Ideally, these would have involved pink food coloring, and perhaps a sprinkling of chopped pistachio on top. Why? Because, especially when it comes to sweets, people can sometimes only taste what they see. If it's not pink, they might not taste the rosewater. So if you don't have pink food coloring on hand, either, just make sure to mention the flavor combo to your friends often as they scarf these delicious cupcakes.
Another winner from Isa and Terry's classic Vegan Cupcakes Take Over The World, these are vegan and sensational, based on a classic Indian pairing.
Ingredients
1/2 cup vanilla soy yogurt
2/3 cup soy milk
1/3 cup canola or vegetable oil
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons rosewater
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line a muffin pan with 12 cupcake liners.
In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the yogurt, soy milk, oil, sugar, and rosewater. Sift in flour, cornstarch, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Mix until large clumps dissapear, then fold in pistachios. Fill liners three-quarters of the way.
Bake 20 to 22 minutes. Transfer to a cooling rack and let cool completely before frosting.
For the glaze, cream 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar with 1 tbs earth balance, then mix in a little rosewater and soymilk (tiny bits at a time so you don't thin it out too much). And a little pink doesn't hurt, either.
These are adorable, and not even snobby omnivores will know they are vegan.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Mocha Chip Cupcakes
Oh yeah, these were good. Originally designed for my friend Maria's birthday party way back in May (the lady enjoys coffee), I reprised them recently for a July 4th BBQ. The secret of intense coffee flavor is instant coffee - crappy to drink but amazingly handy in baking - which also gives the cupcakes a beautifully deep, dark color.
Mocha Chip Cupcakes
Ingredients
(Makes about 24)
3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
1/2 cup hot water
1/4 cup instant coffee granules, plus more
3/4 cup milk
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chocolate chips
Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line standard muffin tins with paper liners, or ready your silicone cups, and set aside. Dissolve 1/4 cup instant coffee into 1/2 cup hot or boiling water, and set aside. Make sure this isn't too hot (we want warm, not steaming) by the time you use it in the recipe.
2. Sift together cocoa powder, flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt into a large bowl. Add eggs, coffee mixture, milk, oil, and vanilla, and mix until smooth, about 3 minutes. Scrape down the sides and bottom of bowl to assure batter is well mixed. Fold in chocolate chips (I used incredily tasty Trader Joe's milk chocolate ones).
2. Divide batter evenly among muffin cups, filling each about 2/3 full. Bake until tops spring back when touched, about 20 minutes, rotating pan once if needed. Transfer to a wire rack; let cool completely, and top with lots of coffee buttercream frosting, and a chocolate covered espresso bean if you're feeling fancy.
Coffee Buttercream Frosting
Dissolve 1 tsp instant coffee into 1 tsp vanilla extract. Beat a stick of butter into a cup of powdered sugar, adding dashes of the coffee gloop until it's a nice color and consistency. You may need to add more powdered sugar as you go, too.
And save a cute one for yourself - because these will be gone very quickly!
Adapted, as many of my cupcakes are, from Martha Stewart's simple 1-bowl chocolate cupcakes.
Mocha Chip Cupcakes
Ingredients
(Makes about 24)
3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
1/2 cup hot water
1/4 cup instant coffee granules, plus more
3/4 cup milk
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chocolate chips
Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line standard muffin tins with paper liners, or ready your silicone cups, and set aside. Dissolve 1/4 cup instant coffee into 1/2 cup hot or boiling water, and set aside. Make sure this isn't too hot (we want warm, not steaming) by the time you use it in the recipe.
2. Sift together cocoa powder, flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt into a large bowl. Add eggs, coffee mixture, milk, oil, and vanilla, and mix until smooth, about 3 minutes. Scrape down the sides and bottom of bowl to assure batter is well mixed. Fold in chocolate chips (I used incredily tasty Trader Joe's milk chocolate ones).
2. Divide batter evenly among muffin cups, filling each about 2/3 full. Bake until tops spring back when touched, about 20 minutes, rotating pan once if needed. Transfer to a wire rack; let cool completely, and top with lots of coffee buttercream frosting, and a chocolate covered espresso bean if you're feeling fancy.
Coffee Buttercream Frosting
Dissolve 1 tsp instant coffee into 1 tsp vanilla extract. Beat a stick of butter into a cup of powdered sugar, adding dashes of the coffee gloop until it's a nice color and consistency. You may need to add more powdered sugar as you go, too.
And save a cute one for yourself - because these will be gone very quickly!
Adapted, as many of my cupcakes are, from Martha Stewart's simple 1-bowl chocolate cupcakes.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Sweet Potato and Spinach Salad with Maple Dressing
This was one of those things I threw together with the crap I had around that turned out to be really good. I don't normally like to post things like salad - it seems cheap, since it barely involves actual cooking - but perhaps one day you, too, will have the following crap lying around, and will be able to make this delicious salad, which is definitely substantial enough for a meal.
Ingredients
1 small or medium sweet potato, sliced in 1/2" rounds
a plate worth of spinach
handful of hazelnuts, chopped
a sprinkling of blue cheese
equal squirts of maple syrup, olive oil, lemon juice, and apple cider vinegar
Directions
There are hardly directions here since, this being a salad, there's not much to do. You do want to roast your sweet potato slices at around 350 for 15-25 minutes; lay them flat in a single layer on a baking pan, coat both sides with olive oil and sprinkle salt and pepper on before you do. Meanwhile, assemble everything else. Whisk together in equal parts some maple syrup, olive oil, lemon juice, and apple cider vinegar; adjust to taste. I find I need extra lemon juice to cut the vinegary taste of the vinegar, but I know some people are into that. For a nice presentation you should hold off on sprinkling the nuts and cheese until the sweet potato slices have been laid on your bed of spinach, but it certainly doesn't really matter. Then you just pour the dressing on top.
Voila.
Ingredients
1 small or medium sweet potato, sliced in 1/2" rounds
a plate worth of spinach
handful of hazelnuts, chopped
a sprinkling of blue cheese
equal squirts of maple syrup, olive oil, lemon juice, and apple cider vinegar
Directions
There are hardly directions here since, this being a salad, there's not much to do. You do want to roast your sweet potato slices at around 350 for 15-25 minutes; lay them flat in a single layer on a baking pan, coat both sides with olive oil and sprinkle salt and pepper on before you do. Meanwhile, assemble everything else. Whisk together in equal parts some maple syrup, olive oil, lemon juice, and apple cider vinegar; adjust to taste. I find I need extra lemon juice to cut the vinegary taste of the vinegar, but I know some people are into that. For a nice presentation you should hold off on sprinkling the nuts and cheese until the sweet potato slices have been laid on your bed of spinach, but it certainly doesn't really matter. Then you just pour the dressing on top.
Voila.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Earl Grey Cupcakes with Lemon Buttercream
My friend Emma had a birthday recently, so naturally some cupcakes were in order. I wanted something with a theme, and she's English, so it was either these or Spotted Dick, and I didn't think the latter would survive the trip in to work very well. And if you know me, you probably know that both my sister and I are tea-obsessives and love working it into recipes. These delicious, delicately citrus-scented cupcakes were just the thing.
You'll find plenty of recipes for earl grey cupcakes on the internet, but none of them really satisfied me, so I sort of made up my own, taking a basic vanilla cupcake recipe from Martha and embellishing it in various ways. These were quite tasty and seemed to be received very well, but to be honest, even though I used more tea here than in most of the other recipes out there, the bergamot flavor still wasn't strong enough for me. Next time I might have to spring for a preposterously expensive bottle of bergamot extract, available here.
Earl Grey Cupcakes
(This recipe makes 24 - I was feeling generous. You can probably halve it with no problems.)
Ingredients
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 large eggs
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups milk
8 bags of earl grey tea, not too fancy
Zest of 1 lemon
Directions
1. Before beginning your cupcakes, heat the milk in a saucepan over medium-low heat until it starts to shake a lot. Dunk in 4 teabags, turn off the heat, and cover for 10 minutes or so. Then squeeze out the teabags into the milk, getting all of that tea-i-ness in there, and refrigerate the milk so it's not warm anymore when it's cupcake time.
2. Preheat the oven to 350 and ready your baking apparatus. Empty the contents of the remaining 4 bags of tea into a food processor and grind up the leaves as small as you can. (This step is optional, I guess, but you don't want big chunks of tea in your cupcakes.)
3. Mix together the ground tea, flour, salt and baking powder and in a small bowl.
4. In a large bowl, cream the sugar and butter together until real fluffy, then add the eggs one at a time, beating each one in separately. (I don't know why this is important but everyone says it is.) Beat in vanilla and lemon zest.
5. Measure your tea-milk to make sure it hasn't evaporated; if it's not 1 1/4 cups, make up the difference with regular milk. Then mix in the flour mixture and the milk into your bowl of liquidy stuff, alternating, ending with flour. Mix until everything is just incorporated.
6. Fill up your cupcake liners (not all the way, of course) and bake for 20-22 minutes, or until they pass the fork test. Top with lovely lemon frosting and serve to the birthday girl.
Here they all are laid out for my friends at work. We had ourselves a little cupcake party.
Lemon Buttercream Frosting
This frosting has less butter than your average buttercream, which was really because I ran out of butter, but I think this ended up making the frosting more delicate. It suited the cakes better. (My friend Atalanti told me this, and she had a stint in culinary school.)
My methods are pretty inexact when it comes to frosting, so I'll just explain what I did. Squeeze out your zested lemon into a cup. Cream half a stick of butter with some confectioner's sugar, maybe a cup's worth. Add in a little lemon juice and beat. Keep adding more sugar and more lemon juice until you have an amount and a consistency that works for you. Refrigerate the frosting if you're not going to use it immediately, but let it sit out for 20 minutes or so before piping it onto the cakes.
Here Emma enjoys a birthday cupcake:
Our friends Camille (foreground) and Karina (background) eat their cupcakes.
You'll find plenty of recipes for earl grey cupcakes on the internet, but none of them really satisfied me, so I sort of made up my own, taking a basic vanilla cupcake recipe from Martha and embellishing it in various ways. These were quite tasty and seemed to be received very well, but to be honest, even though I used more tea here than in most of the other recipes out there, the bergamot flavor still wasn't strong enough for me. Next time I might have to spring for a preposterously expensive bottle of bergamot extract, available here.
Earl Grey Cupcakes
(This recipe makes 24 - I was feeling generous. You can probably halve it with no problems.)
Ingredients
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon salt
12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 large eggs
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups milk
8 bags of earl grey tea, not too fancy
Zest of 1 lemon
Directions
1. Before beginning your cupcakes, heat the milk in a saucepan over medium-low heat until it starts to shake a lot. Dunk in 4 teabags, turn off the heat, and cover for 10 minutes or so. Then squeeze out the teabags into the milk, getting all of that tea-i-ness in there, and refrigerate the milk so it's not warm anymore when it's cupcake time.
2. Preheat the oven to 350 and ready your baking apparatus. Empty the contents of the remaining 4 bags of tea into a food processor and grind up the leaves as small as you can. (This step is optional, I guess, but you don't want big chunks of tea in your cupcakes.)
3. Mix together the ground tea, flour, salt and baking powder and in a small bowl.
4. In a large bowl, cream the sugar and butter together until real fluffy, then add the eggs one at a time, beating each one in separately. (I don't know why this is important but everyone says it is.) Beat in vanilla and lemon zest.
5. Measure your tea-milk to make sure it hasn't evaporated; if it's not 1 1/4 cups, make up the difference with regular milk. Then mix in the flour mixture and the milk into your bowl of liquidy stuff, alternating, ending with flour. Mix until everything is just incorporated.
6. Fill up your cupcake liners (not all the way, of course) and bake for 20-22 minutes, or until they pass the fork test. Top with lovely lemon frosting and serve to the birthday girl.
Here they all are laid out for my friends at work. We had ourselves a little cupcake party.
Lemon Buttercream Frosting
This frosting has less butter than your average buttercream, which was really because I ran out of butter, but I think this ended up making the frosting more delicate. It suited the cakes better. (My friend Atalanti told me this, and she had a stint in culinary school.)
My methods are pretty inexact when it comes to frosting, so I'll just explain what I did. Squeeze out your zested lemon into a cup. Cream half a stick of butter with some confectioner's sugar, maybe a cup's worth. Add in a little lemon juice and beat. Keep adding more sugar and more lemon juice until you have an amount and a consistency that works for you. Refrigerate the frosting if you're not going to use it immediately, but let it sit out for 20 minutes or so before piping it onto the cakes.
Here Emma enjoys a birthday cupcake:
Our friends Camille (foreground) and Karina (background) eat their cupcakes.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Polenta Cakes with Carmelized Onions and Eggs
I love polenta and eggs - especially with tons of parmesan - but it's usually a binary proposal: either soft, porridge-type polenta, or set, firm, bread-like polenta. I, with my insatiable appetite for life, wanted the best of both worlds: a polenta that was soft and creamy inside, but with a crispy, delicious skin. I gave it a shot the other night, and I was quite pleased with the results. A perfect support for the eggs, and especially delicious with a topping of carmelized onions. And, like I said, lots of fresh parmesan.
First, you'll need some polenta. Cook it according to the package's directions (how much depends on how many polenta cakes you want - I can't decide that for you, child) but use broth instead of water and add some dried sage and thyme. Crumble the dried herbs between your palms as you add them; this is the way to release their flavor.
Meanwhile, grease a muffin tin and preheat the oven to 400. When the polenta thickens up and looks good, and is shooting yellow missiles all over your stove and skin, turn off the heat and spoon it into the muffin tin. Bake for maybe 15 minutes, then take out the tin and spoon just a little olive oil over each. Put them back in the oven and let them go for a bit, maybe 20 minutes or so. They'll fry a bit in the cups. Once there's no more oil to make funny noises and shapes, they're probably done. If you aren't finished preparing the rest of your meal by the time this happens, just turn the heat down to 200 and let them sit tight.
This is how the polenta cakes look fresh from the oven:
While the polenta cakes are cooking, carmelize some thinly-sliced onion in butter or earth balance. I used half a small onion for 2 cakes, but this of course is a matter of preference. When that's done put the onions aside and cook your eggs in the same pan. I recommend sunny-side up but anything works.
When everything's done, scoop the eggs onto your plate and top the polenta cakes with the onions. Since we didn't let the polenta set, the insides of the cakes should be smooth and creamy, but since we pretty much deep fried the outsides, you should have a lovely crispy golden skin. Top with lots of fresh parmesan and eat the shit out of them.
I've also found that these keep pretty well; you can put them in tupperware and toast them on high for 10 or 15 minutes. Of course, the insides will be set, but they'll still be delicious.
I dreamed the polenta cakes up to go with eggs, but I'm sure they'd work with other things too. Any ideas?
First, you'll need some polenta. Cook it according to the package's directions (how much depends on how many polenta cakes you want - I can't decide that for you, child) but use broth instead of water and add some dried sage and thyme. Crumble the dried herbs between your palms as you add them; this is the way to release their flavor.
Meanwhile, grease a muffin tin and preheat the oven to 400. When the polenta thickens up and looks good, and is shooting yellow missiles all over your stove and skin, turn off the heat and spoon it into the muffin tin. Bake for maybe 15 minutes, then take out the tin and spoon just a little olive oil over each. Put them back in the oven and let them go for a bit, maybe 20 minutes or so. They'll fry a bit in the cups. Once there's no more oil to make funny noises and shapes, they're probably done. If you aren't finished preparing the rest of your meal by the time this happens, just turn the heat down to 200 and let them sit tight.
This is how the polenta cakes look fresh from the oven:
While the polenta cakes are cooking, carmelize some thinly-sliced onion in butter or earth balance. I used half a small onion for 2 cakes, but this of course is a matter of preference. When that's done put the onions aside and cook your eggs in the same pan. I recommend sunny-side up but anything works.
When everything's done, scoop the eggs onto your plate and top the polenta cakes with the onions. Since we didn't let the polenta set, the insides of the cakes should be smooth and creamy, but since we pretty much deep fried the outsides, you should have a lovely crispy golden skin. Top with lots of fresh parmesan and eat the shit out of them.
I've also found that these keep pretty well; you can put them in tupperware and toast them on high for 10 or 15 minutes. Of course, the insides will be set, but they'll still be delicious.
I dreamed the polenta cakes up to go with eggs, but I'm sure they'd work with other things too. Any ideas?
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Hamentaschen for Purim!!
Happy Purim everybody!! This is a particularly upbeat Jewish holiday where we celebrate our escape from the clutches of a genocidal Persian guy named Hamen who wore a 3-cornered hat. I can't get into the whole thing now but basically, Hamen wanted to kill all the Jews, but Queen Esther saved us, so now we eat his hat. boo Hamen!!! On Purim you are pretty much commanded to get drunk and to share cookies with friends and loved ones and pretty much everybody really. Poppyseed fillings are most traditional; I made a tasty apricot one.
Hamentashen ("Hamen hats")
Ingredients
3/4 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup sugar, white or light brown
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
3 tbs milk or orange juice (they're not kosher with milk)
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
2 1/4 cups flour
apricot filling (recipe follows)
Directions
In a large bowl, cream the sugar and butter until smooth. Beat in the egg, then stir in the milk/juice and vanilla. Mix in the baking powder and salt, then gradually incorporate the flour til you get a big ball of dough. Wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight (you could probably get away with just a few hours).
Then, preheat the oven to 375. Roll out the dough to 1/4" thickness. Take a cookie cutter or just a thin-lipped cup and make circles. Place these on your cookie sheet and place a dollop of jam in the center of each. Pinch them together to form 3 corners. You can brush an egg wash on the dough if you're feeling fancy, but I skipped this on mine and they were still delicious (as my friend Molly said when I asked her whether we should've: "I have no regrets").
Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, erring on the side of slightly undercooked, then let them cool and then get drunk and give them to all your friends. Yay cookies! Boo Hamen!!
Rolling out the dough with my fabulous silicone rolling pin:
Apricot Filling
Ingredients
A bunch of dried apricots (I don't know, maybe, 15-20?)
1/3 cup honey
1/2 tsp cinnamon
Directions
Cover your apricots in water and let them sit overnight. When they get all nice and bloated, puree them in a food processor, stirring in the honey and cinnamon. It makes a lovely and colorful filling for hamentaschen. As for what to do with the leftovers of this, I have no idea. My friend Daniel liked it over ice cream.
Molly:
These were surprisingly delicious (not to mention attractive) with chocolate gelato that Molly brought.
Hamentashen ("Hamen hats")
Ingredients
3/4 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup sugar, white or light brown
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
3 tbs milk or orange juice (they're not kosher with milk)
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
2 1/4 cups flour
apricot filling (recipe follows)
Directions
In a large bowl, cream the sugar and butter until smooth. Beat in the egg, then stir in the milk/juice and vanilla. Mix in the baking powder and salt, then gradually incorporate the flour til you get a big ball of dough. Wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight (you could probably get away with just a few hours).
Then, preheat the oven to 375. Roll out the dough to 1/4" thickness. Take a cookie cutter or just a thin-lipped cup and make circles. Place these on your cookie sheet and place a dollop of jam in the center of each. Pinch them together to form 3 corners. You can brush an egg wash on the dough if you're feeling fancy, but I skipped this on mine and they were still delicious (as my friend Molly said when I asked her whether we should've: "I have no regrets").
Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, erring on the side of slightly undercooked, then let them cool and then get drunk and give them to all your friends. Yay cookies! Boo Hamen!!
Rolling out the dough with my fabulous silicone rolling pin:
Apricot Filling
Ingredients
A bunch of dried apricots (I don't know, maybe, 15-20?)
1/3 cup honey
1/2 tsp cinnamon
Directions
Cover your apricots in water and let them sit overnight. When they get all nice and bloated, puree them in a food processor, stirring in the honey and cinnamon. It makes a lovely and colorful filling for hamentaschen. As for what to do with the leftovers of this, I have no idea. My friend Daniel liked it over ice cream.
Molly:
These were surprisingly delicious (not to mention attractive) with chocolate gelato that Molly brought.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Mom's Polish Cabbage Soup
Oh man, am I excited about this one. I can't even convey it to you over the internet. You see, that "Mom" in the title of this post is not an abstracted standard of home cookin,' but rather actual Mom, the woman who gave birth to me and Erica. In case you don't know, she is a really fantastic cook, and our interest in food definitely comes from her. (Our dad is interested in food too, but his passion is more on the consuming side than the preparing side.) When we were growing up, our mom used to make this amazing cabbage soup as part of her regular winter soup rotation. It was very simple: onion, lots of cabbage, beef broth, bacon and rice. I remember how the little bacon bits got juicy in the soup, and how the wild rice blend my mom always used added an interesting texture. But once we went veg, this was just one of those things we figured we'd never see again. Sure, we can veganize muffins and marinate tofu with a marinade originally intended for scallops, but such a simple soup, so reliant on strong beefy and smoky and bacony flavors? No way it would have the same punch.
Well, my friends, I am here to tell you: yes way.
Sorry the pictures are so ugly, but this is pretty much stewed cabbage, after all. My veggie version, while of course not exactly the same, tastes similar enough to mom's original to transport me back to those family meals. It's delicious and just the perfect thing on a cold winter night, especially with some crusty bread, the way our mom always serves it. Since the flavor is so reliant on the broth, make sure you use a good stock. As usual, I recommend Better Than Bouillion. Or you can make your own if you're badass.
Cabbage Soup
Ingredients
1 good size yellow onion, chopped
1/2 a medium size green cabbage, shredded or chopped into strips
3 cups veggie broth
3 cups mushroom broth
7 strips fake bacon (Morningstar is best, but it's not vegan)
1-2 cups cooked wild rice blend
1 parmesan rind (optional)
Parmesan cheese or nutritional yeast
Directions
First, put a great big pat of butter or earth balance in your soup pot. You're going to carmelize the shit out of those onions; that'll really give the soup some flavor. Stir them around over medium heat for a while - it could take 20 minutes or so - until they get brownish and smell awesome. This is not the place to be stingy with your butter or butter substitute. Cabbage is super good for you anyway so we need to counteract some of that.
Then you can add the cabbage and the stock. If you have a parmesan rind, throw that in too; it will add a real depth of flavor to the soup. Bring the pot to a boil, then reduce to a simmer. This is a good time to cook your faux bacon, and crumble it into small pieces (though they don't have to be tiny). Simmer the soup until the cabbage is tender and translucent. Then stir in the bacon and rice, turn off the heat, and remove the parmesan rind, if using.
Stir some grated parmesan or nutritional yeast into your bowl; experiment with how much you like. Whichever you choose, I don't recommend skipping this; the richness it brings is important to my memory of this soup.
Last night I had mine with an apple salad. Cabbage and apple are a classic combination, or so searches on Epicurious would indicate.
Well, my friends, I am here to tell you: yes way.
Sorry the pictures are so ugly, but this is pretty much stewed cabbage, after all. My veggie version, while of course not exactly the same, tastes similar enough to mom's original to transport me back to those family meals. It's delicious and just the perfect thing on a cold winter night, especially with some crusty bread, the way our mom always serves it. Since the flavor is so reliant on the broth, make sure you use a good stock. As usual, I recommend Better Than Bouillion. Or you can make your own if you're badass.
Cabbage Soup
Ingredients
1 good size yellow onion, chopped
1/2 a medium size green cabbage, shredded or chopped into strips
3 cups veggie broth
3 cups mushroom broth
7 strips fake bacon (Morningstar is best, but it's not vegan)
1-2 cups cooked wild rice blend
1 parmesan rind (optional)
Parmesan cheese or nutritional yeast
Directions
First, put a great big pat of butter or earth balance in your soup pot. You're going to carmelize the shit out of those onions; that'll really give the soup some flavor. Stir them around over medium heat for a while - it could take 20 minutes or so - until they get brownish and smell awesome. This is not the place to be stingy with your butter or butter substitute. Cabbage is super good for you anyway so we need to counteract some of that.
Then you can add the cabbage and the stock. If you have a parmesan rind, throw that in too; it will add a real depth of flavor to the soup. Bring the pot to a boil, then reduce to a simmer. This is a good time to cook your faux bacon, and crumble it into small pieces (though they don't have to be tiny). Simmer the soup until the cabbage is tender and translucent. Then stir in the bacon and rice, turn off the heat, and remove the parmesan rind, if using.
Stir some grated parmesan or nutritional yeast into your bowl; experiment with how much you like. Whichever you choose, I don't recommend skipping this; the richness it brings is important to my memory of this soup.
Last night I had mine with an apple salad. Cabbage and apple are a classic combination, or so searches on Epicurious would indicate.
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