Good Pumpkin Bread & Things from Our Pantry

Good_pumpkin_bread

It’s been a month since we came back from the exciting/ emotional trip to Japan, and things have been going back to normal. That means, for us, scavenging food from our garden, cold storage and kitchen pantry (and the occasional visit to a local grocery store). Although we enjoy challenging eating in this way, I felt that it was really a luxury not to plan a meal, not to gather ingredients from our household, and not to cook: the entire process and ritual. While we were traveling, we ate street food, decadent pastries, traditional meals that my family prepared plus enjoyed some delicious dishes at izakayas and a couple of restaurants.

One of my favourite snacks during the trip was a skewer of grilled chicken liver yakitori finished with teriyaki sauce, enjoyed while browsing the city streets. I also munched on a variety of salads with seafood, meat or grains that I could pick up at the food section at decent department stores. These experiences opened my eyes to creating new recipes with unusual ingredient combinations. As for those dishes that I have longed for but could not manage to eat during this trip, I will try to replicate them and introduce them to you in the near future. For now, here are some examples of what we’ve been eating recently.

Good_pumpkin_bread2

Good_Pumpkin_Bread4

Latte

Good Pumpkin Bread

Originally this recipe was given to me by a very beautiful person while I was studying at horticulture school. She loved nature and good, healthy food as much as I do. Upon tasting her bread, I demanded a copy of the recipe and she kindly shared it with me. I modified it slightly, and the bread got even better! This is why I now grow certain varieties of winter squashes. The key to this particular bread is to use creamy, nutty, sweet and flavourful squashes like Red Kuri or Marina Di Chioggia, but not those sugar pumpkins that you carve for Halloween.

Makes 2 of 9 x 5 x 3 inch loaf pans

3 cups sugar

1 cup grape seed oil

4 eggs

2 ½ cups all purpose flour

1 cup spelt flour

1 ¼ teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

2 teaspoons sea salt

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg

2 cups pureed pumpkin from 1 large pumpkin (or winter squash)

½ cup water

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Topping

3 tablespoons rolled oats

Handful of pecans

2 tablespoons brown sugar

1 tablespoon water

Whipping cream for serving

Preheat the oven to 350C. Cut pumpkin in half. Remove seeds. Place them cut side up on a baking sheet and roast until tender, for about 30 minutes. Remove meat from the skin and puree in a food processor or blender (our dogs love the roasted skins!). If the puree feels too dense, add 1 or 2 tablespoons water to loosen it. Let cool to room temperature.

Preheat the oven to 350C.

Sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and spices together in a bowl. Mix the sugar, oil, and eggs in another large bowl.

Then, add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients while slowly adding in the water to create batter. Finally, add in the pumpkin and vanilla, and stir to combine completely.

Pour the batter into greased pans. Top with the rolled oats and pecans. Bake in the centre rack of the oven until an inserted skewer comes out clean, for about 1 hour. If the pecans become too dark, cover with a piece of tin foil to prevent them from burning.

Cool completely on a rack. In the meantime, make icing. Combine the brown sugar and water in a small saucepan and stir until bubbly. Pour onto the top of the bread.

If you have extras, they freeze beautifully. Thaw at room temperature when ready to eat.

Serve with a dollop of whipping cream.

 

Rhubarb Jam

If you read last year’s post “Rhubarb bars,” you may remember that I introduced the jam recipe there. Now is the time to enjoy the hard work of gardening and preserving from the growing season. I sit at the breakfast table, pour some tea, enjoy the view of my winter garden, savour the richly smeared condiment on toasts and, of course, contemplate another year of garden planning.

Rhubarb_jam_toasts

 

Beet Juice

We go through a lot of root vegetables, such as beets, carrots, and potatoes from our cold storage. In particular, we like to turn the beets and carrots, among other ingredients, into fresh juice. It looks like we have enough to make it to this year’s harvest. Recipe can be found here.

Beet_juice

 

Sprouts

This is our source of raw food during winter months. There are always a couple of bottles sprouting on our windowsill. They provide a great texture and flavour for sandwiches, noodle soups, salads and fresh juices.

sprouts

 

Gluten Free Bread “The Life-Changing Loaf of Bread” by My New Roots

Learning about this intriguingly named bread recipe actually made me run to a local organic store to pick up a bag of psyllium seed husks! The rest of ingredients are always at the read in my pantry. And the result? Yes, the bread changed my life! I feel lighter, healthier and more energetic after eating it. Sarah, the recipe creator, also has so many other amazingly sounding recipes that you may want to try, so I posted a link to her site above.  While this bread has about as many calories as my beloved French baguettes, it’s also packed with more protein and nutrients, making it a much healthier choice all around.. My favourite way of eating Sarah’s bread is to smear goat cheese on a toasted slice and drizzle maple syrup over top. It is unstoppably good! Oh, but I can’t live without that crust of French baguette once in a while.

The_life-Changing_Loaf_of_Bread

 

Plum Schnapps

After baking many plum upside-down cakes last August, I bottled the rest of the Japanese “Beauty” plums with vodka from our front yard. Six months later, I filtered and tasted the batch. It still seems young, so I’ll let it mature a little longer. Nonetheless, the schnapps burst with flavour like summer in my mouth on a winter evening.

plum_schnapps

 

Peperoncino Pasta

I’m not much of a pasta person, unless we’re talking about the delectable dishes that my Italian chef sister makes with tons of seafood. Another exception to the rule is this spicy peperoncino pasta! I remember the days when I looked forward to this pasta dish, served at a family owned café in the Yokohama vicinity, especially after long autumn motorcycle rides. Life is funny–I never ever imagined that I would no longer be riding a motorcycle and instead spend my time growing my own chili peppers in the Vancouver countryside. The heat of chili peppers and garlicky goodness melt together and wrap each individual pasta noodle in a fabulously oily sauce. This is a perfect pasta dish to help warm you up (and may eventually make you steam emerge from your head!). Oh, try not to rub your face while dealing with these peppers like I once absentmindedly did. It hurts for a long time! I miss motorcycling dearly and cherish even the memory of stuffing thick newspapers inside my leather jacket to keep myself warm while commuting on the highway in winter!

Thai_dragon_peppers

peperoncino_pasta3

peperoncino_pasta

Peperoncino Pasta

Serves 2

200g spaghettini pasta noodles

3 tablespoons olive oil

4 garlic cloves, sliced

4 red chili peppers, seeds removed and sliced

Salt and pepper

Bring a pot of water to a boil and add PLENTY of salt. Cook pasta to just before al dente. Reserve some cooking liquid.

In the meantime, sauté the garlic and peppers with oil in a large skillet on low heat. Be patient and take time to infuse the oil, about 12 minutes. When the garlic turns golden and soft, add ¼ to ⅓ cup pasta water to create pasta sauce. Stir the pasta noodles into the sauce, making sure to coat all over. Finish cooking the pasta noodles in the sauce for a couple of minutes. Serve hot and adjust the taste with salt and pepper.

 

Good_Pumpkin_Bread3

Pumpkin Dinner Rolls and Borscht for Valentine’s Day

Borscht

We don’t really celebrate Valentine’s Day. But we always make a nice meal and pour a glass of red wine. This year, however, we didn’t have  steaks or bourguignon, but choose a vegetarian dish, borscht and these rolls. Maybe because we started hot yoga, it feels right to eat more vegetable dishes to cleanse our system. Drink a lot of water, eat more raw food, or at least veggie-based food, stretch, drink more water and sweat it out.

Pumpkin Dinner Rolls

I use freshly roasted winter squash, like Marina Di Chioggia or Red Kuri , that was left after making soup. I know there are a lot of pumpkin dishes at our house this time of year. The fireplace comes in handy when I bake this type of bread. The dough seems to nicely rise for a short time. I just rotate it every so often to make sure one side doesn’t get too hot. If you do, be careful not to place pans too close to the fire. We have two friends who happily anticipate the good food coming later in the day while I bake these rolls. It’s leftover pumpkin skin that they love! For now, they sleep (or watch) in front of my rising doughs.

Pumpkin Dinner Roll

Redrose

These rolls go really well with a big pot of chili or soup.

Pumpkin Dinner Rolls

Make about 25-28 rolls

1 tbsp instant yeast

1 cup warm milk

1/2 cup warm water

5 tbsp sugar

2 tsp sea salt

1/4 cup + 2 tbsp olive oil

1 1/2 cups pumpkin puree

5 cups all purpose flour

1 cup spelt flour (if you don’t have spelt, substitute with 1 cup of all purpose flour)

Extra olive oil for greasing a bowl

2 tbsp milk for brushing

Put together the yeast, the milk, the water and the sugar in a large bowl. Whisk to dissolve and let sit for a few minutes. Add salt, oil, and the pumpkin puree, and whisk until combined. Add the flour a cup at a time and knead into a soft dough, adjusting flour or liquid as needed. Knead for 7 minutes, until smooth.

Place dough in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise for 1 hour, or until doubled in size

Line two 9 inch round pans with parchment paper. Pull off pieces of dough a little bigger than a golf ball, about 2 oz and roll them in your hand to form a ball. Place in the prepared pans just touching one another. When pans are filled cover and let rise for about 40 minutes, until almost doubled.

Preheat oven to 400 F and just before putting the doughs in the oven,  brush the milk on the top of the doughs. Bake for about 18 minutes, or until golden brown. Remove from pan to cool on a wire rack. Serve warm and pull off rolls as needed. They freeze beautifully if you have too much. Thaw them at room temperature and warm them up when you need them.