Contemporary Mystic Lifestyle guide for blending the ancient with the new. A facate of living in the now while adapting to food, spirituality, and home-care for the optimal journey. Shine your brightest with natural remedies, food recipes, seasonal eating, body care and meditations.
Thursday, July 23, 2015
Black Eyed Peas Power
As we experience this heat wave it's tempting to not cook and on the other hand I find myself famished. My mother always says we eat more when it's hot out. Never-the-less, I am in the kitchen daily, cooking up a tasty, satisfying meal.
I am consistently experimenting with the bean. Many beans, fresh beans, dried beans, canned and frozen. Last week was Black Eyed Peas and this week is Adzuki. This little white bean with its black eye, reminding me of a picture taken of a peacock feather in monochrome, has a lot to offer. Not only does it offer a nutrient value high in fibre, protein, potassium and vitamins A, B12, B6, Iron and Calcium; it just tastes great and lends itself to a plethora of recipes.
I shan't digress,
The following recipes were all made out of one batch of soaked and cooked B.E.P's.
1.5 cups of dried bean, sorted and rinsed.
Soaked in water covering two inches past the bean, plus a piece of seaweed, for 1-2 hours.
Drain and place in a pot, cover with 2 inches of water and bring to a boil with the lid off.
Then cover and turn heat to med-low, or a gentle simmer.
Put the timer on for 20 minutes.
At the 20 min mark, check a bean by squishing it in-between your pointer finger and thumb.
If squishes easily and is quit soft, then sprinkle in 1/4 tsp of salt and let simmer another 10 minutes. If it's not a soft consistency, continue to simmer in 15 minute intervals until desired texture.
Drain (save the juice for soups and stocks)
Place in a glass container and refrigerate or use in your favourite bean recipe.
Black eyed pea and Feta Dip
1 Cup Black Eyed Peas, cooked
1 Cup Feta, crumbled
1 TBS sour cream
1 green Serrano pepper, seeded
1/4 C steamed swiss chard, chopped - here you can use any green on hand. mint, parsley, kale, cilantro
2 tsp organic Tamari
1 whole lime, juice only
1/2 tsp cumin
1/4 tsp cayenne
salt
Mix all together in a processor, and adjust to your taste.
Great with fresh cut veggie, crackers and bread.
This whole container was devoured when I brought it to the beach to share with a couple of friends and their kids.
It was refreshing and tasted great while being incredibly nourishing.
Coleslaw, in my kitchen, is never the same and proves to be a chameleon dressed in many guises. The main ingredients are fairly congruent but the choice in dressing is: Sky's the Limit!
General practice? What's the theme of the meal I am making and layer accordingly or sometimes it's the main attraction, as in what's left in the crisper?
More heat and a day at the beach lead to this ...
Black Eyed Pea Coleslaw
1 half green cabbage, shredded
2 green onions, small chopped
1/2 zucchini, small cubed
1 carrot, grated
1 Cup parsley, chopped
1 Cup Black Eyed Peas, cooked and cooled
3 radish, thinly sliced
Mix all the ingredients together
Make Dressing
2 Tbs rice wine vinegar
1 tsp Organic Tamari
1 Tbs Organic toasted sesame oil
2 Tbs Sunflower oil
1 tsp of plasma power chilli mix by Wild Scallions (an amazing restaurant in Pentiction with some of the best hot sauces and rubs ever!)
- now if you don't have this then you can make up a mix that's similar
- crushed seaweed, dried hot chilli's, turmeric and spices.
Pour over salad, sprinkle on Gomashio
My gomashio is made of organic sesame seeds, powdered nettle and crushed seaweed and salt.
Let it marinate in the fridge and eat for dinner or lunch
General Practice: I make it in the morning, ready for a meal later in the day.
Now, the other way to get beans in every meal, other than lunch and dinner, is to implement these fine friends into breakfast, more specifically, smoothies. Yes, I said it. Not your first choice? Why not, I say! These versatile little lumps really have a light flavour and absorb whatever they are placed with, plus they smooth down to a creamy consistency. This is perfect if you're refraining from combining dairy and looking to thicken the drink without filler or ice cubes.
Now in truth, I think the smoothy is over rated and in most cases detrimental to the body's digestive system, but that's another story. Ok, well quickly I will mention that most smoothies have to many ingredients that the body cannot attain all at once, there is a tendency to gulp the drink down which can cause indigestion and also prevents a full communication with the mouth's enzymes necessary to begin the digestion process, and this can lead to the stomach enzymes and acids to believe there is an intruder or toxins in the stomach so it puts on the alert to attack rather than absorb.
I know, that's more than a little blurb, but it must be noted.
Anyhow, I do make smoothies, and I do chew slowly and thoroughly, and I do limit the amount of ingredients.
This being it
Bean Smoothy
A hand full of Black Eyed Peas
about half that of pumpkin seeds
1 Tbs molasses
A hand full of blueberries
1 tsp of Organic Earthrise Spirulina
1/4 avocado
Coconut milk, cover the ingredients and then another 2 inches.
Blend and drink
This is my bean adventure for now. Tonight I am making buttermilk crepes with ricotta, swiss chard, sauteed mushrooms and adzuki beans. I will let you know how this goes.
Bean Blessing
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