Showing posts with label peppers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peppers. Show all posts

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Stuffed Peppers Two Ways - Meat or Vegetarian



I wrote this recipe to be 1/2 vegetarian and 1/2 meat as lots of times we need both to satisfy a crowd.  If you're vegetarian skip the meat instructions and double or triple the amount of rice .  You can use leftover cooked rice in this recipe or any cooked grain such as quinoa or millet.  If you have leftover meat filling bake it in a small oven proof bowl and use it as a mini-meatloaf  or sliced for sandwiches.

Click on this link to print recipe.

INGREDIENTS:
1 cup brown rice, raw - 250 ml
6 sweet peppers, medium - I used 2 each red, yellow and green
1 jalapeno pepper (optional)
3 cloves of garlic
1 cup white onion finely diced
1/2 cup ketchup, barbecue or tomato sauce
2 eggs, medium
1 cup mushrooms, chopped fine
1 cup carrot grated - 250 ml
2 tsp each basil, ground cumin and chili powder
1/2 tsp sea salt - 2.5 ml
1/2 cup water - 125 ml for bottom of baking dish


Variations for this very flexible recipe: grated cheese for top of peppers.  Use any type of spices or herbs you like and have on hand such as Italian seasoning, dill, black pepper etc.  You can also used frozen mixed vegetables instead of the fresh and leftover cooked rice.  Other cooked grains like millet and quinoa also work well in place of the rice. 


METHOD:
Preheat oven to 350'F (190 'C)
1.  Cook the brown rice in unsalted water according to package directions.
2.  Cut peppers in half vertically through the stems and discard inner seeds and membranes.  Keep the stems on as they look nice and help to hold in the filling.


3.  Mix all the ingredients except for ground chicken/turkey/beef with cooked rice.  Set half aside for the vegetarian batch.  Omit the egg if you are vegan.  They won't stick together as well without the egg but it will still work.  Add 90 ml water and 30 ml flour for some "glue" for vegan stuffed peppers if egg is omitted.


4.  Add ground chicken/turkey/beef to other half of rice and mix well.


5.  Fill half the peppers with vegetarian rice mixture and the other half with the meat and rice filling. You can mound them fairly high.  Arrange in a baking dish and add water to bottom of baking dish. Sprinkle over grated cheese of your choice (optional).  The picture below shows the vegetarian stuffed peppers.


6.  Bake for 45 minutes or until chicken is set and peppers are cooked through to an internal temperature of 175'F (77'C).



Nutrition Facts (per 1/2 meat stuffed pepper): 160 calories, 7 g fat, 2 g saturated fat, 60 mg cholesterol, 21 g carbohydrate, 2 g fibre, 5 g sugar, 250 mg sodium, 10 g protein. %Daily Values are 2% calcium, 6% iron, 6% vitamin A and 200% vitamin C.

Yours in good taste, © Nancy Guppy, RD, MHSc.  http://nancyguppy.com/

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Quinoa Corn Polenta with Roasted Garlic Red Pepper Sauce


This delicious, hearty polenta dish is a bit of work but well worth the effort.  It took me an hour and 15 minutes to make it including roasting the garlic and peppers in the oven.  The polenta triangles are served over a roasted garlic and red pepper sauce that is a snap to make in a blender or food processor.  Impress you friends!

Quinoa is a high protein, quick cooking whole-grain from South America.  Corn grits are made from coarsely ground dried corn.  If you don't have grits you can use fine or medium corn meal.  Grits are heartier than cornmeal as they contain the hull and germ of whole grain corn.  The toasted sunflower seeds and thyme add depth of flavour.



I packed the other three servings into plastic containers and put them in the fridge for easy-to-grab lunches for the upcoming week.


It serves 4 people as a main course or 8 as a side-dish.

Click here for a printable recipe.

INGREDIENTS: 
1/3 cup Sunflower seeds, raw, organic - 80 ml 
3 cups Water, cold  - 750 ml
½ tsp Salt, sea - 2.5 ml
2 Tbsp Olive oil, extra virgin, cold pressed - 30 ml
½ cup Quinoa, dry - 125 ml
½ cup corn meal (polenta) - 125 ml
½ tsp  thyme, dried (sub 2 tsp – 10 ml fresh leaves) - 2.5 ml
4 tsp Olive oil, extra virgin, cold pressed - 20 ml

METHOD:
1.  Toast the sunflower seeds in a dry skillet.  Shake the pan frequently and stir with a wooden spoon.


Toast until golden, about 3-5 minutes.  Don't walk away from them as once they get going they can burn easily. 


2.  Put 3 cups (750 ml) cold water in medium saucepan.  Add salt and 2 Tbsp (30 ml) olive oil and bring to a boil.


I used fine cornmeal.


Stir in the quinoa and corn grits, stirring occasionally.  Bring to a boil and reduce heat to simmer.  


Add the dried thyme (or 2 tsp fresh thyme leaves) and cook, uncovered, stirring often until the quinoa and cornmeal are cooked through - about 20 minutes.  Taste it before you stop cooking to make sure the grains are tender.  The mixture is very thick.  I used a wooden paddle to scrape off the bottom and mix well during cooking.


3.  Stir in the toasted sunflower seeds.


Spread into a lightly oiled 10 x 10 inch (25 cm square) baking dish.  Let cool for 20 minutes or until firm.  



I have a foggy spot in the middle of my lens.  Really need a new camera.  Zooms broken too!  On the wish list.

When cool, cut the polenta into quarters and then cut each section into 4 triangles.  


4.  Heat 2 tsp (10 ml) olive oil in a skillet over medium high heat.  Add the polenta triangles and saute until golden, about 3-4 minutes per side.  I sauteed them in two batches adding two more teaspoons oil to second batch.


5.  To serve, spread 1/4 cup (60 ml) roasted garlic and red pepper sauce over centre of plate and top with four triangles.  Serve any remaining sauce on the side.  Garnish with a sprig of fresh thyme or parsley.  The sauce makes approximately 1 1/2 cups (375 ml) depending on size of garlic and peppers so there will be some leftover.  Garnish with a sprig of fresh thyme or parsley if you have it.  I used some parsley I have growing in my kitchen window.  Enjoy!  The recipe for the sauce is below.


Roasted Garlic and Red Pepper Sauce (makes approximately 1 1/2 cups - 375 ml)

2 each  Garlic, heads 
2 each  Red peppers, fresh, medium 
½ tsp  Salt, sea  - 2.5 ml
¼ cup Olive oil, extra virgin, cold pressed - 60 ml
1 Tbsp Red wine vinegar  - 15 ml
¼ tsp  Black pepper, freshly ground - 1.25 ml
¼ tsp Red pepper flakes, hot (to taste) - 1.25 ml

1.  Preheat the oven to 375'F.  Use your hands to take off the papery outside of the garlic.  Use a sharp knife to cut off the top quarter inch off the garlic bulbs.  I save vegetable bits like these in the freezer for my next soup stock.  Place garlic in an oven-proof dish and drizzle with a teaspoon (5 ml) olive oil and roast for 45 minutes until soft.



2.  You can use jar or your own roasted peppers.  I am out of the ones I froze from last summer so I used fresh.  I used one green pepper as I didn't have two red.  The sauce wasn't as vivid a red colour as it would have been.  I am a big believer in using what you have on hand.

I cut the peppers in half and discarded seeds and stem end.  Use your  hands to rub with olive oil and place in oven with the garlic to roast.


Below the garlic is baked.  Take it out of the dish to make it cool faster.


I cut the roasted peppers into smaller pieces to get them to cool more quickly too.  The sauce is getting pureed so I didn't remove the skins.  Simpler, adds fibre.


3.  Put the garlic and the peppers in the blender.



4.  Add the olive oil, red wine vinegar, salt, black pepper and red chile pepper flakes (to taste).  I tried it with less salt but thought it needed the whole amount to bring out the flavour.  Blend until smooth. 


Serve with the polenta triangles (recipe above).

NUTRITION FACTS (per ¼ recipe – 4 polenta triangles and ¼ cup sauce): 420 calories, 28 g fat, 3.5 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 37 g carbohydrate, 4 g fibre, 3 g sugar, 7 g protein. %Daily Values are 6% calcium, 20% iron, 2% vitamin A and 200% vitamin C.
Yours in good taste, © Nancy Guppy, RD, MHSc.  http://nancyguppy.com/



Early February sunset at Chapman's Landing.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Grilled Eggplant Stacks

I have been away from my blog this fall.  Busy with a lot of successful cooking classes and presentations in local high schools, the university and developing recipes for clients.  But I am back at it now and want to start sharing recipes and ideas again.  




Here is one of my favourite recipes I made last summer.  I want to make them again over Christmas.  They were awesome to look at and super delicious!  For a vegan version skip the cheese or use a soy based one or even tofu.  Like most of my recipes this one is gluten free.  All vinegar with the exception of malt vinegar is gluten free (S. Case, RD).  Balsamic vinegar is made with grapes.  Even a white vinegar made from grain is considered gluten free as the gluten is removed during the distillation process.  Malt vinegar is made from barley and is fermented and not distilled and has varying levels of gluten.


Prepare the vegetables on a grill, stack ingredients and heat again until cheese is melted.  You can also make these in the oven.  I first made the recipe when local tomatoes and peppers were in-season and abundant.




# volume
(# mL)
Ingredient
1 lb
450 g
Eggplant (aubergine), raw, upeeled, sliced into rounds
¼ cup
60 ml
Olive oil, extra virgin, cold pressed
1 tsp
5 ml
Black pepper, freshly ground
1 Tbsp
15 ml
Rosemary, fresh
2
2
Garlic, cloves
1
1
Red pepper, sweet, large, cut into circular rings
1
1
Tomato, red, large
2 cups
500 ml
Mozzarella cheese, part skim, shredded
¼ cup
60 ml
Romano cheese, grated
¼ cup
60 ml
Red wine vinegar
¼ cup
60 ml
Balsamic vinegar
1 Tbsp
15 ml
Brown sugar, dark, natural demerara




Preparation:

1.  Cut eggplant crosswise into 1/2 thick slices.  You need 2-3 pieces per stack.  This should make 8  stacks... let me know.  Cut the sweet pepper and tomato into slices.  Depending on the size of pepper and tomato you may need two each.
2.  Puree olive oil, pepper, fresh rosemary and garlic cloves in a blender.  Use to paint both sides of the eggplant.
3.  Heat grill.  Grill eggplant and thick pepper slices until soft and slightly browned.
4.  Make sauce by combining the vinegar, wine and brown sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat.  Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer until reduced to 1/4 cup (about 8 minutes).
5.  Grate or shred the two cheeses and mix together.  Set aside.
6.  Assemble stacks on an oven-proof serving platter or baking sheet.  Layer a slice of grilled eggplant, then sweet pepper and tomato, sprinkle handful grated cheese between and do another layer of eggplant, pepper, tomato ending with cheese.  Broil until cheese is melted and they are slightly browned. 
7.  Pour sauce over and serve.  Garnish with more fresh rosemary or parsley.  Enjoy!!

Nutrients (per stack - 1/8th of recipe)

Calories
190
Protein (g)
15
Total Fat (g)
14
Saturated Fat (g)
4.5
Carbohydrate (g)
10
Fibre (g)
3
Cholesterol (mg)
20
%Daily Values

Sodium
8
Potassium
8
Calcium
25
Iron
4
Vitamin A
25
Vitamin C
70
Folate                                
2
Vitamin B12                                
13


 Tastefully yours,


© Nancy Guppy, RD, MHSc
Chapman's Landing Cooking Studio

Our next cooking class is Saturday February 5th - I'm a Slow Cooker.  Click on this link to visit my website and class calendar for menus and information.  

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Moroccan Inspired Salsa



My Moroccan inspired salsa shown above was originally a recipe called Matbucha which is a cooked salad of tomatoes and peppers popular in Arab countries.  They eat it hot or cold as a dressing for rice or potatoes.  Matbucha is popular in Israel too and one site said to use it as a dip with fresh Challah on Friday.  I think most countries have their own special "salsa."

Here in Nipissing village we had it with organic blue corn tortilla chips!  But, it would also be great with any kind of bread, pita wedges and as a fresh accompaniment to grilled fish.  Sort of like a middle eastern Bruschetta.  I must admit I am a bit of a salsa nut.  It is low in fat and sodium and nutritious in many ways.  It is a much better choice than creamy or cheese based dips which are usually high in fat, saturated fat, sodium  and calories.  Corn tortilla chips are naturally wholegrain and you can even buy baked versions if you want to skip more fat calories.



I used my fresh garden tomatoes and roasted red peppers I had frozen.   I posted a recipe earlier on how to make your own roasted red peppers.  I am down to the very end of my fresh garden tomatoes and next year I really need to grow more of them.  At one point they were in every window on the main floor and we ate them as they ripened.  I know many people like to wrap them in newspaper and put them in a box to ripen slowly in the dark but I find the window sill method works well.

INGREDIENTS - they were all homegrown or organic:

5 roasted red peppers
5 tomatoes, ripe (about 8 cm/3 inches)
3 cloves garlic, fresh
1 cup (250 ml) red onion
1/3 cup (75 ml) raisins
1/2 cup (125 ml) cilantro, fresh
2 Tbsp (30 ml) mint, fresh
1 Tbsp (15 ml) olive oil, XV
1/4 cup (60 ml) lemon juice, fresh squeezed
1 tsp (5 ml) cumin seed
1/4 tsp (1.25 ml) cinnamon, ground
1/2 tsp (2.5 ml) ground cayenne or other hot pepper to taste

METHOD:

Combine everything in your food processor and pulse until you get your desired consistency.  If you don't have fresh tomatoes you can use drained canned tomatoes.




NUTRITION FACTS (per 1/4 cup or 60 ml serving): 30 calories, 1 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 65 mg sodium, 5 g carbohydrate, 1 g fibre, 3 g sugar, 1 g protein.  %Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet and are 15% vitamin A, 25% vitamin C, 2% each calcium and iron.

© Nancy Guppy, RD, MHSc
Visit me at http://www.chapmanslanding.com  
for course information, menus and registration. 

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Roasted Chipotle and Red Pepper Salsa



First of all, I apologize for sending off posts recently that weren't finished. Years ago I was taught DOS commands in computer programming and "control P" is "print" but in the blogger world it is "post!"

This salsa is best served warm. It is a small batch recipe and not one you can and process for later use. It is shown above in my every-day pottery so typical of the Oaxaca region of Mexico that I last visited in 2005. For convenience, use one can of tomatoes which are already skinned and cooked. You can also use your home-canned tomatoes if you were organized enough to make some this year!

It doesn't last long because it is great with scrambled eggs, beans, rice, nachos, layered dips etc.



It is made with home-made roasted red peppers that I posted earlier in September.





I keep a bag of dried chipotle peppers in my cupboard. They are smokey flavoured, sun-dried jalapeno peppers. To rehydrate simply cover with boiling water and leave to soak for a half hour or so. Then dice and add to recipes. You can also use the canned chipotle peppers in adobo sauce but they aren't always available in northern grocery stores. I use Chilly Chiles out of Ottawa to mail order chiles and many spices. They come in the mail within a week and because spices are light it doesn't cost that much to ship by post. I bought the chipotle, brown pod (#C044) but you could use powder or other forms. You can also mail order chiles from The Spice Trader. Both of these sites have interesting gifts for your gourmet friends.

Make approximately 4 cups or 1 liter. Eight 1/2 cup (125 ml) servings.

28 fl oz (798 ml) canned diced tomatoes
1 small jalapeno pepper
1-2 chipotle peppers, dried
½ cup (125 ml) roasted red pepper (see previous recipe)
½ cup (125 ml) red onion, peeled and cut into chunks
2 cloves garlic
½ tsp (2.5 ml) cumin, ground
½ tsp (2.5 ml) black pepper
1 Tbsp (15 ml) cilantro (chopped)
1 Tbsp (15 ml) lime juice, fresh squeezed


METHOD:

1. Soak the dried chipotle in boiling water and leave 30 minutes to rehydrate. Drain and discard liquid (or save for another use).

The photo below shows the dried chipotle pepper on top and a rehydrated one below.



2. Place drained canned tomatoes, tomato paste, chipotle, roasted red bell peppers, red onions and cilantro into food processor and pulse for a few seconds. Don't leave the processor running if you want a chunkier salsa.
3. Add the remaining ingredients. Process all ingredients a few more seconds - do not puree.
4. Serve warm. Cover and refrigerate leftovers.

Note: this is good with jalapeno or any kind of hot chile if you don’t have chipotle peppers.




LYCOPENE

Tomatoes can help prevent damage from the sun and ward off wrinkles. Lycopene is a powerful antioxidant that highest concentration in cooked red tomatoes. It helps increase resistance to the sun's damaging rays and may also aid in the prevention of certain cancers.

This salsa is low in calories and sodium and contains no fat. NUTRITION FACTS (per half cup or 125 ml serving): 35 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 6 g carbohydrate, 2 g fibre, 1 g protein. %Daily Values are 15% vitamin A, 35% vitamin C, 2% calcium and 6% iron.

© Nancy Guppy, RD, MHSc
Visit me at www.chapmanslanding.com
for course information, menus and registration.