Showing posts with label Recipes: Vegetables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recipes: Vegetables. Show all posts

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Sautéed Brussels sprouts with lemon, garlic and cheese

Sautéed Brussels sprouts with lemon, garlic and cheese / Praetud rooskapsad küüslaugu, sidruni ja juustuga

While I'm trying to decide what to do with the bag of lovely and fresh Brussels sprouts that I bought from my local Farmers Market, it's time to post the first ever Brussels sprout recipe here on Nami-Nami. This on-the-hob method of preparing Brussels sprouts has been tested in our kitchen few times already, and it's really quick and rather effortless. Although I have a feeling that the next batch of Brussels sprouts (called rooskapsas or "rose cabbage" in Estonian :)) will be roasted in the oven and seasoned with some crispy bacon, then it's good to have a pan-fry and vegetarian method in the recipe archives as well.

So here we go.

Sautéed Brussels sprouts with lemon, garlic and cheese
(Rooskapsad sidruni ja küüslauguga)
Serves 4 to 6

1 kg Brussels sprouts (about 2 pounds)
4 Tbsp olive oil
3-4 garlic cloves
1 lemon, juiced and zested
salt and freshly ground black pepper
a few Tbsp grated hard cheese (Parmesan or something similar)

Clean the sprouts - trim the root end and remove the floppy outer leaves, if necessary. Halve or quarter the Brussels sprouts, depending on their size.

Heat oil in a large heavy frying pan. Add the prepared sprouts and fry gently for 7-10 minutes, tossing every now and then, until they're soft and caramelised and lovely golden brown all round. Few minutes before reaching that stage add the chopped garlic to the pan as well.

Season to taste with salt, pepper and lemon juice and zest. Heat for another 1-2 minutes, then taste again for seasoning.

Sprinkle with grated hard cheese, and serve immediately.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Oven roasted cabbage steaks recipe

Garlic-rubbed roasted cabbage steaks. Ahjus küpsetatud kapsaviilud.

Sometimes you come across a great and simple recipe that appeals to you instantly. These roasted cabbage "steaks" caught my attention at a food bloggers' Facebook chat few days ago, and I made the dish just hours after reading about it. I had made roasted cabbage slices with lemon from Kalyn's Kitchen before, several times, actually, so I knew I'd love roasted cabbage. This was very similar recipe, though the cabbage was cut into thick slices instead of wedges, and garlic was used to season the cabbage instead of lemon juice.

Cheap as chips, suits pretty much all known diets (Paleo, LCHF, vegetarian/vegan, gluten-free), overall a great way to serve that humble cabbage to your family and friends.

Oven-roasted cabbage steaks
(Küpsekapsas)
Serves 4 to 6

Adapted from Everyday Maven, originally Martha Stewart's recipe. Martha suggests you sprinkle a tablespoon of caraway or fennel seeds on top and I can see how that would work really well. Next time!

Garlic-rubbed roasted cabbage steaks. Ahjus küpsetatud kapsaviilud.

1 head of green cabbage, preferably organic
olive oil
a few garlic cloves, finely chopped
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Preheat oven to 200 C/400 F.

Brush a baking sheet lightly with oil.

Remove the outer leaves of the cabbage, then cut the cabbage from top to bottom (e.g. the root end) into 1-1,5 cm thick slices ("steaks"). Place onto the baking sheet.

Scatter about half of the garlic on top, season generously with salt and pepper, then drizzle with olive oil.

Cabbage steaks. Küpsetatud kapsalõigud.

Bake in the middle of the oven for about 25-30 minutes, until the "cabbage steaks" are golden brown on edges.

Carefully flip the cabbage slices over, scatter the rest of the garlic on top, season and drizzle with oil. Return the oven and bake for another 20-30 minutes, until cabbage is cooked and golden brown around the edges.

Serve hot.

Garlic-rubbed roasted cabbage steaks. Ahjus küpsetatud kapsaviilud.

Got leftovers? Chop the cabbage and use in those dishes:
Finnish mince and cabbage gratin
Estonian cabbage and mince stew

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

Roasted pumpkin soup with almonds and spicy dukkah oil a la Silvena Rowe

IMG_8296.jpg

From the recipe archives, originally posted in October 2011. Totally worth making!!! 
PS Check the comments section - Silvena Rowe herself left a comment - how cool is that!?

I spotted this soup recipe in Silvena Rowe's beautiful Orient Express: Fast food from the eastern Mediterranean, one of my recent cookbook acquisitions. I've been making various pumpkin soups and certainly wasn't looking for a new soup recipe, but this one caught my eye because of almonds. There are almonds both inside the soup and in the dukkah-mixture (Not sure what dukkah is? You can read more about it here). We cooked four recipes from Silvena's book last Sunday (see the menu below, scribbled on our newly painted kitchen wall), and the soup was very well received. The almonds add a thickness and a lovely texture to the soup, the dark red pomegranate seeds are a true eye candy, and the dukkah oil is a wonderful flavour enhancer. I more or less followed the recipe, though I used a bit more pumpkin and less chicken stock, and used some coriander/cilantro for garnish.

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You can either use any orange-fleshed winter squash here - butternut squash or a Hokkaido pumpkin (potimarron in French). Well, you could use any winter squash, but orange-fleshed one looks prettiest :)

More pumpkin soup recipes @ Nami-Nami:
Pumpkin soup with nutmeg
Pumpkin soup with thyme
Estonian pumpkin and semolina soup

Roasted pumpkin/butternut squash soup with dukkah
(Röstitud kõrvitsa supp mandlite ja vürtsiõliga)
Serves six

IMG_8291.jpg

For the dukkah oil:
50 g while almonds
1 Tbsp coriander seeds
0.5 Tbsp cumin seeds
0.25 Tbsp fennel seeds
5-6 Tbsp olive oil

For the soup:
1.2 kg orange-fleshed pumpkin or squash
8 fresh sage leaves, chopped
2 onions, peeled and quartered
6 garlic cloves, peeled
4 Tbsp olive oil
750 ml chicken stock (3 cups)
100 g ground almonds
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

To serve:
pomegranate seeds
fresh coriander/cilantro leaves

Preheat the oven to 180 C/350 F.

Peel the pumpkin, remove the seeds and cut the flesh into 2-3 cm (1 inch) chunks. Place onto a large roasting tray alongside the onion quarters, garlic cloves and chopped sage leaves. Season to taste with salt and pepper, drizzle with olive oil:

IMG_8271.jpg

Cook the vegetables in the preheated oven for 30-40 minutes, until the pumpkin is soft. Remove from the oven and cool.

Make the dukkah oil while the pumpkin is roasting. Place the spices and almonds onto a small dry frying pan and cook over a moderate heat until fragrant and slightly golden (keep an eye on them, as the spices burn easily!):

IMG_8277.jpg

Using a pestle and mortar (or a small food processor), bruise the spices and almonds until you've got a coarsely ground mixture. Add the oil, put aside.

When the vegetables are cooked, place them into a food processor or a blender. Blend to a purée, adding a little of the vegetable stock if necessary. Return the pumpkin purée into the saucepan, add the rest of the stock. Bring into a slow boil, then simmer for 15-20 minutes, until the soup is smooth and slightly thickened. Stir in the almonds, season to taste.

To serve, ladle the soup into warmed bowls. Spoon some dukkah oil on top, sprinkle with pomegranate seeds and garnish with some cilantro/coriander.

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Friday, October 04, 2013

Great comfort food: cold weather hotpot recipe

Sügistalvine hakkliha-köögiviljahautis. Winter hotpot with vegetables, baked beans and beef mince

Now that I have five mouths to feed on a daily basis, I need to cook dishes that are easy to put together and suit all the members of the family, be they 11 months or 41 years. That means they must be flavourful and tasty, as I don't have the time, will or energy to cook separate meals for the still-toothless baby, two active toddlers and two food-loving adults. To be honest, I don't think it should even be necessary.

We've used the baby-led weaning* approach when introducing solids to our three kids, and that means our littlest has been eating family food from Day 1 (not the first day of her life, but the first time she was offered any solid food, e.g. when she was 6 months old). So much more convenient for the whole family and especially the cooking parent (that's me, at least on most days). This stew - enjoyed both by parents and the toddlers (aged 2 and 4), was perfect for the 11-month old as well.

The cold weather hotpot is a great comfort food and midweek dinner. The humble vegetables can be varied - you could add some turnips or parsnips as well, or even broccoli. Sometimes I've used gnocchi instead of potatoes, adding them at the end, so they'd have the chance to soak in the broth. The can of Heinz's baked beans you throw in at the end - well, this adds some protein as well as thickens the stew. Overall it's yet another dish that tastes much better than you'd expect from simply looking at the list of ingredients.

We love a spoonful of thick sour cream on top, but a crusty bread would be good, too.

* New to baby-led weaning aka BLW? Read all about it in Gill Rapley's book - see Amazon UK/Amazon US. I highly recommend reading it if you've got a small baby who's about to start solids soon! 

Cold weather hotpot
(Hakklihaga ühepajatoit)
Slightly adapted from BBC Good Food, March 2003
Serves six

2 Tbsp olive or rapeseed oil
4 small onions
4 good-sized carrots
8 medium-sized potatoes
450 g lean minced beef
1 l hot beef stock (you can use a stock cube or bouillon extract)
a good splash of Worcestershire sauce
a handful of chopped parsley

To serve:
some good sour cream (optional)

Peel the onions and cut into quarters. Peel the carrots, halve lengthwise and cut into thick slices. Peel the potatoes and cut into smallish chunks.
Heat oil in a heavy saucepan, add the minced beef and fry quickly, stirring all the time, until browned evenly.
Add the vegetables, give everything a quick stir. Pour over the beef stock. Bring into a boil, then partially cover with the lid, reduce heat and simmer for about 20-25 minutes, until the vegetables are cooked.
Season with Worcestershire sauce, pour in the baked beans. Stir gently and then heat through. Taste for seasoning, then scatter parsley on top and serve.
Ladle into bowl and enjoy with a spoon.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Quick ricotta and courgette lasagne

Courgette lasagne / Suvikõrvitsalasanje

We are still eating lots of courgettes in our house, and still no end of the courgette/zucchini season in sight. Not that we're complaining, however, as it's one lovely and versatile vegetable, as long as you don't let it grow into a full-size huge marrow. Here's another one of my favourite courgette/zucchini dishes - a simple and quick and creamy courgette lasagne. You'll need a 400 g jar of good tomato sauce - either home-made marinara-type sauce (say, this or this), or a decent ready-made one.

Creamy ricotta and courgette lasagne
(Suvikõrvitsalasanje)
Serves three to four
Adapted from BBC Olive (Quick courgette lasagne)

2 Tbsp olive oil
750 g courgette/zucchini (about 2 medium-sized fruits), coarsely grated
2 large garlic cloves, finely chopped
0.5 tsp (Aleppo) chilli flakes
250 g ricotta
a large handful of fresh basil leaves, finely chopped
3 Tbsp grated Parmesan cheese + more for sprinkling
400 g good-quality ready-made tomato sauce
6 lasagne sheets
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Heat the oven to 200 C/400 F.

Heat a tablespoonful of oil in a large frying pan. Add the grated courgette, chopped garlic and chilli flakes. Season with a little salt. Sauté over medium heat until soft, stirring every now and then. Remove from the heat, fold in the ricotta cheese, chopped basil and 3 Tbsp of Parmesan cheese.

Take a small oven dish (mine is 25x35 cm). Spread about a third of the ricotta-courgette mixture at the bottom, then spoon a quarter of the tomato sauce on top. Cover with three lasagne sheets. Then half of the remaining ricotta-courgette mixture, a third of the remaining tomato sauce, lasagne sheets. Top with the remaining ricotta-courgette mixture and then the rest of the tomato sauce. Sprinkle generously with Parmesan cheese.

Bake in a pre-heated 200 C/400 F oven for about 20-25 minutes, until the lasagne is cooked and the topping "bubbles".

Remove from the oven and let it rest for about 15 minutes before serving.

More favourite courgette/zucchini recipes:
Courgette and Parmesan tart @ Nami-Nami
Courgette salad with poppyseeds @ Nami-Nami
Courgette cake with lemon frosting (Lemon and Zucchini Cake) @ Nami-Nami
Oven-baked zucchini and tomatoes with feta @ Nami-Nami
Estonian courgette and cheese soup (Zucchini and Cheese Soup) @ Nami-Nami
Greek Zucchini Pie (Kourkouto) @ Nami-Nami
Roasted marrow with garlic and herbs @ Nami-Nami

Courgette/Zucchini lasagne recipes:
Creamy courgette lasagne @ The English Kitchen
Angela's Zucchini lasagna @ The Italian Dish
Carrot, Courgette, Ricotta lasagne @ Apple and Spice
Ricotta, courgette and spinach lasagne @ Chilli Marmalade
Vegetable lasagna @ Inspired Taste
Kale, zucchini lasagna$5 Dinners
Spinach and courgette lasagne @ My French Kitchen

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Courgette salad recipe (Shredded Zucchini Salad)

Courgettes Zucchini

We've got just three summer squash plants this year, and gosh, have they've supplied our family well. I harvest one or two good-sized courgettes (zucchini) every other day and I've been cooking all our family favourites on a regular basis (see recipe links at the end of the post).

I've also been discovering new and novel ways of using the zucchini. Nigel Slater's courgettes with dill cream were a huge hit (bigger with adults than kids, I must admit), as was this (raw, gluten-free and vegan) courgette/zucchini salad from BBC Good Food. The grated courgette salad was new as well as novel - although I had made zucchini "carpaccio" salads before, I had never shredded/grated a courgette for a salad.

Recommended!

Suvikõrvits. Courgette. Zucchini.
One of this year's prolific summer squashes in our garden. 

Shredded courgette salad
Adapted from BBC Good Food
(Särtsakas suvikõrvitsasalat)
Serves 4 to 6

Suvikõrvitsasalat. Zucchini salad. Courgette salad.

3 - 4 young courgettes/zucchini (about 1 kg in total)
3 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 Tbsp poppy seeds or black onion seeds or black sesame seeds
1 garlic clove, finely grated
juice of half a lime
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Rinse the courgettes, grate/shred coarsely (I used the coarse grater blade of my food processor). Put the grated courgettes into a large colander, sprinkle with about a teaspoonful of salt, mix gently. Leave for 30 minutes, to get rid of excess water. Then squeeze with your hands to get rid of even more liquid and transfer into a large bowl.

Dress the courgettes with olive oil, garlic, lime juice, poppy seeds and black pepper. Toss to combine and serve.

More favourite courgette/zucchini recipes:
Courgette and Parmesan tart @ Nami-Nami
Courgette cake with lemon frosting (Lemon and Zucchini Cake) @ Nami-Nami
Oven-baked zucchini and tomatoes with feta @ Nami-Nami
Estonian courgette and cheese soup (Zucchini and Cheese Soup) @ Nami-Nami
Greek Zucchini Pie (Kourkouto) @ Nami-Nami
Roasted marrow with garlic and herbs @ Nami-Nami

See also:
Zucchini cake with crunchy lemon glaze @ David Lebovitz
Zucchini stuffed with freekeh @ Sarah Melamed
Zucchini bake with feta and thyme @ Kalyn's Kitchen
Zucchini and carrot ribbons @ A Veggie Venture
Zucchini, pancetta and farro salad @ Lucullian Delights

    Saturday, July 06, 2013

    Georgian recipes: green beans with herbs and garlicky yogurt (mtsvane lobios borani)

    Rohelised oad ürtide ja jogurtikastmega / Mtsvane lobios borani / Green beans with herbs and garlicky yoghurt

    It's a season for green beans (aka French beans, fine beans, string beans), though I'm getting my beans from the market stall just now and not from my garden. Back in April, when all decent gardeners were sowing their beans, I was in Tuscany with my dear K. and our three small kids, so some of my vegetables will be ripening later than usually this year, as they were planted or sown later than they ideally should have been planted or sown :)

    Today's recipe is a flavoursome Georgian (= the country in the Caucasus region, not the state in the US :)) vegetable dish, with loads of herbs and a garlicky yoghurt dressing. Simple to make (and during winter you can cheat by using frozen beans) and a great way to use a great variety of herbs from your allotment or backyard.

    Enjoy!

    You'll find all of Nami-Nami's Georgian recipes here.

    French beans
    Green beans (haricots verts) at a Lyon market in France, August 2009

    Georgian-style green beans with herbs and garlicky yogurt
    (Rohelised oad ürtide ja küüslauguse jogurtikastmega)
    Serves four to six

    450 g green beans
    1 onion, chopped
    4 Tbsp butter
    0.25 tsp ground cinnamon
    a pinch of ground cloves
    freshly ground black pepper
    finely chopped fresh herbs, including (purple) basil, tarragon, coriander/cilantro, dill, savory

    Yoghurt dressing:
    250 g strained Greek yoghurt
    1 small garlic glove, minced
    0.5 tsp salt

    Garnish:
    1 Tbsp fresh spearmint, finely chopped

    Trim the beans, cut into 2 or 3 and blanch in a salted water for a few minutes or until al dente. Drain. (If you use frozen beans, then these are pre-cooked and just need to be defrosted.)

    Heat the butter on a large frying pan/skillet, add the chopped onion and sauté till translucent. Add the pre-cooked beans, then season with cinnamon, cloves, pepper. Fry gently on a medium heat, stirring every now and then, until the beans are fully cooked and soft.

    At the same time prepare the yoghurt dressing. Place the minced garlic clove and salt into a bowl and pound into a paste (or simply use a fine Microplane zester/grater). Mix with yoghurt. Put aside.

    Add the chopped herbs to the cooked green beans, toss thoroughly and heat for another minute. Transfer the herbed beans into a serving bowl, drizzle the yoghurt dressing on top.

    Garnish with mint. Serve hot or at room temperature.

    Tuesday, June 25, 2013

    Sautéed Swiss chard aka warm mangold salad recipe

    Sauteéd swiss chard. Lehtpeet.

    We had a looong winter this year, and for a while it seemed that Spring has decided not to pay us a visit this year. It did, if a bit late. And then, suddenly, the summer arrived. Surprisingly, my vegetable garden seems to like this long winter/late spring/sudden summer a lot. My salad leaves and leafy greens (kale, Swiss chard/mangold, sprouting broccoli) are really thriving, the radishes gave us a bumper crop. The tomatoes, beets, carrots - you name it - all seem to be having a great time! And we'll surely be eating lots of Swiss chard this summer!

    Here's my latest Swiss chard crop:

    Mangold. Swiss chard. Lehtpeet.

    My first mangold dish of the season? This Swiss chard, ricotta and tomato bake, of course. However, then I was a bit lost again, as I couldn't decide which one to pick from those 20 recipes on my Estonian site. I turned my (well, Nami-Nami's) Facebook fans (all 17 000 + of them!) for their favourite Swiss chard/mangold recipes, and one of them, Nelli, recommended this salad recipe on Shelly's QuickQuickYumYum blog.

    Thank you, Nelli - and Shelly!

    Warm mangold salad
    (Soe lehtpeedisalat)
    Serves 4 as a side dish

    Soe lehtpeedisalat. Warm mangold salad. Swiss chard with spices.

    a large bunch of Swiss chard/mangold

    Dressing:
    2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
    3 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
    1 tsp sweet paprika powder
    1 tsp cumin seeds, toasted and slightly crushed
    salt
    half a lemon, juiced

    Rinse the mangold leaves, leave to soak in cold water for 5-10 minutes. Drain and cut into strips about 1 cm wide (just under half an inch).
    Heat a large wok or frying pan, add the mangold, a few spoonfuls of water and heat for 5 minutes. Stir every now and then.
    Mix the dressing ingredients (except lemon juice). Pour over the mangold leaves and continue sautéing for another 5-7 minutes, until chard is soft. Remove from the heat, drizzle with lemon juice, taste for seasoning (add more salt, if necessary).
    Serve hot or cold.

    More Swiss chard recipes:
    Dalmatian chard with garlic and olive oil @ Maninas: Food Matters
    Kartul lehtmangoldiga @ Elust siin ja seal (recipe in Estonian)
    Hautatud lehtpeet @ Pisike ja Pisut Segi (recipe in Estonian)
    Swiss chard recipes @ Simply Recipes
    Swiss chard recipes @ Kalyn's Kitchen


    Wednesday, June 19, 2013

    Smoked salmon and spinach quiche

    Spinati-suitsulõhepirukas / Spinach and smoked salmon quiche

    Some seven years ago, when my dear K. and I met for a long weekend date in Paris. One morning we had a late breakfast at Bread & Roses, a lovely deli-cafe near the Luxemburg gardens. I cannot recall exactly what else we had, but we definitely had a really lovely smoked salmon and spinach quiche. I even wrote about it back in 2006, after baking it in Edinburgh (yes, back then I was still living in the beautiful capital of Scotland, and K. and I were having a long-distance relationship. We had no idea what life had in store for us, and definitely didn't think we'd be happy parents to three little kids in 2013 :))

    The quiche is still a favourite with us, always bringing back nice memories of those promising spring days in Paris. I've modified the recipe a little over the years, and here's the adapted recipe for you, my dear readers.

    Smoked salmon and spinach quiche
    (Spinati-suitsulõhepirukas)
    Serves six

    NOTE that an American cup is 240 ml, an ounce is about 28 grams and 100 grams of butter is 7 Tbsp - in case you need to convert the measurements! 

    IMG_5716.jpg

    All-butter crust:
    180 g all-purpose flour (300 ml)
    100 g cold butter, cubed
    a pinch of salt
    2-3 Tbsp cold water

    (Or use your favourite pâte brisée/shortcrust pastry recipe; you'll need about 300 grams).

    Filling:
    150 g cold-smoked salmon or trout, chopped
    300 to 450 g frozen chopped spinach, defrosted and squeezed dry
    300 to 400 ml double cream/whipping cream/heavy cream
    3 large eggs
    100 g cheese, shredded
    salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Start by making the pie crustIf using your hands, then rub the butter into the flour (with salt added) until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. If using a food processor, then place flour and salt into a food processor and pulse until combined. Add the cold butter and pulse until you have a mixture that resembles a coarse meal.

    Add a spoonful or two of cold water and pulse again, until the mixture just clumps together. Mix until the the dough forms a ball. Press the dough into a greased or non-stick springform pan, 24 cm (9'') or 26 cm (10'') in diameter, going slightly higher up on the sides when using the smaller cake pan.

    Place the pan into fridge or freezer for about 30 minutes.
    Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 200 C (400 F). 

    Bake the pie shell in the middle of the oven for about 15-20 minutes, until golden and beginning to pull away from the sides of the pan. 

    For the filling, whisk together the cream, eggs, salt and pepper. Add the chopped fish, spinach and shredded cheese. Spoon the filling into the partially baked tart shell and continue baking for about 30-40 minutes, until the filling is set and golden brown. 

    Cut into wedges and serve either hot, at room temperature or cold. A nice green salad on the side would be nice. 

    Smoked salmon and spinach quiche. Suitsulõhe-spinatipirukas.

    Friday, June 07, 2013

    A great starter recipe: Shrimp and cucumber salad with mint vinaigrette


    Photo by Juta Kübarsepp for the May 2013 issue of Kodu ja Aed ("Home and Garden", an Estonian monthly)

    Back in early April, when I was trying to decide what starter would suit my Mother's Day menu spread in the next magazine, a FB-friend mentioned Jamie Oliver's shrimp and cucumber salad in a totally different context. I'm not a huge fan of shrimps - although I'm getting there, slowly - and I never figured out which Jamie's recipe my FB-friend was talking about. However, I came across this shrimp and cucumber salad recipe by Ellie Krieger, which sounded pretty good. After some minor tweaking I settled for this extremely light and healthy - and beautifully elegant, don't you think? - salad that works brilliantly as a starter.

    Highly recommended. And let me warn you - I've witnessed people with impecable table manners drinking the minty-cucumber-shrimp "juice"from the bottom of the glass - it's so good :)

    Shrimp salad with cucumber and mint
    (Kurgi-krevetisalat mündiga)
    Serves 4 to 6 as a starter
    Adapted from Ellie Krieger

       Photo by Juta Kübarsepp for the May 2013 issue of Kodu ja Aed ("Home and Garden", an Estonian monthly)

    400 g cooked shrimps (peeled weight)
    1 long cucumber
    a large handful of fresh mint
    2 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
    1 Tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
    1 Tbsp finely grated lemon zest
    sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Drain the shrimps thoroughly. (If using frozen shrimps/prawns, then defrost them slowly overnight in the fridge).
    Rinse the cucumber, then peel and cut into small cubes. If the seeds are rather large, then scoop the soft seeded part out first.
    Chop the fresh mint leaves finely.
    In a bowl, mix the shrimps, cucumber and mint. Drizzle with olive oil and lemon juice, sprinkle with lemon zest and season with salt and pepper. Toss everything gently together.
    Serve at once or macerate in the fridge for a few hours.

    Similar recipes:
    Kalyn added Sriracha sauce to Ellie's version and got Spicy shrimp and cucumber salad with lemon, mint and cumin
    Burmese shrimp and cucumber salad @ Girl Cooks World
    Shrimp salad on cucumber slices @ Gina's Skinny Recipes
    Shrimp and cucumber salad with dill vinaigrette @ Epicurious
    Shrimp and cucumber salad with horseradish mayonnaise @ Bon Appetit
    Seared shrimp with cucumber salad @ Martha Stewart

    Monday, May 13, 2013

    Recipe for a carrot cake with cream cheese frosting

    Carrot and cream cheese cake / Porgandi-toorjuustukook

    My beloved maternal grandmother Senta turned 93 last week. NINETY-THREE. The digits 9 and 3 bother feature in my current age as well, meaning I have known my dear grandma for 39 years in total. She gave birth and raised five children - 4 girls and 1 boy. Now, at the age of 93, her family consists of 5 kids, 11 grandkids, 11 great-grandchildren and one great-great-granddaughter.

    She had to feed and raise the kids, run the whole household consisting of cows, sheep, poultry (all that in addition to having to milk all the cows in the big sovhoosilaut or a collective farm). And once the kids were all adults, she regularly had to take care of her 11 grandchildren who spent weeks at the countryside during each summer. A remarkable woman, and it's only recently that her mental and physical health has been failing her. She's a role model to me in so many ways (so is my paternal grandmother Adeele, who'll be 92 in September, but in very different way :)).

    Here's a photo of my grandma and our youngest child, taken at the birthday party last week. They're 92,5 years apart:
    Vanaema Senta (93) ja Karoliine (6 k)

    My grandmother has been living with my parents for a few years now, and my mum asked if I could bring a cake to the party. Of course I could, and I decided to make this layered carrot and cream cheese cake that some of you were asking for and about after seeing it at Nami-Nami's 2013 Easter Brunch (see overview here). Here's the version I made last week, and before you ask, my two older kids were in charge of decorating the cake. That's why all the chopped pistachios ended up the way they did :D

     photo (45)

    The other two photos were made during the Easter, when I baked three carrot cake layers. The recipe below - and the cake for my grandma's birthday - had four cake layers - it's easier and more layers look more festive.

    PS I've mentioned my grandma Senta on several occasions. Here's her recipe for an egg and smoked ham sauce, and she's the co-star in my post about the fermented oat flummery. She's also behind every story about Paluküla - the village where I spent all my childhood summers together with some of my cousins.

    Carrot cake with cream cheese frosting
    (Porganditort toorjuustukreemiga)
    Serves 12 to 16

     Porgandi-toorjuustukook / Carrot and cream cheese cake

    Carrot cake layers:
    500 g carrots
    4 large eggs
    250 g caster sugar (about 300 ml)
    a pinch of salt
    240 g all-purpose flour/plain flour (400 ml)
    1 tsp baking powder
    2 tsp vanilla sugar or extract
    100 g vegetable oil (about 150 ml)

    Lime and cream cheese frosting:
    400 g cream cheese, at room temperature
    300 g thick sour cream
    100 g caster sugar (just over 100 ml)
    2 tsp vanilla sugar or extract
    2 limes, zested and juiced

    Preheat the oven to 200 C/390 F.

    Carrot cake layers: peel the carrots and grate finely.

    Measure flour, baking powder and vanilla sugar (if using) into a small bowl, give the mixture a stir.

    In a large bowl, whisk the eggs with sugar, salt and vanilla extract (if using) until thick and foamy. Gently fold in the oil, then the grated carrots and finally the dry ingredients.

    Line two large oven sheets with parchment paper/baking paper (mine are about 32 x 35 cm/12 x 14 inches)*. Spoon half of the batter onto one baking sheet, and the other half onto the other.

    Bake, one at a time, in the middle of the preheated oven for about 10 minutes, until light golden brown and lightly springy to the touch. Remove from the oven and bake the other carrot cake layer as well.

    Let cool completely.

    Lime and cream cheese frosting:

    Combine cream cheese, sour cream, sugar, vanilla and lime zest and juice in a bowl, and whisk thoroughly (it's easiest to use an electric whisk here).

    Putting the cake together:

    Cut both carrot cake sheets into two, so you'll end up with four rectangles. Place one carrot cake layer onto your serving tray, spread with one-fourth of the cream cheese frosting. Repeat three more times.

    Garnish the cake with chopped pistachios and fresh mint or lemon balm leaves.

    The flavour improves if you let it stand for a 3-4 hours in a cool place.

    * If you want to bake three separare layers, then I used a 25x30 cm pan (10x12 inches), known as långpanna in Scandinavia. 

    Tuesday, April 16, 2013

    Recipe for buckwheat with leeks and soy sauce

    Tatar porru ja sojaga / Buckwheat groats with leeks and soy sauce

    What's your standby side dish? Pasta? Rice? Couscous? Bulghur? Potatoes? While these figure most frequently in our kitchen as well, then we also have buckwheat about once a fortnight or so. It's easy to cook and the slightly nutty flavour of this pseudo-grain complements quite a few dishes nicely.

    Despite its name, buckwheat is not a wheat nor a cereal grain, but belongs to the same family with rhubarb and sorrel. The flavour is hearty and earthy, and it's quite a health food, being nutritionally high in all eight amino acids, calcium, vitamins B and E, and low-GI.

    Just some years ago, the buckwheat meant just three things to most people - the Japanese soba noodles, Russian blini and the Breton crepes - all made with buckwheat flour. The hulled and roasted buckwheat kernels - buckwheat groats (kasha) - didn't figure at all, unless you lived somewhere in the Northern and Eastern outskirts of Europe. The Flavour Bible (2009), an excellent compendium of what-goes-with-what written for the American audience, doesn't even mention buckwheat. Heidi Swanson briefly mentions buckwheat flour in her Super Natural Cooking (2007), and suggests combining it with buckwheat honey and tart berries (cranberries, cherries, and such like) - there are no recipes in her book, though you'll find many on her excellent blog, 101 Cookbooks.

    And then recipes started popping up here and there. Kim Boyce's Good to the Grain: Baking with Whole-Grain Flours has a great choice of buckwheat recipes, though all using the flour, not the groats (her buckwheat-poppyseed sablés were lovely!). Estonian-American food writer and nutritionist Marika Blossfeldt has several buckwheat recipes in her Essential Nourishment, including kasha casserole and vegetable soup with kasha. Oh, and yours truly has been sharing her favourite buckwheat recipes over the years - see links below :)

    2013 seems to be the year of the buckwheat, at least the year of the buckwheat becoming more and more  mainstream.

    The Wall Street Journal started the year with Buck-Wild for Buckwheat, including a recipe for San Francisco's Tartine Bakery's buckwheat hazelnut sablés (January 4th, 2013).  The Kitchn praised it recently (Buckwheat: The New Baking Star, January 15, 2013, and Buckwheat for breakfast! 5 stunning ways to fall in love with buckwheat, February 26, 2013). The Guardian followed suit - one of the hottest chefs in Britain Yotam Ottolenghi shared his recipes for buckwheat polenta, and polenta and rice salad with dried cherries and hazelnuts (March 15, 2013). I'm sure more will follow.

    Here's a simple buckwheat dish I love making for myself and the kids. Great way to use up leftover cooked buckwheat, though I admit I often cook buckwheat in order to have some left over for this particular dish. Note that it's vegan - and if you use tamari soy sauce, then it's also suitable for those avoiding gluten (buckwheat itself is gluten-free, despite the name).

    If you're a fellow buckwheat lover, you may want to check out the Buckwheat Recipes Pinterest board, where you'll find 40+ great pins leading you to some wonderful foodbloggers' recipes. If you'd love to contribute to that board, then just leave your Pinterest handle in the comments and I'll send you an invite!



    Buckwheat with leeks and soy sauce
    (Tatar porrulauguga)
    Source: L. Virkus, A. Kang, H. Ilves "Wok-toidud" (2002, in Estonian), slightly adapted
    Serves 4

    Tatar porru ja sojaga / Buckwheat groats with leeks and soy sauce

    2 Tbsp oil
    1 large leek, white and pale green part only
    400 g cooked buckwheat (just under a pound)*
    3 Tbsp soy sauce, or to taste

    Halve the leek lengthwise, rinse off any dirt, if necessary. Cut into thin slices.

    Heat oil in a large non-stick frying pan/skillet over moderate heat. Add the leeks and sauté for a minute.

    Turn up the heat, add the cooked buckwheat and fry, stirring constantly, until the buckwheat is heated through.  Season to taste with soy sauce and serve.

    * To cook the buckwheat groats, heat some oil in a saucepan, add the groats and give them a quite stir for a few minutes. Add boiling water (the ratio is 2 parts groats to 5 parts water) bring to the boil. Reduce the heat, cover and simmer for about 15-20 minutes. Season to taste with salt and fluff up with a fork before serving. NOTE that I prefer buying raw groats - if you only have that dark kasha available, you can skip the toasting bit.

    More buckwheat recipes here on Nami-Nami:
    Buckwheat with beets and dill
    Cabbage and buckwheat kasha
    Buckwheat kasha with mince
    Warm buckwheat and mushroom salad
    Buckwheat with beef liver
    Buckwheat and mushrooms casserole

    Tuesday, March 19, 2013

    Beets with cumin seeds and tomatoes

    India peedihautis / Beetroot with cumin and tomatoes / Peedid tomati ja vürtsköömnetega

    Regular readers of this blog know about my fondness of beetroot. I'd like to think that I have a pretty good selection and variety of beet recipes here on Nami-Nami. You'll find recipes for beetroot cream cheese spread with horseradish, beetroot and blue cheese risottoGeorgian beetroot and walnut salad, Persian beet borani, beet and feta quiche, a wonderful vegan beetroot borschtbeetroot pestobeet and blue cheese muffinsbeetroot pickled eggs, beetroot and goat cheese soup, beet and ginger cake, beet bruschetta, raw beetroot salad, beet and potato pie, a layered beet and smoked salmon salad, dashing coconut and beet soup here on Nami-Nami - and this is just the tip of the iceberg!

    Yet I discovered something totally new - and exciting - last weekend. It all began when my dear hubby told me that he had discovered a long-forgotten pile of beets in our garage that also doubles as a very cold larder. And these were not just beets that he unearthed, but some lovely Chioggia, Golden Burpee and small long beets grown by yours truly last summer. They were perfectly crisp and happy, as they had been hiding themselves in a box of sand destined to entertain our five chicken :)

    Beets, the last ones from my garden. Oma aia viimased peedid


    They needed a great recipe. I made actually two great dishes - a beetroot and chocolate cake (using raw, not cooked beets), and then this recipe for an Indian-style beetroot dish that I came across on Delicious Magazine (UK) website. The recipe was by Tom Norrington-Davies, who credits the Indian food guru Madhur Jaffrey for the original recipe. Tom Norrington-Davies writes that he loves making it "for barbecues and serve it with lamb chops or sausages. It is good hot or cold".

    A very novel way of using beets, I thought, and made this dish for our leisurely and long afternoon meal on Sunday. I tweaked the recipe - I couldn't see the point of squeezing the hell, sorry, liquid, out of the canned tomatoes, only to replace it with water later, but otherwise I followed Tom's recipe.

    Our test group of the day - four adults and three kids - were all happy with the result, and if you're into sweet-and-sour flavour combinations, you'll love it. Just like Tom, I can see serving this with grilled meats during the summer, or as a vegetable side dish during the winter.


    If you're a fellow beet lover, you may want to check out the Beautiful Beet Recipes Pinterest board, where you'll find 100+ great pins leading you to some wonderful foodbloggers' recipes. If you'd love to contribute to that board, then just leave your Pinterest handle in the comments and I'll send you an invite!

    Beetroot with cumin seeds and tomatoes
    (India peedihautis vürtsköömnete ja tomatitega)
    Serves 6

    400 g canned crushed tomatoes
    about 500 g small beets
    3 Tbsp vegetable oil
    1 heaped tsp of cumin seeds
    1 garlic clove, chopped
    2 medium onions, chopped
    0.5 tsp dried chilli flakes
    1 tsp salt
    1 Tbsp red wine vinegar or juice of 1 small lemon
    a generous pinch of sugar

    Peel the beets, cut into smaller chunks or wedges, depending on the shape of your beets.

    Heat the oil in a medium saucepan, add the cumin seeds, onion and chilli flakes and sauté gently for about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and fry for another few minutes, until the onions are starting to brown a little.
    Add the beets, canned tomatoes, vinegar/lemon juice and salt and sugar. Bring the ingredients to a simmer, then cover and cook for 40-60 minutes, until the beets are tender.

    Uncover, season to taste. Turn up the heat to thicken the sauce a little, if that seems necessary.

    India peedihautis / Beetroot with cumin and tomatoes / Peedid tomati ja vürtsköömnetega

    Monday, March 18, 2013

    Gigantes plaki aka Greek giant baked beans

    Gigantes plaki / Kreeka moodi hiidoad tomatis / Baked giant beans with tomato sauce

    Gigantes plaki (yigandes plaki, γίγαντες πλακί) is a popular Greek taverna dish, consisting of oven-baked fasolia gigante ("giant") beans with tomato sauce. Gigantes are occasionally also called elephant beans (elephantes) - which is the name reserved for extra large giant beans :) The gigantes are native to Greece, and the ones from Kastoria are especially prized, as well as the ones from Florina and Drama regions - all three have the PGI-designation or are recognised by the EU as products of Protected Geographical Indication.

    If you're in Estonia, look out for Garrido gigantes (either canned or dried, offered by Kaupmees) or Palirria (large cans, offered by HellenicTrade - these are the ones I've been using). Elsewhere, look for the jumbo beans/elephant beans/gigantes at Greek and Middle Eastern markets.  Amazon.com sells Kastoria giant beans online, and there's also a canned variety available. You can use dried or canned cannellini or lima beans instead, but you'll need to adjust cooking times accordingly.

    Serve as part of a mezedes spread, or spoon onto a slice of leavened white bread. I sometimes crumble some decent feta cheese on top at the end of the baking time :P

    Giant baked beans, Greek style
    A recipe from BBC Good Food (September 2009), slightly modified
    Serves 8
     Gigantes plaki / Kreeka moodi hiidoad tomatis / Baked giant beans with tomato sauce

    400 g dried giant or butter beans or 3x400 g canned beans
    3 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil (Greek, of course)
    1 large onion, finely chopped
    2 garlic cloves, minced
    2 Tbsp concentrated tomato paste/pureé
    2x400 g cans crushed tomatoes
    1 Tbsp honey
    1 Tbsp dried oregano
    couple of pinches of ground cinnamon
    sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

    To garnish:
    2 Tbsp finely chopped flat-leaf/Italian parsley

    If using dried beans: soak the beans overnight in plenty of water. Drain, rinse, drain again. Place in a large pan covered with fresh water. Bring to the boil, reduce the heat, then simmer gently for 50-60 minutes, until the beans are tender but not too soft. Drain.

    If using canned beans: tip the beans onto a large colander, rinse with cold water. Drain and put aside.

    Heat the oven to 180C/350F.

    Make the sauce: heat the olive oil in a large frying pan over moderately low heat. Add the onion and fry for about 7-8 minutes. Add the garlic and fry for another 2-3 minutes, until the onion is translucent.

    Add the tomato puree, sauté for a minute. Add the rest of the ingredients (except the beans) and cook for 2-3 minutes. Season generously with honey, oregano, salt and pepper, then tip in the drained cooked beans.

    Transfer the mixture into a large ovenproof dish - I love using my lasagne pan - and bake for approximately one hour. Don't cover and don't stir! The dish is ready when the tomato sauce has thickened and the beans are soft and flavoursome.

    Remove from the oven, cool a little. Scatter the parsley on top and drizzle with some extra olive oil.

    Gigantes plaki / Hiidoad tomatikastmes

    Similar recipes:
    Gigantes sto Fourno @ Kalofagas
    Greek style baked beans @ Souvlaki for the Soul
    Gigantes in savory tomato sauce @ Mediterranean Cooking in Alaska
    Twice-cooked gigante beans with garlic and feta @ Kalyn's Kitchen
    Gigantes plaki (Greek baked beans) @ Closet Cooking
    Gigantes plaki: Greek baked beans @ Choosy Beggars
    Gigandes plaki by Simon Rimmer
    Fasolia Gigantes Plaki: Big Greek Beans baked in a Bodacious Red Sauce @ Sortachef: One Hot Cat in a Woodfired Kitchen
    Gigantes plaki @ Jono & Jules do Food & Wine
    Gigantes plaki @ Life is Like a Dumpling
    Greek baked beans (Gigantes plaki) @ the taste space – steam, bake, boil, shake!
    Greek baked beans @ Eats Well with Others

    Tuesday, March 12, 2013

    It's Pasta Time: Tagliatelle with creamy spinach and pan-fried salmon

    Makaronid kreemja lõhe-spinatikastmega / Tagliatelle with pan-seared salmon and creamy spinach sauce

    One of my favourite pasta dishes recently is this clean-looking pasta (usually tagliatelle, but I've also used linguine) with seared salmon, fresh spinach and cream, with a light lemon kick. For an extra quick version I've used smoked salmon, but using fresh salmon is much wallet-friendlier and has more kid-appeal as well. Also, it's a great way to use that thinner tail-end of the fish that I usually put aside when baking salmon in the oven.

    Note that there's no Parmesan cheese in the dish!!!

    Tagliatelle with creamy spinach and pan-fried salmon
    (Makaronid praetud lõhe ja spinatiga)
    Serves 4

     400 g tagliatelle pasta (linguine or spaghetti would work as well)
    water and salt, for cooking pasta

    400 g salmon or trout fillet
    butter, for frying
    100 g fresh baby spinach leaves, rinsed
    about a cup of double cream
    a handful of fresh parsley
    1 lemon, zested
    sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Bring a large pot of water into a rolling boil, season with salt and cook the pasta al dente according to the packet instructions.

    Meanwhile heat the butter on a large frying pan over moderate heat. Place the fish onto the pan, skin-side up, and fry for 3-4 minutes. Flip over and cook for another 2-3 minutes. (The fish will be still undercooked, but you'll cook it further in a minute).

    Remove the fish fillet from the frying pan: Pan-seared trout / Praetud forellifilee

    Using two forks, break the fish into bite-size chunks: Pan-seared trout / Praetud forellifilee

    Heat some more butter on the frying pan, add the rinsed spinach leaves and cook till wilted.

    Add the cream, season with black pepper, parsley and lemon zest. Return the fish to the pan and simmer for a minute or two.


    Drain the pasta, toss with the sauce and serve immediately. 

    Makaronid kreemja lõhe-spinatikastmega / Tagliatelle with pan-seared salmon and creamy spinach sauce

    Similar recipes:

    Wednesday, February 27, 2013

    Grilled mackerel with potato and chorizo hash

    Grilled mackerel with potato and chorizo hash / Grillitud makrell chorizo-kartuipadjal

    Doesn't this look like something wonderfully light and spring-like? We've had couple of beautifully sunny days here in Estonia recently and I do believe now that this looooong and greyish winter will end, eventually.

    Here's a simple lunch or dinner idea, using new potatoes, cooking chorizo (you can choose a spicy or milder one, it's up to you) and fresh mackerel. Flavoursome and filling!

    Grilled mackerel with potato and chorizo hash
    (Grillitud makrell chorizo-kartulipadjal)
    Adapted from DeliciousMagazine.co.uk
    Serves 4

    500 g new potatoes, skin on
    2 whole mackerels, filleted into 4 either by you or your fishmonger
    2 Tbsp olive oil
    juice of 1 lemon
    1 garlic clove, crushed
    a small bunch of flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
    100-150 g cooking chorizo, cut into smaller chunks
    salt and black pepper

    Wash the potatoes thoroughly, then parboil in salted water until just tender. Drain and cool slightly.

    Put the fish fillets into a shallow dish. Mix together the olive oil, lemon juice, crushed garlic, chopped parsley. Pour over the fish, then season generously with salt and pepper.

    Grilled mackerel with potato and chorizo hash / Grillitud makrell chorizo-kartuipadjal

    Peel the cooled potatoes, chop into smaller pieces.

    Pre-heat the grill to high.

    Prepare the potato and chorizo hash. Heat a large frying pan and cook the chopped chorizo over a high heat for about 2 minutes or until the oil starts to run. Add the chopped potatoes and cook for another 8-10 minutes, stirring every now and then, until the chorizo and potatoes are golden and crisp.

    When the potatoes and chorizo are cooking, lift the mackerel fillets from the marinade. Place onto a grill rack and grill for 7-8 minutes, until the skin is golden and the flesh is cooked through.

    To serve, spoon the potato and chorizo onto warmed plates, place the fish fillets on top, drizzle with some herb oil and serve immediately.

    Grilled mackerel with potato and chorizo hash / Grillitud makrell chorizo-kartuipadjal

    Wednesday, January 23, 2013

    Crunchy carrot salad with salted peanuts

    Krõmpsuv porgandisalat soolapähklitega / Crunchy carrot and salted peanut salad

    What's your best time-saving tip in the kitchen?

    Here's one of mine. Lately I've developed the habit of peeling a big batch - about a kilogram/two pounds or so - of carrots at once. Using my food processor, I grate half of them finely, to be used in soups and various raw salads, meat-based pasta sauces, as well as carrot cakes or muffins. The other half I cut into thick julienne or thin batons or shred coarsely, using either the food processor or my trusty Benriner mandoline. These will end up in stir-fries or in cooked salads. The prepared carrots are simply waiting in the fridge, packed air-tight, of course, to be used as needed. We definitely eat more carrots because of this simple pre-planning, and this can only be a good thing, no?

    Here's a lovely warm carrot salad using the bigger carrot pieces.

    Krõmpsuv porgandisalat soolapähklitega / Crunchy carrot and salted peanut salad
    The combination of carrots and salted peanuts is from Nigella Lawson's book Forever Summer. The trick of giving the carrots a quick microwave oven treatment is from Harumi Kurihara's lovely book Harumi's Japanese CookingHarumi, also known as the Martha Stewart or Delia Smith of Japan (depending whether you're in the US or UK), uses this microwaving method to soften the vegetables in her carrot and tuna salad recipe.

    If you haven't got a microwave oven or prefer not using it, then simply stir-fry the carrots quickly in some of the groundnut or olive oil to warm and soften them slightly. Or make this a raw salad instead, though then I would grate the carrots finely and chop the peanuts first.

    Crunchy carrots with peanuts
    (Krõmpsuv porgandisalat soolapähklitega)
    Serves 4

     Krõmpsuv porgandisalat soolapähklitega / Crunchy carrot and salted peanut salad

    400-450 g carrots
    100 g roasted and salted peanuts
    2 Tbsp groundnut or olive oil
    2 Tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
    a few drops of sesame oil
    fresh (Italian/flat-leaf) parsley, finely chopped

    Peel the carrots and cut into 5 mm julienne-sticks or shred coarsely (I used my food processor for that). Place into a microwave-safe glass bowl and blast them in the microwave for 90 seconds to slightly soften and warm them.

    Take the bowl out of the oven, drizzle with olive oil and sesame oil as well as lemon juice, then sprinkle parsley on top. Toss the carrots gently to combine with these ingredients.

    Serve warm or at room temperature.

    More carrot salad recipes:
    Warm Gingered Carrot Salad with Feta Cheese @ Nami-Nami
    Moroccan Carrot Salad @ Nami-Nami
    Carrots with African spices @ Nami-Nami
    Carrots with African spices @ A Veggie Venture
    Apricot-glazed carrots with ginger and curry @ Kalyn's Kitchen
    Spicy shredded carrot salad @ Kalyn's Kitchen
    Orange Blossom Carrot Salad @ Simply Recipes
    Classic Carrot Salad @ Simply Recipes
    Beautiful carrot and peanut salad @ Trembom
    Caribbean carrot salad @ The Leftover Queen
    Peanuts and carrots @ Nami-Nami (same recipe, posted back in 2006)