Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Glory Bowl

When Canadian chef Shelley Adams invented this recipe some 20 years ago, she probably had no idea what a runaway sensation it would be! Named after a back-country North American ski bowl, this delicious combination of ultra-nutritious foods is the single best salad/main dish I’ve ever had. No one pays me to say stuff like this … I’m completely sincere. If your local grocer doesn’t stock nutritional yeast flakes, you’ll find them in the bulk foods section of a health foods store, or online. 


Glory Bowl: 


To Prepare the Salad:


2 tbsp. (3o mL) canola oil

2 c. (500 mL) cubed extra-firm tofu

8 c. (2 L) hot brown rice (see Note

2 c. (500 mL) grated carrots, peeled, raw

2 c. (500 mL) grated beets, peeled, raw

2 c. (500 mL) packed baby spinach leaves, washed, stemmed, uncooked

2 c. (500 mL) slivered almonds, toasted


Ready to serve: Glory Bowl

In large skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat. Sauté tofu, stirring frequently until brown and crispy, about 10 min. Drain on paper towel. Divide rice among 8 bowls; drizzle each with 1 tbsp. (15 mL) dressing. Top each bowl with tofu, carrots, beets, spinach and almonds, drizzling each serving with an additional 3 tbsp. (45 mL) dressing.


Note: If you need to, see How to Cook Rice, with reference to the section on brown rice.


To Prepare the Dressing:


1/2 c. (125 c.) nutritional yeast flakes

1/3 c. (0.333 mL) tamari or light soy sauce

1/3 c. (0.333 mL) apple cider vinegar

1/3 c. (0.333 mL) water

2 tbsp. (30 mL) tahini

2 medium-sized cloves garlic, peeled and crushed

1-1/2 c. (375 mL) canola oil


In blender, purée nutritional yeast flakes, tamari or light soy sauce, vinegar, water, tahini and garlic. With motor running on low, add oil in slow, steady stream. Blend until smooth. Serves 8 grown-ups or 12 intelligent, nutritionally aware children.

 

(Tip: You can make this excellent dressing in advance. Covered and refrigerated, it keeps up to a week.)

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Another! Lasagna Recipe from Cookbook Star Margo Oliver

Librarian extraordinaire Nathan has been researching, again! And what he’s found will interest lasagna lovers everywhere. Although I’ve been busy in my kitchen, I’ve also been busy with a large project that’s eating up the hours, weeks, and months. 


With a brain the size of a pea pod, I can’t blog and chew gum at the same time. 


Nathan to the rescue with yet another Margo Oliver lasagna recipe a blog reader requested. Says Nathan: “Always happy to do digging for things like this. We don’t get as many fun reference inquiries as we used to anymore …”


So remember your local library and librarians as an excellent source for those old recipes you’re seeking. This oldie but goodie dates to 1967:




Sunday, March 21, 2021

Margo Oliver’s Lasagna

 What day izzit? What month? What year?

I’ve been on a working sabbatical from this blog for a couple of months and (considering I’ve been very, very bad and have taken several sabbaticals from the sabbatical), it looks like I’ll be a while longer. Patience, Grasshopper!


I’ve also been naughty and done a little scribbling on my second blog, but am about to take a break from that, too: https://whatsonnicolepartonsmind.blogspot.com


A reader recently left a comment asking if I could find “Margo Oliver’s Lasagna” recipe. I searched my cookbooks: Nothing. I looked online: Plenty of mentions, but I didn’t want to create (or give an existing) password to unfamiliar sites. I canvassed friends: No luck.


Being the easily distracted kind, I phoned my local library, leaving a pretty big ask on voice mail. Please find me Margo Oliver’s Lasagna recipe: Can’t find it online; can’t go to the library because of COVID; and oh, by the way, don’t have a library card. So give me 40 lashes with a wet lasagna noodle, already! 


Three days later, a Librarian-From-Heaven named Nathan sent me an email. Not only had he found one Oliver lasagna recipe, but three. This was terrific news. Margo Oliver was Canada’s Betty Crocker - famous. (As well as being the easily distracted kind, I’m the more-or-less illiterate kind, and am never quite sure the URLs I post will actually link to sites. Why my own does, I have no idea. So if you can, try this link to read about the late Oliver’s life, career, and many excellent cookbooks: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margo_Oliver


To sum up: When Darling Nathan delivered in spades, I said a quiet prayer for librarians everywhere, and thought I’d print these recipes for my anonymous reader. I sure as H-E-Double Hockey Sticks hope s/he sees this reply because I’ve taken a sabbatical from my blogging sabbatical to reprint these recipes.


As well as being the easily distracted kind, and the more-or-less illiterate kind, I’m the time-stretched kind, so am sending you the screen shots Dear Heart Nathan sent me. Don’t kvetch ... You know perfectly well how to use a magnifying glass. Because these recipes are Margo Oliver’s, you can bet your patootie they’ll be good.


Back to my sabbatical! 


https://nicoleparton.blogspot.com/2021/01/wip-honey-wip.html


xox Nicole