Showing posts with label mennonite food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mennonite food. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Pav Bhaji, a Frugal Recipe

 You know that time of the year when the tomatoes from the garden won’t stop.  This vegetable stew with slightly sweet dinner rolls to sop up the juices is a perfect way to use up tomatoes and any spare vegetables you have lying around.  



I got this recipe from Indian Healthy Recipes and I adjusted it for my family’s taste.  The Pav Bhaji spice mix that I have includes the hot chili, so I didn’t add more.



The dinner rolls are fromSally’s Baking Addiction and this is one of my favorite dinner roll recipes.  This recipe calls for whole milk which I didn’t have on hand, so I added a tablespoon of dried milk to the low fat milk I did have.

Pav Bhaji is a popular street food in Mumbai, India.  Vendors pride themselves on how much butter they use but I was conservative (stingy?) and only used a couple of tablespoons.  Enjoy!


God bless,

Pam

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Real Food and Our Children

Earlier this week I went to the grocery store and as I was picking out some watermelon I realized that there was not a seed in sight.  In fact, I have not seen a watermelon with seeds in the store for years.  Then I got to thinking that my daughter has seldom to never eaten watermelon with seeds and that is a tragedy.

First of all, seeds are the stuff of life.  While convenient to eat there is something that feels wrong about a plant that can not propagate itself without human intervention.  And what about the joys of watermelon seeds?  I remember the happiness of sitting on the porch steps with family and friends eating ice cold watermelon and spitting the seeds into the yard.  It was a great way to finish up a hot summer day of hard play.


Let's not forget the flavor of real food.  Food made from scratch with fresh ingredients tastes so much better than processed food.  How many children know what real mac n cheese tastes like?  A friend of mine made homemade mac n cheese for some children visiting her home.  The kids were horrified that there was no bright orange powdered cheese in their bowls.  So sad; both for the children and for my friend.

Why not spend a week eating only real food?  There are quick recipes available online and in cookbooks.  I like the Moosewood cookbooks for recipes using fresh ingredients.  Go to the farmers market or produce stand and remember the joys of fresh sweet corn, instead of the starchy taste of corn that has sat in the grocery store for a week.



We owe it to our children to let them experience the flavors of real food.  It saddens me that so many of them will spend their lives eating mediocre or even bad tasting food and never know the difference.

God bless,
Pam

Friday, November 2, 2012

Buying Amish Food (Getting My Fix)

Now that I am (mostly) mobile again, yesterday I decided to treat myself to some Amish foods.  Fortunately for me, we have a small store in my city that imports food and other products in from Amish country in Pennsylvania.

The Amish Country Store is in a quaint little wood house with a small barn-like extension off of the back.  There is a Farm All Cub tractor in the yard, along with flowers, children's wagons and baskets.



When you walk inside there are worn, creaky wood floors and simple displays fill with food, drink and crafts.  Walk into the the barn area and there is a deli counter filled with meats and cheeses, refrigerators fill with other foods and a selection of pickles.

I do a lot of my Christmas stocking stuffer shopping in this store.  They always have unique candies and things that I remember from my childhood.  It is definitely a trip down memory lane.

Yesterday I bought a half sandwich for lunch, Kunzler sweet bologna, cheese curds, and Groff's smoked bacon.  Oh, and a birch beer to wash it all down.  Today I'll make myself a BLT for lunch using this special bacon (and save the drippings for pork and sauerkraut next week).

I should be good for another week or two; until I need another trip to my childhood via my taste buds.

God bless,
Pam