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Stuffed Grapevine Leaves

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This tail-end of the summer business really appeals to me. It’s this in-between summer and fall time when we seem to get the best of both worlds. Sweaters with shorts, jeans with t-shirts, less squinting while on the computer, fewer terrible runs, going to bed at 10pm without feeling nerdy (because it’s actually dark outside), I love it all. Equally great, the subtle shifts in food; soup is back, the tomatoes are still here, apples are crisp and juicy, warm breakfasts, and it’s no longer a sweat-based decision whether or not to turn your oven on.

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Cozying right into ‘pre-fall’, my oven is back in action and I’m making one of my favourite things. Just like this special time of year, this dish reminds me of my Mom, and embraces both really good tomatoes and the (slightly) cooler weather.

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My sisters and I grew up on a version of these stuffed grapevine leaves that were filled with lamb or beef and rice and spices. They were roughly Lebanese in origin, (although I’m not sure how classically) and baked in tomato sauce, as opposed to Greek dolmades, which are baked in lemon juice and chicken stock. What I do know for sure is when we saw the grape vine leaves on the counter (either picked from my Granny’s garden or soaking in a bowl of water), we knew we were in for a good time (and possibly some child labour).

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If you have grapevine leaves growing in your yard, you are already ahead of the game (and please send me some!). If not, they are sold in a jar in brine, like capers, and are usually in the same area of the grocery store as olives, roast peppers and canned artichokes. If you are using the jarred version, make sure you soak and rinse them well to remove the majority of the salty brine.

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In the interest of combining soul food with cancer-fighting food, I have replaced the meat with sprouted lentils and walnuts, and subbed in black Japonica rice for the white rice (enzymes, fiber and pigment-power!). Doesn’t excite you? I’m aware that on paper this sounds like an unequal, salad-y trade, but trust me, just go with it. It’s not meat but once it’s all cooked together, it is pretty close to the same overall feel.

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Also in the mix - fresh garlic, red onion and green onion, all from the crushing cancer family -allium (family reunion). Turmeric is in there to lower inflammation, and cinnamon, which belongs in there flavour-wise, but also has a magical side effect of helping to lower blood sugar (bad news for cancer cells, good news for everyone else).

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Fresh shitake mushrooms are in there too, adding their meaty, umame flavour, some immune-boosting powers and……. vitamin D(!) I learned last week, when I attended the Inspire Health (a not-for-profit integrative cancer center in BC) LIFE program, that fungi absorb vitamin D from the sun in a similar way that humans do. They are doing some fascinating research there on vitamin D levels and their effect on cancer. Sooo, I let them suntan naked for an hour on my balcony, gills-up, before using them to QUADRUPLE their vitamin D content. As the sun moves farther away from us, it’s good to know we have a pretty solid and attainable food source of vitamin D too. Apparently it works with any type of fungi. Totally exciting.

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I used passata (pureed and strained tomatoes, usually found in glass jars), a decent fresh tomato sub, but if the fresh tomatoes are still good where you are, use 4 cups of pureed tomatoes (literally, fresh tomatoes blended up in your blender) and leave them unstrained for extra fiber and vit C.

The lemon aspect of this dish is essential, so pay close attention: thinly sliced lemons go on BEFORE cooking (they mellow and you can eat them whole once cooked), and the fresh lemon juice goes on AFTER it finishes cooking. This way you get the benefits (and flavour accents) of the whole lemon as well as the benefits sharpness of the raw juice.

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Serve this with tabouli, or a simple cucumber salad with lemon, mint and parsley. These are filled with protein, vitamins, and warm, cozy feelings.

Stuffed Grapevine Leaves
Author: 
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 6-8
 
Ingredients
For the filling
  • 1c Puy Lentils, soaked overnight, drained and rinsed (optional: sprouted for 2-3 days), cooked until tender with a sheet of kombu
  • 1c Black Japonica Rice, soaked overnight, drained and rinsed and brought to a boil in ¾c water, turned off and let steam with lid on for 30 minutes.
  • 1c Walnuts, soaked overnight, drained and rinsed
  • 4c Shitake mushrooms
  • 1 Red Onion
  • 3 Garlic cloves
  • 6 Green Onions
  • 1 large bunch of Parsley, chopped
  • 2 Lemons, zest only
  • 1 tsp Cinnamon, ground
  • 2 tsp Turmeric, dried (1.5 Tbsp if using fresh)
  • several grinds of Black Pepper (for better turmeric absorption)
  • Sea(weed) salt
  • 2 Tbsp Extra Virgin Coconut Oil
For the rest:
  • 50 Grapevine Leaves (or a 500ml jar -rinse the leaves well, several times)
  • 1 lt of fresh tomato puree (puree fresh tomatoes in a blender until you have 1 lt worth) (or 1 x 670ml bottle of Passata, plus half of the bottle filled again with water)
  • 1 Lemon, sliced thinly (use the zested one)
  • 1 Lemon Juiced (use the other zested one)
Instructions
For the Filling
  1. Cook the lentils in a pot of water with a sheet of kombu, until tender (10 minutes or so if sprouted, a little longer if just soaked), and then drain.
  2. Put the soaked, drained and rinsed rice in a pot with ¾c of water. Bring to a boil, put a lid on and turn off the heat. Leave for 30 minutes.
  3. Meanwhile, grind the soaked and rinsed walnuts in a food processor until about the size of the lentils. Reserve the walnuts in a bowl and set aside.
  4. Use the same food processor (dirty!) to grind up the red onion, garlic and shitakes (stem and all) together until they form a bit of a paste.
  5. Saute this paste in a large frying pan on low heat with the coconut oil.
  6. Add the spices and continue to cook, stirring occasionally until it dries out a bit and tastes less raw (taste it).
  7. Turn off the heat and add the cooked lentils (and kombu!), rice and ground walnuts.
  8. Chop up the green onions and parsley and zest the lemons, and add them in too.
  9. Stir it around and adjust seasoning (s&p;) until it tastes really good.
For the rest:
  1. Preheat the oven to 350*F
  2. Line the base of a (non-aluminum) casserole dish or dutch oven with grapevine leaves and a ladle of tomato puree (or a glug of passata)
  3. On a big stretch of clean counter top, lay out your grapevine leaves (in batches), membrane (bumpy) side up
  4. Using a spoon or your clean hands, put 1-2 Tbsp lumps at the base of each leaf. Try to squeeze it together so that it is tight and not too crumbly
  5. Fold the sides of the leaves in over-top of the filling and then roll the entire thing away from you, creating a tight little bundle.
  6. Fill your grapevine-lined dish with these bundles, seam side down, until you fill one layer and then start stacking the next layer on top
  7. When you are out of leaves or filling, pour the tomato puree (or passata) evenly over the top. If you're using passata, fill it back up halfway with water, put the lid on and shake it around, and pour this over the top too.
  8. Spread the lemon slices over the top evenly.
  9. Put the lid on, or foil (if the foil is touching the top, put a layer of parchment paper between the food and the foil to prevent leaching and sticking)
  10. Bake in the middle rack for 30-40 minutes or until your house smells amazing.
  11. Pull out of the oven and sprinkle the lemon juice evenly over the top and let rest for 10 minutes before serving.
  12. If it dried out a little too much (everyone's oven/dish is different), add a few splashes of water and it will come back to life. If it's a little bit soupy, leave it in the oven for 10 extra minutes with the lid off.
  13. Enjoy with something fresh like tabouli, or a cucumber salad.

Fermented Pickles (Homemade Probiotics)

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The first time I fermented my own pickles, I made them way too salty. I have issues with numbers, which makes following recipes really hard, and apparently results in salty pickles. After staring at them for a while, I saved them and added them (in small amounts) to recipes the same way you might add capers. The rest, I dehydrated, ground up and realized I had invented my own fermented, raw dill pickle seasoning (popcorn, anyone?).

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Fermenting your veggies is a great way to make them even more digestible, add LIVE friendly bacteria (probiotics), beneficial enzymes and B vitamins. It sounds very scientific when you read about it, and there are all kinds of scary warnings about mold and contamination, but at the end of the day it’s pretty simple: you are adding salt water (brine) to veggies, keeping them submerged, and letting them hang out somewhere in the dark for 1-4 weeks. The very worse that could happen is they pop up out of the brine (check at least daily, poke it back under), you can’t do math and add too much salt (see above, make popcorn), or you forget about it and let it ferment, then dry out and then turn blue and fuzzy (I’ve done that too).

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Fermenting is also a great way of preserving the summer’s bounty as it begins to dwindle (don’t panic, we’re not quite there yet), without huge pots of boiling water and pressure cookers (I’ve done that too, so much sweat). The only thing that is important to remember about this that is less relevant with traditional canning is that you have to have room in your fridge (or your friend’s/neighbor’s fridge) for all of those jars of the final product.

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Go to the farmers market, look at what is fresh, interesting and colourful, bring it home, wash it well (I use a bit of vinegar and water), trim it/cut it up. Sterilize your jars in the dishwasher or if they’re already clean, swill some vinegar around in them. Fill the jars with your veggies, and pour the brine overtop, leaving a couple of inches at the top for foaming bubbles. I like the NON-wide-mouth jars because the shoulder works as leverage to keep things submerged.

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(Pre-ferment)

How do we keep our beans/peppers/other air-filled veg from floating? Weigh them down with creative Macgyver contraptions. A cabbage leaf, pressed into the jar, blanketing the whole top layer of veg is a good first step, but this cabbage leaf needs to stay submerged too. It may stay, just as it is, but it might need a little more help. A small glass jar that fits into the mouth of the fermenting jar works well, filled with water for extra weight. A mesh (nut milk?) bag, filled with clean, non-metallic weights (ceramic, glass, stone) works well as a weight too. Even if you feel very satisfied with your brilliant and creative weight, be sure to check in a couple of times a day to make sure the veggies aren’t out-witting it.

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(Post-ferment)

The last step is to keep your veggies as oxygen-free as possible. This helps the good bacteria to flourish and keeps contaminants out. There are air-lock contraptions out there that fit right onto a mason jar, which are obviously a great option. If you are just trying this out and need a quick fix, once all of your veggies are comfortably submerged under your cabbage leaf, and the cabbage leaf is comfortably submerged under a jar of water, pour some coconut oil over the top (it will float). There should be about a centimeter (less than half an inch) once it settles on the top. There will be foam and froth and bubbles, which will escape, but for the most part, it will protect your veggies from contaminants. Put a lid on top of that, and ‘burp’ it once or twice a day (some off-gas more than others). If you don’t have a lid, use a clean tea towel, folded over several times, with an elastic wrapped around it to keep it tight (that was hard to explain for some reason, see picture).

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(Post-ferment)

Now let it rip! Keep it out the light (I drape a tea towel over the whole team and put it in a shadowy area of my pantry. You could also put it in a cupboard, but don’t forget about it!) Put them on a plate/baking sheet, in case there is any spillage. Write on your calendar the day you started the ferment (I always think my steel trap of a brain will remember, but it hasn’t once pulled through) and burp your jars when you brush your teeth. I let these ferment for about 3 weeks through some pretty warm weather (they’ll need longer in cooler weather/house temp), and they are delicious. Briny, vinegar-y (naturally occurring!), garlicky, bacteria-y, local, pigment-filled and tasty on their own, in a salad or served as a condiment to any dish.

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These pickles and brine will lose their gut-healing potency once cooked, so add as a garnish to cooked meals, or stir in at the very last minute to save the enzymes and bacteria. Save the brine to add as seasoning to salad dressings, smoothies and raw food recipes. You will notice a lot of the pigment is pulled from the veg into the brine (those poor dragon beans!), so by consuming the brine, you are getting those extra anti-oxidants, on top of the other health benefits. You can also use the brine again for the next batch of pickles as a great bacteria-filled kick-start.

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(Served with cashew-based cream cheese. So good. I want some right now.)

The recipes below are really just flavour jumping off points. If you have creative flavour combos that you love, want to try or have used to make pickles in the non-fermented way, go for it! Don’t forget to add some super-foods and healing herbs where you think you can see them fitting in (turmeric, ginger, garlic, sea vegetables, rosemary, thyme, oregano etc).

Fermented Pickles
Author: 
Prep time: 
Total time: 
 
Ingredients
For the whole Kirby Cucumbers:
  • Kirby cucumbers, washed and trimmed (enough to fill a 2lt jar)
  • 5 Garlic cloves, sliced in half
  • 3 Garlic Scapes
  • 4 sprigs Dill
  • 1 Tbsp Dulse
  • Brine, to cover
For the chopped Kirby Cucumbers:
  • Kirby Cucumbers, washed, trimmed and cut into 1 inch rounds (to fill a 1lt jar)
  • ½ small Red Onion, thinly sliced
  • 4 sprigs of Dill
  • Brine, to cover
For the Lemon Cucumber:
  • 3 Lemon Cucumbers, cut into wedges (enough to fill a ½lt jar), wash and trim
  • 4 Thai chilies
  • 1 sprig of Dill
  • 1 tsp Dulse
  • Brine, to cover
For the Beans
  • Beans (Dragon tongue, green, yellow, purple) (enough to fill a 1lt jar), wash and trim
  • ½ Fennel bulb, thinly sliced
  • 1 tsp Fennel Seeds
  • 1 Lemon, zest
  • 1 tsp Dulse
  • Brine, to cover
For the Shishito Peppers:
  • Shishito Peppers (or other small peppers or chilies) (enough to fill a 1lt jar), wash and trim
  • 6 Thai chilies
  • 4 Garlic cloves, sliced in half
  • 1 tsp Dulse
  • Brine, to cover
For the Carrots:
  • Carrots (orange, yellow, purple) (enough to fill a
  • 5 Slices of Ginger
  • 5 Slices of Turmeric (or ½ tsp dried)
  • 3 Garlic clove, sliced in half
  • ½ tsp Cumin seeds
  • ½ tsp Dulse
  • 2 grinds of Black Pepper (for better turmeric absorption)
  • Brine, to cover
For the Brine:
  • 6 Tbsp sea salt
  • 8 c filtered/spring water (the chemicals and additives in tap water can prevent proper fermentation)
Instructions
For the Brine:
  1. Dissolve the salt in the water by whisking it together in a bowl and giving it a bit of time (15 minutes?)
  2. If you're anxious to get going, heat up ½ a cup of the water on the stove with all of the salt. Simmer it until it all dissolves and then add it to the rest of the water (this means you won't have to heat the whole brine and wait for it to cool down).
For the Pickles
  1. Pour this over the veggies in the jars, leaving about an inch at the top
  2. Weigh it down with a cabbage leaf and/or another weight.
  3. Poor melted coconut oil over the top to seal it off.
  4. Put the lid on and put the jar in a dark place.
  5. Burp the jars twice a day (unscrew the lid to let air escape, and then screw it back on).
  6. One to four weeks later, (taste for acidity, it will take longer in cooler temperatures) transfer to the refrigerator.

Chili-Lime Jicama with Muscular Guacamole

Have you ever moved the guacamole to the other room, just to get people out of the kitchen? It works, doesn’t it? Because everyone loves guacamole (even more than sitting at the kitchen bar asking you questions). It is one of the healthiest and easiest to make snacks out there. It’s also really, really delicious. Guacamole even has power over those of us who plug our ears when health food convos come up. It’s that good.

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This makes it the perfect vessel for some muscular activity. I am not trying to change the classic guacamole with this recipe, I am just trying to gently point out a few super-food opportunities. As it turns out, guacamole is one of the easiest places to add some cancer-fighting beasts, and here is a little hint: you’re probably already adding most of them. Now you just need to consciously add them every time you make it, perhaps in greater volume and possibly with a little more variety. Do you add cilantro to your guac? Add twice as much. You don’t like cilantro? (I’ve heard about you!) add some Italian parsley instead. Or maybe some kale, sliced very thin as though it was a herb. Or maybe both cilantro/parsley and kale.

Do you already add a bit of onion or garlic to your guac? Try adding both. Or if raw garlic doesn’t fly with you, add some roasted garlic. And dice up some red onion (pigment power) and green onion. Same but different, and complimentary. And what about turmeric? I know, I sound like a broken record, but it is a powerful anti-inflammatory. It’s not that I want your whole life to be yellow-spiced, I just want to point out places where it could work. I think it works in guacamole, that’s all. Not your morning millet porridge with blueberries or your tomato and basil salad with almond cheese. I promise not to talk about turmeric in those posts.

What goes better with a bowl of rich and smooth guac than some juicy, crunchy veggies to dip into it? Jicama is a great option for a change from the usual. It is sweet, crisp, and…solid. Dense. Am I selling it? If you haven’t tried it yet, you must, it’s delicious and clean tasting, making a wonderful addition to cabbage-y salads and, obviously, crudités platters.

I cut the jicama up into large French fry-resembling batons. You could leave them plain as they are, but if you toss them with some lime juice, a bit of sea(weed) salt and spices… including turmeric, you have amped them up to solo snack status. These sexy, yellow batons don’t need the guacamole, they really can stand alone, but they truly enjoy the company of guacamole. A match made in heaven, packed full of tasty and powerful antioxidants.

If the idea of this snack leaves an ice-cold Corona tickling the back of your brain, maybe give kombucha a go. Or a bubbly glass of water kefir. Their names leave something to be desired, but they rival beer as far as that effervescent, thirst-quenching 5pm craving goes. For real. Buy some at the store, or better yet, make your own (it’s so easy!). Either way, throw it on ice before you start prepping your guacamole and jicama and then put your feet up, close your eyes and pretend you’re in …a different version of Mexico, where cancer cells fear to tread.


Chili-Lime Jicama with Muscular Guacamole
Author: 
Prep time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 2-4
 
Ingredients
For the Jicama:
  • ½ medium Jicama, cut into sticks
  • 1 Lime, juice and zest
  • ¼ tsp Chili Powder
  • ¼ tsp Turmeric, dried (1/2 tsp if fresh)
  • a couple grinds of black pepper (for better turmeric absorption)
  • pinch of sea(weed) salt
For the Guac:
  • 1-2 Avocado, ripe
  • ¼ Red onion, diced small
  • 2 Green onions, thinly sliced
  • ½-1 Garlic clove, minced
  • ¼ c Cilantro, shopped
  • ¼ c Kale, thinly sliced
  • ¼ tsp Turmeric
  • 1 Lime, juice and zest
  • a couple grinds of black pepper (for better turmeric absorption)
  • Sea(weed) salt
Instructions
For the Jicama:
  1. Toss everything together until well coated.
For the Guac:
  1. Mash everything together. Serve with the chili-lime jicama or other fresh veggies.

Sesame Kohlrabi Slaw with Miso Apricot Dressing

It’s been a while since I turned my oven on. Not to seem ungrateful for all of this sunshine (and vitamin D), but it has been really hot with humidity that Vancouver doesn’t generally see. So maybe I am complaining a little bit, but chin sweat you guys! All of the time.

So I have been making recipes that require very little heating up, both for me, and the recipients of the meals. It makes it hard to complain about chin sweat when I think about how un-amazing it must feel to add a rough post chemo week into the mix with all of this heat. No ovens no cry. Read More →