Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

Hello lovelies, it’s been awhile and I’m all up in a spring tizzy. My how time flies as the days get longer, along with the to-do list. My mom and grandma are visiting right now, gigi is meeting her great grandson for the first time!

Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

As a lovely surprise I made them this decadent raw pie, oddly reminiscent of a pink creamsicle. The rhubarb in our garden is off the hook, it’s the gift that keeps on giving. The more you pull, the more springs up. I find myself searching for new ways to use rhubarb, aside from pie there are few ideas out there. Any ideas?

Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

The new moon just passed so we took the opportunity to plant seeds in the garden. In biodynamic gardening, planting and harvesting is planned according to the lunar cycles. Which makes good sense, as the moon affects the ebb and flow of all H2O containing life. As the moon grows so do the plants, hopefully, fingers crossed, it’s the first year I’ve had a garden in awhile.

 

More about this pie. Roasted rhubarb is the way to do rhubarb, this roasted rhubarb + vanilla cream raw pie is healthy and light yet super satisfying. You’re going to love it, even if you hate rhubarb. I tricked my mom, who claims she hates rhubarb, but when I gave her a slice she unknowingly bit into it and thought it was oh so delicious. This brings to light a lot of misconceptions about rhubarb. Many folks think it’s too sour or stringy or bitter. I beg to differ, especially when roasted as it caramelizes the natural sugars. Do give this pie a chance, I wouldn’t lead you astray.

Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

 

Roasted Rhubard + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

Ingredients

  • 1 C raw almonds (soaked for 6-8 hrs)
  • 3/4 C raisins or dates (soaked for at least 30 mins)
  • 1/2 C + 1/2 C + 3 Tbs coconut oil
  • 2 C raw cashews (soaked 4-8 hrs)
  • 1 C coconut milk
  • 3/4 tsp vanilla extract or 1 vanilla bean, scraped
  • 1/3 C raw honey or maple syrup
  • pinch sea salt
  • 4 large rhubarb stalks
  • 1/3 C raw honey or coconut sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400F and roast rhubarb on a baking sheet for 20 minutes.
  2. Using a food processor or high powered blender, combine raw almonds, rainsins or dates and 1/2 C coconut oil until smooth. Press this crust into the bottom of a 12 inch springform pan. Set in the freezer while making the filling.
  3. Clean out the blender or food processor. Add the drained cashews, 1/2 C coconut oil, coconut milk, honey or maple syrup and vanilla and blend on high until super smooth and creamy. Pour over the set crust and place back in the freezer while making the topping.
  4. Clean out the blender or food processor and add rhubarb, 3 Tbs coconut oil and honey or coconut sugar. Pour topping evenly over the vanilla cream and allow to set in the fridge or freezer for at least 2 hours before serving.
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Roasted Rhubarb + Vanilla Cream Raw Pie

Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

You guys know I’m Canadian eh? My momma grew up in Quebec and instilled a love for poutine into us from day 1. Okay, maybe not day 1 but you get my drift. That cheesy gooey goodness is infused into my childhood and every now and then I get a mad hankering.

Never had poutine? Well you’ve been missing something special but it’s never too late.

As far as Canadian cuisine goes, it’s literally all over the map, but Quebec wins every time. The twists on traditional French cuisine are endless, and there is also a smorgasbord of other cultures and their traditions thrown in. Quebec is home to most of Canada’s immigrants after all. Montreal is by far the most exciting and vibrant Canadian city.

Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

So to honour my French Canadian roots I like to make homestyle real food delectable poutine once in awhile. Nope none of that weird packaged gravy or GMO fryer oil, just good old fashioned shoestring potatoes fried in chicken fat and smothered with the most delectable spicy roasted chicken gravy, mixed with melty raw cheddar, which isn’t traditional but sure is good.

To make the gravy and get the chicken fat, you really need to roast a whole chicken and save the drippings. I wrote a post on how to make the perfect roast chicken with a spicy smoky blend of flavours which lends itself to your eventual poutine. This is worth the effort, not only are there ample benefits from roasting a whole chicken, but the leftovers are superb.

This is a loose recipe so I am going to treat it as such. You could also make the gravy out of drippings from a roast beef if that’s more convenient, the procedure is the same. Enjoy this stringy, cheesy, comfort food, homemade poutine blows fast food chains out of the water. To make it paleo just ditch the cheese, it won’t be missed, unless you’re French 😉

If you use yummly, I’m now going to be using their recipe cards so that my recipes will show up in their database.  It’s a pretty awesome way to keep track of all the delicious creations in your roster!

Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

Yield: 2

Ingredients

  • 4 medium sized russet potatoes
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 1 1/2 C pan drippings from roast chicken, left in the refrigerator until the fat solidifies on the surface
  • 2 Tbs tapioca starch
  • 2 C leftover spicy roast chicken (link in article)
  • 1 C shredded raw cheddar
  • 2 green onions, finely chopped

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 425F
  2. To make the shoestring fries, use a spiralizer on the smallest setting, par boil the spiralized potato for about 5 minutes and drain well.
  3. Remove the fat from the chicken drippings and place it on a baking sheet (about 2 Tbs worth), pop this in the hot oven until melted.
  4. Spread drained potatoes on to the pan and toss around until well coated in chicken fat, sprinkle with salt and bake for 30-40 minutes until golden brown. You may want to turn the halfway.
  5. To make the gravy simply heat up the remaining pan drippings (about 1 C) combine the tapioca starch with an equal amount of cold water and slowly add to the simmering drippings until desired thickness is achieved.
  6. Prepare the poutine in layers, potatoes, cheese,chicken, gravy, repeat and finish with chopped green onions. Enjoy!
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Spicy Chicken Poutine with Homemade Shoestring Fries

Nettle Pesto

Nettle Pesto

nettle pesto

Nettles, the stinging sisters as Susun Weed calls them, these magical stinging weeds turn into luscious nourishment once the heat touches them.

Nettles make me so giddy, they are such a treat and they don’t last long. When they arrive in early spring I stalk them and try to get them at their most prime, before they go to seed and get too rough and woody to enjoy. They are one of the first fresh local greens to come on the scene.

nettle pesto

They like to grow in marshy wet places, alongside fields and swamps, near creeks and moist woodlands. When harvesting nettles, wear gloves and long pants, bring scissors to snip off the tender top shoots and if you’re lucky you can go around for a second harvest.

nettle pesto

Many people see stinging nettles as an invasive weed, but they are actually a delicious food. All wild foods are far more nutrient dense than the domesticated plants we eat most often. Stinging nettles when lightly steamed to remove their sting, are reminiscent of spinach. They make a delicious earthy tasting tea and when infused for 4 hours or more offer an amazing source of key minerals that many of us are lacking.

 

 

 

We eat a lot of nettles this time of year, basically you can enjoy them in any dish you would use spinach for. So far we’ve really been digging stinging nettle omelettes, hummus, palak paneer, teas and other delightful nettle experiments.

nettle pesto

This pesto is ah-ma-zing, it’s really a classic pesto just nettles instead of basil, which gives it a more demure taste but equally satisfying. We ate it with zoodles (zucchini noodles) and roast chicken which was divine, the next days leftovers were spread on crusty sourdough bread from the french bakery in town.

Henry David Thoreau once said ” All good things are wild and free.” I would have to agree, and nettles definitely fall into that category. Food is meant to be free and the Earth provides plentifully, we just have to know where to look.

 

Nettle Pesto
Author: 
Prep time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 2 C
 
Ingredients
  • 3 C fresh nettle leaves
  • 4 garlic cloves
  • ¾ C pine nuts
  • ¼ C olive oil
  • ½ tsp sea salt
  • 1 Tbs lemon juice
  • ¾ C parmesan or asiago cheese, shredded (optional)
Instructions
  1. Put a pot of water on and when its boiling dump the fresh nettles in for just one minute.
  2. Strain well and get as much water out as possible. Add nettles to blender or food processor.
  3. Add garlic, pine nuts, olive oil, sea salt, lemon juice and cheese if you're using it.
  4. Pulse until smooth and creamy and salt to taste. Enjoy!

 

nettle pesto

Superfood Sunshine Chocolates

Superfood Sunshine Chocolates

superfood sunshine chocolates

It’s spring, the bees are out, the sun is shining and it’s time for a celebration!

What better way to celebrate the suns return than with bright yellow nutrient dense raw chocolate, heck yes.

These little gems are a cinch to make and packed with the ample benefits of bee pollen, a truly amazing superfood. Some nutritionists say we could live on bee pollen alone as it’s such a perfect food. Bees are amazing insects, their specialized hairs attract pollen easily with a sort of static electricity. To make one pound of honey bees must visit around 2 million flowers!

superfood sunshine chocolates

In the spring I usually get seasonal allergies which bee pollen, local honey, and wildcrafted nettles effectively eliminate. Bee pollen is one of the easiest foods to digest and assimilate. Not too mention its got a subtle chewiness that adds a lovely texture to these superfood sunshine chocolates. Raw cacao is loaded with amazing benefits as well as talk about more in detail in this post. It’s certainly no secret how much we relish in our raw chocolate around here!

superfood sunshine chocolates

Superfood Sunshine Chocolates
Author: 
Serves: 12
 
Ingredients
  • ¾ C raw cacao butter
  • 3 Tbs cacao powder
  • 3 Tbs coconut butter
  • 1 Tbs coconut oil
  • 2 Tbs raw honey or maple syrup
  • ¼ tsp turmeric
  • 2 Tbs bee pollen
  • pinch of sea salt
Instructions
  1. Melt the cacao butter in a boil over a double boiler until liquid, add cacao powder and 1 Tbs of honey or maple syrup and stir until smooth.
  2. Pour this chocolate mixture into your choice of moulds, I used a mini muffin tin. Pop in the freezer to set while you make the sunshine layer.
  3. Warm up your coconut butter and coconut oil on the double boiler until smooth and creamy, mix in turmeric, bee pollen and sea salt.
  4. Remove chocolate from freezer and top each with a dollop of sunshine mixture until evenly distributed. Pop back in the freezer for a few minutes to set. When the chocolates are set you should be able to easily pop them out of the mould.
  5. This recipe makes about 12 sunshine chocolate!

 

superfood sunshine chocolates

Caribbean Carrot + Habanero Hot Sauce

Caribbean Carrot + Habanero Hot Sauce

Carribbean Carrot + Habanero Hot sauce

 I worried a lot. Will the garden grow, will the rivers
flow in the right direction, will the earth turn
as it was taught, and if not how shall
I correct it?

Was I right, was I wrong, will I be forgiven,
can I do better?

Will I ever be able to sing, even the sparrows
can do it and I am, well,
hopeless.

Is my eyesight fading or am I just imagining it,
am I going to get rheumatism,
lockjaw, dementia?

Finally I saw that worrying had come to nothing.
And gave it up. And took my old body
and went out into the morning,
and sang.

I Worried
by Mary Oliver

 

If there’s a poem to summon to the surface the realization that worry is of no use this would be it. Not that I’ve fully grasped that concept yet, it seems still there is always something to fret over.

Whether my taurean moon is stirring worry over money and bills or I leave the house certain I left the stove on. The eyes of many may close when we rest our heads at night, but the minds are another story. My head hits the pillow and that is where the real fun begins, the continual thought stream until the sandman’s magic dust forms a crust so thick I can’t help but drift away.

Habanero and carrot hot sauce

There is a light, a reprieve, sleep arrives and worries melt away and wander around our dreams. A new day, and a chance to let it all go, brush it off. As I meander through my mind, I wonder, is there any purpose to imagining the worst, focusing on the bad? I’ve never been one to ignore the gritty, less appealing details of life. Life is messy. Plants don’t grow in sunshine and rainbows, they grow in shit and darkness. Yet there is a balance, a line we walk along which crossed too often into fears allure causes dis-ease. Especially when fears bubble up in a selfish hungry manner. Stepping into the world beyond our thoughts takes courage, but more than that it takes connection. Living in our heads is boring after some time, there’s a whole big wild world out there beckoning us to just release and be vulnerable.

Habanero and carrot hot sauce

I’m happy when my mouth is on fire, when my heart is on fire, when my soul is alight. One worry has at least been squandered and that is not having any hot sauce. I’m slightly ashamed to say this bugs me, there’s something fundamental about always having hot sauce on hand. This recipe makes sooooooo much, you can give it away, hoard it for months or a little of both. It also makes a great marinade for pork or chicken, but be warned, very very spicy.

Habanero and carrot hot sauce

Caribbean Carrot + Habanero Hot Sauce
Author: 
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 
 
Ingredients
  • 1 tsp coconut oil
  • 2 large yellow onions, diced
  • 10 garlic cloves
  • 2 C carrots, diced
  • 20-30 habanero peppers, stems removed
  • 2 inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and sliced
  • 2 Tbs allspice berries
  • 6 whole cloves
  • 1 Tbs whole peppercorns
  • 1 tsp coriander seeds
  • 1 Tbs dried thyme or 2 Tbs fresh thyme
  • ¼ C sea salt
  • ⅓ C coconut sugar or raw cane sugar
  • 3 C white vinegar or ACV
  • 3 Tbs lime juice
  • 2 C water
Instructions
  1. In a large pot melt the coconut oil, add whole garlic cloves and brown on all sides.
  2. Add the diced onion and cook until translucent.
  3. Using a mortar and pestle or an electric spice grinder, combine allspice, cloves,peppercorns,coriander seeds and thyme, if using a mortar and pestle smash the ginger with the spices, if not, throw it in the pot.
  4. Add carrots, habaneros, salt, sugar, vinegar, water and lime juice. Cook until carrots are tender and puree until super smooth. Adjust thickness by adding more water until desired consistency is achieved.
  5. Makes a large amount (10 C) of hot sauce and lasts in the fridge for a long time.

 

Habanero and carrot hot sauce

Red Hot Roast Chicken + The Best Leftover Chicken Soup

Red Hot Roast Chicken + The Best Leftover Chicken Soup

Does roasting a whole chicken ever feel daunting? 

Do you worry about potentially undercooking it and having to put the whole lot back in the oven?

Or maybe overcooking it and ruining all that effort?

But a whole roast chicken is also alluring, the whole house smells intoxicating and it’s easier to find free range whole chickens for a good price.

red hot roast chicken

Around here I usually make a whole roast chicken once a week, and then boil the carcass for homemade stock to add to soups and sauces. Often I save the fat to cook with, you could also make gravy if you wanted to go all out.

Chicken fat or schmaltz is really really yummy, it makes everything you cook it in taste amazing. Especially when infused with the red hot spices the chicken was cooked in. The schmaltz from this particular recipe was bright orange from the paprika. To separate the schmaltz from the juices, pour off the liquid and allow to cool in the fridge. When cool the chicken fat will form a layer on top of the now gelatinous chicken juices and you can just scrape that off. The jelly is nutrient dense and you can make gravy with it or add it to stocks.

red hot roast chicken

Making gravy from the pan juices is really simple too and an added bonus to top your chicken with. For paleo gravy I like to thicken with tapioca starch or arrowroot flour, for the drippings from one chicken I typically mix 2 Tbs flour with 2 Tbs cold water. Simmer the chicken drippings/juices on low and stir in the flour until desired thickness is achieved.

Homemade chicken broth is super nourishing and makes everything more delicious. If I cook rice I usually do it in chicken stock and even just drinking it by itself is so satisfying. But our families favourite standby is leftover roast chicken soup, loaded with flavour, packed with veggies and a bit of satisfying rice to top it all off.

So today, in a bid to convince you to make roast chickens part of your kitchen repertoire, I’m going to share with you the recipe for this delicious chicken AND the recipe for the best ever leftover roast chicken soup.

red hot roast chicken

 

Cooking whole roast chickens doesn’t have to be scary and intimidating. It’s really simple once you have the technique down. There are a million and one variations and ways to flavour your chicken but today I wanted to share with you one of my favourites, red hot roast chicken. This fiery rendition has a bit of smoky sweet and spicy, its also a brilliant golden-red hue, which makes a roast chicken look all the more delectable.

 

Now here’s are the keys to the perfectly moist, delicious roast chicken every time…

This is the easy chefs way of cooking a whole chicken, there are further steps one could take to get to the next level like brining and trussing but for simplicities sake here’s my take.

– Let your chicken come to room temp. before popping it in the oven.

– Thoroughly dry the skin before adding seasonings, this helps the chicken to get a crispy skin.

– Lay the chicken on a bed of large chunks of sliced onion, this raises it just slightly so the air can circulate underneath and the skin doesn’t stick to the bottom.

– I find cooking the breast side down produces a more moist breast, normally the legs take longer to cook than the breasts and they end up being dry but this way they stay tender.

– Don’t be shy with the spices, we’re only able to season the exterior so make up for that by liberal amounts of good salt, pepper and whatever others herbs and spices you want to add. For a classic roast chicken, stuff the cavity with fresh thyme, a punctured lemon and plenty of garlic and onion.

-The internal temperature of a cooked chicken is 180F at the breast and 190F at the thigh. However, if you are like me and you don’t own a meat thermometer- the chicken is cooked when the juices run clear. Normally I puncture the crevasse at the thigh to check. An average roasting chicken (5-6lbs) will typically take 1 hr 2o minutes at 400F.

– Let it rest. It’s tempting to serve it up as soon as the chicken is out of the oven, but waiting allows the juices to seal and makes for more tender fall off the bone meat. Allow the chicken to rest for 10-15 minutes before digging in.

Red Hot Roast Chicken Spice Blend

1/2 Tbs sea salt

1 Tbs smoked paprika

1 tsp fresh ground pepper

1 tsp coriander seeds, ground

1 tsp cumin seeds, ground

1 tsp red chile flakes

1 tsp garlic powder

1 tsp ancho chile powder (or you can use regular)

 

Combine all the spices and sprinkle liberally over the whole chicken on all sides. Add fresh garlic, onion to the roasting pan and stuff a punctured lemon into the crevasse of the bird.

red hot roast chicken

And for the best leftover red hot chicken soup

The Best Leftover Chicken Soup
Author: 
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 
Serves: 4
 
Ingredients
  • ½ red onion, sliced
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 Tbs schmaltz (chicken fat)
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp ancho chile powder or chipotle
  • 1 tsp chile flakes
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • ½ tsp fresh cracked pepper
  • 1 large sweet potato, cubed
  • 2 large carrots, cubed
  • ¾ C white basmati rice
  • 8 C homemade chicken stock
  • 2 kaffir lime leaves (optional)
  • 1 Tbs lime juice
  • 2½ C leftover roast chicken, pulled into bite size chunks
  • green onions for garnish
Instructions
  1. Heat schmaltz in a large pot, add onion and garlic and cook until onion is translucent.
  2. Add spices, salt, sweet potato,carrots and rice, cook for about 2 minutes stirring continuously.
  3. Add chicken stock, lime leaves,lime juice and chicken and allow to simmer for 20 minutes.
  4. Serve with fresh green onion and raw cheddar cheese.

 

red hot roast chicken