Happy New Year 2015!!!

New Years Day came complete with over full bellies and mildly stressed livers. The fatigue passed quickly as the house filled with the aroma of these tasty BBQ black-eyed peas. Friends in the neighborhood hosted NYD brunch and the peas were our contribution to the pot- luck gathering. The recipe was taken from Popsugar. The original comes from talented chef Bryant Terry‘s terrific book Vegan Soul Kitchen. With the inclusion of accompaniments like Mr. Terry’s quick-pickled greens and savory corn muffins, our year is off to a delicious start!

We wish everyone a wonderful new year full of good food, good friends, and good times.

By the way, you’ll see us blogging more in 2015, hopefully once a week but don’t hold us to it.

Cheers,

Steve and Jason

BBQ Black-eyed Peas

1 1/2 cups dried black-eyed peas, soaked overnight
2 teaspoons plus 3 tablespoons olive oil, divided
1/2 onion, diced
1 green bell pepper, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons lime juice
1/2 cup tamari or soy sauce
1 cup canned tomato sauce
1 large chipotles in adobo sauce
1/4 cup agave nectar or honey
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon dried thyme

Be sure to pick through the peas to remove any rocks or damaged bits. Rinse the dry beans in a colander to get the dust off. Add to pan and cover with about two inches of water. Bring to boil then reduce the heat to low to keep the pot at a simmer. It may take up to 50 minutes for the beans to cook, but check them periodically after 30 minutes. Drain beans, but be sure to save a cup of the cooking water.

While the beans are cooking, sauté the onion and pepper in 2 teaspoons olive oil over medium heat until softened, about 5 – 7 minutes. Add garlic and cook until fragrant, about one minute.

Preheat oven to 350F. In a blender, combine vinegar, lime juice, tamari or soy sauce, tomato sauce, chipotles, nectar, cumin, thyme, one cup of the reserved cooking liquid, and three tablespoons olive oil. Puree until smooth, about 30 seconds.

In an oven safe pan, cast iron skillet, dutch oven or two-quart baking dish, stir cooke beans, sautéed vegetables, and sauce until mixed. Bake uncovered for two hours, stirring occasionally.

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Jerusalem Artichoke: Jerusalem Artichoke Chips w/ Rosemary Salt

The Mariquita Farms “Mystery Boxes” (actually, they’re really big bags) we buy twice a month are always filled with beautiful, in-season veggies in an extraordinary variety. The fun of the mystery is that you really don’t know what you’re going to get before you show up to grab the bag off the back of the farm’s delivery truck. And from time to time, we get something that we’ve never considered buying but have always been curious to try.

Such was the case with a recent bag that included a lot of Jerusalem Artichokes. We’ve seen them around. They’re knobby little tubers that look sort of like ginger root or galangal, have the texture of apple or Jíca

ma when raw and make for a delicious puree when boiled like a potato. Cooked, they have an earthier, sweeter flavor than potato, which is to say you get more of the mineral flavor of the soil they’re grown in. They aren’t a starchy veggie, so you don’t get the same fluffy, dry mouth feel you get from potato. Instead, they’re a bit waxy when cooked through. Eaten raw, they’re crisp and a little sweet thanks to their high fructose content. They’re delicious as an addition to your dinner salad.

Nobody knows how the plant got its name. This member of the sunflower family (hence the alternative name ‘sunchoke’ or ‘sun choke’) isn’t an artichoke, and it doesn’t come from the Middle East (it’s a North American native species). Aboriginal North Americans were cultivating and eating it when the first Europeans landed on our shores. It made its way to Europe in the early 1600’s and was quickly adopted on the continent. That’s about all we know about its earliest culinary uses. The bulbs are loaded with potassium and iron and they’re low carb/low glycemic diet-friendly thanks to their high inulin content.

We adapted a bon appétit recipe for Fried Sunchoke Chips with Rosemary Salt by toasting thin slices of Jerusalem Artichoke in the oven on an oiled sheet pan before sprinkling them with the herbaceous salt. We recommend getting them as thin as possible so that they dry as they brown. Our first go at oven roasting produced a softer chip because of the thickness of the slices, but they were sweet and delici

ous all the same.

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Oven Roasted Jerusalem Artichoke Chips sprinkled with Rosemary Salt

1 lemon

1 tablespoon kosher salt

1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh rosemary

1 pound Jerusalem artichokes

3 tablespoons olive oil

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and line two baking sheets with aluminum foil. Mix the salt and rosemary together in a small bowl, set aside. Cut the lemon in half and squeeze one half of it in a bowl filled with fresh water. Scrub the Jerusalem artichokes until very clean; place them in the bowl of acidulated water. Thinly slice each tuber, about 1/8 to 1/16 inch thick, or as thin as possible. Empty the water from the bowl and dry. Add the sliced tubers to the bowl and squeeze the other half of lemon over the top. Add the olive oil and toss to coat. Evenly place the slices on the baking sheets in one layer, do not over lap. Lightly sprinkle the rosemary salt over the slices and place in the oven. Bake for 15 minutes; then pull the pans out of the oven and begin to remove the browned and crispy ones from the pan. Rotate the pans and place them back in the over for 3-5 minutes. Continue to check the tuber slices and remove the crispier ones and place the lighter colored ones back in the oven. This will take up to 30-40 minutes. Consolidate the slices to one pan when there is room available. Sprinkle more rosemary salt over the top. Serve warm or at room temperature.