Tuesday Reviews-Day: San-J Tamari Lite

Tuesday Revews-Day

San-J Tamari Lite

Umami

Sounds very much like a made-up word, but in the food world we know it as the fifth taste behind the more commonly recognized tastes of sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. Umami is best described as the mouth-filling savory quality that you get from mushrooms, oysters, and soy sauce among other things. This savory flavor is responsible for quite a lot of taste-satisfaction, but most soy sauces are made of 50% wheat and 50% soybeans, and are seen as unsafe for those looking to avoid gluten for whatever reason.

For the record, this article at Celiac.com references testing that showed naturally-fermented soy sauces contain less than the 20ppm limit for a product to be considered gluten-free, and even under the 5ppm detection limit. Ergo, very little gluten is found in your average soy sauce and therefore isn’t too much of a worry. That said, it’s unknown how many of the fructans from the wheat survive the fermentation process, but it must be pretty low as soy sauce is not one of the items banned on a Low-FODMAP diet, just limited.

In the interest of better safe than sorry, the alternative to soy sauce is tamari: fermented in the same tradition as soy sauce but from 100% soybeans. And this year San-J has released a Tamari Lite with 50% less sodium than regular tamari sauce. Nothing wrong with cutting some sodium, right? I was sent a sample bottle of San-J’s Tamari Lite and we’ve been using it in place of the San-J Tamari (Black Label) that we usually buy and have noticed absolutely no chance in our food’s flavor.

With everyone looking for simple ways of improving their health with a minimum of inconvenience, I see this as a definite step in the right direction. And since soy and tamari sauces are so wonderful at adding flavor to a dish–be it Asian-inspired or otherwise–having a lower sodium option that has 200 years of tradition and quality behind it is hard to say no to.

Thanksgiving is this week and the gap between it and Christmas feels very small this year. Since I know everyone is looking for snack recipes that travel well (either for pot-lucks, informal gifts, or appetizer options), I thought this recipe that came with my Tamari Lite sample might just fill a need.

Asian Spiced Nuts

1 large egg white
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon San-J Tamari Lite 50% Less Sodium Gluten Free Soy Sauce
2 teaspoons 5 spice powder
1 1/2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
4 cups raw pecan halves
1/4 cup white sesame seeds

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicon baking mat.

Whisk the egg white in a large mixing bowl until very foamy. Whisk in the sugar, San-J Tamari Lite 50% Less Sodium Gluten Free Soy Sauce, 5 spice powder, and cayenne pepper until full combined. Add the pecan halves and sesame seeds and stir to coat. Place the pecans on the prepared baking sheet in an even layer. Cook for 10 minutes; stir the nuts and then cook for another 5 minutes. Let cool.

Enjoy!

***In case you didn’t catch it the other two times I said it, I was sent a bottle of San-J Tamari Lite for purpose of review. All opinions expressed are my own and no other compensation has been exchanged for this post. Any factual errors are mine, too, so apologies if I got something wrong. As for the gluten-free study, always consider the source and make the best choices along with your doctor and/or nutritionist for your personal situation.***

Low-FODMAP Kale and Carrot Eggs with Tri-Color Millet

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While we’re no stranger to meatless meals, it does get a bit tougher on a Low-FODMAP diet to eat vegetarian and, frankly, I’m at a loss of how vegans with FODMAP-triggered IBS manage. It must be tough with so many vegetable protein sources no longer viable alternatives.

This was the thought in the back of my head as I applied to participate in the OXO/Plated Very Vegetarian challenge and, when I was accepted, the thought turned to ‘okay, then, time to prove you can do it!’

Plated is a service that goes a step beyond providing a recipe subscription service and actually delivers the ingredients as well–which, if you’re the type that hates grocery shopping with a passion or are just to busy, that might sound like absolute heaven to you! (Granted, at the moment you also need to live in the DC or Chicago area, but their website says they’re looking to expand, as well.)

So Plated teamed up with OXO and their wonderful line of kitchen tools to ask bloggers to create a vegetarian meal based on the Plated guidelines that took no more than 30 minutes to prepare (including prep work!) and that used at least three items from the tools we were sent.

It was the 30-minute time limit that really is the kicker–there’s plenty you can do with slow-roasted casseroles and simmering soups to make mouth-watering vegetarian meals, but if you’re in a hurry it can be a challenge to grab something more complex than a salad.

My own challenge, of course, was to make a Plated-worthy meal (I hope) that fits the Low-FODMAP guidelines as well. Here’s what I came up with.

Kale and Carrot Eggs with Tri-Color Millet

Kale and Carrot Eggs with Tri-Color Millet

Kale and Carrot Eggs with Tri-Color Millet

Serves 2

1/2 cup Millet
1 1/2 Tbsp Garlic-infused Olive Oil, divided
1/2 bunch Kale (about 3 cups, chopped)
1 medium Carrot
2 Green Onions (green tops only)
2 Eggs
1 Yellow or Orange Bell Pepper
8 Grape Tomatoes
1 stalk Celery
1 Tbsp Lemon Juice
1/2 Tbsp grated Ginger
2 oz Feta Cheese

Equipment Needed: Sauce Pan, Saute Pan or Ovenproof Skillet, Ramekins or Small Pie Plates, Baking Sheet, Measuring Cups/Spoons, Knife, Cutting Board, Hand-Held Mandoline Slicer, Silicone-Tipped Tongs, Salad Dressing Shaker

Toasting the millet.

Toasting the millet.

1. Put 1 1/4 cups of water into a medium sauce-pan and heat on high. While it’s coming to a boil, toast your millet in a dry saute pan for 5 minutes. This is optional, but it improves the flavor so it’s worth it. Once the 5 minutes is up (or your water has come to a boil) add the millet to the water, return to a boil, cover with a lid and reduce heat to medium-low to simmer for 25 minutes.

2. Place your ramekins or small pie plates onto a baking sheet and place in a cold oven. Turn the oven to 375º F and allow to preheat while you prep the vegetables to go inside. Preheating your individual cooking vessels helps to keep the temperature constant when you add your ingredients, later, and speeds up cooking. Heat 1 Tbsp of the olive oil on medium heat in the same saute pan you used for the millet.

Saute the carrots, kale, and green onions

Saute the carrots, kale, and green onions

3. Wash and shake dry your kale and then stack and slice the leaves into 1/2″ strips, removing any thicker stems. Slice the green onion tops and add them and the kale to the hot pan. Peel your carrots and use the hand-held mandoline slicer on setting 2 to make little coins of the carrots straight into the pan. Saute 5 minutes or so until the kale is wilted, seasoning with salt and pepper to taste.

I picked up these sweet little mini pie plates on clearance, but ramekins could certainly work as well.

I picked up these sweet little mini pie plates on clearance, but ramekins could certainly work as well.

4. Remove the heated dishes from the oven, spray with olive oil spray to prevent sticking, and divide the kale and carrot mixture between them using the silicone-tipped tongs, creating a bit of a nest with the strips of kale. Crack an egg into the center of each of your kale nests and return the pan to the oven for 10 minutes or until the whites are set but the yolks are still liquid.

(I usually cook for 4, so the quantities here are double than the recipe above shows.)

(I usually cook for 4, so the quantities here are double than the recipe above shows.)

5. Now prep the vegetables and dressing for your millet. Dice the bell pepper into 1/2-inch pieces, halve the grape tomatoes, and quarter the stalk of celery length-wise and chop into a small dice. Tip: If you run a vegetable peeler down the back of your celery you’ll have far fewer stringy bits to deal with. In the salad dressing shaker combine the remaining olive oil with the lemon juice, ginger, and salt and pepper to taste and shake to combine.

6. When the millet is finished (has absorbed all of the liquid), stir in the vegetables and dressing and crumble in the feta. Divide the millet between two plates and add you individual dish of kale and carrot eggs. And if you’ve got some snipped chives around, sprinkle a little on top of the millet for good measure.

There are a few different way to approach this dish. If you don’t have ramekins or the little pie plates, you could create the nests of kale in a cast-iron or other ovenproof skillet and put it straight into your pre-heated oven. You could even whisk the eggs and divide smaller portions between the wells of a muffin tin if you wanted. The thing about the muffin-tin option is that breaking the egg yolk over the kale and carrot mixture adds an almost-decadent level of richness to the dish, something you’ll miss if the yolks are already broken.

As for the FODMAP implications, kale is one of those foods that is usually considered safe enough once you’ve completed the elimination and challenge phases of the diet and have determined your own tolerance levels. If your system can’t handle the kale, fresh spinach will work just as well, but with a different flavor. I’ve done my best to add a number of vegetables into the dish for flavor, color, and variety while still staying in the safe-zone of FODMAPs–I may be pushing the upper limit slightly, but my own lack of reaction shows it’s a good place to start.

Prepping this meal white taking notes and pictures all while my kitchen timer counted down 30 minutes was a little like playing the home version of one of those Food Network Challenge shows. I haven’t felt quite so under the gun since working the dinner shift during my Culinary School internship. Granted, if you make this dish you certainly won’t be watching the clock so much!

It’s projects like this one and the Dip & Sip (which I won, by the way!) that I would love to do more of because they give me that kick-in-the-pants to do things I’ve been thinking about doing in that nebulous eventually, maybe someday way and giving them a deadline. So even if my recipe isn’t one of the ones Plated chooses to add to their menu line-up (four will be, as I understand it), I’m still grateful for the experience!

***Just in case I wasn’t clear enough, above, I received products from OXO to be incorporated in the meal-preparations. No other compensation has been received, all opinions expressed are my own, yadda yadda yadda.***

Low-FODMAP Graham Crackers

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If you follow this blog’s cocktail companion, Sips & Shots, you already know that this past Saturday was National S’mores Day, and since 1/3 (or maybe even a full half!) of a s’more is the graham crackers, what’s a low-FODMAPer to do but make their own!

While I could look for a pre-existing gluten-free graham cracker recipes, I wanted to try the theory that my favorite flour blend would truly work in any given recipe. So I went with the first Google result: the Smitten Kitchen’s Graham Crackers. Did it work? In spades, my friends, in spades!

jwalker_nb_grahamcrackers

Here’s my adaptation of their adaptation of Nancy Silverton’s recipe:

Low-FODMAP Graham Crackers

2 1/2 c + 2 Tbsp Gluten-Free flour blend
1 c light brown sugar
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp xanthum gum
3/4 Kosher salt
7 Tbsp unsalted butter, cubed
1/3 c maple syrup
5 Tbsp lactose-free milk
2 Tbsp vanilla extract

Additional sugar for sprinkling

Combine the flour blend, brown sugar, soda, gum, and salt in the bowl of a food processor and pulse to combine, or stir together in a large bowl. Add butter and process until the butter has been reduced to small bits among the flour and resembles coarse crumbs or cut it in with a pastry blender or two knives–your standard pie-crust or biscuit method.

Stir together the syrup, milk, and extra and add to the processor or stir into the bowl until a soft, uniform, very sticky dough forms.

Wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill for at least 2 hours.

Flour your work surface with your wheat-free flour of choice and use plenty–this is a very sticky dough! I prefer white rice flour since I can get it in larger amounts at the Indian market, it’s got a fine, grabby texture and won’t change the texture or flavor of the baked goods. Roll out the dough to somewhere between 1/4 and 1/8-inch thick and cut into squares for the traditional graham cracker style or rounds (or any other shape you want) if you’d like to make your own moon pies and such. Dock each cracker with the tines of a fork, a skewer, or toothpick. Docking keeps the crackers from puffing too much, you want them to stay fairly flat and compact, so don’t skip that part. Transfer to a baking sheet lined with a parchment paper or a baking mat and sprinkle with sugar or cinnamon-sugar.

Bake for 20 minutes at 350° F. Makes a bit more than 2 dozen 3″ square cookies.

The distinctive flavor of a graham crackers seems to come from the combination of molasses (from the brown sugar) and vanilla, so you want to make sure the quality of these ingredients are fairly high. The Smitten Kitchen recipe called for a mild honey, but that’s naturally high in fructose so not a good option for a Low-FODMAP indulgence. Since I was substituting maple syrup, I dropped the dark brown sugar to light just to keep things more or less even. And if there was ever a time to bust out the premium vanilla, this recipe is it! For me it was a bottle of Neilsen-Massey Organic Fair Trade Madagascar Bourbon vanilla extract that I received for review. The Neilsen-Massey vanilla is subtle but lovely in a recipe like this that depends on basics, not show.

What amazed me about this recipe came the day after they were baked. The next day I opened the cookie jar to immediately be hit with that quintessential graham cracker aroma and it was amazing. Add to that the perfect texture and flavor–these grahams made for excellent s’mores and even better snacking–not too sweet, just sweet enough.

Low-FODMAP Pineapple Salsa

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I was expecting company last week and had meant to do some baking but the week had just gone from hectic to all-out-insane and I just couldn’t summon the will to turn on the oven. Still, I wanted to offer my guests something so I figured I’d just pick up some nice cheese on the way home and call it done.

Until, that is, I got a hankering for something a little more tropical and came up with this:

jwalker_nb_pineapplesalsa

Low-FODMAP Pineapple Salsa

1 c diced tomatoes
1 c diced pineapples
1/2 c sliced green onion tops
1/4 c chopped cilantro*
juice of 1 lime
salt and pepper to taste

Combine all ingredients and mix well. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or until ready to serve. Good for about 3 days or so.

If you like more heat in your salsa you can, by all means, add a diced jalapeno or other peppers to the mix. Not knowing the heat tolerance of my guests and wanting something a bit on the milder side I left it out. And if you’re in a hurry, many of these items can be found in your local grocery store already chopped and ready to go!

I served it with tortilla chips, of course, but the leftovers made amazing nachos with a bit of shredded cheese and some avocado crema on top!

*Cilatro or Culantro?

When I was picking up said supplies, I needed some cilantro but didn’t really want to buy an entire bunch as I knew most of it would likely go to waste. Dried wasn’t really an option for this sort of preparation, so I was looking among the smaller packages up on the top shelf and found a pouch of Culantro which I mistook for cilantro until I noticed the leaves were actually long, flat blades about an inch wide or so. The packaging mentioned that it had the same flavor as culantro but was hardier–making it a better crop for gardens and a better staple in the fridge.

Preparing this for the salsa I noticed the same taste and flavor as cilantro but the texture was incredibly different. It was more of  a crisp leaf that shattered almost as much as it sliced, and had a crunchiness almost like bay leaves. Still, sliced thin enough and once it’s macerated a bit with the pineapple et al. it’s perfectly fine.

Review: Easy Indian Cooking, Second Edition

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indian-coverweb

***This is a sponsored post. I received a copy of Easy Indian Cooking, 2nd Edition, by Suneeta Vaswani, for the purpose of review. All opinions expressed are my own and no other compensation has been received. Now that we’ve got that out of the way…***

If you’ve been hanging around here for a while, you’ve probably figured out that Todd and I love Indian food in general, and that I love to try out authentic recipes when time allows (like participating in the Indian Cooking Challenge). So it’s no surprise that I jumped at the chance to check out Suneeta Vaswani’s updated Easy Indian Cooking.

The book opens with a brief information section that would have come in super-handy back when I first started trying those ICC recipes and I was having to Google every other ingredient to figure out what I was looking for or what I could substitute. If you’re just delving into Indian cuisine and are wanting to recreate some of the delicacies you’ve enjoyed in restaurants, this section will help you get started in ways that a single recipe might leave you wondering. Not that Vaswani doesn’t give you plenty of tips throughout the book, most recipes have a tip in the margins along with a little note describing the recipe, it’s history, or a memory associated with the food.

Of course we tried out some of the recipes, too!

Yellow Lentil Soup with Vegetables aka Toor Dal (page 72)

Yellow Lentil Soup with Vegetables aka Toor Dal (page 72)

This Yellow Lentil Soup was soup-er simple to prepare and so filling but without being very heavy. The flashes of color from the carrots, tomatoes, and green beans make this a very sunny soup and perfect for a rainy spring or summer day.

Coriander Chicken (page 92) with Potatoes in Tomato Gravy (page 167)

Coriander Chicken (page 92) with Potatoes in Tomato Gravy (page 167)

These Coriander Chicken thighs (page 92) were quite flavorful without being over-powering. While I used the Potatoes in Tomato Gravy (page 167) as a side dish, it actually cam from the Vegetarian Entrees chapter and is meant to be served with rice. Vaswani points out that Indians consider potato a vegetable (as opposed to a starch, the way most nutritionists would/do) and therefore thinking nothing of pairing it with a grain. As vegetarian entrees are quite popular among many of the Indian regions and rice is plentiful, this makes perfect sense. Still, I chose not to double up on the starches for this particular meal.

Sindhi Chicken Curry (page 102)

Sindhi Chicken Curry (page 102)

For many years I limited tomatoes in my diet due to a health condition that now seems to be under better control. I admit, we’ve been reveling in my new-found tolerance for this fruit/vegetable and the Sindhi Chicken Curry (page 102) was a wonderful way to reacquaint ourselves with a rich, well-spiced tomato sauce. This dish is a homey one that the author considers a “quintessential north Indian-style chicken curry.” I think it’s a perfect antidote to the idea that all curries are a) the same and b) all yellow with the ubiquitous curry powder as the main ingredient.

Curried Lamb aka Rogan Josh (page 126)

Curried Lamb aka Rogan Josh (page 126)

While it always sounds like a teacher taking attendance, Rogan Josh or Curried Lamb (page 126) is also one of the favorites when we head out to our local Indian restaurant. It’s not named for a person, though, as rogan can either mean oil or red color (like rouge or rojo) and josh mean heat or passion. So Rogan Josh is a dish cooked by high heat in oil, and in this case it’s lamb, as is perferred in the region of Kashmir, where it’s from. And it was just as good made at home as it was in any restaurant we’ve ordered it in!

Indian Scrambled Eggs aka Akoori (page 160)

Indian Scrambled Eggs aka Akoori (page 160)

Todd opted to try this Indian Scrambled Egg dish (page 160) on one of the frequent evenings we enjoy breakfast for dinner and I really wasn’t sure what to expect. It’s a Parsi dish that the author states is very popular in Mumbai (modern-day Bombay) and it makes a great stuffing for wraps or pitas. We enjoyed the cumin and tomato studded eggs more than we expected to! It’s nice to have this as an option, now, when the usual eggs over easy just aren’t sounding as appealing.

Indian Scrambled Eggs (aka Akoori)
from Easy Indian Cooking, 2nd Edition by Suneeta Vaswani

Serves 4-6

8 eggs
1 tsp salt or to taste
1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper
3 Tbsp oil
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 cup chopped onion
2 tsp finely chopped green chili
1 cup chopped tomato
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/4 cup cilantro, chopped
Tomato wedges and cilantro sprigs for garnish

  1. In a bowl, gently whisk eggs, salt and pepper. Do not beat.
  2. In a large skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat and add cumin seeds. Stir in onion and green chile and saute until golden, 3 to 4 minutes.
  3. Add tomato and saute, stirring continuously, for 1 minute. Stir in cayenne, turmeric and cilantro. Cook for 1 minute longer. Reduce heat to medium-low and slowly add egg mixture. Cook, stirring gently, until eggs are soft and creamy, 3 to 4 minutes. Do not overcook.
  4. Serve garnished with tomato wedges and cilantro sprigs.

Overall we enjoyed the recipes we tried from Easy Indian Cooking, 2nd Edition, and I especially loved the extra information included at the front of the book as well as with each recipe. This, I think, makes this book invaluable for a home cook looking to expand their culinary world with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of flavor.

Enjoy!