Latest Comments

Harma Blog Break .
29. April 2024
Isn't the selvedge something to worry about in a later stage? It seems to me a lot more important th...
Beatrix Experiment!
23. April 2024
The video doesn´t work (at least for me). If I click on "activate" or the play-button it just disapp...
Katrin Spinning Speed Ponderings, Part I.
15. April 2024
As far as I know, some fabrics do get washed before they are sold, and some might not be. But I can'...
Kareina Spinning Speed Ponderings, Part I.
15. April 2024
I have seen you say few times that "no textile ever is finished before it's been wet and dried again...
Katrin How on earth did they do it?
27. März 2024
Ah, that's good to know! I might have a look around just out of curiosity. I've since learned that w...

Something old, something new...

Sometimes life throws you a challenge. My current challenge (well, the non-work-related one) is... vegetarian chili. That's not too bad, you say? That depends, I say.
I've made chili before, and it's basically an easy dish. But the version I'm going for now is actually low-carb vegan chili, due to several different persons with several different food issues that I would like to feed at the same time, out of one pot. And I am, very much, a meat person. I like the strong tastes and the taste mixture of meat with beans and tomato in a chili, very much so. I also like the texture of minced meat in the chili. And while beans are not that high in carbohydrates, they are high enough that I felt a need to put in something beside bean and tomato. Well, apart from my being sort of suspicious that it would be a little... bland otherwise.

So yesterday, I've bought tofu for the first time in my life, and though I've eaten tofu before (not much of that though) I have found out, this morning, why so many recipes talk about marinating it before using it. There was that time, at a living history event, when a piece of wood whittled off of something had fallen into my food bowl. (There's perils as well as joy in sharing camp with a very dedicated woodworker.) Wood, let me tell you, at least when it's fresh and not a weird wood like strongly resinated pine or juniper, tastes like... nothing. Sort of blandness personified.

The only difference to that piece of tofu I tried this morning? (I tried it raw and straight out of the bag, because I am a daring person and wanted to know how bad it possibly could be.) The wood was harder to chew. And probably contained less protein. So at the moment, a bit of tofu is hanging out in some marinade, and later on I shall put a bit of it into a pan and fry it to within an inch of its life... and then see whether my chili project will fly, walk, crawl, or jump over a friendly cliff into the ocean and sink like a stone.

(In the event that it should fly, I promise you the recipe. Should it totally tank, I will never speak of it again, though... so if you want a recipe, keep your fingers crossed for me!)

0
Friday!
Tea, anyone?
 

Comments 5

Margit (website) on Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2014 08:51

Ich habe ja eher eine Haß-Liebe zu Tofu. Viel Erfolg!
Hier ein finde ich guter Artikel rund um das Soja/Tofu-Thema:
http://www.deutschlandradiokultur.de/warum-es-so-viele-sojaallergien-gibt.993.de.html?dram%3Aarticle_id=236306

Ich habe ja eher eine Haß-Liebe zu Tofu. Viel Erfolg!
Hier ein finde ich guter Artikel rund um das Soja/Tofu-Thema:
http://www.deutschlandradiokultur.de/warum-es-so-viele-sojaallergien-gibt.993.de.html?dram%3Aarticle_id=236306
Anonymous on Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2014 13:05

Just remember that most vegans are veteran tofu eaters and probably like it. They'll appreciate your thoughtfulness. And if your chili has nice seasonings the blandness of the tofu won't be noticed.

Just remember that most vegans are veteran tofu eaters and probably like it. They'll appreciate your thoughtfulness. And if your chili has nice seasonings the blandness of the tofu won't be noticed.
a stitch in time (website) on Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2014 14:10

Margit, na, amal geht's scho. Zum Tofuliebhaber werd ich sicher nicht mutieren!

Hm... the plan is that not only the vegans/vegetarians should like the taste, but also the low-carb-fraction. Oh, and myself, too. That's the most difficult bit, probably...

Margit, na, amal geht's scho. Zum Tofuliebhaber werd ich sicher nicht mutieren!

Hm... the plan is that not only the vegans/vegetarians should like the taste, but also the low-carb-fraction. Oh, and myself, too. That's the most difficult bit, probably...
A Life Long Scholar (website) on Donnerstag, 13. Februar 2014 15:18

When I do vegetarian chili or spaghetti sauce I tend to use ground walnuts +/- sunflower seeds +/- pumpkin seeds to give a texture similar to what mom's meat-based version had, and because they taste yummy.

When I do vegetarian chili or spaghetti sauce I tend to use ground walnuts +/- sunflower seeds +/- pumpkin seeds to give a texture similar to what mom's meat-based version had, and because they taste yummy.
lyorn (website) on Montag, 17. Februar 2014 09:07

I liked it better cold on Sunday than hot on Saturday. Not sure if it aged gracefully, or if the sweet note it had (don't know what from? Didn't seem to be the maize) was more muted in the cold chili. I feel that sweet goes fine with meat bur far less so with plant protein. I didn't discover any of the bitterness I would have expected from the cacao you said went into it -- when I made a chili sin carne with cacao powder, it turned out very bitter.

I liked it better cold on Sunday than hot on Saturday. Not sure if it aged gracefully, or if the sweet note it had (don't know what from? Didn't seem to be the maize) was more muted in the cold chili. I feel that sweet goes fine with meat bur far less so with plant protein. I didn't discover any of the bitterness I would have expected from the cacao you said went into it -- when I made a chili sin carne with cacao powder, it turned out very bitter.
Already Registered? Login Here
Sonntag, 12. Mai 2024

Related Posts

Kontakt