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A Vegan Recipe for Your New Year’s Goals

A Vegan Recipe for Your New Year’s Goals

It’s a new year and many people have set intentions for eating healthier. For some, like me, that means focusing more on plant based meals. I realized as I was thinking about eating more vegan or vegetarian foods that much of what I ate growing up in a Greek household was vegan. We gaffed it up with feta, but without it, the dishes were 100% vegan. This is why the Mediterranean diet is so lauded. It’s mostly plant based, but allows you to eat everything. Meat is treated as a seasoning or a garnish, fish is encouraged, but most dishes are vegetarian, if not totally vegan. So I’m sharing one of my favorite Greek dishes: Kounoupidi Kokkinisto or Braised Cauliflower.

Braised Cauliflower is vegan without the feta on top

Ingredients:

  • 1 head of cauliflower cut into florets
  • 1 large onion
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 28 oz. can of crushed tomatoes
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • feta cheese (optional)

Instructions:

Heat the oil in a dutch oven, pot or wide skillet. Add the cut cauliflower, in batches if needed, until browned. (8-10 minutes).

Remove browned cauliflower to a plate.

Add onions to the pot, add more oil if necessary, and cook the onions down until they are soft and golden – about 10 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for 30 seconds until fragrant.

Add the can of crushed tomatoes, the cauliflower, cinnamon, red pepper flake, salt and pepper and then fill up a 1/2 cup water and add until it just covers the cauliflower.

Bring to a boil, then cover the pot, lower the heat to low and simmer until the cauliflower can be easily cut with a fork – about 25 minutes.

Uncover and cook for another 5-10 minutes until the sauce thickens a bit more. Adjust seasoning if needed. Let cool a bit and serve with feta, if you wish. If you want to keep it vegan, then leave the feta out.

Enjoy! And if you need a good motto to follow for eating healthier, I like this one by Michael Pollan:

Eat real food, not too much, mostly plants.

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The Perfect Roast Beef

The Perfect Roast Beef

I grew up in a house where meat was cooked well done – always. I have never liked my meat even medium never mind rare. But my husband loves his roasts, steaks and burgers cooked medium rare and I have never once cooked any of those things correctly according to him. Now he cooks, too, and some will say even better than I do, so if he wants something his way, he makes it and makes mine the way I want. I just never seem to be able to get the timing right to keep meat medium rare.

This year for New Year’s Day it was just the two of us. I was craving a roast and so I made one. I followed this recipe, with some modifications. I used red pepper flake and garlic powder in the paste rubbed all over the roast and just thyme and rosemary, not basil. I kept an eye on the time and pulled it out even though all my instincts told me to leave it in longer. It turned out perfect! I did cook my piece a little longer on the stove. I just can’t eat meat that’s bleeding.

I paired it with these melting potatoes and a side Caesar salad and it was one of the best meals ever. We now have a lot of leftover roast beef for sandwiches.

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Garides Saganaki (Shrimp Saganaki) Recipe

Garides Saganaki (Shrimp Saganaki) Recipe

This is one of my traditional Christmas dishes. I first had it in Greece at a nice restaurant in the town of Gargalianoi – the closest town to my parents’ village where we have a home. I like to make this around Christmas because of the beautiful red and green colors.

In Greek cooking there are a whole slew of dishes which are categorized as saganaki.  One of the most popular is feta saganaki a meze (appetizer) of fried feta set aflame with the help of a little ouzo or Metaxa.  The term saganaki actually refers to the small, two-handled frying pan in which the food is cooked called a sagani, a derivative of the Turkish word sahan, which means copper dish.  But you don’t need a special pan to make this dish, any sort of deep frying pan or cast iron skillet will work.

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1 1/2 cups onion, diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 red pepper, cut into strips
  • 1/2 green pepper, cut into strips
  • 10 ounces grape or cherry tomatoes 
  • 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
  • 1/2 tbsp oregano
  • 1/4 tsp paprika
  • 1 cup crushed tomatoes
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp pepper
  • 1lb shrimp, peeled and de-veined
  • 3 tbsp ouzo
  • 3/4 cup Greek feta, crumbled
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley

Instructions

  • Heat the olive oil in a large skilled over medium heat and saute the onion for 5 minutes until soft and translucent. 
  • Add the minced garlic, red and green pepper strips, cherry tomatoes, red pepper flakes, oregano and paprika and saute for an additional 5 minutes, stirring regularly.
  • Add the crushed tomatoes and tomato paste. Season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring regularly for 2 – 3 minutes and then add the shrimp to the pan with the ouzo. Stir, cover your skillet, and cook for 5 minutes, on medium-low.
  • Uncover your skillet and sprinkle the crumbled feta onto the shrimp and tomato mixture. Broil for up to 5 minutes in the oven or until feta is soft and browned.
  • Sprinkle with the chopped parsley.
  • Serve with toasted/crusty bread or over pasta or rice.
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Breakfast in a private ski gondola at Ocean House

Breakfast in a private ski gondola at Ocean House

If you miss travel (don’t we all?) and you’re looking for a wintery escape that will make you feel like you’re somewhere in the Swiss Alps but also by the ocean, take a trip to South County, RI this winter. The storied Ocean House in Watch Hill almost next door to Taylor Swift’s mansion and overlooking the ocean, has some great deals right now. 

Me and my husband, Jason, outside our private gondola

They’re also offering their unique Veuve Clicquot Fondue Express Village dining experience and have expanded it to include breakfast and afternoon crepes. Even if you’re a local or a nearby New Englander, take a daytrip and make memories that you’ll cherish. Or gift someone this dining experience – maybe they’ll even invite you along. 

Inside the gondola – the table setting.

I have told you about the Fondue Village lunch and dinner experiences in the past. So let me tell you about breakfast. Imagine waking up at the Ocean House and enjoying a special private breakfast in your very own ski gondola. You start off with a glass of Veuve Clicquot champagne. Inside your private gondola there are heavy red velvet curtains you can close to keep the sun out or for extra privacy. The decor is rustic luxury: soft, plush pillows and elegant tableware including elk napkin holders, even heated blankets to keep you warm. You’ll warm up quickly with the cup of hot chocolate you make yourself using the Lindt chocolates and accroutements such as chocolate sprinkles and mini marshmallows. Your server will bring you your hot milk of choice (there are nondairy options) and you just add the Lindt chocolates til your hot chocolate is the right amount of chocolate for you, add marshmallows and sprinkles and enjoy!

Make your own hot chocolate at Ocean House’s Fondue Village

For the first course you have a choice of yogurt and granola parfait (pictured) or Swiss Bircher muesli. 

First course: granola, Greek yogurt and fresh berry parfait

The second course is a crepe and you can choose from three different fillings: ham and swiss topped with an egg (pictured), apple and cinnamon compote with caramel sauce or chocolate hazelnut spread with whipped cream and sugar. The main course can be accompanied by a specialty cocktail such as the Veuve Clicquot Rich Rose cranberry cinnamon cocktail or a glass of Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label Brut champagne. 

Ham and swiss crepe.

Finally, just when you think you can’t eat another bite, your server knocks on the gondola door and brings you chocolate fondue. Pouring rich melted hot chocolate into the fondue pot your mouth waters all over again. There is an assortment of fruit for dipping, bananas, pineapple and strawberries. I promise you, you’ll want to savor every bite, but won’t be able to finish.

Chocolate fondue with fresh fruit for dipping.

To book your experience and review the menu for both breakfast and afternoon crepes, click here. Cheers!

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