www.paleofood.com
I found a lot of helpful recipes here:
www.paleofood.com I also try one new food a week... like a new fish, vegetable, or fruit. This week I tried blood oranges... wow are they good! :yum: Cheers, --Elizabeth |
I thiught I'd post my locally infamous stone stew
Ingredients Onions Garlic (to taste) Meat (Ground beef seems to work best, otherwise whatever you have that's going to go off soon, chop small for preference) Any veg to hand, no matter how old (as long as they're not rotten), I've even added old salad (eg lettuce and tomatos) and it's worked fine Tinned tomatos Salt and pepper Paprika or chilli (or both) or other condiments (eg worcestershire sauce or mushroom gravy) Meat stock Any other spices (to taste) Fry the meat in cocnut oil or butter until brown, add onions and garlic, salt and pepper. Add vegetables (except green leaf veg such as spinach and cabbage) and tinned tomatos (if using plum tomatos, bash with a wooden spoon first). Add spices and condiments, and meat stock if required. Cover and boil hard for 10 minutes or so. Add leafy veg, add boiling water if necessary (so that contents of pot covered at least half way). Cover again and boil for another 5 mins. Turn heat right down and leave to stew till everything tender, stir now and then. I usually leave on the hob for at least an hour. Taste and add extra spices etc if necessary. Serve. I'm still experimenting with this, so bear with me. I've been making it for about 20 years and had it down pat, but I've had to exclude my secret ingredient (Gia vegetable puree) cause it contained sugar and I would have originally added a handful of rice and served with bread and butter. It's great for using up old veg, and no dish is the same. Oh, and the version of the stone soup story I was told as a child involved a man caught by a hungry giant .... |
CURRIED CAULIFLOWER APPLE SOUP
1 small onion, chopped fine 4 garlic cloves, minced 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter 1 large Granny Smith apple 4 cups cauliflower flowerets (about 1 small head) 2 1/2 cups chicken broth 1/4 cup coconut milk In a 3 1/2- to 4-quart saucepan cook onion, garlic, and curry powder in butter over moderately low heat, stirring, until onion is softened. Peel and core apple. Chop apple coarsely and add to curry mixture. Add cauliflower and broth, and simmer, covered, until cauliflower is very tender, 20-30 minutes. In a blender or food processor purée soup in batches until very smooth, transferring as puréed to another saucepan. Stir in coconut milk and salt and pepper to taste and heat over moderate heat until hot. |
This is something I am devouring at least 4 times a week right now- it's delicious.
Chicken breasts cut into strips (long and skinny like really long fingers) rolled around in paprika, crushed garlic and a meat seasoning which has stuff like cardamon, herbs and sea salt in it. Then just pop some coconut oil in the pan, put on low heat and let chicken pieces cook till done, if u like them crispy turn the heat up, but I am ejoying the tenderness of slow cooked chicken. This goes great with homemade guacamole and pepper, cuc sticks to dip into gucamole. Really loving my spices, my pot of paprika has been finished within 3 weeks!!!! Any spices you all buy by the bucket load? and chuck on many things?? |
I'm a rosemary fanatic. Fortunately my neighborhood is landscaped in rosemary so I never run out.
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Here's a couple of variations on beef tartar that I've tried lately, both using raw fatty chuck roast julienned (sliced accross the grain in two directions for the most tender result). These are just delicious!
a) Minced green onions, coursely chopped cilantro, minced ginger, soy sauce, sesame oil, lemon juice b) Minced green onions, coursely chopped cilantro, minced garlic (lots!), sea salt, olive oil, vinegar In both the amount of vinegar or lemon juice is just to give it a small amount of "zing", not to chemically cook the protein as in a ceviche. Another variation I'd like to try would be similar to one of my favorite sushi pieces, the "spicy tuna hand roll". I would use beef or pork instead of tuna and leave the rice out. It would have a mixture of finely chopped beef, sesame oil, chile sauce (Asian not Mexican), soy sauce, ginger with sesame seeds sprinkled on top, wrapped in a nori cone with some julienned cucumber and/or radish sprout and/or avocado and/or shredded daikon. Sorry about no measures on the ingredients - I rarely measure when I'm cooking. Wyv |
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Thanks Nancy LC and Paleodeano-
I've got a rosemary bush in the garden- whoop whoop. Cayenne, chilli, :yum:. Now to get creative. Talking of rosemary my ma taught me to use a good deal when cooking legs of lamb. -Poke a large knife deep into the flesh of lamb leg and stuff into the holes created- smashed garlic cloves and rosemary sprigs- as much as you can stuff into the meat the better. Then roast like normal- (really good on barbecue) and there you have heaven on a bone- DELISH! Also, I once made roast pork stuffed w apricots- cant remember if it included garlic or any herbs- any how, that was also a delightful jig on my tastebuds. |
These sound interesting, will try the pancakes this weekend... Thanks!
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Paleo Bars
I took AimeJoi's idea and did my own variation. I used raw cashews, pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds. Roasted them myself. Ground them in the food processor until finely chopped. Then I took an assortment of dried fruits: figs, apricots and wild dried blueberries and chopped up the big ones in the food processor, threw the dried blueberries in whole. Mix nuts with plenty of salt, mixed nuts and fruit, added honey and coconut oil until it looked like it would all hold together when forced to. Oh yes, coconut went in too.
Pressed it into a 13" pan lined with wax paper and put in freezer to harden. From what I have tasted so far it is sweet, salty and crunchy. Really great tasting! When it finishes hardening I will cut it into individual servings and wrap and probably freeze. |
Boiled Tongue
Boiled Tongue- excellent for cold cuts
Wash tongue well. Simmer until tender in seasoned water to cover. (Bay leaf, salt, peppercorns and other seasonings to suit.) Figure it will take about one hour per pound. If the tongue is to be served hot, add quartered onions, carrots and/or cabbage wedges during the last half-hour or so of cooking. When the tongue is tender, lift it out of the broth with tongs and hold it under cold running water until you can handle it. Then peel off the tough skin. Trim off gristle and put the tongue back into the broth to reheat if you are serving it hot. If you want it for cold cuts, allow the tongue to cool in the broth. This makes it juicier. Then drain well, wrap and chill completely. Slice then to serve. Serve tongue--hot or cold--with a choice of condiments. A brown sauce made of the cooking broth with drippings is good. Raisin sauce is a classic for tongue. Cold tongue can be served with several kinds of mustard (or mix your own variations, using horseradish, capers, or chopped sour pickle). Horseradish, canberry relish, dill pickles -- all are good accompaniments for tongue, either hot or cold. Variation: Tongue can be pressure cooked. Place it on a rack in the cooker. Add 2 cups water for a 3-pound tongue and seasonings. Cook 45 minutes at 15 pounds pressure. This recipe is from one of my favorite cookbooks COOKING ALASKAN by Alaskans Enjoy! |
I made this Avocado compound butter and it is just delicious! I might reduce the cumin by 50% next time though, it is pretty strong. Tastes great on hot veggies!
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Odd, it works for me. Try it naked: http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/rec...6_32236,00.html
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Now the first one is working. And this naked one is NOT. Perhaps if I tried it with a sharp stick! :lol:
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OK... now they are all working. It was just my ISP. The path to the DNS server was messed up. Someone probably threw a sharp stick at the router! :lol:
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Router's aren't good eats! That naked person is going to starve.
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Great ideas everyone. Thanks
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Tom Ka Gai (Coconut soup)
This is an approximation, I have to tweak this soup a lot to get it just right. I found lots of recipes on the Internet and picked one and tweaked it so it tasted like (as close as I could get it) to the soup at my favorite Thai restaurant. 2 cans of coconut milk 2 cups of chicken broth 3 skinless boneless chicken breasts, cut into bite-sized pieces 4-5 slices of Galanga root (Thai ingredient, SE asian market might have) Or substitute Ginger root instead. 2-4 Tbl fish sauce 2-3 cups of sliced mushrooms Lemon Grass (varies... about 1-2 4" pieces chopped) lime zest or Kefir lime leaves (3-4) Juice of 1-4 limes or lemons Chili peppers, chopped (to taste) chopped cilantro to garnish Heat the broth and coconut milk, add the other ingredients, simmer for 20 minutes. YUMMY! |
BBQ Pig's Feet
BARBECUED PIG'S FEET
8 freshpig's feet, split in half lengthwise 2 quarts water 2 cups white vinegar 2 large onion, coarsely chopped 2 green bell pepper, cored, seeded, and coarsely chopped 1/4 cup crushed red pepper, flaked 3 tablespoons salt 1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper 3 cups barbecue sauce 1. Wash the pigs' feet well. Place them in a large pot and pour in the water. Add the vinegar, onions, green peppers, red pepper, salt, and black pepper. Heat to boiling over medium heat. Reduce the heat to simmering and cook, covered, until just about tender, about 2 1/2 hours. Skim the surface and stir the pigs' feet occasionally during cooking. 2. Preheat the oven to 350 degree F. Remove the pigs' feet from the broth with a slotted spoon. (Reserve the broth for cooking greens or vegetables.) Arrange them side by side in 2 baking pans large enoughto hold them in a single layer. Spoon the barbecue sauce over them and bake 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to 300 degree F. and continue cooking until tender, about 35 minutes. |
That soup sounds good Nancy, thanks.
I once had a Korean cocunut soup in S.F. that I still dream about. |
Grilled Chicken Livers
Grilled Chicken Livers
1 package of chicken livers pound bacon salt and pepper Cut livers in half and wash. Pat dry. Cut bacon strips in half. Salt and pepper livers. wrap each liver with bacon,Hold in place with wooden toothpick. This is a mess job but well worth the time and mess. Grill until bacon and liver are done. Dip into BBQ sauce and enjoy. |
What do chicken livers taste like? Anything like beef livers, or completely different? I make a similar recipe with beef liver that's listed on the Carnivorous Recipe thread.
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No they are not are "heavy" as beef liver. I don't like beef liver because of its graininess and heaviness. Chicken livers have a more much delicate taste IMO. The smaller the livers the better IMO.
Also you can wrap a piece of bacon around each chicken liver and broil them. |
Brains n Eggs
This is my grandmother's recipe:
Brains n Eggs
A little bacon grease or lard 4 eggs 1/3 cup whole milk or light cream 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 pork or calf brain (ask your butcher) Melt bacon grease in an iron skillet on low heat. Add pork brains to heated grease. Stir with a fork. Add salt and pepper and stir. Whisk eggs and milk together. Increase heat and add egg mixture to brains. Scramble to desired consistency. Serves 2. |
fluffybear,
Are you sure you aren't a carnivore? All your recipes are animal food! :) Would ya post some of these in the carnivore recipe thread? They all look so good... especially those brains! :yum: Just make sure you substitute heavy cream for the "light". Otherwise... it all looks pretty antivegan to me. ;) |
Well I use heavy cream a lot, but not in my scrambled eggs. When I said light I didn't mean low fat. I meant like half n half.
I have been made to feel VERY unwelcome in the Carnivore thread so I guess I will just stick to the Paleo. |
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Coconut Soup Part II
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I've made the coconut soup twice now. It just gets better! This time I used chicken and shrimp and more fish sauce and more lime juice (lemon is fine too). I think next time I'll try to find some fresh lemon grass, I used dried. Oh yeah, maybe I'll get some dried shrimp from the Asian store and toss a few pinches of that in. That shrimp flavor is great in there. Oh yes, I used canned mushrooms and water chestnuts in my last batch. The recipe is very flexible! |
My Uncle's BBQ Venison
3 sticks of butter 1/2 T/ worchestsire (look for LC if you can find it) 1 sm. can of tomato sauce dash of liquid smoke 1 t. black pepper 1/2 c. chopped onion (optional) 1/2 c. ketchup (again, try to find low carb) 1/2 t. dry mustard or 1 T. prepared dijon mustard 1/2 t. rosemary 1/2 t. thyme 1/2 t. salt 2 lbs. venison roast Put all ingredients in a slow cooker crock pot and cook 5-6 hrs. til done. If venison is frozen cook 10-12 hrs. |
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