Sweet mixes |
So, with there being little time, but a least a day or two
in the week where you can at least spend a little time in the kitchen, I find
this to be an ideal recipe that will easily see you through a week worth of
meals for 3 to 4 people (or serve as a big batch for a party snack). You might
think that, eeewww, you don’t like to eat the same thing over and over, but I’ll
let you in on several preparation methods that’ll keep things interesting.
Warning:
There will be a lot of taste in your mix, but don’t worry
about that until you’ve got your paste done for making the burgers; flour will
take away a lot of the taste. As usual you can substitute with the flour of
choice, but be prepared for a different taste with chickpea/buckwheat/corn
flour. Best substitute would be rice flour, it won’t really alter the taste. As
for potato flour (as in this recipe), if you can’t get it, get some instant
potato mash, it works fine. As to the oats, don’t use raw ones, they’ll be too
tough. Get the ones that have been precooked, as those for the quick and easy
to fix oatmeal. As to the amounts, they are estimates, there are many factors
involved in how much you need, so basically you add the flour/oats until you
have a substance you can work with.
This recipe takes about an hour, but then you can just leave
it in a bowl in the fridge and get out whatever amount you want when the mood
suits you. What you’ll need is a skillet/wok, small cooking pan,
blender/immersion blender—with tubular container, spoons, wooden ladle, plates a
big bowl and something to deep fry in if that is the option you’re going for in
the prep.
High nutritional value is the main thing here. Basically
everything you need is in this mix, so if you’ve got a picky kid that doesn’t
like eating veggies, or something, this is the way to sneak all the vits and
mins in. Basically, if you can stand it, you could easily live quite healthily
of this.
Veggie lentil/oat mix
List 1:
Cauliflower: 2 big rose-sized buds. Quartered
Carrot: 2 mid-size. Chopped (no more than ½ inch thick)
Sweet potato: 1 mid-size. Chopped
Leek: 4-5 inches. Chopped roughly.
Green beans: 4-6 chopped
Oats: 1 mug (150-200gr)
Broth cubes: 3-4
Salt: 1-2 teasp. (to taste)
Sugar: 1 teasp.
Pepper: 2 turns (2 knife points)
Paprika: 1 teasp.
Olive oil: 2-3 tablesp.
Sweet chili sauce: (optional)2 tablesp.
Water: 2 mugs. (1/3 liter)
List 2:
Lentils: 1 ½ mug (400 gr) boiled
Onion: 2 mid-size. Chopped
Red pepper: ½ chopped
Yellow pepper: ½ chopped
Italian pepper: 1 mid-size. Chopped
Zucchini: ½ chopped
(Dried herbs in this case. Double if using fresh, except for
thyme and rosemary)
Parsley: 2 teasp.
Basil: 2 teasp.
Oregano: ½ teasp.
Rosemary: 1 pinch
Thyme: 1 pinch.
Dill: ½ teasp.
Olive oil: 3-4 tablesp.
Sweet chili sauce: (optional) 3 tablesp.
Tomato ketchup: 1 teasp.
Salt: 1-2 teasp. (to taste)
Sugar: 1 teasp.
Pepper: 2 turns (2 knife points)
Paprika: ½ teasp.
Nutmeg: 1 knife point (a pinch)
Sesame seeds: 1 teasp.
List 3:
Eggs: 2
Flour: 2-3 mugs (Approx 450 gr)
Potato flour: 2 mugs (Approx 400 gr)
Oats: 1-2 mugs (Approx 200 gr)
Last bit:
Breading: 1-2 mugs (Approx 200 gr)
Cornflakes: ½ mug (handful) crumbled
To start:
First put list 1 on a high temp burner in your cooking pan
until it boils, then turn down the heat so it can simmer for the duration of
the baking that follows. No particular sequence to how you handle list 1. Just
throw them all in and boil them. Stir frequently, though, to prevent burning,
and add more olive oil if you feel it sticks too much. Leave to simmer until it
starts to become pasty/thick.
While nr 1 starts to heat, get going with your skillet/wok.
Heat the olive oil a little, you’ll see it shift on the bottom. Start with onions. Stir, allow
for some crusts before you add your peppers, zucchini and then your boiled
lentils. Stir, keep the heat up, and then add your seasoning…all of them, no
particular sequence to it, although I tend to throw sugar and salt in early on.
Bake until your zucchini starts to get mushy, be carefully
the lot doesn’t burn and stick to your bottom…it is something lentils like to
do. Add some extra olive oil if you think it is going too fast and lower the
heat a little.
Once both boiling and baking is done, turn off the heat and
blender both components together. Careful, it will be hot. I used an immersion
blender, so I had to do three rounds in a lemonade decanter to blender everything.
The mix should look like a thick soup or porridge, having some of your veggies,
like pepper and beans still floating in it like small colorful bits, makes it
look more interesting, but you can keep blendering until it all one cane-sugar
colored mush.
Carefully stir your raw eggs through the mix and then start
adding the flours and oats from list 3 until you have a paste that will stand
up straight on a spoon without dripping off. If you don’t have enough flour,
add more, if you have too much, leave it.
Your basis is done.
Here come the different ways to finish them.
Breaded burgers: 4-6 Persons
The mix: 8-10 full tablesp.
(Optional: Add 2 tablesp. Cottage cheese to the mix.)
Breading/cornflakes: 1 mug. In a small bowl or on a plate.
Use two large spoons. Fill one to full capacity and slide on
your corn and breading mix. Using the breading to keep your hands from getting
too moist, keep patting the burger until you have a sturdy hamburger sized
pattie. You should have enough for 6 burgers.
Deep fry at 190 degrees Celsius: 7-9 mins. Only two patties
at a time to a deep golden brown.
Or
Fry in a skillet. Heat butter/sunflower seed oil and bake
until the burgers look sturdy and nicely crusted. Similar to a normal burger,
really.
Serve on the side of veggies and staple food as meat substitute,
on a bun, or with a salad, or just as a snack with some mustard and if you like
it spicy Tabasco or Sweet chili sauce.
Pita patties: 4-6
Persons
The mix: 8 tablesp.
Flour: 1-2 mugs (200 gr)
Olive oil: 1 tablesp.
Barley vinegar: 1 tablesp.
Mustard: 1 teasp.
Put your mix into a reasonably sized bowl, add the
ingredients above, and start adding flour until you have a dough like substance
(like for bread). Soft, but no longer sticky. Separate your dough into golf
ball sized balls, and flatten until you have a large pattie about half an inch
thick. Bake in a pre-heated skillet to a golden brown. Keep the heat mid-high,
but regulate if you feel it goes to fast, or slow. There should be some hissing
going on, but no vapors.
Once you’ve got your pitas baked, slice them open and serve
with a potato/veggie salad inside, or greens with a dressing, a ratatouille, a
spicy chili, or just with cheese. Plenty of ways.
Hushpuppies: 4-6 Person
The mix: 12-14 tablesp.
Cheese: 1 mug (150
gr) grated (I would go for a melt cheese but parmesan works too)
Breading: ½ - 1 mug
Stir your cheese through the mix and make small
meatball-sized balls. Roll them through your breading until they look just
right and then deep fry in 190 degrees Celsius for about 5 minutes. No more
than 6-8 balls per fry. You should have around 18 of them, depending on the
size you went for. Keep them small, though, otherwise the center might not be done.
Serve as party snacks with mustard, or other preferred dips,
or serve with your pasta meal as a meat substitute.
As time passes, I will try this mix for different varieties,
so check back every now and then if you’re curious.
Bon appétit.
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