Aaaaddddoooorrrable
Check out the tutorial over at Serious Eats
Don’t be intimidate by it’s name, we hear this is one tasty treat! It’s pretty easy to make too. One of our mamas is still kicking ass and taking names on a raw food diet (erm… something I failed to maintain 100% myself *sigh*) and share this birthday treat recipe with us.
This is the cake my bosses wife made for my birthday. The “regular eaters” loved it’s chocolate-y ness just as much.
Crust
Filling
Crust ~ Combine and mix all ingredients into dough, press in to a 7″ pan and up the sides. chill for at least 1 hour
Filling~ Combine in blender/processor until smooth, pour in to crust chill for at least one hour
That’s it! Raw food can be soooo easy to prepare and taste so good! Don’t get me wrong, raw can be a pain in the arse to prepare too (blenders, dehydrators, spirooli’s, the listĀ of gadgets never ends) but for the most part it’s pretty easy if you aren’t too into “Haute Cuisine”.
I got this out of a magazine (you all remember my cookbooks, right?) so I can’t claim it entirely as my own. I did edit it a little last night, so I’m posting that version. So I guess it’s mostly mine, yah?
Big Batch Jambalaya
prep time is about half an hour, cook time is about an hour, yields about 13 servings that are about 1 cup each (does the word about look or sound weird to you yet?)
In a dutch oven (orĀ a large pot with a lid that fits), cook chicken in 1 Tbsp oil until no longer pink; remove and set aside. In the same pot, cook and stir the kielbasa, peppers and onions in remaining oil until the onions are tender. You may have to add a little more oil. I did. Add the garlic and cook for another minute.
Stir in the broth, tomatoes, water, mustard, parsley, thyme and Worcestershire. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover & simmer for ten minutes.
Add the rice and return to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 25 – 30 minutes or until rice is tender. *** If you are using scallops, set your timer for 20 minutes instead and then stir them in and reset your timer for another ten minutes ***
If you used shrimp, after the 25 – 30 minutes stir in them and the chicken in, cook for 2 – 4 minutes longer or until the shrimp turn pink.
If you used scallops, stir in the chicken and cook until heated through.
We made this last night before graduation and no one had a chance to eat it. I took a bowl to my friends house when we dropped off the kids, and when we got home at 10 we all ate. It was delicious. The original recipe called for less chicken and kielbasa, added ham, cayenne pepper and was shrimp not scallops. I think this is so forgiving because it’s a jambalaya, and the one I shared above just turned out perfectly. If you want a little heat, add the cayenne pepper. It called for 1.5 – 2 tsp, but adjust to taste. Maybe a dash of Tobasco or the like instead even. We will definitely be making it again. Yep, ours is gone, but hey, we fed seven adults dinner with it and two portions for lunch today. Not too bad! Not too pricey either. I don’t have a break down, but I think it was maybe a dollar or two a serving in actual food cost (not accounting for time to prepare or energy to run the stove).