Tuesday, July 11, 2006

It's a go - and I'll be back

It's a go - we're moving tomorrow! [closing in a week or so]. I'll be off-line for two weeks until I get myself a computer. I thought I might leave you with two views - the first, our backyard...





...and our view down the road...


Hasta luego, when I'll be cooking in my new kitchen [and blogging new recipes]!

love & a big sigh of relief from Northern New Mexico,

Karina



Sunday, July 9, 2006

Vegan + Vegetarian Recipe Index


Note from Karina:
This is the original Gluten-Free Goddess index of vegan and vegetarian recipes. Please change your bookmarks to the new updated vegan-vegetarian index here.
Thanks!



Appetizers and Snacks

Basil Mint Parsley Pesto
Brown Rice Tortilla Chips
Crispy Potato Sticks with Roasted Tomato Salsa

Easy Guacamole with Lime
Egg-Free Olive Oil Mayo
Garlic Sesame Crackers

How To Make a Vegan Herb Pesto
Hummus Tahini with Spiced Oil
Joey's Kicked Up Rockin' Guac with Lime + Tomatillos
Lime + Jalapeño Hummus

Pecan Crackers
Potato Chips- Gold + Sweet

Roasted Eggplant Tapenade
Roasted Vegetable Salsa
Roasted Yellow Tomato Salsa
Savory Vegetable Pancakes
Winter Pesto


Main Dishes

A Veggie Lover's Shepherd's Pie
Asparagus and Leek Risotto

Baked Mac & Cheese- Dairy-Free
Best Vegan Mac & Cheese
Butternut Chili

Crock Pot Curry with Coconut Milk
Curried Apple Cornbread Stuffing
Grilled Veggie Skewers

How to Cook Quinoa- the Super Easy Way
Karina's Cheesy Uncheese Sauce
Maple Roasted Acorn Squash
Pasta & Veggie Toss Revisited

Quinoa + Roasted Sweet Potato Stuffed Cabbage
Quinoa Salad with Yellow Tomatoes, Kalalmata Olives and Mint
Quinoa Stir-Fry with Summer Vegetables
Quinoa Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms

Ratatouille on Polenta with Baby Greens
Roasted Acorn Squash Risotto
Roasted Brussels Sprout Medley with Butter Beans & Rice
Roasted Tomato Soup
Roasted Vegetable Chowder
Roasted Vegetables and Brown Rice
Roasted Vegetables in a Nest

Sexy Spring Pasta- with roasted asparagus
Spaghetti Squash New Mexican with Black Beans and Lime
Stir-Fry Veggie Bliss

Vegan Garden Loaf with Maple Apricot Glaze
Vegan Pasta Pie
Vegetarian Mulligatawny
Vegetarian Green Chile Recipe for Stew or Casseroles


Soups and Stew

African Bean and Sweet Potato Soup

Carrot Soup
Celery Soup with Fennel with Ryeless Rye Croutons
Curried Butternut Soup
Easy Sweet Potato Soup

Kicked Up Coconut Split Pea Soup
Mexican Pumpkin Soup with Black Beans and Lime

Potato Leek Soup
Potato Soup for the Sensitive Soul
Pumpkin-Sweet Potato Soup
Purple Cabbage + Sweet Potato Soup

Roasted Tomato Soup
Roasted Vegetable Chowder
Sneaky Tomato Soup
Spicy Vegetable Soup with Lime
Sunshine Butternut Soup
Sweet Potato Soup with Ginger

Two Artists Chili
Vegetarian Mulligatawny
Vegan Gluten-Free Breads

Delicious Gluten-Free Bread (rice-free, egg, bean and soy-free)


Vegan Gluten-Free Ryeless "Rye" Bread (rice-free, bean and soy-free)


Vegan Muffins, Breakfast Brownies, Scones and Tea Breads






Side Dishes




Salads + Picnic Food









Vegan + Dairy-Free Dessert Recipes













Ovo-Lacto Vegetarian Recipes



All my vegetarian and vegan recipes are gluten-free and soy-free.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Every day is a winding road...

The view toward Abiquiu.


The house deal fell apart due to a particularly sticky wicket of disclosure. A long neglected well contaminated with fecal bacteria started the oozing slide into disaster. Not to mention the fantastical estimate to fix the invisible enemy.

And then there was the former semi-owner cum neighbor [possessed by her own dark brew of ancient familial entitlement and alcohol infused paranoia] who wielded her pork-greased pans and patchy dogs and shotgun, and controlled the gates of the irrigation ditches with grim satisfaction and a smile the color of tobacco. Her warnings and stories of feuds with every neighbor were shouted along a sudden rising wind that lifted my jean jacket like wings under a sky that turned as dark as the shadow beneath a priest's mud spattered vestments. Maleleche, I thought as I listened to her words. 

No milagros and bean fields here.

So the search begins again. And I for one am glad. A month of dreaming in one direction has eclipsed other avenues. So I pay attention now as a big striped butterfly arcs above me in the middle of a traffic jam on six-laned Cerrillos. Orange against a bright cloudless sky. And I turn to my husband and ask, Did you see that? See what? he asks, dreaming his own dreams of where to navigate next. And I say only, The sign.

We're going to be all right, I murmur to the beat of a Coldplay song. And we turn at the light to go look at an apartment to rent in the Santa Fe hills.


Saturday, June 17, 2006

Santa Fe Farmers' Market







This morning we walked to the Santa Fe Farmers' Market under cool cobalt skies lit by the morning sun, navigating our unsure path between elbow-nudging  shoppers glued to their cell phones and tiny women with big Indian earrings scooping up armloads of bagged organic mesclun greens, radishes, bok choy, and glistening spring onions like they were going out of style.

There were plenty of cherries, some beautiful twig furniture, and a kilted soloist playing bagpipes [a woman in a straw gardening hat held her cell phone aloft shouting to her connection, Can you hear it?].

We ignored the seductive displays of freshly baked herbed foccacia, brown sugar-cinnamon smothered muffins, country-style oat breads, and white chocolate chip cookies the size of dessert plates [it's only at times like these I chafe against the limits of living gluten-free] and admired instead the baby goats for sale, some impressive pots of sweet basil, one shopping couple's matching waist-long dreads, and the dexterity of a ten year old girl playing country fiddle.

There were giggling women in orange yoga-wear, and pale white turbaned Sikh's eating bread and homemade jam as they bought organic garlic and bunches of squeaky spinach. The breeze smelled like mint from Mexican baskets brimming with handmade soap, and I overheard a bearded cyclist say, If I don't get a girlfriend by the end of the year, I'm marrying the first woman I date in January.
 All this played out to the deft ranchero stylings of a young Mariachi band from the local high school.

We walked back to the casita empty handed, silent, me, mildly overwhelmed by the jostling crowds and ruminating about the intricate diversity of Santa Fe, and the absorbing book I'd just read about the sixties by Bob Dylan, Chronicles: Volume One, hyper aware of my introverted nature.



Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Santa Fe Style



Walking after dinner is a pleasure here in Santa Fe. The light is magic. The adobe walls throb with the heat of the day [you cannot resist raising your palms to it]. Solar power.

In less than two weeks we'll be moving north. Out of the city. Into the country. A place - once a pueblo- called Abiquiu. A tiny village. We'll have llamas and horses for neighbors. And two sour cherry trees and an apple tree to frame our view of the distant bluish hills beyond the Chama River. I'm itching to be there now. To breathe the sense of peace I feel when I turn down the county road and drive along the bosque, green with old cottonwoods.

We've picked out a carved Mexican bed two roperos (there are no closets!), and a couple of tables - a kitchen table carved from New Mexican juniper, and a beat up old wooden table with worn blue paint, perfect for a desk Two generous leather chairs. Some pottery made by local hands. A few mismatched dishes in violet, deep red, green and turquoise. Mexican glasses in various shades of green, blue and teal. 

I still can't decide on a KitchenAid color [or if I'll even need a standing mixer here at high altitude - baking here will prove a double challenge - gluten-free + high altitude = potential for baking disasters].

Any tips on baking gluten-free in the high desert are welcome.

Sunday, June 4, 2006

Easy Guacamole Recipe with Lime

The easiest guacamole recipe- with fresh lime- non-dairy

In three and a half weeks we’ll be in our new home. In the meantime, we are as patient as humanly possible, making do in our tiny rental kitchen, and adjusting to living at a higher altitude. We're indulging in freshly mashed guacamole laced with lots of lime and garlic.

We're making almost instant pizzas with Kinnickinnick gluten-free crusts [Dear Reader, they’re not bad- drizzled with extra virgin olive oil and pre-baked with copious amounts of minced fresh garlic, then topped and baked again with sliced tender Roma tomatoes, balsamic-sautéed yellow pepper slices, and a creamy organic mozzarella- but then, what isn't?].

We’ve been slinking into art openings with the calm detachment of non-featured artists and enjoying the mixed eclectic bag known as the Santa Fe art scene– wondering how, when and where we’ll fit in. If at all.

And of course, I am dreaming of my new cocina. And rustling up platters of green chile enchiladas and Thai peanut stir-fries. The kitchen sports copper counter tops and birch latilla doors. There are hand painted accent tiles embedded in the thick adobe walls. Classic New Mexican style.

I am sipping a peachy Riesling as I write and contemplating just what color my new Kitchen Aid mixer should be (having sold my old custard yellow beast at our estate sale back on the Cape). I’m leaning to cobalt blue today; as the hand painted accent tiles feature a blue bird-like design that reminds me of why I love this high desert country, its deep and penetrating miles of skies, and air that sparkles with the hair-raising urge toward flight into unknown territory.

*Note- this entry has been edited since the house deal fell through.

Easy Guacamole Recipe with Lime

This guac is as easy as uno, dos, tres. Simple. No onions. Clean and fresh tasting. And laced with plenty of lime.

3 ripe avocados, peeled and pitted
3-4 garlic cloves, crushed, chopped
10 sweet grape tomatoes, quartered
Juice from 1 large juicy lime, more limes for garnish, if desired
Finely chopped fresh cilantro, if desired


Using a potato masher (or if you're lucky to have a mortar and pestle, grind guacamole the traditional way), smash the avocados and the garlic in a bowl.

Add the lime juice, and mix until well blended. Taste for seasoning adjustments. Stir in the tomatoes; reserve a few for garnish on the top.

Best served fresh.

Serve with organic blue and yellow corn tortilla chips.

This easy guac is mucho tasty as a condiment to quesadillas, enchiladas, omelettes and frittatas, and other southwestern and Mexican-inspired dishes.

Serves 4-6.

Need a fancier guacamole with tomatillos? Try Joey's Kicked Up Rockin' Guac recipe.

Sunday, May 21, 2006

My First Post from New Mexico

{photo removed when the deal fell through}

I wish I could say I've missed my computer but the truth is I've been luxuriating in the real world, drinking in the color, skies and sunlit warmth of Northern New Mexico, and tossing together simple rustic meals that I pause at [briefly!] and wistfully murmur, I should blog this; but then I sigh, and dig in with my rented fork and sip a soft Pinot Noir [half the price of what I paid for it back east] and listen to the birds in the wisteria laden courtyard outside the rented kitchen window and if I miss anything at all, I miss you all, and wish you were here with me in real time conversation [you know, that way of communicating where eyes meet eyes and smiles can be felt and laughter fills your chest with a sudden ache of sheer and simple bliss]. I don't miss my computer in the least [though I'll have to buckle down and get one once we move in to our new home].

We found a house - and not just a house - but a place to live in and paint in and cook in and wake every day in and sip coffee looking at the mountains from the kitchen sink in. I'll post more about it as time allows [and I steal time at Steve's laptop]. Pictures, too. Promise. Here's a sneak peek - we move in late June...and here's a hint - it's not in Santa Fe, but north of it.