Thursday, July 21, 2011

Peasant Pie with a Flaky Crust

I want to do a little bit of recount of last week’s topic and shed some light for my readers and myself.  This blog is forcing me to study during the summer.  I am interested in the concept of “peasant” food and agrarian movements and the relationship to much of the “green” awareness and urban/agricultural growth in the U.S., particularly the region I live in, the desert southwest.  I believe that “peasants” are commoditized.  Nowadays, we would call peasants, low-income (and often minority) population. Their culture tends to influence pop culture and I especially see this with food ways and traditions. 
I have noticed quite the following of going back to scratch cooking for one thing.  Heck, I am totally interested in making more people aware of this concept that seemed to disappear during the 1980s popular culture.  I really believe that a lot of people in my age group are more accustomed to fast paced processed food ways than previous generations and it is a trend that has grown since the 1950s.  The food industry has also caught on even if it means changing food labels to “all-natural.” 
Low-income and working-class populations from the past have managed to prepare foods in such a way that is economically efficient, energy dense and for the most part flavorful and this is a popular trend now.  Magazines, cooking shows, and newspaper articles are showing today’s folks how to cook on a limited budget because sadly, many of us don’t know how.  I really appreciate these ideas.  So we look to those who have survived on self-sufficiency which is a good thing, but we still have our mass producers who claim to be following the same principles, when they are not.  It is expensive to eat healthy.  I want to explore more about some of these movements so I will be reading about La Via Campesina, an agricultural movement developed in many Central American countries to curtail the devastation caused by agribusiness to the poor inhabitants in these countries.
I would really like to present a challenge for the week.  Choose a meal each day to make something from scratch.  I don’t mean go gather your own eggs or anything, but do make something that comes from a can or the freezer already prepared with more than one or two ingredients unless you added them.  Jam, prepared salad dressings and flavored yogurts are a culprit. 
My example
Breakfast- Peach French Toast Casserole (Kinda need to get up early)
Lunch-Caprese Sandwich  (Easy)
Dinner-GF Gnocci  w/chunky tomato sauce and salad dressed with olive oil and balsamic vinegar (awesome kids cook meal because making the gnocci is like playing with play-doh. (Easier than I thought)
Snack 1- Grape Slushies (Easy)
Snack 2- GF Caramel Apple Pie


Recipe
Gluten Free Pie Crust

I have never been a pie maker because the crust is so daunting and then when we converted to a gluten-free diet, this became such a challenge that I actually threw in the towel.  The crust falls apart, sticks to the counter or wax paper.  It has a sandy texture or is just plain awful. 
But I have two apple trees and they are ready for some baking and I really like the salty crust contrast with sweet tart apples.  I can say that I definitely got it.  Hurray for me.
2/3 cup of chilled butter or shortening of choice (you can probably mix the two)
1 cup of superfine white rice flour (
1 cup of tapioca or potato starch
2 tbls sugar
1 tsp of baking powder
1 tbl cold milk or ice water
1 tsp xantham gum

1/2 tsp salt
Combine dry ingredients and cut in butter or shortening. (If you have a food processor, I mixed dry ingredients with blade then grated butter with grater attachment.)  Add cold milk and it should make a soft dough.  Shape dough into a disk and wrap dough in plastic wrap and place in fridge for a couple of hours.  Remove disk and roll out on rice floured surface like parchment paper.  Place in pie plate.  I turned mine upside down grabbed the parchment and flipped it over.  A little messy, but some practice will improve this method. Fill with favorite pie filling.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Food Stratification

My husband told me a story about being at a friend’s for a dinner party.  He was standing in a line waiting to serve himself some food and another guest said that the food being served was “peasant food.”  The food being served was traditional food here in New Mexico.  He was really offended.  I don’t blame him.  What is so terrible about peasant food aside from the word peasant which does entail some derogatory meaning?   The food on the other hand is probably some of the smartest food this person was going to eat.  When I was a kid, “peasant” food was pretty much all we ate and for the most part it was pretty darn healthy.  It was mostly vegetarian and low in saturated fat, high in complex carbohydrates and micronutrients.   Not all our food was this healthy.  I drank loads of Kool-Aid, ate salami and bologna regularly and cookies with whole milk were often the snack of choice.  However, at dinnertime, my mom would definitely conjure up something creative and healthy and really tasty.   On the occasion we did go out, it was a treat.  Convenience foods that were easy to make and overly processed were too expensive and I think my mother knew better.   I know that some of these foods would have made my mom’s life a bit easier. 
The weirdest part about convenience foods while I was growing up was that they were more expensive.  Only the more affluent people could afford them and they were extremely unhealthy.   I can remember schoolmates teasing me about what I ate.  I ate wheat bread instead of white bread.  I ate the crusts.  I didn’t eat the school pizza.  I ate vegetables.  It seems that this trend is still around because my son gets some flack from the kids at school, but the opposite is true.  The convenience foods are less expensive and more available and it is the more affluent that can eat healthier.  I am really interested in this shift and I think that I am going to have to research it more to find out why the change and why do so many people still choose to eat the convenience foods despite their income level?  I know a lot has to do with taste preference, and there is a way to change it, but it is an investment that so many of us are unwilling to commit to and I can understand the reasons why.  That is why I am committed to posting whole food recipes on this blog, most of which are gluten-free and whole grain.  I am going try something new and I need your help. I am going to post a daily menu for the meals I make that are whole and healthy.  You can try the recipes or give me your ideas of what you make and I can adapt them for my family to eat.  Here it goes, your suggestions are appreciated.  Meanwhile, I am going to research the shift in class eating habits.

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Breakfast
Hazelnut Mocha Oatmeal
Grape Nuts w/skim milk, raisins and almonds
Blue cornmeal blueberry pancakes w/pinon, butter, and maple syrup, skim milk
Choco Cherry oatmeal w/almonds and skim milk
Tropical Oatmeal w/lite coconut milk, pineapple and orange juice
Grape Nuts w/skim milk, blackberries and almonds
Egg Scramble w/corn tortillas, salsa and cheddar
Lunch
Ice Cream (bad)
Peanut butter and Jelly w/Milk
Leftover Rice and Ice Tea
Asparagus, tomato and Swiss pizza on puff pastry, green salad and ice tea
Some kind of veggie sandwich from Which Wich and Ice Tea
Leftover red pepper pasta, salad and ice tea
Birthday party so who knows
Dinner
Fried Bologna sandwich, hot peppers, Watermelon and Fritos
Pinto Beans w/ Cheesy Spanish Rice, including bell peppers, lean grass-fed beef and tomatoes
Grilled Chicken sub w/spicy mustard, lettuce and tomato
Apple, celery waldorf salad w/walnuts
Roasted Red Pepper Pesto w/GF pasta.
Whole plant salad
Wine and water
Fresh caught stuffed trout
W/garlic bread crumbs and veggies, parsley lemon pesto, salad and skim milk
Going out
Chicken bratwurst
w/sauerkraut and mustard, sweet potato fries, corn on cob, milk
Snacks
Homemade gf Chex mix
Banana smoothie
Bing cherries
Cherries and Larabar
Homemade PB rice krispie treat
Peach
Bowl of Choco Pebbles
Cottage Cheese and Pineapple
Grape and melon slushie
Grape slushie
yogurt
PBJ on wheat bread w/skim milk
Snow cone

Notes: 
It is a big week for us due to my son’s regional track practice and events so finding time to cook will be challenging.
On Monday, we had just returned from Colorado so this day was a bust.  No more cheat days for the month.
Grocery bill this week was about $150 which is $25 over what I try to spend
Exercise included pulling weeds every day and watering, running for 30 minutes 3 times this week
What are your goals this week?
Recipe of the Week
Blue Pancakes w/Pinons
1 ½ cups of blue cornmeal
½ cup brown rice flour
1 ½ cups of blueberries
½ cup pinon nuts
¼ cup sugar
2 tsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
½ tsp xantham gum
2 eggs
1 ½ cups of milk or a mixture of buttermilk and regular milk or any milk of choice
1 tsp vanilla
3 tbl melted butter or oil
2 tbl softened butter reserved w/2 tbls of pinon nuts
Roast pinon nuts and combine dry ingredients.  Add wet ingredients and adding more milk for your desired consistency. Add melted butter, blueberries and pinon nuts.  Heat griddle to 350 degrees and start cooking.  Meanwhile, smash pinon nuts and softened butter together, serve w/maple syrup.