Recipes

Tantric Tasting with Dyana Valentine

20 Nov
by shelley, posted in Events, Recipes   |  1 Comments

I’m still celebrating the launch of Tantric Taste: Dessert for Lovers last Thursday.

I’m an Amazon Best Seller ranking #4 in both Desserts and Vegan/Vegetarian Kindle books!

Pretty awesome huh?  Even more awesome are the responses, praise and interviews that have followed.

I got a chance to play with Dyana Valentine and talk about the book.

We discussed everything from

  • Why CRAVEings are useful and the dangers of ignoring them
  • How you can tap into your body’s “Intelligent Ecology”
  • Booty + Buddha™ Food: The sensual and spiritual nature of how and what we eat
  • Love Ketchup: The spiritual condiments that are a must to add to our foods

Have you purchased your copy of Tantric Tastes: Dessert for Lover yet?  If not, buy it here and get your free Kindle Reading App with it.

Tweetables : Copy and Tweet!

What does your Booty + Buddha have to do with food? Find out in @eatrelatelove book http://amzn.to/u8rwLv

Guess who puts Love Ketchup on their food? @DyanaValentine + @eatrelatelove. Learn to make your spiritual condiments http://amzn.to/u8rwLv 

When was the last time you woke up and ATE sexy for breakfast? @DyanaValentine + @eatrelatelove did recently with this http://amzn.to/u8rwLv

 

Beet, Citrus, Fennel and Pickled Ginger Onion Salad

31 Jul
by shelley, posted in Recipes   |  No Comments

An experience at Eataly led me on a mission to scour the streets of New York for the freshest ingredients I could find.  I was so inspired by the plethora of delicious from scratch offerings that they offered that I instantly created a list of creative salads that to make for this summer.

I’m not usually a fan of beets, well actually I’m not a fan at all. But I LOVE their color and I find them aesthetically pleasing. That alone makes me want to indulge. They were the perfect accompaniment to this sweet inspired salad.  Layered with sweet oranges, bitter grapefruit, roasted fennel and red onion pickled in ginger and orange blossom honey balsamic vinegar.

Recipe: Beet Orange Salad with Grapefruit, Fennel and Pickled Onion

Summary: a beautiful medley of summer cooling vegetables and fruits spiced with ginger and honey balsamic vinegar

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup honey balsamic vinegar
  • 2 TB sugar
  • 1 TB brown sugar
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 small onion, thinly sliced
  • 1 fennel bulb, thinly sliced
  • 1 beet
  • 1 grapefruit, segmented
  • 1 orange, segmented
  • drizzle of olive oil

Instructions

  1. Combine honey balsamic vinegar and sugar in an airtight jar and add onions. Refrigerate overnight
  2. Toss fennel, olive oil, brown sugar and salt and spread in even layer on cookie sheet
  3. Roast at 375 degrees for 20 minutes
  4. Boil beet until tender, slice thinly
  5. Plate
  6. Layer in order: beets, oranges/grapefruits, fennel and pickled onion

Quick notes

The pickled onion is also great on sandwiches or as a garnish for meat and fish.

Preparation time: 15 minute(s)

Cooking time: 40 minute(s)

Diet type: Vegan

Recipe by Eat Consciously. Relate Honestly. Love Abundantly.
Microformatting by hRecipe.

Salt Fish in the Jamaican Countryside

22 Jul
by shelley, posted in Recipes   |  9 Comments

Country living.  That’s what my dear grandfather keeps repeating as I maneuver my way through my grandparent’s cottage in Jamaica. A subtle reminder that this city girl has to make minor/major adjustments to the simplicity and life innovation that the country brings. The kitchen is quaint, the dishes are charmingly mismatched and the gas stove requires a match to light.  The bathroom has a running shower with a switch for heated water.  Air conditioning is known as fresh air  that flows through open shutters and doorways and cools my dampened skin.  The sun seems to rise earlier than what I’m accustomed to reminding me that breakfast is begging to be prepared.

Salt fish also known as salted cod or bacalao, is a popular dried fish that is prepared by salting the fresh fish and setting it out to dry.  It’s commonly used in Latin, Caribbean and African cooking.  I grew up eating ackee and saltfish for breakfast.  Admittedly, I didn’t have it as often as I would have liked because fresh ackee wasn’t readily available in Atlanta.  Being spoiled and having no interest in food other than eating it as a child, I never took the time to learn.

So here I am in the country side of Jamaica, staring at salt fish as if for the first time in thirty years.  My grandparents have different ideas of whether to boil it first or soak it, eitherways, both are necessary to get rid of the heavy salt preservative.  While they sort it out, I resort to chopping tomatoes, dicing onion and garlic and picking fresh thyme.  My grandmother shows me how to break up the fish and pick out the bones.  For the first time I manage to light the stove with a simple match and feel somewhat accomplished.

An actual slice of wood serves as the cutting board! How cool is that?

I heat oilive oil and add onion.  The aroma is enough to fill my belly but my tastebuds know better and eagerly await the finished product.  Next I add the garlic and then the tomatoes, crushing them more so their liquid releases and helps soften my fish.  Last I add the fish, fresh thyme and a little water.  I have no idea what the order of things should be, because my grandparents have left me to work it out myself.

So like with most things,  I let intuition, the spirit of my tastebuds and the wisdom of the ancestral kitchen in which I cook, guide my hand so that it can taste good.

There was boiled green banana left over so I added them to the pan to heat.  Filled with pride and having met a satiation that only DIYers are certain to know, I dished out half and saved the rest for later. Breakfast was served.

Recipe: Jamaican Saltfish

Summary: A delicious Caribbean breakfast stapled that can be eaten with ackee, bread, bakes, green banana and yam.

Ingredients

  • 8 oz saltfish, soaked overnight
  • 1 tomato, diced
  • ½ small onion, diced
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 2-3 sprigs of thyme
  • olive oil

Instructions

  1. Boil saltfish, until fish flakes easily, drain water
  2. Break up saltfish, discard skin and bones
  3. Heat oil in pan and sautee onion and garlic over medium heat until slightly translucent and fragrant
  4. Add tomatoes and sautee (~1 min)
  5. Lower heat and add saltfish pieces with thyme. May add a little water or ketchup if mixture is too dry.
  6. Heat through and serve.

Preparation time: 10 minute(s)

Cooking time: 40 minute(s)

Diet type: Pescatarian

Number of servings (yield): 4

Culinary tradition: Jamaican

Recipe by Eat Consciously. Relate Honestly. Love Abundantly.
Microformatting by hRecipe.

*Blogged May 27, 2011

My Munchies Alert

20 Apr
by shelley, posted in Recipes   |  4 Comments

 

Homemade Italian sausage, with feta, fresh parsley and marinara. Perfect with toothpicks, moscato and company!

My babes is wonderful. He taught me how to make Brown Stew Fish and it hits the spot when the munchies come on!

Inspired my Mimi's Hummus, one of me and beau's fave restaurants, I created this mushroom hummus and added rosemary for an extra kick. Add blue corn tortilla chips and the munchies are cured :)

(thought I was gonna write a wordy blog post, didn’t ya with recipes and all? APRIL FOOLS!!!!! *giggle)

That is all…..carry on.

Upside Down Caramel Apple Polenta Spice Cake

30 Mar
by shelley, posted in Recipes   |  No Comments

Apples…..my boyfriend sent me a lovely fruit basket and it was filled with APPLES and some other fruit.  There were Red Delicious, Gala, Granny Smith and Golden.  I immediately began thinking of how I could make good use of it, because I surely wasn’t in the mood for plain apples.

I considered juicing, but I’ve been doing that. I considered puff pastry, cream cheese and apples.  But I did that already.  I considered savory apples, but I remembered that cooked fruit doesn’t really turn me on.  I even thought about apple sauce…I don’t even eat apple sauce! And then I remembered that he told me that there was supposed to be a pineapple in my basket (which they conveniently forgot) and I thought about cake. Pineapple upside down cake.  Well fancy that! Look what word is hiding in Pineapple—>Apple!  So the next best thing was to gather my ingredients for a vegan Upside Down Caramel Apple Polenta Spice Cake!

  • Golden, Red Delicious and Granny Smith!

 

Polenta, flour and spice makes everything nice.

Coconut oil, brown sugar, apples make for a perfect Upside Down Polenta Apple Spice Cake

Ready to go! I used a mini bundt pan but you can use a muffin tin as well.

This recipe is no longer available on my blog, however you may get it in my new book

Tantric Tastes Dessert for Lovers on Amazon Kindle!