Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Azeite. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Azeite. Mostrar todas as mensagens

AFGHAN SALAD

"Also known as Salata. This refreshing and colourful tomato, carrot and onion salad is light and crunchy.

SERVE 4
PREP 15 minutes

Ingredients
2-3 large tomatoes, finely chopped (260g)
50g fresh coriander, roughly chopped
20g fresh mint, roughly chopped
1 lemon, juice and finely grated zest
1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
good pinch pepper
1 large red onion, finely diced (180g)
half cucumber, finely diced (160g)
2 large carrots, grated (250g)

Method
Add the tomatoes to a bowl with the coriander, mint, lemon juice, olive oil and pepper and mix well.
Add the red onion, cucumber and carrot. Mix well and serve.

Chef's tips
Try with different herbs such as parsley, basil or dill.Serve with grilled meat, fish or poultry.Great as part of a buffet or for a packed lunch".

Massa de tarte

100 g de farinha de trigo integral
100 g de farinha de trigo
20 g de farinha de centeio integral
1 ovo grande
água com gelo
3 colheres de sopa de azeite

Colocar cubos de gelo num copo até à borda, encher com água e reservar.
Colocar as farinhas numa taça e abrir um buraco no centro.
Adicionar o azeite, misturando bem até este estar bem misturado nas farinhas.
Bater, levemente, um ovo. Quando a gema e a clara estiverem misturadas adicionar um pouco de água gelada.
Despejar a mistura de ovo e água no centro do buraco e misturar com a ponta dos dedos.
Adicionar água gelada pouco e pouco até obter uma massa uniforme.
Colocar a massa num recipiente fechado, por exemplo um tupperware, e refrigerar.
Pode ser usada 30 minutos depois, ou até 48 horas após ter sido feita.

Imagem: https://bebrainfit.com/olive-oil-brain-food/

Creme de Tomate

1 (150 g) cebola
1 (300 g) bolbo de funcho
1 (150 g) cenoura
2 colheres de sopa de azeite
1 kg tomate
1 (8 g) colher de sopa de sal
1 ovo S
1 l água
1 colher de sopa de cebolinho picado

Descasque a cebola e pique-a finamente, elimine os talos rijos do bolbo de funcho, reserve as folhinhas verdes e pique a parte restante. Pele a cenoura e corte-a em cubinhos pequenos.
Deite o azeite e os legumes numa panela, tape e leve a cozinhar sobre lume muito brando.
Entretanto, pele o tomate, corte-o ao meio e limpe-o de sementes. Pique o tomate em pedaços e junte-o aos restantes legumes. Salpique com cerca de 1 colher de sobremesa de sal, volte a tapar e deixe cozinhar durante cerca de 10 minutos, mexendo de vez em quando.
Ao mesmo tempo coza o ovo em água temperada com sal durante 10 minutos.
Adicione a água a ferver. Quando os legumes estiverem macios triture-os com a varinha mágica e retifique os temperos se necessário.
Descasque o ovo e pique-o finamente.
Deite a sopa nos pratos de serviço, salpique com o ovo picado e as folhinhas de funcho e o cebolinho.

Dica: Para ser mais fácil pelar o tomate, faça um corte em forma de cruz na ponta e escalde em água a ferver 1 a 2 minutos.

Peras Salteadas com Morangos e Nozes

3 peras
2 colheres de sopa de azeite
200 g morangos
1/2 limão
30 g miolo de noz

Descasque as peras e corte-as em gomos, eliminando os caroços.
Aloure as peras numa frigideira no azeite quente e deixe caramelizar, mexendo de vez em quando.
Adicione os morangos, lavados e cortados em pedaços. Regue com o sumo do limão.
Retire do lume, distribua pelos pratos de serviço e salpique com as nozes grosseiramente picadas.
Enfeite com raspa da casca de limão.

The best baked pumpkin

Stuffed with nutty, fruity rice
“Oven-baked pumpkin is beautiful with spices, like in this really impressive veggie dish ”
Serves 4
Cooks In1H 30M
Difficulty Not too tricky
Vegetables, Halloween/Bonfire Night, Gluten-free, Vegetarian

Nutrition per serving
Calories 587 29%
Fat 48.3g 69%
Saturates 7.4g 37%
Protein 5.9g 13%
Carbs 32.3g 12%
Sugars 17.9g 20%
Salt 0.93g 16%
Fibre 4.9g
Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
1 pumpkin, about 1kg
2 cloves garlic, peeled
olive oil
1 red onion , peeled and finely chopped
1 small handful black olives, stoned and chopped
2 sprigs of fresh rosemary, leaves finely chopped
1 dried chilli
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
50 g basmati rice , washed and drained
75 g dried cranberries
50 g shelled pistachio nuts
1 tangerine , zest of
200 ml organic vegetable stock


Method
Pumpkins are so versatile, the things you can do with them are endless! Their flavour goes well with chilli, nutmeg and sage. If you’ve never cooked one before, you’re in for a real treat.
Preheat the oven to 230ºC/450ºF/gas 8. Cut the lid off the pumpkin and reserve it. Scoop out the seeds with a spoon and keep them to one side. Make the hollow where the seeds were a little bigger by scooping out some more pumpkin flesh. Finely chop this pumpkin flesh and one of the garlic cloves. Heat a frying pan over a medium heat. Pour in a splash of olive oil, then add the chopped pumpkin, chopped garlic, onion, olives, and half the rosemary. Cook gently for 10 minutes or so until the pumpkin has softened.
Meanwhile, place the whole garlic clove and the remaining rosemary in a pestle and mortar. Crumble in the dried chilli, add a good pinch of salt, pepper, nutmeg and cinnamon and bash until you have a paste. Add a little olive oil to loosen up the mixture and then rub the inside of the pumpkin with it.
Season the cooked pumpkin mixture and stir in the rice, cranberries, pistachios and tangerine zest with a pinch each of nutmeg and cinnamon. Mix thoroughly then add the vegetable stock, bring to the boil and simmer for 3 minutes (no longer or the rice will end up overcooked later).
Tear off a sheet of tin foil that’s large enough to wrap the pumpkin in a double layer and lay on top of a baking tray. Place the pumpkin on top and spoon the rice mixture into it, then place its lid back on. Rub the skin with a little olive oil, wrap it up in the foil and bake in the oven for about an hour. The pumpkin is ready when you can easily push a knife into it. Bring it to the table and open it up in front of everyone. Cut it into thick wedges and tuck in, leaving the skin. Serve with seasonal greens.

Everyday green chopped salad

With easy homemade dressing and nuts
“This just goes to show that even the simplest green salad can pack a real flavour punch ”
Serves 4
Cooks In 10 minutes
Difficulty Super easy
Vegetables, Dairy-free, Vegan, Vegetarian

Nutrition per serving
Calories 94 5%
Fat 7.9g 11%
Saturates 1.1g 6%
Protein 1.8g 4%
Carbs 2.7g 1%
Sugars 2.1g 2%
Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients

4 scallions
½ cucumber
1 handful fresh basil leaves
½ head Boston lettuce , or small red leaf lettuce
½ heart romaine
½ cup sprouted cress or alfafa
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
½ teaspoon Dijon or English mustard
⅛ teaspoon sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
½ cup chopped toasted walnuts , or your favourite nuts



Method
Chopped salads are incredibly simple to make, you have to give them a go. If nothing else, they can offer you some chopping practice, so why not make something tasty while you’re practicing your knife skills? Anyone can make these salads, just make sure you use a good, sharp chef’s knife and your biggest chopping board – and watch your fingers!

Get yourself a big chopping board and a large sharp knife. It’s best to start by chopping the harder, crunchier veggies first, so trim and chop your scallions and slice your cucumber. Slice your basil. Bring it all into the centre of the board, and continue chopping and mixing together.
Add the lettuce leaves, and cress or alfalfa to the board. When everything is well chopped, you’ll have a big mound of salad on the board.
Make a well in the middle and drizzle in the extra virgin olive oil and red wine vinegar. Add the mustard and the salt and pepper. Sprinkle with nuts. Mix up so everything gets well coated and serve on the board or in a bowl.
Serving suggestions:
This makes a nice addition to any main dish such as Barbecued chicken, Spaghetti and meatballs or Old-school pork chops with apples.
Jamie's tips:
- What I want to show you here is that the sky’s the limit when it comes to the different ingredients you can add to a chopped salad – you can use whatever’s available.
- The only rule I would give you is to always include a couple of handfuls of crunchy lettuce to give your salad a really good texture. Try out different things, and don’t feel obliged to use the same old stuff all the time. Bell peppers, tomatoes, herb sprigs, a peeled and pitted avocado . . . you can get any or all of these into a chopped salad.
- Basil works well in this salad, but so do lots of other soft fresh herbs, such as chives, chervil, or mint.
- For a bit of extra crunch, simply toast some nuts in a warm pan, but watch them as once they start to go brown they can burn very quickly.

My special vegan kofte

A twist on a Persian classic
“Sizzling hot vegan kofte, served with a delicious cashew and peanut sauce and a refreshing minty yoghurt dip ”
Serves 4
Cooks In1 hour
DifficultySuper easy
Vegetables, Dinner Party, Vegan, Vegetarian

Nutrition per serving
Calories 443 22%
Fat 26.1g 37%
Saturates 6.8g 34%
Protein 19g 42%
Carbs 34.7g 13%
Sugars 8.8g 10%
Salt 1.3g 22%
Fibre 8.1g
Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
1 teaspoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger
2 cloves of garlic
olive oil
2 courgettes
fine sea salt
1 large bunch of fresh coriander
1 x 400 g tin of chickpeas, drained
40 g fine breadcrumbs
freshly ground black pepper

For the minty yoghurt dip:
½ a cucumber
3 sprigs of fresh mint
4 tablespoons organic soya yoghurt
1 lemon

For the nutty sauce:
1 small onion
1 clove of garlic
100 g cashew nuts
140 ml light coconut milk
2 tablespoons smooth peanut butter


Method
Toast the coriander and cumin seeds in a small frying pan over a medium heat for 2 to 3 minutes, then tip into a pestle and mortar and bash to a coarse powder.
Peel and finely chop the ginger and garlic, then add to the frying pan over a medium heat with a splash of oil. Fry for 2 to 3 minutes, or until golden, then place into a food processor with the toasted spices.
Coarsely grate the courgettes, place into a colander in the sink, then sprinkle with a good pinch of fine sea salt. Squeeze the mixture together with your hands to get rid of the excess moisture, then add to the processor. Pick the coriander leaves and set aside, then add half the coriander stalks to the processor with the chickpeas, breadcrumbs and a pinch of salt and pepper. Pulse until combined, but not smooth – you want to retain a bit of texture.
Transfer to a clean work surface then, with wet hands, divide and shape the mixture into eight little fat fingers. Place onto a tray, then pop in the fridge to chill for around 20 minutes. 
Meanwhile, make the minty yoghurt dip. Halve the cucumber lengthways, scoop out and discard the watery seeds, then roughly chop. Pick and finely slice the mint leaves, then place into a bowl with the cucumber, yoghurt and a squeeze of lemon juice. Mix well.
To make the nutty sauce, peel and finely slice the onion and garlic, then finely slice the remaining coriander stalks. Place into a large frying pan over a medium heat with a splash of oil, then cook for a few minutes, or until golden. Add the cashew nuts and toast for a further 2 to 3 minutes, then transfer to a food processor. Add the coconut milk and peanut butter, then blitz until thick and smooth.
Return the large frying pan to a medium heat with a splash of oil. Once hot, add the kofte and cook for around 2 minutes, or until golden and piping hot through, turning regularly. Divide the kofte between your plates, tear over the coriander leaves, then serve with the nutty sauce and minty yoghurt dip and lemon wedges for squeezing. Delicious with pitta breads or fluffy rice.

NOODLES PARA RESSACA

"Vegetais crocantes, massa de ovo e um ovo estrelado
Esta receita super saborosa e rápida de massa de ovo é perfeita para quando se sente em baixo.

Porções 4
Tempo de preparo 20 minutes
Nível de dificuldade Muito fácil
Vegetais, Vegetariana, Sem laticínios, Asiática

Valores nutricionais por porção
Calorias 537 27%
Gordura Total 25.1g 36%
Gordura Saturada 5.2g 26%
Proteína 25.1g 56%
Carboidrato 48.3g 19%
Açúcar 7g 8%
Valores de referência para um adulto.

Ingredientes

1 pedaço (5 cm) de gengibre
1 dente de alho
2 colheres (sopa) de molho de soja (shoyu) com baixo teor de sódio
3 colheres (sopa) de vinagre de vinho branco
3 colheres (sopa) de óleo de sésamo
1 couve chinesa
500g de bróculos frescos ou congelados
250g de massa de ovos média
200g de ervilhas-torta
4 ovos grandes
azeite
molho de piri-piri, para servir


Modo de Preparo

Esta refeição super-rápida e saborosa é perfeita para quando você estiver se sentindo meio devagar ou com um pouco de ressaca, já que ela é cheia de coisas boas. Temperar os noodles com um molho é genial, e um ovo frito com gema mole por cima é um bônus. Regue com muito molho de piri-piri para garantir que você irá acordar.
Descasque o gengibre e o alho e rale-os finamente em uma tigela grande. Adicione o molho de soja, o vinagre, o óleo de sésamo e uma pitada de sal e pimenta, então mexa bem para preparar o molho. Apare e rasgue o repolho e coloque-o em uma panela grande com água fervente salgada, junto com os bróculos (corte primeiro em buquets, se utilizar os frescos) e com os noodles para cozinhar por cerca de 3 minutos; adicione a ervilha-torta no último minuto. Escorra bem e misture com o molho na tigela.
Enquanto isso, frite os ovos em uma frigideira grande antiaderente com um fio de azeite sobre fogo médio até ficar no ponto de sua preferência (eu gosto do meu com a gema mole). Divida os noodles entre tigelas individuais, acomode um ovo por cima de cada porção e sirva regado com o molho de piri-piri, para aquele toque tão importante.
Usar noodles integrais neste prato, como você vê na foto, fica realmente bacana – eles são mais caros, mas possuem uma textura e um sabor ótimos. Apenas lembre-se de seguir as instruções da embalagem, pois eles podem precisar de mais tempo de cozimento. Sinta-se livre para adicionar vegetais frescos ou sobras na receita."

Lincolnshire Poacher pie

Filled with cheesy minted courgettes
“This amazing vegetarian pie with rich, crumbly pastry and served with sweet salt-baked shallots is on a whole other level. ”
Serves 12
Cooks In 2H 15M plus cooling time
Difficulty Super easy
Vegetables, Dinner Party, Easter treats, Mother's day

Nutrition per serving
Calories 462 23%
Fat 29.2g 42%
Saturates 16.8g 84%
Protein 13.6g 30%
Carbs 33.4g 13%
Sugars 4.5g 5%

Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
300 g Lincolnshire Poacher cheese
a small bunch of  fresh mint, leaves picked
250 g rock salt
24 shallots
a few sprigs of  fresh thyme

For the pastry:
500 g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
250 g cold unsalted butter, cubed
sea salt
white pepper
1 large free-range egg, beaten
For the filling:
olive oil
a bunch of fresh thyme
1 whole nutmeg , for grating
1 lemon
1.5 kg courgettes, a mixture of yellow and green if you can get them, finely sliced
sea salt
freshly ground pepper


Method
You won’t believe how tasty the courgettes get with this method of cooking – it really does take them to another level. You’ve got to find some Lincolnshire Poacher, it’s an amazing cheese made by the very talented Jones brothers, Simon and Tim (see www.lincolnshirepoachercheese.com). The pastry is rich and amazing, so embrace the fact that it’s really crumbly and will definitely break as you’re making it. I’m serving this with a lemony salad and sweet salt-baked shallots, which will get caramelized and gorgeous and pick up the seasoning from the bed of salt. This method is also a great one for beetroots, so if you like this, try that.
Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Blitz the flour and butter in a food processor with a pinch of salt and a few good pinches of pepper until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs. Tip on to a work surface, make a well in the centre and add 100ml of cold water. Gently mix until it starts to come together, then – most importantly for a short, crumbly pastry – have the confidence to only just press, pat and almost hug it together to form a rough scruffy ball. Please don’t be tempted to knead the dough or it won’t be short and crumbly. Pop it into a floured bowl, cover with clingfilm and put into the fridge to chill while you make the filling.
Put a drizzle of olive oil into a large pan on a medium heat and pick in the leaves from half the bunch of thyme. Add a few gratings of nutmeg, the zest of half the lemon, the sliced courgettes and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Cook gently (the courgettes will cook down and become easier to handle), stirring occasionally, for around 25 minutes. Then turn the heat down to low and cook for another 20 minutes, so the courgette mixture becomes dense and the flavours really intensify and sweeten. Allow to cool a little, finely chop and crumble in the cheese, then chop and add the mint leaves. Set aside.
Halve the pastry and roll each half into a circle just under 1cm thick and slightly larger than the pie dish you’ve chosen (roughly 23cm diameter x 4cm deep). Don’t worry if the pastry breaks up – that’s normal. Just patch it. Roll one of the circles around the rolling pin and carefully unroll it over the pie dish. Gently press the pastry into the corners and sides of the dish, then spoon and spread all your courgette mixture into the dish. Carefully unroll the pastry lid over the top, then flour your thumb and forefinger and gently pinch and crimp the edges together. Trim off any excess pastry and brush the top of the pie with the beaten egg.
Now simply throw the rock salt into a roasting tray with the shallots, still with their skins on, and a few thyme tips. Put the pie right at the bottom of the oven, with the tray of shallots above. Cook for 1 hour, or until the pie is golden, then allow to cool and serve with those soft roasted shallots.
PS: All the leftover salt from baking the shallots can be bashed up and reused.

Mexican breakfast

Chilli tomato stew, eggs and cheese wrapped in tortillas.
“The Mexican name for this dish is ‘huevos rancheros’ and not only is it a breakfast for champions, it’s also the ultimate hangover cure. ”

Serves 6
Cooks In40 minutes
Difficulty Super easy
Eggs, Father's day, Vegetarian, Gluten-free
Nutrition per serving

Calories 218 11%
Fat 11.1g 16%
Saturates 2.2g 11%
Protein 10.1g 22%
Carbs 19.5g 8%
Sugars 7.7g 9%
Salt 0.6g 10%
Fibre 1g

Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
olive oil
1 onion , peeled and finely sliced
2 cloves of garlic , peeled and finely sliced
2 red peppers , deseeded and finely sliced
2 fresh red or orange chillies , deseeded and finely sliced
1 large dried chilli
3 fresh bay leaves
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 x 400 g tins of chopped tomatoes
2 large tomatoes , sliced
6 large eggs , preferably free-range or organic
6 tortillas
Cheddar cheese to serve

Method
The Mexican name for this dish is ‘huevos rancheros’ – eggs with chillies, tomatoes and peppers in burritos. It’s absolutely great if you've got a few mates round, and even better if you've got a hangover you’re trying to shake off. If you wanted to take this dish one step further, for a late brunch you could serve it with black beans, some steamed rice and a bottle of Tabasco or chilli sauce beside it. Give it a go.
Get a large frying pan (make sure you’ve got a lid to go with it) on a high heat and add several good lugs of olive oil. Add the onion, garlic, peppers, fresh and dried chillies, bay leaves and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Stir and cook for 15 minutes to soften and caramelize the veg. Pour in your tinned tomatoes and use a spoon or potato masher to break them up a bit. Bring to the boil, then turn down to a medium heat and cook for a further 5 minutes so the sauce starts to reduce down.
When you’ve got a nice thick tomato stew consistency, have a taste and add a pinch more salt and pepper if you think it needs it. Lay your sliced tomatoes over the top of the mixture, then use a spoon to make small wells in the tomato stew, and crack in your eggs so they poach in the thick, delicious juices. Try to crack them in as quickly as you can so they all get to cook for roughly the same amount of time. Season from a height, put the lid on and let the eggs cook for around 3 to 4 minutes. Warm your tortillas while this is happening. You can pop them into the oven at 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4 for a few minutes, microwave them for a few seconds or even lay them over the lid of the pan so they heat up as the eggs cook.
Take the lid off and check your eggs by giving them a poke with your finger. When they’re done to your liking, turn the heat off and take the pan to the table with your warmed tortillas, your Cheddar and a grater so everyone can get involved and make their own. Personally, I like to grate a bit of cheese right on to a warm tortilla, spoon an egg and some of the wonderful tomato stew on top, wrap it up, and eat it right away. What a beautiful way to wake up!

The best cauliflower & broccoli cheese

Serves 8
Cooks In 1H 35M
Difficulty Super easy
Vegetables, Christmas, Dinner Party, Father's day
Nutrition per serving

Calories 267 13%
Fat 14.5g 21%
Saturates 6.7g 34%
Protein 14.2g 32%
Carbs 16.9g 7%
Sugars 7.4g 8%
Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
2 cloves of garlic
50 g unsalted butter
50 g plain flour
500 ml semi-skimmed milk
500 g fresh or frozen broccoli
75 g mature cheddar cheese
1 kg fresh or frozen cauliflower
2 slices of ciabatta or stale bread
2 sprigs of fresh thyme
25 g flaked almonds
olive oil

Method
Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Peel and finely slice the garlic and put it into a medium pan on a medium heat with the butter. When the butter has melted, stir in the flour for a minute to make a paste, then gradually add the milk, whisking as you go, until lovely and smooth. Add the broccoli (cut up first, if using fresh) and simmer for around 20 minutes, or until the broccoli is cooked through and starts to break down, then mash or blitz with a stick blender (adding an extra splash of milk to loosen, if using fresh broccoli). Grate in half the Cheddar and season to perfection.
Arrange the cauliflower in an appropriately sized baking dish (cut into florets first, if using fresh), pour over the broccoli white sauce and grate over the remaining Cheddar. Blitz the bread into breadcrumbs in a food processor, then pulse in the thyme leaves and almonds. Toss with a lug of oil and a pinch of salt and pepper, then scatter evenly over the cauliflower cheese. Bake for
1 hour, or until golden and cooked through, then enjoy!

Tips
It’s really good fun to play around with different cheeses in this dish and how they taste and melt. It’s also nice to try different veg instead of cauliflower – for instance, 2–3cm chunks of celeriac, squash, potatoes or leeks would all work a treat. Have a play and see what your favourites are – some veg might take longer to cook than others, so test with a knife to check they’re cooked through before serving.

Fonte e imagm: http://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/vegetables-recipes/the-best-cauliflower-broccoli-cheese/#CqlGl8OSWE7ZVewV.99

Spiced aubergine dip

Makes 600 g
Cooks In1H 35M plus cooling
Difficulty Not too tricky
Vegetables, Picnic, Party food, Dairy-free
Nutrition per serving

Calories 49 2%
Fat 2.1g 3%
Saturates 0.3g 2%
Protein 1.7g 4%
Carbs 6.5g 3%
Sugars 4.7g 5%
Salt 0.03g 1%
Fibre 2.4g
-
Of an adult's reference intake


Ingredients

2 large  aubergines
2 onions
4 cloves of garlic
1-2 green chillies
4 cm piece of ginger
4 ripe tomatoes
1 bunch of fresh coriander
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2 tablespoons curry powder
oven-baked corn tortillas


Method

Preheat the oven to 220ºC/gas 7.
Prick the aubergines all over with a fork, then place on a roasting tray. Roast for 50 minutes to 1 hour, or until the skin blackens and chars and the flesh can be easily pierced with a spoon. Allow to cool to room temperature.
Cut the cooled aubergines in half, scoop the flesh into a food processor and pulse until smooth. Set aside.
Peel and finely chop the onion and garlic, trim and finely slice the chillies, and peel and finely grate the ginger (you should end up with roughly 2 teaspoons). Roughly chop 3 of the tomatoes and slice the remaining, then pick and finely chop the coriander leaves.
Heat the oil in a large frying pan. Add the onion and sauté for 5 to 6 minutes, or until softened.
Add the garlic, ginger and chilli, then stir-fry for 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in the tomatoes and curry powder and cook for a further 12 to 15 minutes, or until softened.
Next, add the reserved aubergine and cook, for 3 to 4 minutes, stirring regularly. Stir in the coriander, then remove from the heat.
Garnish with the extra tomato slices, and serve with the oven-baked corn tortillas.

Fonte e imagem: http://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/vegetables-recipes/spiced-aubergine-dip/#Cd4DLzUEGXAXqbUA.99

O meu molho de tomate

Ingredientes:
  • 3 colheres de sopa de azeite;
  • 2 cebolas médias, picadas;
  • 2 folhas de louro;
  • 1 pimento vermelho, cortado em pedaços pequenos;
  • 1 piri-piri (gindungo) fresco ou seco;
  • 1 litro de concentrado de tomate ou 1 kg de tomate pelado ou 1 kg de tomate fresco, depois de pelado; e,
  • 200 ml de água quente.


Modo de fazer:
  1. Num tacho grande, colocar todos os ingredientes, excepto os dois últimos;
  2. Refogar em lume médio a brando, até a cebola estar cozinhada, mas sem deixar lourar;
  3. Acrescentar o concentrado de tomate ou tomate pelado ou tomate fresco e a água;
  4. Cozer em lume brando, cerca de uma hora. Retirar o louro e triturar, com a varinha mágica ou outra máquina, todos os ingredientes, repor o louro e deixar cozer mais 15 minutos.

Dicas:
  • Congelar o molho de tomate em recipientes de 200 ml, para usar em receitas várias;
  • Podem usar tomate pelado, ou tomate muito maduro depois de retirar a pele e as sementes.

Retirar a pele do tomate:
  1. Aquecer água até ferver;
  2. Lavar o tomate e fazer um corte muito superficial, em cruz, no topo do tomate (oposto ao pé do tomate):
  3. Colocar o tomate numa tijela e verter a água a ferver sobre ele;
  4. Retirar passados 10 segundos, descascar com auxílio de um garfo e faca. A pele deverá sair facilmente, se não basta voltar a submergir o tomate na água quente e esperar mais alguns segundos.

How To Cook Like Michael Pollan

Credit: Karsten Moran/The New York Times
"The author reveals how to cut calories and carbon emissions—and you won’t even have to make a trip to the farmer’s market. 
BY RENE EBERSOLE
Published: 11/06/2014
Between one-fifth and one-third of all greenhouse gas emissions result from our food system. In a recent interview with Audubon MagazineMichael Pollan, author of The Omnivore's Dilemma and more recently Cooked, A Natural History of Transformation, spoke with Rene Ebersole about how the fork can be a powerful weapon against climate change. A widespread shift toward smarter consumer choices can reduce air, water, and soil pollution, which in turn can produce healthier food and a cleaner planet, the author says. While shopping at farmers' markets, growing vegetables, and carrying cloth grocery bags are great ways to help thwart climate change, he offers some other very simple, often-overlooked practices that can provide some similar benefits. 
1. Buy frozen. There's a notion that because it's expensive to buy groceries at the farmers' market, eating sustainably is unaffordable for people who don't have a Prius or a house covered with solar panels. Not true, Pollan says--just look in the freezer aisle:
"Processed foods are not necessarily so cheap. If you're willing to cook from raw ingredients you can often cook more cheaply. So I'm not always sure it's a financial question as much as a time question. I would also say that the cult of fresh gets a little bit overdone in that there's nothing wrong with frozen vegetables, and they're really cheap. Even if you can't afford farmer's market organic spinach, you can afford a box of frozen spinach, which is a great product. And it's washed, by the way, so it's really convenient and much faster to cook. I think that there's this tendency to assume that it's a choice between eating fast food crap and farmer's market food--and that's not the first choice. The first choice is between eating real food and processed food. Real food is cheaper than processed food. It doesn't have to be organic; it doesn't have to come from the farmer's market. You can eat well and improve your diet dramatically simply by making that change." 
2. Don't try to cook like you're on a cooking show. Making fresh, healthy meals at home and buying fewer processed items is the way to go, but many people have trouble making that leap Pollan says, offering some insight:
"Either they don't know how to cook because their parents didn't cook; or they're intimidated by cooking because they see experts do it on television and it looks really hard (I mean they make it look like brain surgery on cooking shows); or they just don't have time; or they don't think they have time because the kind of cooking they see on television takes a really long time. But every night home cooking is not making a gourmet meal, and it need not take more than a half hour. Look how much time you can spend microwaving frozen food. You could easily spend a half hour just doing that for a family of four because you can't do it all at once. We have to look at where we spend our time. What do we value? Some people value watching cooking shows more than they value cooking. Or they value being online more than cooking for their family. So that's why I wrote my book Cooked, to hopefully inspire people to get into the kitchen and show them that it's really a very interesting and pleasurable way to spend a little bit of your leisure time." 
3. Raid the refrigerator. Instead of trying to replicate those meals on cooking shows, with umpteen ingredients and hours of prep time, mix up quick and easy dishes from what's already stocked in the kitchen. Pollan's go-to meal:
"I always have frozen spinach in the fridge, and I always have canned wild salmon and pasta in the pantry. With those three ingredients and a little bit of olive oil and maybe some garlic, maybe some basil (if it's in the garden at the time), I can make a really great meal--one of my favorite meals, in like 20 minutes. I defrost the spinach, cook the pasta, saute the spinach over the pasta, open the can of salmon and I put that on top of the spinach, then I put a little basil on that and maybe pour a little extra olive oil on it. It's delicious. If you're in the habit of cooking, you'll have the right things in your pantry, and if you're just strategic about it, and it becomes a habit, it doesn't have to consume your life." 
4. Divide and conquer. Spread the work around. Pollan says: 
"One of the problems with cooking was it was assumed to be the woman's responsibility, and her exclusive responsibility. That makes it really hard, especially if the woman is also working. So I think we have to get men and children involved in the kitchen. You know, if you share the work, it's not that much work. There's also a social dimension. The problem with cooking was we isolated it; it was one person in the nuclear household doing it. But if you do it with your kids it's often very pleasurable time. Kids really love to cook." "

Panquecas

Numa tijela bata, com uma batedeira eléctrica, dois ovos inteiros com duas colheres de sopa de açúcar mascavado.
Quando a mistura tiver duplicado de volume, adicione duas colheres de sopa de azeite, com a batedeira sempre ligada; e uma colher de chá de fermento em pó.
Adicione, alternando, duas chávenas de farinha integral e uma chávena de leite de soja, até obter uma mistura homogénea.
Aqueça uma frigideira anti-aderente, coloque alguns pingos de azeite, adicione uma concha de massa e deixe cozinhar até a panqueca começar a fazer bolhas de ar à superfície. Nessa altura, vire-a com o auxílio de uma espátula em madeira.
Pode incorporar vários elementos na massa, ou colocar sobre a panqueca, como banana, maçã, canela, etc. Na fotografia, uma versão com fatias finas de maça e canela.