Author Archives: VegeCafesNZ

The stimulating pungent good taste

ginger-honey-lemon-teaKeeping healthy is always a challenge, especially in winter. Knowing how to use foods linked to the five different essential tastes is a great way to start keeping yourself warm from the inside, as it were. It’s definitely a time to avoid chilled foods!

Using small amounts of these pungent foods can have a surprisingly large effect. Think of the stimulation to your taste buds when you add a dot of wasabi to a nori/sushi roll!

We all know fresh root ginger is warming – what could be better than a warm ginger, lemon and honey drink (above) on a cold day? – and we easily think of the same heating effect we receive from horseradish or wasabi, mustard, lime pickles, and daikon, the strong large white radish.

chili-peppers-on-a-treeOnion, pepper and garlic, chilli peppers (left) and hot spices are obvious choices to stimulate digestion and improve your metabolism. The legume is lentils; the grain is brown rice.

The stimulating pungent foods with their sharp, biting quality are harvested in late autumn and as you would expect have a dense, concentrated energy. Of course, in cooler weather we are naturally inclined to use cooking styles that send strong energy into the food, such as pressure cooking and baking. The slower growing energy-dense root and strong leafy green vegetables are ideal for the coming winter season and often keep well in storage. We tend to eat these richer, heavier foods to give us warmth, and pungent foods are a particularly useful gift from the garden as they cut through the richness to lighten the after-effects. Think of how adding a small knob of finely chopped ginger enlivens the heavy sweetness of pumpkin soup.

Not all winter food has to be slow cooked. Here’s a quick pickle using daikon (below) that can be prepared in seconds for the table.

Daikon radishPeel and grate a little daikon into a small bowl, cover with some shoyu or tamari (the latter is wheat-free and richer in taste) – and it’s done! Or make it ahead of time and leave it to marinate. It keeps for a few days in the fridge (keep it covered or it will dry out). But use it sparingly, by the teaspoonful. The sauce is salty and, if you like it, can be surprisingly more-ish. It’s great served with a simple base of brown rice, tofu and steamed veges.

Daikon, like anything pungent, is usually an acquired taste. Many people avoid it, but it’s worth learning to appreciate for its benefits. Pungent foods tend to be taken in small quantities, but those small quantities are important.

Pungent foods have a light, dry effect on on your body and are the most stimulating of all to your digestion. They can certainly clear your sinuses, and can have the same clearing effect on your mind! A bit of pungency can definitely be beneficial, as it’s a strong motivator and gets you moving. But be aware: too much can create anger, aggressiveness and resentment. Just as you would expect from over-stimulation in any form.

In some ways the pungent taste is not too different from the sixth: astringent. Some of the foods that qualify in Ayurveda as astringent include chillis and onions. Macrobiotics does not have an astringent category so they’re regarded as pungent. Still, it’s useful to be aware of the different properties, as we’ll see in a later blog.

Next up: the salt-of-the-earth good taste.

The sweet-natured good taste

pumpkin-pieThe sweet taste is the dominant one for more of us than any other, and we are naturally drawn to sweet foods. That can be a shame as we know sugar is added to just about every processed food around, even baby food, to the exclusion of other tastes. So children can be led to believe that only the sweet taste is normal and desirable, and the sweeter the better, and that has become a real problem. Especially as extreme sweetness leads us away from appreciating the other necessary tastes and the valuable foods that our bodies need.

Let’s look at natural tasting sweet foods that belong to the harvest time of late summer. Pumpkin (pumpkin pie, above) is obvious, but some of the others surprised me, such as parsnips, cabbage, chinese cabbage, round vegetables such as beetroot, seeds, chestnuts, cooked fruit, coconut milk, and arame sea vegetable. You don’t have to like all of them but if your own natural preference is for sweet foods, some of these will be among your favourites.

And  onions? – yes! – think of roasted or slowly sautéed onions and you’ll recall their natural sweetness. In macrobiotics, onions are classified as sweet, but in Ayurveda they are deemed to be astringent. In fact they’re both. Many foods have more than one taste combination. Cooked onions are sweet, raw onions are not – we’re talking about white onions here; red onions are less astringent and are sweeter.

hummusSweet grains include millet and basmati and sweet brown rice; the sweetest legumes are chickpeas… hummus (left), anyone?

Cooking techniques vary with different seasons too. You know how in mid summertime you prefer raw salads and quick cooking styles – who wants to be standing over a hot stove? And summer veges lend themselves to these techniques. During winter, baking and roasting are more popular. The longer and slower the cooking styles, the more they will draw out the sweetness, especially for root vegetables – who doesn’t love their roasted veges?

In late summer, slow sauté, and steaming with the lid on, are the appropriate cooking techniques for bringing out the natural sweetness in these foods. And many of them are yellow/orange or creamy in colour, which are the colours we associate with their season, when it is not yet autumn. Notice too that many of these harvest time foods are long lasting, good keepers throughout the colder winter months, when we need the sweet taste to lift our moods in the darker winter days.

Sweet foods tend to be heavy on digestion, and with eating too much of them that’s their effect – heavy in every sense – that they tend to have on your body.

The sea vegetable for the harvest time is Arame and it definitely lightens any heaviness! It doesn’t have the stronger taste of other sea veges and I love it served with brown rice. Known in the west as Sea Oak and found throughout the Pacific coastal shores, arame fronds are dried and cut into thin, fine strips. It’s high in iron, niacin, calcium, iodine, fibre and complex carbohydrates. Here’s a quick recipe to try:

arame-medSoak a small handful of arame in cold water for a few minutes; it will swell. Thinly slice some carrot. Lift out the arame fronds, leaving any grit in the bottom of the bowl, and place in a saucepan with the carrot and cover with water. Sprinkle with shoyu or tamari. Simmer gently, partly covered, for a few minutes until the carrots are cooked. There will be a little liquid left. You can either drain the arame and mix it through the rice or veges (it will be slightly salty from the sauce), or serve it with the liquid. The liquid can also be used as a stock. Any left over will keep in the fridge for a couple of days if covered.

My favourite brand for sea vegetables is Mitoku from Japan, available from health food stores. More on sea vegetables here http://www.marksdailyapple.com/a-visual-guide-to-sea-vegetables/#axzz35982a2DZ 

These naturally sweet foods also have a naturally more descending or stabilising energy. The positive energies associated with this include compassion, empathy and roundedness. But when its out of balance, the negative characteristics are self pity and complaining and coldness.

So it pays to use the other tastes to enrich your life.

In fact, my next blog on the stimulating pungent good taste will highlight exactly how to do that.

The life-enhancing bitter good taste

There are five good tastes (and maybe six).

cappuccino_cup_coffee_milchschaum_238527So you like coffee? Then you won’t be surprised to hear that like all bitter foods, it’s a fire energy – that’s exactly what bitter foods do – fire us up. If you don’t like the bitterness of coffee you may not need the fire energy, or you might dilute it’s effect with milk (sweet) or sugar (sweeter).

Chances are you might like another bitter food though: watercress, bok choy, nori seaweed, dandelion leaves, fenugreek seeds, lemon rind, or black beans. Or the summer grain sweet corn. Sweet corn? – yes, it combines bitter with sweet quite nicely. Look for the aftertaste of your corn on the cob and you’ll become aware of it. (If you like butter with your corn on the cob, you’re adding in a third taste: salty.) Dried corn, such as popcorn, or polenta, or cornmeal, has the corn sugar removed and what’s left is unmistakably slightly bitter. And nutritious.

You might have noticed that these are all summer vegetables, which makes sense for fire vegetables, doesn’t it? They’re deemed to be light on digestion as they have a rapid, expanding energy, and – no surprises here – cooking techniques are quick, like a brief sauté or stir fry or quick tempura (deep fry).

The relevant seaweed is nori, best known for its use to make sushi rolls.  Like land vegetables, sea veges are packed with goodies. Nori is high in iodine and and also contains Vitamins A, B12, Bs, and C, and calcium and iron; finding sources of B12, iron and calcium as we know are crucial for vegans. In Scotland, Ireland and Wales, its harvested and prepared as laver bread.

nori-seaweedTry slicing a strip of toasted nori into small pieces and scattering it over your veges or grains. Or you can wrap a thin strip of nori around a slice of firm-ish tofu before shallow sauté, or use a slice to wrap around and bind a sandwich of two slices of tofu filled with a nut butter, or miso and tahini perhaps with a smidgeon of finely chopped spring onion, then sauté…

The bitter taste is fascinating and modern research proves the point that each of these taste preferences is innate – that we are biologically programmed in our preferences. It also makes the point that taste is linked to specific nutrient components.

In a recent NZ Listener article, nutritionist Jennifer Bowden described her experience as a student when she gagged after being tested with a concentrated bitter tasting compound similar to those found in many foods. She is not alone but is one of the 25% who have a similar reaction. About 25% of us don’t notice the bitter taste at all and the rest of us do so moderately.

Having this sensitivity is a handy protection against many toxic plants, as well as rancid fats, smoking and many alcoholic drinks. It’s a mixed blessing though. This highly sensitive group also tends to avoid eating chilli, black pepper, and a range of foods and vegetables containing small amounts of bitter compounds known as phytonutrients that can reduce cancer and cardiovascular risk.

So if you’re not part of the highly sensitive 25%, it’s useful to know that bitter foods containing these disease-preventing nutrients include green tea, broccoli, brussel sprouts and dark chocolate.

This recipe is for a simple, deliciously flavoured Watercress Soup. It uses only watercress (bitter), onions (sweet & pungent), potatoes (pungent) and salt – four good tastes in one pot.

Watercress soupIn a large saucepan place 1 lb (500g) roughly chopped white onions; 1 lb (500g) peeled and roughly chopped potatoes; 3 cups cold water; 1 dessertspoon salt. Bring to the boil and simmer partially covered until the veges are cooked, about 40 minutes. Add ¼ lb (125g) watercress leaves and tender stalks, roughly chopped, and simmer for 5 minutes. Blend. Serve, garnished with a few watercress leaves. Add a swirl of cream if you wish.

Positive emotions associated with fire energy – no surprises here either – are joy, warmth, openness, outward and sociable behaviour. Negative behaviour is erratic and ‘hyper’ and can promote a sense of disillusionment. The moral – everything in moderation.

Next: the sweet-natured good taste

Five good tastes

Lacto-vegThere are five

… good tastes, that is, and a healthy balanced meal contains all five of them – bitter, sweet, pungent, salty and sour (and a possible sixth: astringent).

Not just because they make a meal taste good. Each of the tastes has it’s own purpose and effect on your health, both for body and mind. Of course you’ll prefer one, two or three kinds of tastes more than the others. Of course, most people will probably only want a small amount of bitter or pungent or sour foods. But we do need them all.

And here’s a curious fact: everyone has one of these five tastes dominant, and the one you like best may not be the one your partner or child or parent or close friends like best. In one family I know, both parents and one child naturally prefer pungent food, such as radishes and ginger and garlic, and they rarely eat sweets. Naturally, the cook (mum) prepares what she likes, so she doesn’t use sweet vegetables much. The other child is naturally drawn to these sweeter foods which bothers his parents as ‘it isn’t healthy’. It is, for him!

If you’ve ever wondered why you like some cafes more than others, when the food seems to be just as well prepared, or why you prefer to use the cookbooks of certain writers, this could be why. Chefs are no different from the rest of us: they have their own taste preferences and will naturally cook to that. Good cooks will prepare a range of tastes within a meal, but don’t assume they will all do this or even know why it matters.

And it does, for a whole bunch of reasons.

There are two great systems of maintaining good health and healing through food that have been introduced to the West in recent decades: Macrobiotics, which is mainly vegan (occasional use of seafood is easily excluded), and Ayurveda,  which is lacto-vegetarian, though only soft dairy is used, such as milk, yoghurt and paneer.

Macrob mealMacrobiotics was developed from traditional Japanese practices by George Ohsawa, and in 1955 was introduced to the West by Michio Kushi. Famously known – and misunderstood – for it’s practice of using unpolished brown rice as a major component of meals, it is actually a method of maintaining health and using food to contribute to the prevention and treatment of a range of diseases. This includes some major ones such as diabetes and cancer.

Central elements of macrobiotics form the basis of the current fashion for healthy eating using whole grains, legumes and vegetables. Miso, tofu, tempeh and nori seaweed (used to make sushi) are some of the now familiar foods that were virtually unknown in the West until three or four decades ago.

A macrobiotic meal has a focus on simplicity and aims to enhance the quality and freshness of the ingredients, along with using cooking styles that bring out the natural flavours of the foods. A typical main meal may start with a small bowl of clear light miso soup, along with fresh vegetables, a whole grain (short grain brown rice with its slightly nutty flavour is the favourite), a small serving of tofu or tempeh or other legume, a little seaweed (packed with essential minerals), pickles, and condiments such as gomasio (toasted sesame seeds lightly crushed with a little sea salt).

Classical macrobiotic cooks rarely use sweets or desserts – there’s no need, as well prepared fresh veges provide the natural elements of sweetness we seek in a meal. Macrobiotic cooks never use sugar. Very little oil is used, and no dairy.

Aveline cookbook

Aveline Kushi’s Complete Guide to Macrobiotic Cooking is the gold standard for macrobiotic cooking. Everything you’d want to know, beautifully written, family recipes, a mixture of information and practical advice, including how to cook – you guessed it – brown rice.

Or go online for a collection of macrobiotic recipes: https://www.facebook.com/macrobioticrecipes

 

ayurvedic mealAyurveda, which translates as ‘the knowledge concerning the maintenance of a long life’, is an ancient method of healing from India, at least 3,000 years old. It’s currently enjoying a resurgence in India and is being introduced to Western countries such as our own. While the choice and preparation of food is central to maintaining and restoring health, Ayurveda also has some specific body treatments and specialist lines of treatment for different diseases.  Ayurvedic traditions have always had a strong influence on Indian cuisine.

Ayurvedic meals are based on a serving of basmati rice, chapati or roti (wheat based pancakes), dhal (legumes), vegetable curries, pickles (tart lime is popular, as are fiery pickles, or raw onion), a sweet served with the meal, a cooling raita i.e. yoghurt plain or with chopped fruit or veges such as apple or cucumber. Coconut milk is often used in sauces. A proper thali is a complete meal based on the Ayurvedic principles.

Desserts are not served after the meal but a small sweet is included with it – the sweet foods are the first to be digested in the stomach, so eating them after a main meal creates disturbance. Alas, refined sugar has found its damaging way into Indian households. A healthy alternative and a useful between-meal snack would perhaps be a handful of raisins and a few soaked and peeled almonds.

Spices are used both to enhance digestion and for specific purposes – cinnamon and cardamon, for example, are carminative i.e. have a warming effect the body.

Interestingly Auyerveda adds a sixth essential taste: astringent. I wonder if astringent foods are used to balance the use of dairy foods such ghee, yoghurt and paneer. More on that later.

Desai&Morningstar

The co-authors of The Ayurvedic Cookbook are Western trained nutritionist Amadea Morningstar and Indian cook Urmila Desai. The book contains easy-to-read recipes and information about Ayruvedic cooking, how to use the spices,  and how they benefit you.

Here’s a short NZ Herald article on the benefits of Ayurveda http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10802505

And you’ll find some more detailed info on Ayurvedic living and healing (they go together) at www.planetayurveda.co.nz

Both macrobiotic and Ayurvedic systems of healing base good health on using healthy food, which include these five good tastes. This makes sense, as good food = good health, and we all know what bad food does. On a subtle day to day level, the food you eat has many effects on you.

In the next blogs I’ll write about each of the tastes, why they matter, the foods that contain them, how they link to the energy of the seasons, and how they can benefit you, starting with the life-enhancing bitter good taste.

 

 

 

 

Fresh ideas for your meals!

Potluck rules!

Vegan lasagnaWhile there are few vegetarian or vegan cooking classes offered outside Auckland – Timaru and Invercargill being the exceptions – shared potluck meals is another way of tasting new foods and swapping ideas. Most of the Vegetarian Society branches throughout NZ offer regular open potluck meals – invaluable ways of meeting friendly, like-minded foodies. Their useful site also includes a selection of recipes www.vegetarian.org.nz

Plus there’s the Vegan Society www.vegansociety.co.nz which has a facebook blog for vegans hunting for flats or flatmates looking for vegans.

Cooking classes:

Timaru

Vegetarian cooking class 14 June 10am-12.30pm at TTEC. $15.

A resource from a Timaru-based vegetarian grocery shop with an online service as well.Stocks a range of vegetarian staples and supplements, including Textured Vegetable Protein, preserved fruit and veggies, ready to eat meals and desserts.

Book at vgroceryshop@gmail.com & find more info here https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vegetarian-Timaru/244718432215468

Invercargill

Inv.VeganSocVegan cooking classes are run on Sundays 3-5pm by the local Seventh-day Adventist Church – themselves vegetarians but this is an open (non-religious) class – the focus is on promoting vegetarianism. All welcome.

 

The energetic Invercargill Vegan Society also hosts regular pot-luck dinners www.invsoc.org.nz

For your copy of the Guide to Vegetarian Dining out in Aotearoa/New Zealand – where to find over 50 exclusively vegetarian cafes email vegecafesnz@daramcnaught.com. $9.95 + postage $1.70.

Refresh your cooking style – Auckland

Looking for some fresh new ways of making delicious healthy meals?

It’s so easy to get stuck in a routine of easy, familiar dishes. But where to go for inspiration? – here are some Auckland suggestions:

These three cafes offer vegan, organic cooking classes:

EAST WEST ORGANICS – NEW LYNN SUPERSTORE AND CAFE 

Ethos cafeEvening weekly workshop series 7-9pm.

$60 per workshop. Info on upcoming workshops will be on http://eastwestorganics.co.nz/natural-health-clinics/workshops-classes/

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THE WISE CICADA ORGANIC CAFE – NEWMARKET

Wise Cicada saladsWednesday 4 June: Sprouts and micro greens. 7-9.30pm. Learn to grow sprouts, microgreens, and wheatgrass in glass jars and soil!
Grow your own greens all winter long.
All samples and a comprehensive recipe booklet included. We only use organic and spray-free ingredients.
$85 Per Person
Each Class Limited to 20 People so Book Fast!
Phone Rene 027 555 1622 or go to http://www.wisecicada.co.nz/events/raw-chef/

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LITTLE BIRD ORGANICS

Little BirdXander & Megans Chef Series: These classes focus on showing you the fundamental building blocks of raw cuisine and how to use them to create your own amazing raw dishes at home.

The first in the series will focus on how to use nuts as an alternative to dairy products in creating creamy and delicious milks, dressings, sauces, cheeses & deserts.

Classes $85 | 7-9.15pm | dates are advertised on the website www.littlebirdorganics.co.nz

Plus there are the vegetarian (some eggs), non-organic Revive cafes:

REVIVE CAFES

Revive cooking classesOwner Jeremy Dixon runs two weekday inner city cafes, has published 3 cookbooks of Revive recipes, and offers cooking classes (Papatoetoe) – next one will be in Spring. To find out more, plus sample recipes, go to the website http://www.revive.co.nz/cooking-classes

Two Indian cafes: one needs to lift its game

Bikanervala PtoeBikanervala at Papatoetoe

It’s surprising to me that given the large Indian and Asian populations in South Auckland there so few vegetarian cafes.

On Easter Sunday, Kitty and I went looking for a local lunch and were pleased to find Bikanervala open. A companion to Bikanervala in Mt Roskill, it’s had very mixed reviews for its food and service, but we’d had a reasonable meal there a while ago.

We both ordered a Punjabi Thali ($14.50). They are served on a plastic tray that has 6 small pockets: one for dhal; two for vege curries; one contained a sweet (almond burfi) and a ‘salad’ consisting of a thick slice each of cucumber, raw white onion and tomato; one pocket had very dry rice; and one was filled with a yoghurt raita. There was also a hot and pungent pickle, and a large freshly cooked naan bread that we didn’t need to so took home for a later meal. Plus half an oddly soft poppadum each.

The light tomato paneer curry was the best dish on the platter and the only one we really enjoyed, though the lentil dhal and the raita were quite pleasant. It might have been a long weekend but most of the dishes did not taste fresh. The sweet was an almond burfi, and not to Kitty’s taste at all, so I went to the chaat counter and bought her a delicate looking kaju kesar ($1.50). This tiny saffron flavoured square covered in sliver leaf had a texture that was reminiscent of marzipan but was too heavy for her. Happily she was able to enjoy the mango lassi ($4), which is made with mango pulp, not just flavouring.

Some of the criticisms of Bikanervala have been of the quality of service. The manager was briskly pleasant. The same cannot be said of the chaat counter staff, whom I encountered twice; indifferent and unhappy would be the best one could say.

Mumbai Chaat SandMumbai Chaat: a happier day

The following day Matt and I found ourselves lunching at Mumbai Chaat in Sandringham village on our way out to Piha for one of our favourite beach walks. What a contrast! The atmosphere there is bright and welcoming and the managers Ajit Ambani and son Gaurang – today it was Ajit – are always helpful and considerate.

They offer a selection of curries and dhals for the Thali platters. We both chose the vege korma, which is always excellent. I had the spicy mini stuffed eggplants, and Matt had undhiyu, a distinctively seasoned fresh vege mix. I enjoy their yellow dhal, which is a little sweet, and Matt ordered the Gujerati dhal, a thin sweet and sour sauce. Fluffy basmati rice. A raita sweetened with grapes and other chopped fruit. Crisply toasted poppadom. We declined their wafer-thin roti with reluctance, as we’re both gluten-free just now. And Matt had one of their delicious mango lassi.

I’ve been to Mumbai Chaat many times with different companions and we have tried various selections from their menu. These are not the usual spices and flavours of established NZ Indian cafes, and they’re managed with skill by chef Pratibha Ambani (wife of Ajit). Be prepared to have fun trying different tastes to find your own favourites.

Definitely a cafe to recommend.

www.mumbaichaat.co.nz

 

 

 

New Plymouth addition to the Vege Cafe Guide

It’s such great news to hear of the new vegan cafe that’s opened in New Plymouth!

The Loving Hut is an international franchise of vegan cafes that offers buffet style meals, salads, burger, and hot meals. They’re usually popular and the online reviews for this one are very good indeed. So if you’re visiting New Plymouth, look it up –

 Loving Hut cafe, 178 Devon St East | Tel 06 759 0447 | Mon-Fri 10am-3pm | Fri-Sat 5-9pm