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Rancho La Puerta
Jan 27th, 2012 by Leslie

Rancho La Puerta's Organic Garden

Rancho La Puerta's Organic Garden

Teaching at Rancho La Puerta in Mexico

Teaching at Rancho La Puerta in Mexico

I am looking forward to being back in Salvador’s gorgeous organic gardens at Rancho La Puerta Organic Spa in Mexico. It is always my pleasure to create the menus for all my cooking classes from the local, seasonal harvest. Seed to Table cooking is a celebration of the earth’s bounty. Come celebrate with me!

For more information on my organic vegetarian cooking classes in Mexico and in the United States and also online course, too, please visit my class schedule: http://lesliecerier.com/blog/class-schedule/

Have a great organic feast!

Leslie Cerier, The Organic Gourmet

www.lesliecerier.com

Teaching at Esalen
Jan 25th, 2012 by Leslie

Leslie in Bliss Teaching at Esalen Institute

Leslie in Bliss Teaching at Esalen Institute


Here is just one of the yummy dishes that I am going to be teaching you how to cook. After feasting, can’t you just feel yourself relaxing in the hot tubs overlooking the Pacific Ocean. I can and I will see you there March 18-25

Click Here for Info and to Register for Great Meals with Great Grains March 18-23 2012

Click Here for Info and to Register: Improvisational Cooking for Health and Vitality March 23-25 2012

Vegetable Stir Fry with Madagascar Pink Rice and Thai Peanut Sauce

Vegetable Stir Fry with Madagascar Pink Rice and Thai Peanut Sauce

Have a great organic feast!

Leslie

www.lesliecerier.com

Great Meals with Great Grains
Jan 18th, 2012 by Leslie

Corn Grits with Kale and Goat Cheddar Cheese

Corn Grits with Kale and Goat Cheddar Cheese

Chewy, moist, creamy, hot, sticky steamy, rolled, wrapped, stacked; Whole Grains are sweet, easy, versatile, nutritious, delicious, high-fiber, low fat, filling, satisfying, and energizing!

Fruit Crisp

Organic Fruit Crisp

Whole grains are one of nature’s gifts that have nurtured people all over the world for centuries. These powerhouses—loaded with vitamins, minerals, fiber, and antioxidants—offer energy, great taste, and worlds of healthy eating pleasure.

Kasha, amaranth, teff, bulgar, cous cous, quinoa, corn grits and rolled oats cook quickly: 5-15 minutes. Besides the standard boil and simmer, you can toast, marinate, bake, sprout, sauté, and even presoak grains to produce different textures and flavors. Kasha, quinoa, oats, and amaranth are complete proteins and gluten-free. Other gluten-free grains are corn, millet, wild rice, sorghum, teff, and numerous varieties of rice.

A fabulous variety of whole grains provide culinary excitement without hours of labor. You can cook grains alone and together with other grains, in infinite combination with spices, vegetables, nuts, and seeds.  Once you know the proportion of liquid to grains you can make up your own combination.  Sometimes it may require a little math because some grains require more cooking liquid than others.  Don’t let the math stop you.  Go a little wild and improvise.  Add cooked grains to a salad, stir fry, soup, or garnish with fresh herbs or toasted seeds.

Organic and Gluten-Free Feta Cheese and Quinoa Salad

Organic and Gluten-Free Feta Cheese and Quinoa Salad

Some Grains need to be rinsed. Place a measured amount in a pot, or large bowl.  Cover grains with three to four inches of water.  Swirl grains with a chopstick or wooden spoon.  Pour off any floating debris, grain hulls, twigs, etc.  Repeat until the water is clear.  Some grains such as barley, oats, and millet are dustier than others and require a longer rinsing period.  Spelt, and kamut are fairly clean and rinse quickly.  Don’t bother rinsing teff.  It is too tiny, and has already been cleaned before packaging.  I also never rinse kasha (buckwheat groats) or flaked or cracked grains like rolled oats, spelt flakes, kamut flakes, corn grits, bulgar wheat, or cous cous. Do rinse red, tan and black varieties of quinoa unless the package says pre-rinsed.

Special Ways of Cooking Grains

1- Dry roast rinsed grains before cooking them

* Alone or with:

* Spices

* Vegetables and Spices

* Nuts and/or Seeds

To make them fluffy, light, individual, dry and nutty flavored.


2- Sauté rinsed, uncooked grains

* Alone or with:

* Vegetables

* Spices and Herbs

To make them moist, tender, individual, rich and flavorful.

Use sesame, extra virgin olive, extra virgin coconut oils, butter and ghee

3- Soak rinsed grains in their cooking liquid overnight or 6-8 hours before cooking them.  This makes them easier to digest and softer.

Want to be deeply nourished? Eat whole grains! Loaded with B vitamins, vitamin E, magnesium, iron, fiber, and valuable antioxidants not found in fruits and vegetables, whole grains give you tasty protection against cancer, stroke, heart disease, diabetes, and obesity. In fact, I actually lost weight without trying by eating lots of gluten-free grains and gluten-free pastries.

Whole grains are important to everyone’s diet-and in my upcoming workshop, Great Meals with Great Grains. March 18-23 2012, Esalen Institute, Big Sur, CA http://webapp.esalen.org/workshops/11140

888-8-ESALEN (888-837-2536)

I’ll show you how to mix and match whole grains with fresh harvested organic vegetables from Esalen’s Organic Farm and Garden. And we will feast on whole grain dishes and lots more overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Please join me.

Have a Great Organic Feast!

www.lesliecerier.com

For more information on Leslie Cerier’s Cooking Classes, please click on this link

Earthy, Quick Cooking Grains
Dec 1st, 2011 by Leslie

Vegetarian Express 6 Great Quick Meals

Vegetarian Express 6 Great Quick Meals

I love to teach vegetarian cooking for health and vitality. Mixing and matching the local, seasonal, organic harvest with sustainable raised whole grains is a fun way to go wild in the kitchen. Wildly creative that is! (Though, I love wild foods like mushrooms, sea vegetables, berries and more. Don’t you?) In cooking classes and in life, there’s always room for self expression. You can play and choose seasonal ingredients and even the the size and shape when chopping them. Include a rainbow of colors and automatically you have a balanced meal of 5 flavors: For example: black beans, carrots, daikon radish, collard greens and red bell pepper. When you prepare and eat a colorful meal, you are bound to be happily nourished. All your senses come alive and also nutrition is being served with a smile.

It is all about the yum!

In the photo above is a plate of several dishes from my cookbooks: Gluten-Free Recipes for the Conscious Cook and Going Wild in the Kitchen:

African-Spiced Coconut Teff & Red Lentil Stew with Collards & Yams
Gingered Tempeh & Shiitake Sourdough Sandwiches with Mesclun Mix
South American Red Quinoa with Green Beans, Pumpkin Seeds and Chiles
Coconut Curried Seitan with Carrots, Cabbage & Mung Bean Sprouts
Jade Rice Vegetable Pilaf with French Lentils & Toasted Walnuts
Asian Vegetable Stir Fry with Bhutanese Red Rice
Spicy Peanut Tofu.

Earthy whole grains like teff, quinoa, Jade Pearl Rice, Bhutanese Red Rice among other gluten-free grains are quick and delicious, especially when cooked with seasonal vegetables and spices. These easy to follow recipes were the ones that I taught all in one evening hands on cooking workshop in New York City’s Natural Gourmet and also these recipes from my cookbooks: Going Wild in the Kitchen and Gluten-Free Recipes for the Conscious Cook. They offer globally inspired flavors that novice cooks can prepare and inspire experienced cooks.

Yes, these dishes are nutritious, delicious, quick and easy to prepare from scratch. Here are photos from my workshop that sold out the Natural Gourmet in NYC for the 6th time.

Asian Vegetable Stir Fry with Bhutanese Red Rice

Asian Vegetable Stir Fry with Bhutanese Red Rice from Going Wild in the Kitchen Asian Vegetable Stir Fry with Bhutanese Red Rice... YUM! Great with the vegetables of the season: onion, carrot and daikon radish. Serve with Spicy Peanut Tofu or Tempeh for a quick and easy Vegetarian meal

Sweet and Spicy Peanut Sauce with Tofu From Going Wild in the Kitchen, great on pasta and the Bhutanese Red Rice Stir-Fry , too

Sweet and Spicy Peanut Sauce with Tofu From Going Wild in the Kitchen, great on pasta and the Bhutanese Red Rice Stir-Fry , too

Jade Rice Pilaf with French Lentils and Toasted Walnuts

Jade Rice Pilaf with French Lentils and Toasted Walnuts from Gluten-Free Recipes for the Conscious Cook

Open Ginger Tempeh Sandwich with Shiitake Mushrooms

Open Ginger Tempeh Sandwich with Shiitake Mushrooms and Mesclun Salad

Have a great organic feast with the local harvest!

All the best, Leslie Cerier, The Organic Gourmet

For more recipescooking class schedule and lots more, please visit www.lesliecerier.com

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