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Lenore's Natural Cuisine Cookbook
Your Guide to Vegetarian, Vegan, and Macrobiotic Cooking
by Lenore Y.
Baum, M.A.
www.lenoresnatural.com

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spaghetti with
gingered broccoli
When visiting a friend, we decided to cook
dinner together. What I found in her refrigerator were broccoli and
leftover cooked spaghetti. This simple, but tasty dish came together
quickly and has become a favorite of mine ever since.
ingredients
1 pound semolina spaghetti
1 bunch broccoli, stems
peeled and diagonally
sliced, florets separated
1 tsp. toasted sesame oil
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1 4-inch piece fresh ginger,
peeled and cut into matchsticks
3 large garlic cloves, minced
1 TBS. shoyu, or more to taste
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directions
1. Fill a large stock pot with 5 quarts of
water. Bring to a boil.
2. Cook spaghetti until al dente, according to package directions.
3. Gently pour cooked spaghetti into a colander in the sink. Rinse until
cold. Leave in colander.
4. Meanwhile, steam broccoli until barely fork-tender, about
2 minutes. Set aside.
5. In a large, nonstick skillet or wok, heat oil. Sauté ginger and garlic
1 minute.
6. Add spaghetti. Sauté until lightly golden, 3-5 minutes. Season with
shoyu, to taste.
7. Add broccoli. Mix gently. Cover and heat through before serving,
about 2 minutes.
variations
Substitute asparagus for broccoli.
For extra pizzazz, add 1/4 teaspoon hot sesame oil to
step #6.
cook's tips
To prevent shoyu from burning, sprinkle it on the food
rather than on the pan.
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sweet
miso soup
Soup for breakfast! It sounds crazy,
but once you try it, I think you will be hooked. Warm and nourishing,
it gives you a better jump-start than any cup of Java, without the caffeine.
Eat it with a toasted English muffin or sourdough bread with Spectrum
Naturals® Canola
Spread.
ingredients
8 cups water
1 6-inch strip wakame
1 small buttercup squash
1 medium onion, cut into
thin, 1/2 moons
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1 small daikon radish, cut
into thin, 1/2 moons
6 TBS. barley miso, or to
taste
1 scallion, thinly sliced, to
garnish, optional |
directions
1. Bring water to a boil in a large stock
pot.
2. Cover wakame with water and let soak for about 5 minutes.
Then, cut it into 1/2-inch squares. Set aside.
3. Meanwhile, remove blemished areas from the squash skin. Leave
remaining skin intact. Cut in half lengthwise, from
top to bottom.
Scoop out seeds. Trim away stem and blossom ends.
Cut into
1/2-inch cubes. Set aside.
4. Add onion and wakame to the pot. Simmer uncovered 5 minutes.
5. Add daikon. Simmer uncovered until fork-tender, about 5 minutes.
6. Add squash. Simmer uncovered until fork-tender, 5-8 minutes.
7. Reduce heat so that soup is no longer boiling.
8. In a small bowl, purée miso in a little hot broth with a spoon or
whisk. Return purée to the pot. Serve garnished with scallion.
variations
Substitute carrots,
rutabaga, parsnips, cabbage or butternut squash for buttercup squash.
Add 1/2 cup-1
cup diced daikon greens or other greens to step #6.
Add 2 slices of fresh ginger to
step #7.
cook's tips
To make a one-pot
breakfast meal, add leftover cooked rice, millet or noodles to the soup.
Use an 8-inch chef's knife to cut
through the dense skin of buttercup squash. Hold the squash securely
on a cutting board,
stem side up. Place the tip of the knife into the
top of the squash
and cut with a rocking downward motion. Repeat on
other side.
To preserve the friendly bacteria
and enzymes in miso soup, do not boil it when reheating.
For the same reason, so not freeze it.
It will keep refrigerated for one week.
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tabouli
This classic Mideastern salad, based on Meredith
McCarty's recipe in Fresh From a Vegetarian Kitchen, is made
with very little oil and no tomatoes. It is exceptionally high in iron
and pairs up nicely with Hummus in-a-Hurry, below.
ingredients
salad
3 cups water
1 tsp. unrefined sea salt
2 cups coarse bulgur
2 cups cucumber,
seeded and cut into
1/4-inch pieces
4 cups fresh parsley, minced
1 cup scallions, thinly sliced |
dressing
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 large garlic cloves, minced
1 TBS. shoyu, or more to taste
3 TBS. fresh mint, minced,
optional |
directions
1. Bring water to a boil in a 4-quart pot.
Add salt and bulgur.
Simmer covered 15 minutes.
2. Transfer to a large bowl. Fluff with a fork and allow to cool.
3. Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk together dressing ingredients.
4. Add remaining salad ingredients and dressing to bulgur. Mix
gently.
5. Refrigerate at least 1 hour before serving.
6. Keeps refrigerated 3 days at most.
variations
Substitute 1 teaspoon dried mint for fresh.
Add 1/4 cup blanched and toasted, slivered almonds to
step #4.
cook's tips
It is healthier to use organic cucumbers. If only waxed
cucumbers are available, peel off the skin to avoid ingesting the
wax, which can coat the intestines and impair absorption
of food.
To remove cucumber seeds, cut cucumber in half lengthwise.
Use a spoon to scrape out seeds. This step is not imperative,
but seeds make the dish watery and give it a seedy
texture, so
you decide!
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hummus
in-a-hurry

Looking for a party-pleaser or a quick meal?
This high-calcium, easy-to-make spread can be served as a dip with rolled
romaine lettuce leaves, pita bread or lavosh. For an instant lunch or
dinner, stuff it into whole wheat pita bread with shredded lettuce.
ingredients
2 large garlic cloves
2 stalks celery, coarsely
chopped
1/2 cup lemon juice
1 15-ounce can organic
chickpeas |
1/4 cup tahini
2 tsp. shoyu
4 pepperocini, to garnish,
optional
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directions
1. In a blender or food processor, purée
the garlic, celery and lemon
juice.
2. Add the rinsed beans, tahini, shoyu and cayenne.
3. Process until smooth and creamy.
4. Serve garnished with pepperocini.
variation
Garnish with a sprinkle of extra-virgin olive oil and
paprika.
cook's tip
A food processor is the best choice for puréeing
hummus. A blender will do, but may require additional liquid, causing
the
spread to have a thinner consistency.
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overnight oatmeal
If you are not a morning person, you can
still enjoy a wholesome breakfast at home, work or while traveling.
Overnight Oatmeal, made in a thermos, requires less than fifteen
minutes to prepare the night before.
ingredients
1 cup rolled
oats
3 cups boiling water |
1 tsp. unrefined
sea salt |
directions
1. Dry-roast oats in a hot skillet on medium
heat until golden brown.
Stir often to prevent burning. This adds a toasty
flavor.
2. Pour hot tap water into a wide-mouth, 3-cup thermos to preheat.
Cover and let stand 5 minutes.
3. Pour the water from the thermos. Add oats, salt and 3 cups of
fresh boiling water. Replace stopper and lid. Wrap in a
towel to
keep warm. Oatmeal will cook overnight.
4. Serve sprinkled with Gomashio or diced dried dulse for a salty
taste.
variation
To sweeten, add raisins to step #3.
cook's tips
As a short cut, prepare rolled oats ahead of time by
dry-roasting them in large quantity. Allow to cool. Store in glass jars
in the
refrigerator or freezer.
Prepackage individual portions of dry-roasted rolled
oats and salt in sandwich-sized Ziploc® bags.
When you stay at a motel or hotel, you can easily request
hot water at a nearby coffee shop.
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Gary's Review of Lenore's Natural
Cuisine Cookbook
I have personally
tried a few of the recipes in Lenore's book and have to say that I have
been very impressed with it. Ever since I have been macrobiotic, I have
tried untold carrot and beet sauce recipes to recreate the taste of tomato
sauce, and in all honesty, none of them came close by a long shot in tasting
like the real thing. I have to say that the combination of Lenore's Un-Tomato
Sauce which I used in her Chili Recipe, actually fooled my taste buds
into thinking that I was eating the real thing.
You really have to try her spaghetti with gingered broccoli. It seems
that whenever I have gone to a macrobiotic or natural foods restaurant,
like the legendary Five Season's Restaurant which used to be located in
Massachusetts, and ordered fried noodles, I have always immensely enjoyed
this dish. Whenever I have tired to reproduce this at home, I was never
successful. I was overjoyed when Lenore's recipe yielded fried noodles
that to me were just as good as what I had out.
Finally, Lenore's Tahini-Poppyseed Sauce was fantastic. This has to be
the best dressing that I ever made from any cookbook. This really makes
boiled vegetables shine!
To me, anyone would get value out of this cookbook just for these few
recipes I cited above, but there are so many more unique ones contained
in this book that I want to try.
Reviewed 07-10-01
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| Author Lenore Baum, M.A.,
has 25 years of experience in natural foods cooking and instruction. She
is a graduate of Columbia University and the Kushi Institute. Baum has participated
in countless seminars, workshops and cooking classes with respected natural
foods experts including Aveline Kushi, Cornelia Aihara, Wendy Esko and Meredith
McCarty. |
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