• 02Nov

    The cold and rain brings back childhood memories of waking up to steaming bowls of rice congee for breakfast. Garnished with whisper thin slivers of ginger to keep the warmth burning inside, congee was the perfect way to start a cold damp day. Congee is also a great food to have when you are feeling under the weather as it is easy to digest after it’s long cook time.

    Here is a recipe where I updated it to use brown rice and lentils to add extra fiber and protein.

    The toppings listed are just suggestions. Don’t use all of them – just pick a few favorites or use what is on hand.

    Whole Grain & Lentil Congee (aka Jook)

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    3/4 cup brown and wild rice
    1/4 cup lentils
    8 cups vegetable broth — or chicken stock
    1 teaspoon sea salt
    ***Toppings (optional)***
    2 each scallion — sliced
    1 tablespoon peanuts — chopped
    4 large eggs, hard-boiled — sliced in wedges
    2 teaspoons flax seed
    2 teaspoons ginger — finely julienned
    cilantro — roughly chopped
    ginko nuts, sesame oil, white pepper

    Soak rice and lentils overnight with 1T of fresh lemon juice. Drain and rinse.

    Put first 4 ingredients in a stock pot and simmer covered for about 3 hours. Stir occasionally to prevent sticking

    To serve, ladle in bowl and add desired toppings.

    For Crock Pot – put hot stock in crock pot with rice, lentils and sea salt. Cook on high for at least 8 hours. Stir every few hours to prevent the bottom from sticking.

    Toppings may be prepared the day before.

    Add 5 g protein per serving by adding 1 oz of cooked shredded chicken breast to each serving.

    Variations: Mix various grains along with the rices – suggested: millet, barley, quinoa. Just keep the total to 3/4 of a cup and the majority of the mix should be rice.

    Enjoy!

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  • 30Oct

    My butcher and I share a common heritage. Last Friday he talked me into buying some beef scraps for stew. Lots of tendons in those scraps which turn very gelatinous after simmering for hours. In China you used every part of the animal – in fact most of the non muscle meat parts of the animal are very nourishing. Those tough connective parts are mostly protein and in your body can be used as the building blocks for your joints and connective tissue. Sure beats buying Chondrotin supplements and tastier too! Maybe it’s an aquired taste as I grew up eating stews from gelatious cuts like these and more – like oxtails. This is my family’s comfort food 🙂

    Here is the recipe for the stew I made from these scraps along with some oxtails

    Beef – Sichuan Red Cooked

    Serving Size : 8

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    2 1/2 pounds beef — (stew, chuck, ox tail, tendon)
    1 tablespoon oil
    3 inch ginger — peeled and sliced 1/4″
    5 each garlic — smashed
    6 each scallions — cut into 1 1/2″ sections
    1 stalk celery — sliced 1/2″ thick
    5 each star anise
    1 1/2 teaspoons sichuan peppercorns — toasted
    1 1/2 inch cinnamon stick
    8 each cloves
    1 each black cardamom (got this idea from the blog Tigers and Strawberries)
    2 strips orange peel — 1 1/2″ long, peel using a vegetable peeler
    1/4 cup shaoshing wine
    3 tablespoons sichuan chili bean paste
    2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
    1 tablespoon Chinkiang black vinegar
    1 quart beef stock — chicken stock or water
    1 tablespoon sucanat
    1 pounds daikon radish — (or watermelon radish, black radish, turnips, potato, yucca, sweet potato.) Peeled and cut into 2-3″ chunks

    ***Garnish***
    cilantro springs
    scallion — sliced thin
    sliced jalapenos — optional

    Boil 2-3 quarts of water in a 6 quart pot. Blanch beef in boiling water for 1 minute. Drain and rinse.

    Heat oil in the 6 quart pot. Sauteed ginger, scallion, garlic and celery over medium high heat until fragrant, about 4 minutes.

    Add star anise, sichuan peppercorns, cinnamon and cloves. Saute for another minute.

    Add chili bean paste and saute for 20-30 seconds.

    Add remaining ingredients except radish.

    Simmer on low heat for 2 – 3 hours until meat is tender. Skim fat.

    Add daikon and simmer until cooked through.

    Serve with steamed rice or on egg noodles. Garnish with cilantro and scallion.

    Enjoy!

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  • 27Oct

    It’s taken a bit of time but here it is – the recipe for the Dan Dan Noodle Salad I brought to the Food Blogger’s picnic back in August and that I made for my nutrition class summer gathering. I’d love to give more background on the ingredients but I am madly preparing for another nutrition talk. Rather than wait until I had time I figured I’d post the recipe and answer questions as they arose. Here is some info on the inspiration for the dish which came from last year’s trip to Chongqing, China.

    * Exported from MasterCook *

    Dan Dan Noodle Salad – Chongqing Street Style

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    **Marinade for Meat or Tofu**
    2 teaspoons shaoxing wine or sherry
    1 teaspoon soy sauce
    1 teaspoon dark soy sauce
    2 teaspoons chinkiang vinegar — Chinese black vinegar
    2 teaspoons sesame oil
    1 1/2 teaspoons Xinjiang Spice Mix
    5 ounces ground pork — or chicken or turkey or crumbled extra firm tofu
    2 teaspoons oil
    **Sauce**
    2 tablespoons sesame oil
    2 each scallion — sliced
    1 1/2 teaspoons Xinjiang Spice Mix
    2 tablespoons cilantro — roughly chopped
    1/2 cup broth or shiitake mushroom soaking water or water
    1 tablespoon soy sauce
    1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
    1/4 cup Chinkiang vinegar or Chinese black vinegar
    2 teaspoons sucanat or brown sugar
    1/2 teaspoon sea salt
    **Noodles**
    2 tablespoons oil — divided
    1 ounce dried shiitake mushroom
    1/2 cup chopped pickled chinese vegetable (ya cai or mustard) — optional
    12 ounces yam noodles
    **Garnish**
    4 each scallion — sliced
    1/4 cup cilantro — roughly chopped
    1/2 cup peanuts — roasted, unsalted & roughly chopped

    Marinate meat or crumbled tofu for 30 minutes to 1 hour. Heat a 10″ saute pan with the 2 teaspoons of oil and brown meat or tofu. Set aside.

    Squeeze excess water from shiitake and roughly chop. If desired, save the mushroom soaking liquid for the sauce. Heat a 12″ saute pan with 2 tablespoon of oil. Saute shiitake until lightly brown. If using, add the pickled chinese vegetable. Saute for 2-4 more minutes.

    To make sauce. Warm sesame oil in a 2 quart sauce pan. Add scallion and Xinjiang spice mix. Cook over medium heat for 1 minute. Add remaining sauce ingredients and bring up to a simmer. Remove from heat and cool to room temperature.

    Cook yam noodles. Boil 4 quarts of salted water. Add noodles and simmer for 6-8 minutes. Rinse in cold water and drain 2-3 times to remove any excess starch. Put noodles in a large mixing bowl. If you do not use right away (within 10-15 minutes – drizzle a little sesame oil on it to prevent from sticking together…and believe me – it will stick together and then some!)

    Putting together the salad. Add to the noodles in the bowl: sauteed meat or tofu, shiitake, preserved vegetable and sauce. Mix together. Season to taste. Serve in one large bowl family style or in individual bowls with the garnish of scallion, cilantro and peanuts scattered on top.

    Here is the recipe for the Xinjiang Spice Mix:

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    1/4 cup cumin seeds
    2 tablespoons ground chili pepper — Sichuan chili if you can find it
    2 tablespoons black pepper
    1 tablespoon sichuan peppercorns
    1 tablespoon ginger — grnd
    1 tablespoon garlic — powder
    1 1/2 teaspoons chili powder
    1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt

    Toast sichuan peppercorns til fragrant. Toast cumin until lightly browned.

    Grind sichuan peppercorns, cumin, chili flakes and black pepper in a spice grinder

    Stir in remaining ingredients.

    Enjoy!

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  • 07Oct

    Mochi’s favorite snack these days. As soon as she hits the back door her figdar is on. She methodically sweeps the yard – first by the garage they back behind the tool shed. She gets her fill of fallen figs and sometimes brings one in the house to save for later. Two Falls ago we noticed her tooth was purple. Being the over protective Mom I panicked and thought she had damaged her tooth. I insisted on taking her to the vet. The doc did a thorough exam and found nothing. Short of taking an x-ray she was at a loss so we took her home and kept an eye on the tooth. Lo and behold, after a week or so the tooth returned to it’s normal white. Sheepishly, I had to admit to P that I over reacted to Mochi’s fig stained tooth – an expensive lesson.

    P and are making our annual trips with 12 foot ladder in tow to M and T’s yard to pick pounds and pounds of black mission figs. This year we’ve been enjoying them fresh in addition to gingery fig chutney (to accompany my Dosa addiction, where btw I ended up purchasing a griddle…shhh, don’t tell P) and a batch of fig gelato based on this recipe. Tomorrow’s bounty will probably get dried in our 8 tray food dehydrator and vacuum packed to enjoy through out the year.

    So the gelato? After making an adjustment to make it non dairy…I liked it. Though if I make it again I will cut back a bit on the sugar. Here is the recipe that I ended up using (based on an LA Times recipe):

    1/2 pound figs, stemmed and cut into quarters
    1/4 cup sugar, organic raw
    1 tablespoons raw honey (I love Marshall’s)
    1 tablespoon orange liqueur like Grand Marnier or Cointreau
    1 3/4 cups cashew nut milk (see recipe below)
    Pinch salt

    Put figs and sugar in a small pot and place over medium-high heat. Bring to a simmer, stirring often. Cook until figs are soft, about 5 minutes.

    Remove from the heat and stir in the remaining ingredients. Chill in the refrigerator or in an ice bath, then freeze according to your ice cream maker’s instructions.

    Cashew Nut Milk

    1/2 c raw organic cashews soaked overnight
    2 cups filtered water

    Blend until very smooth. Strain if desired. I generally don’t strain my nut milks since the blender that I use makes everything so smooth.

    Here is the ice cream maker that I used. It doesn’t make the best ice cream in the world but it’s a pretty cool little toy which I picked it up for $10. For delicious ice cream in the SF Bay Area run over to 4th Street or College Ave.

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  • 22Jul

    Wow, we are going through one big heat wave! Last thing we want to do is fire up the stove. Given that it is 94F outside at the moment even the outdoor grill is not appealing.

    Our garden is brimming with veggies I decided to make ‘noodles’ with my handy dandy Japanese mandoline, the Benriner. With the medium ‘teeth’ julienne blade, I cut up cucumbers, zucchini, carrots from the garden and some jicama and savoy cabbage from the frig. I sprinkled some sea salt on the veggies and let them drain for about an hour so I didn’t end up with a water logged salad. Then I added some finely sliced red onion, jalapenos, cilantro, mint and basil. For good measure I tossed in some blanched pole beans cut into 1/2 inch pieces. Umm, so I guess I did have to turn on the stove…but with the garden producing a pound of beans a day I had to make the sacrifice.

    Dressing it was pretty simple – limes from the garden for the acid, sucanat to sweeten, a splash of tamari, a glug of olive oil, sea salt, lots of minced ginger, a clove of minced garlic and a big pinch of Korean chili flakes.

    Cooking Tip: for a quick mince use the microplane zester. Just ‘grate’ the ginger and clove of garlic on this super sharp zester.

    Another great dressing would be the dressing for the traditional Thai green papaya salad which has lime juice, palm sugar, garlic, Thai chili bird peppers, dried shrimp, fish sauce and crushed peanuts. Yum.

    There you go – a nice Asian inspired ‘noodle’ salad. Serve this well chilled. It would be a nice side to grilled prawns, fish, steak or pork tenderloin. Oh, we can’t forget that nice cold bottle of beer 😉

    Enjoy!

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  • 19Jul

    My dear client loves her soup. She is quite fond of carrot and ginger but is always game for variations on a theme. In this case the theme is orange :)! Well, really it’s the beta carotene we are after. I spied some little organic butternut squashes at Berkeley Bowl the other day. That along with a recent visit to the Berkeley Thai Temple for some cheap eats inspired this soup:

    Thai Squash and Coconut Soup

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    1 1/4 – 1/2 pound butternut squash
    1 tablespoon coconut oil — or vegetable oil
    1 small carrot — thinly sliced (no need to peel – lots of vitamins in that skin)
    1/2 medium onion — thinly sliced
    1/2 stalk celery — thinly sliced
    1 medium jalapeno chile pepper — thinly sliced
    2 inch lemon grass — smashed
    2 slices ginger — minced very fine
    1 clove garlic — smashed
    1 teaspoon sea salt (Try Redmond)
    1/2 cup coconut milk (I use Thai Kitchen Organic)
    2 cups water or vegetable stock — more if needed
    1 tablespoon lime juice

    Cut butternut squash in half, put in baking dish cut side down with about a 1/2 c water. Bake at 350F until soft – about 30 – 40 minutes. Cool and scoop out squash from shell.

    Heat oil in a 6 quart pot. Over medium heat, saute carrot, onion, celery, jalapeno, lemon grass, ginger and garlic with sea salt until soft – about 15 minutes. Add coconut milk, water, lime juice and squash. Simmer another 20-30 minutes, stir every so often to make sure the squash doesn’t stick to bottom of the pot.

    Blend soup until smooth and creamy. Strain through a fine mesh strainer or if you can’t do this be sure to remove the lemon grass before blending, otherwise you will be picking the fibers out of your teeth. Season to taste with salt and more lime juice as needed. This soup can be served hot or cold. A nice garnish would be pumpkin seeds toasted in a little coconut oil with chopped garlic and parsley or a simple sprig of cilantro will do as well.

    Bonus: A little gardening tip today. To grow your own lemon grass, take a few stalks (choose ones that have not had their bottoms trimmed too far up) and cut off the tops so you have about 6-8″. Put this in a jar of water and in a about 1-2 weeks you will see roots. Plant in a large pot (these guys will spread and spread so I like the control of a pot) and water often. Soon the stalks will start multiplying. Set out in a sunny spot. In a few months you will have a nice supply. Be aware that the leaves are sharp as razors and will give you paper cut like slices – ouch! So wear some gloves.

    The next garden related post will be an update on the…yes…no…yes…oh, no…the gooseberries …they’re back…

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  • 18Jul

    When it’s hot who would want to sit down to a steaming bowl of soup? Not I. One of my dear clients doesn’t either and requested a soup that she could serve chilled. She is always daring me to make something different so no gazpacho for her. I love honeydew melons and cucumbers always equals ‘refreshing’ in my mind to this is what I came up with:

    Honey Dew Melon and Cucumber Soup

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    2 cups cucumber — peeled and diced
    2 cups honeydew melon — peeled, seeded and diced
    1 small jalapeno — seeded and diced
    2 tablespoons onion — diced
    1 tablespoon mint — chopped
    1 teaspoon sea salt
    1/2 cup water (I was draining some yogurt for yogurt cheese and used the whey instead of water)
    1/3 cup olive oil (I used Bariani Extra Virgin – a very assertive olive oil)

    Blend all ingredients until smooth and creamy. Serve chilled.

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    So simple and you don’t have to heat up the kitchen!

    Enjoy 🙂

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  • 01Jul

    lands in County Alameda – home to Berkeley California…

    What else could happen but we stuff it full o’ nuts and seeds…This bread is inspired by Karyn D, one of my classmates at the Bauman College Nutrition Consultant program. She happens to hail from Ireland – home to my favorite fiddle music :). For snack she made for us her very addictive Irish Soda bread which she learned how to make from her Mum by the POTPOT method. Just so you know she’s the one who added the nuts and seeds. I’m just attempting to record an approximation of a recipe – not the recipe. This is what I came up with. Not as tasty as I remember hers to be but satisfies my craving. (Yes I know it has dairy in it – which I am sensitive to but what the heck you gotta live a little!) And I couldn’t in good conscious call it Irish soda bread because of the County Alameda influences…

    Irish Lassie Crunch Bread

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    3/4 cup oatmeal — old fashion
    3/4 cup whole wheat flour
    1/3 cup all-purpose flour
    1/4 cup almond meal
    2 tablespoons sucanat or rapadura
    1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
    3/4 teaspoon baking soda
    3/4 teaspoon sea salt, fine
    3 tablespoons unsalted butter — chilled, and cut into cubes
    1 cup buttermilk
    1/4 cup flax seed
    1/3 cup walnuts — finely chopped
    1/3 cup sunflower seeds
    2 Tablespoons sunflower seeds — for topping

    Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Grease a medium loaf pan with butter and lightly flour.

    Toss together flours, almond meal, sucanat, baking powder, baking soda and sea salt in a large bowl to blend. Add butter. Using fingertips, rub in until coarse meal forms. Mix in nutsand seeds. Make well in center of flour mixture. Add buttermilk. Using fork, gradually stir dry ingredients into milk until just blend. Don’t overwork or you will have a very tough loaf of bread.

    Transfer dough to prepared pan and flatten slightly. Sprinkle dough with the 2 tablespoons of sunflower seeds.

    Bake bread until brown and tester inserted into center of the loaf comes out clean, about 30-40 minutes. Cool bread in pan 10 minutes. Transfer to rack to finish cooling. Serve warm or at room temperature.

    Yields 1 loaf with approximately 14 slices. Per Serving: 147 Calories; 8g Fat (49.4% calories from fat); 6g Protein; 14g Carbohydrate; 3g Dietary Fiber.

    A nice variation would be to add some dried fruit: raisins, apricots, cranberries, cherries…

    Enjoy!

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  • 15Jun

    of ideas…

    cooking is fun – whether we follow a recipe exactly or just throw something together. When throwing things together – you sometimes end up with a winner or you end up tossing it to the dogs. Mochi is grinning 😉

    Last night was a throwing things together kind of dinner. I have a nice patch of garlic chives in the yard. When we moved here back in ’97 my mom gave me a few bulbs and they have multiplied into a very healthy corner in one of the raised beds. (A few months back I was able to return the favor as her patch had been dug up by some kind of night creature.)

    I kept thinking I have to use some of the chives up – one of my favorites ways is in Korean pancakes – Pa Jeon. Which is really scallion pancakes but garlic chives work just as well. Scallion pancakes are either made with wheat flour or ground mung beans. I like the mung bean version just fine but it is a bit more involved than the wheat flour version – soaking and grinding takes a little pre-planning. I can post about those another time.

    I’ve been trying to heath-i-fy the wheat flour recipe by using whole grain flours, be gluten free, egg free and a bit higher in protein for P who is vegetarian. One day I used all buckwheat flour…it was a bit too…well, buckwheaty.

    With my socca craze I decided to try replacing the wheat flour with a 50/50 garbanzo flour and buckwheat flour mix. We ate them all up so I guess we ended up with a winner.

    Here is the Recipe:

    Korean Vegetable & Garbanzo/Buckwheat ‘Socca’

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    *Pancakes*
    1/2 cup buckwheat flour
    1/2 cup garbanzo flour
    3/4 teaspoon sea salt
    1 tablespoon sesame oil
    1 cup water
    1/3 cup garlic chives — cut into 1/4-1/2″
    vegetable oil for pan frying

    *Dipping Sauce*
    1 tablespoon tamari soy sauce
    1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar — unseasoned
    1 teaspoon sesame oil
    1 pinch chili flakes — Korean style with no seeds, optional

    Whisk together all pancake ingredients so there are no lumps.

    Heat a 10 inch cast iron pan over medium heat until hot. Add about a tablespoon of olive oil. Pour about 1/3-1/2 cup of batter into pan. Cook until bottom is turning brown – this should take at least 3-4 minutes so turn up or down the heat as needed. Flip and cook until cooked through and brown. Transfer to plate and keep warm in a low oven. Cook remaining pancakes – you should have enough batter for 4-6 depending on how thick or thin you made them. Serve them cut into quarters with the dipping sauce.

    Variations: Add any and all kinds of thin sliced vegetables in any combination like: scallion, leeks, green garlic, spring onions, asparagus, green beans, zucchini, carrot, peppers, shiitake mushrooms, button mushrooms, etc. This batter can probably take up to a 1/2c to 3/4c of cut up vegetables. This recipe is a great way to use up any odds and ends of veggies in the frig.

    Enjoy!

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  • 09Jun

    socca…socca…socca! No, I not watching the World Cup games though I did enjoy a game or two of soccer back in the good old days when I actually had lungs. But I digress…

    socca, socca, socca…That’s what the socca vendors in Nice, Provence would call out when wheeling their carts about selling their wares. And that’s what I’ve been yelling about the house these days…P thinks I have finally lost my marbles 🙂

    Thanks to a good friend, N, I had my first taste of Socca -alas, not in Nice- but in Berkeley at Socca Oven located in the new Epicurious Garden on Shattuck Avenue. Socca’s are pancakes made of chickpea (aka garbanzo bean or gram) flour, water and extra virgin olive oil. At SO they finish the soccas in an open flame clay oven with various toppings – sort of like pizza but not. N & I had tapenade and salt cod – a bit salty but I am a salt fiend. P had the zucchini and loved it. I was hooked and am now a socca addict – we’ve had them for dinner twice now.

    In my research I found that these are traditionally made in copper tins – large ones, from 50-70 cm in diameter. Since my oven wasn’t that big, I opted for my 10 inch cast iron fry pan. At SO they were made a little less than a 1/4 inch thick but the thickness varies from that to as thin as a crepe. Seems that in France these are eaten plain with a glass of wine rather than topped as made at Socca Oven. I’m thinking these would be a nice appetizer in either case.

    We liked ours thick but maybe slightly thinner than we had at SO. I’ve varied the toppings depending on what we had on hand. We had plenty of greens in the garden so one night we had sauteed kale and the other swiss chard. One version had roasted onions and garlic with goat cheese and anchovies. A veggie version had home grown baby zucchini.

    I bet an Indian spiced version would be fun. In fact, in the western part of India there is a savory steamed chickpea ‘cake’ called Dhokla. One day I will have to try my hand at making some dhoklas.

    Soccas are a great food – a nice gluten free alternative to the wheat flour crusted pizzas. And you’ve got fiber – the soluble type which is good for lowering cholesterol; protein which we all need for building bone, muscle and cartilage; folate which is good for the heart; magnesium which is needed to help relax your muscles; and many trace minerals. One trace mineral it is especially high in is molybdenum which interestingly enough helps the body detoxify sulfites which is found in some wines. Those French know how to eat and drink!

    Here’s the recipe I used for the Socca pancakes.

    Socca

    Amount Measure Ingredient — Preparation Method
    ——– ———— ——————————–
    2 cups chickpea flour
    2 1/4 cups water
    2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    1 3/4 teaspoons sea salt
    extra virgin olive oil for cooking the pancake

    Toppings of your choice – some ideas: caramelized onions, roasted garlic, sauteed greens (kale, chard, spinach), olive tapenade, sundried tomatoes, any herb pesto, any roasted veggie, smoked salmon, salt cod, anchovies, any cheese, etc…

    Whisk together all ingredients so there are no lumps. You can strain through a sieve or china cap if desired. Let sit for 10-15 minutes.

    Preheat broiler to high or oven to 500F. Heat a 10 inch cast iron pan over medium heat until hot. Add about a tablespoon of olive oil. Pour about 3/4 cup of batter into pan. Cook until bottom is turning brown – this should take at least 3-4 minutes so turn up or down the heat as needed. Flip and cook until cooked through and brown. Transfer to baking sheet. Cook remaining pancakes – you should have enough batter for four.

    Arrange your toppings on to the pancakes. Put under the broiler or in hot oven for a few minutes or until the toppings are heated through. Serve hot with a nice green salad.

    Check out what other bloggers have created at:

    Mahanandi’s Indian Dosa

    In Praise of Sardines

    The Scent of Green Bananas

    The Travelers Lunchbox

    And check out the Italian version here:

    Beyond Salmon

    Epicurious.com

    ENJOY! 🙂

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