Simple and delicious. Nondairy too!
- 100 g bittersweet chocolate bar
- 75 g brown rice syrup
- half a can coconut milk, stirred (full fat)
Melt chocolate. Stir in rice syrup. Stir in coconut milk. Et voila! Enjoy.
Simple and delicious. Nondairy too!
Melt chocolate. Stir in rice syrup. Stir in coconut milk. Et voila! Enjoy.
These beans make a divine dish for a party or a campout. Topped with a rosette of thin tomato wedges and broiled until blackened around the edges, they’re as pretty as they are tasty. You can add the protein of your choice for a different flavor. Smoked tempeh is a good option.
Saute until semi-soft.
Blend.
Stir together beans, sauce and sauteed peppers and onions. Place in large stoneware bowl. Bake for 30 minutes at 350F.
Take the beans out of the oven. Decorate with tomato wedges to fill the top surface. Broil for 10 minutes or until the tomatoes are blackened around the edges and the sauce has begun to caramelize on top.
Helen’s note:
We have taken these beans camping for years with the girls and their many cousins. We recently served them at our empty nest party, celebrating 25 years of parenting three lovely daughters (we did it!) and our return to the twosome we created so long ago. In those days, our favorite meal was instant mashed potatoes, blackened hot dogs and canned green beans. You will see after eating these beans that we have been practicing in the kitchen a bit since then.
June 2016 note:
Barbecued Tempeh
My sister Katherine her husband Tomás asked me to convert this recipe to the grilled barbecued tempeh that Scott and I served them on their recent visit when they came to town for the Ragnar race (go, Team What Was I Thinking? !). Here it is:
Make the sauce as described above. Cut the tempeh into slices about 3/8″ thick. Boil them for 15-20 minutes to expand the tempeh. Lay the slices out on a well oiled baking pan. Brush them with sauce and broil. Turn midway through and brush the other side. Broil until just blackened. Enjoy!
The delightful Feldman sisters, 9-year-old Leah and 6-year-old Evann, helped me make this excellent sauce on a recent visit to their parents’ home in Petaluma, California.
Caramelize the sugar in a narrow, deep pan (stir slowly over medium heat until the sugar becomes a golden-brown syrup).
Add butter one pat’s worth at a time, allowing the butter to melt before adding more.
Pour in the cream a couple of tablespoons at a time, allowing the caramel mixture to resume boiling before adding more.
Serve liberally over vanilla ice cream.
Enjoy!
Note of caution: fiery hot temperatures result during the cooking process. Adult supervision required.