Sesame Cabbage Fritters

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

Like most humans, I am hungry...our three basic needs, for food and security and love, are so mixed and mingled and entwined that we cannot straightly think of one without the others. So it happens that when I write of hunger, I am really writing about love and the hunger for it... - M. F. K. Fisher

Thick, paperback, and a little bit intimidating, a large text book sat on my desk when I walked into the office one morning. I immediately remembered a conversation with a co-worker when they said they had a book to lend me (thanks Max!). Food and Culture: A Reader, was the title.

The forward was a quote from M. F. K. Fisher that I absolutely adore (the one I opened this post with).  Of course food and security and love, are intertwined. Every discussion about food is also about your up bringing and your emotions and your heart. Of course. This is why I love the topic: we all have a deep, intrinsic connection to what we make in our kitchens and even what we eat when we are very, very far from our kitchens. There is something there, and it is so much more than food (even when food is the hero of the story). 

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

Take these cabbage pancakes: I could tell you about how delicious they were, and how they were something new for our table. But that's not the story. The story is about how I have always (always!) struggled to make anything like this: latkes, zucchini pancakes, corn cakes. The few memories I have of latkes (a bat mitzvah, a pot luck)  are positive (who doesn't love potato fried in oil) but they were never something my parents made and I didn't grow up watching them come together. So when I've tried to recreate them in my own kitchen, it's been a battle of Caitlin versus fried patty, and sadly the patties usually win and I put up a white flag. We eat whatever it is as a shredded, fried pile (it's delicious, but totally off the mark). 

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

With this as my background, I'm not sure what exactly made me think "I will make pancakes out of this head of cabbage that's been wasting away in the fridge" rather than just sautéing it or making slaw. But, that's what I thought. I got out a knife, and shredded the cabbage into thin, papery strips, and as I did it's volume ballooned and filled our largest mixing bowl. This made me nervous, but I made the move that said "There's no turning back" (tossing everything with egg and cassava flour) and then--after thinking for a brief moment What will I do with this pile of sticky battery cabbage if this doesn't work out?- I heated up oil in the pan. 

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

And? Hallelujah! Finally a fritter I can make. A single battle won, 15 more pancakes to flip. That first pancake gave me the bode of confidence I needed: It didn't matter that I wasn't a life-time latke-making pro. Attempt after attempt of fritter frying, my work had paid off. This win was coming home. (And yes, the stringiness of the cabbage, compared to shredded potato, may have something to do with my success. I'm ok with that for now). 

These were also completely devoured in 5 minutes, if any one asks. But if they do ask, please also tell them it's a story about perseverance. 

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

Sesame Cabbage Fritters (Gluten-Free and Paleo)

Paleo, Primal, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free    |       

Cabbage is fried in a savory pancake and served with a sesame-soy dipping sauce.

Yields: 4   |    Total Time:



Ingredients:

  • 6 cups shredded cabbage
  • 4 eggs
  • 1/3 cup cassava flour (Here is one brand)
  • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1 bunch green onions, roots removed and remaining parts roughly chopped
  • Dash salt
  • 1/4 cup sesame seeds
  • Coconut oil for cooking

  • For the dipping sauce:
  • 1/4 cup soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon Sriracha

Directions:

  1. Please shredded cabbage in bowl and toss with chopped green onions, 2 tablespoons sesame seeds, dash of salt, and cassava flour. Once cabbage is coated, crack eggs into bowl and add sesame oil and soy sauce. Mix until everything is combined.
  2. Heat 1 tablespoon of coconut oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Once it sizzles, scoop the cabbage mixture into the skillet 1/4 cup at a time. Use a spatula to press the 1/4 cup pile down into a pancake shape and allow to cook for 5-10 minutes, until the cabbage begins to brown. Using the spatula, flip the fritter and cook on the second side for 5-10 more minutes, until browned. (I find I can do 3 fritters at once in my skillet to quicken the cooking process). Place cooked fritters on a plate and repeat until all of the cabbage mixture is used.
  3. Make the sauce: combine ingredients for sauce in a small sauce pan and bring to a simmer. Stir. After 5 minutes, remove from heat. Pour into small bowl.
  4. Serve fritters warm with sauce for dipping. Garnish with extra sesame seeds or Sriracha.

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Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

For the third time this month, I pushed the tomato sauce in our skillet from one side to the other, swirling in a dollop of Harissa paste. Once the Harissa paste was completely mixed in, it was time for the eggs. They found their place snuggled in the spicy sauce, and cooked there. 

Just as I started mincing parsley for a garnish, it hit me. Why isn't this recipe on the blog? I keep coming back to it, undoubtably because the ingredients are easy to keep on hand. 

Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

When I make shakshuka I eat it with a spoon or a fork--honestly whatever I find first. Lately I've been toasting a piece of sour dough for Oliver, so that he can pile the eggs and spicy tomato sauce on top and eat it like an open face sandwich. You can pretty much each it however you want though, and for whatever meal you want, too! 

Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka
Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

Lately, the finishing touch on our spicy shakshuka is a sprinkling of feta cheese, which balances out the bold Harissa paste that is swirled into the sauce. I didn't grow up eating shakshuka, but it's made its way into my standard day. 

Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

Middle Eastern Spiced Shakshuka

Paleo, Primal, Grain-Free    |       

A swirl of spicy harissa and a sprinkle of feta.

Serves: 2   |    Total Time:



Ingredients:

  • 4 eggs
  • 1 16-ounce can crushed tomatoes
  • 2 tablespoons Harissa paste (1 if you prefer less spicy)
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 cup feta cheese, crumbled
  • 1/2 small white onion
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 2 tablespoons parsley leaves, minced
  • 1 teaspoon coconut oil

Directions:

  1. Heat coconut oil in a skillet over medium heat. While it melted, dice the onion and bell pepper. When the oil glistens, add the onion and pepper to the pan. Sauté until the onion is transparent.
  2. Pour the canned tomatoes into the pan, and add the harissa paste. Stir and bring to a simmer.
  3. Using a wooden spoon or spatula, make 4 indents in the tomato where the eggs will sit. Crack one egg into each indent, and place lid on pan. Reduce heat to low. Keep covered until egg whites are fully cooked (I leave my yolks runny, but you can cook the eggs for a bit longer if you prefer your yolks hard).
  4. Sprinkle with feta and minced parsley. Serve hot.

Hearty Eggs Benedict

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Despite my immediate desire to eat chocolate in the morning, I tend to feel better if I eat a real breakfast (go figure). As a kid I was a no-breakfast type, preferring a cup of hot chocolate and nothing else. But my dad always ensured I ate something of breakfast-- grapefruit, toast with almond butter, cereal, and on the special days oven roasted hash browns or even Eggs Benedict. 

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Now I love eggs for breakfast, and Eggs Benedict feels like a holiday to me because you have to get more than one pot dirty to make it, but it's always worth it. This particular Eggs Benedict recipes includes more than just Hollandaise sauce: with a bed of hash browns and a layer of lox, it's pretty hearty, in the best of ways. 

Just got home from a really long trip? Make this. 

Finished a tough work out? This. 

It's Saturday and you just need some time to yourself after the work week? Yup. 

Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox
Eggs Benedict with Hash Browns and Lox

Hearty Eggs Benedict

Primal, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free    |       

Served over hash and lox, a poached egg is dressed with hollandaise sauce.

Serves: 2   |    Total Time:



Ingredients:

  • 2 egg yolks
  • Juice from 1/2 lemon
  • 4 tablespoons butter, melted
  • Dash cayenne
  • Dash salt
  • Parsley, for garnish
  • Pepper, to taste
  • 2 eggs, poached or fried
  • Hash browns of choice
  • 2 servings lox

Directions:

  1. Before making the sauce, prepare your hash browns to your liking, and cook your eggs (I prefer to leave the yolks runny).
  2. Whisk together egg yolks with lemon until they become slightly lighter yellow. Place in small pot and heat over low, whisking continuously (or in a double boiler if you have one). After 3 minutes, pour in melted butter continuing to whisk the entire time. Continue to whisk until sauce thickens. Remove from heat. Add a dash of cayenne and salt to taste.
  3. Serve: Make a layer of hash brown on each plate, and top with lox. Then place a fried or poached egg on top, before drizzling with sauce. Top with parsley leaves for garnish, a sprinkle of pepper and/or more cayenne to taste. Serve immediately.