I was really interested to hear about the experiences of another blogger but her experiences in 2002 suggest that blogging has changed quite a bit today. Honestly, if she was a food blogger today I would be unlikely to visit her blog regularly. Her attitude to meat – liver is sexy, isn’t it funny killing lobsters, and her embrace of marrow, aspic and offal – just isn’t something I can enjoy.
I have never been a great fan of French food because it is full of meat, cream and butter. Not at all my thing. As for Julia Child, I find it interesting to read American bloggers talk about how significant she was in changing the face of cooking in America. She has barely rated a mention in Australian cooking history so she brings no nostalgic value for me.
I could identify with some of Julie Powell's blogging stories. The late dinners, the kitchen groaning under piles of dishes and the enjoyment of comments. I even felt a little comforted that she had disasters even worse than mine, such as a maggot colony in her kitchen. But there were no mention of photography. In fact, I wanted to see photographs throughout the book because that is important with food blogging. I also found that she talked about her blog readers (or bleaders) but never about visiting other blogs. She presents blogging as a performance rather than a communal activity. Maybe this has changed as blogging has developed.
One other element of blogging that was missing, due to her focus on one cookbook, was the tyranny of choice. So many great recipes, so many interesting variations. This week I have had to make difficult decisions over coleslaw and vegetarian sausages, both of which have many interesting version.
It started with cabbage and carrots on sale. I decided to make coleslaw. Normally I would chop just a bit of the cabbage but I have a new mandolin slicer and thought I would try that. It was so easy before I knew it I had sliced up half a cabbage. I had so much that I thought I would take advantage of the opportunity to try two dressings. Both were great in their own way.
I had intended to dig out some coleslaw recipes but was too overwhelmed because everyone has their own variation. Instead I winged it using what was in the fridge, the pantry and the herb garden. After all, although I don’t tend to make it often, I have made coleslaw enough not to really need a recipe. One coleslaw had an Asian style dressing with crunchy peanuts and spicy ginger and cayenne. The other was more Western style with the sweet cranberries as foil for the tangy mustard.
The first night I thought it would be a nice quick meal to whip up but it was after 8.30 that I served it. Alongside it were Apricot and Orange Glazed Tofu and leftover Lentil Salad. But I kept thinking how much I associate coleslaw with barbeques so Michael’s Chorizo Sausages came to mind.
I have talked before about how much I love vegie sausages. The idea of being able to easily produce my own appealed. I first wanted to try this gluten flour method very soon after starting blogging when I discovered the Seitan O’ Greatness from the PPK Forums. Then I saw the vegan irish sausages on Fat Free Vegan Kitchen which were adapted from Julie Hasson’s spicy Italian sausages. I wanted to try all three recipes but barely had time for one. So you see the dilemma bloggers facing like me with all the blogosphere plus oodles of cookbooks.
I followed Michael’s recipe, which came from Isa Chandra Moskowitz’s latest cookbook, Vegan Brunch. They had a lot of spice so I reduced it considerably and added black pepper and fennel a la Julie (Julie Hasson, not Julie Powell). With a little more tweaking, they were finished. Sounds simple? Not when you are ready to eat and you realize the sausages need to steam for 40 minutes and then be fried. And everything takes longer with a baby. Not to mention the garlic crusher breaking mid-crush!
One reason I haven’t made these gluten sausages is my dislike of seitan and hence a suspicion of any food containing too much of it. The sausages were full of flavour, though not overly spicy, but they had a little of rubberiness of gluten. Truth be told, I think I preferred the Mushroom Chestnut and Couscous Sausages I made last year. I might have liked the gluten sausages more if I had managed to make them thinner. I did like the way they crisped up when fried, though I am still to try them under the grill, which is my usual way.
But the fried sausage slices, coleslaw, tomato and cannellini bean salad, and smoky spicy crackers was quite an impressive meal. Food bloggers might take their time over dinner but we do eat well.
Now I just need to think about how to use the other 6-8 sausages in the fridge. Sausage curry, anyone? Some other ideas below for cooking with vegetarian sausages:
- Sophie’s Mediterranean sausage, fennel, cannellini bean and tomato gratinSusan’s Pasta with peppers and sausage
- Susan’s Dublin coddle with vegan irish sausages
- Vegan dad’s Potato, apple casserole with maple sausage
- Vegan dad’s Fennel and mushroom lasagne
- Veg Cooking Blog’s Sausage, kale and white bean stew
Chorizo sausages
adapted from Vegan Brunch via Where’s the Beef
makes 8-10 sausages
1 cup cooked pinto beans (I used tinned cannellini beans), rinsed and drained
2 cups vegie stock
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons tomato paste
4 garlic cloves, finely chopped
½ cup nutritional yeast
1 tablespoon dry rubbed sage
2 teaspoons dried oregano
1 teaspoon fennel seeds, roughly ground
1 teaspoon black pepper, ground
½ teaspoon cayenne
½ tsp smoked paprika
2½ cups gluten flour
Mash the beans in a large bowl and add the other ingredients in the order listed. Cindy had gluten flour halfway up the list but I think I would prefer to put it in last because it went all rubbery before I finished adding the ingredients. Stir everything well. I ended up using my hands and sort of kneading it in the bowl.
Prepare the steamer so it is ready for the sausages. To steam them all at once you will need a large one. I used my pasta insert in my stockpot to steam them.
Tear off 8-10 sheets of aluminium foil which are about 15 to 20 cm wide. Using your hands pull off a small amount of dough and roll into a rough sausage shape. Place lengthwise along the foil and then roll up tightly in foil. Squish foil at each end (but I found if I twisted it, it broke) so it looks like a Christmas bon bon. Place in the steamer and seam for about 40 minutes.
Unwrap to use and store in fridge for a week or so. I image they will freeze but haven’t tried it. Great sliced and fried.
Two Types of Coleslaw
serves 6-8
½ savoy cabbage, finely sliced
2 large carrots, finely grated
1 medium green capsicum, finely sliced
2 spring onions, finely sliced
For cranberry and mustard coleslaw:
¼ cup mayonnaise (or mixture of mayonnaise and yoghurt)
1 tsp seeded mustard
juice of ¾ lime
½ clove garlic, crushed
¼ cup dried cranberries
handful parsley, chopped
For spicy peanut and lime coleslaw
1 tbsp soy mayonnaise
½ garlic clove, crushed
½ tsp finely grated ginger
handful chopped peanuts
handful mint, chopped
juice of half a lime
dash cayenne
Mix cabbage, carrots, capsicum and spring onions. Place two thirds of mixture in large salad bowl and mix with cranberry and mustard ingredients. Place the remaining third of vegetable mixture in a medium salad bowl and mix with peanut and line ingredients. Will keep for a few days in the fridge but may need extra mayonnaise and/or yoghurt after being kept in the fridge as it gets drier when it sits overnight.
On the stereo:
The Best of Focus: Focus
good to hear your reflections on the book Johanna and I like what you said about the tyranny of choice we face today - not to mention my personal tyranny (and hair pulling) over trying to get good photographs in artificially lit kitchens. Your sausages look fab and I always wondered how people made veggie sausages without them crumbling apart. Foil crackers, genius ;o)
ReplyDeleteHi! I recently came accross your blog and everything looks delicious:)
ReplyDeleteI like your blog and I also like reading what life is like in Australia, which is so far away from Italy... Bye Sabrina
both plates look so good! i really want to see the film, but i think i can give the book a miss
ReplyDeleteHi, I'm an Australian who lived in America for a while (including the period when Julie was writing her blog), so I had a slightly different context for reading it. I think she was less of a food blogger as we know it now, and more of a general-life-challenge blogger, although since her blog-book-movie saga she has become categorised as a food blogger because that is the current niche she would approach (albeit loosely). I think her writing style is one people seem to either love or hate (she has come by a pile of negative criticism, particularly for her language), and her documentation of the recipes and results was secondary to the experience of cooking and living.
ReplyDeleteThe Julia Child thing is a crazy cult-like deal that we just don't get in Australia, isn't it?! FWIW, because of Julie's book I went out and read the biography of Julia Child in France, and I found her story more inspirational in itself. Her love of life and food really comes through in the writing, which gave me a little taste (no pun intended) of the awe and affection in which she is held in America.
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteSeitan sausages freeze and thaw out without any problems. I like to make big batches fo them so I've several meals in the freezer as well as some to chop up for other dishes.
I think I would have likewise preferred our sausages a little thinner! I found them quite rich, and enjoyed chopping up some of the leftovers to mix into red wine lentils. This worked well in the cool weather of the past month but might not suit the current warm spell so well!
ReplyDeleteThanks Nic - my problem is finding a clean space for a photo. Gluten is amazing how it clumps - these sausages held together much better than any sausages I have made before
ReplyDeleteThanks Sabrina - welcome - glad you enjoy hearing some aussie kitchen sink drama :-)
Thanks Philippa - I would like to see the film too
Thanks Sarah - that is a really interesting perspective. I went into the book expecting her to be a food blogger as we know it but the book was really about her life and so was the blogging - much different to Mollie from Orangette's book, for example! I am quite keen to read Julia Child's memoir now too so hope to do that soon.
Thanks Ron Kat - I still have quite a few sausages in the fridge so I think they will have to go in the freezer - good to hear that will work
Thanks cindy - I love sausages and beans of any sort so must try them with lentils - had them in pasta last night which was very good. I think if I made them thinner I would have twice as many sausages but would probably freeze some as ron kat suggested
Mmm I love veggie sausages! I'm adding this one to the list to make.
ReplyDeleteEverything sounds so delicious! I love coleslaw so look forward to trying both types. And sadly I can't have seitan. . . will try out the other one, though.
ReplyDeleteI started Julie and Julia about a month ago and just couldn't get into it. Maybe it's the attitude, as you suggest, but it just didn't "grab" me. I did enjoy the movie, but then again, Meryl Streep's Julia Child was exceptional!
Had Julia Child been on Australian TV, she might have had a similar impact there. Even so, her cult status here represents a fraction of our very large population; that's a lot of people, but the Streep flick could never draw a crowd like the violence-porn genre that dominates our cinema.
ReplyDeleteAs for Powell, I purchased her book as a Xmas gift, curiously poked my nose in it, landing on the lobster episode. I did not purchase a copy for myself.
Your slaw recipes sound fantastic, Johanna. You winged it very well. : } I'm adding cabbage to the top of my grocery list right now.
Made the sausages this arvo and had them for dinner tonight lightly fried in olive oil over very low heat.
ReplyDeleteI've made dozens and dozens of seitan sausages using many recipes and these are by far the best I've come across - lovely and moist and tasty without being too spicy for the daughter.
Many thanks for this one.