Meatless Side Dishes

Seeds and Sonoma Clouds

OurLittleCorner

Seeds and Sonoma Clouds

When my head is in the clouds, I sometimes envision my next life. I would like to be able to develop recipes like Melissa Clark, write like Ian McEwan, sing like Lucinda Williams, and be an intellect like Heather Cox Richardson. And I’d like to look like Martha Stewart, Kim Kardashian, Steph Curry…TBD.

If you’re not familiar with Heather Cox Richardson, she’s a history professor at Boston College and has a presence on Substack, YouTube, Facebook, and Threads – and she sends out an email daily with political/historical analysis that almost everyone we know subscribes to; it’s called “Letters from an American.” But today I want to focus on her normal weekend email, which features a gorgeous, calming nature photo instead of a letter. She lives on the coast of Maine (her husband is a lobster fisherman), so it’s easy for her to find such beauty.

I’m manifesting myself today as Heather Cox Richardson, taking a deep breath and making my blog – with this beautiful Sonoma, California, photo – short and sweet.

A gorgeous field of wild mustard greens, seen in February while driving down Arnold Drive southwest of Sonoma. The Mayacamas Mountains are to the east (photo from NextDoor).

California has several wild mustard varieties. One of them is Brassica nigra – or black mustard (fyi: the milder yellow mustard seeds come from Sinapis – or brassica – alba). If you want to know more about Brassica nigra, California’s non-native plant, and its pros and cons, read this from Thrillist and this from PBS. But if you just want to just kick back, enjoy a beautiful almost-spring day, and chat with dear friends, while enjoying delicious food, you might try this recipe which is a riff on a Melissa Clark recipe.

Black Mustard Seeds and Green Beans with Cashews and Coconut

Black Mustard Seeds and Green Beans with Cashews and Coconut

The brand “Let’s Do Organic” sells bags of Unsweetened Toasted Coconut Flakes; if you can find these, you can eliminate the toasting of the flakes – which is a nice shortcut. Should you happen to have curry leaves, use them instead of basil and the bay leaf. And the cashews may be easily omitted, resulting in a side dish rather than a vegetarian main dish. This is a riff on a recipe from the NYTimes and Melissa Clark

  • 1/2 c unsweetened coconut flakes
  • 2 1/2 T vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp black mustard seeds
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 (1/4″ thick) coins fresh ginger
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • Large pinch red pepper flakes
  • 1 bay leaf (or a few curry leaves)
  • 5 basil leaves, sliced into ribbons (omit if you used curry leaves)
  • 1 lb green or wax beans, trimmed
  • 3/4 tsp Diamond kosher salt, or to taste
  • 1/3 c chopped roasted cashews (salted or unsalted, to taste)
  • Cooked rice, for serving
  • Lime wedges, for serving

Place a large, dry skillet over medium-high heat. Add coconut flakes and toast, shaking pan occasionally, until golden, about 5 minutes. Transfer flakes to a bowl.

Heat oil in the same skillet. Add the mustard seeds and cook until they start to pop (about 45 seconds), then quickly add the garlic, ginger, turmeric, red pepper flakes and bay leaf (or curry leaves). Cook, stirring, for about 1 minute.

Stir in basil, green beans and salt. Toss well to coat in oil and seasonings.

Add 1/3 c water, cover partly and reduce heat to medium. Cook until beans are tender, about 8 minutes. Uncover and continue cooking until most of the liquid has evaporated and the beans are wilted and lightly colored. Toss in cashews and coconut flakes. Serve over rice, with lime wedges.

Recipe brought to you by BigLittleMeals.com and Andy and Ann.

Black Mustard Seed and Dijon Mustard Dressing – served on roasted golden beets

If nice fresh string beans aren’t available at your market, try roasting some red or golden beets, and serving them with this mustard seed dressing from David Tanis and the NYTimes.

Black Mustard Seed and Dijon Mustard Dressing

Use over roasted red or golden beets or for dressing a kale salad or as a topping for cooked lentils. A riff on a recipe from the NYTimes and Davis Tanis.

  • 1 small shallot, finely diced
  • 2 T lemon juice
  • 1 T rice vinegar
  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 1 T prepared horseradish
  • Salt and pepper
  • 4 T vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp black mustard seeds
  • 1/2 tsp nigella seeds (optional)

To make the vinaigrette combine the shallot, lemon juice, rice vinegar, mustard and horseradish in a small bowl. Stir in a pinch of salt and pepper. Whisk in 3 T vegetable oil.

Heat a very small skillet with 1 tablespoon oil. When oil is hot, add mustard seeds and nigella seeds. As soon as the seeds begin to pop (about 1 minute) remove from the heat. Add the popped seeds and oil to the vinaigrette. Taste and adjust seasoning.

Recipe brought to you by BigLittleMeals.com and Andy and Ann.

Gone Fishin’

It’s vacation time! Andy and Travis, our son, have gone trout fishin’ in Missoula, Montana. And I’m figuring out what to do with too many home-grown tomatoes.

We’ll be back on Tuesday, September 9th, with our regular (or irregular) blogs. Meanwhile, I’ve got a super-simple, super-delicious fresh tomato recipe for you to try out, as well as recommendations from past recipes, to make good use of those amazing garden tomatoes (“Champion” has won my prize as the best variety we grew this year). Enjoy them all before the cool days of September arrive.

If you’re bored now that the lazy-hazy-crazy days of summer are about over, this 1000-piece puzzle, “Gone Fishing,” is made by Doodletown and available online.

Andy won’t be bringing home any trout from Montana (it’s all catch and release), but if he did…as my dad did on his yearly fishing trips to Walden, Colorado, I’d try out Martha Rose Shulman’s recipe for Rainbow trout and fresh tomato baked in aluminum foil. And if you’re still looking for ways to make the best use of your tomatoes – other than in a salad – we especially recommend our Sopa de Lima (which is served with a corn and fresh tomato salsa), our Tomato and Basil Pasta, Diane and Grandma’s Tomato Tart, and our B&T Tacos.

Cheesy Tomato Toast

It’s a Good Idea to Be Old

It’s Ann here today. You won’t believe this but Andy is in OurLittleCorner extolling the virtues of gossip.

Andy’s mom used to always tell us that “gettin’ old ain’t for sissies.” She may have gotten the phrase a bit wrong, but it still has made a lasting impact.

The actress, Bette Davis (1908-1989), may have made the expression popular.

Maybe that’s why I was so encouraged when I found this video of the poet Nikki Giovanni speaking at Emory University in February of 2020. Giovanni was almost 78 then. And she maintains “it’s a good idea to be old.” How can I not love that more upbeat approach?

The NYTimes describes Giovanni as “the charismatic and iconoclastic poet, activist, children’s book author and professor who wrote, irresistibly and sensuously, about race, politics, gender, sex and love….”

Giovanni, who passed away this past December, had a challenging life, having been raised by an alcoholic father who abused her mother. Because of that, Giovanni moved from Ohio to live with her Knoxville, Tennessee, grandparents for high school; she started college early at Fisk University and then got expelled her first semester there. She had a son when she was 26 and raised him alone. She dealt with breast cancer and lung cancer. And she was openly gay, married to a white woman who, like Giovanni, was a professor at Virginia Tech.

The video clip below, though only 4 1/2 minutes long, is great, but it may be X-rated. She’s funny, acerbic, and clearly not afraid to say what she thinks. She’s definitely not apolitical. She’s also VERY loquacious!

Excerpt from Nikki Giovanni’s Poetry Reading at Emory University, 2020 (See full YouTube video here). The poem, which she reads at the end, is “It’s Just Love.”

Here’s a humorous quote from a December 2021 NYTimes interview with Giovanni:

You know, with Christmas, I said to my students, I hate the little drummer boy. This girl just had a baby, she’s in a manger, she’s got a bunch of animals, and he’s coming in saying, “Can I play on my drum?”

He probably could’ve read the room better. If that had been the little drummer girl, she would have come to Mary, started to help clean out the manger — done something useful. Instead he’s standing there bitching, I’m poor and all I have is this drum, and we’re supposed to say, “Oh, ain’t that sweet?” No, damn it. Do something worthwhile. [Laughs.] That’s my job: I try my best to get people to think. That’s what I do.

In addition to mentioning grits in her “It’s Just Love” poem which she reads in our video clip, Giovanni wrote a poem devoted just to grits, so, of course, that’s today’s recipe. When Andy and I got married – almost 58 years ago – this recipe for a grits casserole was given to me by a family friend, and it’s the best! You can use Velveeta cheese or update it with cheddar or Monterey Jack. But first read the Nikki Giovanni poem. Be sure to sing while you make the grits. And, if you’re on the older side, smile and remember Giovanni’s words about aging: “Now everything I do is because I want to.”

The Right Way

My grandmother's grits
Are so much better than mine

Mine tend to be lumpy
And a bit disorientated
Though that is probably
My fault

I always want
To put 1 cup grits
Into 4 cups cold
Water with 1 teaspoon
Salt
And start them all together

Grandmother did it
The Right Way

She started with cold water
That she brought
To a boil

Shifted the grits slowly
Into the bubbles
Then added her salt

She also hummed
While she stirred
With her wooden spoon

I wonder if I
Should learn
To sing
Cheesy Grits Casserole
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