June 24, 2017

Raw Kale and Apple Salad

This recipe was tried out of a necessity to use up fresh kale from our CSA haul (we get it nearly every week in the summer!) and a desire to not have to cook it to use it up. I recently had a raw kale salad at a work potluck that I liked so I thought I'd try to make a similar one. I liked this one so much that it's turned into a regular summer meal!

Notes/substitutions:

  • I don't bother mixing the salad dressing ingredients together first, just pour the oil and lemon juice and salt into my bowl of chopped kale.
  • I haven't ever eaten this with dates but I'm sure they're good. I usually use a dried fruit I'm more likely to have on hand (golden raisins, dried cranberries, dried cherries).
  • I've used sliced almonds instead of slivered. Walnuts are also good. Toasting them sounds a little tedious but adds a lot of extra flavor.
  • Instead of just tossing to coat, I massage the ingredients into the kale for a couple of minutes. I find this softens the leaves and makes them easier to eat.
  • I also have used other harder, sharp cheeses in place of Parmesan to good effect. Sartori MontAmore is particularly yummy.
  • This salad keeps for several days in the refrigerator and travels well.
  • It is gluten free and can be made vegan if you leave out the cheese.

RECIPE: Kale and Apple Salad

June 6, 2017

Spicy Ginger Kombucha Cocktail


It took me a long time to warm up to kombucha. I chalk this up to the gap between expectations and reality. Wikipedia says it is indeed a Japanese word for kelp tea that was adopted as a loanword but used incorrectly. Since Japanese cooking often uses kombu/kelp as an ingredient in savory broths, I was expecting it to be kind of salty and savory, and the first couple of times I tried it were pretty mentally jarring because it is sour and fizzy. Sometimes you end up getting a bad impression of a food because of what your expectations of it are rather than going in with no expectations and trying to appreciate it for what it is. I now remember that it's supposed to be sour and fizzy, and I drink it on purpose because I like it.

My favorite kind is a kind that's made in my city, and my favorite flavor that they make is lemongrass ginger. I first tried it in a cocktail at a local distillery. They had flights of different experimental cocktails made with different flavors of this company's kombucha, and the one with lemongrass ginger was exceptionally good. But they wouldn't make me a full sized drink. So I tried to make it myself a few days later. I'm not sure I got it completely right, but I think I ended up with something close and worth making again.

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RECIPE:

Spicy Ginger Kombucha Cocktail
inspired by the Spicy Ginger Cocktail at the Old Sugar Distillery
Makes 1 serving

1-2 tbsp ginger juice (from 1.5 oz unpeeled fresh ginger)
1.5 oz dark rum
1 tbsp honey or maple syrup
1 tbsp lime juice
4 oz NessAlla lemongrass ginger kombucha, or similarly flavored kombucha
Ice

To prepare ginger juice: Peel ginger with a paring knife. Grate ginger finely on a grater or microplane. Gather the grated ginger in your fingers and squeeze the liquid out (ideally into your shaker or the glass you will be drinking from). If there is any juice on your work surface, you can pick it up with the already-squeezed ginger like a sponge. Squeeze until the pulp is dry. Discard pulp.

Shake all ingredients except kombucha in a cocktail shaker with ice. Strain into rocks glass. Top with kombucha and stir gently to mix. Alternatively, place ice in a rocks glass with ginger juice. Add rum, honey or maple syrup, and lime juice and mix until sweetener is dissolved. Top with kombucha and stir gently to mix.