Monthly Archives: September 2010

Cumin-Lime Toasted Black Bean Tostadas with Garden Tomato Salsa

The vegetarians think the vegans are too conservative, but that the pescatarians aren’t conservative enough.  The vegans think the vegetarians are too liberal with eggs and cheese.  “I have the right to bear chicken and beef,” the omnivores say.  And then, there’s that crazy new movement…and we’re not really sure what they eat.

Here is a recipe that will satisfy everyone.  Your vegetarians will be happy, vegans can nix the cheese, and meat eaters won’t even miss the meat. These tostadas are gluten-free, and you can make them in about 40 minutes (30 if you’ve enlisted an extra pair of hands).  It’s like world peace around the dinner table.  Throw together some Southwest Quinoa Salad, and you’ll have a fiesta (just don’t bring up food politics!).

I’ve already been political today, so I may as well be a little bossy too.  These tostadas have as much potential as the ingredients you put into them.  Mediocre pre-made tostada shells and jars of one-dimensional salsa will be so-so at best.  Why bother?

Now is the time to harvest tomatoes, so ripe they practically jump off the vines–perfect for a fresh tomato salsa.  Pull up those onions you’ve been waiting for since Springtime.  Or, ransack the farmers market.  Find the guy with the red hat that will take a big bite out of any pepper you question him about, regardless of Scoville heat rating.  Then, visit the lady with the speckled baby mixed greens.  She’ll give you a little more than you paid for if she can tell they’re going to a good home.

Fry up some corn tortillas until golden and crunchy.  Layer with cumin-lime toasted black beans and shredded mixed greens, and salsa.  Top with spoonfuls of avocado, salty crumbled feta, and a few little garnishes.

I can only think of one reason you’d want to go out for Mexican food instead of making these tostadas at home…but I’m sure a savvy liberal-conservative-moderate-libertarian such as yourself could probably figure out how to make a darn good margarita, too!

Cumin-Lime Toasted Black Bean Tostadas with Summer Tomato Salsa

This recipe has become a regular in the Spoon With Me household.  Mr. Medium Rare may need a new nickname, as he happily devours these vegetarian tostadas on a regular basis.  On their own, these tostadas make a great weeknight meal.  For a dinner-party or on a relaxed Saturday night, serve aside a big bowl of Southwest Quinoa Salad and a frosty margarita.

  • 2 cans no salt added black beans, rinsed in a colander, and drained well
  • 3/4 tablespoon ground cumin
  • salt to taste
  • 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice
  • 8 corn tortillas
  • canola oil (1 1/2 inches in a dutch oven or heavy saucepan)
  • a few big handfuls mixed greens, shredded (thinly sliced with a knife)
  • 1 medium tomato, chopped (for garnish)
  • crumbled feta (omit to make vegan)
  • 2 ripe avocados, pits removed, roughly chopped
  • Summer tomato salsa

Make the salsa: (see below)

Fry the tostada shells

Heat 1 1/2 inches canola oil in a dutch oven or in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat until shimmering.  Fry one tortilla at a time for about 2 minutes, flipping occasionally.  Remove to a plate covered in paper towels when crisp and golden.  Be sure to monitor the oil, turning down the heat if needed.

Toast the beans:

Heat a large, nonstick frying pan over medium-high heat until hot.  Add the beans.  Let them sizzle for a while.  Cook for two minutes, shaking the pan to toss the beans.  Add salt to taste and the ground cumin, and give everything a stir, taking care not to smush the beans.  Continue to shake the pan back and forth for another 2-3 minutes, until some of the beans split open, and begin to show toasty spots.  Remove from the heat, and pour in the lime juice.  Stir.

Assemble:

Arrange the beans, salsa, feta, lettuce, tomato and avocado on the fried tortillas.  Eat promptly.

Garden Tomato Salsa

  • 1 1/2  pounds ripe summer tomatoes, roughly chopped
  • 1/2 medium onion, roughly chopped
  • 1-2 jalapeños, roughly chopped (more or less to taste)
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled and roughly chopped
  • 1 small handful roughly chopped cilantro (upper stems are okay)
  • Juice from one lime
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
  • salt to taste
  • approximately 1/4 cup each chopped onion, jalapeño, and cilantro to stir in at the end

Place the onion, the roughly chopped jalapeño, and the garlic in the bowl of a food processor.  Pulse for about 5 seconds.  Add the tomatoes, and process until the ingredients are mixed together, but not overly smooth.  Add the cilantro, lime juice, cumin, and salt .  Pulse a few times to incorporate.  Making salsa is a balancing act, so taste, and add more salt, lime juice or cumin if needed.

Transfer to a bowl, and stir in some extra chopped onion jalapeño, and chopped cilantro to add variety to the texture.

This salsa may be refrigerated in a clean, airtight container for 3 to 4 days.  To refresh the flavor, add a sprinkling of salt and a splash of lime juice.

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Gluten-Free Girl’s Chocolate Financiers (and a Snazzy Photo-Shoot by Kim, of Element One Photography!)

Have you ever been betrayed by taste-bud trust?  You know, following a recipe step-by- step only to wish you had just trusted your gut and added that extra clove of garlic, or pinch of salt?  You think to yourself, “Mr. Celebrity Chef should know what’s going on, right?”, and so you throw your instincts to the wind.  You level your teaspoons, measure your tablespoons, and hope for the best.

If you’re lucky, Mr. Celebrity Chef was on his game when he wrote the recipe (or his recipe-writer was on her game).  If not, you’re left wanting more.

When I follow a recipe as-is, I often think, “Well, this is all fine and good, but it needs more ________.” Or, “This would be so much better with fresh _______.” As much as I love to tinker with recipes, it’s nice to find a recipe where the flavors lock into place without any drastic changes.

Twice recently, I have eaten at up-scale restaurants and been left hanging.  One dish, a beautiful seared halibut filet surrounded by freshly shelled english peas and topped with a coriander foam was only missing one thing.  The same culprit was missing from the king salmon with crème fraîche mashed potatoes and a corn and fennel salad…SALT!  Both dishes were woefully under-seasoned.

My favorite part about cooking at home is that I get to make food just as I like it, every time.  I’m never left with the decision of whether to ask the waiter to bring out a salt shaker (and risk insulting the chef).

Taste-bud trust is a rare bestowal, only given to my tried and true cookbook authors, food bloggers, and restaurant chefs.  Madhur Jaffrey, the ambassador and mother of Indian cooking has earned a regular invitation to my table.  Her raitas, chutneys and perfectly spiced vegetable dishes are frequent dinner guests.

On nights when I want a sure bet for a good meal, I entrust my taste buds to none other than the cooks at my favorite hole-in-the-wall Middle Eastern joint, Jerusalem Restaurant.  Oh, what I would do to learn how they make their incredibly creamy hummus.

In the food blogging world, Deb of Smitten kitchen is my go-to girl.  I know I’m stumped when I can’t think of a single ingredient I would add to her Summer Succotash.  She is a shameless recipe changer, as am I.  She searches out good recipes, jacks them up, and makes them better.  I owe my addiction to these Gluten-Free Chocolate Financiers to Deb (who gushed over them after finding them on Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef’s blog).

These little two-bite treats come out of the oven hot and springy.  When you break them open, you’re met with a moist center with an almond aroma.  Not too rich or heavy, these financiers are perfect for times when you crave chocolate, but don’t want a molten-chocolate cake attack.  I most recently made them for my mom’s birthday, so I fancied them up with powdered sugar and raspberries.  They were perfect end to our our picnic and outdoor concert at Hudson Gardens last week.

On a completely different note, I have been meaning to share something with you for a while now.  My fabulous friend Kim owns the fabulous Element One Photography Studio in Old Downtown Littleton, Colorado.  Well, she came over to my house this Summer with equipment in tow for a little photo shoot.  Okay, a big photo shoot actually.

She made my kitchen look amazing (ah, the magic of photography!)

I got lost in a sea of cookbooks!

We frolicked in the garden,

And played with our food.

I had a blast, despite feeling a little camera-shy at the beginning.  Thank you Kim!  I’ll re-pay you someday with a healthy dose of financiers.

I feel like I’m just introducing my online self…So, hello readers!  It’s nice to meet you.

Gluten-Free Chocolate Financiers

Adapted and only changed a fraction of a smidgen from Gluten-Free Girl, via Smitten Kitchen

  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled
  • 1 cup almond flour (or, grind blanched almond slivers to a powder in a coffee grinder or food processor)
  • 4 tablespoons Dutch-process unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 cup powdered sugar
  • 1/3 cup egg whites (from approximately two large eggs)
  • 1/8 teaspoon almond extract
  • 1/8 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • butter or oil for greasing the mini-muffin tin
  • granulated sugar to coat muffin cups

Preheat the oven to 400˚f.  Lightly grease the muffin cups with butter or oil.  Coat muffin cups with granulated sugar, and tap out the excess.

Whisk the almond flour, cocoa powder, salt and powdered sugar together in a medium bowl.  Add the egg whites, vanilla extract, and almond extract, stirring until smooth and combined.  Add the melted butter and stir until incorporated.

Spoon the batter into the muffin tins, filling them three-quarters full.  Bake for 10 to 15 minutes until slightly puffed and springy to the touch.  Allow to cool completely in the pan, before removing.  (They can be easily removed from the pan by twisting the top of each financier before pulling from the mold).

Once cooled, financiers can be stored in an air-tight container for up to one week.

These financiers are perfectly delightful as-is, but if you’re feeling fancy, they can be dusted with powdered sugar and topped with raspberries.


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Filed under Baked Goods, Desserts