CAULIFLOWER TIKKA MASALA

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Hi loves! I’m making this on insta live today (2 pm PST) if for some reason you read this prior, and I wanted to post the full recipe here as well. This was a member favorite from SK Cooking Club, and given the current circumstances, I figured it belonged here as well. I know everyone is trying to limit grocery runs, but I think we can make this work. Some members did half cauli, half chicken. Another mentioned she did sweet potatoes and broccoli into the sauce. If you don’t have tomato paste, you can use a can of crushed tomatoes or even tomato sauce and it’ll work. I know there are more details to true, authentic tikka masala but now does not feel like the time for details? Let me know if you have questions!

I hope you are well. Feeding ourselves and our people is one of the most anchoring acts we have right now. I wish you wellness!

CAULIFLOWER TIKKA MASALA // Serves 4

Tikka is a takeout favorite but can often be so heavy. Since we have some dairy-free folks we swapped out the yogurt and cream with full fat coconut milk. We have tested this with both chicken and cauli, so you can adapt it to your family’s preference.

To swap chicken for cauli, repeat the same method of seasoning the chicken as you would the cauliflower with a third of the spice blend. Cut 1 ½ lbs. of boneless skinless chicken breasts or thighs into 1” cubes, toss in the spice blend, and brown in batches, over medium heat, until golden on all sides. Remove from the pan, set aside, and continue with your sauce. Once the sauce has thickened to your liking, add in the browned chicken and allow to simmer in the sauce for 10 minutes until cooked through.

INGREDIENTS

2 Tbsp. yellow curry powder
1 ½ tsp. cumin
1 tsp. paprika
1 tsp. turmeric
1 tsp. coriander
¼ tsp. allspice or cinnamon
½ tsp. red pepper flakes, or more to taste
1 ½ tsp. kosher salt

2 Tbsp. avocado oil, divided
1 large head cauliflower, cut into florets 

1 medium yellow onion, diced
5 cloves garlic, grated
1 Tbsp. freshly grated ginger 
1 6 oz. can tomato paste
¾ cup low-sodium vegetable stock

1 14 oz. can full fat coconut milk
zest and juice of 1 small lemon

Generous handful well chopped cilantro
2 cup cooked basmati, brown, or cauli rice, for serving
¼ cup salted, toasted cashews
naan, optional
yogurt, optional

DIRECTIONS

Preheat oven to 425.’

In a small bowl, mix together curry, cumin, paprika, turmeric, coriander, cinnamon/allspice, red pepper flakes, and salt. 

On a rimmed baking sheet, arrange cauli florets so there is space between them, drizzle with a tablespoon of avocado oil and toss with about a third of the spice mix. Transfer to the oven and roast for 30 minutes until just browned and tender.

Meanwhile, make your sauce. In a large Dutch oven, heat the remaining oil over medium. When the oil is shimmering, add in the onion and cook until golden, about 4 minutes. Add in garlic and ginger and cook until fragrant. Once the veg are golden and tender, add in the remaining spice blend, stir, and let the spices toast for an additional 2 minutes. Add in the tomato paste, stirring to combine. Slowly pour in coconut milk, broth, and bring the sauce to a low boil.

Once boiling, turn the heat down to medium low, and allow to simmer and thicken for 5 minutes, until the sauce is creamy and coats the back of a spoon. Using an immersion blender or blender, puree the sauce until smooth. You can leave it chunky, but we all liked it smooth. 

Transfer the sauce back to the pot, add in the cauli, lemon juice, and zest, and stir gently to combine. 

To serve, fill bowls with a generous scoop of rice, the cauli mixture, cilantro, toasted cashews, and a squeeze of lemon. 

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Chocolate, Dessert, Gluten Free, Snack

PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE SHORTBREAD BARS

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One of our dinner questions has been to call out three specific things that made you happy that day. We’ve had that going prior to the quarantine, but it’s been even more important this past week. Sometimes we draw pictures of the things, which is actually even more entertaining if you have small children. They kids’ answers have ranged from “lunch” to “rough housing” to “riding bikes with neighbor friends” (not touching of course, don’t worry). Curran was building a zip line for his toy in the backyard today and in his excitement, just yelled “this is making me happy right now!” That is the fruit of asking the question - how aware it is making each of us. In this slower, moment by moment pace with my family, I feel like I am getting a chance to see much more than I ever do when I am full charge ahead at all times.

As many of you, finding our way through all of this is challenging, scary, devastating for so many industries and individuals and doing so with kids is an added layer. I find that naming the happy things is a different practice than gratitude, though I’m sure you agree both have great effects on mental health. It helps me to think back on the day - to pay attention to my actual happiness when the default is fear and scarcity. It resets to positive… maybe you even find ways to chase the things you hear yourself name.

Yesterday: It made me happy to hear my kids wrestling and giggling upstairs with each other. I am so happy that our neighborhood has areas to bike, and that there have been breaks in the rain so the kids can move. All the funny memes online have made me laugh. I am happy that the kids like writing notes and dropping them to neighbors or pop them in the mail, hopefully passing the happy along. You get the idea. Look for it, it is there, and I am so sorry for those of you who are having a really hard time with that for a plethora of reasons right now.

Despite the current circumstances of being shut away from all our social connections, which are a huge priority for us as a family, I have been impressed by how well my people did this past week. My kids are getting along and pulling out toys that they used to ignore. I have a hard time even writing that here, as I know peoples’ lives are being destroyed by the pandemic going on around the world. I have chosen to take it day at a time over here and so my own experience is what I have to share. One week in I have learned that I can only take in enough news to be smart but there is a tipping point to being overwhelmed. What a blessing that our business is online - good grief. It is my responsibility to be a steward of that circumstance. That said, I will be trying to share more content here, that may be helpful for you. Our family is supported by our work over on SK Cooking Club, but I hope to share some of the favorited recipes here too, while so many of us are cooking at home.

I wish you all wellness, and hope to stay in touch.


PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE SHORTBREAD BARS

16 small squares

I have not tested these with all-purpose flour, though I’d guess they work. I would replace the almond and coconut flours with 1 1/4 cup all-purpose at a guess, but again, I haven’t tested that. All of these ingredients are also in my Thrive box if you are not a member yet (That link gets you a 30-day free trial and 25% off. I know they are having shipping delays at the moment, but a wonderful resource regardless).
If you have a peanut allergy, any nut or seed butter will work! Just pay attention to the consistency - we want it thick but spreadable - it needs to hold structure when you cut them. We need spreadable, but not a runny mess, but you can fix this no matter what kind of nut butter you buy. Once you add the maple, the nut butter should seize it a bit, especially if you start with a runny nut butter. Note it will firm up a bit in the fridge, but you need it to hold shape, so if your nut butter layer is extra runny, stir in a bit of coconut flour to help firm it up. Too firm to spread? Whisk in a splash of hot water.

Ingredients

for the CRUST

1/2 cup coconut flour
1/2 cup almond flour
1/2 cup oats
1/3 cup coconut oil or butter, barely warmed (think body temp)
2 Tbsp. maple syrup
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Pinch of salt

NUT BUTTER LAYER

1 cup favorite natural nut butter
3 Tbsp. maple syrup

CHOCOLATE LAYER

7 oz. chocolate, chopped
2 Tbsp. coconut oil or coconut butter (or even heavy cream!)
Flaky salt, to finish

Instructions

Line an 8” square dish with parchment paper for easy removal. Preheat the oven to 325’.

In a food processor, combine the coconut flour, almond flour, oats, coconut oil, maple, vanilla and salt and pulse a few times to combine. Don’t overdo it, just a few pulses. It should stick together when you press your fingers together. Press the shortbread layer into the bottom of the pan, getting an even layer all the way to the edges. Bake on the middle rack for 15-17 minutes until just toasty on top. Remove to cool. 

In another bowl, stir together the nut butter and maple. The sweetener may make it seize a bit and that’s ok, we need it to be spreadable but firm. You can stir in a splash of hot water and stir it in if you can’t get the mixture to move. If it’s too runny, a sprinkle of coconut flour will also firm it up.

Over the cooled shortbread, spread the nut butter layer. Pop that in the fridge while you make the chocolate.

In a glass bowl over simmering water (double boiler method), add the roughly chopped chocolate and coconut oil. Stir until melted. Spread the chocolate over the nut butter layer. Let it cool down in the fridge for 15, then sprinkle the flaky salt over the top, and pop the whole situation in the fridge to chill for at least 30 minutes. 

Remove the parchment sling and chop the bars into small squares. They’ll crumble a bit. They will keep stored in the fridge for up to two weeks. 

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BOOK CLUB!

I’ve read a handful of good books lately but have decided I am too…social? relational? to finish and just be done with it. We must discuss. I solicited you, my fine internet friends, and a handful of my real life friends, to read The Dutch House with me, so we had a good excuse to drink wine and eat snacks and chat about the book. I asked for book suggestions and now have a full list of great ones to get through this year. Our next one is Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine if you want to join? I’m also squeezing in American Dirt before that so sounds like it’s time to get reading.

I was going to do all nibbles/apps, but I figured it streamlined things for me to do sheet-pan nachos and salad. Sometimes I think apps are more work? People could eat or not. It was by no means a “sit down dinner”, but more of an eat-as-you-wish situation, with a few little desserts.

I gave this book 3 stars out of 5. This bothered some insta people, and I know it was a super well reviewed book, but I was so annoyed and mad at both Andrea and then the mother that I was just frustrated. I know real life and books don’t always have happy resolution, and some may even argue this one did, but I am fiercely loyal to my people and I was so mad at the mom I couldn’t love the book. A saint? Really? Come on. Personal opinion. I do think it was wonderfully written and I really liked reading it from the brothers perspective, there just seemed to be a lot…missing?

That said. I know there is no way for everyone to love every book, and since I told you all to read it as well, I included the questions and what I made for food. If you have any great book club ideas, leave them in the comments. I would love to make this more of a thing, but I want to know how to do it better!

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Discussion Questions

Rate it on your 1-5 star scale.

Cyril Conroy. If he was more comfortable with his tenants than the people of his office or house, why the Dutch House?

What explains why Elna Conroy abandoned her children? In what ways might such a profound decision be justified or not? Do you think, as Maeve argues, are men who leave their families often judged less harshly?

What explains the very different responses Maeve and Danny have to their mother’s return?

When Elna returns after Maeve’s heart attack, Danny and Maeve argue about whether or not they should forgive their mother for leaving. Whose argument did you agree with, and why?

The story is told from the perspective of an adult Danny Conroy. Do you think this impacted how the story was told? Do you think it would have been more effective from another character’s perspective?

What did you think of the end of the novel? Did you like May’s decision to buy the Dutch House, or do you wish the family had been able to fully let the house go?


To Host

  • Ask people to bring a bottle of wine or a snack. It can be a lot of work and gets pricey to host, so have friends pitch in. I’d suggest doing a savory and sweet yourself in case someone bails, and that way you have both represented.

  • Have a red, white and some non-alcoholic (sparkling and not) beverages to cover your bases. If your book has a themed beverage or cocktail, that would be fun. Maybe you don’t drink, but other people may - so have a few options.

  • Most best seller books have discussion questions online. I’m sure you can think of a few, but google helps too.


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FOOD

SHEET-PAN NACHOS

Made one batch with these mushrooms
lots of pepperjack or goat cheddar
cilantro
guacamole
pico de gallo
pickled onions

(I tried one tray with soft goat cheese (chevre) which was underwhelming and dry for the record. Don’t do it)

MIXED CITRUS + AVOCADO SALAD WITH SK VINAIGRETTE

baby kale
mixed citrus
avocados
spicy pecans

Vinaigrette

SK VINAIGRETTE

There are some story clips in my instagram highlights if you are a more visual person! This works on nearly every salad, can be mixed with shredded chicken, herbs and grapes for a fancy chicken salad, used as a marinade, drizzled over steamed vegetables - so much!

3 Tbsp. finely minced shallot
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
1 tsp. honey
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. dried Italian seasoning or thyme
handful of well chopped parsley
1/4 cup white wine vinegar
2 Tbsp. lemon juice
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil

You can blitz this all in a blender if you like it to be smoother, or shake everything up in a jar with a lid.

Bon Appetit’s best Chocolate Chip Cookies

Recipe here

Baked at 360’ and I highly suggest chilling the batter! The spread a lot, and I prefer my cookies to have a bit of body.

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