Recipe Category Archives: 30 Minutes or Less

Fish Stew with Kale and Seaweed Recipe

adapted from Levana Cooks, using Mushroom Medley Levana Nourishments

fish kale stew

Fish stew with Kale and seaweed:

It just doesn’t get healthier than this!

My fish stew goes a long way towards illustrating my philosophy of food and nutrition in full: Start out with serious ingredients, and end up with fun, nutritious and delicious dishes!

This fish stew is a complete meal in one pot. Macrobiotic food lovers will enjoy this no end as well. The green tea imparts a clean taste and added nutrition. You might decide to forgo the fish for an all-vegetarian meal, with no loss whatsoever of flavor or nutrition. Likewise, no problem if you do not have all the ingredients on hand for this fish kale stew: It has plenty going for it even with a couple ingredients omitted!

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Salmon Pomegranate Sauce Recipe

adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

salmon pomegranate sauce

Salmon pomegranate sauce showcases sweet-and-sour flavors beautifully.

They are a favorite Sephardi combination. The onions caramelize naturally during the cooking process, and contribute a sweet counterpoint to the vinegar.

Salmon Pomegranate Sauce is a quick and delicious dish, just the way I like it—one pan, one step.

I hope you think of pomegranate juice more often when you cook, not just this salmon in pomegranate sauce. Of course I mean pure pomegranate juice: Unsweetened, undiluted. I love the sweet-tart contrast in the flavors, and the naturally syrupy texture that forms a natural sauce at the end of cooking.

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Fish in Tehina Sauce Recipe

adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

fish tehina sauce

This fish in tehina sauce is a delicious and ridiculously easy dish

It is a very good illustration of everything I promise in the Pantry Chapter of my new cookbook, The Whole Foods Kosher Kitchen. Glorious Meals Pure and Simple: Namely, that on days when you have no time to cook, all you need to do is bake a totally unadorned piece of fish or chicken or tofu, and top it with any of the condiments I have included in my Pantry chapter. I am picking one practically out of a hat here, tehina sauce, confident it will do the trick as well as any other condiments in this chapter.

Any excuse to use tehina (sesame paste)!

It will perk up countless simple fish, poultry, and burger dishes. If you would rather end up with a thinner consistency, omit the tofu, and use the sauce as  dressing: Tehina sauce is the best, full-bodied as incredibly healthy.

You will use only about 1/2 cup of tehina sauce for this recipe.

The remaining tehina sauce will keep well in a glass jar in the refrigerator, a good few days:

Dunk your bread in it, pour it over poached chicken, or use it as salad dressing!

This recipe will work well with any thick firm-flesh fish: Salmon, tilapia, scrod, branzino, trout etc

You will love the Sephardi twist in this tehina sauce.

 

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Pasta with Raw Tomato Sauce Recipe

adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

pasta raw tomato sauce

 

Raw tomato sauce?

Yes! This pasta sauce has so much going for it you have no cooking to do.

All aboard in a food processor, simple as that! Please note I have not listed any salt in the ingredients list, as the anchovies and capers have enough salt to season the whole dish. Tomatoes, mint, anchovies: How can you go wrong?

For the best raw tomato sauce?

Just get the ripest plum tomatoes. Even when summer is not in full swing, I find plum tomatoes always accessible and reliable.

This raw tomato sauce is too good to be used only on pasta.

Try it on grilled fish, rice and steamed vegetables as well.

Unless you are cooking for guests with fish allergies, do not say a word about the anchovies: They do their magic in this raw tomato sauce, and they go totally unseen, so no one will object to them!

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Kasha with Onions and Mushrooms Recipe

adapted from Levana Cooks, using Mushroom Medley Levana Nourishments

kasha onions mushrooms

Kasha and dark-fried onions: Perfect expat Jewish food.

Kasha, known to much of the world as buckwheat, is a staple in many Eastern European countries.

Roasting the kasha before cooking it gives it a delicious nutty taste, and rolling it in beaten egg keeps every kernel separated and plump. Do not skip either of these very quick steps, or you will get mush. You can buy it already roasted: In this case skip the egg coating and the toasting.

Experiment with other grains, adjusting the amount of liquid to the grain you are using: steel-cut oats, quinoa, millet, lentils, rice, etc. In this case, skip the step where you toast the grain and roll it in egg: Only buckwheat requires it (just to be clear: other grains: no toasting, no coating in egg).

I make this classic dish sans varnishkes (small bow tie noodles):

I want to keep the dish whole grain and no pasta for a change, loaded with the good starch, and free of gluten. Still if you are attached to the tiny bow tie noodles, throw them in, just a little handful for garnish.

Good Sephardi that I am, it took me quite some time to love the decidedly acquired foreign taste of kasha, but now I can’t be without it. I have it for hot cereal breakfast (cream of buckwheat, or fine granulation buckwheat), throw it in soups and salads, and even use the flour in cookies and crepes: Besides hearty and delicious, it is a real powerhouse!

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