For most of my cooking life, I've not really been one to meal prep, preferring to cook a meal most evenings. Lately, though, evening activities and scheduling have made it so that it is nice to have pre-made food on hand, especially on Mondays and Tuesdays. When I get around to making 3-4 dishes on Sunday afternoon, the week gets off to a more peaceful start.
Today, I managed to do that with these 4 dishes. Without planning it that way, it ended up being a variety of proteins (eggs, paneer, tofu, beans) and a variety of veg in each, and a diversity of cuisines and cooking styles- curry, stir-fry, salad, casserole.
First up, hash brown casserole, made with pesto this time. My kids love this for breakfast, dinner, snack.
The second dish was a tandoori paneer and mushroom kati roll filling. We eat paneer rarely but I had this block left over from the cooking class. I marinated paneer, mushroom, red peppers and onions for 20 minutes or so in a tandoori marinade (yogurt, besan, kasuri methi, tandoori masala, salt, red chili powder, cumin coriander powder, turmeric) and then sauteed it in a pan.
Third, a bean salad. I soaked and cooked black eyed peas (not pressure cooked- they would turn to mush. Black eyed peas cook quickly on the stove top) and then tossed them with fresh tomato and cucumber, a little onion and cilantro, salt and pickled jalapenos.
Finally, there was some Thai red curry paste in the fridge, and I used that along with half a can of coconut milk, some cabbage and carrot and extra-firm tofu to make a quick curry in the instant pot.
All of this, along with clean-up and a side mission- pantry tidy-up- all took me more or less 2 hours.
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Some random photos from the last couple of weeks:
My spouse went to Australia for 8 days for a work trip and sent me this pic of a koala perched in a tree, somehow looking more like a stuffed animal than most stuffed animals.
Koala near Melbourne |
While their dad was away, I promised the kids I would take them out to dinner anywhere they liked, and my son inexplicably chose a pretty fancy Italian bistro- not what you would call a kid-friendly place. I honored my agreement after many reminders that he would have to use his nice manners and inside voice. We went and were sat in the loveliest booth in our regular school and work clothes, amid nicely dressed couples on dates and groups enjoying celebratory dinners. The meal was quite a success but the 7 yr old discovered that he does not like fancy pizza (a Margherita with buffalo mozzarella) and fancy spaghetti (with lemon and cream) as much as he likes regular pizza and regular spaghetti- lol.
Fancy mango gelato topped with toasted coconut |
A dear school friend came by for Sunday brunch with her family- I was seeing them after 7 years. The success of the meal was...mixed. It was an idli brunch and while the sambar was tasty, the idlis were the absolute worst I have made in my life. I have to reluctantly concede that no matter your perceived level of expertise, idli batter does have a mind of its own, especially in winter. My heart sank, much like the idlis themselves. Everyone was gracious, of course, and no one left hungry- there was other food and they even bravely ate the idlis. The one success were the eggless rose and pistachio cupcakes I made, which my daughter adorned with a simple glaze of icing sugar, rose water and lemon juice, and a sprinkling of dried edible rose petals.
Eggless pistachio and rose cupcakes |
Our town has had hazy skies for a while because of wildfires in neighboring areas. Today we were graced by clear spring-like weather and I sat on the deck and was mesmerized by this sight. Also, two turkey vultures circled over my head for 10 minutes. Should I be worried??
Turkey vultures have their eyes on me |
I'll end with a link to a lovely article I read recently. I've been reading off and on about meditation and was intrigued with the concept of non-dualism and did a quick web search looking for some extra reading on it. I stumbled upon an article, a truly lucid and beautiful explanation of the rather abstract (but really, not abstract at all) concept of non-self.
Happy March! How was the last half of February for you? Also, One Hot Stove turned 19 years old last month. Thank you for being here 💙
Lovely read! I am just so thankful to find you again. I stumbled upon your blog in 2007 , while searching for mumbai pao bhaji. Needless to say I only make it your way now.
ReplyDeleteAlso your chicken kolhapuri recipe is my fav! Also the madale bhat one .
In between I had no access to your blog ..no idea why.
Glad to be able to follow you and your awesome recipes again...esp instant pot ones!
Neeta- I'm glad you found my blog again :) and thank you for this nice note.
DeleteThe pav bhaji recipe is probably the #1 most-loved recipe I have posted. I don't have any chicken recipes on the blog but maybe you're thinking of the egg rassa.
A-Ha! Non-duality is intriguing, and such a coincidence that it's been on my mind A LOT these last so many months. You might enjoy reading Rupert Spira's writings (or watching his talks)—he is articulate and he has such a sweet, calm presence. I have also read a few books by Jean Klein, also a teacher of non-duality with a remarkable ability to explain the philosophy.
ReplyDeleteLakshmi
Thanks so much- I will look for these!!
DeleteAlso, that is a very good article, Nupur! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteLakshmi
Thanks! I thought the article was a warm and approachable introduction to the topic.
DeleteNice to read about the Buddhist idea of anatman. I’ve been reading this book (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/51247270-classical-indian-philosophy), and am currently in the part where Shankara in one of his bhashyas criticizes this idea. I did want to read more about it to understand it, so that link was helpful. I’ve always been fascinated by advaitha and the atman, but the variety of metaphysical theories in India are such a delight for an agnostic like me. I can read and appreciate all of their viewpoints and not ever have to commit to any one!
ReplyDeleteThanks- I will look for this book. I am exactly like you- I don't have a horse in the race, so to speak, so I can partake of all viewpoints without necessarily embracing one.
Deletefrom johanna @ https://gggiraffe.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteSounds like you are busy and being a bit of a superwoman to fit in all this meal prep as well. I am also not a meal prep type but wish I was and love it when I get to cook for days ahead.
Very pleased to see your partner made it to Melbourne when he came to Australia - I don't drink coffee but was hyper aware on our recent trip just how highly esteemed our coffee is. Hope he loved Melbourne (and am curious where he saw the koala. My guess was Philip Island.) Koalas look very cute but they have a fearsome growl.
Also I don't think it is just idli that can fail for experienced cook - though I cook a lot, I do have some hit and miss experiences. But the pistachio rose cupcakes look gorgeous - would love to try them especially as Sylvia loves pistachio flavour right now (but not the nuttiness :-)
Hi Johanna- the two hour meal prep was a great gift to my future self, I was relaxed for the next 2-3 days :)
DeleteMy partner saw the koala on a hike in Lorne! I did not know koalas can growl. He loved Melbourne, the river walk, eating out in Chinatown, the buzz and energy of the city.
You must try the cupcakes- they are so good! To enjoy pistachio flavor without the nuttiness, you might consider grinding pistachios to a flour almost.