Showing posts with label Avocado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avocado. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27

Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread

24 servings
Total Cost: NY $8.66
Cost per serving: NY $0.24

Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
So last week’s Great Chocolate Avocado Brownie Experiment got us thinking: what if you used avocado in place of some of the oil or butter in something with flavors that would make for a less counter-intuitive pairing with avocado*? Like, say, a southwestern jalapeno corn bread? If you’ll excuse me for saying so, Eureka! This corn bread is exceptionally moist, zesty with the peppers and scallions, lightly sweet from the honey and thick with sour cream. The avocado is not particularly noticeable on its own, but the taste definitely adds some depth of flavor, in a “what is that mystery ingredient I can’t quite place?” kind of way. Goes great with turkey chili!

Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
Ingredients
  • 2 cups cornmeal (NY $0.38)
  • 1 cup whole wheat flour (NY $0.23)
  • 1 cup all purpose flour (NY $0.20)
  • 1 tablespoon salt (staple)
  • 1 tablespoon plus 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder (staple)
  • 4 eggs (NY $0.66)
  • 1 cup milk (NY $0.27)
  • 1 cup reduced-fat sour cream (NY $1.09)
  • 1/3 cup honey (NY $1.13)
  • 4 tbsps butter (NY $0.38)
  • 1 avocado (NY $1.50)
  • 1 10 oz package frozen corn, thawed (NY $1.19)
  • 1 bunch scallions (NY $0.99)
  • 2 jalapeno peppers (NY $0.64)
Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.** Lightly grease a 9 x 13 inch pan with butter. Dice the jalapeno peppers, using your knife to scrape out the seeds. Slice the thinly scallions, retaining both the dark green and white parts. (No need to discard anything but the tiny roots!)

Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
In a large bowl, stir together the cornmeal, flours, salt and baking powder. In a food processor, combine eggs, milk, sour cream, honey, butter, and avocado. Pulse until thoroughly blended, scraping down the sides with a spatula to make sure that all hunks of avocado are broked down and incorporated into the mixture. Pour the liquid mixture into the dry ingredients, and whisk until smooth and thoroughly blended. Fold in the corn, scallions and peppers with a spatula. Pour the batter into the prepared pan. Bake until gold brown, about 35 minutes. Let cool before slicing into squares.

Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
* Although counter to my own intuition, that is, we’ve been informed that chocolate and avocado is actually a common and delicious Indonesian pairing. Fascinating! Thanks, Chef Aimee!

** Or, if you’re using the crappy oven in our rental, preheat for one hour at 450 degrees, open oven long enough to put corn bread and watch temperature on thermometer drop back down to 375, and set temperature to 400 degrees. Check oven thermometer every 10 minutes, raising temperature back up to 425 degrees if needed. Optional: copious swearing and calls to landlord.


Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread
Nutritional Info
Amount Per Serving

Calories 152.6Vitamin A 5.1 %Iron 6.3 %
Total Fat 5.7 gVitamin B-12 1.9 %Magnesium 7.0 %
Cholesterol 44.5 mgVitamin B-6 5.0 %Manganese 16.1 %
Sodium 335.6 mgVitamin C 4.8 % Niacin 6.6 %
Potassium 150.0 mgVitamin D 1.1 %Phosphorus 8.5 %
Total Carbohydrate 22.8 gVitamin E 2.1 %Riboflavin 8.2 %
Fiber 2.3 gCalcium 2.2 %Selenium 14.1 %
Sugars 4.1 gCopper 3.7 %
Protein 3.9 gFolate 8.4 %
Jalapeno, Scallion and Avocado Corn Bread

Recipe and Nutritional Information after the jump

Friday, January 15

Healthy Brownies: Not a Joke

24 brownies
Total cost: NY $9.34
Cost per brownie: NY $0.39

Seriously?

Seriously.

Seriously?!?

Well, mostly.

Healthy Brownies
This recipe comes from Dave Lieberman and Anahad O’Connor’s new book, 10 Things You Need to Eat.* We were intrigued by the “Chocolate Avocado Brownie” recipe, and wanted to give it a shot. Which we have now done, twice, the first as written and the second with some tweaks for pricing and taste. The recipe for our tweaked version appears below. The resulting product is chocolate-y and palatable and doesn’t taste at all of avocados, but it’s not really what I think of when I think Brownie. It’s more what I think of when I think Lightly Sweet Chewy Chocolate Bread. (What, I do that frequently, don't you?) Stirring in some chocolate chips might make these more brownie-esque, although of course that takes away from the “healthy”.

Healthy Brownies
I think these are worth making if you’re interested in a sweet chocolate snack, but I wouldn’t serve them as dessert. Not to ratchet your expectations too far downwards: make no mistake, we ate all of these and enjoyed them! Just know that what you’re biting into is going to be more like a chocolate Luna or granola bar type thing than it is a decadent chocolate dessert. If you try these—and I know you can’t wait after a build up like that—please let us know what you think, and if you come up with any adaptations of your own!

Healthy BrowniesIngredients
  • ½ cup whole wheat pastry flour (NY $0.13)
  • ½ cup Dutch-process cocoa (NY $0.51)
  • ½ teaspoon salt (staple)
  • 1/2 cup almonds (NY $1.17)
  • ½ cup walnuts (NY $0.99)
  • 4 ounces bittersweet chocolate (NY $2.99)
  • ½ canola oil (NY $0.42)
  • 1 large ripe Hass avocado (NY $1.50)
  • 6 eggs (NY $0.93)
  • ½ cup granulated sugar (NY $0.28)
  • 1 cup dark brown sugar (NY $0.42)
Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a 9 x 13 glass baking dish with parchment and grease.

Whisk together the flour, cocoa and salt in a mixing bowl.

Healthy Brownies
In your food processor, grind nuts until roughly chopped. Careful, this will go quick. Be sure not to overdo it, you want your nuts to be hunks in the finished brownies, not turn into nut meal. Stir chopped nuts into flour mixture.

Add the chocolate to the food processor in pieces, and pulse until coarsely chopped. Stir into flour nut mixture.

Healthy Brownies
Wipe out the food processor bowl, then add the oil, avocado, eggs and sugar and process until smooth. Scrape down the sides to make sure that all the avocado hunks are whipped smooth. Now you've got yourself some unappetizing greenish goop. Don't worry, I promise this is going to turn out OK. And if you don't trust me, trust Dave Lieberman.

So, take the leap of faith and, using a spatula, transfer your greenish goop into the chocolate flour mixture. Gently fold together until combined.

Healthy Brownies
Pour the batter (doesn't look green any more, now does it?) into the baking dish. Bake for approx. 30-35 minutes, until the center is just set. Let cool before slicing. Take a bite, and tell us what you think!

Adapted from 10 Things You Need to Eat

Healthy Brownies
* Full disclosure: we got a review copy of this book free when the LBUH attended a promotional event for Dave Lieberman. In the viewpoint of the FTC when we, as amateur bloggers, get something for free, our independent judgment and any ethics we might possess go flying right out the window, we dance around our kitchen maniacally cheering “Free! Free! Free! Let us go shill for it unreservedly and in direct violation of our own honest feelings about the item in question!” and rush off to the computer to tell you to go out and buy it immediately because it will complete your life, make you taller, thinner, grow your hair back and imbue you with the ability to fly. Unless, of course, we are forced to tell you the readers about it, in which case you, the readers, are to think “Aha! They were given this item to review for FREE! Accordingly, this item cannot possibly possess all of these positive attributes extolled by these blatantly biased and uncritical bloggers! In fact, it will probably make me less fulfilled, shorter, fatter, and balder, though I suspect it will still give me the ability to fly!”

In short, the new FTC blog guidelines don’t really give bloggers or their readers much credit at all and, although I understand their goals and am aware of the bad sites out there they are trying to curtail, I find them both somewhat offensive and also vague enough that they don’t give much actual guidance. Or, for other, sharper, smarter words, see: Janet Reid’s FTC Compliance Notice. When you read reviews of this same cookbook in a magazine, you can be sure the reviewer didn’t run off and buy a copy, but the FTC doesn’t think that they need to tell you about it. Yet because I am not Gwyneth Paltrow, more's the pity, I apparently do.

Additionally, please see the note about our Amazon store that we have added to our "About REC(ession)IPES" section.


Healthy Brownies
Nutritional Info
Amount Per Serving

Calories 183.5Vitamin A 1.8 %Iron 7.1 %
Total Fat 11.2 gVitamin B-12 2.1 %Magnesium 7.3 %
Cholesterol 53.1 mgVitamin B-6 2.8 %Manganese 15.4 %
Sodium 68.9 mgVitamin C 1.1 %Niacin 2.5 %
Potassium 149.7 mgVitamin D 1.6 %Phosphorus 6.9 %
Total Carbohydrate 19.8 gVitamin E 11.2 %Riboflavin 6.9 %
Fiber 2.2 gCalcium 2.8 %Selenium 8.9 %
Sugars 5.7 gCopper 8.1 %Thiamin 2.4 %
Protein 3.6 gFolate 3.8 %Zinc 3.5 %

Recipe and Nutritional Information after the jump
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