I love to cook. Anyone who knows me loves that. I like challenging dishes. Dishes with a million ingredients. Dishes that require weird kitchen gadgets to make. I'm kind of ashamed to admit that I sometimes spend over 2 hours cooking dinner, but that's the price you pay when most of your food is cooked from scratch. Tonight was NOT one of those nights.
Sometimes, you need a quick meal, reminiscent of flavor cravings, but without all the hassle. That's where tonight's meal comes in. I managed to capture the taste of Indian food without spending more than 45 minutes from start to finish AND without doing a single authentic thing to this meal. Ha! At least it tasted like something closely resembling Indian food, enough to trick my gut into believing that I had just gorged at my favorite buffet (Hey Flavors!)
Tonight's meal consisted of:
Curried tofu pockets, grilled okra, Indian spiced collard greens |
Curried Tofu Pockets
1 package extra firm tofu, drained
1 c. frozen mixed vegetables (corn, peas, carrot, and green beans work best)
1 medium onion, chopped
1/4 c. water
2 gloves garlic, minced
1/2" piece of fresh ginger, minced
1 Tbs. coconut oil
2 tsp. curry powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. red pepper flakes
1 lb. bakery pizza dough (I used Publix bakery pizza dough)
1 egg
1 Tbs. water
Preheat oven to 375 degrees and assemble all your goods.
Here's all the goods snuggling in close for a group shot |
It should look like this after 5 minutes |
The colors! |
Now it's time to crumble that big blob of soybean goodness. Just squish it between your fingers and into the pan. Chop up any big lumps with your spoon. Cook this mixture for about 5 minutes and then add the 1 cup of mixed vegetables and 1/4 cup water. Cook for about two minutes.
I always keep frozen vegetables on hand to throw something together |
Let that sit and cool for a few while you play with your dough ball.
Sprinkle your work surface generously with flour and sprinkle some on the dough as well. Use your awesome maple french rolling pin that your husband got you for Christmas...oh wait, just use whatever you have. Wine bottles are awesome for this purpose. Preferably empty.
Sprinkle your work surface generously with flour and sprinkle some on the dough as well. Use your awesome maple french rolling pin that your husband got you for Christmas...oh wait, just use whatever you have. Wine bottles are awesome for this purpose. Preferably empty.
Roll your dough out into a rectangle. Something shaped like a rectangle will also do. As you see, my rectangle turned into a circle when I cut it into 8 pieces. That's OK! This is a non-authentic quick dinner. Nobody will care how ugly their pocket sandwich is as long as it tastes good.
Now it's time to start assembling. I used two tablespoons of filling per dough triangle. The baby walked in. Here's a gratuitous Tootie shot.
She dropped the mirror five minutes later. |
Don't worry about making these look good. My dough wasn't quite big enough due to the awkward shape I ended up cutting them in. I marched on and got something that looked like this:
Mix the egg and 1 Tbs. of water and egg wash these babies!
Stop and take a moment to indulge your toddler who brought you a chicken suit and dress her in it for funny pictures.
Bake for 25 minutes (The sandwich pockets...don't even think about eating THAT chicken!) and they'll come out looking like this:
We ended up with 5 left over, so into a gallon sized freezer bag they went to be frozen and reheated for quick snacks or lunches later!
They look great, and that chicken suit is wonderful!
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