These... are happening again. If there was ever any doubt, food can be downright delicious! This is true even if, or perhaps especially if, you are limited to a restricted diet. I view my restrictions as a license to be creative in the kitchen and embrace food I enjoy!
Ingredients:

approx 8 medium red potatoes*
coconut oil
3-4 medium onions, chopped
sea salt or rock salt
almond butter
shredded coconut
maple syrup
chipotle powder
optional: juice of 1 lime

*many people prefer russet, but I use red, because they are healthier and, in my opinion, still delicious.

Directions:

Preheat oven at 400 degrees. Stab your potatoes and lather them in coconut oil. Bake for about an hour.


Sauté onions in coconut oil on medium or lower heat until just beginning to brown. Set aside.

Remove potatoes from oven. When sufficiently cool, halve the potatoes and scoop out the flesh, leaving 1/4" of flesh on the skins.
Coat insides with coconut oil. Bake for 10 minutes skin-down, then 10 minutes skin-up.
Sprinkle salt into skins. Distribute onions into each skin. Spread almond butter over onions, but not too generously (it has a sticky texture). Sprinkle coconut on top, and drizzle maple syrup. Add a few drops of freshly squeezed lime juice if you prefer to. Dust the top with chipotle powder. Bake for another 2 minutes and serve immediately. Serves 4-6.
Variations: Try adding slivered almonds. Substitute peanut butter in a pinch (natural peanut butter!). Sauté some chopped leafy greens with the onions. Sauté a chopped apple with the onions.

Food Storage Applicability: If you properly store your onions and potatoes, this one is a great food storage recipe! Stir your almond butter before use for best results.

Word of Wisdom: This recipe is heavier on the fats and not as nutritionally dense. It also features maple syrup, which I try to use sparingly. There are a lot of misconceptions about the appropriate amount of fat in one's diet. The fats used in this recipe are healthy fats. Go with what your body is telling you. If you have been eating salad all day, your body probably needs some fats. Plan your meals with an awareness of your total intake. Listen to your body, exercise moderation, and food like this can be part of an overall healthy diet. This recipe is Word of Wisdom appropriate.

Gluten and Corn Free: This recipe should be safe!  A reminder to make sure your bakeware is pristine to avoid cross-contact with glutenous or corn-containing crumbs that may remain from previous baking.

I thoroughly enjoyed this appetizer. What a blessing it is that we can enjoy so many foods! This recipe almost didn't happen today. Here is a special behind-the-scenes look at today's recipe, brought to you by motherhood:
... yes, that is almond butter. Cheers!
 
I think this one speaks for itself. Bookmark this appetizer for the next time your parents stay for dinner, the missionaries are coming over, or your toddler takes scissors to your favourite dress and you just really need life to be beautiful.
Ingredients (per plate):
  • 1 roma tomato
  • 1 ripe avocado
  • 2 shakes sea salt or rock salt
  • fresh dill
  • dried currants
  • scant dusting of nutmeg
  • dusting of cinnamon

Directions:

Mash avocado in a bowl with salt. Place centered on plate. Smooth and top with dill.
Slice roma into 6 slices and one thick end slice. Use a sharp knife to cut petals into the thick slice. Cut the remaining six slices so they fit closer together as shown:
Place the largest three on the bottom with the remaining three staggered on top. Top with the thick slice.

Place dried currants in a line on each petal. Top with a subtle dusting of nutmeg and a dusting of cinnamon.
Serve immediately.

Food Storage Applicability: The applicability is limited here as avocado doesn't store well, though you could whip up some cashew cream, peanut butter, or almond butter for a base and be creative with presenting your canned tomatoes. Who said food storage can't be pretty?

Word of Wisdom: Yes! Food can be decadent and healthy!

Gluten and Corn free: Very safe. This is also paleo and raw vegan while still being really presentable to.. anybody! (Unless you are cooking for somebody who needs to avoid tomatoes, or a baby avoiding cinnamon. We needed to find an exception somewhere, right?)

I am grateful for beautiful and delicious foods to enjoy and share. Bon appetit!
 
This soup was inspired by a trip to the local produce store and a slough of substitutions from this recipe. Feel free to mix and match veggies or adjust ratios. I love this soup because it is full of delicious autumn flavours while staying safely corn free. So many soup recipes call for broth, and I am yet to make my own safe broth. The roasted vegetables have fantastic texture and keep the flavour varied. It doesn't hurt that I am a huge coconut curry fan! This recipe is a unanimous yes in our family.

Ingredients:

Coconut oil*
2 medium butternut squash, halved and de-seeded
3 large parsnips, coarsely chopped
8 medium carrots, coarsely chopped
4-5 medium beets (or one gargantuan one like I used), coarsely chopped
2 medium zucchini, coarsely chopped
3 medium onions, sliced
10 garlic cloves, finely chopped
4-5 tsp fresh ginger, finely chopped
4 apples, chopped
1.5 tbsp curry powder
2.5 tbsp cumin
2 tsp turmeric
2 heavy dashes coriander
1 cup red lentils (omit if you eat paleo)
2 cans coconut milk**
3-4 cups of hot water (2 cups to simmer and the rest after the roasted vegetables, adjusted to achieve desired thinness)
2 tbsp apple cider vinegar***
juice of 2 limes
1 bunch cilantro, coarsely chopped
ample sea salt or rock salt to taste****
a goodly bit of fresh ground black pepper to taste

*You could use olive oil, but I prefer coconut oil for cooking because of the smoke point. Since coconut oil has a higher smoke point, it can be heated to a higher temperature without smoking. When an oil smokes, there is an underlying chemical change occurring, and the end result is not as healthy.
**Watch this ingredient. Make sure to read the label. The ideal contains only coconut milk. Some brands are diluted by water and many contain other additives. Guar gum is corn free (according to my reading and experience, but do your own research and know your own sensitivity), but it is not nutritious.
***Pasteurized is sufficient for this recipe. Avoid buying heinz as word of mouth indicates it may provide issues for persons with corn intolerance.
****Iodized salt, often labelled generically as salt, is made with corn. Make sure you are using an unprocessed salt. The coarseness of the grind is irrelevant in this recipe.

Procedure:
  • Preheat oven at 350. Coat bottoms of squash (open side down), parsnips, carrots, beets, and zucchini with coconut oil and bake 35-60 minutes until soft.
  • Lightly sauté onions, garlic, ginger, and apples in a stock pot on medium low heat with lid until soft (about 10 minutes).
  • Stir in curry, cumin, turmeric, and coriander. Toss in lentils and gently fry for about one minute.
  • Add coconut milk, 2 cups of water, apple cider vinegar, and limes. Stir well, reduce heat, and simmer with lid until lentils are soft (another 10-15 minutes) or baked vegetables are ready. Stir intermittently.
  • Remove baked vegetables from oven and add to pot. I sliced the squash into cubes and scraped it out with a spoon. Toss in cilantro. Add water to achieve desired consistency. You may want to increase heat to medium. Add salt and pepper to taste. Adjust other flavours to taste. Serve when soup has uniformly taken on the reddish hue imparted from the beets, cilantro is wilted, and soup is simmering gently.
This soup probably serves 7-8. As a nursing mother, my sense of serving size is off. I am so grateful for these seasonal vegetables we are blessed with!

Variations: Experiment with different squash and root vegetables! You could also throw in cooked rice or beans. Try adding a hint of cinnamon or nutmeg.

Food storage applicability: Limited by means. Should be able to make this soup exclusively from storage during part of the year with the help of a root cellar or cold room and/or overwintering your veggies.

Word of Wisdom: At this time of year, this is a fresh produce in season victory! I love how much of this soup is fruit, vegetable, and herb, just what we should be eating. The only suspicious character is the guar gum if your coconut milk isn't pure.

Gluten and corn free: This soup should be safe. There is a small chance of corn cross contamination if the produce was stored with corn.

A note on root vegetables: Root vegetables tend to be particularly susceptible to absorbing pesticides (think about how roots work). As such, we have a tendency to scrub and peel. I vastly prefer the flavour, texture, and nutrition of intact root vegetables. For those eating mainly vegan diets, traces of dirt remaining on (preferably organic) roots may be a viable source of Vitamin B12, the most difficult nutrient to obtain without milk or meat.

If you try my recipe or any variation of it, let me know what you think! Thanks for reading!
 
Today's post is brought to you by my dehydrator. For me, my dehydrator is an important part of meeting my food goals. Why home dehydrate?
  • enables storage of fruits, vegetables, and herbs
  • maintains a good proportion of nutrients
  • control over additives and cross contamination (palm and/or cottonseed oil? potassium sorbate? sulphites? dextrose? no thank you!)
  • it's delicious
  • makes great snacks, especially on the go
  • wonderful way to spend time with children
  • quick method of storage
  • useful in preparing raw vegan foods
  • greater variety than commercially dehydrated options
I cut my pineapple about half a centimeter thick and dehydrate at 104 degrees fahrenheit until leathery and getting crisp. I like to dry mine quite ripe. I blend the pineapple cores with one banana and a tablespoon of coconut manna (shredded coconut works too but the end product won't be as smooth) with trace water for a refreshing piña colada smoothie.

A note on certain terms used in the context of this site: I do not consume gluten or corn because of intolerances I have. I do not advise the extent to which they should or should not be consumed by others as this should be a personal and prayerful decision, and the answer is not universal. I do feel that there are many people who eat gluten and corn without realizing they are being implicated by intolerances. If you have never considered whether it is possible for you to be intolerant, I would encourage you to spend some time researching and praying. I am not recommending any particular resource as I am yet to find one that I feel is completely worthy. I think there is truth in some of the information about gluten, but it needs to be discerned prayerfully. I also label some foods on this site as vegan, raw vegan, and paleo. This is predominantly for the benefit of those who are looking to follow these diets. I find that many of my dietary choices fall into these categories, but do not want to suggest that these diets are purely inspired.