Ayurveda, the 'science of life', is a centuries-old healing modality from India, which highlights food as medicine. This traditional method is still practiced widely today. Cooking classes at the Ayurvedic Center of New Mexico highlight the importance of changing the way we cook and eat in accordance to the seasons. Fall is a time to focus on foods that are sweet, sour, and salty in nature.
Maple
Macaroons
You
will need:
2
organic egg whites
1/2
cup maple syrup
Pinch
of sea salt
1
1/2 cups unsweetened shredded coconut
2
tablespoons spelt OR rice flour
1/2
teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4
teaspoon ground cardamom
Preheat
the oven to 325 degrees and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
Combine
the egg whites, maple syrup and salt in a saucepan over medium heat
and cook, stirring constantly, until just warm, about 1 minute. Add
the coconut, flour, vanilla, and cardamom and continue to cook,
stirring constantly, until the mixture just begins to sizzle and is
slightly dry, about 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool for
a few minutes.
Using
a teaspoon and your fingers, form the dough into 24 small mounds on
the prepared pan. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until golden brown. Let
cool completely before serving.
Get
creative: chop
your favorite dark chocolate and place it in a dry metal or glass
bowl and set it over a pan of gently simmering hot water (or use a
double boiler if you have one). Stir the chocolate constantly until
just melted. Remove it from the heat.
Dip
the macaroons into the melted chocolate, then place them on a pan or
plate lined with wax or parchment paper. Chill in the refrigerator
until the chocolate hardens. Enjoy!
Greek
Lemon Soup
You
will need:
8
cups chicken or vegetable stock
2
shallots, or 1 small red onion, peeled and chopped
6
1-inch pieces of unpeeled fresh ginger, minced
1
cup carrots, peeled and diced
1/2
teaspoon sea salt
1
teaspoon each: thyme and coriander
½
teaspoon each: turmeric and paprika
Pinch
cayenne
1
organic/free range chicken breast half, cut into 1/8-inch-thick
diagonal slices
OR
1 cup cooked white beans (I like canellini)
2
Tablespoons lemon juice
1/4
cup chopped fresh cilantro, for garnish
2
tablespoons sliced scallion, cut thinly on the diagonal, for garnish
Coat
the bottom of a soup pot with olive oil. Combine the shallots,
ginger, carrots, and 1/4 teaspoon of the salt and sautee over high
heat for 5 minutes. Add broth and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to
medium-low and simmer for 20 minutes.
Stir
the thyme, coriander, turmeric, paprika, and cayenne into the soup.
Simmer
for 3 minutes, then add the chicken or white beans and simmer for an
additional 10 minutes, until the chicken/beans are tender and
thoroughly cooked. Stir in the lemon juice and the remaining 1/4
teaspoon salt, and taste. Add more maple or salt as needed.
Serve
garnished with the cilantro and scallion.
Get
creative: to boost your immunity, add 1 cup of stemmed and sliced
shiitake mushrooms when you add the chicken or white beans.
Spelt
Gnocchi with Caper Sardine Pesto
Choose
4 medium potatoes with dry flesh. Boil the potatoes in water until
soft.
Trying
to keep them warm without burning your fingers, cut the potatoes into
chunks and pass them through a vegetable mill or smash them with the
back of the fork.
Add
just enough spelt flour to give the dough consistency, about 1 1/2
cups. It needs to be supple without being too sticky.
Roll
the dough into inch-thick ropes. Cut the rope into small chunks.
Roll
each chunk off the edge of a fork to create grooves on one side and a
hole in the other side.
As
you are shaping the gnocchi, bring a large pot of salted water to a
boil.
Add
the gnocchi in small batches and remove them from the boiling water
with a slotted spoon when they rise to the top. Place them in a deep
baking dish and keep them in a 250 degree oven to stay warm if
desired.
Caper
Sardine Pesto
In
a food processor, mix:
½
cup olive oil
½
teaspoon sea salt
½
Tablespoon lemon juice
Blend
at highest speed for 2 minutes.
Turn
the off processor, add enough basil to fill the bowl, and blend at
lowest speed, stopping occasionally to tamp basil down into blades
and add more as needed.
While
blending, mixture may become too thick with basil leaves. If so, pour
additional olive oil in a small stream through the opening of the
food processor while it is blending.
Keep
adding basil until you have used about 2 cups fresh basil.
Remove
from food processor and place in a large serving bowl.
Add
2 Tablespoons capers and 1 can sardines.
Add
cooked gnocchi to the bowl, mix and serve with grated parmesan cheese
as garnish if you like.
Get
creative: instead of potatoes, use roasted, de-skinned winter squash
to make gnocchi.