1.5 cups raw cashews
1/4 cup raw sesame seeds
1/3 cup nutritional yeast
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup safflower oil (I use whatever lighter oil I have on hand, or double the olive)
several pieces of roasted bell pepper
several squeezes of lemon or lime
a dash of Bragg's Liquid Aminos (or soy sauce)
6 cloves of garlic (more or less to your taste!)
fresh jalapeno if you have it
1/4 - 1/2 cup of water (to bring it to your desired consistency)
Blend. Eat.
We enjoy this rolled in a tortilla with fresh basil, fresh arugula (ah! I bought some at market this morning!), or leftover salad greens. You can use it as a dip for veggies or chips...you could throw it on pasta...the possibilities are endless. It is also a fairly forgiving recipe, so if you are short on cashews and use almonds, or substitute different oils, it usually turns out just right anyway!
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Dan has spent the day with us today, which is just...so nice. After market (arugula, nettles, ramps, eggs, coffee, summer sausage and organic cheese from grass-fed and finished cattle) we headed to the garden to work on the fence, water, weed and plant a little more kale and carrots, and some flowers we bought this morning as well.
don't you garden with a handbag?
tiny lettuce
amish snap peas
turnips!
This we refer to as the comfrey jungle. It is on my list of "things to learn about" - this is an amazing plant, both for its medicinal uses (its other name is "boneknit") and its ability to THRIVE. It also makes wonderful green compost, apparently. I would like to learn how to use this herb this year.
Yarrow is another herb (like the lemon balm and comfrey) that has come back full steam in the garden; it also has many medicinal uses that I am only beginning to learn about.
Dan is building the fence around our plot with bamboo; today he was trying to figure out a trellis for where we will vertically grow melons and squash. Our garden already looks and feels so much more like a real garden than it ever did last year. I am still ready to be disappointed, but I'm working on turning that around and imagining abundance! It would be really nice to have enough to share a lot with other people - it is one of the requirements of having a garden there, that 10% go to someone else who needs it - neighbors, friends, the local food banks. Last year it was like, "here's a handful of beans and 5 onions." I think the garden can feeeeeel the love this time around...
Oh the handbag. I laughed so hard...right out loud. Perfect.
ReplyDeleteYour garden is looking great. Seeing those little things come up moves something deep inside me. I can definitely feel the love. :) -Debbie
So much growth already! I'd like to try comfrey here but I didn't get any seeds this year. It's good to hear it's hearty!
ReplyDeleteI will totally try your recipe. That looks so delicious!
I've grown comfrey and never really used it but one day, long ago, I had mysterious rashes develop on my breasts while breastfeeding and a girlfriend gave me a tincture made from comfrey that did the trick. It is indeed full of life.
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