So they turned out wonderful! Pretty good for my first attempt. The quinoa has a great flavor and texture.![]()
So they turned out wonderful! Pretty good for my first attempt. The quinoa has a great flavor and texture.![]()
It's not one of my favorites, but it's good in lentil soup and in kidney bean salad.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
We like Quinoa very much and use it similar to rice.
For instance:
* Cook a small teacup Quinoa (in 2 teacups of water with a little salt. If you like it, you can add Curry or Curcuma.). Roast chicken or turkey in a pan, and use the same pan for steaming some vegetables (I like babycarrots and zucchini), add some herbs if you like and mix the cooked Quinoa into the vegetables.
Thats my last Minute recipe it's really quick
* Cook some Quinoa.
Take small zucchinis, cut them in halves (lengthwise). Take some of the zucchini-flesh (?! how do you call that) out with a spoon so you can "stuff" them.
Roast an onion and some mushrooms with the zucchini-flesh that you scraped out of the zucchinis before, season with salt/pepper/garlic and mix it with the cooked Quinoa. (You can also add olives and/or feta cheese if you like it.)
Fill this mixture into your zucchini-halves.
You need some tomato sauce (I take a can of tomatoes, add 3 dried tomatoes and blend it).
Put the tomato sauce and the zucchini-halves into a casserole (you can add some grated cheese on top) and bake for about 40 minutes (it's ready when the zucchinis are soft boiled).
Last edited by Susan; 08-13-2010 at 12:34 AM.
You can use it like rice, it is quite great and a complete protein. The trick is to WASH it. And Wash it. And wash it some more. Did I say wash it? It comes with a soapy-like exterior that can become bitter if it is not removed - so wash it some more
This really is a great grain - I think that some don't care for it because it wasn't washed enough and it was bitter. I understand that soap-like exterior fends off insects in the wild - I can see why
I've used it like a pilaf and in assorted ethnic dishes. It may be the only grain that is a complete protein, though there may be others I've not run across.
Last edited by Catrin; 08-13-2010 at 02:06 AM.
Some of the packages do tell you to wash it.
Then there are other brands that are pre-washed but don't say so.
I wash mine plenty, it's the sweetness that puts me off.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
Add it cooked to any dish made with ground meat - sheperd's pie, meatballs, hamburgers, meatloaf. But a little tends to go a very long way with quinoa. I don't particularly like its taste when not hidden in ground meat. Stir fried like fried rice is also pretty good.
I love quinoa...although it is relatively new to my diet. I have basically only eaten it "plain"...but cooked in fat-free chicken broth, with maybe a sprinkle of parmesan cheese on it. I have yet to try it in a recipe. I hadn't thought about it, but when Oakleaf mentioned the "sweetness" of it...she was right, it does have a somewhat odd sweetness to it.
2012 Seven Axiom SL - Specialized Ruby SL 155