Getting over injury and sickness is never fun or easy, but the payoff for laying low, daily yoga, and herbal tea comes in the form of quicker recovery to enjoy these beautiful days. I complained a lot and posted a few too many photos of me and my dog in bed, but I'm grateful today for my health.
To celebrate our first bike ride together of 2015, E. made dinner. Crusted barbecue tempeh, raw kale salad, and fried potatoes, paired with some cider from East End Brewing Company, was a great way to end the day.
The dressing for the Kale salad was then used on our dehydrating kale. This recipe is E.'s, adapted from Brad's Raw Kale Chips, using ingredients readily available around the house. These aren't "guilt free" except that no one should feel guilty about eating. They have fat and calories from healthy sources, and are a wonderful snack to satisfy cravings for crunchy, savory treats.
- Raw sunflower seeds, enough to coat the bottom of food processor
- Garlic (whole cloves, 3+ depending on preference)
- Green onions (1-2), hard to taste and therefore optional
- Miso paste (scoop about the size of a ping pong, about 2 Tbsp)
- Peanut butter, natural and crunchy (hefty scoop, a bit more than the miso)
- Lemon juice (2-3 Tbsp)
- Ginger (optional, to taste)
- Water
- Kale, raw and destemmed (however much you have and can put on your dehydrator, probably 3 handfuls or so)
- Add the sunflower seeds to the bottom of food processor to coat the bottom. Grind up into finest powder possible.
- Add garlic and green onions. Blend.
- Next, add the wet ingredients, starting with the miso and peanut butter. Blend again.
- Add lemon juice, ginger, and water. Water is the magic sauce! It adjusts the dressing consistency. If you add too much, add a bit more PB to bring it back. Blend.
- Pour dressing on kale and massage it in. The surface area of kale shrinks, so if the dressing is strong, add less dressing because the chips will also be strong.
- Add kale to dehydrator. Spread out bigger pieces, but if you buy the pre-cut kale on sale at Trader Joes, layer the smaller pieces and "cook" for a bit longer so they become one motherchip. Otherwise, leave the kale alone for 12 hours or so, checking periodically to see how they're doing.
This recipe also works well for beet greens, a great way to make the most of these healthy leafy tops.
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