Little Italy

I had an all-Italian day today without even realizing it!

First was a latte

… or, a slightly less classy and less time-consuming mug o’ joe with almond milk added. And the frothiness?

This was made by shaking the almond milk in a jar first! I discovered this trick on Friday morning after my work Christmas party. I was craving something sweet. Not water… anything but water. So I poured some almond milk into the container that held the last of my strawberry flavored syrup and shook it for a while and was surprised to find that the milk turned super frothy.

So simple, right?

I’ve used a hand blender in the past and the milk was nowhere near as frothy as it was when I used the shaking method. There’s a lesson in this! Simple is better!

Then there was lunch. I bought some olive and rosemary bread crisps and threw together some tomato, onion, basil, vinegar and a little salt to top it with. Interesting fact: I thought this dish was called bruschetta, but ‘bruschetta’ actually only refers to the bread part. So, this dish would be called bruschetta with tomato and basil!

For dinner I made a new vegetable lasagna to complete my Italian food trio :)

Time to go do some packing in preparation for our big move next weekend!

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Blustery Day

It is a rainy, windy, miserable day here in NYC…

The weatherman told us that yesterday would be a great day to get out and about because today would be like this. So we did!

We started with a walk down 9th Avenue- about 30 blocks.

It was cold, but worth it! We eventually stopped for an early dinner at A.O.C., a French restaurant on Bleecker Street. I ordered the pressed baguette with vegetables- it was supposed to have goat cheese, but they left that out for me.

I put most of my fries on my sandwich!

We both had a Hoegaarden (vegan beer!) and this water, which I kept accidentally picking up and drinking, thinking it was my beer!

Interesting fact: Hoegaarden beer is vegan, but if you order it in a bottle the label is attached with a casein-based glue. This information was given in response to an inquiry to Hoegaarden about whether the beer itself is vegan- pretty cool of them to volunteer the information about the bottle as well!

I much prefer my beer on tap, anyway. It tastes better from a glass!

After dinner we walked over to Greenwich Village. The picture above was taken at 5pm… It gets dark so early these days!

There was a massive Santa pub crawl underway so it was hard to find a bar that wasn’t packed full of drunk Santas! We stopped in at one place that is usually quiet and we were horrified to find peanut shells and food all over the floor, and beer spilled everywhere. So we made a hasty exit and 2 blocks later we found a quiet bar with lounges to sit on and 2-for-1 drinks. Somehow most of the Santas had not discovered this place!

(We only found it because we saw a Santa open the door, look inside, and then turn around and shout to his friends, “OH MY GOD, THIS PLACE IS EMPTY!!!” Fortunately, none of his friends heard him- but we did!)

After a few hours we headed for home, but not without stopping for pizza first!

We split an individual pizza at Monster Pizza: Toby’s half was Margherita and mind was topped with tomato and mushroom. It was fantastic! I can honestly say that I didn’t miss the cheese one little bit. The tomato sauce and mushrooms had so much flavor!

2 hours after we got home the rain started, and 13 hours later it’s still going. That’s okay because I’m quite content sitting inside under my blanket with my warm vanilla coffee :)

Have a great Sunday everybody!

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Vegan Lasagna

Last night I decided to continue my Allie and Pete-inspired “no food goes to waste” streak by making this vegan lasagna. Interesting fact: ‘lasagna’ actually means the sheet of pasta used, and ‘lasagne’ means multiple lasagna sheets. In most countries outside of the US (including Italy, and Australia where I grew up), ‘lasagne’ is the correct spelling for this dish.

For the past few months, every time I eat a load of bread I have been putting the ends of the loaf in the freezer. I didn’t know what I would do with them, but I knew I would use them one day. No food goes to waste! Then yesterday I had the idea to make lasagna, and instead of buying pasta sheets I decided to use up all the frozen bread ends.

I microwaved the ends and chopped them into cubes, just like croutons. I tossed them in a little olive oil and toasted them in the oven at 400F.

While they were toasting I sliced a large eggplant and browned the strips in a frying pan. I didn’t cook them in oil because I’d already used oil on the bread, and my pan is nonstick. They cooked perfectly!

About 7 months ago I thought I had become intolerant to eggplant because I had it a few times and felt really unwell afterwards. I now know that this was more likely because of the amount of oil used in the dish (eggplant parmigiana hero) and also possibly because I was eating it well before it was in season, therefore it was grown far away and conventially. I can eat it now with no problems whatsoever.

I sliced some mushrooms and onion and then steamed the onion in the frying pan with a little water until it was soft but not cooked through. Once that was done I began to layer my lasagna in a glass dish.

I started with a layer of bread, then spooned half a medium can of diced organic tomatoes over the top. I added a layer of onion and then a layer of mushrooms.

On top of that went a layer of eggplant, then the other half of the can of diced tomatoes, another layer of bread, more onions, more mushrooms and more bread. I opened large can of whole organic tomatoes and spread them out across the top, smushing them as I went. Then, a layer of torn basil leaves…

… before I layered the last of the eggplant and then poured the sauce from the can of whole tomatoes over everything. I topped the lasagna with bread crumbs made from some leftover croutons (I had to make some myself using a rolling pin; if you have a food processor, you can save yourself 10 minutes!) and then poured nutritional yeast over the top. I baked the dish at 375F until it was cooked. I covered it with foil halfway through cooking, but you may not need to do this.

It tasted fantastic! … last night, and this morning for breakfast :)

Quick summary:

Ingredients

~1 loaf of bread, cubed and toasted
1 large eggplant, sliced into thin strips
2 onions, steamed to soften
~10 white mushrooms, sliced
1 medium can diced tomatoes
1 large can whole tomatoes
~4 large basil leaves
Nutritional yeast

Directions

Layer ingredients in a large dish. Top with bread crumbs and nutritional yeast. Bake until cooked on top and soft in the middle.

Buon appetito!

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