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A delicious jar of flavanoid and probiotic rich Kimchi!

 

I've been super excited to share my method for Sauerkraut, and even better in my humble opinion, KIMCHI, for quite some time… the day has finally arrived!  

Personally, I consider Kimchi to be Sauerkraut's amped-up cousin.  My methods for making the two are exactly the same with kimchi simply requiring a few additional veggies & spices to provide its gorgeous color and kick of hot, spicy flavor.  In fact, I was fascinated to learn both Sauerkraut and Kimchi are Asian in origin.  Although sauerkraut, German for "sour cabbage", is thought of as a German invention, Chinese laborers building the Great Wall over 2,000 years ago ate it regularly and it was likely brought to Europe 1000 years later by Gengis Kahn.

Kimchi – and Sauerkraut too – is low in calories, helps boost metabolism, and contains immune and digestion boosting probiotics of the order of 1000 times that of yogurt!  And, the longer it ferments, the greater the health benefits become.  In previous articles I've discussed the important benefits of excellent DigestionProper Food Combining, and a Detoxification lifestyle so we're aware of the amazing affect probiotics have on our skin, digestion and health overall.  In fact, by incorporating probiotic rich foods on a daily basis such as apple cider vinegar, kimchi and sauerkraut, it's actually possible to reverse poor gut health (aka leaky gut) due to unhealthy diet, illness, or antibiotic use.  While there isn't any strict amount of the foods to take daily, the more we eat, the quicker the gut will mend, as these are all boasting prebiotics, probiotics and other compounds that encourage healthy immune and gastrointestinal systems.   Let's look a bit closer at why, via the benefits of Kimchi (most of which are shared by sauerkraut as well).  

  • Kimchi is a storehouse of vitamins including A, B1, B2 and C as well as being rich in essential amino acids and minerals such as iron, calcium, selenium.  It boasts an impressive array of powerful antioxidants and provides the aforementioned benefit of probiotics in the form of lactobacillus bacteria.  Kimchi contains numerous healthful components including capsaicin, chlorophyll, carotenoids, flavonoids and isothiocyanates.
  • Kimchi is an excellent food to promote digestion.  Its probiotics, produced during the fermentation of Kimchi, not only enhance the flavor but create the healthy bacteria, Lactobacillus, which is required by the body to maintain a healthy state of intestinal flora.  The organic acid, lactobacilli, and lactic acid produced during fermentation suppress harmful bacteria and stimulate beneficial bacteria, prevent constipation, clean intestines and prevent colon cancer. 
  • Even prior to fermentation, the cabbage base in Kimchi is well known for its detoxification qualities and ability to aid the body in getting rid of wastes and toxins.  It helps in cleaning up the intestines, stimulating better assimilation of nutrients in the body.
  • Cancer:  Cabbage contains healthful flavanoids which are known to inhibit the growth of cancer cells. Additionally glucosinolates found in cabbage break down to form isothiocyanates which are well known for their effectiveness against cancer growth.  Capsaicin, contained in the red chili pepper of Kimchi, helps reduce the chance of developing lung cancer.  Allicin, a chemical contained in garlic, assists to reduce the chance of developing stomach, thyroid and liver cancer. Indole-3-Carbinol contained in cabbage helps reduce the chance of developing stomach cancer. 
  • Garlic and hot red chili pepper in Kimchi kill bacteria that cause gastritis, such as Helicobacter Pylori.  

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.  This information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. 

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While I do personally eat Kimchi or Sauerkraut almost daily, it's wise to start off with a small amount as any fermented food is highly detoxifying and a "die-off affect" can contribute even further to the toxic burden released.  We never want to overwhelm our immune systems by detoxifying too fast, so it's important to implement changes and additions/subtractions to our lifestyle gradually and listen to our body along the way.  That said, adding just a small amount of this exotic condiment can simply transform the flavor of anything from salads, sandwiches, wraps, tacos, rice, to a minestrone soup or a bowl of lentils… endlessly yummy applications!

Recipes for Sauerkraut and Kim-chi adapted from Turtle Lake Refuge

Recipe for Sauerkraut (makes 1/2 gallon)
Ingredients

  • 2 green cabbages
  • 2 T sea salt

Method

  1. Grind the cabbage (red or green) in a food processor or chop it fine with a knife by hand.
  2. Once the cabbage is ground, add the salt and mix it all together well.
  3. Use a wooden dowel (I use the end of a French handle-free rolling pin) to pound the cabbage and salt which brings out the juices.
  4. Once the juices are flowing, pack tightly using a wooden dowel or clean fist to pack tightly into a 1/2 gallon jar all the way to the top.
  5. When the kraut is close to filling the jar, the juices should be covering the top of the kraut. It is key that the kraut is under the cabbage juices because culturing sauerkraut is due to an anaerobic (without oxygen) reaction rather than an aerobic (with oxygen) reaction. 
  6. Place the lid on the jar not too tightly so that as it cultures, the excess juices can escape (otherwise your jar might explode).  Place the jar in a pan that can catch the overflow juices. 
  7. Cover the jar with a towel to keep it dark and let sit at room temperature for one week. 
  8. After a week has past, there may be a bit of discoloration on the top of the kraut if all the juices overflowed out.  If so, just scrape off the top and keep the lower layers.** 
  9. Now you can refrigerate the jar or repack the kraut into smaller jars to store.  We store our sauerkraut in the fridge, but it keeps in this form for months and months.

Recipe for Spicy Kimchi

Ingredients

  • 1 green cabbage
  • 1 chinese cabbage
  • 2 large bunches of radishes
  • 4 carrots
  • 1/2 thumb size hunk ginger
  • 4 scallions
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp chili powder
  • 1 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 2 Tbsp sea salt

 Method

  1. Chop all the veggies according to your preference – I like to chop the cabbage & scallions coarsly for the Kimchi – mix in the spices & salt and follow the method above.

** If you're a newbie looking for a more "fool-proof" method I recommend the Perfect Pickler which has a little vacuum seal on the top to seal out air & induce a naturally pro-biotic world. It self-pressurizes to lock out airborne microbes. I have one and I found it worked great.

  

Have you ever made (or considered making) your own sauerkraut?

What's your favorite recipe variation?

 

Much Love,

Juliane

 

Thank you for visiting 🙂

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I am not a healthcare practitioner or provider. To the extent that any information is provided through this website, it is for general informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute or substitute for medical advice or counseling, the practice of medicine including but not limited to psychiatry, psychology, psychotherapy or the provision of health care diagnosis or treatment, the creation of a physician-patient or clinical relationship, or an endorsement, a recommendation or a sponsorship of any third party, product or service by me. If you have or suspect that you have a medical problem, contact your health care provider promptly. Information and statements regarding dietary supplements available on this website have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

 

yummier. healthier. yet looks, feels & tastes like traditional!

 

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Raw Veggie Stuffing… Swoon!

 

Savory Raw Veggie Stuffing is absolute yumminess!  A perfect hardy, cozy winter recipe.  You could fool a person into thinking it was cooked if you didn't tell!  Boasting a beautiful complexity of flavor, fresh, vibrant color and that oomph of hardy, slightly gooey texture we all love in our holiday stuffing!  This fantastic recipe is perfect for a holiday spread, or added as a savory filling to stuffed mushrooms, bell peppers or inside steamed acorn squash or pumpkin!  A yummy, healthy dish to accompany your winter suppers.

 ~ 

Recipe for Savory Raw Veggie Stuffing (4 small, yet very filling servings)

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup walnuts or a combo of walnuts & pecans (preferably soaked & dehydrated)
  • 4-5 pitted dates
  • 1 teaspoon dried rosemary
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon himalayan salt
  • dash of fresh ground pepper
  • few sprinkles of poultry seasoning (optional), maybe a shake of garlic (optional)
  • 1/2 large carrot chopped
  • 1 1/2 stalks celery chopped
  • 1 scallion chopped into big pieces for food processor
  • Drizzle of EVOO for finishing

Method

  1. Add walnuts through salt & pepper to a food processor and pulse several times until combined into smaller pieces.  Add the chopped carrot, celery and scallion and process til carrots and celery are incorporated as small bits like the picture.  Check seasonings.
  2. How easy is that!  Scrape into your serving bowl or onto your plates and drizzle with a wee bit of EVOO. Enjoy 🙂

 

How is your New Year going so far?  I hope fantastic.  All my best & much love to you!

XOXO

Juliane

 

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am in love with plant based Living Foods!  SO fresh.  So clean.  So flavorful.   Not to mention energizing, beautifying & healing…  they taste better than traditional cooked fare!  I really feel it's what nature intended for our nourishment.   

French Hazelnut Pumpkin Pie with "whipped cream" is no exception – this coming from a girl who always disliked hated pumpkin pie – that is until 6 years ago, when I discovered an amazing French recipe for cooked Hazelnut Pumpkin Pie.  Of course, now that I follow a primarily Raw Vegan foodstyle (because it tastes and makes me feel so amazing!) I had to figure out a way to upgrade that French recipe to a delicious, enzyme rich, Living Foods version.   

 

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Perfect for entertaining – or for just having as your own special, beautifying treat awaiting you in the freezer.  Since it's frozen it remains beautifully fresh compared to a traditional pie.IMG_5837

This knockout has a candied cookie-like crust and a creamy cheesecake-esque pumpkin filling. 

 

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Oh, and shhh… don't tell anyone about the secret ingredient that makes this SO much creamier & delish than any pumpkin pie you've had before (carrot juice).  Plus, as always, it's unbelievably simple to prepare.

 Please enjoy!

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Recipe for French Hazelnut Pumpkin Pie

Crust: 


Ingredients:

  • 1 3/4 cup raw pecans (or a combo of pecan, macadamia & walnuts, preferably soaked overnight & deydrated for 24 hours)
  • 
1/2 cup raw hazelnuts (preferably soaked overnight & dehydrated for 24 hours)
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 
1 tablespoon coconut oil

  • 1 1/2 tablespoons date paste (or use 2-3 dates mixed into 1st step of nut processing- just be careful not to turn the nuts into date-nut butter!) 
  • 1/2 tsp himalayan salt

Method:

  1. Place nuts in food processor, pulse into small crumbs – be mindful not to overprocess into nut butter!
  2. Combine the rest of ingredients by hand in a separate bowl.  
  3. Add this mixture to the crumbed nuts, mixing by hand until fully incorporated.  Mixture should stick together when pinched between fingers.
  4. Dump this into a 9 inch tart pan with removable bottom (or use saran if tart pan is one piece).  If you don't have a tart pan, use a pie plate with saran. 
  5. Press mixture firmly into tart pan or pie plate.  Depending on size of your pan, thickness of your crust, you may have extra crust left over (especially if using the shorter edged tart pan.  No problem! Just make some mini tarts or cutout a few "cookies" with your favorite cookie cutter!  Once dehydrated fill the extra tarts with any leftover filling you may have- or with a little cashew cream topped with fresh sliced fruit! Pretty & Yummy 🙂
  6. Dehydrate 48 hours at 115.

  7. Chill crust in freezer for 1/2 hour before filling. 

Filling

Ingredients:

  • 
1 1/2 cups cashews 
  • 1/2 cup chopped pumpkin
  • 1/2 cup maple syrup

  • 1/2 cup coconut oil

  • 1/2 cup carrot juice plus 1/4 cup reserved for blending assistance if needed (yes that's right, carrot juice!) 
  • 1/2 tablespoon vanilla 
  • 
1/4 teaspoon himalayan salt
  • 3/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg

  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves (optional)

Method:

  1. Blend all ingredients in Vitamix until super smooth.  Add additional 1/4 cup carrot juice as needed to facilitate blending- tho try not to use more than 2 tablespoons.

  2. Pour into tart crust and chill in freezer overnight.
  3. Store in freezer and slice it right out of the freezer.
  4. Add a small dallop of whipped cream (click preceding link for recipe!) if desired.

**Disclaimer! The above recipe is my tweaked version which is SO amazing as I've already mentioned, I know:) However, I wasn't able to get pictures of it so the pics here are of the 1st version which looks a little different. The above tweaked recipe will have a more solid, finely ground crust and the filling is much smoother and creamier. Bottom line, your pie will have a less grainy texture in both the filling & crust. Although they look somewhat similar I wanted to point this out.  

 

Let me know how you like this one!  Did you make any tweaks to make it your own?  How were your Holidays?  Any New Year's Resolutions?

All Love,

Juliane

 

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As promised here is the delicious Chilled Carrot Soup with Lemon-buttered Farfalle recipe I made from our garden's prolific carrot harvest…  It's a lovely French recipe combining cool, luxuriously silky, sweet, carrot puree with unctious lemon-buttered pastas tossed in fresh dill.  

THE perfect light yet decadent meal for this hot, steamy weather.

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Chilled French Carrot Soup w/ Lemon-buttered Farfalle

Chilled Carrot Soup with Lemon-buttered Farfalle

(Serves 6)

Ingredients:

  • 2 tablespoons butter (separated)
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 small onion chopped
  • 1 pound carrots peeled and sliced into coins (if they're baby carrots don't peel)
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 4 cups chicken stock
  • 1 1/2 cups farfalle pasta
  • 2 tablespoons fresh squeezed lemon juice (separated)
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh dill

Method:

  1. Heat 1 tablespoon butter and 1 tablespoon olive oil in a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add the chopped onion and sautee until soft, about 5 minutes. 
  2. Add the carrots, honey and nutmeg and continue to sautee for another 10 minutes.
  3. Add the chicken stock, bring to a simmer, cover and cook for 10 minutes until the carrots are softened.
  4. Puree the liquid using an immersion blender or in a Vitamix for the silkiest, smooth result possible.  Stir in 1 tablespoon of fresh lemon juice into the soup.  Chill for a few hours or overnight.
  5. Prior to serving, cook the farfalle pasta to package directions. Drain and return to pot with 1 tablespoon of butter and stir to coat. Add the fresh chopped dill and 1 tablespoon lemon juice to the pasta and combine.
  6. Ladle the chilled carrot soup into shallow serving bowls. Divide the dilled pasta amongst the soup bowls, mounding a small amount in the center of each bowl.

Enjoy!

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Chilled French Carrot Soup w/ Lemon-buttered Farfalle


PS. Don't forget to check out StyleNectar's convenient Recipe Index!

It's been a few weeks since my last post because we've been away on vacation. In addition to sharing a few vaca snaps with you, I have a delicious new recipe you'll love for a Chilled French Carrot Soup with Lemon-buttered Farfalle which I'll share in my next post.

Our vacation was spent in beloved Chatham, Mass (Cape Cod) and Nantucket, a part of the world where the weather is always mild and the sunlight ever clear and bright.  We adore the salty sea breezes, beautiful sandy beaches and silver, cedar shingled houses covered in climbing pink roses with hydrangeas galore and the lushest of English gardens.

We biked and we hiked, Jim fly fished and I sketched (lot's of material for upcoming paintings!). We strolled lazily through beautiful art galleries, window shopped and frequented The Bean (our favorite Nantucket coffee house) a couple times a day. Dining on Nantucket is absolutely fabulous. So much so that we simply allowed ourselves to steep in the romance of beautiful, fresh flavors and wonderful ambiance rather than bothering to photo-document it all. Just a few of our favorites are Company of the CauldronOran MorPearl, Lola 41  and Toppers. All amazing.

Meanwhile, miles away back at the home front, our garden was going into overdrive, providing us a bounty of fresh produce to help keep us light and cool for the hot, steamy weather that welcomed us home (think 95+ and high humidity).  Jim brought in beans, peas, jalapenos, ruby beets, herbs and gorgeous baby collards, red leaf lettuce, beet greens and nasturtiums (DELISH in salads) plus six pounds of beautiful baby French carrots… I'm sure I'm forgetting some things too!

Our abundance of carrots resulted in a delicious Chilled French Carrot Soup with Lemon-buttered Farfalle I'll share in my next post…  The perfect, light meal for this hot, steamy weather.

~

Nantucket and Chatham Snapshots ~ Part I

Stay tuned… I'll be sharing a few more snaps with you soon!

(As always, click images for a better, larger view)

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Bye for now… I'll be sharing a few more snaps with you soon!

PS. Check out StyleNectar's convenient Recipe Index!

Pesto has always been a special favorite of mine… as though its ingredients were terribly rare or difficult to prepare… it's that luxuriously delicious.  Fortunately, as pre-packaged versions don't at all measure up to homemade, it's quite simple to make.  Pesto can be customized to whatever is in season- or growing in your garden as the case is with me- nothing needs to be measured precisely… all you need is a trusty food processor and you're ready to go.

Last weekend Jim harvested a TON of fresh spinach from our garden, half of which I boxed into leftover stay-fresh spinach boxes I'd saved from the market (for our delicious morning green smoothie) the other half I made into an amazing Spring Garden Spinach & Chive Pesto.  I absolutely LOVE spinach pesto -even better than basil or arugula versions.  I made a large enough batch that we couldn't use it all immediately so I froze the bulk in ice-cube trays then popped the cubes into a ziplock freezer baggie.  Great trick!  Now we have Spring Pesto on hand whenever we need it- which er, seems to be every day suddenly…

Slathered on sandwiches

Tossed with a beautiful gluten free pasta

Starring in a potato salad

Smeared on gluten free toast/crackers

Tossed with grilled vegetables… 

Jim… I think it's time to harvest the rest of that spinach!  We're already running low on our Spring Pesto supply:)

Below, I thought I'd share a few bonus snaps (please click them to enlarge for better, larger view) from the garden which is more and more breathtaking by the day!  We've been enjoying collard greens, spinach, radishes and herbs so far this Spring with lots more on the way… purple potatoes, fingerlings, peas, carrots, beets, squash, melon, zucchini, tomatoes, peppers & eggplant!  My husband has created the most magnificent world of beauty just outside our kitchen door.

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Spring Garden Spinach & Chive Pesto frozen in ice-cube trays & popped into a freezer baggie! 
 

Spring Garden Spinach & Chive Pesto

Ingredients:

  • 8 cups fresh spinach packed (or substitute arugula, flat leaf parsley or basil)
  • 1 cup fresh chopped chives (to help food processor out a bit)
  • 3/4 of a cup walnuts and pinenuts (or substitute your favorite combo of nuts)
  • fresh vegan Parmesan
  • 2 or 3 cloves garlic coarsley chopped (to assist food processor)
  • juice of 1/2 lemon- or an entire lemon- suit your taste- provides a beautiful freshness
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil– or more to create desired texture
  • sea salt to taste
  • fresh cracked pepper to taste- just a wee bit

Method:

  1. Pulse the greens and chives together in your food processor until the bulk of the spinach is reduced greatly. 
  2. Add the toasted nuts, cheese, garlic, lemon juice and olive oil and pulse until you achieve a desirable texture.
  3. Season with sea salt and a WEE bit of fresh cracked pepper to taste.

Enjoy!

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The Land of Spinach

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Deep within the Land of Spinach

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Empty Spinach rows following Jim's record holding Spinach harvest… no worries, there is more growing to the right of this photo.

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"Big Red", Jim's trusty wheelbarrow

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Beet Greens

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The Land of Beets

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The Land of Carrots

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Deep within the Land of Carrots

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Purple Potato Blossoms ~ yes, the potatoes will be purple too!

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Baby Peppers growing up near the gorgeous Land of Beets

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The Land of Swiss Chard

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Sun-drenched Pea

 

What are your favorite Springtime veggies?

Are you growing anything edible in your yard this year?

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Cozy Lentil Soup with Sauteed Sausages

Funny, each time I sit down to write about food, I instantly think of my mom. She is my culinary inspiration after all! And her lentil soup is to die for… as are every single one of the other 15 to 20 cold weather delights she makes. Really, she's Queen of Soup! One of the best parts of a soup night growing up was the fresh bread she served alongside. Perfectly crusty, steaming fresh from the oven, a little towel over top. Smeared with butter that melted instantly under jam, it was the perfect accompaniment. Of course it didn't stop there, she'd always arrange a simple, refreshing cool bite- a medly of crunch to contrast with our steaming bowls of nourishment.

I know Mom will love this Cozy Lentil Soup with Sauteed Sausages. Your family will also!  For an easy accompaniment, set out sliced pears or apples. Feeling more ambitious? A mixed green salad with apples or pears, blue cheese and walnuts would be lovely.

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Sausages Sauteeing in Butter! Could anything smell better!?


Cozy Lentil Soup with Sauteed Sausages Recipe (Serves 4)

Ingredients

  • 10 ounces lentils 
  • 3 quarts ham, chicken or vegetable stock (I love "Better Than Bullion" added to water)
  • 1 large leek (white part only) chopped
  • 2 celery sticks chopped
  • 2 carrots chopped
  • 1 onion quartered
  • 1 whole clove (insert sharp end into an onion quarter for easy removal)
  • 1 bay leaf
  • sea salt
  • freshly ground pepper 
  • 4 high quality sausages (I love kielbasa, or use any high quality sausage you love)
  • 2 tablespoons organic butter (organic because it's CHOCK full of vitamins & minerals unlike non-organic & tastes AMAZING!)
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • a couple of handfuls of fresh baby spinach (optional, adds a lovely burst of green freshness- I normally use it!)

Method

  1. Add the lentils and stock to a large dutch oven or stockpot and bring to a boil
  2. Add all the vegetables and seasonings through the bay leaf.  Add sea salt and freshly ground pepper to taste (be careful with the salt if your stock isn't low sodium).  Allow to simmer for 1 hour.
  3. Near the end of the cooking time, saute the sausages in 1 tablespoon of butter until browned.  Add the browned sausages to the lentils.
  4. Melt the remaining tablespoon of butter and mix with 2 tablepoons of flour until smooth.  Add flour mixture to the soup, stirring over the heat until thickened slightly.
  5. Toss in a couple of handfuls of fresh, baby spinach for a vibrant punch of color.  Allow to wilt. Check seasonings.
  6. Ladle into serving bowls and garnish with finishing salt if desired. 
  7. Enjoy!

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Cozy Lentil Soup in the making…

Do you have a favorite cold weather dish? 

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Dreamy Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting

At StyleNectar I share only my favorite recipes with you- and these Dreamy Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting are no exception!  As with many of my recipes, you'll notice they're healthed up a bit-  yet they remain decadent as can be to the tastebuds!

Entertaining?  Dreamy Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting are perfect!  Whip these little darlings up the night before without sacraficing one iota of fresh, moistness.  The secret to  keeping them fresh?  Store them in an airtight container on the counter overnight, UNFROSTED.  Storing cupcakes in the fridge before serving is the quickest way to dry them out.  Mix the icing the night before also, stowing it covered in the fridge.  The next day, decorate your cakes with the icing in all of about 4 minutes and…  Ta da!  Moist, perfect cupcakes that taste as if made the hour before your guests arrived 🙂

Dreamy Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting Recipe (For 1 Dozen Dreams)

Cream Cheese Frosting:

  • 8 ounces 1/3 less fat cream cheese
  • 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar, SIFTED (don't skip sifting unless you like lumpy frosting!) 
  • 1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest

Using a hand held mixer, starting out on the lowest speed, combine the cream cheese, powdered sugar and lemon zest, until creamy and smooth.

Cupcakes:

  • 3/4 cup whole-wheat PASTRY flour (it's gotta be whole wheat PASTRY not reg whole wheat)
  • 1/2 cup all purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 cup canola oil
  • 3/4 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1/2 cup applesauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 1/2 cups finely shredded carrots
  • 1/4 cup plus 3 tablespoons finely chopped, LIGHTLY TOASTED, walnuts; Separated
  1. Position oven rack in middle of oven. Preheat the oven to 350 F. Line a standard muffin tin with 12 cupcake liners.
  2. Sift together the first 6 ingredients (whole wheat pastry flour through nutmeg). In a large bowl, whisk together the oil, brown sugar and eggs until combined. Next add in the applesauce, vanilla and carrots. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and stir gently with a spatula until just combined. Fold in 1/4 cup of the chopped walnuts.
  3. Using a large ice-cream scoop, divide the batter evenly amongst the muffin cups. Bake for about 20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.  Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
  4. Frost the cooled cupcakes and sprinkle with the remaining 3 tablespoons chopped walnuts.  Once the cupcakes are frosted they should be stored in the refrigerator.  

Make Ahead Note: To make cupcakes the night before, bake and cool cupcakes completely.  Then store UNFROSTED cakes in an airtight container on the counter overnight.  Stow the frosting, separately, in the refrigerator.  Frost the cupcakes the next day for perfectly moist, fresh cupcakes!

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Dreamy Carrot Cake Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting