Warm Soup for a Cold Apartment

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There are few things more pleasing than coming home from work on a rainy day to a sparkling clean kitchen, a happy dog, and the warm, inviting aroma of freshly made soup. When your darling is waiting with a kiss, well, that’s just the icing on the already perfect cake.

S took a sick day yesterday, but that didn’t stop him from having dinner ready and waiting for me when I got home. No relying on a lazy-day dinner last night! Instead, here’s what we ate:

Top-down view of a bowl of soup with a reddish broth, lots of kale and potatoes, and crumbled veggie chorizo.

Soup, soup, a tasty soup…!

S veganized this recipe for Potato Soup with Kale and Chorizo, a hearty concoction overflowing with tender kale and buttery, melt-in-your-mouth potatoes. It was steaming hot, a perfect weapon to combat our chilly apartment. (Let’s just say that our dryer broke at the most inopportune time imaginable – namely, right after S washed a load of sheets. They didn’t fit on my drying rack, so he had to rig up makeshift drying apparatuses in front of open windows… on a 45˚ day. Brrr.)

Our only complaint about the soup was that it was overly salty for our tastes. S learned a lesson from that little problem, though – always buy sodium-free or low-sodium bouillon so you can control the salt level of your soup. (He also learned to check the damn pantry before buying bouillon, because I keep it well stocked, but that’s another lesson entirely.) I’ll happily take an overly salty soup, though, if it means that someone else cooked it for me!

What do you like to come home to on a cold day?

Vegan Staples: Rice & Beans, Lazy Burrito Bowl Style

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When I introduced my Pantry Staples series, I joked about rice and beans being so much more than just “dumping plain white rice and canned black beans into a bowl and calling it dinner.” Cough. Well. Um. I can’t lie – what I’m about to share with you is really little more than that. But hear me out; I promise it’s justified.

It’s justified because sometimes you just can’t find it in you to do much more than heat up canned foods. Sometimes the thought of breaking out a knife and chopping veggies is just too much to handle. Maybe you worked late and came home and are really hungry and also exhausted and you have a headache and it’s already seven thirty and you’re angry and tired. Maybe you had a really exhausting day of truly back-breaking labor. Or maybe you’re just lazy. That’s okay. I won’t judge. It happens to the best of us. Whatever your reasons, here’s one way to use little more than pantry staples to create an easy, tasty, and filling dinner.

Red-orange plate with a bed of white rice topped with refried beans, pico de gallo, avocado slices, and cilantro.

An uninspiring photo, I know.

In all honesty, this is really your basic burrito bowl… on a plate. It’s just rice, canned refried beans (go for the low-sodium option!), store-bought pico de gallo, fresh cilantro, and sliced avocado. It’s simple, easy, and tasty. It’s not gourmet, but let’s get real – even those of us who could happily talk for hours about complex, multi-step meals sometimes resort to white rice and canned refried beans for dinner. And you can too. It’s okay. Avocado makes anything 35% more delicious (it’s Science!), and pico de gallo adds a pleasant, cool freshness to an otherwise warm meal.

A note on rice – I am a believer in brown rice. I love its complex, nutty flavor and its elevated nutritional profile. But S and I are working through a giant Costco-sized burlap sack of white basmati rice that S had before we moved in together, so we often resort to relatively quick-cooking white rice for dinner. You do what you can.

Because, really, that’s what being vegan is all about – doing what you can. We know that we can’t save every single animal, but by eschewing animal products and pushing corporations to provide us with cruelty-free options, we do make a difference and we do save some animals. And some is a better amount than none.

So do what you can, and when you can’t, don’t worry about it. Don’t try to craft three-layer vegan lasagnas with homemade tofu ricotta and pine nut crema for every single meal. Instead, when you’re feeling beat, enjoy a lazy meal while watching 30 Rock on Netflix and cuddling with your loved ones. You’ll be happier for it. I promise.

What’s your lazy meal of choice?

Recipe Showdown: Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls!

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Welcome to the the first Recipe Showdown of VeganMoFo 2012! In my Recipe Showdowns, I pit three recipes for one food item against each other to see which recipe reigns supreme. For this challenge, I put three recipes for Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls in the ring and let them fight it out for eternal glory and a special spot in my stomach. ;)

Before we get to the contestants (and the results!), let’s talk about pumpkin cinnamon rolls. More specifically, let’s talk about what makes an excellent pumpkin cinnamon roll. I went into this showdown with virgin taste buds – I’d never actually eaten a pumpkin cinnamon roll! I had some simple criteria for what I expected. I decided that a stellar pumpkin cinnamon roll should be:

  • Tender and fluffy. This goes for all cinnamon rolls, really. They should be light and airy, not heavy and dense.
  • Rich, but not sickeningly so. This is a tricky line to toe – I want my rolls to have a rich, gooey filling in their centers, but I don’t want to feel sick after eating a single roll.
  • Pumpkin-flavored! This is a no-brainer, but I want to taste the pumpkin! A healthy dose of pumpkin pie spice to round out the flavor profile is also a must.

All pretty reasonable, right? Of course, to make pumpkin cinnamon rolls, one needs pumpkin. After I used freshly roasted pumpkin puree for my first batch, I knew that I had to continue using it for consistency’s sake. My pumpkin puree was nowhere near as dark orange as the stuff you find in cans:

Clear Tupperware container of a bright orange pumpkin puree.

Bright!

I love how vibrant homemade puree is, but it doesn’t make for noticeably orange baked goods. So if my pumpkin cinnamon rolls don’t look as orange as you’d expect, that’s why. I should also note that I don’t have a stand mixer, so I kneaded the dough for all my rolls by hand, even when the instructions said to use a mixer with a dough hook.

Now that we’ve got the technical details out of the way, on to the recipes! First, I tried a recipe from a chef who only occasionally cooks vegan.

Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls from Eat, Live, Run

Intrigued by Jenna’s use of chia seeds and entranced by the beautiful, deep orange hue of the rolls, I eagerly put together the dough for these rolls one Sunday morning. As it completed its first rise, I realized that I’d totally forgotten to add the sugar. After much swearing and despairing, I made the sugarless dough into savory biscuits and forged ahead with a second batch of the now properly sugared dough. Here’s what these rolls looked like just before heading into the oven:

Glass baking pan with unbaked rolls. They're not very orange; they're more of a light brown.

Can you spot the chia seeds?

And here they are all baked up and drizzled with icing:

Closer shot of baked cinnamon buns in a glass pan. They're set against a bright blue napkin and they're drizzled with thick white icing.

Just a hint of orange…

I love how uniformly rolled these are – the dough was very easy to work with, so I had no problems rolling it out and slicing it. But how did they taste? Let’s look at the pros and cons.

PROS:

  • Not terribly unhealthy – just four TBSP of Earth Balance in the entire recipe!
  • Recipe was really easy to follow (as long as you don’t forget a key ingredient!)
  • S described them as “Really good!”

CONS:

  • S said, “This doesn’t taste overwhelmingly pumpkin-y… there’s definitely a spicy tinge to it, but I expected it to be more pumpkin-y.”
  • Texture was just the slightest bit chewy – I blame the chia seeds.
  • Boring, overly sweet glaze – it’s just confectioner’s sugar, almond milk, and vanilla.

Spoiler – this isn’t the only time you’ll hear about a lack of an overwhelming pumpkin flavor! Overall, S and I enjoyed these rolls. They were easy to make and were not overly sweet or fatty – I never felt remotely sick after eating them. Still, I was disappointed that they only used 1/3 cup of pumpkin and that the filling had no traditional pumpkin pie spice – just cinnamon. Adding more of those spices would’ve helped differentiate these rolls from regular ol’ cinnamon rolls.

OVERALL GRADE: B

Next, I tried a recipe that’s been on my To Make list for ages, one that was debuted during a VeganMoFo of yore to the delight of pumpkin-lovers everywhere.

Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls from Don’t Eat Off the Sidewalk

The recipe for these rolls is prefaced with the warning, “I hope you have your fat pants ready.” Sounds promising, right? These rolls were fluffy, puffy dreams before baking:

Pillows of pumpkin-y delight!

Just look at that gorgeous filling! These rolls were equally attractive after a brief stay in the oven:

In the foreground is a small white plate with a tall cinnamon roll dripping with white icing. In the middle background is a small glass jar filled with cinnamon sticks, and in the far background is another plate with another roll on it.

Fat pants = ready.

If the tops of these rolls look a little bit brown to you, you’re not seeing things. I accidentally broke my golden rule of baking and set my kitchen timer for the recommended minimum baking time of 20 minutes. Usually, I set the timer for at least three minutes before the minimum time to make sure I don’t overcook them. Alas, I broke my own rule and suffered the consequences. User error aside, how did these come out?

PROS:

  • Absolutely perfect texture – fluffy and tender.
  • Yummy sweet filling.
  • Definitely a rich treat.

CONS:

  • No real noticeable pumpkin flavor.
  • Dough itself wasn’t very sweet – could’ve used just a bit more sugar.
  • Same boring glaze as the ELR rolls.

These rolls are more in line with a traditional cinnamon roll than the ELR rolls, which means that they’re richer and more filling. I found the dough a little difficult to work with – it was very soft and droopy. But that definitely made for a truly perfect texture – I was delighted with the tender, fluffy crumb.

Overall grade: B+

The final contestant was from another baker who isn’t always vegan, but when I saw this recipe come up in my MoFo feed last week, I knew it was the perfect recipe to round out the trio.

Pumpkin Spice Cinnamon Rolls and Maple Cream Cheese Icing from Baker Bettie

Let me tell you a little something about myself – I am a sucker for anything maple. I think that maple is the absolute most perfect flavor in existence. Those maple sugar candies? Heaven on earth. Maple syrup? Makes me weak in the knees. I had no power to resist this recipe.

The rolls were adorably soft and fluffy before baking:

Top-down view of a metal baking pan with uncooked cinnamon rolls.

Raw rolls.

When they were done, they got a drizzle of warm maple-Tofutti icing:

Top-down view of a single cinnamon roll. It's definitely orange and it's drizzled with a thick, light brown icing with noticeable flecks of spice.

Hey! It’s orange!

Look! Finally, a roll with a noticeably orange hue! So – how’d this recipe stack up?

PROS:

  • Great texture in the sections that were fully baked.
  • Very prevalent pumpkin pie spice flavors – “the spiciest of the bunch,” according to S.
  • Yummy icing!

CONS:

  • No noticeable pumpkin flavor.
  • Icing was nowhere near as thin as in the original recipe’s photos – it was chunky, thick, and a bit difficult to spread.
  • Rolls did not bake evenly – some were severely under-done in the centers.

What a mixed bag of responses for this one! Here’s the deal – I took the rolls out after about 16 minutes in the oven. Their tops were already golden brown and a bit hard; all my instincts told me that the rolls were done. Later, when I started cutting into them, I realized that they were still very doughy in places. But it was way too late to put them back in the oven (and I have a not-so-secret love of raw dough), so S and I just ate them as-is, doughy bits and all.

Beyond the dough issue, the icing was a bit of a nightmare. It looks okay in that photo, but the rest of the rolls didn’t get as much care from me and basically received large globs of thick, slightly chunky icing. I’m really not sure how Kristin (the recipe’s author) managed to get her icing so uniform in texture – all the whisking in the world wouldn’t have made mine as thin and glob-free as hers.

This is a tough recipe to grade. If they’d cooked through, these would’ve been amazing – the rolls that were fully cooked had a wonderful texture and flavor. If I’d let myself fiddle with the icing, I could’ve gotten it to a better state. But the integrity of a Recipe Showdown relies on me following recipes exactly, so I couldn’t do that. Therefore, I can’t grade these as highly as they probably deserve.

Overall grade: B

So, by a hair, the recipe from Don’t Eat Off the Sidewalk takes the day!

Here’s what I think – pumpkin cinnamon rolls are all about the pumpkin-related spices, because you can’t really taste much actual pumpkin in them. Maybe canned pumpkin would add a more noticeable flavor, but I’m not so sure. So it’s all down to a judicious sprinkling of cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, cloves and allspice to trick our easily-hoodwinked tongues into thinking we’re tasting pumpkin.

I think that my perfect pumpkin cinnamon rolls are a mix of the Don’t Eat Off the Sidewalk rolls and the Baker Bettie rolls, with a modified version of the maple-cream cheese icing. S and I are hosting a harvest-themed party in a couple weeks, so who knows – you might just see my own pumpkin cinnamon roll recipe up here soon. ;)

What’s your favorite pumpkin cinnamon roll (or regular cinnamon roll!) recipe? What vegan food would you like to see in a Recipe Showdown!

Simplicity Sunday: Pumpkin Spice Syrup

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It’s Sunday, which means that the first week of VeganMoFo is nearly over. Are you food-ed out yet? I hope not. But if you’re experiencing any MoFo fatigue, whether from the stress of keeping up with your Google Reader or getting a post up every day, take a breather and relax today.

Curl up with a book, a companion animal (human or otherwise!) and a cup of tea or coffee or even hot chocolate. If you’re craving some fall flavors in your hot beverage of choice, well, how about pumpkin? It’s pretty easy to make your own pumpkin spice syrup. I did it last weekend and have been enjoying the results all week.

Unfocused small blue teacup in the foreground with an in-focus jar of an orange-brown syrup in the background. Next to the jar are two cinnamon sticks.

Syrup.

The recipe I followed is here. I halved it but still used the full amount of pumpkin puree, because I’m all about infusing as much pumpkin-y goodness into everything I make. Next time I make this, I might reduce the sugar – the resulting syrup is very sweet. It’s a little too sweet for me, although I bet it mimics the stuff they use at coffee chains pretty well.

A small blue teacup on a matching blue saucer in the foreground. In the background on the left is the jar of syrup; in the right is a small metal stovetop coffeepot.

Coffee time.

The picture above is a homemade version of a pumpkin spice latte… kinda. I don’t have a device for steaming milk, so I just put my almond milk in a jar and shook it really hard until it got all frothy, and then I microwaved it. I added it to a small cup of really strong coffee and pumpkin spice syrup, mixed it all up, and pretended it was a latte. ;) It was good, but I think the syrup really shines in regular ol’ coffee. I don’t drink coffee all that often, but when I do, I take it black. So using this syrup has been a bit of a shock – I’m not accustomed to sweet coffee! In this context, though, I could definitely get used to it. ;)

What are you doing today? Are you taking it easy or not?

Friday is Pizza Day: Vegan Thai Pie Pizza

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By the time I left work yesterday, I knew three things for certain: I was tired and a bit headachy, I didn’t feel like cooking, and I wanted a very particular take-out pizza for dinner. As S and I drove home, I broached the topic:

Me: So, are you hungry now?

S: Um… not really. You?

Me: No. But when I am, I won’t feel like cooking… and I bet you won’t either…

S: You know what our option is.

Me: What? What is our option?

S: Vegan Thai Pie.

Me: Yesss, I was hoping you’d say that! I’ve been dreaming of it for the past two hours!

S: Really?! I thought you’d reject it outright!

Me: Nope!

Normally, S would’ve been right – I’m nearly always the one who balks at eating out. But I’d already dropped a fair chunk of change yesterday day to pay off one of my [admittedly smaller] student loans, and spending a couple more dollars on dinner seemed like a good way to celebrate.

S called in our order to Glass Nickel Pizza Co. and agreed, darling that he is, to pick up the pizza while I got a workout in. What a champ. So while he drove out to get our dinner, I spent some QT at our complex’s fitness center (read: room with some rickety old exercise machines from the eighties, a rack of free weights, and a single all-purpose weight machine).. Not long after I returned, S and our pizza arrived.

White plate with two slices of fully loaded pizza.

That’s the pizza, not S.

To my knowledge, Glass Nickel was the first local pizzeria to offer Daiya – I blogged about it earlier this year. Since then, they’ve also introduced the vegan version of their popular Thai pie.  The Vegan Thai Pie features cilantro, Daiya, tofu, broccoli, carrots, red pepper, and yellow onion. It’s topped with chopped peanuts and features a spicy peanut sauce in lieu of a tomato-based sauce.

It’s amazing. It’s a perfect pizzafication of pad thai. I love it.

Seriously, it’s one of the best pizza-joint pizzas I’ve ever eaten. I love that Glass Nickel offers such a creative vegan option! Honestly, though, the Daiya is a bit extraneous – the rest of the pie’s flavors are more than robust enough to keep it interesting, and Daiya just gets in the way. My only other nit-picky issue is with the tofu – it’s pretty plain; if Glass Nickel marinated it and chopped it into smaller cubes, the pizza would be out-of-this-world delicious. But those are minor quibbles – I might submit my suggestions to Glass Nickel, but if I do, I’ll be sure to thank them more than profusely for even offering the Thai Pie. Gotta encourage the vegan friendliness!

What’s the most creative pizza combo you’ve eaten? Do any of your local pizza places offer creative vegan options like this one?

Friday Favorite: Creamy Avocado Pasta

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White MoFo fist logo on an orange background with the text "Vegan Staples: Noodles!"

This post is a twofer – it’s a Friday Favorite (one of my favorite recipes) and a Vegan Staple (an example of how to spice up a fallback vegan food item). This recipe is doing double duty!

S and I share a document on Google Docs (‘scuse me, Google Drive) titled “Yummy Things We’ve Cooked.” Its contents are exactly what you’d imagine – a list of dishes we’ve prepared, eaten, and enjoyed. It’s our go-to source when we’re strained, stressed, or just plain stumped at dinnertime. The dishes in the document range from complex (see: vegan pho) to ridiculously easy (see: colcannon). On the “ridiculously easy” end of the spectrum is one of our top choices for a quick, simple, and satisfying meal – the 15-Minute Creamy Avocado Pasta from the wonderful Angela at Oh She Glows. (Or, as S titled this dish in our document, “Creamy noodles of some kind… what was it?”)

The concept is simple – you just blend a ripe avocado with lemon juice, garlic, olive oil, basil, and salt and toss the resulting sauce with your favorite noodles. Avocado blends like a dream, creating a luscious sauce that perfectly clings to your noodles. The result is a creamy, rich, and incredibly satisfying dish.

Top-down view of a small white plate with a pile of white noodles coated in a creamy, light green sauce. The noodles are topped with black pepper and a single whole basil leaf.

Noodly perfection.

The beauty of this dish is that it’s incredibly versatile – don’t like lots of garlic? Use a single clove! Don’t have fresh basil? Omit it! And you can use any type of  noodles – on this occasion, S picked up some locally made black olive and garlic fettuccini, which lent the dish a little extra flavor. Spaghetti or even soba noodles are fine choices, too.

Although we usually eat this dish alone – it’s deceptively filling! – it’d be fantastic with a slice of fresh crusty bread or a simple side salad. If you’re looking for a low-effort, high-rewards dish to add to your meal rotation, try this one – you can thank me later.

What’s your quick weeknight meal of choice? Which OhSheGlows recipes are your favorites?

What’s in the Box? Summer 2012 CSA Week Nine

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It seems appropriate to post about my CSA haul during MoFo. The ideal vegan diet should feature oodles and oodles of  veggies, and I love that my CSA gives me so much beautiful fresh food to eat. This week’s share, though slightly smaller than those of previous weeks, was still full of gorgeous produce.

Basket full of veggies. A huge head of lettuce and a large bunch of curly kale are particularly prominent, along with some acorn and delicata squash.

Cheeky squash face…

Clearly the cool-weather veggies are starting to come in! Those are the last sweet red peppers of the year, alas. They’ve been such a delight. Maybe this big bag o’ spinach will help make up for my loss, though:

So green!

So – what’s in the box this week?

  • Acorn squash
  • Carmen sweet pepper
  • Cilantro
  • Curly green kale
  • Delicata squash
  • Garlic
  • Romaine lettuce
  • Russet potatoes
  • Spinach
  • Yellow onion

Last night S and I halved that big ol’ acorn squash and coated it with coconut oil, brown sugar, maple syrup, and a dash of salt and roasted it to sweet, tender perfection. We served it alongside sauteed kale and cannellini beans for a veggie-rich dinner. Vegan food at its freshest and finest! I’m already said that my next share will be my last of the season. :(

What should we do with the rest of our produce? What’s your favorite way to eat winter squash?

Curious about what other folks are getting in their CSA boxes this time of year? Check out the What’s in the Box? link party for this week!

Vegan Staples: Rice & Beans, Costa Rican Style

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This post is part of my Vegan Staples theme, where I’ll show you how to take stereotypical vegan foods and make them dishes worth serving to even the staunchest omnivores. 

Ah, rice and beans. Its name is boring and evokes images of the blandest meals imaginable. It’s the quintessential veg*n meal, the refuge of the creativity-drained plant-eater. And now one half of its equation has those pesky potential arsenic issues to combat.

But I firmly believe that rice and beans is unjustly derided, that it can be a truly inspiring meal when done right. And how does one do rice and beans right? You consult an expert. And by “consult an expert,” I mean “browse Terry Hope Romero’s Viva Vegan! for the most delicious-looking beans and rice recipe you can find.” And find it I did, on page 92. Terry’s Costa Rican Refried Rice and Beans (aka Gallo Pinto, or “Painted Rooster”) doesn’t require anything too fancy, but by using a cast-iron pan, freshly cooked beans (and their liquid!), and lots of bright flavors, this dish cooks up to be a beautiful and satisfying meal.

Close-up of a cast-iron pan with a rice and beans mixture cooking. It has lots of visible diced veggies and spices.

Gallo Pinto in the pan.

It looks a bit like confetti, doesn’t it? What you’re seeing is long-grain white rice, small red Central American beans, peppers, onions, and lots of other spices. I substituted a bit of Braggs for the vegan Worcestershire sauce, since I didn’t have any at the time, and I reduced the amount of liquid smoke because liquid smoke and I don’t always get along. After a good fry in the pan (they’re not technically refried!) I scooped the mixture into little mounds and served up a lovely meal.

White plate with a small mound of rice and beans next to a sprig of cilantro and a few slices of tomato. In the background is another plate of rice and beans and a jar of hot sauce.

Plated.

Served with a side of fresh tomatoes, extra cilantro, and hot sauce for topping, this dish would make even the most skeptical rice and beans eaters ask for ¡más, más!

What’s your favorite way to eat rice and beans? Which meals from Viva Vegan! have you cooked?

VeganMoFo 2012: Get Your MoFo On!

Orange rectangle with Vegan Month of Food: 2012 text.

Welcome, friends, to VeganMoFo 2012! Are you as excited as I am? Cuz I’m pretty damn excited!

If you’re not familiar with VeganMoFo, check out my MoFo 101 guest post over at Vegan Bloggers Unite or go visit the official MoFo blog. If you’re too lazy to do that, well, fine – basically, 500+ bloggers are participating in VeganMoFo this month, which means that we’ll all post about vegan food for at least 20 days in October. And the otherwise-non-vegan bloggers also agree not to post non-vegan food during the month. So if you’re following all of the RSS feeds, you shouldn’t see anything but animal-friendly goodness for 31 days. Woohoo!

As in years past, I’m aiming to post every single day in October. I’m slightly less prepared than last year, but more prepared than the two years before that. So… we’ll see how this goes. ;) I do have a couple of fun themes planned, with graphics and all!

Bright orange banner with the VeganMoFo fist logo and the text: "Recipe Showdown: one food item, three recipes".

Because this theme was pretty popular last year (and because they’re just plain fun), I’ll do a couple of Recipe Showdowns, where I pit three recipes for one type of food against one another and decide which one reigns supreme.

Bright orange banner with the VeganMoFo fist logo and the text: "Vegan Staples: what do vegans eat, anyway?"

If you ask an omnivore what a vegan eats, you might get a puzzled stare for an answer. Or you might get something like, “…salad? Rice and beans? Um, tofu?” And let’s be honest – we do eat those things, along with lots and lots of others. I’m going to show skeptical omnivores (and uninspired vegans!) how to make vegan staples exciting, because there’s a world of options beyond dumping plain white rice and canned black beans into a bowl and calling it dinner!

Bright orange banner with the VeganMoFo fist logo and the text: "Friday Favorites: recipes I can't stop making".

Just like last year, every Friday I’ll share one of my favorite recipes, one that I find myself making time and time again. They’ll typically be pretty simple recipes, ones that are great to keep in your arsenal for those weekday nights when you’re cranky after work and the idea of spending two hours lovingly preparing a complex dish for you and your partner makes you feel a bit murderous. Not that I’d know anything about that. ;)

Those are the three themes I have planned, but you can expect lots of other great content – product reviews, restaurant reviews, original recipes, and who knows what else! Do leave a comment if there’s anything special you’d like to see. And you can expect some better quality photos than in the past. After a year and a half of dating S and three months of living with him, I finally realized that I can totally use his DSLR for my food photography needs! Duhhh. I’m still teaching myself how to use it, so don’t expect any masterpieces just yet, but they’ll definitely be nicer than many of the photos you’ve seen in the past.

I wouldn’t feel right counting this as an official MoFo post without any actual food, so here’s a teaser of things to come this month. Feast your eyes on ready-for-the-oven pumpkin cinnamon rolls:

Glass pan with unbaked pumpkin cinnamon rolls.

Yup. :)

Are you participating in MoFo? What are you excited to see this month?