Showing posts with label patriotic holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patriotic holidays. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Stars and Stripes Chips Platter - Gluten-Free, Vegan Patriotic Beet Crackers

I've been sitting on this patriotic 4th of July recipe for a whole year! I made these Stars and Stripes chips and crackers (and dip) for a Fourth party last year but waited until the last possible moment to make them (seriously... I was frantically mixing and baking all that morning!) so didn't have time to make and blog it in advance. Not that I would have bothered... I probably would have just taken the time to take nicer pictures... Then sat on them for a year!

To make my Red, White, and Blue Stars and Stripes Cracker Platter, I made white tortilla chips and red beet crackers, then added some store-bought blue corn chips.
The dip is basically a dairy-free herb dip mix we got, with garlic and assorted dried herbs, mixed with vegan cream cheese and mayonnaise. I don't have a recipe for that, as we buy the dip mix at the Farmer's Market. But my kids love my Pink Dip, which you could make with dairy or with a dairy substitute, or leave out the radishes if you want the dip to be white. (I was in a hurry that day and didn't have time to roast my radishes. Oh well.)
Stars and Stripes Beet Crackers
1 tsp extra-virgin olive oil
3 Tbsp water (plus more, as needed)
1 small beet, finely diced (roughly 1/4 cup, but a little more is okay.)
1 1/2 cup almond flour or sunflower seed flour (1 cup raw sunflower seeds ground in a food mill or coffee grinder should make 1 1/2 cups flour)
1/2 tsp granulated garlic powder
1 Tbsp finely chopped fresh rosemary
1/2 tsp salt (plus more to sprinkle on top, if desired)
1 Tbsp nutritional yeast (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
In a small skillet, heat the olive oil over low heat. When shimmering, add the water and diced beets. Cook for 5-8 minutes, stirring often, until the beets just start to get tender. Add more water a splash at a time as needed if the pan begins to dry out.

Meanwhile, in a food processor (or really good blender,) pulse almond flour, garlic powder, rosemary, 1/2 tsp salt and yeast until combined.

Drain the beets, reserving any liquid, and add to the food processor. Process 10-20 seconds to combine. Add 1 Tbsp of reserved beet liquid (or water, if there isn't enough,) and process until a rough dough forms. You may need to scrape the sides and pulse a few times.

On a large piece of parchment paper, form the dough into a roughly rectangular shape, then place another piece of parchment over the top before rolling dough out to roughly 1/8-inch thick.

Using a knife, cookie cutters, or pizza cutter, cut dough to desired shape. Using a thin spatula (preferably metal, as they're the thinnest,) transfer shapes to parchment-lined baking sheet. You can re-roll excess dough to make more shapes!
If you're just making squares or strips, you can use a pizza cutter to trim the edges and cut the lines, then transfer the bottom layer of parchment and cut dough straight to a cookie sheet (remove top layer of parchment.) You may need to cut the lines again immediately after baking - see next step.

Bake for 12-15 minutes at 350 degrees F until light brown around the edges and firm to the touch. *Turn oven off and let sit in oven for another 5 minutes to get crunchier.
*If you transferred the dough all together rather than separate shapes, remove pan from oven after the first 12-15 minutes, cut again with rotary cutter if needed, and separate crackers before returning pan to warm (but turned off) oven and let sit 5 minutes.

Remove pan from oven and allow crackers to cool.

Store in an airtight container.


Stars and Stripes Tortilla Crisps
3-4 gluten-free "flour" tortillas (corn works too, but may affect cooking time.)
Olive or coconut oil or spray
Sea salt

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F

Using cookie cutters, a knife, rotary cutter, or kitchen shears, cut tortillas to desired shapes. Place on parchment-lined baking tray.

Spray or brush oil onto cut chips, and sprinkle salt as desired. Optional: Flip chips and spray and salt other side as well.

Bake cut tortilla shapes at 350 degrees F for 10-15 minutes. Check chips every 2 minutes after the first 10. Smaller shapes will cook faster, so pull them out as they start to brown around the edges and get crispy.

For both recipes, I used a mini star cutter until I was ready to slap someone if I had to make one more stinking star, then switched to a rotary cutter to make the stripes. And while you could certainly bake them both together, I baked them in waves, so I could cut the tortillas while the beet crackers were cooking!

Once I got to the party, I arranged the "stripes" as best I could in alternating colors, and then scattered some tortilla stars on a pile of blue corn chips. I may have eaten about half of them in the process... Then kind I of dumped everything on when I got bored with that, and wandered off to have fun with my kids!

Tools of the Trade

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Thursday, July 4, 2013

Happy Independence Day! Red, White, and Blue Round-Up


These are our most recent Red, White, and Blue lunches; from Armed Forces Day and Flag Day. I was too lazy/busy/uninspired to do any before the 4th this year. Enjoy this little revisit.

You can check out all my past Red, White, and Blue lunches - but be warned. The photography gets progressively crappier the further back you go!

Friday, June 14, 2013

Waving the Flag - Happy Flag Day!

 

Sometimes it's easier to have a theme to inspire me. So I will grasp at any straw... or in this case, random holiday, to help me decide what I'm going to design our lunches around. So. Happy Flag Day, everyone!

Baby E's Lunch
GF PBJ bites, GF pretzel sticks, gouda stars and scraps; organic sugar snap peas, apple, strawberries, and blueberries
 
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Neither girl eats a lot of sandwich lately, so I used my FunBites Cube It cutter to make enough little bites out of a single gluten-free PBJ for both girls. For E, I stuck in some patriotic star cupcake picks to help make it fun. And it worked. She ate them all!

Red, White, and Blue: I happened to have some chunks of Golden Delicious apples to use up, plus strawberries that needed some judicious pruning to salvage the still-edible parts, and some blueberries to use up. How perfect is that?

Stars and Stripes: I was excited to have all the right colors of star silicone muffin cups (the white ones came from this set.) I used a mini star cutter on some white gouda cheese, and gave E a few stars, plus the scraps. For "stripes," I included some gluten-free pretzel sticks.

Little Z's Lunch
GF pretzel sticks, GF PBJ bites, gouda stars; organic sugar snap peas, apple, strawberries, and blueberries
I used all the same foods and theme for both girls, which I rarely ever do, mostly because they have different tastes/ And I'm lazy. Since I didn't have to worry about her gouging out anyone's eye, Big Sis got some patriotic wooden flag skewers I found at a local party supply store.
And instead of a red-white-and-blue fruit salad jumble, I put hers on some heart cupcake picks (I found mine at Dollar Tree around Valentine's Day.)

Tools of the Trade
      Japanese Bento Silicone Food Cup Star 6P Star

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Peace*Love*Bento - Happy Armed Forces Day!

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America's National Armed Forces Day is always observed on the third Saturday in May. It's a much cheerier holiday than Memorial Day (also in May,) which honors the men and women who died while serving in the US Armed Forces. I get all weepy just thinking about it. So we'll see if I get a Memorial Day lunch done this year. Probably not, since I'll be out of town at a blogger conference (squee!) that weekend.

We Love Our Troops!
Z's Lunch: Organic strawberries, blackberries, and sugar snap peas; leftover gluten-free pizza, olives, organic white cheddar, homemade gluten-free rhubarb donut chunks
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We had gone to a birthday party a Chuck E Cheese so I'd ordered a gluten-free Dominos pizza to bring with us. Well, they wouldn't let me bring it in. Turns out they have gluten-free pizzas there now! And there's no cross-contamination risk because they come sealed from a gluten-free facility and are baked in their wrapper! You even get a sealed plastic pizza cutter for each one! So with the Chuck E Cheese leftovers plus my uneaten Dominos, I had a lot of leftover pizza to go through! MOMables leftover pizza skewers to the rescue!

I used a mini heart cutter on the pizza and some cheese and put them onto plastic heart skewers along with some olives.

The berries have a plastic heart cupcake pick just for fun and more love (found at Dollar Tree for Valentine's.)

Peace, Baby
Baby's Lunch: Gluten-free pizza, olives, organic white cheddar scraps, homemade gluten-free rhubarb donut chunk; organic strawberries, blackberries, and frozen peas; organic brown and white rice with quinoa mix w/cheese and olives
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For Baby I just used the pizza and cheese scraps on some plastic peace sign swizzle sticks (with the bottoms snipped off to fit in the EasyLunchbox.) There was one cheese heart left over, so she got that on top.

Tools of the Trade
      

Friday, July 6, 2012

Dye-Free 4th of July - DIY Sugar Sprinkles

My friends Bob and Jessica throw the best 4th of July party in the history of ever. Seriously. I have turned down family events to go to their party. They invite anyone they've ever met with a pulse, so it has a broad pool of guests - and since it's a potluck, a lot of amazing food comes through there. They also do a pinata for the kids, and Jessica makes goody bags for the littler ones who don't want to jump into the scrim to fight for scraps. Even Baby E got in on the goody-bag action! Her favorites were the plastic slinky and the miniature flag.
One of my favorite treats each year has been Jessica's Ice Cream Cone Cupcakes. When Z was just a few weeks old, Jessica even sent me home with her leftover buttercream frosting. I lived off of buttercream-frosted chocolate chip cookies and random protein bars until Hubby would come home from work each day for about a month, until the buttercream ran out.
So I was devastated that we'd have to miss out this year, because of the artificial colors. I've taken a photo of her stuffing one of these into her gob every year (except when she was 4-weeks old, obviously!) I was more sad about missing my photo op than anything else, really, since she's actually been good about saying "no" to dye-filled treats, even if she'd really been wanting one.

But I went ahead and contacted Jessica in advance. Would she be willing to use a Trader Joe's (artificial-ingredient-free) cake mix? And if her frosting contained fake colors, would she be willing to leave a few un-frosted for me? Yes and yes! She even told me her buttercream source, so I could check for myself (Albertson's. Yes. Fake colors. To make the white look whiter.)
So Hubby whipped up a batch of Trader Joe's white buttercream frosting for me (I'm pretty inept at things involving mixing powders with liquids. I tend to over-mix and ruin everything.) I had some India Tree Naturals sprinkles, but they didn't have a red-white-and-blue set. And I only have green, purple, "carnival mix" and chocolate jimmies anyway. Z chose the chocolate ones, but I wanted something more patriotic. So I quickly whipped up some sugar sprinkles! It was super easy!

I used the India Tree Nature's Colors food coloring, so you may need to add more or less if you're using powdered or liquid natural colors from somewhere else, such as the Chocolate Craft Kits ones.

I used Trader Joe's organic sugar, thinking it was a larger grain. It wasn't. Oh well.

India Tree Nature's Colors DIY Colored Sugar
For 1/3 cup of sugar, I used 4 drops of red, and 4-5 drops of blue. (The blue was a bit oozier, so I got a little extra, I think, with each drop.) I could have added more for a deeper color, but I was in a hurry. 


You'll want to do this in a zip-seal baggie, rather than a bottle or hard container. I've been saving and washing empty spice jars and cream cheese tubs in preparation for our dye-free switch, to store all my replacement sprinkles! I had quite an impressive collection, but found loving new homes for them, with kids who aren't affected by the dyes.


The color droplets clumped up in the sugar, and I had to massage them into the sugar to break them up. Shake shake shake. Massage clumps. Shake shake shake. Massage clumps. Etc. So definitely a baggie! You could probably re-use the same one if you're making an array of colors, especially if you start with lighter shades, like yellow, then dump it into your storage container before going to orange, then red, then purple, then blue, then green.
My blue came out fairly green-y looking, but I didn't use a whole lot, considering. You can use this guide, which is based on 1/4 cup frosting, to get a better idea of how much natural food coloring you need to use to get more vibrant colors. 

And as you can see, the sugar was barely visible. (And my frosting job was pretty crappy.) But Z didn't care.

And I got my photo op!
July 4, 2009
July 4, 2010
July 4, 2011
July 4, 2012
*On a side note, due to Jessica's love of Trader Joe's, there were a ton of other safe treats there too. Most notably, the pickle slices happened to be from Trader Joe's which is where I get my dye-free pickles. And E's goody bucket had a TJ's soft fruit and grain bar (like Nutri-Grain,) TJ's yogurt-covered star cookies (which Z loves, and was one of our potluck contributions as well,) and a TJ's juice box. As a responsible big sister, Z lovingly freed Baby E from the danger of the foods she wasn't old enough for yet. How thoughtful!