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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Vegetarian Summer Series #4: 6 ingredient Hijiki (seaweed) and sprouted mung bean salad

The damp, warm weather persists. The heating and cooling at work is STILL on the mend (have a fix-it ticket in). Downing coconut ice cream, red bean popsicles or Naked juice popsicles every day after work to feel refreshed. So the salad and/or minimal cooking recipes continue! Give sprouting a try, it's not as crazy/weird as I thought and once it soaks and drains, it just sits and grows on its own! No babysitting-don't need to shake/stir, check water levels or anything.

This post is for Ann since she says she feels lost going to an Asian market (I still don't know what most things are at the market, but if its label translated in English sometimes, I may just buy it and look up a recipe when I get home...like the agar agar still sitting for the last 3+ months)

I threw together some panty ingredients to make a very easy salad. For planning ahead, you need half an hour to soak the dried hijiki seaweed. I picked this up at a local Japanese market. There are three in the Convoy area of San Diego, Marukai, Mitsuwa and Nijiya-
  • Be a Marukai member for $10 per year to get things on sale or $1 per shopping trip to get the sale prices and get a fun monthly sales leaflet that gives the history of Japanese foods/drinks.
  • Marukai carries free range Shelton's chicken and free range eggs. I think the other meat may be all natural.
  •  Marukai also has it two stores in the same plaza-one sells home goods and Hawaiian products, and the other one has $1.50 items.  
  • Nijiya has a lot of organic options and I found some awesome black tea flavored with banana--possibly not natural but yummy.
Speaking of Japanese places, I finally tried Niban, just off the 805 freeway and Clairemont Mesa, in the Wal-mart shopping center. It's a order at the register, then sit place. With tip, dinner was only $8. I gave the vegetarian sukiyaki a try and it was a very generous portion -it did come with rice (which texture could have been better, a bit mushy) and had a nice flavor, also included miso soup and a salad--am sure this doesn't fit gluten free diets nor soy free though due to soy sauce, miso and tofu. I make my occasional exceptions since my sensitivities are not so extreme.

You also need 2-3 days if you are sprouting your own beans (grab a soup pot with a lid, a tea towel and do as described for red lentils last week). Short on time? Pick up sprouted legumes at the health food store or I'm sure the  more fully developed mung bean sprouts you can pick up at any grocery store would also work (those white ones you throw in stir fried or sukiyaki or they come with pad thai! Yeah you know, they must be used in about 3 days or they get limp. I don't really have storage tips other than don't rinse until right before you need them and cook them panfried or in a soup if you can't use them raw after 3 days)

Salad:
The seaweed is already in nice small pieces.

1.3 oz of dried hijiki-yields about 1 cup of plump seaweed after soaking half an hour
3/4 cup of dried mung beans (un-sprouted): which yields about 2 cups sprouted

Dressing:
2 tbsp Braggs Amino (or soy sauce or coconut aminos, whatever suits your diet, more or less to taste)
1 tsp honey (or other sweetener)
1tbsp sesame oil
ground pepper to taste

1. After draining the hijiki, toss it with the sprouted mung beans and dressing.

2. Can chill for best taste. Eat, savoring the crunch and slight sweetness of mung beans and savory,slick seaweed.

Idea: add some chopped cucumber for additional crunchiness.


Do you have any new favorite apps? I have an Android phone started using Ibotta a month ago and finally made my first coupon purchase of Silk coconut milk.

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