Category Archives: Dressings

Yellow Zucchini Spaghetti

raw zucchini pasta

Zucchini noodles (also known as “zoodles“) are the perfect gluten-free, zucchini pasta.

The Spiralizer is far and away my favorite tool. It creates curls of your favorite vegetables, literally in seconds. It’s the fastest tool of the bunch and requires the least amount of strength or effort (with suction cup feet to keep it in place). You simply cut off the ends of a zucchini, place it next to the blade and spin. In less than 8 seconds you’ll have spiral sliced the entire zucchini.

For cashew sauce:

1 cup soaked 2 hours cashew nuts
1 cup water
1 tbs nutritional yeast for cheese flavor
pinch of Himalayan pink salt
1/2 lemon juice
blue spirulina for color
1 date

Blend all ingredients well, taste and add more water if needed.

Bon appétit! 👌😉

Japanese Dressing

Lunch time as usually a salad 🥗

Today is was with japanese dressing:

2 Tbsp organic miso paste
1/4 tsp grated ginger
1 Tbsp lemon juice
3 Tbsp raw sesame seed oil
1/2 cup water
1/2 tsp light Japanese soy sauce
1/4 cup thinly sliced green onions

In a bowl mix miso paste, sesame oil and lemon juice. Add water to obtain the right dressing consistency. Add ginger, salt and pepper to taste. Add spring onion and mix gently. ReadyJapanese Dressing 

Raw Coconut Christmas Cake

10968522_778755722209830_1070500986197201250_nToday, I carried out a Raw Food Class, and we make a Raw Coconut Christmas Cake with five attendees. We used fresh young coconuts and raw coconut nectar, sprouted dry buckwheat and dry white mulberries, instead of cashew nuts and of agave nectar. Strawberry season started already in Japan. Putting strawberries on top of Christmas cake is so popular among gourmet Japanese, so I used the most beautiful strawberries today.Thanks to all attendees we enjoyed making a beautiful Christmas cake. I look forward to meeting you again!

 

Here is a video recipe of this yummy cake:

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Chocolate-Pistachio Tartlets

chocotarte

I don’t make a raw yogurt very often, but if I have a chance to get fresh young coconuts, I always make  an ice cream, cake and yogurt from coconut meat. This week my friend send me a box of fresh coconuts and I loved to drink coconut water and eat raw coconut meat without any cooking and only two of them I use for making my yogurt 😉 My family wanted something sweet and I created this raw version of Chocolate-Pistachio Tartlets from Vegetarian magazine recipe. These mini tarts can be made up to a day in advance – simply garnish with fruits right before serving. Makes 5 tartlets. Continue reading

GREEN SHISO SAUSE

Shiso Leaves Green and PurplePerilla (shiso) is either red or green, the red perilla having an anise flavor and slightly less spicy than the green variety, which tastes more like cinnamon. The leaves, which are rich in calcium and iron, are used for seasoning, coloring, pickling and garnishing. Shiso leaves can be used whole or cut into strips. Use the flower buds by collecting the seeds at the end of the season to sprinkle on salad. The Japanese, in particular, use the red variety to color umeboshi and pickled ginger. Perilla seeds form an essential part of the famous seven spices of Japan, which originated more than 300 years ago in Kyoto.

Recipe:

1/2 cup cashews, soaked

1 tablespoon lime juice

10 Vicia faba, also known as the broad bean, fava bean, faba bean, field bean, bell bean, or tic bean

5 leaves shiso (Perilla frutescens)

2 teaspoon white miso

1 big date or 1 teaspoon agave

Pinch salt / 2 tablespoon water or more if needed. Blend until very smooth.

Bon Appetit!

Sesame dressing

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Almost sesame seeds in Japan are already roasted, but you can find a raw white and black sesame seeds online or at healthy organic shops. Sesame seeds add a nutty taste and a delicate, almost invisible, crunch to many Asian dishes. They are also the main ingredients in tahini (sesame seed paste). Not only are sesame seeds a very good source of manganese and copper, but they are also a good source of calcium, magnesium, iron, phosphorus, vitamin B1, zinc and dietary fiber. In addition to these important nutrients, sesame seeds contain two unique substances: sesamin and sesamolin. Both of these substances belong to a group of special beneficial fibers called lignans, and have been shown to have a cholesterol-lowering effect in humans, and to prevent high blood pressure. Sesamin has also been found to protect the liver from oxidative damage. Continue reading