Food Lover’s Cleanse – The Final Days

The last days of the Food Lover’s Cleanse were scattered, but such is life.  I was able to prepare some of the dishes despite the demands of the week, and for that I’m happy.

Day 11 started not with the compote, but steel cut oats.

I took some cues from similar previous breakfast dishes, and added chopped pecans, currants, cinnamon and chia seeds to the oats, topped with raw milk.  It was pretty good!  I eat a lot of oatmeal in the winter, so I’ll definitely be doing more creative things with it.

Dinner was actually the content of Day 5, and the results were… disappointing.  The menu was beet soup, warm escarole salad, and hanger steak.  This was probably the least successful menu of the cleanse for me.

First, I left out the ginger in the soup, thinking one of my dinner guests hated ginger, but I was wrong – she is ok with it, so without it, it tasted a bit lackluster.  I doctored it up with five times the 5 spice powder, a tablespoon of butter, and a few tablespoons of red wine.  It turned out ok, but not great.

I’d definitely add the ginger next time.

The escarole salad was probably the most successful element of the dinner – I loved the addition of the dijon mustard to the shallot vinaigrette I already had on hand.  It helped ameliorate the bitterness of the escarole, too.  It’s not a very pretty dish, and I forgot to take a picture.

Cooking the hanger steak also proved quite daunting – my first go around yielded a very rare steak.  We cooked it a couple times more to get it to medium, a process which is just too funky.  I have a lot to learn about cooking a steak, and blame my 13 years as a vegetarian for the lack of skills in this area.

So, after asking for steak cooking tips (I got some great ones!) on Facebook, a friend invited me into their home on Friday and taught me how to do it right.  I learned a lot and look forward to the next time I have the opportunity to cook one.  I will say – both times, the hanger steak had great beefy flavor.  Definitely one of my favorite cuts of beef.

Thursday and Friday were kind of off as far as the cleanse goes, but I did manage to have a healthy smoked salmon and chevre omelet on Thursday night, and as I mentioned above, my friend taught me how to cook a steak Friday night.

Oh, and Thursday morning I prepared the coconut oat pilaf, which I just did not care for – savory oatmeal, to me, is just the oddest thing, and I find it hard to get my head around the concept.  To me, oatmeal is always on the sweet side.  I ended up eating it with a little maple syrup and raw cream.  Odd, but it made the whole thing more palatable.

Saturday morning, I prepared the garam masala tofu dish for brunch, but substituted pastured eggs for the tofu.  It worked out really well!  I was dubious at first – dried cranberries in eggs?  It worked, and worked well.

I split Day 14‘s dinner into two meals.  Saturday night I made the curry – substituting sweet potatoes (I have a ton of them right now) for the squash, as well as using full fat coconut milk and coconut oil.  Really great dish, and raw yogurt on top is a perfect accompaniment.  The recipe made a lot of food, so I was able to have it again tonight along with the cumin cilantro chicken, which was fabulous.  Marinating boneless skinless chicken breasts for an extended time in yogurt seems to work really well as a tenderizer.

I also loved that I shared the final meal of the cleanse with friends.  I definitely want to cook more for friends this year.

So this is the end of the Food Lover’s Cleanse!  I’ve really enjoyed these past couple of weeks, and have learned a lot along the way.  I’ll write a wrap up in the next couple of days, with my sentiments and observations on the whole process.

Food Lover’s Cleanse Day 7

Day 7 of the Food Lover’s Cleanse started with a delicious combination of raw yogurt, half a pear (diced), roasted pecans, chia seeds, and maple syrup.  It was an incredible combination – tasted a bit like dessert, actually.  Pecans and maple syrup are a winning combination, and I think that those were flavors that really made this dish.

This was the first time I’d tried chia seeds, and I really liked them.  The recipe originally called for flax. Chia has a similar nutritional profile as flax, but contains a little more ALA (alpha linoleic acid, an omega-3 fatty acid).

Lunch was leftover roasted broccoli with apples and walnuts added.  Not very pretty, but very tasty.  I ate it with leftover bulgur pilaf.

I snacked on marcona almonds and a couple of dates in the afternoon.

Dinner consisted of a delicious curried lentil soup and some salmon cakes which contained the new-to-me kaffir lime leaves.

They have the most incredible aroma and taste.  I found it was easier to work with them by soaking them in hot water for 5 minutes or so.  If you don’t, they’ll just shatter and turn into a kind of dry leaf dust, but that might be something appealing in certain cases.  I just couldn’t get over how amazing these leaves smelled.  They really did add something different to the salmon.

The lentil soup was really good and I am going to enjoy eating it for the next few days.  The resident picky eater did not like it, though.  The most unusual element in it was the chickpea puree and butter added toward the end of the cooking time.  It makes the soup creamy without adding cream; it adds a nice richness that I like very much. It also tastes great with extra lemon juice squeezed into it.

I rounded out the meal with a mâche salad with shallot vinaigrette. Dessert consisted of a tangerine and an ounce of dark chocolate with almonds and sea salt. Love that combination.  Fruit and chocolate for dessert is much more satisfying these days.