Dhokro is a savoury steamed cake and is perfect for a quick snack or a cup of chai. This version is made with semolina and flavoured with garlic and spices.

Food | Travel | Family | Life
By Fareen 5 Comments
Dhokro is a savoury steamed cake and is perfect for a quick snack or a cup of chai. This version is made with semolina and flavoured with garlic and spices.
Happy Valentine’s Day! With my birthday being next month and our anniversary the month after, we aren’t big on store-bought gifts. I remember our first Valentine’s Day, I made my honey some home-made truffles. Hard to believe that was eight years ago! It was definitely time to make the truffles again.
People always seem impressed when you make chocolates but it really is so easy! It’s also messy, so be prepared to get your hands dirty. My favorite combo is chocolate with roasted almonds but any topping will work – sprinkles, dusted cocoa, even icing sugar.
Chocolate Truffles
8 oz. chocolate chips or squares
1/2 cup whipping cream
chocolate chips, melted
toppings (nuts, sprinkles, cocoa, etc.)
Over a double boiler, melt the chocolate and whipping cream. Refrigerate the resulting ganache for a few hours. With a melon baller, scoop out little balls from the chocolate and refrigerate again. Take the scoops of chocolate and make them into round balls with the palms of your hand. Dip the balls of chocolate first into the melted chocolate and then into the topping of your choice. Enjoy!
Any excuse for my toddler and I to make cookies together, we take it. With Valentine’s Day around the corner, we just had to make cookies to celebrate. Q gets up on the counter and helps pour things into the mixing bowl, watching as everything is incorporated. His favorite part is decorating, especially when sprinkles are involved.
These are cookies from my childhood. Almond cookies shaped into crescents. Sometimes topped with icing sugar, sometimes dipped in chocolate and nuts. Not too sweet, they are perfect with a cup of chai.
We dipped the ends of these ones into chocolate and covered them in heart-shaped sprinkles. A delicious surprise for all of Q’s little friends.
Almond Crescent Cookies
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup margarine
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup finely ground almonds
1 1/2 cups flour
Beat the sugar and margarine until fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and mix. Next add the almonds and flour until the dough comes together. Make dough into a disk and refrigerate for 10 minutes. Take rounds of dough and shape them into crescents. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes. Makes 1 1/2 dozen cookies.
Chocolate – it’s a huge weakness of mine. It’s rare for a day to go by without me having it in some form. I was so happy when I rediscovered these chocolate fiber muffins. I found the recipe years ago and it was a favorite of mine, but somehow got lost and forgotten. I recently found it on my old computer and it has been a staple the last few weeks. Chocolate muffins that are good for you! These are filled with fiber and have no butter or margarine. These muffins are dense and filling and with their chocolately goodness, I don’t know who likes it better, me or my toddler. I substituted half the batch with mint chocolate chips making it a good substitute for my peppermint hot chocolate which I rarely have these days. I wish I knew where this recipe came from – the creator of this recipe deserves A LOT of credit.
Chocolate Fiber Muffins
1/2 cup cocoa
3/4 cup flour
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 TB baking powder
1 1/4 cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla
2 cups water
3 cups All Bran Cereal
2 egg whites
2/3 cup chocolate chips (or mint chocolate chips)
Put cereal in water and set aside. Mix all dry ingredients with a whisk. Combine cereal, dry mixture, egg whites and vanilla and mix well with a mixer. Fold in chocolate chips.
Bake at 350 degrees for 18 to 20 minutes. Makes 24 muffins.
By Fareen 2 Comments
A few weeks ago, we went to Redwater Grille to celebrate a friend’s birthday. I started my meal with an appetizer of Pan Roasted Wild Shrimp in a garlic chili butter. The dish was so amazing and I thought about it for days. I had to find the recipe.
Thanks to Google, I discovered the menu was created by Ned Bell, who was the corporate chef of the Vintage Group who owns Redwater Grille. I happen to come across the recipe on someone’s personal website, under a different name – I was thrilled! I made the shrimp for our Progressive Dinner and my husband commented that the sauce would go great with pasta. This past weekend, I pulled out my new pasta machine and tried my hand at fettucine. The wholewheat noodles were perfect to sop up the tasty sauce.
Ned Bell’s Wild West Prawns
3 TB olive oil
30 peeled jumbo shrimp
2 TB minced garlic
1/4 cup dice red bell pepper
1 cup cherry tomotoes, quartered
2 TB chili powder
1/2 cup white wine
1 cup cream
8 ounces butter, cut into cubes
salt
pepper
1/4 cup green onions, thinly sliced
1/4 cup cilantro, roughly chopped
Heat oil in a pan until almost smoking hot. Add the shrimp and sear for 30 seconds or until they start to turn golden brown. Remove the shrimp and add the garlic, red pepper and tomatoes to the pan. Saute for about 1 minute or until the garlic browns slightly. Stir in the chili powder, cook 30 seconds and add the wine. Bring to a boil and add the cream and butter.
Reduce the sauce for about 2 minutes, or until it is thick enough to coat a spoon. Season with salt and pepper to taste and mix in green onions and cilantro. Return the shrimp to the pan, warm through, and serve immediately.
We had a wonderful dinner party this past weekend. After watching Giada’s Progressive Dinner, I thought it would be such a fun thing to do! A three course meal at three different houses – it was a perfect event to do with our close friends who live minutes away.
It was bound to be an interesting evening since we weren’t coordinating our menus.
We started with appetizers and cocktails at our house. Hubby was in charge of the cocktail and came up with an orange / nectarine mojito. With all the citrus and the mint, the drink was delicious and so fresh.
It was hard to decide on just one appetizer so I made a few. Rosemary almonds were placed on the table for people to munch on. It was nice to see that these were a big hit.
Since I had just had my lesson in making butternut squash ravioli, I definitely had to make a batch. Everyone was served one big ravioli with a serving of greens.
The idea of the progressive dinner came shortly before we visited Kayne‘s a few months ago. I knew after tasting their brie, I had to have something similar. I didn’t want to fry anything so I baked some panko breaded brie which was served on top of red pepper jelly.
The final appy was a shrimp dish. Sauteed shrimp in a red pepper cream sauce served with baguette. It’s a dish that I had at a restaurant recently and I was happy to find the recipe online.
We hopped into our cars and drove a few minutes to the next house for dinner. S and P had made an amazing thai dinner with both green curry and a spicy red curry. This was served with rice and was enjoyed by all, even the kiddies.
We then headed around the corner to S and G’s house where we indulged in two desserts. Molten lava cake served with ice cream was the chocolate contribution of the night. The other dessert was a concoction prepared by S with lemon pound cake, custard and strawberries – delicious!
It was a fun evening and a nice way for everyone to contribute without doing a potluck. Looking forward to many more of these dinners!
January 24 is Peanut Butter Day! This month, Lauren of Celiac Teen is hosting the monthly event, Go Ahead Honey It’s Gluten-Free (GAHIGF). A theme is chosen each month and based on that theme, bloggers create gluten-free dishes. Lauren’s theme is “Follow the Calendar”, where you pick a food holiday and make a recipe celebrating it.
I just happened to have made peanut butter cookies the day I read Lauren’s post and thought it would be the perfect thing to blog about. This is the easiest cookie recipe with no flour and no butter. Only 4 ingredients are needed and the cookies turn out delicious! You know something is good when my 2 year old asks for more.
Gluten Free Peanut Butter Cookies
1 cup peanut butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 tsp baking soda
Beat the peanut butter and sugar until the 2 ingredients are incorporated and fluffy. In a separate bowl, beat the egg with the baking soda. Add to the peanut butter mixture. Drop by spoonfuls onto an ungreased cookie sheet and bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Makes about 30 small cookies.
By Fareen 2 Comments
Last year, at one of our family dinners, my cousin AJ made us butternut squash ravioli with sage butter sauce from scratch. It was so rich and flavourful and ever since, I order butternut squash ravioli anytime I get a chance. When I bought my pasta machine this past Christmas, I knew the first thing I wanted to learn and make was my cousin’s pasta.
AJ came over yesterday and taught me how. I couldn’t believe how easy it was. I found it amazing how the pasta machine could take a ball of dough and turn it into something so long and thin. Amazing that all it took was flour and eggs. The word of the night was amazing.
The dough was just 1 1/2 cups of flour, 3 eggs and a little bit of olive oil. It came together pretty easily and then we kneaded it for over 10 minutes. We let the dough rest while we prepared the filling.
I had roasted the butternut squash earlier in the day with some olive oil and salt and pepper. It was really tasty and it was hard to not eat the whole thing before pasta making time. For the filling, we heated up some oil and sauteed a shallot with one clove of garlic. We then added the squash and 150 grams of goat cheese until it was all incorporated. We took it off the stove and mashed. We then filled up a ziploc bag, our makeshift piping bag.
The dough was put through the pasta machine a couple times on each thickness. By the time we got to the thinnest plate, the dough was long, thin and pliable. We piped the squash on one half of the dough and folded the dough over. Air pockets were removed and the dough was cut with a pizza cutter into squares. We boiled the ravioli for only 3 minutes!
We topped the pasta off with a sauce made with browned butter and sage ,and some parmesan cheese. So simple and with so much flavour!
I had so much fun making pasta. The end result was a very tasty, rich pasta. Amazing!
By Fareen 2 Comments
I have always wanted to try wonton soup but it seems like every restaurant has their wontons with pork, which I don’t eat. I came upon a few recipes that had shrimp wontons and I knew I just had to try it. I combined a few different recipes and came up with this. I don’t think greens are normally in the broth but I added spinach for more nutrients. The first time I made, we loved it but since we hadn’t tried it before, we had nothing to compare it to. The next time, we had friends coming over that had tried wonton soup before. They loved it and went back for more – always a good sign. This will definitely be a regular at our house.
Come join SoupaPalooza at TidyMom and Dine and Dish sponsored by KitchenAid, Red Star Yeast and Le Creuset.