Viva Vegan!: 200 Authentic and Fabulous Recipes for Latin Food Lovers (50 page)

BOOK: Viva Vegan!: 200 Authentic and Fabulous Recipes for Latin Food Lovers
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Truly Tropical Banana Smoothie:
Add 1 frozen banana, chopped, along with the rest of the ingredients, and blend for a thick tropical smoothie. You can get away with using less sugar to compensate for the banana’s natural sweetness.
 
REAL HOT CHOCOLATE AND VARIATIONS
 
 

Serves 4

Time: Less than 15 minutes

Gluten Free, can be made Soy Free
 
 
Chocolate: we all love it and want it the world over. In chocolate’s hometown, Central and South America, the traditional way to get your daily allowance is via a warm, soothing “real” cup of creamy hot chocolate made with Latin-style drinking chocolate bars—never cocoa powder mixes!—and your favorite nondairy milk of choice.
 
Drinking chocolate is typically flavored with spices, vanilla, or nuts and varies from country of origin: the Mexican brand Ibarra features almonds and cinnamon; the Colombian brand Lukar is spiked with ground cloves. My new favorite brand, Taza, is actually made in Massachusetts; go figure. Most Latin drinking chocolate is vegan. Although I’ve yet to see one that had any sneaky dairy products added, just to be sure to always read the ingredients.
 
 
Tip:
Most directions on drinking chocolate packages call for about an ounce of chocolate per serving. I’ve increased it a little for smoother, richer flavor with more foam. A low-calorie drink this is not, but what else is better on a chilly autumn evening?
 
6 ounces any Latin-style drinking
chocolate bars, chopped coarsely
⅓ cup water
3½ cups soy, almond, rice, hemp, or other
nondairy milk, or a combination
 
 
1.
In a 2-quart saucepan with a lid, combine the chocolate and water. Bring to a simmer over medium heat, stirring to melt the chocolate. Stir in the nondairy milk and continue to heat until steaming, but take care not to boil, 6 to 8 minutes.
 
 
L
atin-style hot chocolate is often whisked or beaten to produce a creamy foam topping. Most famous of these special instruments is the Mexican
molinillo
which looks like the funky lovechild of a rattle and a scepter and is briskly rolled between one’s palms. If you don’t have one, don’t worry—a wire whisk or a handheld immersion blender fitted with a whisk attachment is just as effective.
 
 
 
2.
Turn off the heat and use a
molinillo
, wire whisk, or a handheld immersion blender to beat the chocolate until a thick layer of foam forms on top, anywhere from 2 to 6 minutes. Alternatively, try pouring the hot chocolate into a blender jar and pulse for 45 seconds or more to create the foam. Ladle the chocolate into serving cups, making sure to include a serving of foam on top of each.
 
Variations
 
For richer chocolate:
replace 1 cup of the nondairy milk with soy creamer or coconut milk.
 
 
Toddy Caliente:
Simmer the nondairy milk with a cinnamon stick or piece of orange zest. Remove before beating either by hand or with a blender. Spike each hot chocolate with a tablespoon of rum, Kahlúa, or brandy.
 
 
 
Quiero Vegan Café con Leche!
 
B
efore there was a big national coffee chain on every corner, Americans in the know could satisfy that craving for a creamy coffee at any decent Latin bakery (especially a Cuban or Puerto Rican one).
Café con leche
is what we’ve come to know as a latte, perhaps milkier and less foamy that the stuff served at the corporate coffee joint. For a homemade
café con leche
experience, anything from a basic stovetop espresso pot to a full-service espresso machine works just fine.
 
Cuban-style Coffee
: Sweet Cuban-style coffee is fun to make at home. For authentic flavor, look for deep, dark, Cuban-style espresso roast coffee; Bustelo brand is plentiful and cheap in New York City supermarkets, for example.
 
Place 2 tablespoons (or more!) of sugar into the base of your espresso pot, brew the coffee as directed, and as the coffee drips into the pot, it will dissolve the sugar. Be sure to remove
continues
your espresso maker pot just prior to when the brewing stops to prevent the coffee from spilling over. Stir the espresso slightly, then pour into demitasse cups and serve.
 
Alternative method: If you don’t feel like sugaring up your stovetop espresso pot or machine, an easy alternative is to brew your espresso as usual and pour the sugar into a small (less than 6-ounce) coffee cup or a small milk pitcher. This cup should be just large enough to contain your entire serving of brewed espresso when finished. Drizzle in a teaspoon of hot espresso and stir vigorously with a small spoon to form a creamy paste with no sugary grit. If the sugar doesn’t completely dissolve, drizzle in a little more espresso and continue stirring until smooth. Now slowly pour the remaining hot espresso into the paste while constantly stirring. A well-made
cafécito
will have a thin layer of light brown foam, the
espumita
, on top, but if it doesn’t, you’ll still have one high-powered shot of espresso.
 
Café con Leche:
Consumed everywhere in Latin America, if
café con leche
is your ultimate destination, stir a steamed (or microwaved until hot) cup of your favorite nondairy milk into your sweet little shot of espresso. Thick creamy hemp or coconut-based (not actual coconut) milk is
fabuloso
!
 
For a complete Cubano café experience, serve with a slice of crusty bread, well buttered with your favorite vegan margarine and pressed until browned and crunchy in a panini grill (or use the technique for Cubano Vegano Sandwiches on page 66) and enjoy bites of buttery toast along with sips of sweet creamy coffee. Ahhhh,
sabroso
!
 
 
SIMPLE SYRUP
 
 

Makes 1 cup

Time: Less than 10 minutes

Gluten Free, Soy Free
 
 
Simple syrup is the basis of lots of easy-to-make cocktails and even frozen desserts such as Fresh Papaya-Lime Sorbet (page 239). Make a batch and keep it chilled, and you’ll always be prepared for impromptu parties. This recipe is easily halved or doubled.
 
1 cup sugar
1 cup water
 
 
1. Combine the water and sugar in a small saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat to a simmer, stir, and cook for another 5 minutes, until all the sugar has been dissolved. Remove from the heat and let cool to room temperature. To speed up the cooling process, fill a large metal mixing bowl with ice, cover with cold water, and carefully settle the saucepan into the bowl, making sure the ice water doesn’t spill over into the syrup. Let sit for 15 to 20 minutes until cold.
Make-ahead Tip:
If you’re in no rush, you can make the syrup up to a week in advance and store it in the refrigerator in a tightly covered container until ready to use.
 
SANGRIA
 
 

Makes 2 liters

Time: 30 minutes

Gluten Free, Soy Free
 
 
It’s not a Spanish meal without this timeless blend of wine, brandy, and fruit juice. Although sangria is often associated with the Old World, it’s enjoyed all over the Americas. Oranges, lemons, or apples are classic additions, but I gravitate toward tropical fare such as papaya, mango, or pineapple. It is strong, but you can go easy on the brandy, if you like, or toss in an ice cube for a gentler sangria.
 
A good sangria can be—or even
should
be—crafted out of inexpensive dry red wine and brandy. Rigging up wine with fruit and liquor would ruin that spendy twenty-year-old vintage. But say you do want special-occasion sangria. Then it’s time to invest in a good brandy such as apple-scented Calvados, stir in a few shots of Grand Marnier, and power-boost that sangria with a crushed (and vegan) port wine.
 
1 orange (preferably a Valencia or
“juice” orange)
1 lemon
½ cup simple syrup (page 218)
⅔ cup brandy
½ cup freshly squeezed orange juice
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed
lemon juice
3 cups mixed fresh fruit, such as apple,
papaya, pineapple, mango, any melon,
strawberries, or raspberries, chopped
into bite-size pieces
1 (750 ml) bottle dry red wine, chilled
Ice cubes (optional)
 
 
1. Wash the orange and lemon well. Use a heavy, sharp chef’s knife to quarter the fruit and slice each piece into paper-thin slices, discarding any seeds. In a large glass pitcher, combine the simple syrup, brandy, orange juice, lemon juice, sliced orange, lemon, and chopped fruit. Stir and set aside for 30 minutes for the fruit to absorb the brandy flavors.
2. Before serving, pour the chilled red wine into the pitcher and stir into the brandy mixture. To serve, pour the sangria into 16-ounce glasses and use a large spoon to ladle in plenty of fruit. Serve immediately. If desired, add a few ice cubes to help temper the alcohol.
Make-ahead Tip:
Prepare the fruit and soak in the brandy mixture up to a day in advance of stirring into the wine.
 
Variations
 
Use a good-quality fruity brandy, such as Calvados.
 
 
Add 2 tablespoons of the following: A sweet crushed port wine, Grand Marnier or Cointreau, or a good cherry brandy.
 
 
For a sweeter sangria, stir in more simple syrup.
 
MOJITO
 
 

Serves 1

Time: Less than 10 minutes

Gluten Free, Soy Free
 
 
Simple syrup makes this effortless. A mojito in hand, and that next sweltering summer evening in your apartment could be considered just “tropical.”
 
¼ cup loosely packed whole mint leaves
(remove stems)
1 tablespoon lime juice
2 tablespoons simple syrup (page 218)
2 tablespoons light rum
Ice cubes
Chilled club soda
Mint sprigs or thin lime slice, for garnish
 
 
1. Place the mint leaves in a tall, narrow glass and add the lime juice and simple syrup. With either a muddler (special bar tool for these things) or the opposite end of a long wooden spoon, gently crush the mint while stirring the juice and syrup into the leaves. Do this for about a minute, then add rum. Pile in ice cubes and pour in enough chilled club soda to almost reach the top of the glass. Top off with a mint spring or lime slice and a swizzle stick. Stir and sip and contemplate the joys of drinking your greens (minty greens, that is).

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