Fall Breakfast: Spicy Ginger Pumpkin Pancakes

Spices and crystallized ginger mean no syrup needed for these fall pancakes.

I am no big fan of pumpkin. Mostly it tastes like the spices that flavor it, IMVHO — it doesn’t have a specific taste, really, especially if it comes out of the can (and is likely to be butternut squash anyway).

But these fall pancakes manage to balance the more subtle flavors of pumpkin with a fiery kick of ginger. I add a ton of chopped crystallized ginger, so I get a crunchy piece in every bite. It’s the perfect fall breakfast or late-night snack or mid-day snack or dinner or…you get the idea.

Spicy Ginger Pumpkin Pancakes

These pancakes could not have been more delicious if they tried. Faintly spicy, studded with crispy candied ginger and tasting of pumpkin. Light and fluffy. Delicious with or without maple syrup. Delicious with homemade apple butter. You will want to keep this recipe and make it often, especially my gluten-free friends. They freeze beautifully, and you can even freeze the batter (although the resulting pancakes are less fluffy. Still delicious.). Add more or less spice, use the ginger or don’t, fry bacon until it’s super crispy, and then crumble it into the batter before you fry them up: go crazy.

Ingredients

2 1/2 cups gluten-free all-purpose flour

¼ cup sugar (use less if you like)

1 tablespoon baking powder

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon ground cloves

Minced crystallized ginger (as much as you like; I ended up with about 4 tablespoons).

1 1/4 cup pumpkin puree (freeze the leftover puree in ice cube trays and pop them in soup as a thickener)

1 1/2 to 2 cups of milk (dairy or non-dairy works — I usually use oat milk; use less if you prefer waffles, but aim for thick-ish cake batter)

4 tablespoons melted butter, cooled slightly

2 eggs

Method

In a large bowl, mix together flour sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, salt, cloves, and ginger, adjusting the spices as you see fit.

In a separate bowl, stir together pumpkin puree, milk, melted butter, and eggs.

Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients. You don’t have to be gentle here, but it’s also okay if there are still lumps in the pancakes. I gave the batter a good thrashing with a whisk because lumps drive me crazy, and the pancakes seemed to like it (and gluten-free flour doesn’t mind it, but maybe be a little more gentle for regular AP flour).

Heat a skillet, and add a little butter if it’s not non-stick. Use a little less than 1/4 cup of batter per pancake, and cook on one side until the edges are dry and little bubbles form and pop (about 2 minutes, depending on the heat). Figure that your first pancake is going to look awful, and resign yourself to eating that steamy mound of deliciousness right away. It’s a sacrifice I am sure you are willing to make. Flip, cook for another minute or two, then serve with syrup, apple butter, wrapped around a sausage, or plain.

This makes about two dozen pancakes. I can’t actually remember. I eat them plain hot off the griddle, and I lose count. But it makes a bunch.

If you have leftovers, cool them all the way then pack them in single serving sizes and freeze. YUM.

Recipe notes

  • You can also use ground ginger, but I like the texture of the crystallized ginger in the pancake. For ground ginger, try 1 teaspoon.
  • Freeze the leftover pumpkin puree in ice cube trays and pop them in soup as a thickener. You can also use fresh-roasted pumpkin, pureed, when it’s in season.
  • Add more clove or cinnamon (or less) as you prefer it.
  • Freeze in sealed baggies in appropriate portion sizes, reheating from frozen or thawing in the ‘fridge.

Ruby Chocolate Ice Cream With Coconut And Walnuts Sandwiched By Ruby Chocolate World Peace Cookies

Fall is one of the best times for an ice cream sammie.

Technically, I am not supposed to have a blog post title that long.

It should be short and sweet, intriguing.

But if you are not intrigued by the title above, you’re a dead person in a flesh suit.

Start here. Watch the video, make the cookies.

I swapped out my gluten-free flour blend and an equal amount of ruby chocolate for the chopped chocolate at the end.

And a word to the wise: weighing the ingredients for this recipe is important. I measured by volume the first time around and was totally unimpressed. Measuring by weight changed the whole experience. This recipe makes 36 cookies, and they can be frozen, baked, or frozen unbaked and sliced/baked when ready.

You could also skip the ruby chocolate if you like and make them as written, and you wouldn’t be sad, but this is a theme. 10/10 recommend finding some ruby chocolate for the cookies — you need it for the ice cream anyway, so why not?

Next, make the ice cream. This ruby chocolate ice cream is velvety smooth and rich, studded with unsweetened coconut and chopped walnuts. It’s not the same flamboyant pink of other recipes on the interwebs because I opted not to add food coloring or beet powder, but it you want that shock of pink in your mouth, add a 1/2 teaspoon of powder or as many drops of food color as you like.

New to ruby chocolate, which is a relative newcomer to food? Read more about ruby chocolate here from the company that discovered it.

Ruby Chocolate Ice Cream With Coconut And Walnuts

Ingredients

1 ½ cups heavy cream

½ cup coconut milk

⅓ cup sugar

3 egg yolks

6 ounces ruby chocolate

Optional: Beet powder or red food coloring

½ cup chopped walnuts

½ cup unsweetened shredded coconut

Method

Heat cream, coconut milk, and sugar in a heavy saucepan over medium heat until bubbles appear at the edges.

While the milk heats, place the egg yolks in one bowl and the ruby chocolate in a slightly larger bowl and prepare an ice bath for the slightly larger bowl.

Once the bubbles appear, turn off the heat and very, very slowly drizzle the heated cream and coconut milk into the egg yolks, whisking constantly. If you go too fast or don’t whisk you’ll end up with sweet scrambled eggs. Go slow.

Return the mixture back to the heat, turn the flame to medium low, and get ready to stir until it thickens. This can take a minute (up to ten), but don’t get impatient and turn up the heat or you will end up with — you guessed it — sweet scrambled eggs.

When the milk mixture coats the back of the spatula and is thick (like a custardy sauce, not quite pudding), it’s done. Place a strainer over the bowl with the ruby chocolate and pour the milk into it. This catches any stray bits of egg (it happens).

Stir until the ruby chocolate is completely melted and incorporated. If adding beet powder or food coloring, do it at this step.

Place the bowl of what is now delicious, delicious ruby chocolate custard into the ice bath and stir until cooled. Wrap the bowl in plastic and chill until totally cold (at least four hours, but overnight is good, too).

When the custard is cool, process according to your ice cream maker’s directions. I add the coconut and walnuts in at the last five minutes, and it works like a charm.

Sandwich between two cookies, eat out of the ice cream maker, or freeze and serve later.

Note: 

This recipe doubles easily.

You can also substitute milks (non-dairy, no heavy cream, etc), but you will not get the same richness.

In The Planning Stage (Apparently)

It’s a reflection. Get it?

I haven’t posted here since the beginning of the summer, and if you haven’t read that post you need to go there because it’s the most delicious salad that translates into fall with maybe just sturdier greens and some quinoa.

I’ll wait.

But now, this post, which doesn’t have anything to do with food, really, except that I have made white bean and kale soup, gluten-free bagels, and GF and vegan doughnut holes from Minimalist Baker (among other delights), and am working on a ruby chocolate truffle that may make it onto the blog (along with Ruby Chocolate World Peace Cookies, in progress). But this post is not about that.

This post is about this quote:

“Nobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish
someone had told me. All of us who do creative work, we
get into it because we have good taste. But there is this
gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not
that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s
not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game,
is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints
you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit.

Most people I know who do interesting, creative work
went through years of this. We know our work doesn’t
have this special thing that we want it to have. We all
go through this. And if you are just starting out or you
are still in this phase, you gotta know it’s normal and the
most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Put
yourself on a deadline so that every week you will finish
one story. It is only by going through a volume of work
that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good
as your ambitions. And I took longer to figure out how to
do this than anyone I’ve ever met. It’s gonna take a while.
It’s normal to take a while. You’ve just gotta fight your
way through.” – Ira Glass

My creative work has gone through some changes with the publication of my book Healing Where You Are: An Introduction to Urban Foraging; the shitty voice in my head has been back for awhile now, and my creative practice in the past eight months or so has simply been to get it to STFU.

I do that by pressing on. By walking. By jotting things down and editing when I get the urge. By saying no to mercenary writing that sucks the life out of me and yes to putting paint on canvas. By starting big projects that might lead to bigger projects (spoiler alert: #tinycabinbiglife).

Have I done as much as I should? Could?

Not likely.

But winter is coming, and for me that just more opportunity to dig deeper. To fight my way through.

To let go, even.

Also to start baking again. So there’s that.

What’s unfolding for you? Curious to know how people are moving forward after the first pandemic years.

Summer Salad With Vegan Cashew Dressing and Chipotle-spiced Potatoes

chipotle spiced roasted potatoes sit atop vegan cashew dressing on colorful salad greens with red and yellow peppers
Chipotle-spiced potatoes languishing on vegan cashew dressing and crispy salad greens.

It seems everybody and their fucking brother has a salad recipe for the summertime, but I’m just going to come out and say it: this one is better.

How’s that, you say? 

1. It’s accidentally vegan, and by “accidentally” I mean I don’t follow a vegan diet, but we should all eat less meat, because A) high-quality meat is getting more expensive, B) the only meat you should eat is high-quality meat, and C) eating plant-based meals a few times a week is really good for you.

Plus it’s cheaper to eat plant-based whole foods that aren’t processed. So there’s that.

2. The two highlights of this salad — the dressing and the potatoes — can be strewn about any number of variations in terms of greens and accoutrements. I give some suggestions in the Recipe Notes.

3. It’s a really good chance that you have everything you need to make this salad immediately. The only iffy thing is the cashews, but even the cashews can be picked up at a convenience store on the way home, as they don’t need to be fancy and raw (which means no soaking).

Everything else is pantry and fridge staples, and there’s no unusual ingredients. 

There’s also no yeast — a common vegan trick for a “cheesy” flavor — in this recipe. Many people, including this writer, have issues with yeast. Leaving it out is no big deal.

4. It’s just really, really fucking delicious.

Summer Salad With Vegan Cashew Dressing and Chipotle-spiced Potatoes

Ingredients

Vegan cashew salad dressing (makes about a cup)

½ cup roasted, salted cashews

¼ cup neutral oil (I used canola)

1 teaspoon maple syrup or honey (I used shagbark hickory syrup in late winter)

3 tablespoons lime juice (more to taste)

1 clove garlic (about 1 teaspoon chopped if you buy it in a little jar, which I do sometimes and LOVE, so zero shade)

1 teaspoon cumin

Hot water to thin (see Recipe Notes)

Chipotle-spiced Potatoes

Yellow potatoes, cut into ½”-1” cubes 

Chipotle chili powder (see Recipe Notes)

Olive oil

Salt and black pepper

Salad Stuff — go crazy here

Romaine hearts, chopped

Red and yellow peppers

Carrots

Red cabbage

Chopped snap peas

Avocado

Cherry tomatoes

Black beans, grilled chicken, leftover steak, or all in some combination

Pickled red onions (or raw in thin slivers)

Shredded sharp cheddar if you want the dairy experience

Method

Salad dressing: Place all ingredients except water in a food processor or very capable blender, and blend until smooth and creamy. Add hot water to thin as needed, but be prepared to bump up the lime juice and other seasoning (cumin especially) if you add too much. Since I use this on hearty romaine salad greens, I certainly don’t mind a thicker dressing, but you choose your own adventure.

This can be stored in the fridge for three days. Note that it will thicken as it cools, so you may need to add a combo of lime/warm water to thin.

Potatoes: Preheat your oven to 400 degrees.

Chop up a mess of yellow potatoes, more than you think you need. More than you think you want. Seriously.  Chances are good when you are done eating your salad, you’re going to want to nosh on these with some ketchup. If you have leftovers, they are just fine on salad the next day, or you can use them in a frittata. SO GOOD. Plus, if you’re going to turn your oven on in the summer, you might as well make it count.

Add potatoes to a bowl and splash with a generous glug of olive oil, chipotle chili powder, salt and black pepper. How much?

Frustratingly for you, maybe, it’s hard to say. People’s spice preference is different. The chipotle chili should be visible on the potatoes, and you want them fairly slippery with oil. Use more salt than you think you need, and keep it handy.

Place in the oven and roast for 20 minutes. Give them a stir, taste for salt and add if needed,  turn off the oven, and let them sit in the oven for another ten minutes while you put your salad together.

Assembly: I chop, wash, and spin dry three romaine hearts every week in the summer so there’s no excuse not to eat veggies, and it’s easy all the time (I’ll grate tons of carrot in there, too). You can use any type of hearty salad green, but for the love of all things holy, avoid iceberg lettuce in most applications, including this one.

Add whatever salad-y things you like. I would avoid cucumbers unless they are the English kind that have less water, but I might also avoid those. They just don’t seem delicious here, but if that’s your jam, have at it.

Add dressings and pile on the potatoes. I like to toss everything together in a slightly larger bowl so the dressing touches every corner of the salad and potatoes. 

Eat. Repeat. Salad for days.

Recipe notes

  • If you use too much hot water to thin your cashew dressing, it could also dilute the flavor. I like to alternate between water and additional lime juice. If you only have one lime, you could also add unseasoned rice vinegar instead. Acid is a good friend here — it keeps things light even though this is a filling salad.

If you don’t stan chipotle chili powder, substitute the same amount of smoked paprika. It changes the flavor profile a bit, but the smoke is what you’re after. If you hate both of those options, season the potatoes with a fancy smoked salt and live your best life.

No Cap: Tortilla Soup

The garnishes seem overwhelming, but this is also delicious without a single addition.

I am going to share a top secret recipe today that is fail-proof, delicious, cheap, and vegan (if you skip some of the garnishes). It’s because I LOVE YOU, and I want you to have good things in your life. That’s why.

Not even going to make you sit through a story — just soup, soup, and more soup. Enjoy.

Tortilla Soup

Ingredients

2 tablespoons vegetable oil

1 cup yellow onion, chopped

4 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 jalapeño, finely chopped (keep as many or as few seeds as you like)

 Salt and pepper

1 teaspoon chili powder

1 teaspoon ground cumin

2 tablespoons puréed chipotles in adobo (see Recipe Notes)

1 (28-ounce) can diced tomatoes (or two smaller cans)

2 cups vegetable or chicken stock (I used veg for the vegetarian)

1 can of corn kernels (or fresh, about 2 cups)

1 can black or dark red kidney beans

GARNISHES, ANY OR ALL

Avocado, chopped

Tortilla chips

Shredded Colby jack (or cheese of your choice)

Sour cream

Chopped fresh cilantro

Red onion, finely chopped

Method

Heat oil over medium heat in a large, heavy-bottomed pot. Add onion, garlic, green chilis/jalapeño, and season with salt and pepper. Cook until onion is soft (5-8 minutes).

Add chili powder and cumin and stir to coat. Cook a minute or two until spices open up, then add chipotle purée and tomatoes. Season again with salt and pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, until the tomatoes start to caramelize a bit on the bottom of the pot (the time for this varies depending on your pot, the heat, etc. But there will be less liquid and the tomatoes will brown slightly. Mine took about ten minutes).

Add vegetable stock, corn, and beans. Bring to a simmer and reduce heat to low. Simmer uncovered 15-20 minutes and taste for seasoning.

At this point, the soup is done. It can be set aside and reheated, and it’s even better the next day. It freezes perfectly.

Garnish the hell out of your soup, or eat it plain. Delicious either way.

This soup’s spice can be moderated by adding fewer seeds/veins from whatever pepper you choose.

Recipe Notes

  • When you open a can of chipotle chilis in adobo, dump in a blender and purée. Remove the amount you need for the soup, then place the rest in a Ziploc bag and flatten. Freeze. Break off chunks of deliciousness as needed.
  • Add grilled, shredded chicken (or rotisserie chicken from the store – EASY) for carnivores.