I have really been enjoying my food lately. I'm resisting the urge to talk about my food on facebook by posting on here instead. : )
First off, that tahini sauce/paste I posted a while back is a miracle. I use it all the time. Just a few hours ago I spread some on a pita, threw some lettuce and cucumber and tomato on it, sprinkled it with salt and pepper and a bit of fresh parsley I had left over from making tabouleh a while back, and a spoonful of yogurt. Amazingly delicious sandwich and surprisingly filling thanks to the tahini.
Thursday night I neglected to prepare a lunch for work on Friday, and then I overslept a bit Friday morning, so I quickly boiled up a half cup of rice, while it was cooking shredded some daikon radish, carrot, and a bit of ginger, mixed it together and threw it in a tupperware container, then dumped the rice in next to it, wrapped my bottle of soy sauce in a plastic bag in case of leakage, and tossed it in my backpack. Delicious lunch in about ten minutes.
Another good quick lunch idea came from a Czech friend: sautee thinly sliced onion and mushrooms in a little olive oil with marjoram, parsley, a bit of basil, and spicy paprika, plus a little salt and pepper. While it's cooking, toast up a couple slices of good dark bread (works best with Czech bread, which contains caraway). Spread the onion/mushroom mix on the bread (add a slice of cheese if you're fortunate enough to not be lactose intolerant) and eat. I also put some sriracha (chili/garlic) sauce on this for an extra kick.
I just impulse-bought a bag of wasabi peas from the local Vietnamese shop while buying veggies. Never had them before and they are amazing. Gonna start keeping them on hand regularly for when I need a snack. Trying to stay away from salty crap as much as possible.
I actually read lately that a study has found evidence of a link between refined salt and eczema. I suffer from terrible eczema and nothing seems to be helping it, from vaseline to steroid creams, so I've bought some good-quality sea salt (the article seemed to indicate that the missing minerals in refined salt, rather than too much of the salt itself, might be the real problem) and am trying to home-make everything possible, since I know anything I buy will be loaded with refined salt. We'll see if it helps. I'm going to try to bake some pita break tomorrow to replace the store-bought kind which apparently is a large hidden source of salt.
Finally, a question: I've had plum wine in restaurants and loved it. I just bought a bottle of it at that Vietnamese shop and am looking forward to drinking it, but I've never had a bottle of it before and am not sure how to treat it once opened. Is it like hard liquor, where you can just put the cap back on and store it for as long as you want, or do I need to either refrigerate it or drink it all quickly to avoid it spoiling? Thanks!