Thursday, January 23, 2014
Vegan Gluten Free Birthday Treats
At Muse, we only serve organic foods and because of this, students are asked not to bring outside food onto the campus. When birthdays role around the kitchen bakes special treats for each student to share with his or her class. As you can imagine, with 150 students we wind up doing a lot of baking! This is the vanilla cupcake recipe we have adapted which is vegan and gluten free, making it universally friendly even for students with allergies or food restrictions. Looks pretty tasty, right?
Vegan-Gluten Free Cupcakes
Makes 2 dozen mini cupcakes
1 1/2 cups gluten free flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
8 TB Earth Balance butter substitute, softened
1 cup cane sugar
3 TB ground Flax seed, mixed with 9 TB water
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
3/4 cup rice milk
-Preheat oven to 350F.
-In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream the Earth Balance and sugar until light and fluffy. Add in the flaxseed and water mixture slowly. Set aside.
-In a large bowl, sift the flour, baking powder and salt. Mix the wet mixture into the dry and add the vanilla extract and rice milk. Stir the mixture until well combined.
-Portion the batter into mini muffin pans lined with recycled baking cups. You should have about 24 cupcakes.
-Bake 10-15 minutes until golden brown and set in the center. Determine doneness by inserting a toothpick into the center of one of the cupcakes. If it comes out clean, they are ready. Allow to cool at least 20 minutes before frosting.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Going Green in 2014
Happy New Year and welcome back to school! Its the time of year for resolutions and if yours are at all in line with the most popular resolutions of 2014, you are likely focusing on health, fitness, family or some combination of all three.
To get you moving in the right direction I wanted to share this simple recipe for what I like to call a Green Julius. When I was a kid, my mom, not knowing any better, would take my sister and I to Orange Julius on occasion for a treat. For those of you not familiar with the chain, they make creamy, delicious orange smoothies that are loaded with sugar, yet delicious.
Inspired by Diana who has been making green smoothies since we returned from winter break, I whipped up a vegan version of the orange julius that is loaded with spinach. If your kids can get past the color, they are sure to love it!
Green Julius
1 cup coconut yogurt, such as Sodelicious
1 cup Vanilla Almond milk
1 cup spinach leaves
3 oranges juiced
1/2 cup ice
Mix in Blender and enjoy immediately.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Lavender Fair 2013
Last week was very busy as we geared up to run our lunch booth at Lavender Fair. Thank you so much to everyone who attended the event and supported our booth as your choice for lunch. We raised over $1000 for the school and actually sold out of food by 2:30! Enjoy the photos from the last week below.
Erica always seems to be lurking behind every corner.
The Muses in the Kitchen lunch booth!
Lunch ladies, Myrtle and Flo, stopped by on Thursday to help us with our prep work and there was some Hawaiian guy who was really good at doing dishes.
The Muses in the Kitchen lunch booth!
Me with my husband helper. Poor guy got up at 4:30 in the morning to help me finish prepping. Thank you!
Friday, October 25, 2013
Passion, Love and Getting Burned
I like to cook, yes. I love food in general. Since I was 16
years old, every job I have ever had has always revolved around taking care of
people who want to eat.
The truth is that it is an exhausting line of work to be in.
Have you ever noticed that people are generally hungry again within 3-4 hours
of eating a meal? In my world that means it is rare that I am ever not holding
a knife, stirring a pot or cleaning up some mess that has resulted from the
other two activities. I’ve worked 16 hour days without stopping, steam burned
the top layer of skin off my hands, sliced the tip of my thumb so many times I
don’t even feel it. Don’t get me started about taking inventory. I don’t always
feel passionate about these things.
There are times I have had fantasies of winning the lottery
or going to college. I try to wonder if I would be better off as some alternate
version of me. But then, I will
invariably find myself wandering through the grocery store one day, with
nothing in my cart, only to realize I have been there for half an hour just
looking at all the different food products and imagining what I would do with
various combinations of them.
That’s not passion. It’s a long term love… so clearly
in front of you that you sometimes fail to recognize it’s there. A kind of love
that can be exhausting. A kind of love that can cause you to cry (yes I have
cried about being a chef at various points in my career), but a kind of love
you wouldn’t be yourself without.
At MUSE we talk a lot about children’s passions. It’s an
interesting experience for me to see how excited kids can get about cooking.
Actually, to see how excited they can get about just about anything.
Me: “We are having yogurt for snack.”
Passionate Student: “Yes!!!!! We love yogurt!!!!! This is
the best day ever!!!!!”
I know that I was like that once. I think it must come with
being a kid and seeing things through a lens of focalism. When you are young,
it is hard to account for the complexity of life experiences yet to come. And
yet somehow, that inability to see the future has its adaptive advantages in
helping us to follow our dreams…in giving us the guts to follow our dreams.
I went to a very traditional private high school. I had a
very high GPA. I was surrounded by guidance counselors pushing college
applications my way. I didn’t want to go to college and this was rare in a
school that boasted statistics on percentages of graduates going on to four
year universities. I was a fish trying to swim in a different direction
and if it was not for one teacher who recognized the spark in me, I would be on
a very different course right now.
Her names was Sister Maria Goretti. She was a nun who lived
in the convent adjacent to the school. She knew I liked cooking and instead of
a college application, she offered me a job cooking for the 20 nuns that lived
at the convent.
The Sisters were
mostly elderly and Irish. They enjoyed pot roast, baked potatoes and salads
with Ranch dressing. They had a penchant for having dessert and tea after every
meal and sometimes they even drank wine. It was one of the best cooking jobs I
have ever had, for the most appreciative people I have ever met.
At that time, you needed a certain number of experiential
months of cooking to even apply to culinary schools. My job at the convent
helped to get me into the Culinary Institute of America with a scholarship.
Looking back on my life so far everything seems very linear
and the steps I took from one restaurant to another all make sense, even if they didn't at the time. I can
recognize the kitchens and the experiences that wore me out and broke me down and
the people in my life who kept me going just enough to not let the spark die
completely.
I am 28 years old. In the scheme of a life, I have a long
way to go. I don’t know where I will end up. How many more kitchens I will
scrub and care for and make my own. I don’t know how many more thousands of
people I will feed or what the culinary trends of the future will be, but right
now I can look to the passionate students at MUSE and remember why I started
doing this in the first place and I am grateful for that reminder when the
times get tough.
17 years old. My first big catering job. A 3 course plated dinner for 150 people. I got all my friends to work as waitresses.
19 years old. My first job out of cooking school. Working at a cafe in Upstate New York. Yikes, that refrigerator looks gross!
24 years old. The Golden Door Spa. This picture was from a photo shoot for Traditional Homes magazine.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
1st Grade's Kale, Quinoa, Grape and Roasted Squash Salad
Every Wednesday, Shawn Greenbaum, leads a class trip to the Farmer's Market. Last week he took the first grade and they came back with some beautiful Fall produce: Butternut and Kabocha squash, a variety of kale and some red grapes.
I met up with the first graders on Thursday and they helped me prep these ingredients to make a quinoa salad. They worked in teams, tearing up kale, peeling squash and cutting grapes. It was a fun afternoon. Check out the photos below!
Friday, September 27, 2013
New Year: New Good Things
Well, we are almost a full month into school and I am just finally getting back to the blogging! We had a transformative summer in the kitchen, with days spent cleaning, re-organizing, painting and even sanding! The result is our new space which has helped us keep up with our increase in students (140! Yikes!).
Check out the photos below to see all of the good new things going on in the MUSE kitchen.
Chip, our facilities manager, built these beautiful and functional cabinets to store all of our dishes! The recycled wood came from a barn in Northern California. He knocked them out in three days and Javier and I got to brush up on our sanding skills. The doors alone took almost 5 hours to make smooth!
In order to maximize the space of our small kitchen we had to go vertical, using peg boards to hang our pots and pans. I use this same trick at home and its great because you always know where everything is.
We were running out of counter space and work area in the main kitchen so we transformed our old food pantry into a prep room! Its a nice quiet place to work in and I love how spacious it feels.
This last picture is of a new MUSE IN THE KITCHEN! This is Erica Aquino. She started working part time with us a week ago and we are so thankful and happy to have to extra support.
Erica Aquino
Age: 20 years old
First Job: Papa Murphy's Pizza
Favorite Pandora Station: Diiv
Little Known Fact: I play bass in a band and sing (pretty cool)
Guilty Pleasure: Watching "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo Child" on TLC
Check out the photos below to see all of the good new things going on in the MUSE kitchen.
Chip, our facilities manager, built these beautiful and functional cabinets to store all of our dishes! The recycled wood came from a barn in Northern California. He knocked them out in three days and Javier and I got to brush up on our sanding skills. The doors alone took almost 5 hours to make smooth!
In order to maximize the space of our small kitchen we had to go vertical, using peg boards to hang our pots and pans. I use this same trick at home and its great because you always know where everything is.
We were running out of counter space and work area in the main kitchen so we transformed our old food pantry into a prep room! Its a nice quiet place to work in and I love how spacious it feels.
This last picture is of a new MUSE IN THE KITCHEN! This is Erica Aquino. She started working part time with us a week ago and we are so thankful and happy to have to extra support.
Erica Aquino
Age: 20 years old
First Job: Papa Murphy's Pizza
Favorite Pandora Station: Diiv
Little Known Fact: I play bass in a band and sing (pretty cool)
Guilty Pleasure: Watching "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo Child" on TLC
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Restaurant Italiano
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