But don’t despair, I have a really useful recipe, and
useful is always a good thing- useful makes our lives that little bit easier!
Vegetable stock (or ‘broth’) is
a staple in pretty much all vegan cooking (and for cooking in general). It
provides so much of the important flavour within a dish, and the difference
between a good stock and a bad one can make a huge difference to the outcome.
Vegan cooking is often so very reliant on the subtleties of flavours without
the strength and textures of meat and dairy to carry a dish.
So, why risk it?
Make your own!
I use this stock paste in everything where I list ‘vegetable
stock’ in my ingredients, I also find the fact that it is a paste really
useful, as it mixes with water so much more readily than a hard cube. You can
also use precisely the amount you want instead of having to break off half a
cube for a small single portion.
This recipe originally came from the cookbook that came with my Thermomix, I have followed it almost identically other
than reducing the amount of salt specified (the original recipe stated 300g
which I didn’t feel was necessary by the
second time I made it), you can add a little extra salt back in if you prefer.
Believe me, it’s so much more satisfying making your own
stock with real vegetables, and it
really is so simple…so no excuses! Right?
Recipe: Homemade stock paste
Makes the equivalent of 40 stock cubes
Ingredients
200g celery
2 large carrots
1 onion- quartered
1 courgette- cut into chunks
1 garlic clove
50g fresh mushrooms
1 bay leaf
5g each of basil, sage, rosemary
20g parsley
30g dry white wine
1tbs olive oil
150g sea salt or unrefined rock salt
Method
In a food processor place all veg and chop until quite fine. Place
the chopped veg in a large pan then add the herbs, wine, oil and salt. Simmer
for 20 minutes. Remove the bay leaf (if you can find it, don’t worry if not)
and blend either in the pan using a hand blender, or pour into a blender, to
achieve ensure a fine smooth paste.
The paste can be store in the fridge for up to 6 months.
To use, dilute each teaspoon with 300-400g water or milk
substitute.
For tips and info on recipe measurement conversions, ingredients, substitutions and the methods behind how I do things.... check out my 'baking tips' tab at the top of the page.
Great idea! Will be making it this evening. Thnks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome, glad I inspired you!
DeleteWow. That's brilliant! I'd never thought to do this. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. It's funny sometimes how things we take for granted are actually so simple to create ourselves! :-)
DeleteThis is so cool! What a great idea. Great that you don't need a thermomix either.
ReplyDeleteThank you, so simple isn't it! I always have a tub in the fridge ready to go.
DeleteI noticed the picture has tomato, eas this missing in the ingredients?
ReplyDeleteAh yes, good spot! I checked back in my recipe file and I did indeed use 1 large tomato (3-4 small cherry tomatoes) though to be honest the recipe is not too rigid... a little bit of whatever you have in the fridge if you need to swap in or out a few items will typically do the trick!
Delete