March 30 is Whole Grains Sampling Day, so get your taste game going with this Kamut recipe
Originally posted on
Meatless Monday: Small, Sustainable World
It’s a small world, as Walt Disney told us. And we’re all hungry. I was thinking of this last week in Anaheim, where 60,000 of us converged. We weren’t all going to the Magic Kingdom but to Natural Products Expo West, all of us eager to influence what you eat.
Our influence doesn’t seem felt much right outside Disneyland, where there’s nothing natural about the eats, just fast food, with nary a fresh vegetable to be scrounged. Inside the Anaheim Convention Center, it was a different story. There were plenty of natural and organic companies hawking products. Your food choices matter — now more than ever. But better than the food and free samples was the vibe. The biggest Expo in its 32-year history coalesced around the idea of a magic kingdom where we all have access to fair, fresh, fabulous, healthy and sustainable food.
With so many of us, of course, we all have our own ideas about the best way to get there.
For me, well, you know, the beauty of a vegcentric lifestyle is ever on my mind, and it was an Expo extra to see more people and products proud to be vegan.
For the Organic Farming Research Foundation, what matters most is supporting organic farmers and the food they grow.
For James Beard, award-winning chef, and Wholesome Wave founder Michel Nischan, it’s closing the food fairness gap by establishing local farmers markets in underserved communities.
For chefs like Akasha Richmond and Donna Prizgintas, it’s making whole food accessible and awesome.
For Kamut king Bob Quinn, it’s getting people to eat more nutrient-rich ancient grains and less processed food.
For Austin farmer Brenton Johnson, it’s about growing organic food and growing his community.
What matters? All of it. All of it seems like a lot to swallow. It’s best taken in small bites like these:
Go meatless at least one day a week. Monday works. I’ll always have a seasonal meatless recipe for you, plus there’s that nice alliteration. Keep the plant-based love going tomorrow, too, for Meatout.
Eat an ancient grain. Bite for bite, you get more nourishment than you do with processed grains and zero genetic modification.
Swap fast food for a feast from your farmers market — we have over 7,000 across the country now. Support nonprofits like Wholesome Wave so fresh produce is available in every community.
Just sign the Just Label It pledge saying you demand genetically modified products be labeled.
Insist on organic. I’m not just saying this because I got to speak at the OFRF luncheon. Until there’s a law identifying gmos, buying and eating organic is the only way to be sure your food hasn’t been genetically monkeyed with and your food and our resources aren’t being dosed with chemicals.
Support your local, organic farmer and you support your community, too.
We might have different ideas about the best way to create a healthy food system, the important thing is that we all play a part.
Margaret Mead said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, commited citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”
Turns out that despite our record numbers, what the folks attending Expo West want is pretty much the same thing. Small world.
Kamut with Lemon and Mint
Ingredients
- 1 cup Kamut sometimes sold as Kamut berries
- 3-1/2 cups vegetable broth divided use
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 2 cloves garlic minced
- 3 scallions chopped
- 1 cup cooked chickpeas roughly half a 15-ounce can
- 1 lemon juice and zest
- 4 ounces 3 cups fresh spinach, chopped
- 1 bunch mint chopped
- sea salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
Instructions
Bring three cups of vegetable broth to boil in a large pot. Add rinsed and drained Kamut. Stir and return to boil. Cover and reduce heat to low. Simmer Kamut for 90 minutes — yes, alas, an hour and a half. But in that time, the Kamut will have grown exponentially, aborbed all the liquid and the result will be a fabulous ancient whole grain with both charm and chew. Set Kamut aside to cool slightly. Heat olive oil in large skillet over medium-high heat. Add garlic and scallions, stirring gently until vegetables turn fragrant, about 5 minutes. Add chickpeas and Kamut. Stir to combine. Reduce heat to medium. Squeeze in lemon juice, add chopped spinach by the handful, then add mint. Continue cooking for another 5 minutes or so, until Kamut is heated through. Finish with a lavish addition of sea salt and fresh ground pepper.Notes
Keeps covered and refrigerated for several days. Flavor deepens over time. So if you make it for Meatless Monday, it’ll be even better for Meatout. I’m just saying.
Caroline says
This sounds delicious,however, what about the 1/2 cup of broth and the lemon zest? I do not see where they have been added in the instructions. Thank you
Ellen Kanner says
Caroline! Thanks for the catch. Grate the lemon zest in just before serving, and if that kamut has soaked up all the liquid — it’s thirsty! — that’s where you can add the extra half-cup of vegetable broth too. Please let me know how yours comes out.
Jay Barksdale says
From a 3 month vegan and a first time for kamut. Very fresh and clean, this salad. Not having scallions on hand, we used a bit of red onion, and eye-balled all the proportions. Next time I’ll cook the kamut 90 minutes, as you suggest, instead of 60, for it was quite toothy. The lemon zest brought it all together. A keeper!
many thanks
Jay & George
Ellen Kanner says
Super-delighted to hear from you, and big thanks for playing Team Vegan. Your red onion addition is the perfect work-around. I’m a big believer in using what you have on hand. An Instant Pot cuts Kamut cooking time, but not by a lot Give it a good overnight soak before cooking, and make a big batch. Once cooked and cooled, you can freeze Kamut in an airtight container and have it ready to go whenever you like. What other recipes would you like to see here? I want to make sure you’re happy and well-fed on plants.
Greenly,
Ellen
Jay Barksdale says
Thank you, and since yo asked….
1) what about Teff?
2) do you have a grain and/or bean salad for 15 persons that could be made the day before, put in the fridge overnight, then served at room temp?
and btw, we made the kamut salad again = just as tasty. The first time I was suspicious of the lack of herbs and almost put in our old friend thyme, but was glad I didn’t. The lemon and mint were just right bright.
cheers – Jay
Ellen Kanner says
Hi! A couple options for you: for basic, comforting rice and beans, you can’t beat hopping john. I usually make it for New Year’s Day, but it’s good anytime But for something a little spiced and special, I have a recipe for Caribbean Pigeon Peas and Rice created for Rancho Gordo . In either case, just double the recipe, and you should have plenty for 15. Can’t wait to hear!
Greenly,
Ellen