Four different kinds of pulses, a gluten-free grain, a hearty green, nuts, dried fruit, fresh fruit, healthy oils, and a hefty punch of fresh citrus is this salad. A fairly long list of ingredients and some prep work is needed, but the pay off if a fantastic one.
A long or short life lays in the hands of our Maker, so a mere salad won't change that, but what it does have the potential to do is contribute to a healthy life, whether it is predestined to be a long or short one.
The salad keeps beautifully in the refrigerator long enough to munch on for every lunch for about five days. It also makes the perfect school lunch as its nutritious, filling, and not smelly at all!
Kale might not be easily found outside North America, so if I were to recommend an alternative, it would be cabbage (strangely enough). Kale is a hearty, sturdy green that does not wilt as spinach or silverbeet do.
I got the idea of this salad from a popular TV show visiting diners and showcasing their dishes.
Ingredients:
1/2 cup dried kidney beans
1/2 cup dried red lentils
1/2 cup dried black eyed beans
1/2 cup dried mung beans
1 cup quinoa
4 cups finely shredded kale
1/2 cup pecans, roughly chopped
1/4 cup dried cranberries
1/4 cup golden raisins
1/4 cup pitted prunes, chopped
1 large mango, peeled and cubed
For the dressing:
peeled skin of 1 orange
peeled skin of 1 lemon
1 inch piece ginger, peeled and sliced
3 lemons, juice
1 small orange, juice
1/4 cup coconut oil
1/2 cup olive oil
3 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
Method:
In four separate bowls, soak the kidney beans, lentils, mung beans, and black eyed beans in plenty of water overnight.
Next day, rinse the pulses separately, discarding the soaking water.
Boil each of the pulses separately in plenty of water.
The lentils take about 15 minutes.
The mung beans take about 40 minutes.
The black eyed beans take about 60 minutes.
The kidney beans take about 75 minutes.
Once each bean is done cooking, strain them from their cooking water and allow to cool.
If cooking traditionally over the stove, I suggest starting cooking all at once. If you have a pressure cooker, they will take about a third of the time only.
Cook the cup of quinoa in two cups water, bring to the boil, cover the pot, reduce the heat to low and let simmer 25 minutes. Fluff and cool.
Once the pulses and quinoa have all been cooked and cooled, toss them in a large bowl with the shredded kale, chopped pecans, cranberries, raisins, prunes, and cubed mango.
Make the dressing in a mini blender: blitz the lemon peel, orange peel, and ginger until pureed.
Add the lemon juice, orange juice, coconut oil, olive oil, salt, and pepper, and blitz again until honogenous and combined.
Dress the salad and mix well to coat all the components.
Keeps well refrigerated for up to five days.
صحة و عافية
This works surprisingly well. I was looking for a multi-day salad (perhaps a contradiction in terms) and tried this. After making a couple of times I'd recommend using a green mango -- a popular S.E. Asian salad ingredient. The red lentils I've sourced here in the UK need a much shorter cooking time and I'd also go a bit easy on the amount of lemon in the dressing and add a little clear honey. Still not sure whether it's better to add all the dressing right away, or reserve until needed. After a couple of days the kale could, I suppose, become slightly pickled. This helps preserve it, of course, so perhaps it's a matter of preference. Also prefer sprouted mung beans to cooked. On the downside, this salad takes an excruciating amount of preparation time.
ReplyDeleteSpoken like a true connoisseur.
DeleteGreat tips!
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