Vegetarian Thai Hot and Sour Soup (Tom Yum)

I went to a local Thai restaurant not too long ago and they had the most amazing Vegetarian Hot and Sour soup. I’ve had Chinese Hot and Sour Soup before and thought it was “ok”. I have this crazy thing for lemongrass flavor, so Thai Hot and Sour stole away my heart.  I had a bunch of leftover Thai ingredients from a dinner I made a few nights back and didn’t want all my yummy Asian produce to go to waste. And what better way to use a whole slew of leftover produce but a soup? Per my usual style, I browsed some recipes, then made up my own.

With the vegetables, you can pretty much use whatever you prefer. I listed what I used in my soup, but feel free to make it your own way. You really can’t go wrong with a soup like this, so get the ‘base’ down and then modify to your heart’s content!

I am entirely pleased with the outcome of my soup. It’s warm, comforting and, in my humble opinion, has a comforting authentic flavor. I’ve been taking 2nds and 3rds… “Just one more taste” ever since I ate it for dinner. I can’t wait to share it with the rest of my family who are going to taste my leftovers tomorrow.

Another great benefit is that it’s a very low fat and low calorie dish. I did my own nutritional calculations, so though I can’t guarantee they are 100% accurate, they’re pretty close and can at least give you a guideline (nutrition values are below, under the recipe).

A few things to note before you get started about the ethnic ingredients, especially if you’re not used to working with them…

  1. Thai Bird Chilies (aka “Thai Chilies” or “Birdeye Chilies”) usually come in red or green and are about 1 inch long. The number of chilies you use determines the “star” rating of heat. I used 3 and it was ‘medium’. I probably could have gone for 4. I like a little nose drip with my hot and sour soup. These chilies are very hot. In fact, you may want to wear gloves when chopping them. My left thumb was burning for hours after holding the chili to chop it with my right. I also scratched an itch on my cheek and had a red ‘burn’ for a few hours as well, no thanks to the chili juice. But don’t let this scare you. They are an essential flavor (aka – the “hot” in “hot and sour”) to this soup. Just proceed with caution.
  2. Fish Sauce is a staple flavor in most Thai dishes. There are some vegetarian options out there at specialty stores or you can make your own. In a pinch, you can use a bit of seaweed for that “sea” flavor, but I would use that as a last resort.
  3. Lemongrass. Do not eat the lemongrass. I don’t even want to tell you my story of when I tried to serve my husband (then boyfriend) lemongrass finely sliced in a salad. It was bad. It’s a flavoring. Don’t. Eat. The. Lemongrass. I’m sure you all know this already, but in the event you didn’t. I needed to at least let you learn from my bad experience and warn you. Strip the outside layers off, wash it well, then get the flavor out of it by using the flat side of a knife or a rolling pin and pound it a few times. Then, slice into 3″ pieces and throw it into the soup. I know there are ways to use the actual lemongrass in recipes but I haven’t figured that out yet.

Vegetarian Thai Hot and Sour Soup (Tom Yum)

Serves: 4-appetizer, 2-meal

  • 1 t oil (I always use olive because that’s what I have closest to the stove)
  • 1/2 medium white onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3 cups vegetarian chickenless broth (or vegetable broth)
  • 3 cups water
  • 1 stock lemongrass, pounded and cut into 3″ pieces
  • 14 oz whole tomatoes, drained (not rinsed), cut into large chunks (approx 1/2 a large can)
  • 1 to 6 red or green Thai chilies, seeded and finely minced
  • 1/2 cup carrots, chopped
  • 1/2 cup fresh peas
  • 1/2 cup mushrooms (I recommend Shitake or Chinese black)
  • 1/2 cup green onions, chopped
  • 2/3 cup extra firm tofu, cubes
  • Any additional vegetables of your choosing, such as red bell pepper, bamboo shoots, broccoli, etc. (I would have used these if I had some on hand)
  • 2 Tbsp vegetarian fish sauce (you can buy or make your own. Fish sauce is a “staple” flavor’
  • Juice from 2 limes
  • 1 Tbsp rice vinegar
  • 3-4 lime leaves (optional)
  • 1 t Basil, minced, plus additional for garnish (optional)
  • 1 t Cilantro, minced, plus additional for garnish (optional)
  • Bean sprouts for garnish (optional)
  1. Prepare all your ingredients by chopping, dicing, mincing, etc. Pound the lemongrass with a rolling pin or the flat side of a knife.
  2. Heat the oil in a medium/large pot over medium-high heat. Add onions and garlic. Cook stirring occasionally until translucent.
  3. Add broth, water, lemongrass, lime leaves (if you have it) and tomatoes. Bring to a boil. Let boil 15-20 mins.
  4. Add chilies, carrots and peas. Bring back to a boil and let simmer at a low boil for another 10 minutes
  5. Add mushrooms, tofu, green onions, vegetarian fish sauce, lime juice, vinegar, basil and cilantro. Bring back to a boil and let boil approx 5 mins. If there doesn’t appear to be enough broth, add 1/2 cup of water at a time bringing it back to a boil before serving.
  6. Serve being mindful to not serve the lemongrass or lime leaves Garnish with bean sprouts and additional basil and cilantro before presenting.

Nutrition for 1/4 the recipe, when making it as an appetizer for 4:
140 calories, 4g fat, 20g carbs, 8g protein, 4g fiber

Whole Wheat Pita Bread

My mom gave my sister and I each our own copy of King Arthur Flour Whole Wheat Baking. She’s had this book since last year and has great luck with each and every recipe. So much that my sis and I kept calling her for recipes. She must have got sick of us always asking and decided we needed our own. Anyway… I very highly recommend this book for anyone who is interested in whole grains and baking. You’d be surprised at how light and fluffy a lot of these recipes taste. You’d never guess they were whole wheat/grain!

Back to the recipe on hand…. Last night, I decided to try out the Whole Wheat Pita Bread recipe. I’ve heard pitas are pretty easy to make and I had some falafel and greek yogurt (that I turned into tzatziki) that I needed to use. It only took about 5 mins to mix all the ingredients together, let them rise for 1 1/2 hours while I went to the gym, then came home and whipped them out in no time!

I ate them with my falafel last night and this morning I had them again for breakfast with some scrambled egg and feta cheese. Yum!

Important Notes if you’re going to try this recipe that I found made it easier and made those little rounds get nice and puffy:

#1: Move your oven rack all the way to the bottom, closest to the heating coils.

#2: They cook quickly and require a turn mid-baking. This means you’re going to lose a lot of heat in a conventional oven from so much open/closing. I recommend upping the temp to 465 (from the recommended 450).

#3: Pre-heat your baking sheet or whatever you’re baking them on (I didn’t have the bread stone it called for, so I used a cookie sheet).

#4: Use a spatula to flip them over halfway through. Tongs don’t work (as I quickly found out after my first attempt. Silly me!

Whole Wheat Pita Bread

Makes 8 pitas
Cook Time: 5 mins each batch (cook 2 pitas per batch)

  • 1 3/4 cups whole wheat flour
  • 1 1/2 cups bread flour (I didn’t have this on hand so I used whole wheat pastry flour instead. Bread flour has more gluten and makes the texture better. Pastry flour also has a fairly high gluten content, and I felt they came out just fine)
  • 1 1/2 t salt
  • 1 1/2 t instant yeast (or active dry yeast dissolved into 1/4 cup of the recipe’s water)
  • 1 1/4 cups warm water
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
  1. Combine all ingredients together and mix or kneed by hand or mixer until you have a soft supple dough. About 8 minutes by hand, 5 minutes by mixer (the kitchen aid dough hook works perfectly for this!). It should feel tacky to the touch. You may need a bit more flour, but not too much.
  2. Cover the bowl and let rise until approx doubled in bulk, 1 1/2 hours.
  3. Place a baking stone on the bottom rack of your oven and preheat overn to 450 (I did it at 465 to make up for all the in and out I was going to do)
  4. After it’s risen, place the dough on a lightly floured surface and cut in half. Cut each half into 4 equal parts until you have 8 lumps of dough. Form each into a ball, cover and let the dough rest 10 mins. Make sure to keep the dough covered unless you’re working with it at the moment.
  5. After the dough has rested 10 minutes, use a rolling pin to roll out each ball into a circle approx 6 inches diameter and less than 1/4 inch thick. Use only enough flour to prevent sticking but do not over-flour. Keep the waiting dough covered as you work.
  6. Load 2 pitas at a time directly onto the baking stone (or in my case, an ungreased baking sheet). Bake approx 3 mins on one side, flip and bake on the other 2 additional minutes. It should take 3-4 minutes to go into full “balloon”. Turn them once when they are baking.
  7. Stack the warm pitas together in a kitchen towel to keep them from crisping as they cool.
  8. EAT THE PITAS!

Nutrition: 196 cal, 4g fat, 6g protein, 35g carb, 4g fiber.

Vegetable Casserole with Tofu Topping


My sister made this dish especially for me at a bbq we both recently attended. It is absolutely delicious. She doubled the recipe for some extra flavor, and I thought it was fabulous. She intentionally left out the fact that the topping had tofu in it for the anti-tofu meat eaters in our mix and just said it was “bread crumbs, parm cheese and stuff like that”. They loved it. I’m sure you will too!

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Recipes for a Great Dinner Party

I had a small dinner party at my house Saturday and we had a fabulous time. But, of course, the main highlights (for me anyway) were all the amazing flavors in the food. I thought I’d take a few minutes to share with you, my faithful readers.

If you don’t want to try all of them, there are two you MUST try: Tomato Olive Butter and the Strawberry Spinach Salad with Goat Cheese. Don’t ask questions. Just do it! (I even moved them to the top of the post so you could get to them easier.)

Enjoy!!!

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Must Try Recipe: Butternut Squash Gratin

This is seriously one of the best dishes I’ve had in a while! I made it for my family party last Sat night. It was a hit. I got there late and was afraid everyone would be full and not want any. A few people tasted it and word got around that “you’ve got to try it!” In a short time, it was gone!

It’s perfect for the vegetarian going to a meaty party. It’s a hot, hearty meal that can act as a vegetable side dish for those who eat meat and act as a main dish for the veggies. I hope to make it again soon. (as in the next week). It was that good!

It’s also perfect for if you have to travel, because it can be made ahead of time, a day early, and refrigerated if you want to. You just have to pour the cream and sprinkle hazelnuts over the top and bake it 40 mins before serving. I made mine Friday afternoon and baked it right before I walked out the door. With towels around it, 45 mins later, it still required hot mitts to pull it out of the car.

The recipe is from epicurious.com, originally published in Bon Appetite’s November 2007 issue.

Now, go make it, I tell ya!

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Roasted Acorn Squash with Sweet Balsamic Glaze


I made the best dinner for myself tonight (yes, I’m proud of me!). I went to the grocery store to buy all my ingredients for a Christmas Brunch I’m co-hosting on Saturday. I went tonight so I wouldn’t have to fight crowds this weekend which are bound to be thick.

Though the word “vegetable” is the root of “vegetarian”, me eating lots of vegetables isn’t always the case and I was feeling inspired by a Vegetarian Times magazine article about this very fact. So, as I leisurely browsed the produce section, I got the idea to try making something with acorn squash. Also, as you can see from my previous post, I just recently had an acorn squash main dish at Lark Creek, and I figured it couldn’t be that hard. It’s hearty enough to be a main dish for me and since my husband was working overtime, he wouldn’t have to eat any (he doesn’t like squash).

So, here’s what I made. It’s really an amazing flavor. I was very impressed with it. The sweet maple syrup mixed with a bit of tang from the balsamic and the undertones of sage and hazelnuts… Ahh… Perfect for a cold night. (You might need to play with the proportions since I didn’t measure anything. I rarely do.)

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Fun with Agar Agar

So I went a little crazy with the cranberry sauce this Thanksgiving. I had two different parties to go to in the Thanksgiving season and I efficiently decided to make homemade cranberry sauce for both. Smart, eh? Well, it would have been smarter had I had a concept of how much to make.

I bought 8 – yes eight – bags of fresh cranberries. I used 7 of the bags and made a MASSIVE batch of sauce. It was delicious. And everyone loved it at both of my parties. And then I had a bunch leftover. So, I got creative. Me and my cranberry sauce, persimmons, apples, and a package of agar agar. It turned out delicious and with the different weights of the ingredients, it was slightly layered which would look great in a pretty mold. Let me see if I can remember what I did…

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Summer Vegetable Tart in Winter

A friend and I are beginning to discuss a Christmas dinner party we want to co-host for our closest friends. We don’t want to do a traditional holiday meal since all of December will likely be filled with traditional foods and we don’t want to get sick of it. We are also going to have a wide variety of people, tastes, likes and dislikes. So, I’ve started my recipe search for a yummy main dish that can serve for the vegetarians (er – vegetarian – I think I’m the only one).

I discovered this recipe for Summer Vegetable Tart on epicurious.com. It seems it can serve as both a main dish for me and as an elegant side for the others. That means I’ll have to double or triple the recipe, for sure!


After reading some of the comments/reviews, instead of following the recipe exactly, I’d like to modify the recipe to use philo dough and some different vegetables like portobello mushrooms and some herbs.

Yay or nay? Any thoughts or suggestions?

If I make this recipe, I’ll be sure to write a full review and show some pictures of it.