Dr. Wild's Kasha with Vegetables

 

4 servings

 

Kasha boasts a wonderfully nutty flavor when toasted. You can buy it already 
toasted. If you buy the untoasted variety, toss it lightly in a dry skillet

over medium heat until it colors. Hearty, but not too heavy, kasha is a staple 
of Northern Europe and Russia traditionally served as an accompaniment to

meats, in pilafs or as the essential ingredient in many traditional Jewish 
dishes like kasha varnishkes. Exotic though it may sound, kasha is just basic

buckwheat groats, used like a grain, but botanically just a cousin of true 
grains. Once only available through specialty grocers, you'll find kasha in

many health food stores and supermarkets now as well. So, by all means, go nuts 
with kasha!

 

Ingredients:

2 oz. dried mushrooms

1 cup toasted buckwheat groats (kasha)

1 large carrot, sliced

1 medium onion, coarsely chopped

Salt or natural soy sauce to taste

 

Instructions:

1. Soak the dried mushrooms (shiitake or porcini are very flavorful) in water 
until soft.

 

2. Drain, saving the soaking water, and slice, discarding any tough portions.

 

3. Add the groats to 3 cups boiling water (including the mushroom-soaking 
liquid), lower heat, and add the carrot, the onion and the mushrooms.

 

4. Cover and simmer until water is absorbed. Add salt or natural soy sauce to 
taste.

 

Nutritional Information:

 

Per serving:

147 calories

1 g total fat (0 g sat)

0 mg cholesterol

32 g carbohydrate

6 g protein

5 g fiber

150 mg sodium

 

-Recipe reprinted with permission of DrWeil.com.

 


~To get something you never had, you have to do something you never did.
-Sugar

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