Dana Treat – Treat Yourself

Bringing the Tropics Home

Posted March 11, 2009

Last week, my little family and I went for a vacation to Kauai which is one of the islands in Hawaii. As I wrote about here, it is a good idea to get out of the Seattle gray skies and drizzle at least once each winter to keep your sanity – if possible. We have had more sun this winter than usual, but also more cold and a LOT more snow. Suffice it to say that I was really ready to see the sun and to have it be warm.

But it was not to be. Kauai is the “rainy” island and we were staying at the “rainy” end of it, but usually that just means that, in the midst of sunny 80 degree days, rain clouds periodically pass by and drench you. I’m OK with that. Our week was a little different. Some kind of storm system was settled over the islands last week and we had colder than usual temperatures, quite a bit of rain, and a lot of wind. Oh, and not much sun.

We still had a lovely vacation – we were all together in a nice place and the boys got to play on the beach and even stick their toes in the water. We went to an incredible park with the best play structure that any of us had ever seen. Randy and I got a babysitter one night and went out for dinner. And each night at 5pm, we would venture over to the bar for happy hour and the cocktail of the day. The boys were particularly fond of pineapple and guava juice. We were particularly fond of anything with rum.

It was really so nice to be away from our stressful and busy lives back home. It felt luxurious to just sit for a while – and not at the computer! I finished 2 1/2 books and it would have been 3 if I had not chosen Salman Rushdie’s latest. He is a tough read.

Now that we are back, I find myself missing the tropics – even if the tropics weren’t that tropical for us this year. I wanted to re-create some of those flavors for my clients this week and found the most amazing soup. This tropical gazpacho is quite different than the gazpacho I make gallons of each summer. Most of the vegetables, along with some bread, are all pureed together. Here is the kicker – there is pineapple in there too. It may sound weird, but I assure you the flavor is fantastic. The pineapple doesn’t overpower, just lends a slight sweetness and yes, tropical-ness. I would encourage you to taste as you go and what you think it needs. I added additional pineapple and it’s juice, plus more lime. I served this soup with Sweet Potato Roti and Golden Basmati Rice Pilaf.

Tropical Gazpacho
Adapted from Moosewood Restaurant Low-Fat Favorites

Serves 4-6

4 garlic cloves, minced or pressed
1 English cucumber, peeled and seeded

1 medium red pepper, diced

1 small red onion, diced

2 medium tomatoes, diced

1 cup canned unsweetened pineapple chunks in juice

2 tbsp. red wine vinegar

generous pinch cayenne, or more to taste

1 tsp. ground cumin

1 1/2 cups crusty bread, crusts removed, torn into chunks

3 cups tomato juice

salt and pepper to taste

In a blender or food processor, combine the garlic, 1/2 the cucumbers, 1/2 the bell peppers, the red onion, 1/2 the tomatoes, the pineapple and its juice, vinegar, cayenne, cumin, bread chunks, and tomato juice and puree until smooth. (DN: If you do this in the blender, it will be quite full. Be sure to hang on to the top when you turn it on.)

Transfer to a bowl, then stir in the remaining vegetables. Add salt and black pepper to taste. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours and up to 1 day.


Article printed from Dana Treat – Treat Yourself: http://danatreat.com

URL to article: http://danatreat.com/2009/03/bringing-the-tropics-home/

Copyright © 2009-2014 Dana Treat. All rights reserved.