Sunday, April 11, 2010

A Little Plate of Fried Snacks (Hush Puppies, Onion Rings and Zucchini Fries)

I knew I couldn’t make it long without busting out the deep fryer my friend Jen got me for Christmas, and today looked like the day to do it. Yesterday was a gorgeous day for a long walk, Lindsey and I took advantage and walked though the city, stopping to pick up some gorgeous onions from the farmers market at the Eastern Market. She’s been begging me for onion rings since I started this adventure, and I figured as long as I had the fryer out, I might as well make zucchini fries and hush puppies at the same time. In my opinion, hush puppies are the king of all southern food, you just can’t go wrong with deep fried corn meal batter.  Let the frying commence!!!


 Hush Puppies
(WSCC pg. 115)

2 cups cornmeal
3 tbs all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
½ tsp baking soda
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt
egg replace for one egg (I use bob’s red mill.)
1/3 cup extra firm silken tofu, beaten in blender
1 cup milk soy milk with 1 tbs apple cider vinegar (mix together and let sit for 10 min)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
3 tbs minced onion

vegetable oil for frying

Mix first 5 ingredients together. Beat egg replacer, oil, silken tofu, and soy milk mixture. Add to cornmeal mixture, onion and stir until blended. Drop 1 ½” spoonfulls into hot oil (375 degrees, approx) and deep fry until golden brown. Drain and serve. And don’t crowd the oil!

“Why add vinegar to soy milk?” you may ask. Well, when you add vinegar (or lemon juice) to soy milk and let it sit, the soy milk curdles and acts more like a buttermilk. And no, it doesn’t work with rice milk. Unfortunately.


Onion Rings and Zucchini Fries
(WSCC pg. 94)

1 cups bisquick
1/3 cup cornmeal
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp black pepper
1 cup soy milk (or rice)
1 tbs yellow mustard

vegetable oil for frying

1 large onion, peeled, cut into ¼ slices and split into rings
1 zucchini, cut into sticks

Combine dry ingredients into bowl, and beat in soy milk and mustard.

Coat zucchini and onions and place in hot oil until browned, turning once. 

The best to make both of these are probably if you have people coming over. It makes quite a bit for just two people. Even when one of them can eat copious amounts of onion rings.

1 comment:

  1. I have nothing witty or exceptional to say - except that sounds awesome!

    ReplyDelete