Jessica Tom's Blog, page 20
February 23, 2014
"Detox" Kale Chimichurri
Here in New York, the word "detox" is both status symbol and shaming device. In January, you'll see a lot of detox humble brags in your social feeds.
Day 5 of cleanse -- kill me now! (she actually loves it)
I love this coconut carrot juice! (he doesn't really love it)
Doing penance for the weekend. Wish us luck! (they don't need it -- they do this every month)
Well this is not that kind of detox. Food should never be masochistic. It's either clean or indulgent, but you're in control of how far you slide either way. Stay towards the middle if you can. Eat what you want, move where you want, but no so much that you'll regret it.
This is a moderate detox -- the slightly left of center, but still sane kinda detox. It's clean but not ascetic, bright without being punishing, healthy without being obnoxiously so (if I do say so myself).
It starts with chimichurri -- a spicy and sour mix of herbs, a cross between pesto and Chinese ginger-scallion sauce. In the same way a squeeze of lemon and sprinkle of herbs cuts through the heaviness of a stew, chimichurri adds a welcome lightness and sharpness to your stomach. Kale and Bragg apple cider vinegar make a good thing even better.
RECIPE: Toast pumpkin seeds and set aside. Trim and clean a mix of parsley, cilantro, mint, chives, and kale. (I used equal parts parsley, cilantro, kale, and slightly less of the mint and chives... but it really doesn't matter). Add everything to a food processor with olive oil, apple cider vinegar, salt. Pulse until all the leaves are chopped (not pureed!). Add red pepper flakes and pumpkin seeds. Keep on hand to eat with a crudité platter, or with stir-fried veggie, or with a tuna-yogurt salad... you get it.
February 20, 2014
Zucchini Meatballs with Sumac Yogurt

When I worked in Bushwick, everyday I passed a mysterious wholesale furniture business that sold things like wooden eagles with ten foot wingspans and golden camels with marble hooves.
I never saw a customer go in or out, only workers sitting outside smoking and grilling, no matter the season.
I usually stayed on the other side of the street or sheepishly rushed past them. I think they were Turkish, and their rumbling chatter echoed through the warehouse-lined streets.
I left that job two years ago this month. I must have been carrying a lot of stuff back, or maybe I had a sentimental look in my eye. But on the last day, the guys outside the shop gave me an oblong-shaped meatball right off the grill. It was so flavorful, still hot enough that the juices played close to the edge, prone to drip at just the slightest pinch.
I know you're not supposed to take food from strangers. But sometimes, those bites are the best.
RECIPE:
adapted (and lightened) from Jerusalem by Yotam Ottololenghi & Sami Tamimi
Finely julienne or mandoline/slice 2 zucchinis. Chop your pick of herbs -- mint, parsley, cilantro. Combine 1 lb ground turkey, 1 minced onion, zucchini, 1 whisked egg, 2 cloves of crushed garlic, 1 teaspoon of ground cumin, 1 teaspoon of salt, 1/2 teaspoon ground pepper, 1/2 teaspoon of cayenne. Shape into patties or balls or footballs. Fry for 4 minutes each side, or bake for 40 minutes.
Mix one cup Greek yogurt with 1 tablespoon olive oil, 1 tablespoon sumac, 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Serve with meatballs.
December 9, 2013
Turkey Chili (with coffee & cocoa)

Great chili has soul.
You might come across chili recipes that boast extreme prep times, like some miracle 30-minute workout. These recipes are roll calls of cans and ready-made mixes: Goya, Ro-Tel, McCormick. The flavors are shallow, merely the sum of their parts and nothing more.
You can't get soul in 30 minutes. You can, however, get soul in an hour and a half and with two guest stars -- coffee and chocolate.
I've made the mistake of thinking that meat and beans were enough. They aren't. I've tried to compensate with corn and chorizo and sweet potatoes. Not quite. It's rather hard to make the leap from slurry to stew.
Coffee and cocoa powder are miracle workers. Call them the Instagram filter for your lackluster chili. They smooth out the edges, they boost the main players, they blur out the imperfections.
In a perfect world, you'd cook this low and slow. But this recipe is no floozy. She's got enough soul to last you bowl after bowl.
RECIPE: Boil 1 1/2 cups of dried beans and soak for 40 minutes. In a Dutch oven, sauté 1 onion, 2 large carrots, 4 celery stalks, 1 cup of bell peppers (I like a combo of red, yellow and green) and 5 cloves of garlic, all diced. Add 1 tablespoon ground cumin, 2 tablespoons chili powder, 1 tablespoon paprika, 1 teaspoon ground coriander, and 1 tablespoon of salt. When the onion is translucent, add 1 pound of ground turkey meat. Break up the chunks with a wooden spatula and cook for 5 minutes, until some of the turkey is browned. (If you're using a fattier meat, I would cook the meat first so you can cook the veggies in the fat. Ground turkey breast will just dry out if you sauté it too long and is better served by steam and stewing.)
Add one 20 oz can of pureed tomatoes, one 6 oz can of tomato paste, and one 32 oz carton of chicken broth. Add the par-cooked beans and 1 cup of the bean water.
Add one tablespoon of instant coffee (!!) and one tablespoon of unsweetened coca powder. Simmer, partially covered, for 90 minutes or more.