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Meatless Monday: Breakfast tacos for the uninitiated

By Jeremiah spacer September 13, 2010
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I'm a big believer in the power of breakfast tacos - nothing starts my morning off quite as well and breakfast tacos do. Apparently though, lots of people don't know about breakfast tacos (which I was reminded of by the New York Times coverage of breakfast taacos several months ago). Breakfast tacos are a staple in our family because not only are they quick and easy to make, but you can make them in advance and store them in the fridge for quick hot meals.

Breakfast tacos can be as easy as serving scrambled eggs and potatoes on a tortilla (flour or corn per your preference, though flour tortillas tend to break less easily than corn tortillas do) or as complicated (if you can call them complicated) as migas. Migas are basically eggs scrambled with sauteed onions and hot peppers and mixed with crumbled up tortilla chips or slices of corn tortillas and cheddar cheese. (Incidentally, this is an excellent way to use those last little chip crumbles in the bag that are too small for dipping.) I don't care for eggs, so in our house, we substitute tofu for the eggs, and season with brewer's yeast for an eggy color and umami protein flavor. In fact, the only rule of breakfast tacos is that they are served on tortilla! If your menu plan for the week includes making black or pinto beans or potatoes, throw in some extra while you're cooking them and save them for the next morning's breakfast - you can add those to the eggs or migas too.

Basic Ingredients


Here's a list of basic ingredients, you can mix and match to make your own breakfast tacos:

  • scrambled eggs
  • refried or whole black or pinto beans

  • migas (scrambled egg and onions or firm tofu crumbled and scrambled with onions and brewer's yeast)

  • hashbrowns

  • salsa or pico de gallo

  • guacamole

  • fried potatoes

  • cheddar cheese


Tofu Migas


Sautee a medium onion and 2-4 jalapeno peppers (to decrease the heat, take the seeds out but make sure you wear gloves when you cut them up) in your preference of oil (we always use extra virgin olive oil, because that's what we keep around the house).

Add two 16-oz. containers of extra firm tofu and smash them with a potato masher.

When the tofu has started to heat up, add 1/2 to 1 cup of cheddar cheese and a handful of tortilla chips or sliced up corn tortilla strips (I always use the end of the bag of tortilla chips since I rarely have corn tortillas on hand).

Stir and cook until tofu is hot.

Season with 1/2 T turmeric, 1 T cumin, 1/2 t red pepper, 1/4 t chili pepper, 1 T nutritional yeast and salt to taste.

Serve on flour tortillas topped with your choice of sour cream, guacamole, beans, salsa, or pico de gallo.

If you really get into the breakfast taco thing, you can branch out into chorizo, sauteed nopalitos (the de-spined pad of the prickly pear cactus, it's got a slightly sweet flavor and the consistency of bell peppers without that pepper flavor), or one of my favorites, chilaquiles (basically migas without the eggs with a green or red mole sauce).

The best thing about serving breakfast tacos is that you can have a variety of ingredients and each person (or, ehem, picky kid) can choose their own ingredients. Next week when you make them again, serve different ingredients and voila, a new meal!

The key to good breakfast tacos is getting good tortillas - see if you can find a Mexican grocery store or a taqueria that makes fresh tortillas and buy them by the dozen. Our local grocery store has a "tortilla factory" in the store so we keep tortillas on hand all the time.

Oh, and if your little one (or you) has a hard time keeping the stuffing in the taco, try this trick we used when Z was first learning to eat tacos.

Do you serve breakfast tacos in your house? If so, what's your favorite ingredient for breakfast tacos? If not, what are you waiting for? Give them a try and let us know what you think!
Categories: cooking, food
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Meatless Monday: Vegetarian Sloppy Joes

By Jeremiah spacer spacer September 06, 2010
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One of our favorite, quickest, and easiest meals is the Vegetarian Sloppy Joe. We cheat and use Simply Organic sloppy joe mix instead of making the sloppy joe flavor from scratch, but remember, this is so we can have a quick, easy meal on a night we might otherwise just give in and go out to eat!

Here's the process:

  1. Sort and rinse a pound bag of brown lentils. Put them in a pot with water, heat to a boil and simmer for about 15 minutes or until mostly soft. (Make sure you check after 10 minutes or so to make sure that you don't run out of water in your pot.) Once the lentils are basically finished, strain the water from the lentils and return the lentils to the pot.

  2. Pour the sloppy joe mix into 1/4 cup water and stir until well blended.

  3. Add your seasoning liquid plus several tablespoonfuls of tomato paste to your lentils and let simmer for another 10 or 15 minutes or until most of the water is boiled out, stirring occasionally.

  4. Serve on hamburger buns or regular bread. Add sliced cheddar cheese, slices of white onion or pickles as a condiment to the sandwiches. Serve with a few chips or a pickle on the side for a nice crunchy contrast.


This makes enough for 6 servings with plenty left over for freezing for even quicker (how is that possible!) meals.
Categories: cooking
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Links we love: Great reads on other blogs

By Jennifer spacer August 29, 2010
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Photo by Trushu.
A few great reads we've seen on other blogs this week:

These DIY "treasure stones" look like the perfect activity for a hot summer day (or maybe a cold winter one) and would be great for a dinosaur party activity!

I love the thoughtfulness of this Craftzine post about making "magic wands." I'm thinking we're going to have to make some someday soon.

We try hard not to use food as a "treat" but in our small town it's sometimes hard to think of something else that we could do to reward ourselves. Do you have any ideas for non-food, family rewards? Mary at A Merry Life has some thoughts on the subject.

Tara at The Organic Sister wrote an interesting article about shifting her thinking in honoring her eleven-year-old's needs and getting him a cell phone. Don't judge until you read.

Categories: link roundup
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Carnival of the Green #155 Links we love Link roundup Seen and heard around the web
Link roundup Link roundup Link roundup: Saving handmade products, easy desserts, letters from Santa, homemade games, and more Link roundup: Crazy homemade trophies, new sippys, DIY diaper cream, and "satisfaction guaranteed"
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