Get Baked With Autostraddle: Kale Edition

This post is brought to you by the kale chips I made last Tuesday.

Here are the reasons kale is superiour to any other cabbage-like vegetable:

1. It is slightly leafier, making its use as surrogate hair during ill-advised wig-making contests while waiting for the pan to heat slightly more fun, and:

2. It tastes better after cooking.

I know I that’s the type of compelling endorsement that makes me want to eat kale. It also comes up a lot in vegan cooking, can be frozen and used for cooking later without looking like fast-food quality Romaine lettuce, and, importantly, is delicious, particularly when prepared according to these awesome (vegan-friendly) recipes.

Kale Chips From Tuesday

by Carolyn

Much like actual chips, kale chips are supposed to be crisp. Unlike actual chips, they aren’t completely disgusting if you eat them fresh when they’re a little soft, but make sure to dry them off before baking and use the right amount of olive oil just in case (ie, in case you’re giving them to someone else. I would probably eat my own cooking even if it’d been unintentionally on fire at some point, because in my world it probably has been, but a charming lady visitor might be less inclined to it).

Kale chips are also wonderful because if you normally want to eat chips for dinner but are held back by concerns about general health and also embarrassment, then you can have kale chips instead! It’s just like eating salad. Sort of.

Side notes: one bunch of kale looks like kind of a lot in a bowl, but it will shrink when baked. There are several different varieties; I used the curly kind, but as long as it’s not expired you should be OK. Kale chips: they are hard to screw up.

Ingredients:

1 bunch of kale (about 8 oz or 230 g), any variety, washed, dried, stems removed, torn or cut into potato chip-sized pieces
1 tbsp. olive oil, approximately
pinch of sea salt
optional other seasonings: any spices you think would taste good, and/or nutritional yeast, to taste

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 300˚F (150˚C).

2. Toss kale with olive oil.

3. Spread kale on a cookie sheet (ungreased, with or without parchment paper) in a single layer. Note that it looks like you’re about to put a tiny forest into the oven, and make an editorial comment about global warming. Sprinkle with salt and, if you feel like it, other spices (the salt takes out some of the bitterness).

4. Bake for 15-20 minutes, until crispy. Toss halfway through if you want, but I didn’t remember to do this and it was fine.

5. Remove from oven and serve.

Lemony Chickpea Stir-fry

by Sarah

Ingredients:

2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
fine grain sea salt
1 small onion or a couple shallots, sliced
1 cup chickpeas
8 ounces extra-firm tofu
1 cup of chopped kale
2 small zucchini or summer squash, sliced
zest and juice of 1 a lemon
Pinch of chili powder

Directions:

1. Heat 1 tablespoon of the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat and stir in a big pinch of salt, the onion, and chickpeas. Saute until the chickpeas are deeply golden and crusty. Stir in the tofu and cook just until the tofu is heated through, just a minute or so. Stir in the kale and cook for one minute more. Remove everything from the skillet onto a large plate and set aside.

2. In the same skillet heat the remaining tablespoon of ghee/olive oil, add the zucchini and saute until it starts to take on a bit of color, two or three minutes.

3. Add the chickpea mixture back to the skillet, and remove from heat. Stir in the lemon juice and zest, taste, and season with a chili powder and a bit more salt if needed.

Adapted from Heidi Swanson.

Kale Hummus

“by Carolyn” but with all actual culinary skills by Jenna

Hummus is one of the greatest foods ever, and kale is one of the greatest foods ever, and combining them is like an explosion of vegan deliciousness. But not a literal explosion. This is possibly the easiest thing ever, not even I could set it on fire, and I have a special talent for doing that.

Ingredients:

1 cup canned or cooked chick peas, drained
2 tbsp. tahini
1 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
2 tbsp. lemon juice, or more to taste
fresh garlic to taste
1/2 cup kale, cooked and chopped or from frozen, defrosted and chopped

Directions:

1. Place all of the ingredients except the kale in a food processor and pulse until smooth. Adding fresh garlic gives it a bit of a kick but the amount is up to you — somewhere between one and three cloves should be about right.

2. Place the kale in the food processor with everything else and pulse until it’s in tiny pieces (but not so tiny that you can’t see it. Having texture is a good thing.).

3. Serve. No, really.

Quinoa, Kale, and Walnuts

by Sarah

Ingredients:

2-3 cups kale, stems removed, chopped
1 cup quinoa
2 tbsp. olive oil
1 medium onion
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 tsp. red pepper flakes
1 lemon, zested
juice of one large lemon
1/3 cup white wine
1/3 cup (heaping) chopped walnuts, toasted
pinch freshly grated nutmeg
salt & pepper

Directions:

1. Cook quinoa according to the package directions.

2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet heat olive oil, add onions and red pepper flakes and saute for 3 minutes or until onions are translucent. Add garlic and lemon zest, cook for 1-2 minutes. Add white wine, stir and let simmer for 2-3 minutes. Add salt & pepper.

3. Add kale, 1/2 of the lemon juice and the pinch of nutmeg. Stir to combine and allow to cook over a low flame for 5-7 minutes, or until the kale is wilted and most of the liquid has been absorbed.

4. Add the cooked quinoa to the kale mixture and gently combine. Turn off the heat and add the remaining lemon juice, and toasted walnuts. Taste and add more salt & pepper, if needed.

Kale Sauteed with Sunflower Seeds

“by Carolyn” but with all actual culinary skills by Jenna

One of the reasons kale is so excellent is that it holds up far better than other leafy green things when it’s cooked. You can cook it fresh from the grocery store/garden/fridge, but for some reason it tastes better if you wash it, dry it and remove the stems, stick it in the freezer for a few hours, chop it, and quickly blanch it before sauteeing it. Though if you forget all of that, or just don’t have the time or planning skills for it, that’s OK too.

If you don’t like sunflower seeds, use pine nuts, toasted the same way you would the seeds. Optional raisins, added just a few minutes before the kale finishes cooking, would also probably taste good. While the original recipe (adapted from Bon Appetit) calls for four bunches of kale, you can halve the recipe without any unpleasant side effects.
Ingredients:

4 bunches of kale (about 2 lbs or 900 g), washed, dried, sans stems, and cut or torn into coarse pieces
1/4 cup olive oil
1 large red onion, chopped into smallish pieces
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/3 cup sunflower seeds, roasted
pinch of salt
splash of sherry vinegar or white wine vinegar (optional)

Directions:

1. Before anything else, you’ll need to toast the sunflower seeds. Do this by putting them in a dry (read: completely empty of everything including cooking spray/oil) frying pan over moderate heat for a few minutes, until they start to change colour. When they’re done, put them aside.

2. Heat the olive oil in a large pot over mid-to-high heat. Add the onion, and sauté with a pinch of salt until it starts to get brown. Add the crushed garlic and cook for another few minutes. Basically the goal is to remember that the onion has another six minutes in the pot and you don’t want it to burn, but also, you want to make sure it’s cooked enough to do it’s job.

3. Add about half the kale. You will probably have a few problems getting it all in the pot, even if you halved the recipe in the first place, so don’t be afraid to smoosh it down. Cook, tossing frequently, for about 2 minutes. Add the remaining kale and most of the sunflower seeds, and cook for 3-4 minutes longer, until the kale is a bright green colour. If at any point in this, the kale starts sticking or the pan feels like its too dry, you’re going to feel like adding more oil. Resist. Add a little bit of water instead, which will add moisture and steam the kale a little without making it greasy. If you want to add a splash vinegar, now would also be the time to do it — it’s fine without, but a little acid brightens the flavour.

4. Serve, and sprinkle with remaining sunflower seeds.

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Ryan Yates

Ryan Yates was the NSFW Editor (2013–2018) and Literary Editor for Autostraddle.com, with bylines in Nylon, Refinery29, The Toast, Bitch, The Daily Beast, Jezebel, and elsewhere. They live in Los Angeles and also on twitter and instagram.

Ryan has written 1142 articles for us.

56 Comments

  1. I love kale. All of these recipes make me super excited. I want to cook them all now.

    Thanks!

  2. I don’t think I can properly express to you how much I love kale and therefore this post.

  3. Sarah Croce, please marry me so we can have a kale themed wedding and eat all the kale ever together.
    2nded on Katie- I love kale the most, and I love you the most for this post.

  4. These are inspiring! The sunflower seed recipe looks soooo good. In Vermont there’s a slogan: “Eat More Kale.” http://eatmorekale.com/ If there were an award for the Promotion of Kale Eating, you would get it.

  5. mmm kale! love kale chips, also i like it sauteed with onions, garlic and white beans (and lots of cumin). and on toast under a poached egg. or raw in a salad with lemon & pecorino. or in a peanut butter smoothie. mmmm i could go on for days!

    last night, sauteed some red kale with garlic and tossed w roasted hazelnuts for a side dish to some roasted garlic and shrimp over quinoa. if the weather doesnt get better here in sf, im thinking a kale / lentil stew may be on the menu too…

    • The other day I made a sautee dealie of kale, onions, garlic, white beans, mushrooms, yellow zucchini squash and tofu, with some salt and turmeric.

  6. I do a variation on the sunflower seed kale by cooking it in white wine with either pine nuts or golden raisins (to your taste, both plump nicely when you cook them) and red onions and all the other mentioned ingredients in the above recipe. The white wine provides a nice fresh little bite and I am cooking-challenged, so if I can pull this off, anyone can!

  7. I feed my parrot kale all the time. :)

    The chickpea stir-fry sounds great! I am personally a fan of tofu, but if I’m going to make this dish for my family tofu will not fly, can I use chicken? Would that work?

    • You can definitely use chicken! I cook it in a separate pan with lemon juice and sage then add it to the rest of the mix.

  8. I love kale! All of these look delicious and I can attest to the unsurpassed excellence of the Lemony Chickpea Stir Fry. I usually add garlic though, ’cause garlic makes everything better.

  9. Is Kale meat and/or marijuana? Otherwise it sounds like something my mother would make me eat when I was young. I am not in any way disagreeing with people who think Kale is awesome, I just think, like any dish it could be improved by the addition of bacon and weed.

    Hurray for Kale, whatever the frak that is…..

  10. you are correct. kale chips are both delicious and hard to screw up. go team kale.

    also i went to college with a kid named kale.

  11. i have the ingredients to make any of these recipes, but ONLY ONE of these recipes, in my kitchen right now. which to choose?

  12. Ooh, these all look delicious! My favorite hummus is spinach and artichoke, but next time I think I’ll try substituting kale for the spinach. Spread it on some hearty multi-grain bread and YUM! That would be a nice twist.

  13. i need to know if one is to pronounce this kale (as in, rhymes with shale) or kale (as in mcaulay [kalé] culkin).

    • It is pronounced to rhyme with shale, at least in the US. Who knows how those Canadians and Brits pronounce it, though it probably sounds more earnest and/or classier.

  14. now i know what kale looks like. (i’m obvs. not very healthy.)
    now to google this “quinoa” and “tahini”

  15. My queer book club meets as a monthly potluck and every time someone brings a different kale dish. Seriously. We assumed it must be a lesbian thing and now Autostraddle has proven us right.

    • you’re so right. sometimes i wonder if kale and quinoa made me queer. probably not though. just gassy.

      • thehairpin, a lovely website i frequent when i’ve already read everything on autostraddle, had this silly post a while ago: http://thehairpin.com/2011/02/what-do-lesbians-eat which caused me to realize my diet of kale and chickpeas (i even make fritters! yum!) was possibly the queerest thing about me. besides like, bonin’ chicks.

  16. These look amazing and I love kale, even though when I make it myself it’s only in a tofu scramble/stirfry thing. Maybe now that will change!

  17. Are you doing theme ingredients like Iron Chef? Because if so, I vote for chick peas or sweet potatoes.

  18. I love kale but feel sad that you’ve put it in with fatty oils and nuts (which, granted raw are ok in small modernation only).

    Love it raw in a green smoothie or in a salad with orange juice dressing!

    • There are soooooooooooo many opinions on what makes a dish healthy, and sooooooooo many different types of bodies that like different kinds of food.

  19. I am certainly one of the dopes who messed up kale chips. The “quickie” mid-cooking wasn’t quick enough. Sigh. I had a burnt forest of kale that exploded in green-brown dust on contact. I am motivated to try again ;-)

    Awesome recipes, kind of looking forward to buying more leafy greens!

  20. I LOVE kale. I slow sautee it with garlic and chickpeas and balsamic caramelised red onions and a little bit of lemon. Add a poached egg and some parmesan and you have a comfort meal in a bowl.

    Autostraddle do you live in my head, I can’t imagine anywhere else on the internet where my love of women and kale could be celebrated at the same time.

  21. I’ve never tried kale, but that’s because my greengrocery only sells it by, like, THE WHOLE PLANT. There are only two of us in this house, and we’re not big eaters! We’d have to eat nothing but kale to make that work!

    Silverbeet (aka chard), on the other hand, is delicious.

  22. is it weird that kale makes me think of plankton. as in the character on spongebob and not that thing you learn about in biology.

  23. Sarah, I made the lemony chickpea stirfry last night and it was amaaaazing! It was also the first time I’d tried kale (usually I’m more of a collard/mustard greens fan).

  24. Thanks, this was very well timed for me. I get my first CSA box this weekend, and I know there will be lots of kale in it!

  25. I love Autostraddle for putting up easy and yummy-looking vegan recipes. And pinups. So many pinup girls.

  26. OK, so I’m 90% sure that an Autostraddler must work at my local Trader Joe’s cause the free sample today was…wait for it…wait for it. KALE CHIPS. FESS UP. Ok, so I realize my sample size is 1, but whatever. If it was just an amazing coincidence I’m going to be in serious denial. I’ll probably start to see Get Baked in all TJ samples. “THIS FEATURED SALT, JUST LIKE THE AS RECIPE.” No, but for reals.

  27. guys i just returned from buying fruits and vegetables including kale and remembered this and so i searched for “kale” in the autostraddle search bar and i am making kale chips RIGHT NOW YAY

    also i vote yes to the previous comment

  28. What’s really sad was that when I went home to the sticks, I looked for Kale and the kid in the produce department had no idea what I was talking about, and my former co-workers thought it was only a decoration and could not be eaten.

    That. USE. To be my life.

    Chicago, *sigh* xo

  29. Also! A most excellent Kale Salad that I make involves: Kale (obviously), Dried Cranberries, Pine Nuts, Apple Cider Vinegar, Tomatos, and Lemon Juice. HOLY CRAP! AWESOME! And packed with more nutrients than any other regular green leafed salad making items.

  30. Yes. I went to several grocery stores in Memphis and came up empty-handed. I finally did find some…

    In a bouquet. In the flower section.

  31. Pingback: 10 Simple Snacks for Kids - VillageQ

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