One: Pot, Pan, Planet: A Greener Way to Cook for You and Your Family: A Cookbook

One: Pot, Pan, Planet: A Greener Way to Cook for You and Your Family: A Cookbook

by Anna Jones
One: Pot, Pan, Planet: A Greener Way to Cook for You and Your Family: A Cookbook

One: Pot, Pan, Planet: A Greener Way to Cook for You and Your Family: A Cookbook

by Anna Jones

Hardcover

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Overview

From the award-winning culinary superstar and all-around “Queen of the Greens,” a cookbook that perfectly reflects the way we want to cook and eat today: vegetarian food that is stylish, sustainable, and packed with flavor.

"This is a book where thought meets practical action meets deliciousness." –Yotam Ottolenghi, bestselling author and award-winning chef

With her award-winning cookbooks, Anna Jones blazed the trail of modern and creative vegetable-centered cuisine, and in her new book, she makes cooking mouthwatering meals simpler and greener than ever before. One: Pot, Pan, Planet delivers all the goods: delectable recipes that are easy to prepare and that keep sustainability at the center of every dish. And with Jones guiding the way, the variety and depths of flavors possible using just one pot, pan, or tray are limitless: Persian Noodle Soup, Carrot & Sesame Pancakes; Crispy Butter Beans with Kale, Lemon & Parmesan; Quick Squash Lasagna; Saag Aloo Shepard's Pie, to name just a few.

With over 200 recipes for every occasion—from busy weeknight meals, to weekend feasts, to desserts that promise to delight —these inventive, deeply satisfying dishes will become your new go-to kitchen staples. Whether preparing the recipes vegetarian or vegan, you will also find information to help you reduce waste, use leftovers, make kitchens plastic-free, and become a more environmentally mindful shopper. One: Pot, Pan, Planet is a splendid cookbook that is all good: for you, for your pocket, for the planet—and, of course, for your palate!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593320327
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 01/04/2022
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 175,567
Product dimensions: 7.40(w) x 9.70(h) x 1.90(d)

About the Author

ANNA JONES is a cook, writer, and stylist. Dubbed the "Queen of Greens" by The Guardian, she is widely recognized as being the voice of modern vegetarian cooking. She is the author of The Modern Cook's Year, A Modern Way to Eat, and A Modern Way to Cook. She lives in Hackney, east London with her husband and son.

Read an Excerpt

Winter Red Cabbage & Apple Soup

This is a cheerful, vibrant soup that ticks all the flavor boxes. It’s a soup I make all year, as it’s both comforting in winter and vibrant enough to eat on a colder spring or summer day too (think borscht). Sweet red cabbage comes with a pickled edge, earthy caraway and freshness from a couple of apples. The crunch from buttery toasted walnuts, brightness from dill and some leveling creaminess from crème fraîche finish it off. I use an oat crème fraîche here but a dairy version or some thick Greek yogurt would work too for non-vegans.
First, put the cabbage into a bowl with a good pinch of salt and the red wine vinegar. Squeeze together in your hands, then put to one side to pickle, while you start on the soup.

Melt a little butter or heat some oil in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over a medium-low heat. Add the onion and celery and sweat until soft and translucent, stirring from time to time. It will take about 15 minutes.

Once the onions are soft and sweet, add the caraway seeds and stir for a minute. Turn the heat up a little and add the apples and three-quarters of the cabbage, then fry for a further 5 minutes until the cabbage begins to soften.

Add the stock, balsamic vinegar and honey or agave. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat, cover and simmer for 30 minutes. Uncover and simmer for another 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, heat a frying pan and add some oil. Once it's really hot, add the remaining cabbage and cook until crisp. For the last couple of minutes add the walnuts and half the dill.

Back to the soup. Stir in the rest of the dill and season to taste with salt and pepper. You can leave this as it is, but I like to blitz it with a handheld blender to make a vibrant purple soup.
Ladle the soup into warmed bowls and top each serving with the fried cabbage and walnuts, a spoonful of crème fraîche, sour cream or yogurt and some more dill if you like.

SERVES 6
1 pound/500 g red cabbage, finely shredded
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar a little butter or olive oil for frying
1 large red onion, finely chopped
3 stalks of celery, finely chopped
1½ teaspoons caraway seeds
2 apples (Coxes, a British variety, are my choice, but any sharp eating apple would work), cored and cut into chunks
6 1/3 cups/1.5 liters vegetable stock
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
2 teaspoons honey or agave½ cup/50 g walnuts, crumbled a small bunch of dill, leaves chopped, with some fronds reserved for garnishing

TO SERVE
4 tablespoons oat crème fraîche, sour cream or thick Greek yogurt

Quick Squash Lasagna

Pasta has my heart like nothing else. My love affair with it was cemented when making stuffed agnolotti, caramelle and everything in between in restaurant kitchens, but it started with something simpler: my mum’s lasagna. This lasagna is something slightly different but still as nostalgic and comforting. It is the quickest I’ve made, ready for the oven in 10 minutes (not the hour it normally takes), yet there is still a rich deep tomato sauce and those crisp baked edges to fight over. I don’t pre-cook my lasagna sheets, as they cook in the sauce and I like them a little al dente. If you prefer them softer, you could use fresh pasta sheets here. This recipe was originally inspired by one of my all-time favorite cooks, Heidi Swanson of 101cookbooks.com.

Heat the oven to 400°F/200°C.

In a large bowl or jug, mix the passata (or purée/crushed canned tomatoes) with the oil, half a teaspoon of flaky sea salt, the chopped garlic, chili flakes, drained lentils, grated squash, chopped olives, capers and lemon zest. Tear the basil leaves in half.

Spoon a quarter of the sauce into an ovenproof dish roughly 8 inches x 12 inches/20 cm x 30 cm (I use an oval roughly the same size), tear over a third of one of the balls of mozzarella, then cover with pasta sheets. Repeat for another two layers: a quarter of the sauce, a third of a ball of mozzarella, a layer of pasta.

Finish with a final layer of sauce, then tear over the whole second ball of mozzarella, sprinkle with salt and pepper, top with the basil, and drizzle with a little more olive oil.

Bake for 30–35 minutes, until the mozzarella is deeply golden. Serve with a sharply dressed salad (I mix lemon juice, cider vinegar, mustard and extra virgin olive oil, and toss through a bowl of green leaves).

SERVES 6
2 ¾ cups/690 g tomato passata/purée/crushed canned tomatoes
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped a good pinch of dried chili flakes
2 x 15-ounce/400 g cans green or Puy lentils, drained (or 9 ounces/250 g home-cooked)
1/2 a butternut squash (about 1 1/3 pounds/600 g), peeled and grated
1/3 cup/50 g black olives, pitted and chopped
2 tablespoons capers the zest of a lemon, unwaxed or organic a small bunch of basil, leaves picked
2 x 4-ounce/125 g balls of mozzarella or vegan-style mozzarella
9 ounces/250 g dried lasagna sheets
 
Halloumi, Broccoli & Chickpea Bake

A variation of this goes into our oven at least once a week. I pinched this way of cooking Halloumi from my friend and brilliant cook Georgina Hayden. Ras el hanout is a North African spice mix that I always have on hand, but if you don’t have it, try a mixture of ground cinnamon, cumin, and smoked paprika or chili powder. Vegans could swap the Halloumi for a block of firm tofu rubbed with more ras el hanout and olive oil, or use vegan-style Halloumi in the same way.

Heat the oven to 450°F/220°C.

Spread the chickpeas on a large sheet tray, sprinkle with the ras el hanout and the zest and juice of half the orange (grate the remaining zest into a bowl), drizzle with olive oil and season. Roast for 10 minutes. Meanwhile, score the top of thpae Halloumi block with 1/4-inch/5 mm-deep crisscrosses, then set aside. In a bowl or jar, mix the tahini, remaining orange zest and juice, and a tablespoon of olive oil—if your tahini is thick, it might need a really good stir.

Once the chickpeas have had 10 minutes, take them out of the oven and turn on the grill. Add the Halloumi, broccoli and pumpkin seeds to the tray, toss everything together, so it is all coated in the orangy spiced oil, then put under the grill for 10 minutes, until the Halloumi is golden, the broccoli spears are softened and the florets are crisp.

Sprinkle over the pomegranate seeds and parsley, drizzle over the tahini mix, then drizzle the Halloumi with honey. Serve with flatbreads.

SERVES 4
2 x 15-ounce/400 g cans chickpeas or
1 x 11/2-pound/700 g jar, drained
1 heaping teaspoon ras el hanout
1 orange, unwaxed or organic olive oil
7 ounces/200 g block of Halloumi or vegan Halloumi-style cheese (sometimes called “Mediterranean-style”)
3 tablespoons tahini
9 ounces/250 g purple-sprouting or Tenderstem broccoli a large handful of pumpkin seeds seeds from 1 pomegranate a small bunch of parsley, leaves picked

TO SERVE
1 heaping teaspoon honey or maple syrup
4 flatbreads

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