Carrot and Courgette Noodle Thai Stir Fry

I love stir-fries and I love Thai flavours so the combination of both makes for a superb dish which is both very quick, and very simple to prepare.

As I had two cooked chicken breasts in the fridge, I decided to add these, chopped into bite-sized pieces, to the stir-fry and it made a very filling meal.   The ingredients below are ample for two good-sized portions.

INGREDIENTS:

2 courgettes, spiralised
1 large carrot, spiralised
½ red pepper, thinly sliced (I used green)
½ yellow pepper, thinly sliced
A large handful of baby sweetcorn
A handful of cashew nuts
A handful of fresh basil, chopped
Coconut oil for cooking
2 cooked chicken breasts, cut into bite sized pieces (optional)

SAUCE:

2 teaspoon of tamari
The juice of 1 lime
1 clove of garlic, finely chopped or minced
1/8 teaspoon ground ginger
1 tablespoon of peanut butter
Handful of fresh coriander, chopped
Chilli flakes to taste

METHOD:

Cut and chop the vegetables, and prepare the dressing.

Heat a large fry pan or wok and melt the coconut oil.

Lightly fry the sweetcorn and peppers for about 2 minutes, together with the chicken if using.

Processed with MOLDIV

Peppers, sweetcorn & chicken; carrot and courgette noodles; fresh coriander, basil and cashew nuts

Add the vegetable noodles and cashews and continue to cook until they soften ever so slightly.

Sprinkle and stir in the fresh basil then pour over the dressing, mixing well until everything is coated and heated through.

Remove from the heat, serve and enjoy.

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Carrot and Courgette Noodle Thai Stir Fry with Chicken

When I purchased my spiralizer I didn’t realize quite how often I would end up using it.  Vegetable noodles are not only extremely healthy, but they are very quick to prepare, can be eaten either raw or very slightly sautéed.

Recipe adapted from Mealz.

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An excellent article concerning Bone Broth

I don’t normally share articles but when our local GU15 magazine for February 2016 dropped through our letterbox and my husband spotted this interesting article, I decided to copy it onto my blog as it so well describes the benefits of bone broth.

I mentioned last October that I frequently make both bone and vegetable broth and try to keep ample supplies in my freezer.   I use this broth as a base for most of my soups, for many recipes, for cooking quinoa, rice etc and my husband often has a mugful a day.

The following article was posted by Astrid Lowe,  an acupuncturist practising classical Chinese acupuncture and cosmetic acupuncture in Chobham.  Whilst I have never visited an acupuncturist myself, I know of several acquaintances who have.

“Why Acupuncturists Love Bone Broth

Easily made, packed with nutrients, tasty and easily digested, bone broth is popular in many cultures of the world. It can make a great base for a soup, but is designed for healing rather than a main dish, and is meant to be drunk from a mug. In New York it has gone mainstream, you can get takeaway bone broth in a cup, just like you’d get coffee or tea.

Let’s look at bone broth as medicine. Simmering bones for a long time breaks down and extracts the collagen from the connective tissue. You get a protein – and mineral-rich medium that is both delicious and restorative.  But let’s look at it through an acupuncturist’s eyes.

Chinese medicine is all about Yin and Yang.  Bone broth is an acupuncturist’s top homecare advice for nourishing the deeper Yin of the body, which is linked with Water (one of the ‘five elements’ within us: Water, Wood, Fire, Earth and Metal). Some signs that make your acupuncturist think about an imbalance in the Water element are: dark shadows under your eyes, lower back pain, ‘bad’ knees, issues with bones and teeth, ear problems and being prone to fear or depression.

It’s a good idea to nourish your Water element anyway. Water is at the origin of life in Chinese philosophy. It stores Jing, your ‘essence’, the root of all your Qi (the vital energy that keeps you functioning). When you are born, you receive this Jing like a genetic inheritance from your parents, enough to last a lifetime, like one big deposit on your bank account. You’ll spend this currency on studying, partying, working, exercising, having children, maintaining or recovering your health etc. Since this Jing is finite it’s important to choose wisely what you invest it in. You can also earn yourself a little interest if you run your ‘Jing account’ well, with a balanced lifestyle and nutrition, including bone broth!

Consider bone broth especially when you:
      Are sick, recovering after illness or surgery, or when in need of an immune boost
      Feel tired or run down for any reason, be it work (physical or mental), exercise or     play
      Want to support the healing of bone fractures or manage arthritis or bone degeneration
      Need to build up strength and stay strong to cope with an intense lifestyle
      Are trying to conceive or are recovering post partum
      Suffer with dryness and need more than water to supplement moisture in your body
      Want to maintain your youthful appearance

My favourite is chicken broth, made with an onion, a few carrots, parsnips, celery sticks and a pack of chicken drumsticks. Buy the best quality ingredients for this ‘medicine’ meant to nourish your ‘essence’. The secret is to add a tiny amount of vinegar and boil the broth for a long time (1.5 hours for chicken, 3 for beef or pork), to get more minerals out of the bones. If you make plenty you can freeze small portions to warm up and drink when you like.”

I was actually in the process of making a new soup when my husband discovered this article and he sat in the kitchen and read it out to me.   The base of the soup I was making was my homemade chicken stock which I had made some weeks ago from the carcase of a roast chicken, an onion, carrots, celery, bay leaf and a dash of vinegar.   Poured into ‘soup bags’ it stores well in the freezer.

I keep a packet in my cupboard from chicken stock cubes to remind me of what I am NOT missing:  Ingredients – wheat flour, salt, dried glucose syrup, flavour enhancer (monosodium glutamate), yeast extract, flavouring, chicken fat, potato starch, sugar, chicken extract (2%), onion extract, colour (ammonia caramel) and this is from a well-known make that has no artificial preservatives!

 

 

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Multiseed Loaf

This gluten-free, nutrient-dense bread looks just like a rustic loaf.  Packed with a variety of seeds, chewy raisins and a dough of sweet potato (or squash) and buckwheat, it is a dense, flavoursome bread which toasts nicely and smells incredible.

The loaf can be portioned up and frozen so that you can grab slices as and when you need them – just toast in the oven, under the grill or gently in a toaster for an excellent crunch.  It’s great for sweet and savoury toppings or just plain salted butter and, small as it is, just two slices will fill you up nicely.

It is especially good bruschetta style, topped with your favourite toppings.

INGREDIENTS:

1 large sweet potato or ½ squash
110g buckwheat flour
4 tablespoons arrowroot
¼ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
½ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon ground flaxseed
2 tablespoons lemon juice

For the Seed Mix:

60g pumpkin seeds*
60g sunflower seeds*
60g sesame seeds*
75 – 90g raisins

*Seeds benefit from being soaked or ‘activated’.   8 hours or overnight does the job.   As a rough guideline, soak in double the volume of filtered water using a glass or ceramic bowl. Drape with a tea towel and leave at room temperature. Rinse well and drain before using.

METHOD:

Preheat the oven to fan 180°C/Gas 6.

Slice the sweet potato in half and bake for 45 – 60 minutes until tender. Remove the skin, weigh out 200g and blend in a food processor.

Mix in the rest of the dough ingredients until smooth, then knead in the seeds and raisins until completely combined.

Shape into a loaf using lightly floured hands and make shallow slices along the top.

Bake for 40 minutes until nicely golden.

Leave to cool slightly before slicing.

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Multiseed Loaf

What we really loved about this loaf was the combination of the sweetness of the raisins with the texture and taste of the seeds.   The loaf is not large but two small slices are really filling.  This bread would work well either on its own, with butter or topped with a savoury mix.

Recipe adapted from The Art of Eating Well by Hemsley and Hemsley.

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Creamy Chocolate Avocado Smoothie

There are many, many recipes out there for Chocolate Smoothie but I really do think this one is one of the very best.  Thick, creamy and so delicious that my husband now includes it in his daily intake as it adds in some healthy fats to his diet.

We found out that my husband was gluten-intolerant nearly a year ago and have recently visited a Food Intolerance and Naturopathic Nutrition practitioner who, alongside his medical doctor, is helping sort this problem out.   Whilst his medical doctor has taken him off certain medications which he was taking due to an earlier health problem, the Naturopathic practitioner has put him on various minerals and supplements to help alleviate the situation.  This drink fits in with his gluten-free diet and healthy eating plan extremely well.

INGREDIENTS:

8 ounces Almond milk
½ cup crushed ice (optional)
1 ripe banana
3 dates or 1 tablespoon honey (we prefer dates)
½ avocado (we tend to use a whole one)
2 tablespoons raw cacao
2 tablespoons Almond butter
1 ½ teaspoons golden flaxseed

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Ingredients

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Creamy Chocolate Avocado Smoothie

METHOD:

Blend for 30 seconds until smooth.

Another superb recipe from Danielle Walker’s Against All Grain.

 

 

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Avocado and Spinach Soup

The colour of this soup is amazing;  so vibrant and deep yet with only a few ingredients and not an additive or colouring in sight.  It is also about 2.5 servings of your 5-A-day  vegetables as well as a source of B-vitamins, Vitamin E, protein, fibre, potassium, zinc and mono-unsaturated fats (good fats).  All in all, an excellent, tasty, nutritious soup and so very quick and easy to make.

An added advantage is that it can also be frozen (consume within 1 month).  When re-heating, allow the soup to become hot, but do not allow it to boil.

INGREDIENTS:

200g white onion
2 garlic cloves
Olive oil
400ml water
125ml vegetable stock
1 bay leaf
15ml lemon juice
300g fresh spinach leaves
320g avocado pears
250ml almond milk)
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

METHOD:

Peel and chop the onion and garlic.

Heat a little oil in a large pan over a medium heat. Add the onion and garlic and gently fry for 1 – 2 minutes or until softened.

Add the water, stock, bay leaf and lemon juice. Stir together; cover with a lid and bring to the boil. Add the spinach. Simmer and cook for about 3 – 4 minutes. Remove from the heat and allow the soup to cool slightly.

In the meantime, peel and chop the avocado. 

Remove the bay leaf from the saucepan and discard.  Add the avocado and either blitz in the pan, or transfer to a blender and blend until smooth and creamy.

Add the milk and season to taste.   Add slightly more milk if you prefer a thinner soup.

If serving straight away, gently heat but do not boil. Alternatively, transfer to a resealable container and store in the fridge or freezer.

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Delicious and healthy Avocado and Spinach Soup

This delicious soup can be served on its own, with a swirl of live yoghurt or with some nuts and seeds.

Recipe adapted from  Eat2Health Blog.

Posted in Brunch, Lunch, Miscellany, Soups, Starters, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Seared Prawns with a Ginger Sugarsnap Pea Salad

Even if you do a couple of things wrong, like I did – this dish is still delicious.  Fresh, crunchy, tangy and surprisingly filling.

For a starter, I didn’t have raw king prawns but a huge bag of peeled prawns in my freezer.   I thawed 300g of these and seared them over a high heat and they were very tasty.  I think if I used these small prawns again in this dish, I would probably add a few extra as they tend to shrink when heated (and we just love prawns!!).

I decided to lightly toast my sesame seeds and then forgot to sprinkle them on the finished dish.  It was only when we were half-way through eating that I remembered them, so my picture doesn’t show any seeds.

INGREDIENTS:

300g raw king prawns
200g sugarsnap peas, ends cut off and sliced in half
100g radishes, finely sliced
1 tablespoon cider vinegar
1 tablespoon freshly grated ginger
1 tablespoon coconut oil or butter
2 tablespoons olive oil or sesame oil (I used sesame oil)
2 tablespoons sesame seeds
Salt and pepper

METHOD:

Pat the prawns dry with a kitchen towel and grind salt and pepper over them.

Put the sugarsnap peas in a bowl with the sliced radish.

Mix the vinegar, ginger and olive or sesame oil with a pinch of salt.

Heat the coconut oil or butter in a frying pan over a high heat for about 1 minute. Turn the heat down a little and fry the prawns for 1 minute on each side until cooked through.

Plate the prawns with the salad.

Pour over the dressing and top with the sesame seeds.

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Seared Prawn and Ginger Sugarsnap Pea Salad (just imagine sprinkled with toasted sesame seeds)

Recipe adapted from Get the Glow by Madeleine Shaw

 

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Courgette Blinis

Even though I have been cooking for quite a few years (more years than I care to remember!), I still get pleasure from finding a new recipe which goes down well and everyone likes, however simple it may be.

I had two sorry looking courgettes sitting in my vegetable basket and I needed to do something with them before they went ‘over’.   A quick look through some of my cookbooks came up with the idea of Courgette Blinis.  As my little grandson would be at my house for lunch, I thought what a good idea to get some vegetables into him – he’s at the age of deciding he doesn’t like some foods (2 1/2 years) and he usually sits down to lunch with Granddad and loves to eat the same food.    There is one really good thing about my husband – he absolutely loves his food and willingly tries out anything I concoct in the kitchen and there isn’t much he doesn’t like – except liver !!

2 – 3 large courgettes
1 tablespoon coconut flour
3 eggs
Sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Coconut oil or ghee for frying

METHOD:

Grate the courgettes using a food processor with a shredding disc – you need about 2 cups (350g) grated courgette.   Alternatively, grate them finely by hand.

Sift the coconut flour on to the eggs and beat them together until smooth.

Mix in the courgettes, salt and pepper.

2016-01-22_095950391_98F7A_iOSHeat a little oil in a frying pan and spoon in dollops of the batter. I found my egg-frying rings to be a perfect size but make sure you don’t put too much mixture in otherwise the blinis will be very thick.

My first two were too thick but I soon got the hang of how much to cook.

 

Once set, slip the rings off and turn over to cook on the other side.

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Courgette Blinis ready to reheat and serve

Serve warm with almond butter or cream cheese with chives on top.

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Delicious Courgette Blinis with Almond Butter

I found these blinis reheated perfectly and they were a great success.  I used two large courgettes which made 12 blinis.

Recipe adapted from the book I Quit Sugar by Sarah Wilson.

 

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Kale Crisps

The other evening I was in one of those moods where I really wanted something to nibble and remembering I had half a bag of kale in the fridge, decided to quickly make some kale crisps.  These crisps are so tasty and flavoursome that once you start nibbling them, they don’t last long and it’s a bit push ‘n shove between my husband and I as to who gets the last crisps.

They are very quick and easy to make, taste delicious and kale is so good for you.

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

Remove the thick stalks from the kale and tear any large leaves into smaller pieces.

Using your hands, massage the kale with a good lug of olive oil and a good sprinkle of sea salt.  Don’t use too much oil – just enough to help massage and for the salt to stick.   Very roughly, about half a tablespoon for each baking tray of kale.

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Spread in a single layer on a baking sheet and bake for about 15 to 20 minutes until starting to brown at the edges, but not burn.  There is no need to toss them.

Leave to cool slightly for a couple of minutes before tucking in.   Enjoy.

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Delicious Kale Crisps

To make a change, sprinkle with a little garam masala or chilli powder before cooking to spice things up.

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Chocolate Zucchini Muffins

I made these delicious muffins recently and they are so moist, chocolatey and gooey that I have had to slap my husband’s hands as he kept pinching them.  Although the original recipe calls for dairy-free chocolate chips, I used a very dark chocolate chip instead.

INGREDIENTS:

Coconut oil for greasing
¾ cup zucchini, finely shredded (I used one large zucchini)
4 large eggs
½ cup maple syrup
½ cup unsweetened apple sauce
1/3 cup coconut flour
¼ cup cacao powder
3 tablespoons arrowroot powder
1 ½ teaspoons baking soda
¾ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¼ teaspoon sea salt
½ cup dairy-free or very dark chocolate chips

METHOD:

Preheat the oven to 350°F and line a baking tin with paper or silicon cups.

Place the shredded zucchini in a muslin and squeeze out as much juice as possible (don’t throw it away – add it to your next green juice). Put to one side.

Place the eggs, maple syrup and apple sauce in a stand-mixer and mix on medium speed until combined.

Add the coconut flour, cacao powder, arrowroot powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and sea salt and mix again on medium speed until combined.

Add the dry zucchini and mix into the batter together with half of the chocolate chips.

Fill the paper or silicon muffin cups about 2/3 of the way full and sprinkle with the remaining chocolate chips.

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Bake for about 25 minutes. Cool in the pan for 10 minutes and then turn them out onto a wire rack until completely cool.

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Chocolate Zucchini Muffins

Last Autumn a neighbour of mine was inundated with windfall apples and kept leaving box loads for people to take.  I am so grateful I took the trouble to cook so many down and freeze in small quantities.  Just hoping the same happens this year as I am finding more and more recipes using unsweetened apple sauce.

Another fantastic recipe adapted from Danielle Walker’s Against All Grain.

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Sweet Potato Hash with Fried Egg

I’m copying The Juicy Health Company‘s words:  a new week, a new breakfast – this Sweet Potato Hash with Fried Egg arrived in my inbox just at the right moment – husband at gym and he is always ravenous when he gets home.  I’ve always got sweet potatoes in the cupboard and eggs on the side so I prepared the sweet potato mix and popped it into the fridge reading for cooking when D arrived home.  He loves his brunch on a Monday (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday etc – any day to be honest!)

INGREDIENTS:

1 large garnet yam or sweet potato
1 big pinch of sea salt
Several turns of freshly ground black pepper
A few shakes of garlic powder
A couple of dashes of onion powder
A sprinkle of dried herbs
Cooking fat of choice (I use coconut oil)
Aleppo pepper (optional)

METHOD:

Either grate the sweet potato (or yam) by hand or put through a food processor.

Add the salt, pepper, garlic and onion powder, herbs and Aleppo pepper if using. Mix well.

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Grate your sweet potato

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Add seasonings and mix well

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heat some oil in a large pan. Toss everything in the fat and stir-fry for a minute. Then, pop on a lid for a few more minutes while the potato/yams cook.

The hash is ready when there’s some crunchy brown bits and texture is soft and tender.

Meanwhile, heat a little oil in another fry pan and cook one or two eggs (to taste).

Alternatively, pop the cooked hash on a plate and keep warm while frying the eggs in the same pan.

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Sweet Potato Hash with Fried Eggs

My large sweet potato was sufficient for two servings and just for the record, my husband loved it.   Father Christmas gave me two egg rings on the Christmas tree – the reason why my eggs look so lovely and round.

Recipe adapted from Nom Nom Paleo.

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