Healing tropical slaw

Healing Tropical Slaw

This slaw is not only packed with flavour, but is also a powerhouse recipe that feeds our own powerhouse, our stomach. In Eastern medicine the stomach area is known as the solar plexus chakra and is associated with the element of earth and emotions of anxiety and stress. High stress levels can shut down our digestive system so it is important to tune into how stress affects our eating behaviours.

The mind and emotions live within yin energy, which is replenishing. In this belief, emotions and earth are sustained by yin energy. Basic metabolic theory shows us how food and air that we put into the alchemy fire of the stomach can magically transform and lead into the ultimate metaphor for the digestive process that is gold. It is this refinement of foreign materials into highly refined energy that is the essence capable of extending life.


Serves: 4

Preparation time: 20 minutes

Cooking time: 10 minutes


½ bunch kale, stalks removed, finely sliced

½ bunch Tuscan kale, stalks removed and finely sliced

1 handful fresh coriander leaves, finely chopped

1 handful fresh rocket, roughly chopped

½ small red cabbage, finely sliced

1 mango, peeled, pitted and cubed

150 g mixed sprouts

50 g sunflower seeds, toasted

50 g pumpkin seeds, toasted

salt and pepper




Dressing

zest and juice of 2 limes

1 tablespoon liquid aminos

2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar

1 tablespoon water

1 tablespoon honey

1 tablespoon peeled and grated fresh ginger

½ tablespoon peeled and grated fresh turmeric

6 tablespoons olive oil

salt and pepper


Place all the dressing ingredients into a blender and blend until combined. Season to taste and set aside.

Place the kale, coriander, rocket, cabbage, mango and sprouts into a large salad bowl. Make sure all the greens are finely sliced as you want the texture to be like a slaw. Cover in the salad dressing and toss well using your hands, gently massaging the kale while you do so. Top with sunflower and pumpkin seeds and season to taste.

Enjoy!

-Melissa




Quick and easy tofu scramble

This fascinating thing happens when you talk about veganism. People become uncomfortable, because in many ways veganism shines a very bright light on being a more conscious consumer. It’s not to say that veganism is the right way of eating, but that bright light, I believe, shines into areas of darkness and pain for others and can elicit an emotive response. If you choose not to be vegan, then why not experiment and try the occasional vegan meal. This recipe is an example of that.


Serves: 2

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 10 minutes


Ingredients:

1 teaspoon coconut oil 

3 spring onions, sliced  

1 clove garlic, minced 

1 teaspoon ground turmeric 

1 teaspoon ground cumin 

¼ teaspoon chilli flakes  

1 tablespoon tomato paste 

1 red pepper, seeded and cubed 

1 teaspoon tamari paste

1 handful kale, stalks removed and finely chopped 

280 g silken tofu 

2 slices sourdough bread

1 avocado, peeled and pip removed

juice of ½ lemon

salt and pepper 

olive oil

1 handful fresh coriander leaves

Instructions:

Heat the coconut oil in a medium frying pan over medium heat and add the spring onions. Fry for 3–5 minutes, then add the garlic, turmeric, cumin, chilli flakes and tomato paste. Fry for a further 3 minutes. 

Add the red pepper and fry until soft. Add the tamari paste and kale and fry until the kale has wilted. Add the tofu and break it apart, scrambling it for 5 minutes. While the tofu is cooking, toast the sourdough bread.

When the toast is ready, smoosh the avo onto the slices. Drizzle with lemon juice, top with the tofu scramble and season to taste. Top off with a drizzle of olive oil and fresh coriander. 

Enjoy - Melissa

Quick and easy tofu scramble

Grilled vegetable and beetroot flatbread

Cooking is about joy and bringing joy into your life with something that fuels your body is a little act of kindness. Within that joy, I want you to experience play. Play with flavours, play with ingredients, and connect to this child-like quality that is often lost in our day-to-day lives. Start with little steps and then expand by creating your own recipes based on intuition. This recipe is all about play with pink flatbreads and delicious vegetables! Make the flatbreads for this recipe or for your next curry night!


Serves: 2

Preparation time: 35 minutes

Cooking time: 10 minutes

Ingredients:

2 medium beetroots 

180 g spelt flour or gluten-free flour of your choice

1 teaspoon salt 

2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda 

¼ teaspoon garlic powder

juice and zest of 1 lemon

½ cup water 

2 red peppers, seeded and sliced

olive oil

salt and pepper 

3 medium courgettes, ribboned 

Coconut oil

6 tablespoons Greek yoghurt or substitute of your choice

1 handful fresh dill leaves, finely chopped 

1 small handful fresh mint, finely chopped 

1 handful fresh rocket 



Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 180 °C. 

Place the beetroots in a roasting pan and roast for 35 minutes until soft when pierced with a fork. Remove and set aside. (I usually do a bigger batch and save the rest for salad or other meals and snacks.)

To make the flatbread dough, place the flour, salt and bicarbonate of soda into a medium bowl and mix together. Set aside. 

Using a blender, blend the beetroots until smooth, 1 teaspoon of the lemon juice, and the water.

Make a well in the middle of the flour and gradually add the beetroot mixture while mixing until a dough begins to form. Tip the dough out onto a flat surface and knead until well combined. Return to the bowl, cover, and set aside to rest for 20 minutes. 

Meanwhile, place the red peppers in a separate mixing bowl, drizzle with a little olive oil and season to taste. Toss until evenly covered with oil. In a grill pan over medium heat (the pan must be hot), add the red peppers and grill for roughly 5 minutes until grill marks start to appear. Repeat the process with the courgette ribbons and cook for 1–2 minutes. Be careful not to overcook the vegetables.  

Once the dough has rested, remove from the bowl and divide into four fist-size balls. Roll out the balls of dough on a floured surface until they are about the size of your frying pan base. Lightly rub a little coconut oil on each side of the dough circles. Fry in a medium frying pan over medium to high heat for 5 minutes on each side or until golden brown. 
While the flatbreads are frying, mix the remainder of the lemon juice with the yoghurt, dill and mint in a small bowl. Season to taste. 

Once the flatbreads are ready, remove from the heat. Serve with a generous smear of the yoghurt dressing, topped with the rocket and grilled vegetables. Season to taste with a little extra black pepper and drizzle with olive oil. 

Enjoy - Melissa

Grilled vegetable and beetroot flatbread

Stuffed peppers with mint yoghurt dressing

spelt stuffed peppers with herby yoghurt dressing

This is a fun and healthy take on an old classic. It is such a hearty dish that always offers a beautiful pop of colour when you add it to your plate. Eating colourful food means more nutrients and health. You can get creative and try it with different spices and serve them as the main affair or as a side. It’s also a great do-ahead dish so you can grab a stuffed pepper when on the run.

Serves 2 as a main dish, 4 as a side

Prep time: 15 minutes

Cooking time: 45 minutes


Ingredients:

4 medium red or yellow peppers, tops cut off and saved for later, and seeds removed

Dressing

1 cup plain Greek yoghurt or coconut yoghurt

juice of 1 lemon

12 fresh mint leaves, finely chopped

2 tablespoons maple syrup or 2 teaspoons unrefined brown sugar

80 g goats milk cheese

salt and pepper

Filling

1½ cups spelt, cooked

1 cup vegetable stock

2 teaspoons coconut oil

2 shallots, finely diced

2 cloves garlic, finely sliced

1 teaspoon ground turmeric

½ teaspoon cayenne pepper

4 plum tomatoes, chopped

4 medium-sized courgettes, grated

2 teaspoons caper berries

1 tablespoon nutritional yeast

olive oil

1 handful fresh coriander or parsley leaves, chopped

Instructions:

Prepare the peppers and set aside. You want to keep them intact as you will be filling them later.

For the dressing, mix together all the ingredients in a small bowl until combined. Season to taste and set aside.

For the filling, cook the spelt as per the packet instructions, adding the vegetable stock to the water that you use to do so. Once ready, set aside.

Heat the coconut oil in a medium frying pan over medium heat. Add the shallots and sauté for 5 minutes until translucent. Add the garlic, turmeric and cayenne pepper and sauté for a further 5 minutes, stirring often. If it dries out, add a splash of water to help it along. Add the tomatoes and cook for a further 15 minutes, stirring every 5 minutes. Once the tomatoes have cooked down, remove the pan from the heat and add the courgettes, caper berries, nutritional yeast and spelt and fold through.

Preheat the oven to 180 °C.

Using a spoon, fill the peppers to the top with the tomato and spelt mixture. Drizzle with a little olive oil, making sure the sides get some oil too. Use your hands if need be. Pop the peppers onto a roasting tray and roast them in the oven for 10 minutes. Change the setting to grill and grill them for an additional 10 minutes, keeping an eye on them so that they don’t burn.

Serve with a big dollop of dressing, and a drizzle of olive oil, and top with the coriander or parsley

-Melissa


Ultimate veggie burger & fries

Ultimate veggie burger & fries

This recipe is a longer cook but oh so fun for getting the children involved. Teaching your children to be kind to animals is our responsibility. They don’t need to be vegan, but growing up with a disconnect to where their food comes from raises adults who are disconnected from the farm-to-table process and who end up buying meat unconsciously. Meat is a privilege and the animal has given its life for it. Teaching your children that these are kind patties that haven’t harmed another being might encourage them to not only learn something new, but to try something new. It may even do the same for you.

Serves: 4

Preparation time: 20 minutes

Cooking time: 45 minutes

Fries

5 unpeeled potatoes, sliced into wedges

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 teaspoon paprika

salt and pepper

Patties

½ cup uncooked brown lentils

2 cups vegetable stock

200 g fresh or frozen sweetcorn kernals

200 g fresh or frozen peas

1 bunch fresh coriander leaves

½ teaspoon ground cumin

¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)

75 g spelt flour

1 tablespoon sesame seeds

1 tablespoon sunflower seeds

salt and pepper

1 tablespoon coconut oil

Vegan mayo

2 spring onions

½ fresh red chilli (optional)

1 clove garlic

2 heaped tablespoons cooked chickpeas

1 teaspoon English mustard

1½ tablespoons sun-dried tomato paste

juice of 1 lemon

5 tablespoons olive oil

To serve

4 quality burger buns (gluten-free if you wish)

½ head iceberg lettuce

2 plum tomatoes, sliced

2 gherkins, sliced

2 sprigs fresh basil leaves

1 lime

1 avocado, peeled, pip removed, sliced

Preheat the oven to 180 °C.

For the fries, toss the potato wedges with the oil, paprika, salt and pepper in a large bowl until the wedges are evenly coated. Pop them onto a roasting tray and into the oven for 35–40 minutes or until they are golden brown, tossing them at the halfway mark. I drizzle them with a little extra olive oil as they come out of the oven and season with salt.

For the patties, place the lentils and vegetable stock into a medium saucepan over medium heat. Cook for 30 minutes until al dente.

Meanwhile, add the sweetcorn, peas, coriander, cumin, cayenne pepper, flour and seeds to a food processor. Once the lentils are ready, remove them from the heat, drain them and allow to cool for 10 minutes and then tip them into the food processor and season with salt and pepper. Pulse until a rough paste starts to form. You don’t want to make it too smooth. Once ready, divide the mixture into four even patties about 2 cm thick. Place the patties on a lightly floured tray and pop them into the freezer to set for 10 minutes or save them in the fridge for later.

While the patties are setting, get started on the mayo. Place all the mayo ingredients, except the olive oil, into a blender and blend until smooth. While the blender is running, add the olive oil very slowly and keep blending until a mayo-like consistency forms. Once ready, set aside.

Heat the oven again to 180 °C.

Heat the coconut oil in a medium frying pan over medium heat. Cook each patty for 2 minutes on each side. Once ready, transfer to a roasting tray and pop them into the oven. Turn the oven down to 150 °C and bake a bit longer while you assemble the burgers.

Cut the buns in half and add a dollop of mayo. Top with lettuce, sliced tomato, gherkins and basil. Add a squeeze of lime. Place a hot patty on top and close the bun.

Serve with the fries and an extra dollop of mayo for dipping!

-Melissa