Browse Category by Vegetarian
Dinner, Lunch, Soup, Vegan, Vegetarian

Four Bean Soupreme

Four Bean Soupreme is served!

During the winter months, I enjoy warm, hearty meals with a bit of a kick to fight off those lazy days and over-eager bugs! The Spicy Winter Soup with chicken proved very popular among my family and friends, however, being vegetarian this month meant that I would be getting my protein source from elsewhere! Cue, pulses, in the form of beans, the tinned variety!

Beans are hearty, full of vitamins and minerals, and loaded with protein! Tinned or dried, we have been eating them in various meals for years in our household! If you want to have this as a chilli con carne type meal or increase the protein content, simply reduce the water and add in mincemeat, Quorn or tofu.

I had a busy day and was hungry so had my soup with German rye bread, which is naturally love in gluten and heavy! Two slices do me every time! You can have your soup with whatever you wish! You can even serve it with rice, quinoa or any other carb staple, just remember to not add 1 litre of water, unless you want a sloppy mess!

This recipe is meat free, gluten free, and dairy free, but highly nutritious and delicious, even if I do say so myself!

Ingredients - Four Bean Soupreme!
Ingredients – Four Bean Soupreme!

INGREDIENTS

Four Bean Supreme Soup

1 red onion

1 onion

3 spring onions

4 cloves garlic

1 cm ginger

½ red chilli

½ green chilli

½ red pepper

½ green pepper

½ teaspoon dried coriander

1 tin chopped tomatoes

¼ tin red kidney beans

1 tin mixed beans (containing Adzuki, Cannellini and Haricot beans, you can use any mix you like)

Salt and pepper to taste

2 teaspoons coconut oil

1 litre filtered water, boiled

RECIPE

Four Bean Supreme Soup

  1. In a large saucepan, melt 2 teaspoons coconut oil, and add in sliced and diced red, normal and spring onions (keep the green leaves until the end), crushed garlic, chopped ginger and turmeric, and sauté until golden brown, cooking on 3/4 heat;
  2. Add in 1 tin chopped tomatoes, dried coriander, ½ teaspoon salt, and cook until the water evaporates for an infused and blended taste. I added in the chillies at this step because I wanted a spicier soup;
  3. Add in the chopped peppers and beans, mix gently and add in the boiling water;
  4. Cover and leave to cook for around 10 minutes on ¼ heat, stirring occasionally and to check the ingredients are done as you like them;
  5. Your Four Bean Soupreme is served! (If you wish, garnish with fresh coriander, parsley, basil or even mint!).
Four Bean Soupreme is served!
Four Bean Soupreme is served!

Preparation time: 15 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves 2-4 people

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂

Dinner, Lunch, Vegan, Vegetarian

Chilli Con Quorni

Chilli Con Quorni and Juwar Chapatti!

It’s my first full month of going vegetarian and we’re cooking on gas, both literally and metaphorically! I wanted to cook chilli con carne but didn’t have all the ingredients that I would have liked but, so I improvised! I love spicy food but not too spicy, and the whole point of my blog is to make spicy tasty food highly nutritious, so I upped the vegetables and added protein in the form of Quorn mince!

Chilli con carne is usually served with white rice, but I really didn’t fancy more (brown!) rice this week, especially after having so much quinoa! Therefore, I decided to get the boss, my mum, in to help out! I wanted some form of bread but being gluten intolerant means her delicious chapattis (made from chapatti flour) don’t go down very well, literally, so mum suggested that I have my meal with juwar chapatti instead!

Juwar, or sorghum flour, is naturally gluten free, high in protein and carbs, light but moreish, and very easy to make, so easy that I got my mother in to make it… also, because I have the hands of a baby and can’t handle the heat from the hot chapatti pan… ehem…! But mum does it better anyway, as you might have seen from the video, so I got the seasoned experts in!

This recipe is meat free, gluten free, and dairy free, but highly nutritious and delicious, if I do say so myself!

Chilli Con Quorni Ingredients
Chilli Con Quorni Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

Chilli Con Quorni

200 g Quorn mince

1 red onion

1 onion

3 spring onions (I would have added them if I had them!)

3 cloves garlic

1 cm ginger

1 cm turmeric (I would have added it if I had it!)

½ courgette/zucchini

½ red chilli

½ green chilli

½ red pepper (I would have added it if I had it!)

½ green pepper

½ teaspoon dried coriander

1 tin chopped tomatoes

½ tin white kidney beans (I would have added half a tin if I had other kidney beans in!)

½ tin red kidney beans (I would have added it if I had it!)

½ tin black kidney beans (I would have added it if I had it!)

Salt and pepper to taste

2 teaspoons coconut oil

Juwar Roti

250 g sorghum flour

500 mL filtered water (boiled)

RECIPE

Chilli Con Quorni

  1. In a large saucepan, melt 2 teaspoons coconut oil, and add in sliced and diced red, normal and spring onions (keep the green leaves until the end), crushed garlic, chopped ginger and turmeric, and sauté until golden brown, cooking on 3/4 heat;
  2. Add in quorn and mix until all the bits are separated;
  3. Add in 1 tin chopped tomatoes, dried coriander, ½ teaspoon salt, and cook until the water evaporates;
  4. Add in the chopped chillies, peppers, kidney beans (drained) and courgette, cover and leave to cook for around 10 minutes on ¼ heat (start making the juwar chapatti), stirring occasionally and to check the ingredients are done as you like them;
  5. Chilli con Quorni is served! (If you wish, garnish with fresh coriander, parsley, basil or even mint!).

Juwar Chapatti

  1. In a bowl, add 250 g sorghum flour, and add enough boiling filtered water needed to knead the dough into dough balls;
  2. 250 g of sorghum flour will give you around 5 dough balls, more than enough for 2 people;
  3. On a plastic sheet, gently flatten out the dough balls with your hands into a circle (~15 cm diameter);
  4. Cook on a hot pan, the one you saw mum use is specific for chapattis;
  5. To ensure the dough is cooked thoroughly and in the interests of speed, you can use a solar grill to finish off the juwar chapattis.
Chilli Con Quorni and Juwar Chapatti!
Chilli Con Quorni and Juwar Chapatti!

Preparation time: 15 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves 2 people

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂

Dinner, Lunch, Vegan, Vegetarian

Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese

Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese is served!

I have been making Spaghetti Bolognese for many years now, throughout university and my time abroad, trying to make it healthier, tastier etc., draining the fat from the minced beef, trying different oils and wholegrain spaghetti.

With going meat-free, spag bol was off the menu, until a trip to the supermarket turned it on its head! Now, I know meat alternatives exist, I never got around to buying “fake meat” because I used to enjoy the real thing! Now, needs must! So, I bought some packs of quorn and have been experimenting with “chicken” and “mince beef”, to varying degrees of success (mum hated quron tikka masala, but don’t worry, it’s coming!). Considering I hadn’t had spag bol since some time last year and don’t eat pasta, Spaghetti Bolognese was on! I have had gluten-free spaghetti at home for a while because of one of my friends who has Coeliac disease, so she can eat something whenever she’s over!

I love the mix of all 3 different types of onions available at the supermarkets here in the UK (I used to have white onions in Germany!) when caramelised together, I get this delicious sweet and tangy taste and aroma! Topped with some fresh garlic, ginger and turmeric, we’re rocking!

Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese Ingredients
Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

Quorn Bolognese

250 g Quorn mince

1 red onion

1 onion

3 spring onions

3 cloves garlic

1 cm ginger

1 cm turmeric

½ red chilli

½ green chilli

½ red pepper

½ green pepper

½ teaspoon dried coriander

1 tin of chopped tomatoes

Salt and pepper to taste

2 teaspoons coconut oil

Gluten-Free Spaghetti

50 g gluten-free spaghetti (mine is made from brown rice)

1 teaspoon coconut oil

½ teaspoon salt

500 mL filtered water

RECIPE

Quorn Bolognese

  1. In a large saucepan, melt 2 teaspoons coconut oil, and add in sliced and diced red, normal and spring onions (keep the green leaves until the end), crushed garlic, chopped ginger and turmeric, and sauté until golden brown, cooking on 3/4 heat;
  2. Add in 1 tin chopped tomatoes, dried coriander, ½ teaspoon salt, and cook until the water evaporates;
  3. Add in the chopped chillies, peppers and quorn, cover and leave to cook for around 10 minutes on ¼ heat (start cooking the spaghetti);
  4. Stir occasionally and check the ingredients are done as you like them;
  5. Quorn Bolognese is served! (If you wish, garnish with fresh coriander, parsley, basil or even mint!).

Gluten

  1. In a saucepan on ¾ heat, add 1 teaspoon of coconut oil and ½ teaspoon of salt (put the 500 mL of filtered water on to boil);
  2. Add in the boiling water, stir, add the spaghetti and stir gently for 30 seconds, cover and leave to cook for 10 minutes on ¼ heat;
  3. Check on it 5 minutes later and gently stir;
  4. Cook until it is to your liking and drain the spaghetti;
  5. Cooking time is about 10 minutes and it is ready to eat!
Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese is served!
Gluten-Free Quorn Bolognese is served!

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves 2 people – mum was surprised by the taste and had hers with horrible white spaghetti!

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂

About Me, Vegan, Vegetarian

Red Meat Free – One Month On!

Hi everyone, I just wanted to give you a quick update on how I am getting along with going red meat free! So for an entire month, I haven’t touched red meat, and I must say that I haven’t really missed it much! However, I have experienced some drastic changes in my body and mind!

I have lost over 2 kgs in weight (5 lbs), have gone down 2 belt notches and feel much calmer and more peaceful than I have been doing for a while, meaning that I sleep better!

Have you tried going vegetarian? How are you getting along? I’d love to hear about your experience!

Dinner, Fish, Lunch, Vegetarian

Hearty Haddock

Heart Haddock is served!

As part of me going chicken-free in November, and vegetarian for December, I decided to cook fish! I looked in the freezer and found some haddock. I love how my mum cook’s haddock but it can be a bit too spicy for me, and although I love chapatti, my stomach doesn’t do well with gluten! I also bought a pack of mixed vegetables the other day and I decided to put it to good use!

I love colour in my food, and although many of the dishes turn out red because of the tomatoes, I love the mix of green and red, so always try to ensure a colourful and of course tasty dish! Ever since I began this blog, I wanted to ensure that I had a good mix of protein, fats and healthy carbs in my dishes, and this one has the macronutrients covered!

You can have this dish with rice, naan, chapatti, bread, bulgur wheat, buckwheat or anything like that but I love my quinoa so had it with that! Also, depending on how well you like your vegetables cooked, adjust the time you cook them for. I personally like them slightly crunchy, mum loves them basically mashed! Each to their own!

Heart Haddock and Quinoa Ingredients
Heart Haddock and Quinoa Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

Hearty Haddock

250 haddock filet (2 pieces)

1 large onion

4 cloves garlic (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 cm ginger (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 green chillies (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

Salt and pepper to taste

Optional: Red chilli powder

Small pack of mixed vegetables

½ teaspoon dried coriander

Optional: A handful of fresh or frozen coriander

2 teaspoons coconut oil

Quinoa

100 g quinoa

1 small onion

½ teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon coconut oil

200 mL filtered water

RECIPE

Hearty Haddock

  1. In a large saucepan, add in 2 teaspoons coconut oil, 1 chopped onion, and caramelise on 3/4 heat;
  2. Add in garlic, ginger, chilli, and cook and stir until the smell goes;
  3. Add in 1 tin chopped tomatoes, dried coriander, 1 teaspoon salt, and cook until the water evaporates;
  4. Add in the fish, mix, cover, and cook until all the frozen bits are cooked (unless using fresh, in which case cook until it is almost done), around 10 minutes;
  5. Add in the mixed vegetables and cover for 10 minutes;
  6. Continue to stir occasionally;
  7. Check the fish and vegetables are done as you like them and add the fresh or frozen coriander as a tasty garnish;
  8. Hearty Haddock is served!

Quinoa

  1. In a saucepan on ¾ heat, add 1 teaspoon of coconut oil (put the water on to boil);
  2. Slice and dice in the ¼ onion and stir, sauté until the onion caramelises;
  3. Add the quinoa and stir gently for 30 seconds;
  4. Add in the boiling water and a ¼ teaspoon of salt;
  5. Allow the quinoa to simmer, turn the heat down to a quarter, and cover with the lid;
  6. Check on it 3 to 5 minutes later and gently turn the quinoa over with a plastic or wooden spoon to ensure you keep your quinoa seeds in tact;
  7. Repeat step 8 until the quinoa is cooked and all the water evaporates;
  8. You are now ready to eat!
Heart Haddock is served!
Heart Haddock is served!

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves up to 2 people

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂

Breakfast, Dinner, Lunch, Snack, Vegetarian

Fishy Omelette

Fishy Omelette :)

I love eggs! Free-range mind. And I eat 4 every morning for breakfast! I get my daily dose of post-gym protein and healthy fats without fail! Hard boiled, scrambled or as an omelette, I eat eggs! The omelette is ubiquitous throughout the world and comes in many different forms such as the frittata (Italian omelette) in Italy, tortilla in Spain (Spanish omelette) or the tamagoyaki in Japan (Japanese omelette).

In Gujarat, India, the birthplace of my parents, the omelette is called a pura. As you can expect, Indian omelettes are spiced up to the high heavens! If there’s no chilli, it isn’t Indian! I loved the omelettes my mum and dad made for me and sometimes mum does still make them. In our household, and I am sure many households, it is the default go-to dish when you are hungry, don’t want to make a fuss in the kitchen and enjoy a filling meal.

Now, I do love my mum’s omelettes, but they tend to leave me feeling a little hungry – must be my big appetite! So, about 3 months ago, after a big morning workout, when I felt hungry enough to eat a cow, I decided to experiment (much to the chagrin of my mother’s traditionalist attitude in the kitchen) with a tin of tuna, and half a tin of mixed vegetables, along with the regular spice, and coconut oil! Up until this point, mum was using olive oil (and vegetable or sunflower oils before that, which play havoc with my immune system) for her omelettes, even though we’d switched to coconut oil – something about frying and “proper” oil ;). Anyway, I ended up cooking a deliciously healthy, tasty, quick and easy meal, rich in protein, good fats and healthy carbs, which was rustled up in 15 mins, and eaten in about 5! You can have this omelette for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and if you reduce the ingredients, a hearty snack! Oh, and if you want to up your greens, this omelette goes perfectly with salad!

I cooked this without the half tin of mixed vegetables because it was late and I wasn’t as hungry as I am after the gym! However, don’t be scared to experiment, have a bit of fun in the kitchen and see what you can come up with!

Fishy Omelette Ingredients
Fishy Omelette Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

4 free range eggs

4 cloves garlic (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 cm ginger (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 green chillies (I used a bag we’d frozen before)

Salt and pepper to taste

Optional: Red chilli powder

 

Optional: ½ can of mixed vegetables

1 can of tuna (remove the brine)

½ teaspoon dried corriander

1 teaspoon coconut oil

RECIPE

  1. In a bowl, whisk up the eggs, garlic, ginger, chilli, salt, pepper, seasoning and tuna (and mixed vegetables);
  2. Heat up a teaspoon of coconut oil in a large non-stick frying pan;
  3. Pour the mix into the frying pan and cook on a medium heat for about 5 minutes, the bottom is cooked;
  4. Turn on the solar grill to full and place the frying pan in there for about 5 minutes whilst the top of the omelette cooks. If you don’t have a solar grill and/or want to flip the omelette, good luck!
  5. Once it cooks to your taste, place a large plate over the frying pan, carefully flip over, and you are ready to eat!
Fishy Omelette :)
Fishy Omelette 🙂

Preparation time: 5 minutes

Cooking time: 10 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves up to 2 people

This was a meal for me, but it could easily feed 2! My rule of thumb is 2 eggs per person 🙂

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂

Dinner, Lunch, Vegan, Vegetarian

Spicy Spinach

As part of my little experiment to go meat free, I decided to get mum in to help me out when I decided to cook! She suggested I cook her dish Spicy Spinach, which I have enjoyed for many years. The only thing we have changed recently is using coconut oil instead of other oils.

Traditionally, we ate this with every other Saturday with yellow rice, (mum uses turmeric for the colour!), and kurhi, a heated watered down yogurt, not great for my digestive system! Mum also enjoys this with chapati, naan or pitta bread, however, with my gluten intolerances, I guess I could handle wholemeal or jasmine rice, but I went with my tried and trust quinoa, made Indian style!

This dish is perfect for a light lunch or dinner, contains potatoes for some carbs (mum said sweet potato or butternut squash would make the dish too sweet, so I went with starchy potatoes!), iron and zinc from spinach and other spices to up antioxidants. You will also receive a decent amount of protein from 40 g of quinoa!

Spicy Spinach and Quinoa Ingredients
Spicy Spinach and Quinoa Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

Spicy Spinach

200 g spinach (we used a bag we’d frozen before)

50 g peas (we used a bag we’d frozen before)

¼ tin chopped tomatoes

4 charlotte potatoes

4 cloves garlic (we used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 cm ginger (we used a bag we’d frozen before)

2 green chillies (we used a bag we’d frozen before)

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon turmeric

1 teaspoon dried coriander

1 teaspoon red chilli powder

1 teaspoon

2 teaspoon coconut oil

Pillau Quinoa

40 g quinoa

¼ onion

2 cinnamon sticks

200 mL of filtered water, boiled.

¼ teaspoon Salt

1 teaspoon Coconut oil

INSTRUCTIONS

Spicy Spinach

  1. In a large saucepan, add in ¾ chopped onion, 2 teaspoon coconut oil peas, garlic, ginger, chilli, ¼ tin tomatoes, chopped potatoes, spices and seasoning, place on ½ heat and cover for 5 minutes whether ingredient are frozen or not due to moisture from the spinach;
  2. Simmer on ¼ heat for 20 minutes and stir occasionally to mix;
  3. Spicy Spinach is served! Yes really!

Pillau Quinoa

  1. You can begin cooking this simultaneously with the Spicy Spinach;
  2. In a saucepan on ¾ heat, add 1 tablespoon of coconut oil (put the water on to boil);
  3. Slice and dice in the ¼ onion and stir, sauté until the onion caramelises;
  4. Add in the cinnamon sticks;
  5. Add in the boiling water and a ¼ teaspoon of salt;
  6. Add the quinoa and stir gently;
  7. Allow the quinoa to simmer, turn the heat down to a quarter, and cover with the lid;
  8. Check on it 3 to 5 minutes later and gently turn the quinoa over with a plastic or wooden spoon to ensure you keep your quinoa seeds in tact;
  9. Repeat step 8 until the quinoa is cooked and all the water evaporates;
  10. You are now ready to eat!
Spicy Spinach and Quinoa
Spicy Spinach and Quinoa

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Eating time: 15 minutes

Serves up to 2 people

I made enough just for mum and I!

Let me know how you get on and please feel free to provide feedback 🙂