Get Healthy with Dr Carrot

21 07 2011

TV’s Dr Christian Jessen and the British Carrot Growers’ Association have collaborated on an informative yet fun leaflet that is now downloadable from www.britishcarrots.co.uk.  The Get Healthy with Dr Carrot leaflet is part of a year-long campaign by the nation’s carrot growers and Dr Christian to reiterate the words of wisdom uttered by Dr Carrot, a cartoon character from World War II.  Dr Carrot was part of an educational programme by the Ministry of Food to show people how to eat healthily during rationing but his words of advice are as valid today as they were 60 years ago and the leaflet is designed to communicate them to the younger generation.

Photo credit: The Imperial War Museum

“Dr. Carrot was a well loved character who promoted healthy-eating messages to keep the nation fit during the dark days of war,” says Dr. Christian.  “I’m delighted to be revisiting his advice on behalf of the British Carrot Growers’ Association.  Together we’ll get Britain healthy!”

The Get Healthy with Dr Carrot leaflet explains in a child friendly way just how important carrots are in our diets in particular the role that beta-carotene plays.  This is an antioxidant that occurs in high levels in carrots and which creates Vitamin A in the body.  This vitamin is vital for good eyesight, immunity, healthy hair and skin and ensuring good growth and strong bones and teeth.   As Dr Christian explains: “Research* has shown that many of this country’s youngsters and indeed adults have lower levels of vitamin A intakes than is ideally necessary.   But an 80g serving of cooked carrot – that’s just half a medium sized carrot – contains more than twice the recommended daily amount of vitamin A equivalent needed by adults.  It really couldn’t be easier to eat yourself healthier with carrots.”

The leaflet also looks into the fascinating history of carrots, which believe it or not were originally purple.  They only turned the more familiar orange colour in the 15th century when carrots were developed by Dutch growers in honour of their royal family who were from the ‘House of Orange’.

Perfect fodder for school quizzes, the leaflet contains some fun, interesting facts about carrots.  Do you know, for example, how many carrots are bought in the UK every weekend?  Or why carrots are ‘put to bed’ in winter and harvested at midnight at the start of the new season in June?  For the answers visit www.britishcarrots.co.uk!

Carrots are incredibly versatile and can be eaten raw or cooked.  During the Second World War carrots were promoted as a replacement for sugar in many recipes due to their natural sweetness which probably explains their popularity with children.   If, as a mum though, you still struggle to think of ways to get your kids to eat more carrots, the Get Healthy with Dr Carrot leaflet can give some top tips to help make it happen eg mix mashed carrots with mashed potato and use to top cottage pie or fish pie.

Another sure-fire way to get children to eat better is to get them involved in cooking and the leaflet provides some simple recipes that youngsters should find easy to make and which have been developed by Dr Christian for that ‘celebrity flair and kudos’.

Dr Christian adds: “There’s so much to say about carrots.  They’re low in calories, low in fat and saturates, naturally low in salt but high in fibre making them the perfect snack to crunch on when you’re watching your weight or that of your children.  The beta-carotene, when converted into Vitamin A, is an important nutrient for eye health – a lack of it can cause blindness – and because beta-carotene is an important antioxidant, eating carrots helps to keep your skin healthy and elastic.”

To find out more about the wonder of carrots and to download the Get Healthy with Dr Carrot leaflet visit www.britishcarrots.co.uk.

*The research to which Dr. Christian refers is the National Diet and Nutrition Survey of Young People¹ that revealed that 13 per cent of 11-14 year old boys and 20 per cent of 11-14 year old girls have vitamin A intakes below the minimum amount needed for good health.  This is also true of 16 per cent of men and 19 per cent of women aged between 19 and 24².

References:

¹  National Diet and Nutrition Survey:  Young People Aged 4-18 Years. 2000.
² National Diet and Nutrition Survey: Adults Aged 19-64 Years. Volume 2, 2003

Content provided by Mustard Communications.





New Year Recipes For Vitality

14 01 2011

As 2011 begins, discover how to nourish the glow of beautiful skin, the radiance of clear eyes and expand your energy levels and fitness this year.

Begin the year by feeding your health with pure and natural dishes.  Delight your palate with delicious cooking that’s healthy too.

Can you really enjoy both yummy and healthy meals?

Anna Freedman, a qualified Macrobiotic Cook and Wholefood Coach from Wholefood Harmony, is passionate about inspiring health through delicious, natural cuisine. She believes in whole, unprocessed foods for their powerful benefits to health and mitigation against disease.

Wholefood Harmony offer cooking workshops, coaching sessions and personal cook services  to share the wisdom of natural food diets, rich in whole grains, pulses and local, seasonal vegetables with no fat, sugar or added preservatives.

Anna says that ‘the influence of season and the balance of pure ingredients, dishes and cooking styles are central to the art of our menu design.  I love creating menus made up of dishes and flavours that harmonise together beautifully bestowing pleasure, vitality and wellness on those enjoying our meals.”

Wholefood Harmony are running a ‘Healthy New Year’ Cooking Workshop series beginning 20th January.  Here you can learn to create dishes that delight your appetite and expand your health.  The series will allow you to discover how to integrate pure foods into busy schedules and make a healthy start on enjoying feeding your vitality this year.

The workshops include themed wholefood teaching, hands on cooking and they conclude with enjoyment of a full, three course meal comprising over seven different dishes.  Sessions are £40 each and take place close to Golders Green, North West London.

 

For more information please visit www.wholefoodharmony.com.  You can contact Anna on 07957313187 or at welcome@wholefoodharmony.com.

Healthy New Year Cooking Workshops

Thursday 20th January – Cooking for Men & Women6.30-930pm; Includes full balanced wholefoods meal that will delight both men and women.

Sunday 23rd January 2011 – New Year Recipes for Vitality10am-1.30pm; Discover ingredients for wellbeing and learn to create recipes to expand health this year. Includes full luncheon.

Wednesday 26th January 2011 – Naturally Fast Cuisine10am-1.30pm; Learn about nourishing yourself and others with delicious, natural dishes that you can prepare quickly. Includes full luncheon.

 





In season in December, recipes and a few eco goodies!

10 12 2010

December is getting off to a white start this year, with widespread snow and bitterly cold temperatures.  Thankfully it’s also the festive season; a time of goodwill, good company and good food, so there is plenty to look forward to!

In this blog entry we’ve highlighted kale, including scrummy recipes such as Spicy Kale with Chickpeas and Kale & Roquefort Parcels.  We’ve also included two recipes that mix apples and celeriac (read on to find out more), and we have a special soup section.

Enjoy the blog and we wish you all a very merry, festive time!

The VegBox Recipes Team

PS. This recipe for Mushroom and Winter Veg Pie should not be missed.  It’s a perfect winter warmer that will turn whatever root veg you have into a divine treat!

In Season in December

As well as marking the start of winter, December is of course the festive season, and the way things are going you would be forgiven for thinking that here in the UK, it might be a white one!   So what can you expect in your veg box?  Forced Rhubarb and Purple Sprouting Broccoli is coming in, and plenty is still in season including: Beetroot, Celeriac, Kale, Pototoes & Swede.

Click through for the full list.

Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Kale

Kale is a great source of Vitamins C, A and B6. It’s also packed with antioxidants, which are vital for a healthy immune system.  It’s in season over the winter, which makes it a useful ingredient in the vegetable box.  It’s strong flavour requires careful cooking, so it’s worth reading how to use it and checking out the recipes, to make sure you enjoy it.

Read more about this ingredient.

Try these recipes:

Celeriac & Apples!

And what about putting celeriac and apples together? Try these recipes:

Wholesome, Warming Soups

With the temperatures as they are, here in the office we have been bringing in soup to have for lunch, to warm our cockles and help power us through the afternoon.  Here are some of our favourite recipes which we think you will love too:

Ooffoo Community

These fabulous articles were uploaded to our sister site, Ooffoo, by community members:

Tips for Wormeries, by Maddy

…BEDDING - Add some additional bedding to your wormery such as shredded paper, scrunched up newspaper and/or a moisture mat as this can help to add some “insulation” and keep your worms a little warmer over the winter…

Read the full article.

The Joy of Mess, by Kerryb

…it isn’t just laziness or the comfort of soft furnishings and central heating that keep me inside.  It is not because I choose to neglect my garden, it is because I choose not to interfere.  This is armchair gardening at its best.  With a cup of tea and biscuit by my side, I sit back on my comfortable settee and watch, reaping the rewards of my negligence…

Read the full article

Marketplace Goodies

 Product image

Scented Drawer Sachets

Fair trade. Perfect for keeping drawers smelling sweet.

£10.50


 Product image

Flower Embroidered Jacket

Keep the cold out this winter.

£160.00


 Product image

Long Socks

Warm and cosy socks knitted from recycled yarn.

£22.00


 Product image

Sustainable Gift Wrap

Sustainable wrapping kit using recycled material.

£10.00


 Product image

Garden Sign

An amusing sign that makes the perfect gift for a green fingered loved one.

£4.99


 Product image

Gardening Book

Organise your gardening year and make the most of your produce.

£19.50





Funny Hurried Yummy Summer Honey Kohl Rabi Stir-Fry

16 06 2009
yours in 15 minutes!

yours in 15 minutes!

Last night’s dilemma:

We have 30 minutes before we have to leave the house.

We’re starving.

Cue “Flight of the Bumble-Bee” and chopping for my life…

It was stir fry time!





Anyone for tennis? Wimbledon Juice Recipe

16 06 2009
wimbledon juice

wimbledon juice

Well the men’s qualifiers have started, and the first day of Wimbledon (22nd June) is approaching fast.

If you’re planning on tuning in, and if the idea of coughing up for champagne is less than appealing, how about trying a British seasonal fruit juice perfect for mid-Summer?

We’ve called it Wimbledon Juice in honour of the sporting season.





July’s Fourth Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Runner Beans

15 06 2009

Late summer and early autumn are the classic “runner bean season”, although harvesting can start as early as June in some areas.

what to do with runner beans?

what to do with runner beans?

The season starts with fresh, young beans, with delicious, soft pods that simply need to be topped and tailed and briefly steamed. The season ends, however, with rather tough, stringy pods and oversized beans.

Chances are you’ll love your runner beans early in the season but might not be quite so keen by the end. Which is why we’ve recruited the talents of regular VBR reader, Steve in KL, to provide us with a solution for end-of-season bean fatigue ;) Read on.





July’s Third Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Peppers

15 06 2009
andrew williams spicy vegetable lasagna

andrew williams' spicy vegetable lasagna

This month we’ve been joined by fellow food blogger and newbie food grower and chili pepper enthusiast, Andrew Williams.

Andrew talks to us about why he grows veg at all, why he’s passionate about growing chilis, shares advice on getting started yourself and passes on an amazingly creative recipe for spicy lasagna that is more Mexican than Italian, including the use of enchiladas instead of lasagne pasta! Read on!





July’s First Fruit-in-the-Spotlight: Plums

9 06 2009
he stuck in his thumb ...

he stuck in his thumb ...

Plums come into season in late July or early August in the UK, and stick around being bloomin’ delicious until the end of September to mid October. Here’s a simple guide to buying, storing, preparing and cooking them, including a new recipe for Plums Poached with Earl Grey, courtesy of our friends Abel & Cole. Enjoy!





July’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Cucumber

9 06 2009
DIY Tsatsiki...

DIY Tsatsiki...

Pretty much every weekday morning right now I’m mindlessly chunking up cucumber and throwing it into the box with salad leaves, peppers, spring onions, cashews, and mushrooms for VegBox Husband’s lunch. Add a bit of black pepper, a splash of balsamic or even a tin of tuna and some mayo and I can be pretty sure I’ve saved him from the pot noodle for another day!

But is there more to cucumber than salad? Is there more to cucumber even than tsatsiki? Cucumber side effects? And is it possible that it can be cooked?!

Hrm … Read on!





June’s Fourth Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Samphire

26 05 2009

The final veggie we’re featuring ready for June is Samphire – specifically Marsh Samphire.

Marsh Samphire

Marsh Samphire

And the main reason we wanted to feature it is because we didn’t know anything about it!

To our rescue … The utterly encyclopaedic Lee Hamilton of Hertfordshire BuyLocal.net. Read on, over on our sister site www.ooffoo.com for more information on this mysterious veggie, a simple recipe, and for more about BuyLocal.net to boot!

Photograph of Salicornia europaea, near Southhampton, UK, by Marco Schmidt.





June’s Third Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Rocket

18 05 2009
some like it hot ...

some like it hot ...

Traditionally, after washing, there is little left to do other than savour this healthy, tasty leaf. It is said that if you want to enjoy rocket in its most natural Italian way, simply wash and dress with a good quality olive oil and freshly squeezed lemon.

But of late, a certain contingent of trendy people have been using rocket in HOT FOOD!!! Are you among them? Will you be joining them? To help you along, here are some rocket facts and a recipe for Rocket and Gruyere Omelette.





June’s Third Fruit-in-the-Spotlight: Raspberries

18 05 2009
are you relishing raspberries?

are you relishing raspberries?

This week, and to make sure we keep VegBox newsletter reader “Diana J” happy, the fruity spotlight is on raspberries, in readiness for their big entrance in June.

Click through to find out:

  • where the expression “blowing a raspberry” comes from;
  • what to avoid when you’re shopping for them; and
  • how to use them in savoury as well as sweet dishes.

Are you looking forward to raspberry season?





Prize Draw plus June’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Courgettes

18 05 2009
you could nab a free copy!

you could nab a free copy!

Courgettes are in their main season in the UK in June, July, August and September, and we’re celebrating their arrival on the Summer scene with:

Find out more over on our sister site, www.ooffoo.com.

Stay tuned for the next Fruit Feature … Raspberries!





National Vegetarian Week: Top 10 Vegetarian Soups

18 05 2009
whats your favourite veggie soup?

what's your favourite veggie soup?

18th – 24th May is National Vegetarian Week 2009, and in celebration, we bring you our take on a “Top 10 Vegetarian Soups” hit parade!

What would be in your Top 10?





Be Nice to Nettles Week: and a recipe for Nettle Pesto!

12 05 2009
be nice to nettles!

be nice to nettles!

VegBox Recipes reader, Carol G, contacted me yesterday, after the May newsletter went out, to let me know that May also brings with it “Be Nice to Nettles Week” (13th – 24th May).

It would have been a crime to miss an event like this, when nettles can be found and foraged in abundance without costing us a penny. So here are some nettle factoids and, more importantly, Carol G’s recipe for Nettle Pesto.

Will you be giving it a go?





Ideas for British Sandwich Week

11 05 2009
whats your favourite?

what's your favourite?

This week (10th – 16th May) is British Sandwich Week, and not that long ago, we asked you to let us know what your fave sandwiches are. We had so many delicious responses, we just had to compile them for you.

So here are the highlights for you to savour … And oh look, it’s lunch time!





June’s First Fruit-in-the-Spotlight: Apricot

6 05 2009

all about apricots

When they’re in season, how to store them and a brand new summer sorbet recipe

Plus why not to chew on the kernels, what on earth they’ve got to do with Henry VIII, and the (possibly!) secret to a long life!

Read on for an All-About-Apricots kind of an article!





June’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Broad Beans

6 05 2009
brand new recipe just for you!

brand new recipe just for you!

Broad beans are also known as fava beans (eek, memories of Hannibal Lecter!).

In the UK, we usually use them fresh, but they can also be dried and then used as pulses. They are one of the most common garden vegetables in the UK. You can eat them whole, podded or skinned, depending on their age and size, and they are SO easy to grow, yielding beautiful purplish and white flowers into the bargain!

However, often there are gluts of them, and “our survey said” that lots of folks feel a bit stumped by how to use them.

Read on for a little un-stump-ing, and for the brand new broad bean recipe we’ve  been given by our lovely friends over at Octopus Books, who recently published “The Seasoned Vegetarian” by Simon Rimmer.





May’s Third Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Fennel

22 04 2009

“If your association with fennel is soggy, aniseed-tasting ratatouille, you’re in the right place.

Fennel will always been something of an acquired taste, admittedly, but there are a lot of alternatives to sogginess…”

Read the full article over on our sister-site, ooffoo.com, to find out what to look for when you’re buying fennel, how to store and prepare it, some of the medicinal qualities associated with it, and a brand new recipe that is a world away from soggy aniseed ratatouille : )





May’s Second “Veggie”-in-the-Spotlight: Strawberries

22 04 2009
four brand new recipes!

four brand new recipes!

Were strawberries used as face scrub or toothpaste?

Are they delicious simply with sugar or black pepper?

And are they a member of the lettuce or the rose family?

There are no prizes, but there ARE four brand new recipes for you, just in time for British strawberry season. Simply click through to read the full article over on our sister site, ooffoo.

And if you’re contemplating growing your own, here’s an extra bit of motivation for you…





May’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Aubergine

22 04 2009
beware leprosy!

beware leprosy!

Once upon a time, but not actually that long ago or far away, aubergines were attributed with the power to cause leprosy, bad breath and madness! During these times, people used them primarily ornamentally, and frankly, who can blame them with that kind of a reputation?!

Fortunately, those days are gone. But that doesn’t mean their reputation has improved much. A bit like cabbage and cauliflower, over-cooking renders them mushy, reminiscent of bad school dinners and generally a bit grim. And eating them too early in the season can leave you with the impression that they’re a bitter vegetable.

But it doesn’t have to be this way! Read on over on ooffoo, our sister site, to find out when and how to prepare and cook them, and to get your mits on our absolutely most favourite aubergine recipe…





A “snarf” of sarnies?

7 04 2009
whats your favourite?

what's your favourite?

I have no idea whether there really is a collective noun for sandwiches, but in my case, I think it would be a “snarf” (thanks to PVH for introducing me to this word!).

As in, if I see a plate full of sandwiches, I usually end up “snarfing” most of them myself.

May 10th-16th will be British Sandwich Week. In honour and in preparation, we’re using our sister-site, ooffoo.com, to host an “ooffoo round of sandwiches“.

We’ve contributed three seasonally scrumptious sandwich recipes to the round-up, and are inviting everyone we know to submit their own favourites to the list. Really special recipes will be added to the VegBox Recipes database, with your names on them of course, and also to the ooffoo recipes listings.

So read on to check out our sarnie recipes and to share yours : )





VegBox Recipes Easter Simnel Cake Recipe

7 04 2009
something the kids can help with

something the kids can help with

The long Easter weekend is almost upon us. If you haven’t already made plans, here are some ideas:

For something to do with the kids on Friday or Saturday, how about having a go with this Easter Simnel Cake recipe, published over on ooffoo?

Making the almond paste balls and creating other decorations is a particularly fun and easy bit. You could use food colouring to dye the balls (which represent the Apostles, I’m told!) different colours.

Also, do check out this lovely article by our friends over at Small Homestead for step by step guidelines on painting Easter eggs.

Finally, if you decide to blow rather than hard boil the eggs, how about using the egg-y-ness to try Warborne Organic Farm’s Sorrel Omelette? It’s their Easter Open Day this Sunday, so if you’re in or near Boldre in Hampshire, that promises to be a great day out.

And if you have made plans, we’d love to hear what you’re looking forward to doing / cooking.

The VegBox Recipes Team





Another April Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Endive (NOT Chicory!)

1 04 2009
which ones which?

which one's which?

It’s too baffling for words.

So I’m going to spare you the majority of what’s in my head!

What I will say is that there is a huge a global confusion about the difference between chicory and endive.

Now I am very far from claiming to be an expert. I just think we need to define our terms for future reference …

So click on for the British solution to the tangle, posted on our sister site ooffoo.com, and to discover a brand new recipe that falls firmly into the category of  unusual ways to use salad…





April’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Spinach

23 03 2009

spinach

spinach

When is Spinach in Season?
Spinach is best from April to September.

How to Buy
Look for bright leaves and a fresh smell. Avoid anything even slightly yellow or slimy.

How to Store
Keep spinach in the salad drawer, but NEVER wash before storing it – it will get very soggy!

Nutrition
Spinach leaves are a rich source of vitamins and minerals, particularly vitamin K, calcium, folic acid and antioxidants. It is a good source of iron, but not as good as Pop-Eye would have us believe! 1 cup of lightly cooked spinach contains 1/3 of a woman’s recommended daily intake of iron, but a cup of cooked spinach is a lot of spinach!

Spinach Secrets
Spinach originated in Iran and didn’t arrive in Europe until the 11th Century. It was imported to Spain and when it arrived in Britain, it was known as the “Spanish Vegetable”.

Like tomatoes, lightly cooking spinach makes it easier for the body to absorb the nutrients it contains. For example, 1 cup of cooked spinach contains 10 times your daily requirement of Vitamin K, 6 times the amount of raw spinach.

How to Prepare Spinach
The absolute key with spinach is to wash it well. It tends to pick up grit and soil and nothing spoils a dish as easily as lumps of gravel in your lasagne!

If you’re going to eat spinach raw in a salad, or if you’re going to saute it, then once it’s washed you need to pat it dry again.

How to Cook Spinach

new recipe

new recipe

Check out this brand new recipe:

Tom’s Breakfast Spinach Special
Let us know how you feel about spinach using the comments box down there, and if you try the new recipe, perhaps you’d send us a photo? We were so hungry we ate it before we remembered to take its picture!





Food for Feasting!

19 03 2009

We absentmindedly missed not only St. David’s Day and St. Piran’s Day but we also missed celebrating St. Patrick’s Day with you. BAD VBR.

To make up for it, we thought we’d have a St. George’s Day recipe challenge, in preparation for April 23rd.

Fancy having your name in lights not only here on the blog, but also on the VegBox Recipes main site AND over on our sister site, ooffoo?

Then all you need to do is submit a recipe for something scrumptiously traditional that uses seasonal ingredients … And we’ll announce the winner at the beginning of April.

Now then … cabbage, spinach, spring onions, watercress … which ingredients will they choose to use?

what did st george eat?!

what did st george eat (other than dragon, that is) ?





Out with the Old … in with the New… Potatoes

18 03 2009
new potatoes

new potatoes

The last of the stored potatoes were probably finished off in February, and we won’t be seeing the “big boys” of the potato world again now until late June. So it’s just as well that the newbies are starting to arrive and will be with us until the end of July : )

Shopping

Best to get the mucky ones rather than the washed ones as the mud helps keep them fresh and blemish free.

Cooking

If you eat organic, you probably don’t peel your taters anyway, but newbies are even lower maintenance, because you don’t even need to chop them before cooking. Just a quick wash and a plunge into boiling water and you’re cooking (groan).

Storing

If you keep them cool and shaded, they should last a few days after buying them. If you can resist them, that is!

Recipes

And now it’s over to you…

What do you most like to do with new potatoes? Share your recipes here and we’ll get them added to the main database with your name on them. And do send us your photos … Always good for getting a lunch time tummy rumbling.

The VegBox Team





Earth Day Challenge

17 03 2009

In 1969, Gladwin Hill wrote in the New York Times:

earth day

earth day

“Rising concern about the environmental crisis is sweeping the nation’s campuses with an intensity that may be on its way to eclipsing student discontent over the war in Vietnam…a national day of observance of environmental problems…is being planned for next spring…”

That national day of observance has now become an international and annual event called Earth Day. And it takes place on April 22nd.

Which gives us just over a month to plan something :O

Now, given the VBR passion for seasonal eating and for growing our own food, it seems sensible to play to our strengths. And I personally have been promising myself that one day I will organise something designed to help create a more friendly community in the street where I live. So I guess this is my chance.

But I can’t decide exactly what to do. And that’s why I need you, dear reader!

1. Please vote in the poll to help me choose between three ideas:

2. And then please use the comments box down there to share ideas on how you plan to use Earth Day to promote seasonal / local / organic eating or “victory gardening”.

We’ll pick all the events we really like, publicise them for you here, and even see if we can get a bit of radio or print publicity for you when we issue our own press releases announcing whichever event gets the most votes.

Can’t wait to hear from you!

The VegBox Team





March’s Third Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Over-Wintered Spring Onions

9 03 2009
out of hibernation

out of hibernation

Although called “spring” onions, these veggies are in their main season from April to October.

So why are we writing about them in March?

Because there are certain types of spring onions that can be “over-wintered“,  the Japanese variety being a common favourite. By making late sowings in August, September and October, veg growers are able to harvest an early crop from around now.

On the farm that provides the delicious produce for Home Organics in Dublin, there are some over-wintered spring onions (also sometimes called scallions) that will be ready to come up from the soil any time now. And in preparation,  Margaret, Mary and Sarah have passed on one of their favourite spring onion recipes to share with you. Thanks folks!

Spotlight One: The Recipe

spring onion recipe

spring onion recipe


Panfried Spring Onions with Goat’s Cheese and Toasted Pine Nuts

This is a simple yet elegant lunch time recipe that will serve 2, or one really hungry bunny!

Ingredients

1 large bunch spring onions
1 tablespoon pine nuts
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar (red wine vinegar will also work well)
1 thin slice of sourdough bread
1 round of chevre goat’s cheese about 1/2 inch thick

Method

1. Wash and trim the spring onions cutting away most of the green part which can be saved for something else.
2. Heat a dash of olive oil in a pan and when it starts to get hot throw on the onions and toss for about 3 or 4 minutes until they have turned golden brown.
3. Just before taking them off the heat add a pinch of sea salt, give them a final toss then cover to allow them to wilt a little more.
4. Toast the pine nuts until they start to change colour.
5. Roughly chop the spring onions and mix with the pine nuts.
6. Dress with the olive oil and balsamic vinegar.
7. Toast the bread then place the goat’s cheese on top and grill until golden.
8. Serve alongside the spring onions and pine nuts and eat immediately.

Time From Cupboard-To-Table
20 minutes

Notes & Variations
Why not try bulking out this salad by serving everything on a bed of dressed salad leaves.

Spotlight Two: Key Facts

also available in red!

also available in red!

Full season: March to October. Those available now in March will be overwintered Japanese varieties. Look out for red as well as white varieties.

Buy: Firm green leaves not wilted or yellowed and definitely not slimy!

Store: In the fridge preferably unwashed . Use within a few days.

Freeze: The white parts, if cooked.

Cook: Normally eaten raw, they can also be roasted, grilled, griddled or fried.  To prepare wash and trim root and snip tops of leaves. The green parts are great as a garnish or in stir-fry. Milder and more delicate than an onion they can be used in many ways – try stirring them into Asian noodles, creamy mash, on top of soups and stir-fries, in omelettes, sambos and of course in all kinds of salads.

fast growers

fast growers

Spotlight Three: Other Interesting Facts

It only takes two to three months to grow a spring onion, so they are sown all through the spring and summer to extend the availability.

If you want to get children interested in salad vegetables, spring onions are a great way to start because the seeds germinate quickly and you can harvest them after just a few weeks, if you want mild-flavoured, teeny weenie baby ones! It’s quite interesting watching the seedlings, which are initially folded in half, straighten out and grow so fast.





March’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Brussels Sprouts!

3 03 2009
sprouts away!

sprouts away!

We just had to do it.

Like the roots we’re also saying goodbye to in March, it’s their last month with us before they pack their cases (like the picture?!) and migrate to cooler climes, not to return until December. And a little like this month’s other Veggie-in-the-Spotlight, they’re still misunderstood and they still haven’t made it to the sunglasses-sporting veggie A-list.

So, here’s some stuff that you may not have known about Brussels Sprouts:
1. They were cultivated in Belgium from cabbages. Hence the name.
2. They’re an excellent source of Vitamin C, with just 6 lightly cooked sprouts containing an adult’s recommended daily allowance. They’re also packed with Vitamin D and folic acid, which are both common deficiencies in our modern diet.
3. If cooked right, they should have a pleasant, nutty flavour.
4. Like cauliflower, it’s the sulphur released during cooking that gives Brussels Sprouts their infamous smell. So the less time you cook them for, the less they’ll stink!
5. They’re migratory*.

*OK, no they’re not. But it’s a funny thought.

How To Choose

  • If you have the option, get your sprouts still on the stalk, because they’ll keep for longer.
  • If you’ve got them already off the stalk, choose sprouts that still feel firm, with as little yellowing of the outer leaves as possible.

How To Store

  • They keep for longer if still on the stalk – up to 10 days in the fridge.
  • If already detached from the stalk, they’ll keep for about 5 days in the salad drawer of your fridge

Our Favourite Brussels Recipes

Remember the annual “sprout peddling” competition?

Here are the winning recipes, past and present:

three sprouty winners

three sprouty winners

Sauteed Brussels and Applestill our favourite, thanks to Nadja.

Garlic & Almond Sprouts - a creamy dish that has converted several friends…

Brussels Sprout & Pine Nut Salad – no chance of stink with this one, and the balsamic works perfectly!

So be honest, folks – will you be giving Brussels a sumptuous send off? Or are you determined to hand them their hats?





The Last of the Root Veggies … aka What to do with Swede

2 03 2009
ready to go in the lunch-box

ready to go in the lunch-box

March has arrived. And March is an important month in the seasonal food calendar. Because it’s the last month of the winter root vegetables. For many of you lovely folks, this isn’t coming a day too soon!

After all, how many swedes can one girl eat?

Just when we thought we couldn’t find any more ways of making root veg interesting for you, reader Paula J presented her trump card.

Paula says “I had the most enormous swede delivered in my veg box last week and was immediately returned to my childhood when mashed carrots and turnip was the standard accompaniment to all roast meats. This came along with boiled potatoes. Now I have not eaten boiled potatoes (except new!) since then, so you can imagine my trauma when faced with the prospect of swede!

Anyway a quick trawl through a recipe book left me inspired to adapt an Italian Style Turnip Soup with what I thought was a great result. And the end of my childhood swede trauma!”

Paula J’s Italian-style Swede Soup

Ingredients
Serves 4

1 tbsp olive or rapeseed oil
1 tbsp butter
1 onion, diced
3 rashers streaky bacon (optional)
1 large swede, diced
1 handful quinoa
stock
chopped parsley

Method
1. Heat 1tbs olive / rapeseed oil and 1tbs butter in a large pot
2. Gently fry a chopped onion and 3 rashers of chopped streaky bacon (optional) for about 5 mins.
3. Add the chopped swede and continue to fry for 5 – 10 mins until the swede begins to soften.
4. Add a handful of quinoa, cook for a couple of mins until coated with oils.
5. Add enough stock to cover and cook until the quinoa is tender. I added a little thickener at the end and also some chopped parsley.

Time From Cupboard-To-Table
30 minutes

When Can I Cook This?
Swede is in season in the UK in October, November, December, January, February and March

Over to you. Use the comments box below to tell us what tricks you have up your sleeves for getting through the last month of root vegetables for this year.





April’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Sorrel

2 03 2009
sorrel leaves

sorrel leaves

April means no more root veggies, and a big hello to sorrel (amongst many other things). We haven’t featured sorrel before, so it seemed about time, and who better to help us out than our friends over at the award-winning Warborne Organic Farm in Hampshire.

The lovely Sophie sent us the deliciously simple recipe below for Sorrel Omelette, straight from the kitchen of one of their own box scheme customers, a self declared avid fan of sorrel.

And while Sophie was chatting with us over the virtual farm-fence, we were excited to learn that the family at Warborne are once again holding an Open Day, this time an Easter-themed one.

Still reeling slightly from the resounding success of  the TV series about them (“Farm Life” on Animal Planet), the Heathcotes will be swinging the gate open from midday till 4pm on Sunday 12th April. There’s no charge for entry, and visitors can look foward to:

  • a self-guided tour and Easter Egg Hunt in their tunnels, veg fields and livestock to see where and how they grow delicious organic produce with minimal food miles and maximum taste;
  • food tastings;
  • shearing demonstrations in the barn, and
  • organic, homemade goodies and refreshments from their farm kitchen.

Address: Warborne Organic Farm, Warborne Lane, Boldre, Hants SO41 5QD

Tel: 01590 688488

URL: www.warbornefarm.co.uk

sorrel omelette recipe

sorrel omelette recipe

Recipe Spotlight: Sorrel Omelette

Ingredients
(Serves one hungry person)

1 good handful of sorrel
40 ml milk
3 organic eggs
Salt and pepper
Veg oil or butter

Method

1. Whisk 3 eggs in a large bowl, along with seasoning and milk.
2. Rinse the sorrel in clean water, and drain. Roll the leaves and roughly chop or tear the leaves.
3. Heat butter or oil in a small frying pan on a medium heat.
4. Pour the mixed eggs into the frying pan.
5. Let the bottom of the omelette cook slightly before adding the sliced sorrel.
6. Using a spatula mix the leaves slightly in to the eggy mixture.
7. Finish cooking the omelette until done as preferred.
8. Serve alongside a good crusty roll.

Time From Cupboard-To-Table
20 minutes

When Can I Cook This?
Sorrel is in its prime in the UK in April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November and December

Fact Spotlight: More about Sorrel

Sorrel is a green leaf (very easy to grow in pots if you have limited space) that can be used raw or cooked. It is usually the young leaves, that are lemon-y and have a little kick to them, that are best in salads. Later on in the season, sorrel is better cooked, and is traditionally used in sauces for fish or in soups.

As with all other leaves, the best flavour and nutrition comes from leaves that are crisp and bright in colour. Sorrel should only be stored for a few days in the salad drawer in the fridge.

So that’s all from us on sorrel… Let us know whether you’ve used it yet, whether you try out this recipe, and, if you do head over to the Warborne Farm Open Day, let us know all about it using the comments box.

The VegBox Team





March’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight. Or “Someone’s Been Saving Our Cauliflowers!”

2 03 2009

Two weeks ago we wrote about the Brassica Growers Association’s campaign to Save Our Cauliflowers. The campaign was launched following the alarming reports that sales, and subsequently production, of British cauliflowers have gone into decline.

We invited you to remind us how good cauliflower can taste, and as always, you came up with the goods!

frugal cooking

frugal cooking

We particularly love this recipe for Cauliflower Bhaji, which has come from VegBox-regular, “Steve in KL“. Steve is passionate about green and frugal living, and this includes cooking his veggies on top of his cast iron wood-burning fire.

Now I used to think that a Bhaji was a little ball of veggies, but Steve’s put me straight. While a lot of people use it that way like me, it’s actually a more generic Indian word for a vegetable dish. Thanks Steve!

Steve’s Recipe for Cauliflower Bhaji

When Can I Cook This?
Cauliflower is at its best in the UK in mid-December, January, February, March and mid-April

How Do I Choose a Cauliflower?
Choose cauliflower that’s still white, rather than browning. If it’s going brown, just slice these bits off before using – but it’s a sign that you need to use it, fast! The leaves on a cauliflower should be green and not wilting. If the stalks don’t “snap” as you remove them, then your cauliflower has been hanging around for a while…

Does it Always Smell?
The stinky smell often associated with cauliflower is from the sulphur released during cooking. Want less stink? Cook it less!

How Do I Store the Cauliflower?
Store in a paper bag in the fridge for up to a week. In plastic bags, they tend to sweat, which can make the florets go mouldy.

Can I Eat the Leaves?
Traditionally only the white part (called the curd) of the cauliflower is eaten. However, the leaves and stalk can be added to stock, to improve flavour.

Bhaji Ingredients
Serves 4

1 very large or 2 medium potatoes
1 medium size cauliflower
2 tbsps oil
quarter teaspoon of mustard seeds
3 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
1 or 2 green chillies, according to taste
half tsp ground cumin
quarter tsp ground coriander
quarter tsp turmeric
three quarter tsp garam masala
125ml warm water
fresh coriander leaves to garnish

Method

1. Cut the cauliflower into florets and dice the potatoes
2. Heat up the oil then throw in the mustard seeds. Pop the lid straight on and listen to them leaping up against it. Once they stop “trying to escape”, take the pan from the heat
3. Take the lid from the pan and add the potatoes
4. Saute for 3-4 minutes
5. Add the cauliflower and all other ingredients than the water, and fry for around 5 minutes, stirring
6. Add the water and simmer for roughly 15 minutes until the cauliflower and the potatoes are cooked (but not mushy)
7. Serve, garnished with fresh coriander.

Time From Cupboard-To-Table
30 minutes

Your Views…
Let us know if you use this recipe and how it comes out for you. And we’d love it if you took a photo of it to share with us here.

Any more cauliflower inspiration, anyone?





What’s Your Favourite Pancake Filling

23 02 2009

Tomorrow is Shrove Tuesday aka Pancake Day – did you think we would leave you unseasonal?

Course not!

We want to hear from those of you who already know what you’ll be putting on your pancakes.

Cinnamon sugar mix is my hands-down favourite, bringing back memories of my South African grannie, who I seem to remember used to invite her whole tribe (13 of us!) round and then spend the entire evening in the kitchen churning out “pannekoek” to pass through the hatch into the front room.

savoury pancakes

savoury pancakes

These days I’m making my own pannekoek, and I’m just as likely to use pancakes for a savoury dish. They make a great substitute for canneloni tubes or you can use them as wraps.

Here are links to our two favourite savoury pancake recipes:

Winter Vegetable Pancakes

Pancakes with blue cheese sauce

Do share what you plan to have, and let us know whether you’ll be observing lent and how.

Now, have we got enough eggs …?

The VegBox Recipes Team





February’s THIRD and Final Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Salsify

16 02 2009
salsify plant

salsify plant

Salsify is on its way out until October, but we didn’t want our newest addition to the VegBox Recipes tribe to disappear without a send off.

A member of the dandelion family, Salsify is really quite a versatile plant. As well as being pretty good-looking in the garden, you can eat the sprouting seeds, the young shoots and the flowers as well as the roots. The roots, once matured, have an oyster-y taste, earning Salsify its nickname of “Oyster Plant”.

Spotlight One – How to Choose Salsify

Salsify roots look a bit like a bundle of grubby black candles! Look for firm smooth ones when you’re shopping.

Spotlight Two – How to Store Salsify

Best kept in the fridge in a sealed container.

Spotlight Three – How to Prepare Salsify

Salsify discolours very quickly once peeled, so it’s best to peel and chop it quickly, dropping the chunks into water that has either lemon juice or vinegar in it.

Spotlight Four – Salsify Recipes

We’re delighted to have finally been able to add two brand new Salsify recipes to the VegBox Recipes database.

salsify gratin

salsify recipes

Salsify Gratin – This recipe is the first we’ve added for this unusual root vegetable and has been generously provided to us from the lovely book “Veg: The Cookbook” by Greg Wallace.

Simple Salsify Fritters – This simple recipe, generously provided for us by Abel & Cole, makes a brilliant lunch or a special side for a bigger meal.

We’d love to hear from you if you’ve cooked Salsify recently.

The VegBox Team





Save Our Cauliflowers!

16 02 2009

chartWe suspect that you, dear reader, are NOT a statistic on a Government chart when it comes to cauliflowers.

Because apparently sales are declining, forcing production to fall. Which in turn has prompted the Brassica Growers’ Association to launch a campaign to Save Our Cauliflowers.

S0, to shamelessly steal a slogan, have YOU forgotten how good cauliflowers taste?

We can’t believe you have, but just in case … Let’s get recipe swapping.

Here’s our contribution for an early Spring lunch-box filler:

our recipe

our recipe

Cauliflower and Chickpea Pitta Pockets

This is a lovely way of enjoying cauliflower. The chickpeas give the meal a nutty flavour and the watercress means it’s packed with nutrients. If you can get hold of tahini (sesame seed butter), it adds to the flavour and is also full of calcium and essential fatty acids.

What have you been doing with your cauliflowers then, cauliflower-eating comrades?





Growing Our Own – update 2 from the new VegBox Garden

10 02 2009

Today has been like a very happy cross between Blue Peter and Ground Force!

blue skies

blue skies again

Somehow, the snow of last week put me off even doing the indoor jobs needed to keep the new VegBox Garden heading in the right direction. But today the sky is blue, and the lean-to seemed more inviting. Having turned off the central heating and confined myself to this one room, I felt ok about having a little electric heater going. And whilst the bobble hat and fluffy socks are not my most alluring look, I’m cosy enough not just to do the gardening but to blog whilst I’m in here!

Step 1 - I filled my arms full of all the cardboard boxes and tubes and plastic yogurt pots I’ve been saving to re-use since before Christmas, then shuffled through the house dropping them like breadcrumbs, finally reaching the lean-to dribbling toilet roll inner tubes like an FA cup champion on training day.

home-made seed planters

home-made seed planters

Step 2 - watched Mrs Green’s video on making carrot seed planters out of re-used toilet roll inner tubes, keeping up with her as she went and ending up with a happy little row of home-made containers, slotted into converted catfood product boxes to keep them secure, and finally set inside rolled-down biodegradable plastic recycling bags.

I was really chuffed with the orange bag touch. Firstly, I’m hoping it will help keep water from leaking all over the place when I water the little seedlings. Secondly – I’ve just discovered I’ve got to move out at the end of this month, so I figure that when the time comes, I can move them by rolling up the bag to carry them in.

polystyrene cooler for re-use as a planter

polystyrene cooler for re-use as a planter

Step 3 - Carrot planters duly made, I moved on to creating a planter for the broad beans out of the last Abel & Cole cooler box my milk arrived in. I wasn’t sure if it was OK to plant directly into polystyrene, but I found a brilliant Australian website called PermUP and they were using very similar boxes, so I felt reassured.

Step 4 – Ahem … texted the VegBox Husband and ask him to pick up some soil for me on his way back from work … Then checked the RocketGardens guidelines on seed spacing for broad beans and lettuce so I know what I’m doing when the soil is delivered. Oops. That is, graciously acquired on my behalf and brought home lovingly, of course. Not delivered. No no.

puy and red lentil mix for bake

puy and red lentil mix for bake

Step 5 - Gazed adoringly at the array of home-made planters, peeked inside the broad beans packet, took photos of everything in site, including the new composting dalek in the garden, and snaffled down some lunch, which today was left-overs of last night’s VegBox House-mate enticing success – lentil bake with spicy red cabbage and apple on the side.

Step 6 – Posted about this morning’s “re-use“-erama on the eco community site “ooffoo“, where they are asking readers to vote (at the bottom on the homepage) on whether re-use is good for the economy, and running a competition to find the most innovative and inspiring re-use ideas.

If there is a better route to happiness than steps 1-6, I haven’t found it yet!

What have you lovely folks been doing on the growing your own front?





February’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Rhubarb

9 02 2009
have you seen any this year?

have you seen any this year?

The main season for rhubarb is from April through to July. Unless you buy forced rhubarb, which may be around as early as this month.

“Forcing” rhubarb isn’t quite as cruel as it sounds – it simply means that it’s grown in the dark, which means it sprouts earlier, is more vibrantly pink and has a less intense flavour.

What to look for when you buy rhubarb – Make sure it’s nice and red or green or pink and free from brown mushy bits or obvious bangs and bruises. Go for straight, firm stalks rather than curling or limp ones. Avoid rhubarb with black or brown leaves.

How to store it - In a bag in the fridge for up to a week. Cut the leaves off first. Or freeze it. First cut it to a length that will fit into your container, and then boil it for one minute only before freezing, to help it retain its flavour. It can also be frozen raw or completely cooked.

How to cook rhubarb - Rhubarb isn’t eaten raw. It’s traditionally baked with something to sweeten it, and can be cooked either peeled or with the skin still on. It’s better to cook in non-aluminium pans because of its highly acidic nature. The easiest and healthiest way to sweeten it is with orange juice or apple juice. For really sour rhubarb, you’ll want to add sugar or honey.

beware!

beware!

Never eat the leaves – they’re poisonous! We’re not sure how poisonous, but we’re also not about to try it to find out!

Little Known Rhubarb Facts

  • To be accurate, rhubarb is a vegetable, and to be even more pedantic, it’s actually classified as an “edible stem”. Oooooh!
  • It has been known for people to use rhubarb for cleaning blackened spots from pots and pans. And apparently some people use it for hair colouring. Just a little known fact for you – not something we’re recommending you try at home!
  • Finally, rhubarb isn’t just a great ingredient for crumbles… it goes brilliantly with fish and seasonal meats. Which leads us on to our “Spotlight” recipe.
rhubarb chutney recipe

rhubarb chutney recipe

TV Chef and proprietor of The Foxhunter in Nantyderry, Matt Tebbutt, has very generously provided us with this new recipe for rhubarb chutney to share with you. Unlike all the other recipes we currently list, this is for serving with savoury dishes. Just click the picture to the left.

You can find this recipe in Matt’s new book “Matt Tebbutt Cooks Country“, and we’ve included it in our database courtesy of Mitchell Beazley and Octopus Books. Thanks folks!

If you’ve already had some rhubarb this year, we’d love to hear from you. Just use the comments box below.

The VegBox Team





February’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Chicory

9 02 2009
red chicory is common in italy

red chicory is common in italy

This month we interviewed Denise Tolson, who discovered chicory at the tender age of 18 whilst doing a grand tour of Europe. Years on, she’s still a fan with a rather tasty chicory recipe up her sleeve.

VBR: Hi Denise – thanks for spending some time with us talking about Chicory. Not everyone has eaten this veggie. When did you discover it?

Denise: I discovered chicory when I went to Italy aged 18 with my sister aged 17.  We were doing one of those ‘take a flight and see what happens’ holidays with hardly any money and no sense to speak of.  Anyway, we tended to eat in very cheap places where you ate what you were given. One day we got chicory in some sort of salad.  It was a bit of a shock as it was quite bitter but we definitely developed a taste for it.  In Italy you can get glorious red chicory as well as the beautiful pale green version you more commonly see in this country. I think Waitrose do it sometimes.

VBR: What was the first meal you ever cooked using it?

Denise: I started off just mixing in in with other salad stuff and putting french dressing on it which was very nice. I grew up on those round floppy lettuces with cucumber and tomato and plenty of salad cream when salad was on offer at home but after Italy I got a lot more adventurous.

VBR: What does Chicory taste like to you?

Denise: Chicory tastes quite bitter but much less so than it used to. I wonder whether English growers have bred some of the bitterness out to make it more palatable to the British market. Either that or my tastebuds are jiggered! I think it is a really pretty vegetable and it also has a good texture, especially at the white end so it gives a bit of crunch to your salad.

VBR: Do you know any strange facts about chicory?

Denise: I know that it is sometimes called Belgian endive which can be a bit muddling as to me that is a different type of lettuce.

VBR: Care to share your favourite Chicory recipe with us?

Denise: Sometimes I make a caesar salad with half little gem and half chicory and that is nice. I have two sorts of dressings that I use just with chicory and they are both Nigella Lawson ones: Mustard dressing and Anchovy dressing.

Here’s a full recipe for any fish eaters out there – it also uses beetroot, another veggie that’s currently in season.

use any white fish

use any white fish

Cod with Chicory and Baby Beetroot

VBR: So are you a vegetarian, Denise?

Denise: I am not a vegetarian myself although I was for about 20 years.  I have eaten fish for about the last 10 years and I have managed to end up in a family of carnivores, don’t know how that happened, punishment for sins in a previous life probably.

I studied nutrition at university in the early 80′s and I think that made me very thoughtful and curious about the food I was putting in my mouth. One of the reasons I stopped eating meat was that at that time it was factory farmed meat or nothing and I couldn’t see that those intensive farming methods could be good for either us or the animals involved in the process.  People used to laugh at me for that but they went surprisingly quiet after BSE.

VBR: Do you get a vegbox?

squash

squash

Denise: I used to grow my own veg before organic became available. Now I am a mother and work full time I’ve become very lazy and use a box scheme.  We grow tomatoes and squash in the summer for fun and because I am a food bore and want the sprogs to know where there food comes from. I will probably go back to grow your own at some point. I’m hoping to buy some chickens for my son’s birthday in the spring (really an indulgence for me thinly disguised as generosity).

I do use the supermarket for most of my shopping but I also like the local farmer’s market (only comes once a month sadly) and the local Saturday market.  I try not to buy out of season stuff like strawberries in winter and I only ever buy English asparagus because it is the best and we are really lucky to have a farm down the road so we get it really fresh.

VBR: How did you first discover VegBox Recipes?

Denise: I get a bit bored with root veg in the winter. We started looking at the recipe site to get ideas about what to do with root veg as boiling and mashing or roasting can get very dull.  There is also a great vegetarian cookery writer in the weekend Guardian magazine called Yotam Ottolenghi. He recently did a two potato curry using sweet potato (which I don’t like much) and ordinary potato, it was delicious and will become a favourite. We have also used organic meat boxes and they are very good.

VBR: Do you like the vegetables available at this time of year, or is there another time of year you prefer?

Denise: I’m more of a leafy / green veg / salad kind of gal.  Though I am rather fond of the old jerusalem artichokes as our friends know to their cost…

VBR: Denise, thanks so much for helping us get to know February’s first Veggie-in-the-Spotlight.

Denise: You’re very welcome. I hope the recipe goes down well. I’m off out now for a spot of snowball throwing!

__________________________________________________________________________________________

Over to you! Tell us what you love (or loathe!) about chicory by using the comments box below.

The VegBox Team





What’s in Season in February?

2 02 2009
jerusalem artichoke soup

Well for starters, SNOW seems to be in season!

Which means that here at VegBox Recipes, garden activity has ground to a halt and we’re considering wrapping the composter in bubblewrap and carpet to keep the bacteria warm and working. Whilst pondering, we’re making cosy Jerusalem Artichoke soup and working in front of the fire. Lovely …

Here’s the run down on what’s in season during the shortest month of the year …

Beetroot
Brussels Sprouts

Cabbage (white, red and Cavolo Nero)
Carrots
Cauliflower
Celeriac
Celery
(on it’s way out, now)
Chard
or “Swiss” Chard
Chicory (watch this space for a special feature!)
Jerusalem Artichoke
Kale
or “Curly” Kale
Kohlrabi
Leeks
Mushrooms
Onions
Parsnips
Potatoes
(from store)
Purple Sprouting Broccoli

Rhubarb (watch this space for a recipe donated by our favourite TV chef)
Salsify(on its way out)
Spinach
Squashes (last ones from store)
Swede
Turnips

What are you eating this week?

The VegBox Team





Obama, Vegetables and Global Hunger …

22 01 2009

It’s been an incredibly significant week in the history of the world.

And at first it seemed slightly surreal to blog about vegetable recipes in the midst of it all!

Yet strangely, how to feed ourselves is one of the most critical topics on the current political agenda. And not just in the USA.

In this month’s “Dis-Patch from the Veg-Patch” section of our newsletter, we talked not only about our own efforts to grow food in the back garden, but also spoke for a second time about the Eat the View campaign to persuade the new President to convert the White House lawn into a “Victory Garden” designed to inspire others to do the same. Less food miles so less petrol (oil) and less carbon emissions, less pesticides (oil again), less global warming, improved health, lower healthcare costs …

The resounding message right now is not just that “we are what we eat”, but that “we are how we grow and buy what we eat”.

Over on AboutMyPlanet, there is a timely reminder from Craig Baird that if we are going to change how we grow, we’d better do it soon. A reminder that the way we grow – and shop for – food now will have a direct impact on whether we’ll be able to grow food at all in the future. According to some estimates, in only 91 years, one in two people will be going hungry because of the effects of rising temperatures both on crop yields and on how much water falls to fill supplies.

Barack Obama invited Americans to “seize gladly” the opportunities to meet our duties to the planet and the people on it. Whether or not you’re American, if you’re already committed to personal changes designed to preserve and sustain our life on earth, keep going! Is there any more can you do? Who else can you inspire?

zero waste week

zero waste week

And if you’re at the beginning of this journey and are not sure where to start … how about starting your own Victory Garden? Or reducing your household waste just like Mrs Green and so many of the residents of Gloucestershire this week?

And (of course!) how about moving away from eating oil disguised as asparagus flown in from Peru, and moving toward simply buying, cooking and savouring the flavours of what’s in season where you are?





How to Cook Purple Sprouting Broccoli

12 01 2009

Broccoli is a member of the brassica family, like cabbage.

The plant produces green flower heads on thick stalks. They are picked and eaten before the flowers bloom. Broccoli and calabrese are often confused.

calabrese

calabrese

sprouting broccoli

sprouting broccoli

Calabrese is the large headed variety (see the picture on the left) that most of us call Broccoli (confused yet?!). The other is a sprouting variety (on the right), with individual stalks for each flower clump.  It is usually purple, or sometimes white, and is often known as PSB – short for Purple Sprouting Broccoli.

“PSB” is a delicious spring vegetable that can start to appear as early as the end of January and has a long season. It cooks quickly and is packed with nutrients, with a more delicate flavour than full heads of calabrese.

We already feature one recipe on the site especially designed for sprouting broccoli – Sprouting Broccoli with Toasted Seasame Seeds.

Now we’re pleased to bring you a recipe for Spicy Purple Sprouting Broccoli Pasta, courtesy of Abel & Cole.

Ingredients

*  500 g purple sprouting broccoli
* 1 medium sized fresh red chilli
* 2 cloves garlic, peeled
* 1 small tin of anchovy fillets in olive oil, drained (optional, if you’re anything like me!)
* good quality olive oil
* 350 g pasta: fusilli, oriecchiette, penne rigate or conchiglie
* parmesan or hard pecorino cheese to grate

Method

  1. Trim the outer leaves and woody stalks from the broccoli.
  2. Wash and chop into 1 cm sections.
  3. Cut the chilli in half lengthways and scrape out the seeds.
  4. Chop the chilli, the garlic and the anchovies finely.
  5. In a pan, warm 4 tablespoons of olive oil and add the chilli, garlic and anchovies.
  6. Sweat these for a minute or so and add the broccoli, season with a little salt and pepper, then continue to cook gently.
  7. Drop the pasta in boiling water and stir immediately.
  8. Grate 4 tablespoons of the cheese and reserve.
  9. After the pasta has been cooking for 5 minutes transfer a small ladle of the cooking water to the broccoli.
  10. Keeping over a high heat, add another 2 tablespoons of oil and add the cheese.
  11. Cook for a couple of minutes, then toss with the pasta and serve immediately.

So has PSB shown up in your box yet? If it has, we’d love to know where in the country you lucky folks are!

The VegBox Team





January’s Second Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Celery

7 01 2009
negative calories??

negative calories??

We thought it was appropriate to feature this much-maligned veggie in January, in the spirit of all those new health regimes and diets that get started at the beginning of a new year.

For those of you who, like us, are feeling a bit scales-shy after SO much cake, some celery in your veg box might be the very thing. We’re talking, of course, about that oft-cited “factoid” that celery actually contains “negative” calories. That is, we supposedly burn more calories crunching it than we gain digesting it! Now we have no idea if this is actually true, but it certainly is a pretty low calorie snacking option.

Historically, celery was also valued for its sedative powers, and it’s ability to reduce hypertension. This may be due to the “phthalide” compounds celery contains. And one last strange celery fact before we get down to business: After Top Gear’s Richard Hammond recovered from his horrific motor crash, he discovered that he liked celery, having previously hated it!

SPOTLIGHT ONE: Celery is in good condition when the sticks have a solid, rigid feel, and the leaves are at the most only slightly wilted. It can be stored in the salad drawer for up to two weeks, and it can be eaten raw or cooked in stir-frys, stews, bakes and soups.

SPOTLIGHT TWO: Here’s a new celery recipe from us.

tuna, sweetcord and celery

tuna, sweetcorn and celery

Tuna, Sweetcorn and Celery Salad Mix

This recipe is brilliant for that moment when you (or the kids!) are starving and need something NOW… The texture and combination of flavours are hugely satisfying for munching at lunchtime.

And if it’s closer to dinner time, how about serving it stirred into freshly cooked pasta!

Ingredients: Serves 2 as a main course

1 can of tuna in brine or spring water, drained and broken up into chunks;
4 or 5 sticks of celery, diagonally sliced into 1cm pieces;
200g tin of sweetcorn, drained;

For the dressing:
5tbsps sunflower or grapeseed oil;
the juice & zest of half a lemon;
1 tsp Dijon mustard;
1 tsp sugar;
salt & fresh ground black pepper

Method:
Put the celery, tuna and sweetcorn in a bowl.
Mix the dressing ingredients together and pour over the salad.
Mix well and serve.

Cupboard-To-Table: 10 minutes

And now over to you… Are you working to eat more healthily? And will celery be featuring in your lunches or dinners this month?





January’s First Veggie-in-the-Spotlight: Jerusalem Artichoke

2 01 2009

They aren’t from Jerusalem.

NOT a Jerusalem Artichoke!

NOT a Jerusalem Artichoke!

They aren’t even artichokes.

And although they look like root ginger, they are actually sunflower tubers!

Now my mum used to tell me that if I ate apple pips, I’d have apple trees growing out of my belly-button / ears / nose etc etc … If that’s true, then does it follow that if I eat a sunflower tuber, then … ?

Oh I DO hope so ; )

Given the curious nature of this ingredient, we thought it should be one of our January

Veggies-in-the-Spotlight

SPOTLIGHT ONE: Check out how to shop for, store and prepare it on the main website.

SPOTLIGHT TWO: check out all the new Jerusalem Artichoke Recipes we’ve added just in time for their peak season. Here’s what you can look forward to:

Jerusalem Artichokes in Wine, Rosemary and Cream

Jerusalem Artichoke and Carrot Salad

Jerusalem Artichoke Soup

This month, our new Jerusalem Artichoke recipes are kindly provided by Abel & Cole.

Let us know what you think if you try one of these, and do share your own “J.A.” recipe favourites with us, using the Comments feature at the bottom.

The VegBox Team

PS Watch this space to our other January Veg-in-the-Spotlight: Celery.





What IS a Jerusalem Artichoke, and HOW do you cook it?!

27 12 2008
what IS it?!

what IS it?!

The excitement of the Brussels Sprouts competition has started to die down, and we can’t stand it.

So we thought we’d ask you for yet more recipes, this time for a different “unusul ingredient” – the Jerusalem Artichoke.

It looks like a daffodil bulb or a lump of ginger root, and truth be told, it has nothing to do with either Jerusalem or artichokes.

But it is deliciously nutty, and it’s in season for another couple of months.

So we’re calling all cooks.

Send a Jerusalem Artichoke recipe to claire.vandenbosch@vegbox-recipes.co.uk and we’ll test it and feature our favourite entries here on the blog, as well as in the main VegBox Recipes database, with your name all over it, of course!

To get you in the mood, check out the truth about what a Jerusalem Artichoke really is, discover its antisocial side effect, and have a look at a recipe we already feature:

Jerusalem Artichokes with Pine Nuts

recipe

recipe

This is a lovely way of serving Jerusalem artichokes. The garlic and ginger give the dish a spicy, warming feel, while the toasted pine nuts beautifully compliment the flavour of the artichokes.

Looking forward to your inspiration.

The VegBox Team





Going Back To My Roots (yeah…)!

30 10 2008
green meanies?

green meanies?

So the clocks went back, we had the first snow (how bizarre was THAT?!), and now the leeks are even sweeter and the parsnips are arriving for the winter in droves.

There’s no denying it, the season has well and truly shifted … it is the time of mash and stews and chunky soups. And sprrrrrrrrrrrouts.

Love ‘em or hate ‘em (perhaps sprouts are the marmite of seasonal food?), they are here for a while, and likely to start making appearances in your vegbox. So in honour of these much-maligned little greenies, we thought we would run a VBR competition to find that recipe worth its weight in gold … the one that will convert sprout-loathers across the Northern hemisphere over the next few months.

We will officially launch the competition with the November newsletter and announce the winners in December in time for the festive season. Meantime, thinking caps on, friends. And if you get some in your box, start experimenting! The person who submits the most delicious suggestion (I can’t believe I am going to have to test drive all your submissions) will win a special prize and free membership to the VegBox Recipes Club.

So, going back to my roots before I sign off, I wanted to ask for your help.

The root in question was beetroot. Earlier in the week I decided that it was finally time to dust off my baking tins and try a chocolate and beetroot creation. I used gluten free flour, agave nectar instead of sugar and carotino oil instead of butter. And it was truly horrible. In fact my sister was adamant that it no longer classified as a food stuff.

I think the main problem was the carotino oil and the agave nectar, as I had struggled to find guidelines for substitution amounts.

And I’m hoping that’s where you folks come in. Where do you go when you want to make substitutions for less traditional ingredients and don’t know how much to swap in?

mind your clothes!

mind your clothes!

Meantime, I will leave you with a link to my favourite beetroot recipe:

Pink Mash – sent in by Natasha Mangion and always a winner in our house!

TOP TIP: use baked rather than boiled potatoes, remembering to rub the skins with oil and salt, then scoop the pink mash back into the skins, grate over some cheese, melt under the grill and serve.








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