Minimal washing up whilst creating a really delicious and balanced meal in 15 minutes! It’s using courgettes, kale, basil and nasturtium all from the allotment. If you haven’t tried nasturtium before, it has a slightly peppery taste that reminds me of rocket – both the flowers and leaves are edible, plus they act as a pollinator for bees which attracts them into the allotments to pollinate my fruits and veggies!
Serves 4
Ingredients
300g pasta
150g kale, roughly chopped, stems separate to the leaves
2 medium-sized courgettes
1 tub of garlic and herb cream cheese (135g) – I used Paysan & Breton
1 tin of butterbeans
1 lemon, zest and juice
10g basil leaves
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
Nasturtium (optional)
Method
Cook the pasta for 4 minutes less than the packet instructions, adding the kale stems in too. Meanwhile, grate the courgettes.
Once the pasta is cooked, reserve a mug of pasta water and add the kale leaves in before draining.
Return to a low heat and add the grated courgettes, cream cheese, butterbeans, lemon zest and juice, basil leaves and olive oil. Cook for 2 minutes, adding extra pasta water if needed.
Season to taste with pepper before serving up and topping with extra basil and optional nasturtium.
One Pan Courgette Pasta
Per serving: 464kcal/ 14g fat/ 6.2g saturated fat/ 62g carbohydrates/ 11g fibre/ 17g protein
If you grow courgettes, you’ll know you can easily be overrun with them! As part of National Allotments Week I’m pledging to help you use up your courgettes this year in a series of dishes all revolving around the humble courgette. This is an effortless dish, requiring zero cooking, making it the perfect heatwave meal to prepare.
Cut the courgette into ribbons using a vegetable peeler or mandoline. Place in a bowl and sprinkle with all the salt. Massage the salt in and leave for 10 minutes to draw the water out.
Meanwhile, grate the garlic into the yoghurt and mix through.
Once the liquid has been released from the courgettes, rinse and then squeeze the excess water out before patting dry with a kitchen towel.
Add the preserved lemon, herbs and olive oil to the courgettes and mix well.
Spread the yoghurt over the sourdough before piling the courgette mix high over the top and sprinkling with sumac. Enjoy straight away.
If you cook potatoes and then let them cool overnight you can create something called resistant starch, which, as the name suggests, is resistant to digestion. This means that you get to eat delicious-tasting food, and your gut microbes also benefit from the starches, which we are unable to digest, but they love!
Serves 3
Ingredients
500g new potatoes, cooked and cooled overnight
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
2 cloves of garlic, skin on
1 tin of cannellini beans, drained, rinsed and patted dry
250g sprouting broccoli
200g thick strained yoghurt
1 lemon, zest and juice
10 sprigs of mint, leaves finely sliced
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°C fan/200°C convection
Smash the potatoes using a large flat item so they are around the thickness of a pound coin. Place on a baking sheet and brush with 1 tbsp olive oil. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes
Flip the potatoes over to crisp up the second side, adding the cloves of garlic and brushing with more olive oil. Bake for another 30 minutes, or till the potatoes are golden brown and crunchy.
Meanwhile, run your beans with the remaining olive oil and spread out over a second baking sheet, tucking the broccoli down the centre. Roast for 20 minutes.
Once the potatoes are cooked, remove the garlic cloves from their skin and mash into the yogurt along with half the lemon zest and juice. Mix well and season with pepper to taste.
Plate up with all the elements, and finish with the remaining lemon zest and juice and a sprinkle of mint.
Roasted Smashed Potatoes with Broccoli and Beans
Per serving: 350kcal/ 11g fat/ 2.5g saturated fat/ 38g carbohydrates/ 12g fibre/ 18g protein
The Summer holidays are upon us, and I’m sure we’ll all be in need of inspiration for family friendly recipes!
I created this recipe for baby and child nutritionist Charlotte Stirling-Reed and it is an absolute winner. It’s really easy to prepare – all in one dish, filled with nutrition and flavour with no added salt making it the perfect family-friendly recipe!
Serves a family of 4
Ingredients
2 tbsp mixed chopped fresh or frozen herbs e.g. basil, sage, oregano, thyme OR 1.5 tsp dried mixed herbs
3 garlic cloves, grated OR 1 tsp dried garlic powder
250g orzo or other short pasta with a cooking time of around 12 minutes
400g chopped cherry tomatoes* OR 1 400g tin of chopped tomatoes
1 red onion sliced** OR 120g frozen chopped onion
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 block of soft set (silken) tofu (350g)
1 tbsp nutritional yeast
1 tsp basil (fresh or frozen)
Method
Preheat the oven to 160°C fan/180°C convection.
Mix the onion and olive oil together in a separate bowl.
Add the mixed herbs, garlic and orzo to a large ovenproof dish with 500ml boiling water and mix to evenly distribute.
Add the tomatoes over the top, the tofu in the centre and spread the onions out around the tofu.
Bake in the oven for 45 minutes.
Once cooked through add the nutritional yeast, extra basil and mix everything together before serving.
Tofu Pasta Bake
*For small babies and children cut the tomatoes into quarters
**For small babies and children cut the onion into small squares
I know a lot of people love feta, but I’m afraid for me it’s one of my least favourite cheeses. I personally find it too salty, but when I saw this cheese I knew I needed to try it because I love goats cheese. For me this wasn’t as salty in taste as feta, as well as being much milder. What I didn’t realise till I had gotten home, made this dish, and thoroughly enjoyed it, was that manouri cheese is made as a by-product of the feta production, which is something I can definitely get on board with!
I also think this would be a great salad to serve at a barbecue, grilling the cheese and figs before plating up, should the UK weather start to actually resemble summer…
This salad is light enough to work as a side salad or a starter, but substantial enough to also work as a larger portion for a main meal when served with some good bread on the side.
Serves 4 as a starter or 2 as a main
Ingredients
1 block of manouri cheese
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
8 figs, or around 230g, cut into halves and quarters
120g rocket
1 tbsp honey
1 tsp black sesame seeds
To serve
Sourdough bread
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
Method
If serving with sourdough, brush the sides with extra virgin olive oil and griddle till crispy with charred lines across the surface. Keep warm.
Brush the manouri with the olive oil and griddle for a few minutes on each side. Add some of the figs, brushed with any remaining olive oil – you can cook as many or as few as you like.
Once cooked through to your liking, add the rocket to a large serving dish and dot pieces of the cheese and figs over the top, drizzle with honey and sesame seeds.
This risotto is a true labour of love, starting with growing the broad beans from scratch, to shelling them with fresh British peas, and then using wholegrain risotto rice, which, unbeknown to me up till this point, takes much longer to cook in comparison to its white counterpart. Something I feel I should have know, but may have overlooked. Therefore, I have a few simple swaps to make the process easier. Despite this, Matt said it was really delicious and I should make it again!
I was also surprised that using brown risotto rice only gave 8.6g of fibre per serving, whereas white risotto rice would have given 8.3g fibre per serving. So the addition of 0.3g of fibre per serving for me doesn’t equate to the extra time spent cooking and stirring an already labour intensive dish!
I absolutely love fresh peas straight from their pod, there is nothing that quite tastes like it. However, if you’re short on time, or if peas are not in season, use frozen peas and broad beans, or swap the seasonal asparagus for other green veg such as kale, swiss chard, purple sprouting broccoli or sugar snap peas.
Serves 5
825g broad beans in their pods, or 250g shelled
450g peas in their pods, or 100g shelled
200g asparagus, tougher stems finely chopped and tender tips cut into large lengths
1 very large onion, finely diced
4-5 cloves of garlic, finely sliced
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tbsp butter
300g brown risotto rice (or swap to white if you prefer)
250ml dry white wine (option to leave out if preferred)
2 stock cubes
75g parmesan, grated
100g pea shoots
Method
Blanch your broad beans, peas and asparagus tips in 2l* of boiling water for 2 minutes, 30 seconds and 1 minute respectively before plunging into iced water to retain their vibrant green colour. Set aside.
Using the reserved blanching water, add your stock cubes and keep on a low heat.
In a large pan, gently soften the onions in the olive oil with the tougher asparagus stems for around 10 minutes, till the onion starts to turn translucent. Add the garlic and cook for a minute longer.
Add the butter and risotto rice and toast till fragrant, usually around 2 minutes, before adding the wine and allowing the grains to absorb the liquid.
Add a few ladles of stock at a time, and stir continuously till absorbed. Repeat this process till the rice is cooked through, but still has a slight bite to it.
Drain the broad beans, peas, and asparagus tips and add to the rice, cooking for 1-2 minutes till warmed through.
Remove from the heat and stir in the parmesan and serve with pea shoots.
*White risotto rice will use less water than brown risotto rice
This is the easiest bowl of comforting food you can make which is packed with beneficial nutrients such as omega-3 fats, protein, vitamins C, D, iron, folate and a portion of veg as one of you 5-a-day.
I’m using hot smoked salmon, which means I only need to cook the pasta and then stir everything together, using just one pan making it a really easy-to-make (and clean up after) meal.
Serves 2
Ingredients
150g spaghetti
140g baby leaf spinach
80g cream cheese
Zest and juice of 1 lemon
20g chives, finely chopped
280g hot smoked salmon
Method
Cook the pasta for 3 minutes less than the packet instructions, saving some of the pasta cooking water before draining.
Over a low heat, add the spinach to the almost cooked-through pasta and allow to wilt before adding the cream cheese, lemon zest and juice, chives, smoked salmon, and season to taste with pepper. Add more pasta cooking water if needed to loosen the sauce and enjoy!
This potato salad is for all those mayonnaise haters out there! I’m using lemon juice, extra virgin olive oil and Dijon mustard as the base of the sauce, and keeping it light by using a load of chopped herbs, capers and gherkins.
Cooking and cooling potatoes allows for the starch to retrograde into something called resistant starch. Our bodies are not able to digest this type of starch, but instead, it helps to feed the microbiota living inside your digestive tract.
Serves 2 as a main, or 4 as a side dish
Ingredients
500g new potatoes
200g asparagus, trimmed and cut into short lengths
Juice of 1 lemon
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 heaped tablespoon of Dijon mustard
40g flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
20g dill, finely chopped
20g chives, finely chopped
1 heaped tablespoon of capers, drained and roughly chopped
2-3 gherkins, chopped
1 packet smoked mackerel, skin removed and roughly flaked
Method
Boil the potatoes for around 15 minutes untill cooked through, adding the asparagus in for the last minute of cooking.
Meanwhile, prepare the sauce by mixing the lemon juice, olive oil, Dijon mustard, herbs, capers and gherkins together.
Drain the potatoes and asparagus and add to the sauce, mixing while hot.
This is my perfect working from home lunch when I have have 10 minutes to cook something. I want it to be nutritious but quick, and this is the perfect meal for that. You can sub the vegetables with what you have, but I always have frozen edamame beans in the freezer ready for a quick snack or meal. They’re a great source of plant-based protein, really affordable and conveniently shelled in the pack so you can just add them to whatever you’re cooking for the last minute or two.
Serves 2
Ingredients
1 garlic clove, minced
1/2″ piece of ginger, minced
3 tbsp tahini
1 tbsp mirin
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp sake
2 packs of udon noodles
160g choi sum
160g edamame beans
3 spring onions, finely sliced
2 sheets nori, cut into thin strips
1 tsp sesame seeds
Method
Cook the udon noodles according to the packet instructions, adding the veg in for the last minute of cooking.
Meanwhile make the sauce by combining the garlic, ginger, tahini, mirin, soy sauce and sake together.
Toss the cooked noodles in the sauce to evenly coat, adding some cooking water to get a smooth sauce consistency to your liking, and add the veg, garnishing with the spring onion, nori and sesame seeds.
10 minute sesame noodles
Per serving: 511kcal/ 23g fat/ 3g saturated fat/ 48g carbohydrates/ 11g fibre/ 21g protein
I made these quick pickled onions for some friends when I recently visited them in Portugal; they absolutely loved them! This is a really easy and quick way to take the edge off raw onions, something I personally don’t always enjoy. I also love the pop of hot pink colour they add to the dish; the longer you leave the onions in the lemon juice, the brighter the pink.
This is the perfect meal you can double up the batch to make once but eat twice. It’s great as a cold pasta salad the next day, which, in addition, will allow resistant starch to form as it cools down.
Each serving provides you with 2.5 of your 5-A-Day, including 13g of fibre and 31g a protein. To make vegan or dairy free switch the feta for a vegan feta or use some crumbled tofu.
Lemon Orzo Pasta
Serves 2
Ingredients
1 red onion, finely sliced
Zest and juice of 1.5-2 lemons
150g orzo
150g prepared asparagus tips
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
Herbs – I have used mint, oregano and flat-leaf parsley
75g feta
1 tin of drained and rinsed chickpeas
80g rocket
Method
Start by pickling the onions by blanching in boiled water for 30 seconds before draining and covering in the lemon juice.
Meanwhile, cook the orzo in boiling water for 1 minute less than the cooking instructions. Add the asparagus for the last minute before draining.
Add the onions along with all the lemon juice to the hot pasta and stir to combine, followed by the lemon zest, olive oil, herbs and season with pepper to taste.
Crumble in the feta, along with the chickpeas and rocket and stir to combine.
I couldn’t get the thought of this sandwich out of my head, so I had to make it! I thought the green of the wild garlic running through the mayonnaise would be much brighter, but I do love the way the purple and orange colours of the slaw still shine through.
If you don’t eat meat this would be delicious with some crushed chickpeas, or some slices of tofu crisped up in a pan or in the oven.
For the mayo
1 egg yolk
1 tsp dijon mustard
Juice of half a large lemon
100ml extra virgin olive oil
50g wild garlic, roughly chopped
For the slaw filling
1/2 an onion, finely sliced
100g red cabbage, finely sliced
1 large carrot, finely sliced
2 chicken thighs, cooked, cooled and torn into strips
Method
Make the mayo by adding the egg yolk, mustard, lemon and around 25ml oil and mix together using an emersion blender. Slowly add the remaining oil to make a thick emulsion. Add the wild garlic and blend in.
Mix the slaw ingredients together with 2/3 of the mayo and then layer thickly into slices of sourdough to make 2 deep-filled sandwiches.
Wrap the sandwiches in paper to hold while you cut them in half.
If you find yourself short on time, but still want a homemade dinner, this pasta sauce is so easy, and completely adaptable to your schedule. If you need to have a longer gap, reduce the oven temperature and increase the time, the end result will be almost identical, whilst giving you the flexibility you need to do your work, or exercise, or pick the kids up from school or in my case, walk the dog.
Cooking tomatoes in this way actually increases their lycopene content as the cells in the walls of the tomatoes have time to break down and release the lycopene, making it more bioavailable to our bodies. Lycopene is a type of antioxidant that can help protect our bodies from oxidative damage. Pairing it with a healthy fat, such as extra virgin olive oil as I have done here, can again help improve absorption rates as it’s fat soluble. Therefore, this is a delicious way to get some extra lycopene in your diet to help benefit your body.
Serves 4
Ingredients
300g tomatoes, any size but larger ones will need to be cut into large chunks about cherry tomato sized
1 head of garlic, top sliced off to expose the cloves
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
125g mascarpone
300g pasta of choice
240g baby leaf spinach*
15g basil
Parmesan to serve
Method
Add the tomatoes and garlic to an ovenproof dish where it all fits snugly, and drizzle over the olive oil. Cook in an oven set to 150°C fan for 1.5 hours.
Once cooked, squeeze the garlic out of the skins and mash into the tomatoes with the mascarpone and season to taste with pepper.
Meanwhile, bring a large pan of water to the boil and cook your pasta for 4 minutes less than the cooking time.
Drain, reserving a large mug of pasta water and return to the pan with a little pasta water, but not all. Add the spinach and stir in, cooking over a low heat for 2 minutes till the spinach has wilted. Remove from the heat.
Add the pasta sauce and basil and stir to combine, using a little extra pasta water if needed to loosen the sauce.
Serve with parmesan over the top.
*other suitable veg include swiss chard, broccoli, kale, or try roasting other veg at the same time as the tomatoes such as courgettes, peppers or aubergine.