My favourite sausage dinner (adapted from Delicious Magazine)

This is a really nice way to eat aubergine as it goes super soft and creamy, so no nasty squeaky bits. Plus only needs a frying pan and a baking sheet to prepare. We have it between 2 with some broccoli on the side, but it’s meant to serve 4, so you only get half an aubergine and 1 sausage each. A green salad and the garlic bread as they suggest might work. I don’t add the breadcrumbs at the end, but use parmesan or a little mature cheddar instead.

MUST USE DECENT SAUSAGE!!! I get the Sainsbury’s Taste the Difference 70% pork in the 10 packs when they’re on special and split them up to freeze. You only need 4 sausages so does work out quite economical. I’ve been known to bung the rest of the pack of sausages on the baking tray too cook while this is roasting so I have cooked sausage in the fridge for frittatas etc. This week I used my own chorizo-style kofta sausages (from WellFed2) as they’ve been in the freezer a while. 

Whole thing costs under £4.50 to make 🙂

http://www.deliciousmagazine.co.uk/recipes/sausage-and-herb-stuffed-aubergines-recipe

[picture to follow]

How to be a Domestic Goddess

Following a few weeks off, trying to adjust to an office-free existence, I finally got my backside in gear and invested a whole day in the kitchen. As a result, my freezer is now full to bursting and I have a whole month’s dinners planned!

Dinners:

2 x Lamb curry
2 x Pork cheek and chorizo carnitas
3 x West African Chicken stew
5 x beef and pork ragu
3 x Lamb bobotie
1kg Czech meatballs
Jerk seasoned, shredded ham hock
Bora bora fireballs (pork and pineapple meatballs)
Grilled chicken thighs
Spanish pork casserole
Eisbein
Farm shop beef meatballs

 

Sorted. I like to be ahead of the curve, but if I have to chop another onion any time soon I may go postal 🙂

Low Carb, High Fat for ZAR40 / day?

 

Interesting topic on Twitter from Prof. Tim Noakes this week. Can a LCHF diet be maintained on ZAR40 / day?

On today’s exchange rate, ZAR40 ≈ £2.25 ≈ $3.67

Not sure if this is based on an individual, buying food every couple of days or a family doing a weekly or bi-weekly supermarket shop taking advantage of economies of scale, and obviously I’ve not taken into account buying power in each country.

We average £40/ week on food shopping. This covers 3 meals a day for 2 adults so approx. £2.85 per person, per day. And that’s without really trying to cut costs; just shopping at the supermarket and shopping to a list, rather than picking up all the BOGOFs.

Our menu is varied and, even though it doesn’t often feature steak anymore, we eat good quality protein with each meal.

Does not include beer and wine, but of course we shun booze on our Paleo/ Primal diet don’t we…. 🙂

 

SUNDAY COOK-UP!

As mentioned before, I like to roll my sleeves up and get a good cook-up going on the weekend. In part this is due to the amount of prep required while following a paleo or primal diet, but also because I like to know that I have enough food supplies for the week . It’s less hassle to pick up a few extra bits during a Sunday stroll than remembering to do it on my way home from work, and I’m less likely to pick up extra treats and ‘bargains’ if I don’t have a car with me!

For this week’s dinners I wanted a few big, veggie side dishes ready to heat and serve. It’s cold and wet outside so the temptation for stodge is strong 🙂  For this week I’ve gone with an aubergine parmigiana (without cheese – just for versatility) and  a sweet potato and red onion dauphinoise. I also needed to restock the freezer with different flavour meatballs and koftas, which I use for at least 2 dinners a week now.

Got started early (for me) by reworking the leftover sweet potato mash into a breakfast. Had about a heaped cup of mash, added 2 chopped spring onions and a couple of tablespoons of ground almonds to give it some form. After cooking some bacon I dolloped 4 ‘cakes’ of mix into the pan and made myself leave them alone for 5 minutes to get a good crust. Result was more like bubble and speak as they don’t hold together very well. Managed to turn them and make reasonable looking cakes to go with the bacon and a couple of poached eggs.

While the cakes were cooking, I got chopping. Two big aubergine cut into thin slices; brushed with a little oil, S+P and dispatched into med-hot oven to cook completely. Onion, celery and garlic for the marinara sauce base. Left on back of the hob to simmer. Sliced red onions thinly for dauphinoise. was going to get the food processor out for the sweet potato slivers, but was short on space and wasn’t feeling strong enough to lift it out of the larder anyway. Besides, slicing 3 spuds by hand isn’t that much. Sliced 4 big cloves of garlic and added to double cream and milk in a small sauce pan. Brought to the boil then turned it off and left it to infuse. Made myself a coffee, changed out of my PJ’s and ate my breakie. Put half dozen eggs on the hard boil.

Layered up the cooked aubergine slices and marinara sauce, then bunged the dish in the oven for 20mins. The sweet potato looked like a lot more than I’d planned so had to dig out my biggest lasagne dish. Greased it then layered the potato slices and red onion slices with S+P and dried thyme until all used, finishing with potato to prevent nasty burned bit. Poured over the infused cream mix – forgot to remove garlic slices so they ended up on top. Covered dish in foil (to stop the garlic burning) and baked in oven for 1 hr. After 1 hr (only meant to do 45mins but got distracted washing up) took the foil off and gave in another 30mins to brown; checking every 10mins to make sure the garlic wasn’t burning.

While stuff was in the oven, I got mixing 2 batches of meatballs; Czech pork with caraway and wholegrain mustard, and a chorizo (of sorts). Take 2 big bowls. Put the relevant seasoning in each bowl. Make a coffee. Check on oven. Eventually stop flitting and take pork mince out of the fridge. Weigh meat before adding. Mix each bowl (washing hands in between to prevent cross-seasoning. Put both bowls in fridge out of the way until you have cleared enough space in kitchen to have 2 baking trays covered in greaseproof paper in front of you. I weigh my meatballs to ensure they’ll cook evenly and I get a consistent quantity from the batch. Take trays of perfectly formed balls and put in freezer to open freeze. After about an hour they should be quite firm so can be transferred to a ziplock baggie for easier storage. I put mine together in 1 big bag as you can easily tell the difference in colour.

Both veggie dishes done and cooled. Marked into portions (4 from the aubergine and 12 squares of dauphinoise), stored half in the fridge, other half in freezer wrapped in greaseproof and foil.

That little lot should cover me for all of tis week, and give me ready meals for next week too.

UPDATE: Spotted this article – sums up just how much you can get done even if you only have 10 minutes! http://www.nerdfitness.com/blog/2013/03/11/10-meals/

You say empty fridge, I say…….

  • Kale and pancetta with poached eggs (supper tonight)
  • Courgette, lardon and parmesan frittata (for breakie tomorrow)
  • Mackerel and pomegranate salads (2 packed lunches)
  • Courgette zoodles (dinner tomorrow with meatballs and tomato sauce)
  • Hard boiled eggs (grab and go breakie Wednesday)

Have managed to defer shopping for another 3 days!

Now, what to do with 3 beetroot, a parsnip and a lot of lemon?

The cost of being paleo

OK, so as I’m not
strictly paleo that’s a bit of a misleading title but I think this applies to
any diet where you are preparing fresh from scratch on a daily basis. The
second thing I noticed after switching to Paleo, the first being the health
benefits and general improvements to my wellbeing, was the shopping bills!
Bejeezus!!

I mean, I know food
is fuel for my body and I should care about what I put into it. And that the
organic food we get tastes better. And animal welfare is important to our
farming industry as well as doing great things for our karma… yada yada…. but
holey moley – there’s no way we spent this much on food before?! So i took a deep breath and consider it.

  1. Yes, we’re buying quite a bit
    of meat – but actually the farm shop is very competitive with our
    supermarket’s prices. Just got to be careful with portion sizes as chicken
    thighs are about 50% bigger than the ones from the supermarket. Plus, we get to
    go visit the piglets at the farm and check they’re getting plenty of fresh
    air and rest 🙂
  2. The veg & fruit we get
    delivered is organic – before we got battery veg, so not really comparing
    like-for-like here. We don’t always know 100% what we’re going to get, as
    we opt out of potatoes every week, but it adds an interesting twist to the
    week’s meals and means we have to eat plenty of veg before it rots and goes to compost =
    wasted ££ 🙁
  3. We have an interesting, tasty
    meal to look forward to every night. Back-in-the-day we would linger in
    town a bit late and ‘may as well stay out for a pizza and another bottle
    of wine’. Or stop in at Waitrose for some extras to perk up a boring dinner, which normally meant
    buying more food than needed, but since when was Waitrose about need? 🙂
    Add to this the canteen and sarnie bar lunches at work. All of this adds up to a lot more ££,
    but no idea how much as it wasn’t on our weekly shop receipt. We have
    started eating out regularly again, after a long time avoiding it (will
    more about this another time) but searching for Paleo options means we are
    quite picky about where we go so it tends to be researched, and something
    to look forward to- not just paying to put food product in mouth. Another
    saving is on snacks – I don’t get the munchies in the afternoon any more,
    and all the typical, easy to get hold of snacks (brownies, granola bars,
    sweets) are off limits anyway.
  4. We’re good with leftovers. Not just coming up with dinner from scraps, but being disciplined at
    keeping useful odds-and-ends to make another meal. My courgette noodles
    (recipe to follow) are a good example of this one; the odd offcuts make perfect frittata filling. No leftover is too small!  If we buy a large joint
    of meat, being just the 2 of, us we’re never going to eat it all in 1
    sitting so we are careful to make sure that if there’s meant to be enough
    for 3 dinners that we don’t have 2 greedy dinners.
  5. My skin has never been better
    and I actually have the energy to go out and exercise, thus saving money
    on skincare products and contributing to money-can’t-buy happiness 🙂  Having
    never run before, and never seen the attraction, I got off my backside and
    trained 2 months for a 5km run. Now, thanks to my damn competitive nature, I’m going to keep doing it until I can improve my time. Too shameful being
    beaten by people twice my age and/or size and I have no bloody excuse!!

Efficiency

As much as one needs to be frugal with the food one has spent a large amount of money on, I also like to be frugal with my time. Getting the most out of my time spent on shopping trips, running errands and time in the kitchen. For that reason I tend to get ahead by doing little extra things which will save me time and effort when I’m at my laziest (i.e. any time in the morning before 9am). Small tasks which can be done while a pot is simmering, but don’t actually feel like extra effort.

Making stock (or bone broth) in the pressure cooker is a great one. Unlike making in a big pot, there’s no need to skim off scum, or watch that it doesn’t boil over. Also, the cooking is done in about 30 mins, and 15 mins to cool/ release pressure, so the messy tasks are done while you’re still in ‘cooking’ mode and not 4 hours+ later when you’ve sat down with a bottle of vino watching TV, and now really can’t be arsed to deal with a heavy pot of hot, greasy stuff – animal fat is a bugger to clean up, and the pot and lid is normally caked with burned bits of scum (might just be the way I do it!). I’ve found that using the pressure cooker you get a clearer stock and the result is more consistent, probably because you use less water as it all stays in the pot, so less need for straining and reducing to get the desired colour and flavour. I also like to think that the pressurised container, kept sealed after cooking, is quite a sterile environment so I don’t mind leaving it outside (unopened) overnight if I have left it a bit late to cool and freeze batches. Will share my method another time.

Back to the topic. So last night I made zoodles (zucchini- noodles) to have with some leftover ragu. I make these all the time now, and it’s a better alternative to the spaghetti squash recommended by a lot of the US blogs – when was the last time you saw spaghetti squash in a UK supermarket?? Simply take a firm courgette (or a zucchini if you prefer) and julienne it with a speed peeler. Some people suggest steaming them, or zapping it in the microwave, to heat up but I prefer them just raw, with a hot sauce poured over. Keeps a nice texture and saves washing up another pot. I do stirfry them if I’m using them to replace egg noodles – treat them gently, like fresh egg noodles, and they take on a nice bit of colour and flavour. Not too long tho, or they just go soggy as the water is driven out.

You can buy these tools in most kitchen shops now; Kuhn Rikon make a pretty sturdy looking version. It’s just a variation on the y-shaped speed peelers. Mine was part of a set gifted to me by my Mother in law in SA (thanks Ma!) and tbh, when I first got it I was a bit sceptical about how much we’d use it. I assumed it would just make a mushy mess, but this thing is razor sharp – as I have found when (stoopidly) peeling things into my palm or washing the dishes. Back to the zoodles. So, nifty gadget and impressive looking veg. Only problem is that you end up with funny shaped bits of courgette left.

Rather than compost them, I chop it into equal-sized pieces and store in a little tub. Conveniently 1 courgette gives me enough zoodles for 1 dinner, and the left over bits are enough for a frittata for 1 🙂 The result is a rather tasty breakie, with no knives required in the morning. Just toss the veg into the pan, TV chef style and add eggs. Voila!

Zoodles