Week Four

Breakfasts:

  • Brunch @ Bosco
  • Omelette
  • Quasi huevos rancheros

 

Lunches:

  • Sausages w/ sweet potato salad
  • Tuna deli salad w/ eggs
  • Mackerel, beetroot, green bean and egg salad
  • Bora bora fireballs w/ celeriac slaw

 

Dinners:

  • Haggis, mashed neeps and red wine gravy
  • Pigs cheek in leek, mustard and cream sauce w/ savoy cabbage
  • Pesto chicken w/ green beans (4 x chicken thigh)
  • Kippers, spinach and poached eggs
  • Czech meatballs w/ mashed swede and gravy
  • White fish w/ pesto veg
  • West African chicken w/ cauliflower rice

Week Three

Breakfast:

  • Ham, spinach and poached eggs (Brunch – Bosco Lounge)
  • Broccoli slaw omelette
  • Sausage, bacon and egg (work canteen)
  • Broccoli slaw omelette
  • Kippers and scrambled eggs

 

Lunches:

  • Chicken, bacon and avo club salad
  • Grilled chicken w/ sweet potato salad and eggs
  • Tuna deli salad w/ pickles
  • Mackerel, beetroot, green bean and egg salad
  • Tuna deli salad

 

Dinners:

  • Chicken fajitas in lettuce wraps
  • Bolognaise w/ sweet potato mash
  • Meguez meatballs w/ aubergine gratin*
  • West African chicken stew w/ sweet potato dauphonoise and red cabbage* 
  • Kippers on spinach w/ poached eggs
  • Czech meatballs w/ cauliflower rice*

*ready meal in freezer

Week Two

Breakfast:

  • Omelette
  • Sweet potato patties w/ bacon and egg
  • Quasi huevos rancheros
  • Muffins

 

Lunches:

  • Reuben rollups w/ broccoli salad
  • Tuna waldorf salad
  • Mackerel, orange and green bean salad

 

Dinners:

  • BBQ chicken wings w/ sweet tayto wedges
  • Sausages roasted on tomato and veg sauce with sweet potato dauphinoise
  • Crispy belly pork w/ sauerkraut and garlicky green beans
  • West African Chicken Stew w/ kale and coconut cauli-rice
  • Merguez meatballs w/ aubergine parmigiana
  • Czech meatballs w/ kale and mashed cauliflower
  • Egg fried rice w/ pork and broccoli

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/

Week One

Breakfasts

  • Meat and spinach muffins
  • Omelettes

Lunches

  • Tuna deli salad w/ eggs and sweet potato salad
  • Sausages with coleslaw
  • Leftover bora bora fireballs w/ eggs and sweet potato salad
  • Meat and spinach muffins w/ coleslaw
  • Tomato soup w/ meat muffins and tuna salad

Dinners

  • Bora bora fireballs with cauliflower rice
  • Zoodle pad thai w/ prawns and broccoli
  • Chicken and bacon in creamy mustard sauce w/ broccoli
  • Belly pork with braised red cabbage and sweet potato mash
  • Beef and Kale garbage stirfry

 

Batch prep

  • Meatballs
  • Debone and freeze chicken thighs
  • Rice cauliflower
  • Hard boil eggs
  • Sweet potato salad (inspired by Summer Innanen)
  • Coleslaw (½ cabbage)
  • Tuna deli salad
  • Meat and spinach muffins x 16

New Year, new start

Ok, so I’ve left my New Year start a little late but it is only 3rd!

Xmas always puts me out of sorts. What day is it? In short, I’ve stuffed up my usual organised shopping and eating routine over the holidays. Yummy festive leftovers have been the base for most meals. Not entirely my fault; shops are silly busy and stock levels unpredictable.  Weather has been hazardous too so, for my own safety, I couldn’t venture out to the market.

Back to school on Monday, so no more loafing and grazing. Time to pull up the metaphorical socks. I considered doing a Whole30 reset for January but the restrictions make me want to cry; no nuts and seeds, no cheese, no wine, no coffee?!

My plan is to get my 4 weeks of real-food menus drafted, and get as much prep done as possible at the weekends so we won’t be caught out Mid-week when we’re too tired to think about food. Week 3 will be a tough one as I’m home alone and have tendency to not be bothered to eat properly. Dinner party anyone?

 

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?

Busy day :(

Bit of a late post today as I was disorganised this morning and had to drive to a Customer site. 

No breakie, snacks or packed lunch prepared. Gulp. Managed to survive the drive with a beaker of tea and pick up a rather nice salad and some cooked chicken from Sainsbury’s. 

Forgot to bring my own tea bags too so no caffeine for me for the rest of today – prob just as well; I have been caning it a bit lately.  

Fortunately I did have the foresight to prepare the components for dinner ahead of time – batch of ragu taken out of freezer last night, and thin slices of aubergine chargrilled on the braai Sunday night = Aubergine Parmigiana Bolognaise 🙂

DSCN0458

Ah, Sunday…….

Slight change of plan yesterday. After getting home, unpacking, showering and (most importantly) giving me all my pressies, Hubby really wanted a proper beer so I took him to his favourite pub for a pint. Decided to do a quick, no fire, dinner of sausages and Jammy balsamic onion gravy with roast pumpkin. Bet you didn’t get THAT in your 5* hotel, huh?!

Nice, 97% outdoor bred pork sausages with minimal fillers courtesy of Sainsbury’s – though I have been impressed by ASDA’s premium version.

So the braai rolls over to today. Probably a good thing as it’s looking GLORIOUS out there!

First things first – coffee on the veranda while I wait for Monsieur to get back from his run and place his breakfast order 🙂

Lunch

What do Paelo-eaters have for lunch?

Back in the day, my packed lunch would be a brown bread sarnie with tuna or leftover roast chicken in mayo. Maybe cheese and marmite or pickle. If I was feeling creative, a pasta salad or leftover roast veg with couscous – seeing a theme here?

Now that the baguette is banned and the couscous cancelled, what’s left? I can’t take a plate of stew and sautéed veg to work in my lunchbox; we don’t have microwaves to heat stuff up – long story, let’s just say people did bad things and now everyone has to suffer.

Got to think outside the box (or inside the box – lunchbox).

Salads:

There’s only so many times you can have tuna and salad (and I use that term to describe the rather sad, English-salad of lettuce, cucumber and tomato) before you lose the will and march to the nearest food vendor for something hot and filling. So, there are few tips to keep it interesting:

  1. Keep it seasonal – not just      the ingredients, but a light chicken salad is only going to make you feel      so-so if it’s grey and cold outside (in the UK that can mean any day, not      just outside ‘Summer’ season). Even if you have to have a cold lunch,      adding some roast meat leftovers and colourful veg with a punchy      horseradish or mustard dressing can make the day a little better.
  2. Toppings are your      friend. Pumpkin seeds are good with      roast veg and feta cheese. Pecan nuts with coleslaw. Gherkins with beef.      Some of these are not cheap (like capers) but a little goes a long way,      and they keep in the fridge for weeks. Look out for supermarket ‘Economy’      versions of things like olives; no, they’re not the sort of olives you’d      serve on an antipasti plate, but they make a tuna nicoise look      bistro-good. Don’t forget the seasoning and dressing – think of the      American-style chef’s chopped salad or the beautiful creations at Ottolenghi. These are not English-salad 🙂
  3. Lots of vegetables – more      variety means more colour and ticking off more vitamins. Frozen veg work      well for this, as you can grab a handful and thaw under cold running      water, or just add them to your salad if you’re preparing the night      before. The humble frozen pea, just thawed, is surprisingly sweet. Dress      with chopped mint, or some pesto mixed with yogurt and you’ve got a bit of      wow-factor. Try different lettuces too; doesn’t have to be the expensive      bags of pre-washed baby leaves – just switching to a crunchy romaine or      bitter-leaf frisee can make things more interesting in appearance as well      as taste.
  4. Take inspiration from other      dishes and deconstruct – e.g. breakfast = bacon or gammon, hard-boiled      egg, tomato. Fajitas = chicken, peppers, roast onions, cheese, salsa,      guac, chipotle sauce. Moroccan tagine = roast lamb, butternut squash,      apricots, cinnamon, cumin.

Other:

Now, I’m keeping this to cold lunches due to my own work environment but if you do have means to heat your lunch there’s no reason not to have leftover dinner for lunch. I appreciate some people might think yuck, leftovers but given the economics you can’t knock it. Plus, if you’re buying the best quality meat you can afford, and spending time cooking it, makes sense to stretch it as far as possible.

Soups are also a winner, but pre-made versions tend to include beans, rice or pasta to bulk them up or are with thickened with corn-starch. If you get a veggie box delivered, and I cannot recommend this enough, then you’ll always have a variety of bits on hand to whizz up into a tasty soup. If nothing else to use them up before they go from looking a bit sad to turning into mulch and going to the compost bin. (Only downside I’ve found with organic veg – they just don’t last as long as supermarket stuff. Fortunately the flavour more than makes up for it.)

Once a week, normally a Friday as that’s when the next veg delivery arrives, I have cold frittata for lunch. Thursday nights I raid the fridge for any remaining bits of veg (I save off-cuts after making things like zoodles, but you’ll see more about that later) roast or panfry as necessary then combine with eggs and a dash of cream to make a large frittata. If there’s enough of something to make a proper dinner dish then it won’t go in, but anything that’s not-quite-enough is ideal. Small amounts of leftover bacon or ham work well, as does a little feta or goat’s cheese just dotted on top. Baby leaf salad like rocket or spinach that isn’t otherwise going to get used can be stirred thru the mix before cooking. Cool and cut into wedges, then pack with a pot of chutney or salad.