Still recovering & it’s still summer

I’m still recovering from the gastritis associated with my GERD. Eating healthy, very low-fat, and in small, regular portions rather than a set 3 meals per day. It just takes time to get back to feeling “normal” and pain free.

We’re still eating the dhal and rice I cooked a few nights ago. Who would have thought that 3 small potatoes, 2 small carrots and 1 cup of lentils would have made so much food!! This will be our 4th night. Just as well it’s yummy. And it’s very soothing comfort food for an inflamed stomach (as long as you leave out any hot spices like chilli or curry powder).

Lunches have been delightful affairs. Take a small pita bread, warm or toast lightly. Spread with light Philly (cream cheese, 80% reduced fat version). Cover with a small handful of assorted lettuce & salad leaves (I use mignonette, baby spinach & cos). Throw some fresh, chopped basil and lots of parsley on top (I use continental or flat-leaf parsley for its stronger taste). Finally, a few halved kalamata olives. Eat. Enjoy! This tastes so fresh and green!

In spite of the heat (we’re back to days of 39 and higher temperatures again) I opted to do some baking yesterday. I followed the recipe in Nigella Lawson’s book Nigella Express, for Breakfast Bars.  It was incredibly easy to throw together and only made a few, slight alterations to the recipe.

Pre-heat the oven to 130C (a very slow oven). Mix together in a very large bowl:

  • 250g rolled oats (not the instant oats)
  • 75g shredded coconut (I used moist coconut flakes)
  • 50g dried cranberries (craisins – available in the dried fruit/baking aisle of Australian supermarkets)
  • 50g mixed dried fruit (I use Angas Park’s Dried Fruit Medley)
  • 125g mixed seeds (I used pumpkin seeds, sunflower kernels and pine nuts, conveniently packaged together by the “Lucky” brand in Australia.)
  • 100g chopped, unsalted macadamia nuts (Nigella’s recipe calls for 125g peanuts but I prefer macadamias and I only had 100g.)

Open a 395g can of condensed milk and pour into saucepan. Warm gently. (I used the “skinny” or reduced fat version of condensed milk. If you read the nutrition label on the cans you’ll see there’s an incredible difference in fat content!)

When the milk is warm, pour over the mixture and stir thoroughly. You want everything coated. Spread the mixture into an oiled rectangular baking tin or use a throw away foil one, 23 x 33 x 4 cm. Bake in slow oven for 1 hour.

I found the top was beginning to crisp a little too much after 45 minutes so covered the top with some foil. Next time I’ll bake covered for the first 20 mins, then uncovered to ensure it turns golden and slightly crisp.

Let the tray cool for 15 minutes, then cut into 16 chunky squares. Let cool completely. Store in airtight container.

I have to say, this recipe is definitely a winner. I have tried a number of differing recipes for muesli and breakfast bars, but this has been the best. And it’s healthy. Although do remember that because of the condensed milk and the dried fruit, the sugar content is high.

Rather than eating these for breakfast, I eat them as a hefty snack. Preferably in two sittings. Each of those 16 bars was a fair size.

I think you could also make “biscuits” (cookies) out of this recipe too if you didn’t want the bother of cutting up slices. I’ll experiment next time I make this. I think it would work out well if I rolled out small balls for biscuits and they’d make a lot more than 16. Cooking times would need to be adjusted.

Shopping & Menu Planning

Those who are frequent visitors to my home will testify that I’m one of those people who sits down each week and writes out a menu plan for the coming week’s evening meals. That is then left on the kitchen bench (for the other occupants of the house to read and therefore not ask “what’s for tea?”) and is used as a basis for constructing the weekly shopping list.

This ritual works without fail during the cooler months of the year. In summer, by the time we get into those relentless and seemingly endless days of greater than 40 degree heat, the menu planning is a wee bit more haphazard.

I sit down and flip through my favourite cookbooks and notebook (I keep a book of recipes I jot down from all sorts of sources) and then write out a rough menu plan to cover either one or two weeks. I just want to ensure my pantry is stocked with all the ingredients and know which fresh vegetables I need to purchase and when. Potatoes for example, I can buy them days and days ahead of cooking them. But salad vegetables I like to buy as fresh as possible. I want them crisp and fresh, not slightly wilting.

As we’re on day 10 of more than 40 degrees, and the hot weather really has lost its novelty for me and my GERD is playing up again (nausea and reflux … lots of nausea), spending time in a warm-hot kitchen doesn’t appeal. Eating appeals, but I just want very quick, very easy, very summery recipes.

So tonight we’ll have the final remainders of that pasta bake. If we’re all still a bit hungry after a small serve each, then we have some lovely, fresh baked pesto and cheese rolls from the local bakery. They’re quickly reheated in the oven or microwave and they’ll be filling. And there’s fruit in the fridge if we’d prefer something cold and healthier.

Tomorrow I’ll do a salad, serving it either in a bowl or with some flat bread (as a salad roll). Tomorrow will be tomatoes, cucumber, fetta, lettuce, basil, parsley and olives all tossed together ( a sort of Greek salad, or maybe it’s an Italian salad, but with an Australian twist … we’re very multicultural here).

Sunday I’ll opt to roast some pumpkin, then add that to some chopped fetta, sliced red onion (pre-steeped in lime juice to get rid of the sting) and red coral lettuce. I’d have liked to use raddichio but couldn’t find any at the supermarket today. (And no, we don’t have a green grocer here, the supermarket is our primary source of fresh vegetables and fruit). I might throw in some toasted pine nuts too. Again, this salad can be served either in a bowl on its own, on some flat bread, or even with some cold, cooked noodles.

Monday I’ll go back to warm food again. Baking some potato, sweet potato (kumara or orange sweet potato) and red capsicum with garlic and assorted spices. Some mangetout (snow peas), quickly blanched, and the vegetables served up on a bed of hot couscous. The couscous will be prepared in vegetable stock, just to add extra taste. This dish can be eaten hot or cold. Both are delightfully yummy. A squeeze of lemon or lime juice is the only condiment needed. (I am tempted one day to experiment using a mix of bulgur wheat and couscous, I think the two different textures and flavours would be wonderful, but that can wait until the weather is cooler and my brain not quite so fried).

Later in the week I can do a sort of salad nicoise, with green beans, hard boiled eggs, olives, lettuce, tomatoes or cucumbers, basically anything and everything, all thrown together. Including a baked potato.

So, from the above paragraphs you can see my shopping list for today emerged with just a variety of fresh vegetables  on the list. Easy.

And the best thing is, if I want, I can change the menu plan as all those vegies would be useful in other dishes. It all depends on my mood, the weather, how many people are eating at home that night. The key is flexibility but stay inspired.

What I ate for lunch today

I had a little salad left over from last night. I lightly toasted one side of a slice of sour dough bread. Spread hommus on the untoasted side. Plonked some salad on top, a twist of the pepper grinder, added a small handful of grated, low-fat tasty cheese and placed it under the griller to melt the cheese. Sort of a cheese on toast meeting bruschetta.

Healthy. Tasty. Yummy.

When it’s hot, salads help

I know I wrote that I don’t like to eat salad all through the summer. But there are times when a salad is a very pleasant meal. As we’ve had maximum temperatures over 40 degrees these past few days, and I’ve been feeling lazy, salad has been served and happily eaten the past two nights.

My salad is a mix of panzanella or fatoush and greek salads, with the dressing courtesy of Rosemay Stanton.

Desertgirl’s Salad

crisp lettuce leaves, chopped or torn(I bought a bag of mixed cos lettuce leaves, some green, some red, lovely)

handfuls of parsley, chopped roughly (I used both continental flat-leaf & curly varieties)

fresh basil leaves, chop if large otherwise leave whole (use enough for your preference)

a few vine-ripened tomatoes, quartered, seeded, then diced

continental cucumber, sliced in half lengthwise, de-seeded lightly, diced into chunks

Australian kalamata pitted olives, halved (I use Sandhurst olives)

Fetta cheese, crumbled (I use reduced-fat fetta from South Cape, Tasmania as I find it’s creamier and not as salty)

Mix it up all in a bowl. Serve. I allow people to dress their salads individually, but here’s the dressing I’ve been using lately:

balsamic vinegar, splash of grape seed oil, juice of half an orange, some garlic. Mix.

I serve the salad either in bowls, or I often will grab some flat bread (I use Greek Yiros bread as it stretchier and most flat breads are delivered frozen to Alice Springs and tend to be brittle when defrosted. The yiros bread tends to not dry out so much.) I spread some hommus (reduced fat hommus is yummy!) on the bread, plonk on plenty of salad, roll it up and eat! By using the bread I feel I’m eating a far heartier meal than if I just ate salad from a bowl alone.