Showing posts with label bake it sundays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bake it sundays. Show all posts

Gluten Free Vegetarian Pasta Bake

There is just something about the old classic, the pasta bake...
It instantly reminds me of my mother and dark, rainy nights snuggled in front of a cosy fire when we lived in the country. Happily eating her pasta bakes covered in crochet blankets!
Warm memories.
I love the way food is such an experience that certain foods are linked for us with events and times of our lives. Food really does tell a story and for me the pasta bake was one of my first comfort foods.

Now I make it for my kids too, but with a healthy twist, now we are also not gluten intolerant but I like to do a large amount of our meals and snacks gluten free as I believe it is more kinder on the bowels!!

This dish can be whipped up in not very long at all, it freezes really well and makes fantastic leftovers and school lunches too or a bring a plate dish for the next BBQ!

If you like pasta bake or macaroni cheese you will love this healthy version.
Gluten Free Vegetarian Pasta Bake
Ingredients
  • 1 box of gluten free pasta, cooked according to packet directions.
    (I also find it helps to add a little dash of oil in the boiling water with gluten free pasta to stop it all sticking together.
  • 2 tablespoons gluten free flour
  • 500ml almond, soy or dairy milk ( I used almond.)
  • half a teaspoon nutmeg ground
  • 2 teaspoons paprika (look for a really good quality one - it makes a lot of difference!)
  • !/2 cup broccoli, very finely chopped.
  • 2 carrots peeled and finely grated.
  • 4 stalks celery, finely chopped.
  • 3 large tomatoes. 2 chopped one sliced.
  • 1 zucchini, peeled and grated.
  • 1 cup grated cheese.
  • Freshly chopped parsley to taste ( I used about a good handful ).
  • Fresh and thinly chopped chives to taste. (I used about 9 stalks).
  • 2 teaspoons wholegrain mustard (or to taste)
  • 1 free range egg.
  • 1/4 cup of sundried tomatoes (optional)
  • pepper
  • himalayan salt - to taste
  • 2 cloves garlic finely chopped.

  • Cook gluten free pasta according to directions, rinse very lightly and then drained and set aside.
  • Very, (extra very for fussy eating kids) chop the broccoli
  • Grate the carrot and zucchini.
  • Place the vegetables into a mixing bowl or even straight into the baking dish.
  • Place the butter into a saucepan and melt slowly over a low heat.
  • Once melted add in the flour, stir constantly for 1 minute.
  • Add small amounts of the milk stirring the whole time until they are combined with the flour mix, keep doing this until all the milk has been used and it is a nice consistency. Use a whisk of needed to make sure it is nice and smooth.
  • Season with the nutmeg, paprika and a pinch of himalayan salt and add in the mustard. Taste. 
  • Add in the cheese and stir through until melted in. Taste again add more mustard or salt and pepper if needed.
  • Let the sauce cool a bit and then whisk in the egg.
  • Mix everything together except the sliced tomatoes and a small amount of the chopped mixed herbs.
  • Pour into a deep baking dish top with the sliced tomato and some of the fresh herbs.
  • Bake at 180' fan forced for 20 minutes or until nice and golden on top.
  • Serve on its own as a simple dinner or with a nice fresh salad with a zesty dressing and optional garlic bread for a great tasty meal.
Notes
  • This dish is great for leftovers and school lunchboxes.
  • Make and freeze ahead for those tired nights.
  • Add some chili for more punch.
  • Add mushrooms at the last step before cooking.
  • For VEGANS, leave out the egg, make the white sauce with olive oil in place of butter and leave out the cheese, add another half cup of milk when making the sauce and instead add savoury yeast flakes for a lovely cheesey flavour.
Toddler/Kids Tips
  • Kids love the cheesey flavour. You can make it even stronger my adding a strong flavoured cheese that is suitable or more grated cheese.
  • Freeze lunch sized amounts in container for easy lunchboxes and pack on the day with a fresh salad or chopped raw crunchy vegetables.

Live Well. Eat Beautiful. Stay Calm. Be Active.

Bek xx


Silverbeet & Kale Canneloni


Silverbeet & Kale Cannelloni 


This is one of our family FAVOURITES!!

This recipe both my own kids love and have grown up eating, it is right up there with spaghetti  bolognaise and homemade pizza as an all time favourite meal and one we cook together as it is a great kids in the kitchen meal, they can even harvest the greens for it too as i alwasy try and have plenty of silverbeet, so they are really seeing food from garden to kitchen to plate.
This can also be made ahead and frozen for a ready-made dinner. Perfect for entertaining or just a delicious family meal. Meal planning friendly. Serves 6.

Ingredients
• 1 x 500gm tub Ricotta Cheese
• 1 box gluten free Cannelloni Shells
• 1 big bunch silverbeet leaves, washed and very finely chopped (or spinach)
• 1 cup of fresh kale, washed and finely chopped (around 4 large leaves or so)
• 1 large jar Tomato Pasta Sauce (or 2 cups homemade tomato pasta sauce)
• ¼ cup grated Cheddar Cheese and 1 clove garlic very finely chopped (optional)
• Baking Dish


Method
• Preheat oven to 180’c.
• Wilt the silverbeet and kale together slightly in a saucepan on a low heat with a tablespoon of water for a few seconds only.
• Remove from saucepan, drain and squeeze all excess water out
• Mix together spinach, kale, garlic and ricotta cheese in a bowl.
• In a deep baking dish pour a thin layer of the tomato pasta sauce to make a ‘bed’ for the cannelloni shells to lay on.
• Stuff each cannelloni shell with the spinach mixture and arrange so they are touching completely filling the baking dish.
• Pour a layer of tomato mixture over the top, use a butter knife to let the sauce run down between the shells.
• Top with the grated cheese.
• Bake for approximately 30 minutes or until tubes are cooked through and it is nicely browned on top.
• Serve hot with a fresh, leafy green salad.

Notes
• This is a meal that the whole family and even fussy eaters will enjoy.
• A delicious and cheap to make recipe, even more so if you grow your own spinach and kale.
• Make a double batch so you can freeze one portion for another night.
• Halve the quantities for a smaller family meal serving size or freeze leftovers for another night.
• A popular dish for dinner parties.
• You could optionally add garlic and/or 1 teaspoon nutmeg to the mixture.
• You can use defrosted, frozen spinach
or silver-beet in place of the spinach leaves.
 Just ensure all is wilted and excess water removed


Toddler Tip
• This is a great dish for when little ones are getting into solids that are also the family meal. Cut up into really small pieces.
• It can be messy but kids love this, make their servings nice and saucy.
• A great recipe to make with the kids, they will love mixing and stuffing all the tubes.

I use kale, spinach and sillverbeet (pictured with my youngest here) in so much of my cooking, I literally put them in almost anything! Full of nutrients and so very easy to grow organically at home.
Baby spinach is just so delightful and silverbeet is almost a fail

safe to grow.
Anyone really can grow it, if your not a gardener, this is one veggie I really urge you to have a go at. It's fast growing, forgiving, attractive so you even plant in amongst established gardens and can be used in so much cooking and things like juicing.

·        











Kale (Brassica Oleracea)

As modeled here by Mr Ryan Gosling -
Image Source is a green leafy vegetable considered to be one of the highest in nutrients with many health benefits including
it is said, having anti – cancer effects so it is well
worth tracking down or growing your own.
It is very easy to grow and is an attractive green (and sometimes purple or even black depending on the variety) leafy plant.
Throw some in your flower beds for edible foliage contrast too!
Simply sew seed straight into prepared garden beds
with good drainage, in the full sun as you would cabbage. It is a quick crop making it a great vegetable to grow with kids and even on sunny balconies, in tubs and large pots. It is pretty hardy and not too bad with garden pests, though like us caterpillars and grasshoppers also appreciate its healthy lush leaves too!
There are many varieties available and it is also excellent in juicing and often made into kale “chips”.
Not a new thing. kale was in fact a very popular vegetable in the middle ages it was considered the most widely eaten vegetable in Europe. It also has ancestry in Russia and Greece and there is even a related plant that is very similar used in Chinese cooking called kale in English Brassica oleracea.While recently becoming a popular superfood in the US and Australia in recent times it is a popular food source in many parts of the world and has been for a long time. During World War II it was also in the Dig for Victory campaign  in the UK because of its nutrient content.

This recipe has been published in Holistic Bliss magazine and I also re-created it with local cheeses, styled and photographed it for client Maleny IGA Supermarket to use on their
Local Product Local Recipe - recipe card series I did for them.
Contact me for commercial ventures and proposals. 
Recipe and photography (c)RebeccaMugridge2013

PIES, healthy home-made take away and bake it Sundays

When you become a parent there are always THOSE NIGHTS.
The nights that come after a very long day. Maybe a child is sick? Maybe you had a hard day juggling work and home, maybe something stressful happened, maybe it was go go go sort of day or you were running about all afternoon with kids sports or maybe it was just actually an ordinary day but you just plain don't want to cook! Fair enough too!

Reaching for the car keys and heading out for takeaway MIGHT seem like a good idea but really is it?
  • It's going to cost you money
  • It might involve negotiating the kids into the car and for a drive and back again
  • It will probably involve some waiting
  • You could get frustrated in traffic
  • It could be cold by the time you as the driver actually get to eat it
  • If the kids eat it in the car (so there's doesn't get cold and maybe your trying to keep them happy and amused now on the journey) your car could end up looking VERY scary-and how sure are you that all the crumbs came out?...
  • It might taste rather bleh when you finally eat it
So what else could you do?

My two favourite solutions are these:

Bake it Sundays
and
Healthy Homemade Takeaway

A bake it Sunday involves taking advantage of having most family members around and finding that time after family and life commitments to get cooking. Cooking in advance.
Find yourself a few recipes that suit your family, (preferable nice healthy ones) that can be frozen.
This means that during the week you can pull one of these wonderful meals out, whip it in the oven and throw together a quick, tasty fresh salad and walah!! An awesome family meal!

Trust me once you have done this a couple of times you will pull out all stops to have that Sunday afternoon or morning cooking session because this makes life SO much easier during the week!

This can also be a fantastic cooking slot to make things for school age children's lunches like muffins and biscuits that can be frozen individually or homemade muesli bars that you can keep in a pantry sealed container ready to grab and go and if there is one thing I have found as a mum of two girls under 6 it is that you need healthy ''grab and go'' options. It is all good and well to have great intentions of making those healthy snacks from scratch but when your juggling kiddies and life happens its just not always possible!!
Hence why so many snacky items fill our supermarkets!

Making your own is cheap and a great thing to do with the kids too!

Your own healthy takeaway is another great option.
Turn your families all time favourite meals into quick, healthy alternatives.
It is actually quite surprising at how much difference a few tweaks to a recipe can make!

Make your family's own pizza's, fish and chips, Chinese, burgers, taco's, fish fingers, nuggets, kebabs.
If you love these foods how much more are you going to love the healthy AND tasty versions you make for or as a family!

Looking for ideas right now?

Vegetarian Quinoa Pot Pies
Pineapple & Sweet Corn Mini Quiches
Spinach, Kale and Cottage Cheese Canneloni
Healthy Maca Bliss Balls (sweet treats that have no refined sugar)
Tasty Tempeh & Chick Pea Bites
Peri Peri Sweet Potato Fries
Ricotta, Carrot & Zucchini Cheese Rolls
Rockemelon & Mango Mousse (no added sugar and great for lunchboxes!)
Beetroot, Yoghurt, Chocolate Muffins


And why not have a go and making your own party pies

Lily's favourite home-made party pies

Ingredients
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 & 1/2 cups "Quorn" vegetarian mince. (find me in the supermarket freezer section or swap for regular mince, brown lentils or sanitarium nut mince found in the heath food isle)
1 large onion, chopped
3 large cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 & ½  teaspoons dried thyme
1 teaspoon dried parsley
½  teaspoon sweet paprika
½  teaspoon oregano
½  teaspoon pink himalayan salt
1 medium zucchini, very finely chopped
1 large carrot, very finely chopped
2 stalks celery, very finely chopped
1 spring onion, very finely chopped
1 tsp soy sauce
2 tbsp plain or GF free flour
¼  cup water
3 sheets low fat, wholegrain or gluten free puff pastry or if you are really clever your own home-made pastry - see one of my pastry recipes here
olive oil
non-stick miniature muffin tray
glass with a base approximately 9cm diameter at opening and another with approximately a 7cm opening diameter for cutting pastry, ( or the equivalent in proper pastry cutters should you have them)

Method
Pre-heat oven to approximately 200'c
Add the teaspoon of olive oil to a non-stick fry pan
Add in the onion and garlic to the heated oil, fry until transparent.
Sprinkle the thyme, paprika, parsley, oregano and sea salt onto the onion and garlic.
Add the mince (or sanitarium product) into the onion mixture and mix together well, fry until mince is nicely browned and cooked.
Next add in the zucchini, carrot and spring onion, mixing through and frying together over a medium heat for 2-3mins before tossing in the celery
Add the soy sauce, mix through before adding the flour and stirring into the mixture well.
Pour in the water and stir all ingredients together well ( Note: the mixture should be quite 'sticky' and not runny )
Remove the mince mixture from the fry pan and place into a bowl and allow to cool
While cooling partially de-frost the sheets of pastry
Lightly spray the miniature muffin tray with the olive oil spray, to prevent pies from sticking
Cut out a large circle and a smaller one with your glasses and measure against your miniature muffin tray (you might want to try a few different glasses to get the 'just right sizing for your tray, just be sure the base is big enough with sides slightly over the rim of the muffin hole indentation and the smaller circle for the top will fit onto it nicely.
Once your sure of your pastry sizes, cut an even number of bases and lids out of the pastry sheet
Line each muffin hole with a pastry base, spoon some of the cooled mixture into each one, almost but not quite to the top.
Top with a pastry lid and go around the edge gently with a fork, pressing the sides together softly.
Brush each pie top very lightly with the milk
Reduce the heat to a medium oven or approximately 180'c and bake until the tops are nice and golden brown, approximately 10-15minutes depending on the oven and pastry used
Remove from tray and place on a cooling rack for 2-3 minutes
Serve with a fresh, luscious salad.

Notes
If you find the circles too fiddley just do squares, cut the pastry evenly into large squares one sheet and smaller squares another sheet and match them up.
This is also a great filling for sausage rolls. Instead of using a muffin tray, use 2 flat non-stick trays. Cut a pastry sheet in half. Around 4 cm in from one edge, place an amount of the mixture from one end to the other in a long line around 3 cm thick. Then take the edge and firmly roll the pastry over the mixture and back onto itself, creating one very long sausage roll. Chop into much smaller segments and place on a lightly sprayed or baking paper lined non-stick baking tray. Lightly brush the top of each with a little milk and sprinkle with some sesame seeds and bake in the oven until nicely browned.
These are great either as the pies or sausage rolls for entertaining, children’s lunches, and children’s parties.
You can make them up to the ready to bake stage and then freeze for an easy meal for another time.
This recipe can be used with a non-stick electric pie maker.
Turn into a giant family pie by using a large pie dish and adding a layer of mashed   potato or sweet potato over the mince mixture before adding the pastry lid.
Vary your pies by using different ingredients like: chicken mince, finely chopped green beans, chopped and cooked potato cubes, peas, corn kernels, cooked lentils, very finely chopped silverbeet/spinach, mushrooms and capsicum, mashed sweet potato, pumpkin or potato.

Toddler Tips
These are just great when made nice and small for toddler hands, and you have the added bonus of knowing exactly what is in them.
Make them extra healthy for growing toddlers and add some very finely chopped spinach, if it’s really finely chopped they won't even know it’s in there.
Serve with a toddler salad of cheese cubes, fresh snow peas, grated carrot, chopped tomato, avocado cubes and celery sticks.

In really cold weather serve nice and warm with some mashed potato, cooked pumpkin, cooked peas and sweet potato wedges for a great, hearty warming meal the kids will love!


Also stay tuned for my cookbook I am working on Healthy, Happy cookbook it has HEAPS of healthy homemade takeaway ideas and some of them are so much fun to make with kids. I have included 3 different types of burgers, fish fingers, pizza's, muffins, fruity treats all sorts!
And there are also some fantastic recipe's in my award winning book the The Pram Diet book too!


Rebecca xxx
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