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.
This is one of my favourite things to eat! YUM
ReplyDeleteOur family too! XX
DeleteThis recipe really appeals to me. I'll have to see if I can convince my husband to make it. I love all the greens you mentioned. Thanks so much for reminding me there are many other things they can be used for. Visiting from Blogger's Corner. http://475035832790540880.weebly.com/blog.html
ReplyDeleteThanks Francene - let me know if you make it XX
DeleteI love spinach! This dish sounds absolutely amazing & I'd love to try it!
ReplyDeleteThanks Sophie! Let me know how you go - its so yummy and even better, easy! XX
DeleteHey hey, you have your Cheddar shipped over from Kenilworth in Warwickshire ? ;) This looks absolutely delicious and i'll be serving it up next week for Caro and I for supper.
ReplyDeleteBek,
ReplyDeleteThis recipe is right up my alley. I even have Silverbeet (we call is Swiss Chard) (Bright Lights variety!) in the garden, and kale, too. I agree with you that having a steady supply of kale and chard in the garden is quite an asset. Love your blog, Bek!
My husband makes something like this using - well, for us "silverbeet" is Swiss Chard, too. But what is "ironbark spinach"? I love these differences in terminology between your country and ours. If everything was the same, how much fun would it be?
ReplyDeleteThis looks wonderful and I must make it to serve my wife. Wondering if I dip them into tomato sauce before placing them into the baking dish would help coat them better. I'll try one and see if it works. I will have a problem with the cheese, it is so hard to find a good cheddar here in Mexico.
ReplyDeletereplica bags reddit visit here z6t70n5e00 replica bags wholesale replica evening bags have a peek at this website b1y17f6d36 replica bags wholesale in divisoria navigate to these guys v2w83z4m62 designer replica luggage replica bags manila
ReplyDelete