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My special vegan kofte

A twist on a Persian classic
“Sizzling hot vegan kofte, served with a delicious cashew and peanut sauce and a refreshing minty yoghurt dip ”
Serves 4
Cooks In1 hour
DifficultySuper easy
Vegetables, Dinner Party, Vegan, Vegetarian

Nutrition per serving
Calories 443 22%
Fat 26.1g 37%
Saturates 6.8g 34%
Protein 19g 42%
Carbs 34.7g 13%
Sugars 8.8g 10%
Salt 1.3g 22%
Fibre 8.1g
Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
1 teaspoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger
2 cloves of garlic
olive oil
2 courgettes
fine sea salt
1 large bunch of fresh coriander
1 x 400 g tin of chickpeas, drained
40 g fine breadcrumbs
freshly ground black pepper

For the minty yoghurt dip:
½ a cucumber
3 sprigs of fresh mint
4 tablespoons organic soya yoghurt
1 lemon

For the nutty sauce:
1 small onion
1 clove of garlic
100 g cashew nuts
140 ml light coconut milk
2 tablespoons smooth peanut butter


Method
Toast the coriander and cumin seeds in a small frying pan over a medium heat for 2 to 3 minutes, then tip into a pestle and mortar and bash to a coarse powder.
Peel and finely chop the ginger and garlic, then add to the frying pan over a medium heat with a splash of oil. Fry for 2 to 3 minutes, or until golden, then place into a food processor with the toasted spices.
Coarsely grate the courgettes, place into a colander in the sink, then sprinkle with a good pinch of fine sea salt. Squeeze the mixture together with your hands to get rid of the excess moisture, then add to the processor. Pick the coriander leaves and set aside, then add half the coriander stalks to the processor with the chickpeas, breadcrumbs and a pinch of salt and pepper. Pulse until combined, but not smooth – you want to retain a bit of texture.
Transfer to a clean work surface then, with wet hands, divide and shape the mixture into eight little fat fingers. Place onto a tray, then pop in the fridge to chill for around 20 minutes. 
Meanwhile, make the minty yoghurt dip. Halve the cucumber lengthways, scoop out and discard the watery seeds, then roughly chop. Pick and finely slice the mint leaves, then place into a bowl with the cucumber, yoghurt and a squeeze of lemon juice. Mix well.
To make the nutty sauce, peel and finely slice the onion and garlic, then finely slice the remaining coriander stalks. Place into a large frying pan over a medium heat with a splash of oil, then cook for a few minutes, or until golden. Add the cashew nuts and toast for a further 2 to 3 minutes, then transfer to a food processor. Add the coconut milk and peanut butter, then blitz until thick and smooth.
Return the large frying pan to a medium heat with a splash of oil. Once hot, add the kofte and cook for around 2 minutes, or until golden and piping hot through, turning regularly. Divide the kofte between your plates, tear over the coriander leaves, then serve with the nutty sauce and minty yoghurt dip and lemon wedges for squeezing. Delicious with pitta breads or fluffy rice.

Lincolnshire Poacher pie

Filled with cheesy minted courgettes
“This amazing vegetarian pie with rich, crumbly pastry and served with sweet salt-baked shallots is on a whole other level. ”
Serves 12
Cooks In 2H 15M plus cooling time
Difficulty Super easy
Vegetables, Dinner Party, Easter treats, Mother's day

Nutrition per serving
Calories 462 23%
Fat 29.2g 42%
Saturates 16.8g 84%
Protein 13.6g 30%
Carbs 33.4g 13%
Sugars 4.5g 5%

Of an adult's reference intake

Ingredients
300 g Lincolnshire Poacher cheese
a small bunch of  fresh mint, leaves picked
250 g rock salt
24 shallots
a few sprigs of  fresh thyme

For the pastry:
500 g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
250 g cold unsalted butter, cubed
sea salt
white pepper
1 large free-range egg, beaten
For the filling:
olive oil
a bunch of fresh thyme
1 whole nutmeg , for grating
1 lemon
1.5 kg courgettes, a mixture of yellow and green if you can get them, finely sliced
sea salt
freshly ground pepper


Method
You won’t believe how tasty the courgettes get with this method of cooking – it really does take them to another level. You’ve got to find some Lincolnshire Poacher, it’s an amazing cheese made by the very talented Jones brothers, Simon and Tim (see www.lincolnshirepoachercheese.com). The pastry is rich and amazing, so embrace the fact that it’s really crumbly and will definitely break as you’re making it. I’m serving this with a lemony salad and sweet salt-baked shallots, which will get caramelized and gorgeous and pick up the seasoning from the bed of salt. This method is also a great one for beetroots, so if you like this, try that.
Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Blitz the flour and butter in a food processor with a pinch of salt and a few good pinches of pepper until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs. Tip on to a work surface, make a well in the centre and add 100ml of cold water. Gently mix until it starts to come together, then – most importantly for a short, crumbly pastry – have the confidence to only just press, pat and almost hug it together to form a rough scruffy ball. Please don’t be tempted to knead the dough or it won’t be short and crumbly. Pop it into a floured bowl, cover with clingfilm and put into the fridge to chill while you make the filling.
Put a drizzle of olive oil into a large pan on a medium heat and pick in the leaves from half the bunch of thyme. Add a few gratings of nutmeg, the zest of half the lemon, the sliced courgettes and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Cook gently (the courgettes will cook down and become easier to handle), stirring occasionally, for around 25 minutes. Then turn the heat down to low and cook for another 20 minutes, so the courgette mixture becomes dense and the flavours really intensify and sweeten. Allow to cool a little, finely chop and crumble in the cheese, then chop and add the mint leaves. Set aside.
Halve the pastry and roll each half into a circle just under 1cm thick and slightly larger than the pie dish you’ve chosen (roughly 23cm diameter x 4cm deep). Don’t worry if the pastry breaks up – that’s normal. Just patch it. Roll one of the circles around the rolling pin and carefully unroll it over the pie dish. Gently press the pastry into the corners and sides of the dish, then spoon and spread all your courgette mixture into the dish. Carefully unroll the pastry lid over the top, then flour your thumb and forefinger and gently pinch and crimp the edges together. Trim off any excess pastry and brush the top of the pie with the beaten egg.
Now simply throw the rock salt into a roasting tray with the shallots, still with their skins on, and a few thyme tips. Put the pie right at the bottom of the oven, with the tray of shallots above. Cook for 1 hour, or until the pie is golden, then allow to cool and serve with those soft roasted shallots.
PS: All the leftover salt from baking the shallots can be bashed up and reused.

Power Up Your Summer Salads

By Mehmet C. Oz, MD, and Michael F. Roizen, MD

"Last time you had a salad for your main meal, did you leave the table hungrier than a wolf in a cabbage patch? Sure, a big bowl of greens is good for you, but you'll be raiding the refrigerator an hour later if it doesn't have more going for it than that. Yet if it does, a salad can be seriously satisfying, even for you carnivores out there.
Sure, salads keep you looking good in your Speedo or tankini and give your brain and body a big-time nutrition bump: You're significantly more likely to get your fill of vitamins if you're a salad hound, according to a joint UCLA/Louisiana State University study (we don't have a clue how those two got together). What's more, feasting on veggies (plus some lean protein) helps you fend off cancer, osteoporosis, stroke, and ordinary aging.
Before you start loading up the crisper, keep in mind that the best salads are real meals: lean protein, complex carbs, and healthy fats. The worst? They're usually restaurant salads masquerading as health food but actually oozing fat and calories. Take a Chili's Southwestern Cobb Salad: Without dressing, it has 650 calories and 32 grams of fat. With dressing? A Speedo-busting, heart-stopping 970 calories and 60 grams of fat.
For the best salads -- the kind that make your taste buds zing, your belly smile, and your cells young -- toss these ingredients into your bowl:
  • Big and little greens: We probably don't have to tell you that richly colored greens (baby spinach, arugula, romaine, watercress, radicchio) are the foundation of a great salad. They're packed with nutrients that inhibit cancer and help bones stay strong. But don't stop there. For a clean, bright flavor -- and a serious phytochemical boost -- add some fresh herbs. Go for mini powerhouses like mint (filled with cancer-busting monoterpenes), basil (packed with inflammation-fighting volatile oils), or cilantro (it goes after bad cholesterol).
  • Learn how fruits and veggies help prevent osteoporosis.
  • Powerful proteins: Protein keeps your stomach busy for a long time. It responds by telling your brain that you're full. Smart diet move. Instead of sodium-socked deli meats or full-fat cheese, aim for lean fixins like 3 ounces (about the size of a tin of Altoids) of canned salmon, skinless chicken or turkey breast, chopped egg whites, low-fat cheese, or cubed tofu. A quarter cup of walnuts or a half cup of lentils, chickpeas, or beans will also kick up your protein count.
  • Major flavor boosters: We've got no beef with the old salad standbys, like carrots, tomatoes, and cucumbers. But to really punch up the flavor, toss in asparagus, corn, black beans, zucchini, portobello mushrooms, red and purple peppers, or baked sweet potatoes. Even better, lightly roast the veggies in a little olive oil first. The deep smoky flavor is to drool for.
  • Complex carbs that aren't oil-soaked croutons: Anytime you're cooking up some brown rice, barley, or whole-wheat couscous or pasta, make extra and save it for your salads. Ditto for quinoa (it's like fluffy rice but high in both protein and fiber) or chia (a grain that's a good source of healthy omega-3s). Crave crunchy croutons? Toast and cube some rye bread.
  • Dressings that aren't fat phobic: Your salad needs some heart-friendly omega-3 (or omega-9) fats to help your body soak up fat-soluble vitamins like A, D, and K, and it needs disease-fighting carotenoids such as lycopene and beta carotene. Enter real dressings. It's hard to beat balsamic vinegar and a little olive or walnut oil. Swirl in some mustard, ginger, or herbs; if the seasonings are likely to overwhelm the olive or walnut oil, switch to canola oil -- it's less expensive. If you prefer store-bought, check labels to avoid inflammation-encouragers (most other oils, added sugars). Your goal: a dressing that's thin and slippery enough to coat your salad easily. Drizzle on about half as much as you think you need (roughly 2 tablespoons for a meal-sized salad; add extra balsamic if needed). Then, toss like crazy to coat every last lettuce bit. Dig in.


Fotografia e receita de Salada de Couscous: http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/11690/10minute-couscous-salad

Omelette aux courgettes, à la menthe et au cumin (1€/pers)

"Type de plat : Plat
Ingrédient principal : Œuf
Nombre de personnes : 4 personnes
Temps de préparation : 15 minutes
Temps de cuisson : 7 minutes
Degré de difficulté : Facile 
 

Ingrédients :

2 petites courgettes, 3 branches de menthe, 1 c. à s. de graines de cumin, 6 œufs, 25 g de beurre, 1 c. à s. d’huile d’olive, sel, poivre.

Découvrez cette recette en vidéo en cliquant ici

Étapes :

Otez les extrémités des courgettes. A l’aide d’un économe, prélevez des bandes de légume sur toute la longueur et sur tous les côtés jusqu’à arriver au cœur, plein de graines, que vous jetez. Faites cuire ces bandes à l’eau bouillante salée pendant 2 min. Egouttez-les, refroidissez-les. Prélevez les feuilles de menthe et hachez-les. Incorporez-les aux œufs, rapidement fouettés à la fourchette, en même temps que le cumin. Triez les bandes de courgette : gardez-en six ou sept, parmi les plus belles, les plus colorées, et ajoutez les autres dans les œufs. Salez, poivrez. Dans une grande poêle antiadhésive, faites chauffer le beurre et l’huile. Disposez-y les bandes de courgette réservées, puis faites couler délicatement les œufs par-dessus. Ramenez les parties cuites au fur et à mesure vers le centre puis donnez une forme ovale à votre omelette. Retournez-la pour cuire la seconde face. Servez-la avec une salade croquante, bien relevée."

Fonte e imagem:
http://www.marieclaire.fr/,omelette-aux-courgettes-a-la-menthe-et-au-cumin-1euro-pers,20173,339179.asp

Gratin végétarien de coquillettes

Gratin végétarien de coquillettes

Nombre de personnes : 4 Temps de préparation : 20 mn Temps de cuisson : 35 mn Degré de difficulté : Facile

Ingrédients :
250 g de coquillettes, 6 carottes, 1 fragment de gingembre, 1 c. à c. de coriandre en grains, 4 branches de coriandre, 3 courgettes, 2 c. à s. d'huile d'olive, 1 gousse d'ail, 1 branche de menthe, 30 cl de crème fraîche épaisse, 2 jaunes d'œufs, 100 g de gruyère râpé, noix muscade, sel, poivre.

Découvrez cette recette en vidéo en cliquant ici!
Etapes :
Pelez puis émincez les carottes. Couvrez-les d'eau, ajoutez les grains de coriandre. Laissez cuire 20 min. Egouttez-les, placez-les dans un mixeur, râpez du gingembre dessus et parsemez de feuilles de coriandre ciselées. Mixez, salez, poivrez.
Taillez les courgettes en cubes. Dans l'huile chaude, faites-les revenir rapidement. Ajoutez l'ail, écrasé au presse-ail, et la menthe ciselée. Salez, poivrez.
Chauffez la crème et faites-y fondre le gruyère. Laissez tiédir hors du feu avant d'incorporer les jaunes d'œufs.
Faites cuire les coquillettes à l'eau bouillante salée selon les indications du paquet. Egouttez-les et mélangez-les avec la crème.
Râpez de la noix muscade, vérifiez l'assaisonnement.
Dans un plat à gratin, alternez couches de coquillettes, de courgettes et de carottes. Terminez par des coquillettes. Placez sous le gril du four jusqu'à coloration."

Fonte:
http://www.marieclaire.fr/,gratin-vegetarien-de-coquillettes,20173,36241.asp

Clafoutis de courgettes et feta, cumin, menthe

out      Nombre de personnes : 4 Temps de préparation : 25 minutes Temps de cuisson : 20 minutes Degré de difficulté : Facile
Ingrédients : 
2 branches de menthe, 2 gousses d'ail, 5 courgettes, 400 g de feta, 2 c. à c. de cumin en grains, 30 cl de lait entier, 3 œufs, 4 jaunes d'œufs, sel, poivre. 
Découvrez cette recette en vidéo en cliquant ici  
Etapes :
Préchauffez le four à 180 °C. Effeuillez et hachez la menthe. Pelez et émincez l'ail.
Otez les extrémités des courgettes puis taillez-les en rondelles.
Coupez la feta en fins rectangles.
Fouettez 1 min le lait, les œufs et les jaunes d'œufs. Salez (pas trop, parce que la feta est déjà assez salée) et poivrez.
Répartissez dans 4 ramequins individuels la menthe et l'ail. Dessus, disposez les rondelles de courgette debout, en suivant le bord du plat. Toutes les deux rondelles, intercalez une lamelle de feta. Remplissez le centre de courgette et de feta.
Répartissez le cumin et la préparation de lait et d'œufs dans les 4 ramequins. Enfournez pour 20 min environ."