

Stir in the strained tomatoes + water and cook for 3-4 minutes. Halve the peppers lengthways, remove the seeds and place on a baking tray.ģ) Heat the olive oil in a frying pan over medium heat and cook the onion, garlic and chilli for about 5 minutes, until fragrant and softened.Ĥ) Add the celery and fry for another 2-3 minutes. Parsley or flat-leaf parsley, finely choppedġ) Cook the lentils in vegetable stock for about 15 minutes and drain well.Ģ) Preheat the oven to 200° C (400 ° F). Stir frequently to prevent the buckwheat from sticking.ħ) After about 20 minutes when the buckwheat is al dente, add the remaining stock, feta cheese and the diced beets and stir vigorously until the risotto absorbs the juices of the beets and turns a bright shade of pink.Ĩ) Add salt if needed and finish off with freshly ground pepper.ĩ) Serve immediately with a drizzle of olive oil, baby chard leaves and chopped parsley.ġ/2 red chilli, deseeded and finely choppedġ celery stalk (including green tops if you like), diced Wait until each addition is almost completely absorbed before adding the next ½ cup, reserving about ¼ cup of stock to add at the end if needed. Add onions and garlic and sauté for about 5 minutes, stirring often, until the onions are soft.Ĥ) Add the buckwheat and stir to coat the grains evenly with oil for about 1 minute.ĥ) Add lemon juice (or wine) and stir until all of the liquid is absorbed into the buckwheat.Ħ) Begin adding the hot stock, ½ cup at a time, stirring frequently. Drain in a colander.ģ) Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat.
#VALENTINA STUDIO VS DATUM FREE SKIN#
Remove from the heat, rinse with cold water and when the beets are cool you can peel off the skin using a knife.Ģ) Rinse the buckwheat first under hot water, then cold. Bring to a boil and cook until ‘al dente’ – when you can easily insert a knife in the middle they are ready. Sea salt to taste (be careful though, the stock and the feta cheese was enough for me)įreshly ground black pepper, olive oil, baby chard leaves and chopped parsley to serveġ) To cook the beets: Scrub well and add them to a pot with lightly salted water, just enough to cover the beets.

Juice from 1 lemon (or a splash of white wine) So, let’s get cooking (scroll down for recipes)! And if you still need more inspiration to kick-start your 2015 I suggest you head over to Jamie Oliver at Youtube to check out his ’10 meals to kick-start a healthier 2015′ – that’s brilliant stuff over there! And a new year is always a good time to start new habits, like eating more healthy food and think of the future and your health, right? And eating more veg and less meat will certainly benefit not only You, but the Planet as well. And I believe in creating new habits, little by little. I’m not a big fan of New Year’s resolutions. I used the green tops of the celery stalks instead of herbs in the stuffing, but if you have parsley or flat-leaf parsley you could use that too. The stuffed peppers were simply inspired by what I had in the fridge and the pantry – which is how food happen more or less every day around here. That book by the way – you really should buy it if you’re looking for amazing, seasonal food-inspiration. But this time I made it with buckwheat instead of rice (to add more protein) and some additional small alterations. The buckwheat ‘risotto’ is inspired by a recipe in Kimberley Hasselbrink’s brilliant book Vibrant Food. Most of my meals are completely vegetarian, and I’m always trying to find new and interesting ways to cook my veg.Īnd if you’re looking for that too, perhaps these two recipes will help you in the right direction? Both are really simple to make, or to alter according to whatever ingredients you like, or have to hand. And meat, fish or poultry is almost always just a tiny add-on to my meals. I am not a vegetarian, but I’ve always found veggies more intriguing than meat. And I’ve come up with two simple and healthy vegetarian meals to start off the new year.

So after several hotel nights and restaurant meals I came back home filled with inspiration to cook in my own kitchen again. We had a lovely week with lots of skiing, fresh air and last, but not least – good food of course.Īnd as always when I’m away from home and work (the two are hopelessly intertwined in my life – until I find the right studio place, that is…) I get inspired.Īs so much in my life evolves around food, it is such a treat for me to leave the kitchen and all the dishes and just eat what somebody else cooked for a few days. I certainly did.Ī couple of days after Christmas me and my family left Sweden for a week of skiing in Austria, and I can’t think of a better way to end – or to begin – a year.

I hope you all had a great start to the new year.
