Kamis, 24 Maret 2011

Storage Tips for Bulk Buying - Guest Post


Guest Post by Bel 

This is Part 2 of Bulk Food Buying & Co-ops. Not everyone has a great, big freezer like I do, so my friend Bel has kindly offered to explain how she stores her bulk food orders without a big freezer...

I’m lucky enough to be involved in the same co-ops as Jo.  We often get up to 150kg of food delivered at once (due to ordering for the following 6 months).  For me, this is sometimes an overwhelming amount to put away.  I have a little kitchen with a small pantry cupboard, and I use a few shelves of the linen cupboard for some food storage too.  I don’t have a large chest freezer like Jo’s, so I can’t just drop the bags into the freezer when they arrive.

I normally take a few days to put everything away, and this is the process…

I decant the grains, legumes and flours into 10L buckets with lids.  The buckets came from a yoghurt shop, I believe, and were used only once before being discarded.  They are plain white, strong and food-grade with well-sealing lids.  I buy them through our local LETS group for less than half the price of similar buckets at the hardware store in town.

Some bulk purchases I decant into unused plastic bottles which I get from a local factory when they are labelled or dated wrong and need to be discarded.  They’re perfectly clean and useable, just not right to go onto the supermarket shelves.  I really like to reuse containers when I can, rather than buying new ones.  These bottles stack really well in the freezer space I do have, and when I need some grain for the kitchen, I need only grab out one bottle at a time (rather than a hefty bucket or sack full!)

Other products I decant into clean glass jars.  Friends have saved me some fantastic 2L olive jars with screw-on metal lids, and also very large coffee jars.  These are great for the pantry as it’s easy to see what’s in them, and they don’t taint the contents with any plastic smell or flavour as some expensive brand-name canisters of mine have in the past in our hot climate.  I soak the jars in a bucket in the laundry for 2 days or so, then the labels just slip right off.  A good scrub in hot soapy water, and they are dried and ready to be reused.

I label the buckets with some masking tape and a marking pen – naming the contents and the date packed.  I write directly onto the bottles (as I only use them once) and I make labels for the jars using my Dymo label maker. I share my kitchen with at least 3 other family members every day, so it’s important that everything is accessible and easy to identify.

Products I use a lot of are simply kept in the buckets and accessed by the cupful or more as I need them (the buckets are in the laundry, a few steps from the Thermomix.  I mean kitchen!)  These have never had weevils or had mould, so the buckets must have a good seal.  Other products spend at least a few days in the freezer, and are then packed onto shelves (or on top of the freezer – the door is on the front) in their very airtight containers.  Freezing them soon after they arrive kills weevil eggs and prevents them from hatching.  Weevil eggs can be inside the grain kernel when it is still on the stalk, in the paddock!

When I first started bulk buying, I didn’t have buckets or jars or containers and so I used large plastic ziplock bags.  Unfortunately, bugs can chew through plastic, and it can tear, and it’s hard to shuffle all the same-looking bags around a very full freezer.  It was okay in the beginning, but I’m glad I now have more solid storage solutions for our bulk order.  I no longer have a film of flour with bits of lentil and buckwheat across the bottom of my freezer from accidental spills!

My latest order cost me almost $800 and a few hours of my time, but it’s really worth it because I don’t have to pay inflated prices at the health store for quality organic ingredients.  I always have plenty on hand, which suits my shopping habits as we are a 70km round trip from the health store and major supermarket.  I encourage others to look into creating a co-op using the helpful hints posted by Jo.

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Thanks for those great tips, Bel! 

If anyone wants to have a chat or ask questions about co-ops and storing bulk foods, or if you have any hints of your own to share, come on over to my Quirky Cooking Facebook page - we have some great discussions there! And if you're part of a co-op that doesn't mind some more members joining you, let us know so we can spread the word. Thanks!

Jumat, 18 Maret 2011

Bulk Food Buying & Co-ops


Buying food in bulk saves me a lot of money!
 
Buying basic ingredients in bulk, and using the Thermomix to cook from these basic ingredients instead of from packets and jars and tins, saves me so much money that we can afford to eat mostly organic. If you're thinking, "Well, I can't afford to buy organic," you might be surprised - I usually find I pay less for my bulk organic produce than I would if I bought non-organic from the grocery store! (Note: I don't always buy everything organic - if I can't get organic, I at least try to buy local, preferably insecticide free. If I can’t afford the organic produce, I focus on avoiding the ones that are worst affected by pesticides – see this list.
 
I first became a part of a bulk food co-op about twelve years ago, when I became interested in using alternate grains and reducing wheat in my diet. I had bought a second hand stone grinder, and a kind lady gave me her own bread recipe using a mixture of stoneground flours. Back then I had no Thermomix to make bread making easier - I'd grind up the grains in my very noisy, messy grinder, then mix and knead the dough by hand - a big, messy job, and looking back I don't know how I did it all with three small children and a baby wanting my attention! I started to learn about spelt and kamut and buckwheat and many more grains, and the same lady introduced me to a co-op she was a part of so I could buy them cheaply. I was so excited when I made my first bulk order - I think I must have ordered nearly everything there was to order, and ended up with way too much! I didn't have a freezer big enough to store it all, so I stored most of it in airtight plastic containers... but a lot of it ended up all 'weevily', so maybe the containers weren't too airtight! So now it's twelve years down the track and I still get excited when I get my bulk order - it's like Christmas has come, with lots of packages and boxes full of lovely things.
 
If you're new to the concept of a bulk food co-op, here's a definition in a nutshell:
 
A co-op is a group of people who voluntarily work together to provide quality goods and services at the lowest possible cost to the group, rather than buying goods and services from businesses whose aim is to sell at the highest possible price that the consumer is willing to pay!
 
I've got nothing against businesses making a profit - they wouldn't have a business if they didn't - but if I can get it cheaper somewhere else, I will! That's the beauty of free enterprise :) 
 
I’m a firm believer that you can eat healthy on a budget. If you don’t have access to a co-op, you could either start one, or you could buy bulk online or from your local health food shop. It always helps to get a few friends to do an order with you – ask businesses for a bulk price even if it’s not advertised, and see what they can do for you.
 
Here are a list of online suppliers that will mail Australia wide, so just compare prices of what you’re looking for and see who suits you best.
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
Green Caravan (a co-op and online store)
 
 
Bulk Food Co-ops
 
I buy through three different local co-ops – one co-op buys direct from Demeter Farm Mill (Honest to Goodness is their online store) and Fitness Products - organic grains, seeds, flours, oils, pasta, dried fruits, and all the other basics. One buys from Trumps - nuts, dried fruit, seeds and some flours. And one is a local CSA, The Realfood Network, for fresh, local, mostly organic fruit and vegetables. I also buy some fruit and veges from the local shops or markets.
 
I also buy meat in bulk whenever I can. We have a wonderful local butcher shop where the meat is grass fed and practically organic (not certified), and they also sell organic chickens. Sometimes I get meat in bulk from friends who’ve had a beast butchered. I also buy fish in bulk for about $10/kg (eg. Barramundi & King Salmon) from local fishermen. (For some great ideas on saving money by buying your meat in bulk, see this article by Rhonda at Down to Earth: Saving Money on Meat - Buying in Bulk.)

For a list of bulk food co-ops, community food co-op shops, and places to buy bulk, see my Quirky Cooking Facebook Page- and feel free to add more links in the comments, which I will add to the list.


Pantry Staples
 
Two of the questions I've been asked a lot are 'what do you order', and 'what do you like to always have on hand in your pantry or freezer?' So here's a list of the kinds of things I order, and always try to keep stocked up on. (I’m not coeliac, but I do find my body prefers a very low gluten, low grain diet, so I use some grains, but mostly seeds, nuts and non-grain flours.)
 
Grains & Flours:
 
- Spelt grain, unbleached plain spelt flour, buckwheat grain, millet, quinoa, oats, quinoa flakes, brown rice, basmati rice, arrowroot flour, potato starch, tapioca starch/tapioca, chickpeas (for making flour), sorghum flour, cornstarch (now & then), coconut flour (or I make my own)
 
Sweeteners:
 
- Rapadura, coconut sugar, coconut nectar, raw honey, pure maple syrup, green stevia powder, rice malt syrup, xylitol & yacon syrup (now & then)
 
Dried Fruit:
 
- Dates (dried & raw), sultanas, apricots (now & then), shredded coconut  
(I have a dehydrator and can dry my own in-season fruits, especially bananas & mangoes, but I do buy some)
 
Nuts & Seeds:
 
- Almonds, cashews, macadamia nuts, hazelnuts, brazil nuts, pecans, walnuts, sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, pepitas, linseeds, chia seeds, pine nuts & pistachios (now & then) - (I buy all my nuts and seeds raw, although I often buy blanched almonds as well for dairy free sour cream or milks)
 
Legumes:
 
- Chickpeas, lentils (red & green), lima beans, black-eyed peas, kidney beans, turtle beans - (I also buy other beans in small amounts from the grocery store as I need them, sometimes tinned, sometimes dry)
 
Oils:
 
- Extra virgin olive oil, macadamia oil, grapeseed oil, coconut oil, sesame oil (all organic cold pressed if possible), and ghee (sometimes make my own)
 
Other:
 
- Raw cacao powder, raw cacao nibs, additive free baking powder, shoyu or tamari sauce, coarse celtic sea salt, himalayan salt, coconut cream, raw cacao butter (for making chocolate)
 
I only have a very small kitchen, and a small pantry cupboard. I store my grains, flours, nuts, seeds, and dried fruit in my large chest freezer. This keeps them fresh and stops them getting mouldy or weevily... We live in the wet tropics, so you really can't leave grains and flours just sitting in the cupboard for long periods of time - they'll turn green and cobwebby!

If you don't have a large freezer and can't store your bulk foods this way, check out some other storage ideas that my friend Bel explains here: Storage Tips for Bulk Buying - Guest Post.



 
 
Starting a Co-op in your area:
 
 A lot of people would love to order through a local co-op, but can't find one in their area. Well, I always say, if you can't find one, start one!

 - Get the word out to friends, family, co-workers, and fellow 'Thermomixers' that you're interested in starting a co-op. Try and get a good sized group together, but even five or ten people are enough to start with - our co-op started off small and now has about 100 people in it.

- Contact the large suppliers (see list above) and ask how you would go about ordering through them, what the freight charges are, etc. The bigger the order, the less freight you'll have to pay - which is why we only order 3 or 4 times a year.

- You will need someone who's willing to be in charge of the co-op, collate the orders, get the order to the suppliers, send out emails, get payments in, organize dividing up the order, etc. You'll also need a large covered garage or verandah or room where you can divide the shipment into each person's orders. The person doing the organizing should charge a small fee for his/her time - for example, a 3% surcharge on each order as a 'membership fee'. This covers stationery and materials, computer maintenance, small discrepancies in orders that aren't worth chasing up, and the time spent handling finances. A small discount can be given to those who help divide up the order, such as $10 off their bill.

- It's easiest if everyone orders in 1kg, 5kg or 12.5kg lots (or whatever size bags the produce comes in) - it makes dividing up the shipment a lot quicker! We used to order big 25kg bags of everything, then spend most of a day weighing out everyone's orders into bags, and trying to work out costs, and it was a real headache. Now we sort the bags/boxes into piles of what it is (spelt grain, Rapadura, etc) and those helping go through each persons' list and puts their bags/boxes into a pile, someone else checks it, and it's done! Much easier. No weighing and dividing and bagging things up. But if people want to divide a bag with friends, they can always get one person to order the whole bag, then take it home and weigh it out there, and sort out payment amongst themselves.

- We have sub-groups in our co-op, divided by suburbs/towns, with up to 10 people in each group. The person in charge of each group collates the groups' orders and sends them in to the organizer of the co-op. The organizer collates all the orders into one big order and sends it off. Once the shipment arrives, everyone's invoices are emailed to them and they pay the organizer by direct deposit. Payments must be made within a couple of days. Once all payments are received, the organizer pays the supplier. (We have a computer program that was made specifically for our co-op, and that's been a big help in organizing things.)

- We divide up the shipment as soon as possible after it arrives. Everyone who can comes to help with dividing up and delivering the orders - it's quite a social activity! Then we all go home loaded up with goodies :) So much fun!

 
This might sound like a lot of work, but if it's well organized it will run smoothly, and it's really worth the trouble. If you have any questions that I haven't covered, let me know and I'll try and help. I think food co-ops are a great way to go for those of us who want to go back to basic ingredients, buy organic foods, and save money!

Minggu, 13 Maret 2011

Peaches 'n' Honey Fruity Dream



Want a healthy, instant ice-cream? We call this one 'Peachy Dream'. It's so creamy and delicious - you'd swear it was made out of peaches and cream, but there's no dairy in it at all, it's RAW, and it only has three healthy ingredients... fresh peaches, honey and egg whites! Make sure your peaches are ripe and juicy before you freeze them, and obviously the better the peaches, the better the ice cream :) Enjoy!

1. Peel, chop and freeze a bunch of fresh, ripe peaches. (Well, you don't really have to peel them - it's up to you.) You'll need 600g of chopped peaches for this recipe. (Or you can half it and use just 300g.)

2. Chop up the frozen peaches quickly, so they don't thaw out. Little pieces are best, less than an inch, so that you can grind them up all together.

3. Weigh frozen peaches into Thermomix and grind up on speed 9 for about 20 seconds, using the spatula, until they turn into a thick, frozen paste. Scrape down sides and mix again if necessary.
- 600g frozen peaches

4. Add honey and egg whites and mix in for 5 seconds on speed 6, just to soften the frozen fruit paste:
- 60g raw honey
- 2 fresh egg whites

5. Push the butterfly down onto the blades and whip on speed 4 for 3 - 4 minutes, until the bowl is full to the top. (It fluffs right up to the lid if you whip it for this long.)




6. Serve straight away! And you can freeze any leftovers, it won't freeze hard. Use within a week, or the 'fluffiness' goes away and it becomes a bit icy.

Variation: you can use any frozen fruit for this recipe - mangoes are especially nice, or nectarines! See also Berry Fruity Dream for a berry version, or Dreamy Dragonberry Delight for a bright pink one!

Kamis, 10 Maret 2011

Flourless Chocolate Brownie Cookies



Need a chocolate fix? Well hold onto your tastebuds, these chocolate pecan cookies will knock your socks off!! 

I got the idea for these cookies from a recipe for 'brownie cookies' that used wheat flour, but I decided to try ground pecans instead. I'm always looking for ways to make gluten free (or even grain free), dairy free treats that are even better than their original wheat and dairy counterparts... I love pecans and chocolate together, and I was hoping the pecans would give these a chewy 'brownie' texture. They did!  I also changed the sugar to Rapadura, which gives them a richer flavour, and is of course better for you than refined sugar.




I promised to post this recipe ages ago, but I needed some photos, so today my daughter Cassia helped me make these again. (She loves to use the Thermomix, and is always quite happy to pose for photos.) I also invited my Quirky Cooking Facebook friends to join in the baking fun! A few of us baked 'together' via the internet, exchanging hints and tips as we cooked. (Check out some of their tips and variations below the recipe.) We'll have to do some cooking together again via Facebook - it was a lot of fun!

So here's the recipe - please let me know how you like it in the comments below. Recipe makes about 40 cookies.

1. Chop for 8 seconds on speed 6:
- 220g dairy free dark chocolate, broken in pieces (I use Lindt 70% cocoa - it's dairy free; or you could make your own!)

2. Melt chocolate at 50 degrees for 3 minutes on speed 1.

3. Add and mix for 20 seconds, speed 8:
- 150g pecans
- 3 eggs
- 1 tsp dry, instant coffee (or raw cacao powder)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 120g Rapadura
- 1/4 tsp sea salt
- 1/4 tsp bicarb soda (opt.)


The mixture will be thick and sticky, not quite as thick as usual cookie dough. Try not to eat all the raw mixture - I know, it's hard!


The raw mixture is soooo yummy!

4. Drop by heaped teaspoonfuls onto lined baking trays and bake at 160 degrees C for about 11-15 minutes, until cookies have risen and cracked slightly. You don't want to overcook them, as they are supposed to be slightly 'gooey' in the centre - just barely baked through! Leave on trays for 5 mins, then remove to cooling rack. They will sink down as they cool and become flatter and chewy. 


If you can manage to keep everyone from scoffing them all straight away, store them in an airtight container in the fridge - they taste delicious cold!

P.S. I think next time I'd better double or triple this recipe!

Tips and Variations:

Phiazy used a mixture of almonds and hazelnuts instead of the pecans - her cookies were a little firmer, and puffed up a little more. She also used a mixture of dark and milk chocolate, and sugar instead of Rapadura (because she didn't have any). Actually, she forgot the sugar in the first batch, but she said they were still yummy (since she didn't use 70% cocoa chocolate, so they were pretty sweet already) - they were just a little flatter. So if you don't use dark, 70% cocoa chocolate, make sure you cut down on the sugar!

Raelene made these the old-fashioned way - she doesn't have a Thermomix (yet!)... She chopped the chocolate, melted it in a double-boiler, got water in it and had to start again, ran out of chocolate and had to go to the shop again, used 100g pecans plus 50g almond meal (but found she needed more almond meal because the mixture was too thin), and used raw sugar because she'd run out of Rapadura - but they still worked! She decided next time she'd use Rapadura plus add some raw cacao powder to make them richer and more chocolatey. Despite her setbacks, Raelene decided these were definitely worth making, and even worth the extra trip to the shop!!

Jessica made these using macadamia nuts instead of pecans - yummo!!

Sabtu, 05 Maret 2011

Does the Thermomix Cook Enough for Large Families?



A lot of people with big families think the Thermomix would be no good for them because 'it just wouldn't make enough for us.'  After having a Thermomix for over 6 1/2 years, and cooking for our family of six (plus many extra kids and visitors), and also cooking at youth camps and other functions, I must say I think EVERY big family needs a Thermomix!! It just makes food preparation so much quicker and easier, no matter how many you're cooking for, and you really can pump out a lot of food, quickly, with a Thermomix in your kitchen! (Why do you think chefs love the Thermomix so much?!)



Cooking for family and friends is so much easier with the Thermomix!

To show you how the Thermomix can make life easier for large families, here's a letter and some photos from some good friends of mine with a very large family, who just received their new Thermomix two days ago. I've been getting lots of excited text messages from them telling me what they're making, and I just had to share their excitement with you all! Giselle and Troy have nine children (including a couple with food allergies) and a baby on the way, (due at any minute!), plus a constant flow of visitors coming and going... You'll be amazed when you see the amount of food Troy's been making in his first two days - obviously they're totally addicted!!



"Chef Remmi" (Troy) cooking up a storm!

Giselle says: 
"Day Number One: 'Chef Remmi' (Dear Hubby Troy) made for his first dish a pineapple-lime-banana-coconut sorbet! It made a few funny noises but I think he's getting the hang of it now. He is certainly in his element with his new little baby... He also made 2 litres of rice-almond milk, Nutella, raw cacao date & almond balls, tzatziki dip, gluten free pizza bases (plain), berry sorbet, nacho sauce, and beetroot saladHe went to bed pretty tired as you can imagine.
Day Number Two: Today was a busy day (as usual) at the Dunstan household. Only one day to go 'til baby no.10 is due! Counting the visitors, there were 7 adults and 21 kids here for lunch (almost 22 kids mind you with the baby due any minute)... So just as well for the Thermomix - we were able to cook up a quick storm!


'Chef Remmi' made us gluten free pizza bases with toppings, beetroot salad, coleslawbread rolls, vanilla yoghurt berry sorbet, and flourless nut cake for lunch, as well as a couple more batches of rice-almond milk. Then this afternoon he made a red Thai curry paste, then a red Thai prawn curry for dinner. We 'only' had 4 adults and 14 kids here for dinner (see photo above). Troy made two batches of the curry (took 20 minutes per batch), keeping them warm in the Thermoservers, plus he made rice on the stove. (We are thankful to have more than one Thermoserver - thanks to February's great deal of two food warmers with the Thermomix!!) The curry was as good as the one we get at our favourite restaurant, Hans Cafe - the flavour was awesome! Now we're all sitting down with a nice, cup of cashew, honey and coconut milk, made in the Thermomix - of course! Oh, and some creme patisserie, and another batch of rice-almond milk is going in...


Red Thai Prawn Curry, adapted from a recipe in the Everyday Cookbook

I think with his zeal and passion, Troy had better become a Thermomix demonstrator and start making some money out of it at the same time!"

I agree, Giselle - sounds like a Thermomix consultant in the making!! :D

So there you are - if you have a large family, think of all the things you could be cooking with your Thermomix to keep all those hungry tummies full and happy :) HOORAY for Thermomix - what did we ever do without you??!!


UPDATE!! The new baby has arrived - It's a GIRL! The score is now 5 all! (5 girls, 5 boys)... And 'Chef Remmie' has become a Thermomix consultant! Woo hoo!!


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For more ideas of what you can use the Thermomix for when catering for large groups, check out my post about cooking for a youth camp! (Scroll down to the bottom of the page for a list of things I use Thermy for when cooking for large groups.)  Also, Madame Thermomix has posted some more great ideas for cooking for large groups of people with the Thermomix on her blog, 'Why is There Air'.

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P.S. If you'd like to see a Thermomix cooking demonstration in the comfort of your own home, please let me know and I can help you find a consultant in your area. :)



Selasa, 01 Maret 2011

Gluten Free Focaccia


I thought I would play around with a gluten free recipe for focaccia tonight, and I was really happy with the outcome. I used my gluten free pizza base recipe, just changing a couple of things. Instead of arrowroot flour, I decided to use potato starch, since most arrowroot flour contains preservatives and I really like to stay away from them if at all possible. And I changed the amounts of some of the other ingredients and added a little Rapadura.

Okay, so this might not look a lot like the Focaccia you're used to, but it really does taste good! It has a yeasty, pizza dough flavour, but it's light and fluffy inside with a crispy crust underneath... I'm thinking it would be good as a pan pizza base too (or pizza pie), if you pre-cooked it a little before adding the toppings.

Usually I would top the focaccia with kalamata olives, rosemary, garlic, sea salt and a good drizzle of EVOO, but this time I left it plain, because I wanted to be able to have it with soup for dinner, as well as toasted for breakfast with pure maple syrup drizzled over! Yum :) This makes a very large focaccia, and it really tastes best while it's hot, so if you only have a small family you may want to halve it (and cook it in a smaller, square baking dish), unless you want leftovers to toast for breakfast. 

 
Preheat oven to 210 degrees C (or 200 degrees if you have a fan forced oven).

1. Mix seeds with water in a cup, and leave to soak for a few minutes:
- 2 Tblspns chia seeds
- 4 Tblspns warm water

2. Grind in Thermomix on speed 9 for 1 minute, or until finely ground:
(Tip: I put a piece of kitchen paper towel under the MC to stop the grains from spitting out onto the lid)
- 100g basmati rice, raw
- 150g brown rice, raw

3. Add and grind for another minute, or until finely ground:
- 60g millet, raw
- 80g buckwheat (or dry, uncooked chickpeas)

4. Add and mix on speed 6 for 10 seconds:
- 160g potato starch
- 2 tsp dry yeast
(or 1 sachet)
- 2 tsp sea salt
- 2 tsp Rapadura

5. Add wet ingredients and mix on speed 5-6 for 15 seconds, using spatula to help it along if needed:
- 380g warm water
- 1 Tbspn apple cider vinegar
- 60g extra virgin olive oil
- soaked chia seeds
The batter should be the consistency of a cake batter - if it's too thick you'll end up with too dry a bread. Adjust consistency if needed.

6. Prepare a large rectangular baking dish by pouring in a thin layer of extra virgin olive oil, and swirling it around so it coats the bottom and sides of the dish. Pour batter into dish. The oil should come up the sides and even over the edges a little - this will make a lovely crispy crust.

7. Add toppings if you like (olives, herbs, garlic, sea salt) and drizzle with some extra virgin olive oil. Let the bread rise for 20 - 30 minutes, then bake in hot oven for 25 - 30 minutes, or until golden, with browned, crispy edges.