Senin, 30 April 2012

Chocolate Hazelnut Pudding {also known as Nutella Pudding!}


Anyone who loves chocolate and hazelnuts (or Nutella of course) will swoon at this pudding. Words cannot describe it, so I'm not even going to try. Just go make it. Seriously. You won't regret it.

And by the way - it's dairy free and gluten free, and has no junky white sugar or other 'food-like' substances, so it's practically health food! No guilt, okay? :D

[Not the greatest photo - sorry - couldn't wait to post this! Guess I'll just have to make it again tomorrow so I can take a photo by daylight! hee hee...]

Serves 6 - 8 (It's very rich!)




1. First, roast your hazelnuts. I go ahead and roast a whole tray at once, and freeze what I don't need - but just roast the recipe amount if you want to. (I buy my nuts bulk, so I have enough to roast trayfuls at a time.) The amount you need for this recipe is:
- 100g hazelnuts

Roast them for about 15 minutes at 180 degrees C, or until lightly browned. Rub the skins off (as much as possible, don't have to be too fussy) with a tea towel or with your hands. If you're lucky, you can pay one of your kids 50c to do the lot, like I did. ;)




2. Weigh the 100g of roasted hazelnuts into the Thermomix bowl, and grind them up on speed 9 for 10 seconds.

3. Add the chocolate and grind for another 10 seconds on speed 9:
- 70g dark chocolate, broken into pieces (I used 65% cocoa, dark, dairy free, sugar free chocolate - thanks to a very kind friend who sent me some amazing chocolate for a present!)

4. Add remaining ingredients and whiz it up for 20 seconds on speed 8. Scrape down bowl, and cook at 90 degrees for 7 minutes on speed 4:
- 300g coconut cream
- 300g rice-almond milk (or milk of choice)
- 2 eggs
- 50g Rapadura (or sweetener of choice)
- 20g tapioca starch (or cornflour)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- a very small pinch of Himalayan salt

Pour into little dessert dishes and enjoy either warm or cold.

Senin, 23 April 2012

Thermomix Menu Plans - 23rd April


What's cooking at your place this week? I hope your Thermomix is getting a workout! Here's some ideas to inspire you...


What about some Vegan Anzac Biscuits for Anzac Day? (spelt or gluten free)...


(Or if you're looking for a grain free version, these 'Paleo' Anzac Biscuits from Theresa Cutter look great too!)


Do you like curry? The Cashew Chicken curry in the Thermomix Indian cookbook (Fast & Easy Indian Cooking) is a good one. I change it to make it dairy free by using coconut cream instead of the dairy cream. I also add the juice of half a lemon, and some baby peas towards the end of the cooking time. (I cook it for about 20 minutes in the Thermomix - I don't bother removing to the stovetop to finish cooking.) I use ground spices (you can grind your own in the Thermomix), as my family doesn't like the 'bits' when I use whole cardamom seeds, etc. I like to serve it on Cauliflower 'rice', making this a perfect grain free (and Paleo) meal. Delicious.



If you're gluten free, you can save a tonne of money by making your own gluten free bread. And it tastes SO much better than the bought stuff, too. This is a loaf made from Cyndi O'Meara's recipe in the Thermomix 'Gluten Free Wheat Free Cooking' book. I change it a little: I use a bit more rice, add extra pumpkin and pepita seeds, and also add some chia seeds to help bind it. Excellent recipe.



Need a quick meal idea? It's so easy to whip up a quick quinoa salad in the Thermomix... The eggs 'boil' while the quinoa cooks (all in the Thermomix basket), then once it's cooked you toss it all together with your favourite salad ingredients. (Peeling the eggs first, of course!) I'll post the recipe with lots of variations soon.



Don't you just love pomegranates? They're in season in Australia until October - yahoo!! Here's my recipe for Banana & Pomegranate Custard Crumble (gluten free & dairy free options)...



Do you need help planning your menu? Menu planning saves me a lot of time and frustration. Here's How to Menu Plan, if you want some tips.



Here's my menu plan for the week (just the main meals)... Feel free to link up your menu plan too, following the directions here: Thermomix Menu Plans. It's great to share ideas.

['tmx' = made or prepared in the Thermomix]


Monday:
Beef & vege 'burgers' (tmx) (no bread), baked sweet potato & lamb's lettuce.

Tuesday:
Thermomix fried rice (tmx), except with quinoa instead of rice - quick and easy 'all in one' meal. The quinoa cooks just the same as the rice, but use 350g instead of 400g.

Wednesday:
Vietname Fish Curry with Sticky Rice (tmx) - another 'all in one' meal that we love.

Thursday:
Baked mustard chicken (using this recipe), leafy green salad, baked sweet potatoes.

Friday:
Gluten free pizzas (tmx) with lamb mince and salad toppings (tmx) (dairy free).

Saturday:
Minestrone (tmx) - requested by my 10 yr old who is cooking that night.

Sunday:
Roast beef and baked veges with a leafy green salad (gravy in tmx).


Lamb mince & salad pizza (before adding the salad!)
on the gluten free pizza base. Delish!

Have a great week, link up your menu plan below, leave a comment, and pop by my Facebook page to share what you're cooking too! You can also find me on Twitter, and check out my pins on Pinterest for food and home inspiration.

Jo xx



Selasa, 17 April 2012

Thermomix Menu Plans - 16th April


Okay, I know it's not Monday the 16th; I'm late. Sorry, blame it on a trip to the 'big city' to buy myself a new car - woo hoo! No more driving 'the brick', getting bogged at demos, sliding down driveways sideways, being late because the car won't start, having to play music full blast because the rattling drowns out the sound, or having to yell to get the kids in the back to hear me! Bliss.

I want to say thank you so much to all of you who have voted for my blog this week in the 'Best Australian Blogs' competition, for the People's Choice Award. I really appreciate it! If you haven't voted yet and would like to, click on the box in the right side bar that says 'Vote for Me Now', and follow the prompts. Thank you :)

So what's been cooking at your place this past week? We enjoyed having raw zucchini 'noodles' with the sweet and sour beef; it's so much lighter on the stomach than eating grain noodles. And it's an easy way to get kids to eat raw veges. If you want to try a completely raw pasta, here's a couple of our favourites - Raw Zucchini Pasta with Walnut and Mushroom Sacue; or Raw Pasta Sauce on zucchini 'noodles'.


Raw zucchini noodles with walnut and mushroom sauce

School holidays are over, and gone are the hoards of hungry children filling the house... now there's only four hungry children hanging around most days. These spelt cinnamon scrolls with dairy free caramel sauce were pretty popular for breakfast here on the hols - recipe coming to this blog soon! Cinnamon scrolls are an old favourite in our family, and so easy to make the night before to bake in the morning. I like to add blueberries and pecans, or apples and berries... mmmm, delicious. If you'd like to make a gluten free version, this recipe for gluten free scrolls was recommended to me, and I'm hoping to try it this week.


Spelt cinnamon scrolls with dairy free caramel sauce

Here's something else I enjoyed this week for breakfast - this amazing Raw Superfood Chia Porridge, shared by Sarah at Homemade, Healthy, Happy! Wow, it's gorgeous. I mean, anything that includes cinnamon, raw cacao nibs, raw cashews and raspberries has got to be good! I could eat it every day. You can vary the berries and nuts and make it different each time... I didn't have any goji berries, so I added sultanas, and it was great.


Raw Superfood Chia Porridge

The weather's getting cooler, autumn is well and truly settling in, even here in Far North Queensland. We get a bit more cool weather up here in the mountains than they do on the coast, so jackets are on, and soup is on the menu. Tonight we had the lovely 'Chickpea Soup with Spinach' from the 'Full Steam Ahead' cookbook, except I use an orange sweet potato in place of the turnip in mine, and add my chicken stock paste for extra flavour. So tasty. (If you have a Varoma demo, this is the soup that is demonstrated, and you can buy the cookbook once you have the demo.) We also love my Creamy Chicken and Brown Rice Soup, which seems to be a general favourite. So if the weather's getting cool enough for soup where you live, try it and let me know what you think. (The chicken stock paste recipe is included in the recipe for the chicken and brown rice soup.)


So what's on the menu in your home this week? If you don't have a menu plan and would like to know how to begin planning, read 'How to Menu Plan.' If you have a plan and it's posted on your blog or public facebook page, come and link up and share your ideas with us all! See 'Thermomix Menu Plans' for instructions.

Here's what we're having this week... 'tmx' means 'made and/or prepared in the Thermomix'.

Monday:
Out all day, so quick and easy 'Breakfast Burritos' for dinner: homemade spelt tortillas (tmx) (video how-to) filled with a mixture of scrambled eggs, homemade American-style sausage mince (tmx - slightly spicy), and grated zucchini or sauteed mushrooms (tmx). Salsa optional (tmx). We don't add cheese as we can't have dairy.


Breakfast burritos - great for a hearty breakfast or a light meal

Tuesday:
Chickpea & spinach soup (tmx); garlic lamb, steamed in Varoma (tmx) then seared in pan; steamed sweet potato slices with steamed broccoli (tmx); gravy made from the meat juices (tmx).

Wednesday:
Raw vege pasta (tmx) with turkey mince sausage patties, homemade (quick and easy!)

Thursday:
Cashew chicken (tmx Indian cookbook) with cauliflower 'rice' (tmx) and a leafy green salad.

Friday:
Cooking class today in Innisfail - for the family, fish (coated in rice flour, shallow fried in ghee and coconut oil) with raw vege sticks and baked sweet potatoes.

Saturday:
Lentil and vegetable Shepherd's pie (tmx) with creamy cauliflower mash topping (tmx), and leafy green salad.

Sunday:
Grandma's Chicken with 40 Cloves of Garlic, baked veges, coleslaw (tmx)



Chicken with 40 Cloves of Garlic


Here's one more photo which I thought was pretty cute - a candid snapshot of my kitchen on a Saturday morning... As usual, full of kids, some mine, some not!



(left to right) Miss 14 making lunch to take to the stables; her friend helping Miss 8 wash the dishes (both washing up together in a single sink!); Mr 12 cooking up scrambled eggs for the breakfast burritos; and Mr 10 entertaining everyone! Good fun. But I would love a bigger kitchen. Ha.

I hope you all have a great week, and I'd love to hear about what you're cooking! Leave a comment either here or on my Facebook page; and if you have a menu plan, link up below. Thanks :)


Senin, 09 April 2012

Thermomix Menu Plans - 9th April



Menu planning is a joy when you have access to so much fresh produce. Our meals often depend on what's in our local food box (which we get from the Realfood Network), as well as what's available in our small local supermarket and butchers. (As well as some herbs and passionfruit and things from mine and my mum's gardens. Okay, mostly mum's because I killed mine by neglect. Trying again though.) 

I love living in Far North Queensland - we are so blessed with a variety of amazing fruits and veges. This week's food box included custard apples, a pomelo, ruby red grapefruits, Shepherd avocadoes, mini local pineapples (the original type grown in this area), mushrooms, happy eggs, organic bananas, mandarins, chokos, potatoes, sweet potatoes, limes and a big, fat cucumber - all local, all organic or pesticide free. It came just in time - I'd forgotten it was a public holiday and hadn't gotten what I needed from the shops, and needed mushrooms and eggs desperately... And then comes a knock at the door and there's an angel in the form of the food box man. Ha ha! (Thanks Chris!)



My Realfood Network food box

Since it's school holidays, I had a houseful of kids today, so here's what I made for lunch: a tropical fruit platter, and mixed seafood, shallow fried. Very simple, very delicious. My youngest is a voracious seafood and fruit eater, so she was very happy pigging out on mussels and custard apples. :)


Fresh fruit for lunch - passionfruit, pomelo, custard apple, pineapple, bananas, limes for the seafood, and avocado.

You don't have to feed kids junk to keep them happy. Keep it simple, and just vary the way you present fresh fruit and veges, and you'll be amazed at how the fussiest of eaters will 'dig in!' We eat with our eyes first, and that seems to be especially important with kids. I've noticed if I just put out a basket of fruit, it hardly gets touched. But if I cut it up and arrange it on a plate, it goes in no time.



Kids digging in to fresh fruit and seafood

For those kids who only want to eat pizza and chips, try some healthier versions of pizza, using homemade spelt or gluten free or grain free bases, and topping with raw salads after cooking... And bake some sweet potato wedges in the oven with olive oil and herb salt - yum!



Wholemeal spelt pizza with avocado pizza topping, baby spinach, roasted red peppers, Kalamata olives and macadamia 'cheese'.

 
Another tip for getting kids to eat healthy food is to let them make it themselves. Teach your kids to cook! Let them experiment. Don't worry about the mess... They're not going to remember a messy kitchen when they grow up, they're going to remember the amazing things they created and how you loved them enough to let them learn to cook with you. Again, it doesn't have to be complicated - our kids love to make fruit salads or fruit plates and serve them up to each other. They get quite inventive!


A fruit plate made by Miss C (7 yrs old) - apple, cherries & honey

Here's my menu  plus a few lunch ideas which I'll decide on on the day - nothing flash, just simple family meals, using my Thermomix to save time and make life easier. If you need some ideas to help you with planning your weekly menu, read How to Menu Plan. If you have a menu plan on your blog, website or public Facebook page, how about linking it up here so we can all share ideas? Here's how: Thermomix Menu Plans.

Enjoy your holidays and have a great week!

Monday:
Mixed seafood, shallow fried (like this), with a fresh fruit platter.
Creamy chicken & brown rice soup, spinach and avocado salad.

Tuesday:
Beef & choko curry (tmx) with cauliflower 'rice' (tmx), cucumber & greens salad

Wednesday:
Lentil bolognese (tmx) on brown rice (tmx), leafy green salad



Thursday:
Sweet & sour beef (tmx) with raw spiralized veges instead of pasta

Friday:
Cooking class
Slow cooker meal for family - Corn & potato chowder with chorizo sausages (white sauce made in tmx & added to slow cooker; made with half sweet potatoes, half regular) & raw vege sticks

Saturday:
Sausage & sweet potato bake (homemade sausage meat, white sauce & crumb topping all prepared in tmx; baked in oven) & leafy green salad

Sunday:
Honey mustard chicken (baked), mashed potatoes (tmx) and salad
...and a Flourless Chocolate Espresso birthday cake for me! :D



Lunches...
- stir fries (tmx) with either cabbage 'noodles' steamed in varoma, or mung bean noodles cooked with veges in tmx
- quinoa salad
- baked sweet potatoes & raw veges sticks/salads
- devilled eggs & salad
- pasta fagioli with gf pasta
- grain free pizza
- leftovers


I'd love you to link your menu plan below! :)



Sabtu, 07 April 2012

Double Chocolate Truffle Ice Cream



I love chocolate. Who doesn't? And Easter is the perfect excuse to eat more of it than usual. But it is important to get the good stuff. Forget those cheap Easter bunny chocolates made from sickly sweet, plasticky tasting chocolate - yuck. And it's important to try to avoid chocolate that is not Fair Trade as well. (Which cuts out Lindt and Ferrero Rocher this Easter!)

This year we're not buying Easter eggs or bunnies... we're just making our own chocolate treats that are healthier and happier. (Happier because they don't involve child slave labour. Okay, they may involve a little... but at least my slaves children get to eat what they make! Lol!)

This chocolate truffle ice cream was inspired by UK chef Chris Horridge's delightful, dairy free, naturally sweetened, chocolate truffles. He was kind enough to give me his recipe for making truffles using the Thermomix, with permission to share it here. It's so easy. Maybe too easy... although they're very rich so I can only eat one or two at a time. (I just come back many times a day. Ha ha! Dangerous!)

I was thinking the other day about an ice-cream I loved as a child. The one that's chocolate with chocolate malt balls mixed through it. I imagined chocolate truffles would be even more perfect mixed into homemade ice-cream for a decadent treat... and they are! Little, chewy morsels of cocoa-covered chocolate in a dairy free, coconut cream ice-cream. So good. But be warned - you don't need much of this ice cream, so serve it in small bowls!

So either make the truffles on their own and serve a couple after dinner with coffee, or try this ice-cream for something a bit decadent!

(This recipe makes a little over a litre of ice cream.)



Coconut Chocolate Ice Cream:

1. Place chocolate in bowl and grind on speed 9 for a few seconds:
- 100g 70% cocoa Green & Black's organic chocolate, broken in pieces
(or you can use 80g raw cacao powder, or organic cocoa powder)

2. Add remaining ingredients and cook for 10 minutes at 80 degrees on speed 4:
- 4 egg yolks
- 500g coconut cream *
- 500g coconut milk
- 100g Rapadura or coconut sugar (or 50g xylitol)
- 2 tsps vanilla bean paste, or vanilla extract
- pinch of fine sea salt

* [Note: I use Spiral organic coconut milk fat 18+% for the milk and cream. It can be bought in bulk 3 litre tins through Fitness Products, or in the usual 450g tins. I freeze what I don't use in ice-cube trays for quick ice-creams.]



3. Pour mixture into a stainless steel bowl and cover; place in freezer to set for 3-4 hours or until firm but NOT frozen solid. Take ice-cream out of freezer, cut into pieces and place back in Thermomix bowl. Mix for 30 seconds on speed 9, using the spatula to help it along, then on speed 4 for 10 seconds. Return to bowl, cover, refreeze.

You can obviously make this ice-cream without the chocolate truffles - here's my super rich version with 80% cocoa chocoalte and Rapadura to sweeten...




Chocolate Truffles:

(Chris's recipe uses xylitol as a sweetener - I often use Rapadura instead)


1. Place all ingredients into the Thermomix bowl and cook at 60 degrees for 5 minutes at speed 1:
- 240g thick coconut cream (preferably organic)
- 80 g of xylitol or 120g Rapadura
- 270g 64% cocoa solids chocolate (or 70% cocoa Green & Black's organic chocolate - it's Fair Trade and has no dairy products added)
- 1 vanilla pod, scraped (or a tsp vanilla bean paste)

2. Whiz up on speed 4 for 2 minutes until smooth.





3. Pour into a dish. Leave it out (covered) in a cool spot to set naturally (about 10-12 degrees C), and you will get a lovely shine on your chocolate. It will be very smooth, like this:




It will be medium soft at this temperature - if you want it firmer, add more chocolate, or the same amount of chocolate but a higher percent of cocoa solids. If you want it softer then add less chocolate, or use a lower percent of cocoa solids. If the weather's too hot to let it set, put it in the warmest part of the fridge for a little while. You're just trying to avoid cooling it too quicklly, as this can cause the chocolate to crystallize.

4. Once the chocolate is set, you can take two teaspoons and scoop out the truffles, shaping with the spoons, then dropping into a bowl of cocoa to coat. Okay, I'm not an expert at shaping truffles, so I didn't take a photo of how mine turned out - don't want to embarrass myself! But I don't think anyone will complain if they're not perfect. Keep them in a container in the fridge. Hidden in the back would be best, I think. ;)

If you need some help figuring out how to make the truffles, check out Dani Valent's 'Chocolate Masterclass' video clip on her new In the Mix: Great Thermomix Recipes app, available for free from the iTunes app store. It's very helpful. (Thanks Dani!)


Now back to the ice-cream...

Take the ice-cream out of the freezer, cut into pieces and re-mix in the Thermomix as before. Scoop back into the bowl or a pretty dish, and stir through some chocolate truffles - as many as you think you can handle. Refreeze until you're ready to eat.

To serve, spoon into small dessert dishes, dust with cocoa, and top with another truffle.




Jumat, 06 April 2012

Gluten Free Hot Cross Buns


Okay, so there was a bit of a bun fight on my Facebook page over which recipe I should post first - this one for gluten free hot cross buns, or my decadent dairy free double chocolate truffle ice cream... The buns won. (As buns tend to in bun fights. Ha ha!) But don't worry, the ice cream won't be far behind!

My kids were really happy with these, especially hot out of the oven. They were soft and held together nicely, not crumbly at all, thanks to the xanthum and guar gums. If you don't have both, the most important one is the xanthum gum. If you don't have any of that, see the *Variations* below the recipe. There's also ideas there for varying the flours, milk and sweeteners; and suggestions for those who are egg free or yeast free.

This is just a basic recipe - if you don't like peel and sultanas, change it to whatever additions you like... chocolate chips, currants, dried cranberries, dried blueberries... I think someone mentioned raspberries and chocolate too - mmmm... I actually love orange peel and dark chocolate chips. Also, for an even better flavour, grind up your own spices - use a whole nutmeg, a whole cinnamon stick, and a few cloves, and grind on speed 9 for a minute in a dry bowl, then add the orange zest and grind.

As with all gluten free breads, these are best made on the day you want to eat them, or they'll get a bit too dry. Enjoy!

Gluten Free Hot Cross Buns

1. Make sure your Thermomix bowl is nice and dry, and grind on speed 9 for 1 1/2 minutes:
- 150g brown rice, raw
- 100g basmati rice, raw

2. Add orange zest and grind on speed 9 for 10 seconds or so:
- zest of 1 orange, preferably organic (peel off with potato peeler)

3. Add remaining dry ingredients and mix on speed 6 for 10 seconds, until combined:
- 100g glutinous rice flour (or fine white rice flour)
- 160g tapioca flour (starch) *
- 2 tsp xanthum gum *
- 1 tsp guar gum
- 2 tsp instant yeast *
- 20g Rapadura or 10g xylitol *
- 1/2 tsp green stevia powder *
- 1 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
- 1/2 tsp ground cloves

4. Set aside dry mixture in a bowl. Place milk, water, vinegar and oil into Thermomix bowl and cook at 37 degrees for 2 minutes, speed 2, or until liquids reach 37 degrees:
- 200g coconut milk or cream *
- 200g water
- 1 Tblspn apple cider vinegar
- 50g macadamia oil (or butter)

5. Add eggs and whisk for a few seconds on speed 5 until combined:
- 2 eggs

6. Add dry ingredients and sultanas and/or currants (or other additions) into the liquids in the bowl and mix on reverse speed 3 until well combined:
- 100g sultanas
- 100g currants

7. Spoon heaped, rounded tablespoons of dough into muffin cups, or drop them close together in rows in a lined baking dish, and leave to rise in a warm spot for 30 minutes.You can wet your hands and gently smooth the buns so they look round if you like. I did that with the ones below in the dish, but not with the ones in the muffin tins. Set the oven to 200 degrees C to heat up while they rise. (They won't rise as much as regular bread.)

[Note: you can make the crosses just as you would on regular hot cross buns - just mix together a little rice flour and water to make a thick paste, and pipe onto buns with a piping bag. I didn't as I was running out of time!]








8. Bake in 200 degree C oven for about 30 minutes, or until golden on top and bottom. A knife inserted should come out clean.




Icing crosses: You can pipe on crosses with white icing if you like, which is what I did. Well, kind of. In my rush I forgot to use egg whites and used water instead, and the icing melted all over the still warm buns! Oh well, you get the idea. Here's the recipe for the icing - I just use a ziploc bag for a piping bag:

Royal icing made with xylitol:

1. Grind on speed 9, scraping down now and then, until very fine:
- 100g xylitol
- 1/2 tsp cream of tartar
- 2 tblspns cornflour

2. Insert butterfly and add egg white, mixing on speed 4 for about 4 or 5 minutes, until thick:
- 1 egg white

3. Sit a zip-loc sandwich bag in a glass and drape the edges over the sides. Pour the icing into the bag, squeeze the air out, and seal. Snip a TINY hole in one corner of the bag and pipe the crosses onto the cooled buns! :)


* Variations:

-  If you don't have any xanthum gum, try grinding up 2 tablespoons of chia seeds or linseeds, cover with a little water and leave for a few minutes until it forms a gel, then pop that in instead.

- If you can't have eggs, you could try egg replacer, and add some chia seed gel too - but I haven't tested that, so not sure how well it would go.

- If you can't have yeast, try making these with 2 teaspoons of baking powder instead of the yeast, plus another egg. Again, I haven't tested it on this recipe yet (although I have with similar gf breads and it worked); so if you try it, let me know how it goes!

- Instead of tapioca flour/starch, you can use arrowroot or cornflour starches. Potato starch may not work so well, as it's quite moist. If you don't have glutinous rice flour or fine white rice flour, you could grind your own, but do it separately to the other rice as you should only grind 250g at a time so you don't overload the blades. And you'll need to grind it for at least a minute and a half to get it really fine. Add some of the tapioca flour in with it and then grind, as that will help it to grind finer.

- Instead of Rapadura or xylitol, and stevia, you can use whatever sweetener you prefer. I have made these with all stevia - just use a whole teaspoon. Or all Rapadura - use 50g. All xylitol I'd use about 30g. Of course you can use 50g raw sugar if that's all you have.

- Instead of coconut milk or cream, you can use any milk you prefer.

Kamis, 05 April 2012

ThermoFest Hawaii & My Easter Menu



The view from my room at ThermoFest - Sheraton, Waikiki!

Hi everyone! Sorry there have been a lack of blog posts lately, but I have a good excuse - I've been in Hawaii being totally spoilt by Thermomix in Australia. And now I'm trying to catch up on sleep and work... Oh my goodness, what an amazing week. We packed so much into a short time, and came home exhausted but happy. Here's a few photos of the highlights of my week at ThermoFest!...



Beautiful scenery
Kualoa Ranch with Mokolii Island in the background


Special friends
Kelly, Felicity and me.



Delicious food
Lots of fresh fruit! This is iced, minted green tea, with melon balls.
So refreshing.



Relaxing meals
Lunch under the palm trees.



Lively conversations
With lots of food-loving, Thermomix-crazy people!



Great cooking tips
Chef and Thermomix consultant Fiona Hoskin,
author of the new 'Devil of a Cookbook' which will be sold
to raise money to save the Tasmanian devils.



Motivating training
with amazing speakers who spoke from the heart.



Amazing shopping
At all hours of the day and night. (Yeah, dangerous!!)



Lots of laughs
Hawaiian dancers teaching the hula to anyone
crazy enough to get up there!



Inspiring people
Anya & Dirk Reznik, Chief Executive Officer, Thermomix (Vorwerk)
(with me in the middle)




So as you can see, we had a mind-blowing holiday/seminar in Hawaii, and I'm so happy I work for this amazing company, and have had this opportunity to enjoy spending time with so many beautiful Thermomix people. (By the way, there's plenty more photos from ThermoFest here on my Quirky Cooking Facebook Page!)

*     *     *     *     *

Last week, while I was away, I had a basic menu plan organized for the family and they did really well cooking for themselves, thanks to our 'kitchen robot'! Even my cooking-challenged husband can get dinner together when there's a Thermomix to help out. My fourteen year old daughter was a great help too, whipping up homemade spelt pizzas galore, and beef stroganoff amongst other things. It's great to be able to rely on the family to help with meals these days. I'm loving it.






Easy meals last week for the kids and dad!

So now it's suddenly Easter. I noticed on Change.org that Lindt and Ferrero Rocher are using cocoa produced by child slave labour, and I don't want to support that, so sadly there'll be no Lindt chocolate bunnies this year for us. I will be making my own chocolate truffle 'eggs' for the kids out of Green & Black's Fair Trade Organic Chocolate (70% cocoa, no dairy). And maybe some homemade Ferrero Rocher chocolates, plus double chocolate truffle ice cream (dairy free), raw cacao nib and walnut bliss balls, and also a few other treats, so I don't think the kids will feel deprived. :) (Okay, all that decadent stuff isn't just for us - I'm doing some Easter cooking for others too!)



Dairy free, grain free, homemade 'Ferrero Rocher' chocolates


Do you need some healthy Easter menu ideas? Below is my Easter weekend menu, and if you join us on the Quirky Cooking Facebook Page you'll find many more ideas. Be inspired to try something different this Easter - like Raw Chocolate, or Hot Cross Bun Monkey Bread. I'd love to know what you're planning for your Easter cooking too, so leave a comment below, or on my Facebook page. Have a great week!

Easter Menu Plan

Good Friday
Star Anise Seared Tasmanian Salmon (Green Tea Smoked)
Steamed carrots & bok choy
Leafy green salad
Double Chocolate Truffle Ice Cream (dairy free, naturally sweetened)
(recipe coming!)

Saturday
Shallow fried marinara mix (using this method)
Leafy green salad
Leftover ice cream (hopefully!)

Easter Sunday
Roast lamb with lemon, garlic & rosemary
Baked sweet potatoes
Baked pumpkin
Leafy green salad
Dairy free, naturally sweetened chocolate truffles & coffee


Thermomix gravy






Have a happy and safe Easter!
Jo xx