Discussion forum for parents in Australia
07-09-2017 10:12 AM
07-09-2017 03:36 PM
You will @LovingThruBlue
I have a yummy recipe for Leek and Potato soup. The recipe does include bacon, but that could easily be left out for your daughter. It's full of veggies and easy to make. I buy the soup pack veggies from Woolies which has carrots, a couple of spuds, turnip, celery and parsnip, then just add the extra ingredients. It's in my recipe book, but I'll see if I can find a link for it online. Perfect time of the year for soup too.
07-17-2017 07:34 PM
My 18 year old is vegan but went through a vegetarian stage to get there. There are lots of great Indian dishes that are quite easy to prepare and good at filling them up (find my daughter was always hungry once she stopped eating meat). You can make a few different ones and serve over a few mealtimes. Check out recipes for dahl, channa masala, vegetable korma etc. If you can be bothered making your own spice mixes, you can always use the jar ones. If she likes eggs, quiches are pretty easy. Can fill up with things like leftover roast vegetables. This is another recipe I make quite a lot but also put in things like potato, zucchini, cauliflower etc. http://www.taste.com.au/recipes/silverbeet-pie/00a8d5cd-7032-4b53-92ed-14f8e8049a46
07-17-2017 07:57 PM
Yum, I just looked that up @hashtagmum. Adding extra veggies is a good idea. I'm so hungry and dinner is 15 minutes away. I wish I had a piece of silverbeet pie in front of me NOW lol.
07-17-2017 08:08 PM
Thank you! @hashtagmum They're great ideas and Yummy recipe link!
07-18-2017 05:34 PM
Hey @LovingThruBlue my eldest has been vegan then vegetarian since 17 years old. She's now 24.
My dad and his family are vego and he's a vego chef, so I am very happy to hit him up for some recipes but I wanted to share one with you that I have turned a number of my friends onto and my eldest learned to cook herself.
It's a super basic Dhaal - as mentioned by @hashtagmum
No exact recipe but you need -
Heat oil in a big pan or saucepan until hot and then add spices - stir for a few minutes
add garlic and onion and stir until cooked
add lentils and stir for a couple of minutes
add tomatoes and stir
add stock and stir
leave to simmer for 30 mins or longer - top up liquid if it dries out - only salt if needed.
add chopped coriander when serving.
We live on this in winter. It freezes really well and tastes great for a couple of days in the fridge. It's a great brunch served on avocado on turkish toast.
I make it super mild so my kids will eat it but if she's into spicy you can crank that up. The beauty of this dish is it's healthy and really hard to wreck. The spices and stock stop it from being bland and kids can learn to cook it really easily and feel like they're making something exotic.
You also don't have to call it Dhaal if your daughter isn't into that sort of food.
It basically turns out like this -
07-18-2017 05:51 PM
07-18-2017 05:54 PM - edited 07-18-2017 05:57 PM
Can I be a foodie photographer who steals really good shots off the internet?
07-18-2017 06:21 PM
I didn't know you could freeze dhal, @Ngaio-RO. Good to know!
07-18-2017 06:29 PM
Please take that with a grain of salt (yay! cooking pun) though @hashtagmum
I freeze everything with very little regard to how it looks when defrosted. So there may be a rule about freezing dhaal that I'm unaware of.
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