Rainbow carrot & beetroot salad

Rainbow carrot & beetroot salad

I love the jewel-like colours of this super simple salad.  The zingyness of the lemon juice and mustard contrasts beautifully with the earthiness of the beetroot.  We had it on a bed of dressed green leaves and avocado yesterday in the garden for lunch, with the super simple butterbean salad I just posted.  Because of the antioxidant power of the lemon juice, mustard, and olive oil, this salad keeps for up to 2 days in the fridge.  do make sure to add the lemon juice dressing immediately after you have grated the carrot and beetroot, otherwise, they oxidize and go brown.

4 medium carrots, peeled or scraped
1-2 small raw beetroot, peeled
2 small spring onions or 1 tbsp chopped red onion
1 level tsp mustard, ideally Dijon, but English or wholegrain would do
1 tbs lemon juice
1 tbs extra virgin olive oil
Pinch of Himalayan salt or Atlantic sea salt
Black pepper
Optional health boost: 2 tbsp chopped parsley

1. First make the dressing by mixing in a large bowl the mustard, juice, olive oil, salt, and 10 good grinds of black pepper.  2. Now slice the onion and grate the carrots and beetroot and add to the bowl.  Mix well and serve with some green salad and whatever protein you are eating – lean meat, fish, eggs, beans/pulses.

Why this recipe is good for you:
Beetroot is high in chromium and betaine, nutrients that help your body process the natural sugars in the beet.  In processed sugar, where sugar beets are stripped of their nutrients, all you get is the sweetness, without the chromium and betaine your liver needs to get rid of it harmlessly.  Carrots and beets, like all root veg, are high in carbs so take the place of potatoes or bread in a meal.  Carrots are a great source of beta carotene.  This helps liver function, gives your skin a golden glow, and is a powerful antioxidant, helping protect your skin and eyes from UV or age-related damage.  Mustard, lemon juice, and olive oil are also rich in antioxidants that help you maintain beautiful, clear skin.  Extra virgin olive oil is also rich in vitamin E, which moisturises your skin from within.  Healthy skin does not need body moisturiser.   Virgin olive oil, eaten raw, also aid long-term weight loss when added to your daily diet.  Piperine in black pepper helps your digestive system absorb nutrient minerals.

Basic salad

Basic salad

This is a salad we eat most days for lunch with some protein like chicken, smoked fish, a bean/pulse salad or a couple of eggs.  The main thing about a salad is it needs to be almost completely raw, take up at least 50% of your plate and have lots of different colours to give you a range of nutrients. You’ll see some blanched frozen peas in the picture here, because I love them.  (Thaw frozen petit pois in sieve under hot tap, put in bowl, cover generously with boiling water, leave 1 min, strain, run under cool tap and add to salads).  If you’re packing this lunch to eat later, simply throw in handful frozen peas – will keep everything cool and take a couple hours to melt.

If you’re in a hurry you don’t have to have all the ingredients – mix and match.

For 1:
Leaves (choose one or 2, more if you want): 
A generous 2-hand handful torn up: choose from rocket, chicory, lettuce, endive, radicchio, organic baby spinach, nasturtium leaves, watercress, pea shoots etc.
Colours (choose 3 or 4, more if you want):
1 large tomato or handful cherry tomatoes , cut in bite size pieces
2 spring onions or 1/4 red onion, sliced thinly
1/2 red/yellow pepper,  sliced
Cup of sliced cucumber, courgette, fennel or celery or a bit of everything
Grilled artichokes (drain off the low-grade oil before adding)
1 tbs olives
Healthy Fats:
Optional: 1/4-1/2 soft avocado, cubed (healthy fats aid weight management)
1-3 dsp extra virgin dressing https://www.annacollins.ie/mediterranean-salad-dressing/  OR https://www.annacollins.ie/asian-dressing/
Starch (not more than 1/4 of your meal though):
beetroot (cooked and sliced or raw and grated), small carrot, peeled and grated, thinly sliced raw butternut squash, some leftover cooked baby boiled potatoes, sweet potatoes or roasted squash
Gut-bacteria modifying boost:
1 clove raw garlic, crushed
Optional carbs (no more than 1/4 of the meal):
Grated carrots
Grated or chopped beetroot
Cold cooked potatoes (NOT for SC diet)

1. Throw everything in a big bowl, add 1-3 dsp extra virgin oil-based dressing and toss til coated.
2. Eat with a palm sized portion meat, fish, couple of eggs or a cup of cooked beans/pulses.

Why this  is good for you:
Fresh raw vegetables, especially when organic, are packed with vitamin C and biofoavonoids.  These strengthen skin and connective tissue, speed healing and help prevent digestive disorders.  You need vitamin C from raw foods, folate from dark green leafy veg (eg spinach, chard, broccoli), and bioflavonoids to help maintain digestive wellness.  Greens are also rich in magnesium, which helps you relax your mind and body and fight infections. 

Getting into the habit of eating a salad every lunchtime is one of the best things you can do for your health.  Veggies in your daily diet also give you a beautiful golden skin tone after 6-8 weeks, according to a study I quoted in one of my e-newsletters last year.  Spices and herbs in my special Mediterranean dressing lower numbers of “bad” bacteria in your gut and support growth of healthy bacteria that impact on everything – even weight management and mood.

Super quick butterbean salad

Super quick butterbean salad

This is something delicious I make when I’m in a hurry and need some good quality protein.  It works well with a simple mixed salad on the side to make a balanced meal.  You could also substitute it for potatoes alongside meat or white fish.  I usually make lots so we can use the leftovers for packed lunches.

Serves 4 (or 2 with leftovers)

1 heaped dsp sun-dried tomato pesto
One of the following fresh herbs if you have them, chopped:
Rosemary leaves: 1 tsp/oregano 1 tbs/parsley 1 tbs
2 dsp lemon juice
2 tins or mugs of cooked butter beans, drained
1 clove garlic, crushed (optional)
Black pepper

  1. Mix the lemon juice, pesto, garlic, and herbs together in a bowl.
  2. Add butterbeans, a few good grinds of black pepper, and mix well.  Taste and if you feel like it, add more lemon juice, pesto, or pepper.
  3. Eat with a large mixed salad such as my “basic mixed salad”.

Why this recipe is good for you:
Beans and pulses are rich in soluble fibre, a type of fibre that feeds friendly bacteria in your gut.  Friendly bacteria are important for your immune system, helping regulate it and prevent allergies such as eczema and inflammatory diseases such as colitis.  These good bacteria also help your body clear toxins.  Toxins we are commonly exposed to include used-up hormones (eg estrogens, testosterone), old medications, and chemicals (eg toxic nitrites from processed meat, petrochemicals from toiletries, and petrol fumes).  So if you want to have good detoxification, clear skin, and tune up your digestion, fostering your good gut bacteria is one of the keys.  Rosemary, oregano, lemon juice, and garlic are also great helpers for the liver, also promoting fast efficient clearance of toxins.

Decadent chocolate cherry mousse cake

Decadent chocolate cherry mousse cake

We ate this for dessert last night, and I indulged again after a full breakfast this morning so am sitting here feeling a bit stuffed!  This delicious mostly cake is very decadent and has a lot of good-for-you stuff.  Technically its not all raw as cashew nuts are steamed after harvesting to make them edible. You can make this up to 5 days ahead if you like.  The recipe is adapted from  one by Laura Wright but I have reduced the syrups and given you alternatives for those hard-to-find ingredients.  I also use cooked beetroot instead of raw, which simply doesnt break up well unless you have a super high speed food processor.  Sometimes I make individual servings in mousse rings and store in a box in the freezer.  I find that this cake quantity makes at least 10 so sometimes I make half the quantity for a smaller gathering.

It’s really important to use the mousse ingredients at room temperature not straight from the fridge – otherwise it solidifies instantly into an un-pourable mound with a grainy texture.  I found out this by experience!!

For 1 x 22cm cake (to serve 10-12):
Remember to check out “larder & shopping” section in this blog for suppliers

Base:
310g raw almonds
30g raw cacao powder
¼ level tsp Himalayan or Atlantic Sea Salt
40g dried sour cherries (or use dried cranberries if you can’t get cherries)
8 medjool dates, pitted
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 rounded tbsp extra virgin coconut oil

Mousse:
325g raw cashews, soaked overnight in filtered water, at room temperature
330ml almond milk, at room temperature
155ml/140g extra virgin coconut oil, gently warmed to a liquid
60ml/4 level tbs/85g raw honey, raw agave nectar or maple syrup, at room temperature (tip: use a hot spoon to measure honey, if using)
Juice of 1 lemon, at room temperature
2 tsp vanilla extract
¼ level tsp Himalayan or Atlantic Sea Salt
115g frozen, pitted cherries (or raspberries if you prefer), thawed, at room temperature – or use pitted fresh cherries if in season
1 small cooked beetroot, chopped, at room temperature (shop bought will do)
1 x 22cm spring-form cake tin
A little extra coconut oil for greasing the tin
A food processor
Cling film (if making ahead and storing in the freezer)

1. To make the base, place the almonds in a food processor and pulse until chopped and resembling breadcrumbs.  Add the cacao powder, salt, dried sour cherries, dates, vanilla and rounded tbsp coconut oil and blitz until the dried fruit is evenly distributed throughout the mix.  When the mixture holds together when pinched, it’s ready to use.  Grease the sides of your tin with a little extra coconut oil or rapeseed oil.  Evenly press the base mix into the bottom of the prepared tin and set aside.
2. To make the mousse, remember that all the ingredients need to be at least at room temperature or else the mix thickens too quickly and becomes grainy and unpourable.  Drain the cashews and combine them in the food processor with the almond milk, coconut oil, honey/maple syrup or agave, lemon juice and salt.  Blend until smooth.
3. Pour all but 500ml (about half) of the mixture into the prepared tin.  Add the pitted cherries and chopped beetroot to the remaining 500ml of the mixture.  Blend until smooth and pour all but 250ml of this mixture quickly into the centre of the cake.  Lightly drizzle the remaining mousse mixture around the top of the cake creating a decorative marbled effect.
4. To set the mousse cake: cover the tin with a plate and place in the coldest (bottom) shelf of the fridge for 6 hours or overnight.  Alternatively, stretch cling film over the top of the tin and slide gently into the freezer for 6 hours or overnight.  The cake will keep quite happily for a couple of weeks in the freezer.  Remove from the freezer to thaw at room temperature for 1-2 hours before serving.  When its soft right the way through (test with a needle), place in the fridge until you want to serve.

Dietary note:
Virgin coconut oil is a great source of medium chain triglycerides, a special type of fat that goes straight into energy production in your body instead of being used to make fat. For this reason, it is a healthier fat than butter.  Coconut oil also contains capryllic acid, which has anti-fungal properties – good news for anyone with bowel issues or cystitis linked to candida.  Cherries, red berries and beetroots are high in proanthocyanadins which strengthen connective tissue and the lining of your digestive system, reducing the tendency to diverticulitis, hernias and saggy skin.  Raw almonds (and cold-pressed or “extra virgin” oils) contain vitamin E.  This vitamin naturally lubricates and moisturises your skin, reduces the production of wrinkles, and also helps dampen down allergic reactions.  Healthy skin does not need body moisturisers.  “Raw” cashew nuts are, bizarrely, not raw at all – the nuts have to be steamed in order to be extracted from their hard shell.  Cashews are a sweetish and healthier substitute for cream cheese, sugar and other not-so-great ingredients that tend to be used in desserts.  Desserts like this one should be used as occasional treats and not eaten at every meal.  They are still rich in natural sugars and if you eat them all the time, provide more calories than you need.  A normal daily intake of raw nuts and seeds would not exceed a tablespoon or two.

Braised chard or spinach

Braised chard or spinach

We were once in a rustic trattoria in Puglia where there was no menu.  The owner just came out of the kitchen and told you what they were going to feed you.  One of the courses was local greens (cima di rape) braised with olive oil and garlic and liberally sprinkled with Parmesan.  It was incredibly good.  Since that holiday we often cook greens by braising them with olive oil and garlic, rather then steaming.  Serve as a side to a piece of meat or fish, or maybe an omelette or a simple piece of smoked mackerel or trout.

1 x 500g bag chard or organic* spinach leaves
3 cloves garlic, roughly chopped into quarters
3 spring onions (optional) cut into 2cm lengths
Extra virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
Optional (avoid for dairy-free diet): 1 tbs freshly grated Parmesan cheese

1. Put a frying pan (ideally a heavy-bottomed one) on a medium heat, add the garlic and white parts of the spring onion and 1 tbs olive oil.  Cover with a lid or plate and cook until softened and slightly translucent.
2. Meanwhile wash the chard/spinach, shake the excess moisture off the leafy greens (don’t dry them completely or they will burn).  If the leaves are large, cut into approximately 5cm lengths (across the thick stalks) and add to the pan along with the green parts of the spring onions. Cover and cook gently until wilted.  If you use baby spinach or chard this will only take a couple of minutes.   If you use larger leaves it can take 10-15 minutes.
3. Eat hot or lukewarm – they will keep warm, off the heat, in the covered pan for quite a while.

Why this is good for you:
First of all why do I stress “organic” spinach leaves?  Because spinach is in the top 3 most agri-chamical-contaminated produce.  Agri-chemicals like herbicides disrupt both our gut bacteria and our hormonal systems.  Our hormonal systems need to work well for energy, motivation, mood, proper thyroid function, freedom from hormone-related diseases and much more.   Chard and spinach, because they are dark green leafy veg, are very high in magnesium and folic acid.   If you have digestive disorders, acne, psoriasis, or eczema, or if you are stressed, you could need more of these nutrients.  Folic acid and magnesium are essential for liver function and mental health.  Most Irish people are deficient in magnesium because don’t eat enough magnesium foods and we eat and drink things that deplete it from your body – coffee, sugar, refined foods, for example.  Stress also depletes your nutrients.  Celtic people also often have  altered folic acid metabolism.  This genetic issue may predispose us to alcoholism and depression. 

Creamy banana ice

Creamy banana ice

Last night we ate scoops of this creamy, delicious banana ice piled in chilled cocktail glasses.   Its incredibly simple to make but totally delicious.  The recipe is adapted from one in Agnes Marshalls Book of Ices which came out in 1885.  This is very sweet even when made with lemons.  Children love it.

Serves 6 (allowing 2 scoops per person)
6 ripe bananas (with spots)
100g xylitol/erythritol
300ml water
The juice of 2 oranges or lemons
A blender/food processor, and (if you have it) an ice cream maker

1. If using an ice cream maker, turn it on to start chilling straight away.  This takes at least 10 minutes.
2. Place all the ingredients in a food processor or blender and puree well.
3. Now either freeze the mixture or churn in an ice cream maker until solidified (this takes around half an hour).  Eat immediately or store in the freezer.  If you don’t use an ice cream maker, then removing the mix from the freezer after an hour and beating it with a whisk before replacing in the freezer will make it creamier.  Its not vital, though.
4. To serve, remove from the freezer for half an hour to soften.  If you have a metal ice cream scoop, dip it in a jug of hot water between scoops to achieve perfectly-shaped scoops (I was in a hurry, forgot to boil the kettle, and didn’t bother, which is why the photo above looks a bit too rustic…).

Why this is good for you:
Bananas are a rich source of fructo oligo saccharides (FOS for short), which help feed beneficial bacteria in your gut.   Xylitol is a healthier alternative to standard sugar as appears not to deplete nutrients and has a much lesser impact on blood sugar levels.  Even diabetics can eat xylitol.  Fresh lemon juice is high in health-boosting antioxidants and is supportive of liver function – good news if you want to balance hormones, enhance energy or have perfect skin.   If you want to avoid upsetting blood sugar levels (bananas are a high sugar fruit), eat this ice as a dessert after a protein meal or eat some protein/healthy fats alongside.  A dollop of Coyo or Abbot Kinney’s dairy-free yoghurt (from health stores) would be a good thing to top this.  Or sprinkle 1 tbsp of gently toated almond flakes on top before eating. 

Super simple papaya dessert

Super simple papaya dessert

Last weekend I craved some fresh, gorgeous, ripe papaya so we visited the Asia Market in Dublin 2 where we picked up an enormous specimen for about €7.  We cut about a third off, scooped out the spherical black seeds, peeled the section with a potato peeler, and cubed it before piling it into bowls and drizzling with lime juice.  The rest we kept in the fridge for the next day, and the next.  A real taste of southeast Asia.  This is the simplest dessert in the world after a weekday dinner.  If you wanted to make this into a snack, serve a cupful of papaya pieces with a heaped tablespoon of delicious (dairy-free) Coyo coconut “yoghurt” from health stores.  I get my Coyo from Ennis butchers in Inchicore who also sell great meat and fish, and from Nourish health stores.

1 ripe papaya (you will want enough to make 2 teacupfuls of bite-sized cubes)
1 lime, cut in half

1. Peel and scoop out the seeds of a piece of papaya large enough to yield 2 cupfuls
2. Pile into 2 bowls and hand around a lime half to drizzle over.  Delicious.

Why this is good for you:
Papaya contains the enzyme papain, which helps digest protein.  It’s often in digestive enzyme supplements.  Papaya eaten as a dessert after a meal of fish, eggs, meat, or beans helps you digest the meal.  Papaya also has anti-inflammatory properties and is rich in minerals. 

Easy roast chicory

Easy roast chicory

I dreamed up this easy way with chicory this evening, to go with slow roast free-range pork.  We also had my braised sliced courgettes alongside, which I will post shortly.  The lovely bitterness of chicory cuts the fattiness of the pork, helping you digest it.  You could also serve this as a starter, with a sprinkling of parmesan, or a tablespoon of chopped, raw walnuts.

For 2:
2 medium heads of chicory, treviso, or radicchio, rinsed, then halved lengthways
Extra virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
A pinch of Atlantic sea salt or Himalayan salt
Optional: 2 DSP freshly grated parmesan cheese (avoid for dairy-free)

  1. Preheat oven to 200C (fan 185).
  2. Place the chicory in a roasting tin, cut side up, and drizzle over about a dessert spoon of extra virgin olive oil.
  3. Roast for 15-20 minutes in the oven until wilted.
  4. Serve with a few good grinds of black pepper, a pinch of salt, and another drizzle of extra virgin olive oil.  If you are feeling decadent, sprinkle a teaspoon of freshly grated parmesan over each half.

Why this is good for you:
Chicory, radicchio, and treviso are examples of foods that help you to digest a fatty meal.  This is because their bitterness stimulates the flow of bile and digestive enzymes from your gallbladder.  This helps break down (emulsify) fat into tiny droplets, which can then be digested all the easier by the digestive enzymes made in your pancreas and also in your small intestine.   Other foods/drinks that do the same thing include dandelion coffee, dandelion leaves, rocket, and bitter apple sauce made from cooking apples.

Aioli (traditional garlic mayonnaise)

Aioli (traditional garlic mayonnaise)

This is a traditional southern French garlic mayonnaise at its best.  Always makes me think of holidays.  The other day I ate a generous dollop on some poached salmon with a large salad with nasturtium flowers from the garden.  Aioli is fantastic with poached or baked fish, cold meat, or hard-boiled eggs in a salad.  If you like a more neutral-tasting mayo, you can use equal parts olive and a second cold-pressed (extra virgin) neutral-tasting oil such as sunflower or rapeseed.  Do not use refined (non-cold-pressed) seed/nut oils as they are damaging to health.   Aioli will keep for about 5 days in a glass jar in the coldest part of the fridge.   The garlic helps preserve the raw eggs.  It’s quicker to make aioli using an electric whisk than with the pestle and mortar.  But don’t try to make it in a blender because it never thickens up for me using one!

For 4 servings:
3 cloves garlic
1 organic egg yolk, at room temperature (this helps the mixture not to “split” or separate)
150ml (approx) extra virgin olive oil (or half olive oil half raw cold-pressed sunflower or rape oil), also at room temperature
A pinch of Atlantic sea salt or Himalayan salt (optional)
You will need:
A pestle and mortar and/or an electric whisk

Pestle and mortar method:

  1. Peel the garlic, slice into slivers, and pound to a paste with a pinch of salt, add the egg yolk, and mix in.  Pounding the garlic gives a different (and in my opinion, subtler) flavour from just crushing it with a garlic crusher.
  2. You can now either continue making the aioli with the pestle and mortar or (for less work) transfer the garlic/yolk mix to a bowl and get out your electric hand whisk before starting to add the oil as follows:
  3. Beat in the oil, at first drop by drop, and then, as the mix begins to thicken and resemble mayonnaise, add more liberally but never in a heavy stream.  It is ready when it looks thick and creamy.   See below for instructions on what to do if it goes wrong.

Electric whisk method:

1. Crush the garlic (with a garlic crusher if you have one, otherwise crush with the back of a knife, using a pinch of salt to really grind up the garlic).  Add to a bowl.
2. Add the egg yolk and whisk with an electric whisk for a minute.
3. Beat in the oil, at first drop by drop, and then, as the mix begins to thicken and resemble mayonnaise, add more liberally but never in a heavy stream.  If you add it too quickly the mixture will split and never thicken.  It is ready when it looks thick and creamy.

To rescue “split” aioli:
Get a fresh (room temperature) egg yolk and start beating it.  While beating, VERY gradually and a drop at a time, start adding in the “split” mixture as if it were just oil.  Very gradually incorporate the split mixture into the egg yolk, beating continuously, until you have a thick, creamy aioli.

Variations:
Add the zest of an organic lemon and 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice to room-temperature aioli (if it’s not at room temperature, adding the lemon juice will make it split).  Mix well.   You could also add 2 tbsp chopped parsley too.

Why this is good for you:
Cold-pressed raw oils are fantastic for your health! The raw oils from sunflower, rape, and sesame are rich in polyunsaturated omega 6 oils, while extra virgin olive oil is high in monounsaturated oils and vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant.  Omega 6 is fine in small amounts whereas you can enjoy unlimited extra virgin olive oil.  These oils can help weight management, enhance skin health and also moisturize your skin from within.  You will need to keep raw cold-pressed nut/seed oils in the fridge as they are fragile and easily go off, losing their health benefits.   Refined or fried oils (all supermarket oils except extra virgin olive and cold-pressed rapeseed oil and extra virgin coconut oil) disrupt hormone balance and contribute to weight gain and visible aging.  Studies have shown people lose weight when they ADD extra virgin olive oil (and raw nuts) to their diets!  High-quality oils make you feel fuller longer.  Never cook with polyunsaturated oils, only use them raw and cold-pressed.