Monday 16 November 2015

Pea and Mint Risotto

I love risotto, it one of my favorite foods ever and it sounds really posh! The thing I love the most about this particular risotto is the fact that it barely uses any ingredients and the ones it does use are likely to be in your fridge/freezer already. In other risotto recipes there are expensive ingredients that I personally don't always have available, and many of them also use wine, whereas i believe wine is for drinking! So here is a student friendly, vegetarian, mint and pea risotto.

Ingredients
Dash of Olive Oil
Half an onion
1x garlic clove
Arborio Rice
Frozen peas
Bouillon
Cheese (Cheddar preferable, I only had Red Leicester)

To Season: Mint, Salt, Pepper

Method

1. Dice up your onion and garlic clove, whilst putting a large sauce pan on the hob with a little oil, and filling your kettle with water and turning it on to boil.

2. Once the kettle has boiled, fill a jug with the boiled water and add a tea spoon of bouillon to make a stock. If you prefer it a little stronger, add more.
3. Add the diced onion and garlic to the hot oil and also add the arborio rice.
4. After a few minutes, add the first bit of stock to the pan. Only pour enough in to just cover the onions and rice. Stir gently.
5. Repeatedly pour small amounts of stock into the pan, stirring almost contiuously.
6. Whilst doing this, add frozen peas to a separate smaller pan and boil.
7. Once the rice is soft and has absorbed the stock, drain the peas and add them to the rice mixture. Add your mint and any other seasoning.
8. Mix all together, and serve onto a place. If wanted, grate cheese onto the top of your risotto and enjoy!


Friday 30 October 2015

Ghoulish Brownies

Halloween is one of my favorite times of year, and also a good excuse to bake some spooky snacks! Brownies are one of my favorite bakes and are so easy to make. However, i'm not very good at decorating my bakes so I came up with an easy way to decorate that still fits in with a halloween theme, perfect for a horror movie night in. 

Ingredients:
85g of plain flour
200g of unsalted butter
275g of caster sugar
3 x regular sized eggs
100g white chocolate
200g of dark chocolate
40g of cocoa.
Optional: Icing and food colouring to decorate

Method:
1. Chop up the 200g of dark chocolate, and place it in a heat proof bowl along with the 200g of butter. Put the bowl on top of a small saucepan filled a quarter of the way with water on the hob, and wait for the butter and chocolate to melt. One it has, put the mixture to one side to cool.

2. Preheat the oven to 160 degrees C. Grease two medium sized tray tins.
3. Chop the white chocolate up into smaller chunks 
4. Break the three eggs into a large mixing bowl and add the sugar. Whisk this mixture (preferable with an electric whisk) until it becomes creamy and light. 
5. Pour the chocolate and butter mixture over the egg/sugar mixture and fold them together making a figure-8 movement. Be careful not to take all the air out of it. 
6. Sieve the flour and cocoa into the mixture and again, fold it in until it has all melded together. Finally stir in the white chocolate chunks.
7. Pour the finished mixture into the two trays and put them in the oven for approximately half an hour. To see if the brownies are done, gently shake the trays and see if the middle wobbles. If it does, it's not quite done.
8. When they have done, take the brownies out of the oven and  leave to cool. When cool, take the brownie out of the tray.
9. Mix up some icing, with icing sugar and water, and if you have it, mix in some food colouring. As it's halloween, I used green icing. 
10. Splatter the brownies with the icing, then cut into smaller squares and eat!


Sunday 25 October 2015

'Live and Eat Pie' - Pieminister

Anybody that knows me, will tell you about my love of pie. However, as a vegetarian it can be so frustrating when supermarkets don't stock any meat free pies, or if they do it is a very limited selection. However, my pie dreams were realized in Manchester last year when I found Pieminister. Located on Church Street, only a five minute walk from the Arndale Center, it is easily accessible and really good for price.
Pieminister have a range of vegetarian pies, my favourite being the 'heidi' which contain goat's cheese, sweet potato, spinach and red onion. However, there is also the option of a 'wild shroom' pie, which, as he name suggests, contains wild mushrooms, asparagus, cream and white wine. There are two other pies described as 'open top' pies, which are the 'Mighty Aphrodite' (aubergine, green lentil and red pepper) and the 'Green Goddess' (Spinach, feta, butternut squash and chickpea).
Additional to the great selection of vegetarian pies, is the all important sides that come with these pies. Pieminister does not only serve the standard mash and gravy, there is a whole host of other toppings that you can purchase, or in fact get them all with the 'mothership'. The 'mothership' includes your pie of choice, as well as creamy mash, minty mushy peas, crispy shallots cheddar cheese and a red wine gravy all for £7.95. For me, there is no discussion.





Wednesday 21 October 2015

Veggie Lasagne

As a student it can be really rather annoying when you've had a full day at uni, you have more reading to do for the next day, and you get home and realise you also have to cook your own dinner, wheres mum when you need her? For this reason, it is such a great idea to cook more food than necessary so that you can freeze it and then reheat it through when your running low on time/energy. A great example of this is a lasagne. Not many shops tend to sell one portion oven dishes, so it is likely that you would make more than one portion whether you intended to or not. I made this particular lasagne with Quorn mince as I happened to have some left over, but you can also make it with vegetables or lentils, be inventive!

Quorn Lasagne

Ingrediants

  • Lasagne Sheets
  • Quorn Mince
  • A small onion/half a large onion
  • Tomato sauce
  • White Sauce
  • Little bit of olive oil

Method

  • Preheat the oven to about 180 degrees. 
  • Put a little bit of oil in a pan and put it on the hob on a low heat to warm up.
  • Now chop up some onions/vegetables if you're using them and put them into the pan. Add the Quorn mince. 
  • Fill a bowl with boiling water and place the lasagne sheets into it to soak
  • When the lasagne sheets are soft and the onions and mince have been cooked through, start to layer your lasagne in the oven dish.
  • First i put a layer of lasagne, then a layer of mince, followed then by the tomato sauce and finally the white/cheese sauce. Then continue to follow these steps until the dish is full/you've run out of filling! Pesonally I also put a bit of both sauces on the top layer of pasta as I like my lasagne to be saucier.
  • Then pop it in the over for about 20 minutes. 
  • Additionally there is also the option to grate some cheese onto the top of your lasagne. I would do this with about 5/10 minutes to go so that the cheese does not burn
  • Take it out the oven and serve! I served mine with a side of salad. Enjoy!


Thursday 15 October 2015

Feeling hot hot hot! Chilli con 'Quorn-e'

Chilli con Carne is one of my favourite dinners as a student! It's quick and easy and most importantly, absolutely scrummy! I always find that food with a bit of a kick is a great way to warm up in the cold weather, so a spicy chilli is a great way to do this! As a vegetarian it can be hard sometimes to try and think of alternatives to meat dishes, but with the help of 'Quorn' mince this job is easy. Alternatively, a veggie chilli could also be made with a election of beans, such as kidney or butter beans, or even lentils, or a mixture of all of these ingredients.

Recipe:
A little bit of olive oil
Half an onion
Quorn mince
Passata
Jalapenos (would normally use chilli powder but i ran out!)
Basmati Rice

Method:

1. Fill a small sauce pan with water and set on the hob to boil. Once at boiling point add the basmati rice and turn down the hob so that the water is simmering. For perfectly fluffy rice, only stir the rice once when it first goes into the pan so that it does not stick, then leave it for around 10 minutes until you stir it again. 
2. Put a small amount of oil in a medium sized frying pan and leave on the hob to heat up.
3. Roughly dice the onions and put them in the frying pan. Add the Quorn mince shortly after.
4. When the onions have softened, turn down the heat and add the passata.
5. Chop up a few jalapenos and add them to the mince and onions mixture. Add additional seasoning at this point (chilli power, garlic, salt and pepper etc.)
6. Drain the rice, and serve!




Monday 12 October 2015

Winter Warmer - Butternut Squash Soup

As the nights draw in and the temperature starts to drop, we look to food as a source of comfort. An incredibly quick and easy dinner of a heart warming Butternut Squash Soup! This recipe only takes around half an hour to make and is incredibly simple, cheap and perfect for busy students.

Ingredients:
1x half a butternut squash
2x tablespoon of bouillon (or other stock)
Seasoning

Method:
1. Fill a large saucepan with water and the bouillon and set on the hob to boil
2. Peel and chop the butternut squash into smaller pieces, remembering to scoop out the seeds in the middle. Drop into the pan and leave to simmer for around 20 minutes or until soft
3. When the squash is soft, drain out some of the water in the pan, leaving only a little bit in depending on how you want the consistency of the soup to be.
4. Using a hand blender, blitz the butternut squash until it has a smooth consistency.
5. Season as you wish, I personally use salt, pepper, garlic and chilli.
6. Serve with bread and enjoy!
 
Hannah x

Thursday 8 October 2015

Hello!

Whilst being a student, eating can be a daily issue that many of us face. What to cook, where to buy it etc. are all dilemmas that students face. Now add the extra difficulty of being a vegetarian. Yeh, I know. Some students may take the easy option and bulk buy pot noodles and ready meals, as actual cooking is far too time consuming and complicated. Not to mention the fact that most cookers at university halls are absolutely hopeless! But cooking at uni doesn’t have to be a chore, stressful or unhealthy.

A good place to start for students preparing to go to Uni or having first got to uni, is to buy a cook book especially written for students.  My cookbook of choice was ‘Vegetarian Nosh for Students’ written by Joy May. In this cookbook is a whole host of recipes for different occasions and needs, including quick meals and also meals to impress. As it is aimed at students it doesn’t require any obscure ingredients or complicated equipment, which is exactly what a student needs. It also has a checklist of cupboard essentials that make life much easier when cooking. As a vegetarian, it can be hard sometimes when your flatmates are ordering fried chicken and chips, and you don’t really fancy ordering another portion of chips and a badly made veggie burger for the 100th time.

Other books I chose to buy was a book of different pasta recipes, as pasta, as you probably know, is a student staple. How many different pasta recipes are there you may ask? Well in my recipe book theres a 100, and as students actual spend about half a year at uni by the time you take away reading weeks, Christmas and Easter breaks and of course the 4 month summer hols, 100 pasta recipes will do just fine.

Although pasta is a great quick and easy meal that requires little ingredients, don’t get too disheartened, pasta is not the only meal that us vegetarians can eat. There are a whole host of different meals that we can cook, and recipes that can be slightly changed in order to suit our needs. My personals favorites include chilli butternut squash risotto, spinach and chickpea korma, shepherd’s pie (with Quorn mince), (Quorn) chicken fajitas and chilli con Quorn (chilli con carne with Quorn mince). And they are just a few recipes that can be cooked up quick and easy, and probably most importantly, cheaply!

With this blog, I hope to share good vegetarian recipes, tips and tricks, great places to find vegetarian food in Manchester and places to buy your ingredients.

Hannah x