Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Tempeh with Thai-Coconut Sauce



Ok, so my fancy schmancy camera is broken and I'm a little bit devastated. As, I'm sure, are you now that you have to be satisfied with Instagram photos of my delicious creations instead of the incredibly high-level photographs you've come to expect. *cough*.

Although, having said that, I must tell you I didn't create this, I simply saw this recipe and adapted it exponentially to the taste sensation it turned out to be. Man, I love Thai-inspired food.

I don't even remember the first time I tried something with coconut milk in it, all I know is I've been saving recipes that have it for years because it became a firm favourite.

This is reasonably simple, and calls for all the things that make Thai dishes so good - chilli, garlic, coriander, coconut milk, lime... oh boy.

This will probably feed two, with leftovers. Feel free to double or otherwise tweak to your liking - as I recommend with all recipes!

Ingredients:
1 block tempeh, cut either into strips or diced
1/2 cup vegetable stock
2-3 tablespoons of soy sauce (I used light soy, so needed more)
1-inch piece grated ginger
chopped chillies according to your heat preference
2-3 cloves garlic, minced
1 400ml can good-quality coconut milk
chopped veggies - I used carrot, mushroom, broccoli and zucchini
2 sliced green onions
pinch salt
1/4 cup brown sugar
juice of 1 lime
coriander and extra sliced chilli, to serve

Directions

1. Marinate the tempeh cubes in stock, soy, ginger, garlic and chilli for as long as you like.

2. Scoop out tempeh and set aside. Scoop out ginger, garlic and chilli from the marinade and fry gently with green onion until flavours are released.

3. Turn up the heat a little and add tempeh, cooking about 5 minutes until golden.

4. Turn heat down to low, and add coconut milk, salt and sugar. You can also add a little extra stock here for flavour if you like. Add veggies.

5. Just before serving, after the sauce has heated through, squeeze in the juice of lime. Top each serving with coriander and chilli

Monday, January 30, 2012

Meatless Monday: Honey-Soy Sesame Saute





I stole this idea from someone many years ago who was struggling on a very restrictive diet, and who wasn't overly excited by the amount of vegetables they had to eat. As someone who would happily down a bowl of steamed broccoli without a glance at the condiment cupboard, I was intrigued at how they tried to dress up their veg in order to make it palatable. Just about the only condiment they were allowed was balsamic vinegar... I could drink the stuff, but they weren't feeling it.

So part of their strategy was to saute their veg in various substances to give it a bit of extra flavour.

I have taken that idea and ran with it many times over the last few years, and I'm happy to say that although it takes a bit longer than throwing some veg in a steamer in the microwave (guilty), it is truly delicious.

You could use it as a side dish, or add some tofu or beans or faux-meat strips to make a stir-fry. I sometimes just eat it on it's own, but it does benefit from having some protein if you want to stay fuller for longer.

Ingredients:
various chopped green veg - I used bok choy, zucchini, broccoli (including the big green stem - it's amazing!), celery and spinach in this picture
something to break up the green - I used corn, but red capsicum is good, too
1 onion, sliced
2-3 cloves garlic
1/4 cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon sesame seeds

Directions:

1. Saute onion and garlic gently with the sturdier of your veg - broccoli and zucchini, etc, until onion is soft.

2. Add softer veg and ensure heat is reasonably low. Add sauces and stir, then pop the lid on for 2 minutes or so to make sure the broccoli is cooked through

3. Serve, sprinkled with sesame seeds.


This is also really good with a little stock. And chilli. And sometimes rice vinegar. Options are endless!

Linky bitz...

♥ The linky will be up at 9am every Monday morning, and will stay up until the following Sunday. It doesn't matter if you eat your meal on a day other than Monday - it's just an easy day to create the link!

 Grab the Meatless Monday button above and put it in your post, and even on your sidebar if you're feeling generous.

 Visit at least one other blogger and leave some love. This is so much more cool if we're in it together!

Where it says "Name", you might like to add the name of your dish instead or as well.





Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Veggie Baby Food: Pear and Apricot Puree


How pretty is this colour!

Back when baby veggie ate puree, (which went by fleetingly, to my surprise!), she loved this pear-and-apricot concoction. These days she's all about broccoli spears and whole nectarines, but I still make a puree now and then for dinners and things and when I've already changed her outfit 4 times and she's had two baths so damned if she's getting dirty again!

This one's terribly easy - peel, core and dice a pear or two and put in a saucepan with a little water. Add 3-6 (depends on amount of pear) finely-chopped dried apricots. Cook gently until all is soft. You can add a lid to help steam the apricot if you like. Puree in a processor.

And if you're funny about sulphur and dried fruit and whatever, feel free to substitute for fresh.

Yum :)

Friday, January 20, 2012

ErgoCocoon Air for the tiny in your life!




Ok, seriously - how hot is it right now? I'm sitting here all sloth-like, refusing to dress the baby, eating cold grapes and moaning periodically. Ridiculous.

Anyway, a little while ago I was sent an ErgoPouch ErgoCocoon AIR swaddle to try out on the Veggie Baby and one to give away to a reader. I was terribly excited, I loved the summery-light bamboo feel and the snugness of this swaddle and was dying to squeeze my tiny caterpillar into it.

The only problem was, I'd given birth to a heifer, and she just did not fit into this 2-6month (5-9 kilos) size. Not so tiny after all! The lovely crew taking care of their PR (Hi Kate!) offered a different item in return, so unfortunately I haven't been able to review this product for you. However, a blogging buddy of mine, Sara, has and you can find it here. She even did a video, clever girl!

So if you're sad about wrapping your baby in the usual muslin in this sweltering heat, and you'd prefer something lighter but with the same amount of snuggability, then enter the competition below. You can enter even if you know someone who is going to pop any day now and want to give the best present ever - solid sleep! Wrapping was the best thing I ever did.

I like ErgoPouch because it's an Australian company. They have organic sleepwear for babies and toddlers made from eco-friendly, breathable materials like bamboo, alpaca and organic cotton.

They're all hypoallergenic, anti-bacterial, anti-static and suitable for all skin types, especially sensitive skin - it's excellent for eczema, I'm told, as it prevents babies from scratching. Yay!

This particular product, the ErgoCocoon AIR is the world's thinnest baby swaddle. It's seamless, zip-and velcro-free and made of stretch bamboo fabric.

It is valued at $24.95, and if you'd like to win one, you only need to do two things:

1. Like me on Facebook, if you don't already. (I know, I'm so needy!).
2. Leave a comment on this post about what lullaby you sing to your tinies. I make mine up as I go along so they're always different... but I like to see what other people do!


Entry is open to anyone - yes even if you live overseas! Surely there's someone who's baby is due in July in the Northern Hemisphere, haha. Entries close Wednesday January 25 at 8am. I will choose the entry I like the best. If you have a problem, let me know. I wasn't paid for this giveaway, but I did get a winter sleeping bag for the heifer. It didn't influence me in any way - I can't be bought!

Oh and I don't call my kid a heifer to her face. Well, not often. And not it a mean way. 

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Vintage Lane - Cherry Afternoon Tea Cakes from the WMU Cookery Book





How sweet are these little babies?

I made them from this gorgeous WMU Cookery Book from 1952. I can't remember where I got it from, but it's become one of my favourites. This is the 18th edition, printed in Brisbane.



First page is this charming advertisement for a hotel - with hot and cold running water! Other luxuries designed to sweep guests off their feet were reading lamps beside the bed and telephones.

Funnily enough, although it is never mentioned, The Canberra Hotel was actually created as an alcohol-free hotel, as part of the prohibition movement. They named it The Canberra as they thought it sounded terribly patriotic.



The index has chapters including Soup, Fish, Entries, Breakfast Dishes and Meats, Beef and Veal, Bacon and Pork, Lamb and Mutton, Game and Poultry, Gravies and Sauces, Salads and Dressings, Vegetables, Vegetarian Cookery, Boiled Puddings, Baked Puddings, Cold Puddings, Jellies and Creams, Pastry, Pies and Tarts, Sweet Sauces, Cakes, Fruit and Pound Cakes, Sponge Cakes and Sandwiches, Spice Cakes, Afternoon Tea Cakes, Biscuits, Bread and Scones, Icings and Fillings for Cakes, Sandwiches and Savouries, Omelettes and Pancakes, Jams Jellies and Marmalades, Pickles and Chutneys, Beverages, Sweets, Ices, Household Hints and Miscellaneous.

Phew.

In addition to these categories, they've helpfully included weights and measures, a timetable for roasting and boiling meats, vegetables and various other things; and some hints for the inexperienced cook:


Here we learn how to make Beef Tea (whatever happened to that, anyway? It's in every vintage cookbook I own... seemed popular!), how to bake/roast meat, how to make soup, grill, how to make boiled custard, white sauce, glaze for pastry, meringue topping, whipped cream and how to make tea:

Warm teapot by rinsing it out with boiling water. Allow half teaspoon of tea to each person and half for the pot. Use fresh boiling water and pour it on the leaves without moving kettle from stove. Allow to infuse for 5 minutes and stir before serving. See the water has just reached boiling point before pouring it onto the tea leaves.

We're also told what accompaniments go with what meat, and what to do to "help out on occasions when interruptions set catering plans or unexpected visitors arrive", including stocking up with tinned sardines and asparagus tips, and a few quick recipes for such occasions.

I love the "Brief Hints" that throw together some random bits and pieces that the home cook would be glad to know. Such gems like:

A tempting dish for a hot day - Slice finely 2 or 3 onions and brown them in butter, adding salt and pepper to taste. Beat 2 eggs, stir into pan with the onions and cook til set. Serve with hot buttered toast.
*
If you add the juice of a lemon when making a cake with dripping, the cake will taste, when cooked, as though it had been made with butter.
*
Cook dried apricots in a syrup made of half liquid in which they were soaked and half of fresh cold water. Cooked this way they take less sugar and taste like fresh apricots.


There are a few Brisbane-centric ads, which are all delightfully typical of their time.


so cute!


This picture is indicative of the beginnings of each chapter.

Several recipes raise my eyebrows every time I see them, from each chapter. Things like Sheep's Head Broth, Marmite Soup, Bloater Paste, Kidney Mould, Petit Toe Pie, and Queensland Duck which is actually roast mutton and onions.

We're told in the "Garnishings" section that the art is "sadly neglected". Several options are provided to revive the practice, including tufts of parsley and tomatoes cut into shapes for cold meats, Fish should be garnished with tufts of parsley and sliced lemon, and that tinned fruits such as apricots and peaches look dainty with a preserved cherry in the centre of each.

I don't know about you, but I'm bringing back the garnish.


Lots of my recipe books have these little snippets tucked away among the pages.


And this one contains some hand-written extras such as pikelets, lemon meringue pie, chocolate crackles, ginger cake, biscuit pastry, Jean's patty cakes, sponge sandwich, caramel biscuits and ched burgers.

Toward the back we're given some household hints on how to clean the bath, make furniture polish/soap/fruit salts/camphor oil, the value of Borax (every country housewife should keep a supply on hand, as no other article will be found of equal value), and how handy salt is for stains.

Whatever couldn't be fit into various topics were collated in the Miscellaneous section. Hints such as:

Rosine is as good as cochineal, one drop is enough
*
Raw white of egg or boracic acid for cuts
*
A raw egg, if swallowed immediately, will effectually catch a fish bone that has stuck in the throat
*
Damp salt will remove the discolouring of cups and saucers caused by tea and careless washing
*
A little method is worth a good deal of memory
*
Nervous people will find time, used as tea, give them relief
*
Methylated spirits rubbed into tired feet will greatly relieve them; also dust with boracic powder before putting on stockings
*
An excellent way to cook an old fowl is to place a piece of fat bacon inside the fowl, roast or boil, and the flesh will be quite tender

I took the liberty of baking you the cherry cakes from the Afternoon Tea Cakes section. You're welcome.

Beat 4ozs. of butter and 4ozs. sugar together, add 3 eggs, one by one, beating well, then add 6ozs. of flour, with 1/4 teaspoon of baking powder. Shake in a little grated lemon rind and 4ozs. crystallised cherries cut up. Bake in fancy tins, and when cold ice and top each cake with a glace cherry.

I didn't have any preserved cherries, so I used maraschino cherries from a jar, and used the syrup to mix with icing sugar for the icing.



They were actually delicious. Not light and fluffy, but soft and moist and dense, with a gorgeous crunchy crust. I absolutely loved them because of it. The crust was the best part, and the cherries were very cute flecked pink throughout.

There are so many other things I've made and will make from this book, so stay tuned! If you want to see some more of my vintage cookbook collection, go here, or click "vintage" in the navigation bar at the top of the page :)

Monday, January 16, 2012

Veggie Baby Food: Spinach and Cottage Cheese Pasta






I remember thinking when I was younger that babies just ate puree and it was pretty much vegetable or fruit. Nowadays we know so much more and are getting less and less afraid to get their kids to try more adult foods early.

Back then you wouldn't have caught me eating spinach anything. If I can get Veggie Baby to eat spinach this early, then it will just be normal... right? Well, I'm going to try anyway!

This was super-easy, I just cooked a handful of pasta (doesn't matter what sort) until it was well overcooked. Easier for them to chew that way! Well, gum. In the last few seconds I threw in a handful of fresh spinach, and drained all when it was wilted. Popped it in the food processor with a spoonful or two of cottage cheese, pulsed all until it was at the soft but-bits-still-left-in stage (technical term) and it went down a treat. It does need some thinning with water if you have leftovers and want to use it straight from the refrigerator... but that's easy enough to do.

Linky bitz...

The linky will be up at 9am every Monday morning, and will stay up until the following Sunday.

Grab the Meatless Monday button above and put it in your post, and even on your sidebar if you're feeling generous.

Visit at least one other blogger and leave some love. This is so much more cool if we're in it together!

Where it says "Name", you might like to add the name of your dish instead or as well.







I do want to know though... are you a spinach fan? I went from sheer loathing to true love. Is this normal?!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Veggie Meal Plan


I'll be spending parts of this week mourning the fact we don't have a barbecue. These mushrooms are so good when smoky and charred! Instead they'll have that boring "I've-been-cooked-in-a-cheap-non-stick-frypan-what-of-it?" flavour. Lucky they'll still be delicious. 

I'm also thinking of recreating a couple of Meet Me At Mikes recipes... I saw that potato curry recipe and my mouth cried. YUM!


  cajun mushrooms with potato salad 
 ratatouille pasta 
 Korean bbq stir fry with hokkien noodles 
 felafel kebabs with hommous, tabbouleh and tzaziki 
 pumpkin and feta brown rice burgers 


 cherry afternoon tea cakes 



 veggie omelet strips 
 whole nectarines 


See you at the beach!

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Cars 2 giveaway winner



Morning all!

I bet I'm not the only blogger who is bemoaning the way in which we have to choose winners for giveaways these days - it's hard! Choosing them randomly was so much nicer than having to choose a winner on merit, because if you ask me, everybody's answers are awesome and y'all deserve to win!

However, nothing gets me more than a small child's mispronunciation, and so I have awarded the Cars 2 on Blu Ray and pop-up tent to Fun_Sophie for this entry:

HUGE Toy Story fans,  something for everyone,  Little Miss 4 thinks Barbie and "Kem"  only exist in "Stoy Story 3"... we like to keep it that way,  she especially likes the bit when Barbie rips up "Kem's" clothes... so do I!


Kem! Kem absolutely killed me.

Congratulations my dear, I will get your prizes out to you ASAP.



PS Thank you to those who said kind things about the Veggie Baby... she's pretty cute :)

PPS I love that the disclaimer was a hit!


Friday, January 13, 2012

Five things I swore I'd never do when I became a mum.



My kid is only 9 months old, so I'm surprised I cracked so early! While there are several things I've held on to, my main aim as a parent is to be very Zen and flexible when necessary. So I say goodbye to these random things I said I'd never do because at the end of the day... they're not that big a deal :)

1. I would never, ever, EVER, refer to myself in the third person as "mummy".

For starters, I hate the word "mummy", never used to say it, and made it known to all and sundry I was to be addressed as mama. I would cringe when I heard other mothers say it, and swore it would never leave my lips. These days I can be heard saying "mummy help you?" and "give mummy a kiss" and I don't care who knows it. My strongest, most staunch oath disappeared pretty much overnight.

2. My crawler would never get around on an unswept floor at home.

I can see three dust bunnies right now from where I sit. But she hasn't noticed them yet, and that's the main thing.

3. My child would only eat packaged baby food if there were solid mitigating circumstances and for some reason there wasn't six months worth of food lovingly frozen for emergencies.

Um...

4. My child would not watch TV until the age of two, as per current research.

I thought this one would be a cinch. We aren't big TV people anyway. But have you seen her face when Giggle and Hoot comes on? And she sits there rocking with a big grin and clapping her pudgy little hands in delight? I'm not taking that away from her. At most it's on for an hour in the afternoon and she sits transfixed when any cartoon theme song comes on, then crawls off, uninterested when the music stops. She pays about as much attention to that as she does me when I read the 20 books I do to her every day.

5. I would never under any circumstances buy a three-wheeled pram - have you seen how ugly they are?

Ahh yes, but have you ever felt how amazing they are to manoeuvre?


I bet there'll be more that get left by the wayside as the actual experience of parenting reveals itself to be remarkably different to the theoretical version. My only hope is to stand strong on the things that matter and not sweat the small stuff.

What have you relented with? What standards did you lower a little?


Thursday, January 12, 2012

Pumpkin and Haloumi Salad with a Honey-Jalapeno Dressing







For some reason I can't get out of the groove of making pumpkin salads and adding haloumi to them. It's getting ridiculous, you'd think there was no other vegetable and cheese combination on earth. Way to be creative, Stacey.

Anyway, it's good stuff, and I'll keep making it until sweet potato gets an inferiority complex and shouts from the pantry "you don't love me any more! I always knew pumpkin was your favourite" and slams the door. Attitude.

This one was invented when Mrs Woog came to town and was having a barbecue with about nine million of her nearest and dearest. It was loud, chaotic, full of excited kids and a whole lot of fun. I was tasked with salads, and I wasn't about to pass up an excuse to use haloumi. Stuff is like crack.

It was the day of the hangover from hell, and once I imagined that oozy, salty gift from god frying and generally being delicious in the extreme, I had to have it. There was a good chance I was going to turn up, graciously offer the salad to the hungry masses, then surreptitiously and constantly pick the haloumi out of it when no-one was looking. 

Sometimes it's hard to share.

In a fit of extreme laziness, and a deep aversion to putting the oven on in stupidly hot weather, I fried the pumpkin. I'm reasonably certain nobody could tell the difference. Or they were too polite to tell me so.




Look at this adorable human.

This is Mrs Woog's mum. She liked me even though I have the longest fingers seen on any humanoid, and her daughter told me I swore too much. I also giggled inappropriately, drank too many martinis and lost several games of handball to her grandchildren. She liked me so much she adopted me, and I am now one about 17 girls she calls her own, including the impossibly fabulous Uberkate, shown above making me wet my pants.

My new mum said she liked my salad, and that's all that counts.

Ingredients:

3 cups roasted or gently fried cubed pumpkin
1 block cubed haloumi, fried
A mixture of spinach and rocket
handful of mint, torn
handful of pumpkin seeds (I'm not actually putting my grubby mitts all over these ingredients, it's just a good vague description of amounts...)

Dressing ingredients:

2 cloves garlic, minced
4-5 jalapenos, diced very, very small
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
a little more than 1 cup honey
1/4 cup Corona or other light Mexican beer

Directions:

1. Layer the spinach and rocket in a bowl or on a serving platter.

2. Add the pumpkin and haloumi and sprinkle the mint and pumpkin seeds over.

3. Drizzle with dressing and a little olive oil.

Dressing Directions:

1. Saute the garlic and jalapenos very gently in some olive oil until soft - 10 minutes.

2. Turn the heat down and add the red wine vinegar. Let steep for 10 minutes or so, until some of the vinegar cooks down.

3. Add the honey and stir. At this point I was worried the end result would be too thick, so I tried to figure out what might thin it a little. Just as I thought "I bet I randomly think of something that isn't immediately obvious and it works perfectly", I sipped my Corona. Bingo. I poured in about 1/4 cup or so (maybe a little more) and it was just the thing.



Would YOU like me even though my fingers are longer than a monkey's?

It's ok if you wouldn't.


really.


I probably wouldn't like me either.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Lemon Coconut Slice

Well, as promised, we're back to tea parties and pretty things! Thanks for allowing me that moment, and for being so kind about it all.

Quick, someone put the kettle on!

In the early '80s, Veggie Mama was a very little girl. A little girl that was addicted to lemon coconut slice.

I'm not sure if it's purely an Australian thing, but I ate a lot of it as a kid. It seemed to be everywhere - parties, barbecues, school bring-a-plates, fetes, Christmas... it was probably the single most favourite thing of mine that my mum made.

I was partial to a bit of cherry ripe slice too, actually... and mint slice. Caramel slice I could take or leave, but I still miss jelly slice to this day. Damn you gelatine!

Anyway, my mum made this a lot, and when I moved out of home, I tried to make it too. It became a real labour of love because without a food processor, I had to hand crush those damn biscuits with a centuries-old potato masher! It would take ages and I'd get crumbs everywhere. And I'd grate my knuckles grating the lemon rind on an old tin box-grater.

Anybody would think I lived in pioneer times.

Anyway, with the miracle of modern technology, I am no longer afraid to make this! We actually made them for my baby shower, and I'm not ashamed to say I hid some in case they all got eaten and I didn't get enough. It's the prerogative of a 36-week-pregnant woman in the height of summer. She can have whatever she wants.

Ingredients:
250g Arnott's Marie biscuits (or any mildly sweet, plain biscuit)
1 tin condensed milk
125g butter, melted
1.5 cup coconut
juice and rind of 1 lemon

Directions:

1. Process biscuits in batches until crumbly.

2. Mix with condensed milk, butter, coconut and lemon juice and rind.

3. Press into a rectangular tin and place into refrigerator an hour or two to chill and firm.

4. Ice with lemon icing - a cup of icing sugar, a tablespoon or so of melted butter (optional) and enough lemon juice to make soft and smooth.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

On not being liked.

A while ago now, I spent some time with someone, and thought we'd get along famously.

We were quite different, but had a similar sense of humour and a similar outlook on life. There was much fun and frivolity to be had.

But as the time went on, I got the sneaking suspicion they were not feeling the same way.

And, unexpectedly for me, I began to feel a little bit insecure.



no friends+lolcat pics on Sodahead


Suddenly I was wondering it it was something I had done. Was I not funny enough? Not smart enough? Did I go too far with a joke? Did I unknowingly overstep some kind of personal line? Why was this not working out as I had expected?

Then I wondered what on earth it was that I had expected.

After mulling that over for a while (at 3am mind you, excellent insomnia fodder), I came to the conclusion I hadn't expected anything. It was more that my feelings were a little hurt that someone didn't like me. It was as simple as that. And seemingly, as immature as that.

Then of course, I started the spiral of wondering if I was reading too much into the whole situation, and in fact there was absolutely nothing wrong and I was making it all up. That I had misread some signals and was turning this molehill into a mountain. But my gut was still nagging that there was something amiss.

And then I wondered why I even cared. I am a successful, happy, secure woman with a career and a family and plenty of friends and a charmed life. Why was the (possibly imagined) rejection from a veritable stranger leading me to question who I am and the behaviour I exhibit?

The point of the story is, that in the grand scheme of things, I don't care. Sure it would have been nice to make a new friend, but the truth is, my life is still awesome without them. We can go back to our original aquaintance, which was pleasant enough.

But I'm not going to pretend that at the time, I didn't care. Because apparently, that's normal. Rejection, however slight, stings a little. Sometimes it leads us to re-examine ourselves and that is only ever a good thing. And if I'm to make some changes for the better based on this examination, then I can only be grateful for the opportunity to see them.

But boy, does it suck in the moment.

I don't know whether it's because it brings up schoolyard feelings of being left out and being ignored, or just that navigating interpersonal exchanges can be tricky and filled with opportunities to be confused, but that gnawing, slightly ashamed feeling of being "not enough" is universal.

I am sure this is not the last time I'll ever feel this way. And I know that nobody can make you feel anything without your permission, but feelings are feelings because you can't help them. If we were all rational all the time, there'd be no passion, no creativity, no art. Rationality is the lifejacket that helps you through those irrepressible feelings so at some point you surface from them having learned something.

It's only now that it happened so long ago that I can look back and see with an objective eye the journey I took.

And if it means I can be a better friend to someone else in the future, then it was meant to be.





Wow. that was deep. Back to spinach roll and tea parties tomorrow xx


Monday, January 9, 2012

Sundried Tomato and Goat Cheese Mini Quiches







 





How cute are these little thangs?! And you know what? They're the easiest thing in the world to make. And even good cold. Hell, you could even make one big quiche because all it requires is an impossible quiche recipe... doctored up a little.

I can't remember which one I used now (it's around here somewhere!) but this recipe on taste.com is very similar and will work perfectly. Just swap the chorizo and capsicum with chopped semi-dried tomatoes and bits of goat cheese (I used the marinated stuff in a jar), top with parsley and some basil, and cook 15-20 minutes. Easy peasy!

I made these for a party that required canapes that could be eaten without plates and utensils. They're tiny and bite-size, and work just as well in lunchboxes. You could even make a huge batch and freeze. By lunchtime they'll be ready to go.

Let's see what you've got!

Linky bitz...

♥ The linky will be up at 9am every Monday morning, and will stay up until the following Sunday.
♥ Grab the Meatless Monday button above and put it in your post, and even on your sidebar if you're feeling generous.
♥ Visit at least one other blogger and leave some love. This is so much more cool if we're in it together!

Where it says "Name", you might like to add the name of your dish instead or as well.




Sunday, January 8, 2012

Veggie Meal Plan

With my head still firmly in holiday mode, and my diary fast filling up with things that mean I should really get my act together, dinners around here are still lazy summer style.

God help me if I have to put the oven on.

So with that, (and so I can get back to my book before the baby wakes up), here is what's going down in the Veggie Household this week:


 schnitzel with honey-soy sesame sauteed greens 
 antipasto pasta salad 
 mexican toasted sandwiches 
 sushi and veggie dumplings 
 tacos 

  

 banana pancakes 



♥ apple-apricot chunky mix 
 cold potato cubes 





PS don't forget to enter my Cars 2 giveaway!

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Cars 2 party and giveaway!

I have a confession to make.

I love kids movies.

My very first movie I ever watched at the cinema was Bambi. I am still not over his mum dying in that forest.

I'm not ashamed to say that two Christmases ago, I was given a copy of The Land Before Time on DVD. As a gift. I didn't even have any children then. I still religiously watch The Care Bears Movie.

When I was asked to throw a Cars 2 party in honour of the movie recently being released on Blu-Ray, my brain went into overdrive - I love a party, I love a theme, I love excited kids and I damn well love Pixar movies and I don't care who knows!

I recruited my sister, who has a six-year-old boy, a two-year-old girl and an incredible knack for throwing a good party. She was hassling me for weeks before this went down, ideas all tumbling out of her head and money tumbling out of her purse as she bought more and more themed things. Girl is SERIOUS about this stuff.



She insisted that all partygoers have Cars tattoos. This is her painfully cute Miss 2, Jasmine.



We are big kids at heart. We are the loudest, the most excited, the most dressed-up kid-party-goers you ever saw. In fact, I'm going to go so far as to say we were more excited about the party than the children. But that didn't last long!


First up on the list was the little attendees making their own licence plates. We got a tub of foam shapes and letters from K-Mart and let them go wild.




And I don't know about you, but there ain't no party like a party with a pass-the-parcel. This one contained a Spy Train, and the winning fellow was absolutely chuffed.







Now if you're me, then you think there ain't no party like a party with party food. We had mini hot dogs and teddy cars, which went down a treat. A veggie party-goer and I had cheese and sauce. Good stuff!



tiny party-goers refuelled with "motor oil" which tasted suspiciously like sarsparilla cordial.


We made a ton of popcorn in readiness for the grand premiere, and my genius sister had me put each portion into everyone's party hat. Genius.







We had a ton of pillows and blankets on the floor, kicked the adults out and turned it up real loud. Everyone got comfy, chilled out and ready to kick back and watch.



Even that ridiculously adorable, precious, incredibly biteable Veggie Baby. This post is in no way biased.

Look at those lips.

Sigh.

And those little crossed legs.

Hanging out with the big kids.

SIGH.



Gettin' all squished and slumpy in the cool pop-up tent.


We made super-duper totally red cupcakes and gave each kid about seventeen then sent them home to their parents. MUHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

We also filled Cars party favour bags with Cars crayons, colouring and activity sheets, whistles, balloons, candy and various other bits and pieces to take home.

It was a bit fun.




Hey Veggie Dad... we should probably have another baby.







Meanwhile, Thanks to Pixar, I am giving away a copy of Cars 2 on Blu-Ray and an uber-cool pop up tent! Slouchy baby not included.













All you gotta do is leave a comment telling me what is your favourite Pixar movie and why. I'll pick the answer I like the most. I'd like to do it randomly, but apparently the law frowns upon that... so I hope you don't mind this way!










The competition will close at 8am Saturday January 14. 
The lucky winner will be notified on the blog and by email.
Entry is open to Australian residents only.
Prize pack is valued at $74.99.


*Disclaimer - to celebrate Pixar's 25th birthday (I know, can you believe it?!), I was sent a Cars party pack that included cups, plates, napkins, a pop up tent, favour bags, activity sheets, Cars 2 on Blu-Ray, Toy Story 3 on DVD and Cars Toys, which we used as prizes for the games. If you think that receiving any of this has influenced my opinion in any way, you are a twit.