BEANS beans good for your HEART!

We are celebrating “Heart Health” this week and no better way to do so than with a warming bowl of homemade heart healthy beans!

The food we fuel ourselves with is so important when it comes to our hearts. This homemade beans dish packs in RED (like the heart) ingredients; onions, tomatoes, peppers and paprika these are all great for lowering the chances of heart disease. The beans of course are a great source of fibre that also contributes to a happy healthier heart!!

We’ve topped our beans with a protein packed poached egg, but add tofu if you wish.

All the organic ingredients can be found in our groceries www.greenearthorganics.ie/

Lou 🙂

Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon oil
  • 400g beans (choose black, kidney, butter or cannellini) – drained
  • 400g chopped tomatoes
  • 1 red onion, finely diced
  • 1 red pepper, finely diced
  • 2 teaspoon paprika
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1/2 teaspoon chilli – optional
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 2 teaspoon honey or maple syrup
  • To serve poached eggs or tofu and fresh chopped parsley to sprinkle

Method:

  1. Warm a frying pan on a medium heat and add the oil.
  2. Add the diced red onion and cook to soften for 5 minutes.
  3. Tip in the diced red pepper and cook for a further 5 minutes.
  4. Add the salt, pepper, paprika, cumin, chilli and honey, stir in and cook the spices for a few minutes, if they begin to catch add a tablespoon of water.
  5. Pour in the tinned tomatoes and stir in the drained beans.
  6. Simmer on low for 30 minutes. Taste the beans and adjust the seasoning if needed.
  7. Poach an egg or two in a separate pot then serve up.
  8. Scoop the beans into a bowl top with an egg or two and some chopped parsley if you are feeling fancy.

Produce shortages and good Irish suppliers

The start of a new growing season is upon us, and it always fills me with a sense of hope for the future. The plants will grow, and in a few short months we will be harvesting amazing fresh Irish organic produce.

It has been a reasonably normal February, wet, grey, coldish and overcast, but there have been times of great drying and sunshine too, earlier this month a break in the weather allowed us to get the farm ploughed and tilled ready for the season ahead.

Emmanuel and the team are doing powerful work, and possibly some of the most important work of the season. They are opening up the first of our compost bays and adding back this rich black organic compost to the tunnels. This compost is teeming with life, from the billions of microscopic bacteria to the larger earthworms. Adding this back to our tired tunnel soil will ensure that the crops this year are strong and healthy and full of goodness.

Planting of the first of these tunnels crops is a mere two-three weeks away now, the first inside planting of spinach, chard, salad and lettuce will take place in mid March.

The fields are looking pretty bare now, the only crops left growing are kale, purple sprouting broccoli and swede. We have a store of beetroot and parsnips in one of our cold stores too.

We are lucky though, to have such reliable and decent organic farmers here in Ireland such as Roy Lyttle growing Leeks for us in Antrim, red white and green cabbage from Padraig Fahy in Galway, mushrooms from John McArdle,  Irish apples from Richard Galvin in Waterford. We are very excited for the lovely new mixed Irish salad we will have next week too. Our potatoes, carrots and onions are still Irish, potatoes we aim to have year round Irish supply, for carrots it is a bit trickier.

This is all seasonal Irish fare and the pickings are getting slimmer as the season rolls on. You may have seen the bare fresh produce shelves in many supermarkets and the UK has started rationing supply of many of the fresh Mediterranean type vegetables such as peppers, aubergines and cucumbers.

We deal with a lot of growers on the continent too, to supply the out of season organic produce such as tomatoes and peppers. We have seen price rises of double and treble in our buying which is hard to manage and to maintain our prices.

Unusual cold weather has affected growers, and one supplier we spoke to last week said her farmers have had much of their tomato and pepper crops wiped out by unseasonable late frost.   It seems that unusual is the new usual and certainly as the effects of climate change are felt more and more, our food supply seems to balance on a very precarious edge.  But to invest in food production resilience there needs to be a level playing field, this is a very difficult to do, if farmers are not paid a fair price for what they produce.

It is the below cost selling practice by supermarkets which has weakened our non-export focused food industry and is causing more primary food producers here in Ireland to struggle to sustain their enterprises.

An IFA commissioned economics report published last March, stated that retail prices compression threatens the viability of Irish horticulture which could lead to even more reliance on imports to feed our nation.  The most recent national field vegetable census showed that the number of field vegetable growers fell from 377 in 1999 to 165 in 2014. That is a contraction of 56%

These skills are lost for ever, and once they are gone are difficult to replace.

I for one am grateful for our own farm and the farmers that supply us, we aim to pay fairly for the food we produce and buy, we price our produce as competitively as we can, and we feel by removing the middle man we are able to reasonably compete with the big supermarkets. But not if they continue to sell produce for below the cost of production.

As always, your support makes all the difference, here’s to brighter longer days.

Thank you.

Kenneth

Pancake recipe roundup

pancake roundup

It’s pancake Tuesday tomorrow! What’s your favourite way to eat pancakes? Jam, chocolate spread, or the classic butter/sugar/lemon combo?

Are you team flat or fluffy? Thin beautiful crepes, or thick fluffy style pancakes stacked high on the plate?

Team sweet, or team savoury? We’ve got recipes for every palate.

pancake roundup

If you’re looking for inspiration and want to try something different, here’s our pancake recipe roundup. Click on the links in bold to get straight to the recipe!

Enjoy!

Let food be thy medicine

What is going on with our food? When did it get hijacked and hidden from us, what do any of us really know about the origin of the food we eat?

The short answer is probably very little, and we can all be excused from this responsibility. How are we expected to know? You would need a degree in detection and a lot of free time to really understand what exactly it is we are eating most of the time. The ultra-processed food industry has made it their business to impact our eating habits with all the tools of modern science, and in so doing, have clouded the trail to the truth about our food.

Not only that but we are promised so much, fat free, sugar free, gluten free, fortified with vitamins etc and yet somewhere along the way this food has had its true goodness removed. Why is our food system not better, healthier,and kinder to us and our planet? At what point did food stop being about the food and start being about profit?

Because when it is all about the bottom line, our health and the environment become mere after thoughts. The very building blocks of our health and an industry that covers so much of our planet seems to have lost its way. We are sold the idea of free choice, but the reality is that nearly all of the big brands on our shelves are made by 10 giant multinational conglomerates. An industry built on cheap commodity products wrapped and packaged and sold as healthy, driven by profit, derived from a complex unsustainable food chain, produces most of our food and it is damaging our health and destroying our planet.

How did we get ourselves into this crazy retail race to the bottom and how come it is so hard to value and even want to eat real food? Why is it so hard to do the right thing? Why when we know that diet can reduce the risk of so many diseases, type II diabetes or chronic inflammation or heart disease or the growing level of obesity does the healthy option just feel like an endeavour we will tackle tomorrow? All these questions are linked.

I did a stint in a major pharmaceutical company in the US as a research scientist. A friend of mine at the time worked in the food division, occasionally she would bring cookies to lunch for us to try that had been engineered in her lab to within an inch of their lives. Texture, flavour, taste, and crumbliness had all been optimised in the lab to allow just the right amount of sugar fat and salt to hit our tastebuds in the right way at the right time to make them irresistible. Thesefoods change our culinary habits and desires. But amazing fresh food, rich in taste and texture can quite quickly change our habits back, we can reset the dial so to speak and become accustomed to what real food tastes like again, it has a goodness and a wholesomeness and that cannot be mimicked by processed products.

Hippocrates was the one who said,‘let food be thy medicine’. Sure, not all our aliments can be eliminated by decent eating habits but there is one thing I know for sure it will certainly help. Show me the doctor that has ever prescribed a reduction in eating fresh real food, for there I believe lies our ability to heal our selves and our planet.

Kenneth

Apple & Walnut Traybake

Irish apples are the all year round “fruit” hero! Delicious to eat as they are and fantastic to bake with too. We are all familiar with the apple tart but believe me when I tell you this traybake is much easier and quicker to make and equally delicious!

The walnuts not only compliment the tasty sweet organic apples they also add texture and nutty goodness.

We really hope you try this one soon, remember to serve large slices with giant mugs of tea and chats.

Lou 🙂

Ingredients:

  • 225g self raising flour (or 215g plain flour + 2 teaspoons baking powder)
  • 175g soft butter
  • 150g light brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 2 organic eggs
  • 2 large apples, peeled and grated
  • 100g chopped walnuts, plus 30g extra to decorate
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 2 tablespoons icing sugar to decorate, optional

Method:

  1. Preheat the oven 170c and line a rectangle baking tray (12 x 8 inc) with parchment paper.
  2. Peel and grate the apples. (eat the apple peels with peanut butter as a snack)
  3. Measure the sugar and butter into a mixing bowl and beat together using an electric beater or a hand held whisk.
  4. Next beat in the eggs.
  5. Sieve in the flour, baking powder and cinnamon, mix until combined.
  6. Fold in the grated apple and chopped walnuts.
  7. Add the mixture to the prepared baking tray and bake for 30-40 minutes. Check that the cake if cooked by inserting a cocktail stick when it comes out clean its ready.
  8. Set aside to cool.
  9. To decorate add the icing sugar to a small bowl, add a teaspoon boiling water and mix to a paste, it should be thick like glue. Drizzle over the cake and top with the extra chopped walnuts.

Chocolate Raspberry (Chia Seed) Hearts

These chocolate raspberry chia seed hearts have been trending on the social channels and are the perfect Valentines sweet treat!

We love berry chia seed jam and these chocolate centres have something similar. The chia seeds swell up and give this jammy consistency that works perfectly with raspberries.

Raspberries and chocolate (milk or dark) work so well together. Make these for the one you love, your kids or treat yourself. #selflove

Happy Valentines,

Lou

Ingredients:

Method:

  1. Pop the fresh raspberries into a bowl and mash with a fork, add in the chia seeds, mix well and set aside for 30 minutes to let the seeds swell.
  2. Line a baking tray with parchment paper. To make the heart shapes, use a teaspoon to scoop a small amount of the raspberry mix and put it on the tray in the shape of a ball, flatten with the back of the spoon to make one side of the heart. Put another ball right beside the first one and smooth to make the other side of the heart and make a point for the bottom of the heart. Repeat with all the mix.
  3. Put the tray in the freezer for 2 hours.
  4. Melt the chocolate and butter together in a bowl over a pot of boiling water or in the microwave.
  5. Place one of the frozen hearts in the chocolate and spoon over more chocolate, put it on a tray to set.
  6. Melt the white chocolate and drizzle over – this is optional.
  7. These chocolate hearts will keep in the fridge for 3 days.

Masala Omelette

This is up there with one of our top 5 breakfasts. It is so delicious and incredibly nutritious, I urge you to give this recipe a go. We replaced the eggs in this classic Indian breakfast with a chickpea flour batter here to keep it plant based. Chickpea flour has been used in Asian cuisine for hundreds of years, it is also full of fibre, protein and many vitamins and minerals. Such a useful ingredient, we also use it to make fritters, socca bread and to bind falafel and bean burgers – have you tried cooking with it yet? We stock an organic bag which you can add to your next fruit and veg order.

Liz x

Ingredients (per omelette)

  • 60g chickpea flour
  • 150ml water
  • large pinch of salt
  • chilli flakes to taste (or even better, use chopped fresh green chilli)
  • 1/4 tsp ground turmeric
  • 1/2 tsp garam masala (or any Indian spice blend you like)
  • 1 salad tomato, finely chopped
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped red onion or scallion
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped fresh coriander
  • 1 tsp good oil for frying (we use rapeseed)
  • 1 flatbread (we used tortilla bread here)
  • 1 tbsp mango chutney (or any Indian chutney you like, or natural yoghurt)

Method

  1. Whisk the chickpea flour and water together into a smooth batter. Then add the salt, chilli, turmeric and garam masala and whisk again.
  2. Stir in the tomato, onion and coriander. Meanwhile, heat up a pancake pan over a medium heat.
  3. Warm the flatbread on both sides in the dry pan, place on a plate. Then pour in the oil, swirl to coat the pan evenly. Pour the masala omelette mixture into the pan and swirl or spread in out with a spoon into a thin layer.
  4. Be patient and let the omelette cook slowly until it is set and golden on the bottom and almost dried out on top. You should notice small bubbles forming and popping. Carefully loosen the omelette from the pan and flip with a spatular.
  5. The second side should only take a minute. Spread the bread with the chutney then flip the omelette out on top. Roll up and enjoy whilst hot!

Boxty – Potato pancakes

We don’t eat enough boxty in Ireland. These potato pancakes are so easy to make and so tasty. Boxty is a thrifty and clever way to use up left over mash, stretched further by adding grated raw potato! The secret to really tasty boxty is adding a small knob of butter to finish frying them on the pan.

Eat them as they are or serve with eggs, mushrooms and beans for a delicious weekend brunch.

Lou

Ingredients: makes 16 approx

Method:

  1. Peel and grate the raw potato. Place in a clean tea towel, wrap it and squeeze out the starch.
  2. Finely slice the spring onions and keep some of the green tops for garnish.
  3. Add the mash potato to a mixing bowl along with the grated potato, sliced spring onion, bicarbonate of soda, buttermilk, flour and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Give the batter a good mix.
  4. Heat a frying pan on a medium heat.
  5. Lightly coat the pan with oil.
  6. Spoon on 3 – 4 generous mounds of the potato batter.
  7. Cook gently and just like pancakes, wait for little bubbles to form.
  8. Carefully flip and cook for a further few minutes.
  9. Cook all of the boxty and then return to the pan and drop in a couple knobs of butter, let the butter melt and coat the potato pancakes. Serve straight away.

Sugar Free Flapjacks

The days of 3 square meals has gone out the window for most. Snacking seems to be habitual to many and it definitely isn’t a bad thing so long as the snacks are packed full of energy boasting ingredients like these yummy sugar free flapjacks.

Feel free to snack on these morning, noon or night they taste so good. We favour these over individually wrapped packets from the supermarket too! #lessplasticpackaging

Tip: These flapjacks work best with really ripe black bananas. You can ripen yellow bananas by baking them in the oven for 30-40 mins at 180c or in the air fryer at 180c for 13 minutes.

Lou 🙂

Ingredients:

Method:

  1. Preheat the oven to 160c. Line a 8×8 inc baking tray with parchment paper.
  2. Put the dates in a bowl and cover with boiling water for a couple of minutes to soften.
  3. Measure the oats, coconut and seeds into a mixing bowl. Stir to combine.
  4. Discard the water from the dates and add them to a blender along with the 4 ripe bananas and melted butter. Blend to a smoothish paste.
  5. Add the paste to the mixing bowl and stir everything together.
  6. Tip the mix into the baking tray, push it down and flatten the top as best you can.
  7. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes.
  8. Cool and cut into squares.

Beetroot & Carrot Salad with Dukka

This fresh, sweet salad is the perfect vehicle for my favourite crunchy condiment, dukka. Dukka is an Egyptian dip/sprinkle made with toasted nuts, sesame seeds and spices. It is absolutely stunning – earthy, nutty, warmly spiced with the most intoxicating fragrance. Use it the traditional way as a dry dip (dunk bread in olive oil then into the dukka and devour) or as a crunchy topping for endless salads, soups, stews… you’ll find any excuse to use it once you have a jar in your pantry. Beetroots are in season now and perhaps eating them raw is the most delicious way? Let me know your favourite beetroot recipes in the comments.

Liz x

Ingredients

For the dukka:

  • 250g mixed nuts (or use just the traditional hazelnuts)
  • 4 tbsp sesame seeds
  • 2 tbsp fennel seeds
  • 2 tbsp cumin seeds
  • 2 tbsp coriander seeds
  • optional tsp of salt

For the salad:

  • 3 carrots, julienned
  • 3 beetroot, julienned
  • a large handful of chopped parsley
  • the juice of half a lemon
  • 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • a very small clove of garlic, crushed or finely grated
  • salt and pepper to taste

Method

  1. To make the dukka, toast the nuts in a dry, hot frying pan until they start to take on some colour. Stir often whilst toasting to avoid burning any. Allow the nuts to cool a little before tipping them into a food processor. Pulse to roughly chop the nuts before adding the other smaller ingredients.
  2. Toast the sesame seeds, fennel, coriander and cumin in the dry, hot frying pan next. They will start to pop and smell incredible. Tip them in with the nuts and pulse the processor again until you have a fairly uniform, crumbly mixture. Careful not to over-process, you want crunch and texture, not powder. You can add salt at this stage if you like too.
  3. Allow the dukka to completely cool before storing in a clean jar. Use within one month for optimum freshness and flavour.
  4. To make the salad, add the julienned carrots and beetroot to a salad bowl along with the chopped parsley. Mix the lemon juice, olive oil, garlic and seasoning and pour over the salad. Toss well and just before serving, sprinkle over the dukka. We ate it alongside a parsnip pilaf (next recipe) and some natural yoghurt.