Good Natured Salad (Review)

Just the sheer name conjures up nice food doesn't it? Food that behaves itself and doesn't cause issues?

Well it does for me, and when I was sent a voucher to buy some recently, I was more than happy to try them out as I'd already tried the Winter root vegetables previously.

This weather is perfect for salad, strawberries and cream, and Pimm's, which is why I selected the above salad vegetables and fruit. The tomatoes and cucumber are also a perfect accompaniment when diced and mixed with cubed feta cheese.

The best thing about Good Natured is that they use only natural predators to control pests and diseases, which means that the range has been grown completely pesticide residue free. The salad range included Tantalising Tomatoes, Cool Cucumbers, Perfect Peppers and Awesome Aubergines and are available in selected Asda stores nationwide.

I was sent a voucher to purchase these items. My opinion is honest and unbiased.

Mexican Discovery Fajita Kits (Review)

We like fajitas in this house. They're easy to cook, provide several of the five a day, relatively healthy and taste incredibly naughty! In these 'Summer' months, they're a light and fun meal befitting the balmy evenings, and we tend to have them once a week or so at the moment.

I was sent one of the new packs from Discovery (original flavour) to help us create the perfect fajitas and while I first thought, "How much can you put into a kit without providing the filling ingredients?" I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of the contents. Inside you get a packet of eight really soft and thick flour tortillas, a sachet of salsa and a packet of seasoning mix.

fajitas

This is where I realised I'd been doing it wrong for all this time, I don't tend to use any seasoning on the soya chunks that I put in and as a result the fajitas don't taste very authentically Mexican. However, I did this time, and while it was a tad spicy, it was very tasty and incredibly more-ish. Which is why I forgot to take a photo of the finished product!

The Discovery Perfect Fajita Kit is available from most supermarkets priced at £3.19. I actually think that's a very reasonable price as I would normally pay £1.50 for wraps which taste nowhere near as nice and fall apart the moment the end is folded. When the pack also includes seasoning and salsa which makes it good value. Would I buy it? Yes!

More information on Discovery is available at www.discoveryfoods.co.uk where there's a good selection of recipe inspirations too.

I was sent this product for the purpose of this review, my opinion is honest and unbiased.

Digging For An (Organic) Victory

Last week I was fortunate enough to be invited to somewhere that I'd wanted to go for quite some time: the organic gardens at Yeo Valley headquarters in Somerset. The purpose of the visit was to see how they have really taken on board the technology behind organic farming, as with their dairy products, and to see the techniques they employ.

Yeo Valley is not like so many of those large companies, churning out products (pardon the pun) with little regard for anything other than commericial criteria. They started in the 1970s as a family run business between a husband and wife, the company continues to be run by Mary and now her son Tim, while the gardens are the brainchild of Tim's wife Sarah. When they moved back to the farm twenty years ago, Sarah set about changing the traditional farmhouse garden into something more personal and contemporary, expanding the area to six and a half acres, and opening up the view to Blagdon Lake just beyond the farm.

In 2009 the farm became completely organic, and the gardens followed suit the next year as one of only a handful of organically certified ornamental gardens in the country. Everything in the garden, which is then used in the tearooms, is grown organically and is home-made. The team working on the gardens and in the kitchens, are incredibly dedicated to creating a home-grown environment and delicious foodstuffs, from the organic compost made on site (making them virtually waste-free) to the cheesecakes made by the head chef Jaime.

When I arrived, I was treated to a tour of the gardens by one of the gardeners. The garden is split into 'rooms' and allows for different design aspects to be explored.

The Bronze Garden was one of my two favourite sections, with all flowers and plants fitting the colour scheme of 'bronze'. The pool you see here is treated to an organic black dye every year, this makes it reflective and allows for the statue and surrounding area to be reflected beautifully, but it also means that the sun's rays do not penetrate the surface and therefore no algae grows. Clever hey?

The vegetable garden was my other favourite section; the mixed beds are bursting forth with carrots, leeks, brocolli, sweetcorn, with  Love in the Mist and marigolds scattered in between them. It was a riot of colour, life and promise. There are beautiful metalwork sculptures throughout carrying the vegetable theme on.

The flowers throughout the garden are simply stunning: a riot of typical British countryside flowers in either the natural meadow setting (complete with Yeo Valley's own beehives making sixty jars of honey a year) or the woodland walk with foxgloves and ferns galore.

Following the tour of the organic gardens, we were fortunate enough to have the head chef at Yeo Valley show us how to cook three dishes using the delicious range of Yeo Valley yoghurts. Jaime demonstrated how easy it was to make sourdough bread (the non-messy way), to smoke trout (as a vegetarian I didn't pay much attention to this one, although it could probably do vegetable kebabs and halloumi nicely) and how to use a pot of yoghurt to make a cheesecake.

Don't they look delicious? Fortunately we got to taste test them, as they made up part of our lunch. The chefs at Yeo Valley had created a stunning array of simple side dishes to accompany the smoked trout, or roasted vegetable tart.

Clockwise from top left: home-grown tomato salad, pasta with feta cheese, mustard and olives, beetroot salad, and roasted vegetable tart.

The afternoon concluded with a talk about making organic compost and feeds for plants. I'm quite a keen composter but didn't realise the difference between aerobic and anaerobic composting; most of us compost anaerobically (not turning the mixture) and this can take up to eighteen months. Yeo Valley are keen to use all their garden waste; compost, leaf mulch, nettle and comfrey teas etc. Very impressive, and food for thought in my own garden.

It was an amazing day and I've been trying out a few of the recipes that Jaime showed us, more of these to follow in the next week.

If you'd like to find out more about the organic gardens at Yeo Valley then click here for more information. If you'd like to visit them, then they run open days on Thursday until September, click on the visitor information tab.

I received a day out at Yeo Valley and a bag of gorgeous dairy goodies to experiment with my cooking.

Tuesday 10th July 2012 – 'Your Favourite Colour' (192/366)

I've got two many favourite colours to pick just one, I have a favourite shade of every colour. Today my favourite colour is red; the red of the flowers in the organic garden at Yeo Valley, the red of the confit on the cheesecakes that their head chef made for us for lunch, the red of the sweet peas on the table while we ate a delicious meal, and the red of the home-made strawberry jam on the home-made scones for afternoon tea.

Meal Planning Monday #13

It's been a few weeks since I've taken part in this linky (because of The Boy's birthday and our holiday the week before) and for the few weeks before that I'd been lacking enthusiasm. That ended up costing us money and wasting food. Not good, not acceptable and a complete lack of effort on my part. This month is completely manic financially: our holiday, The Boy's birthday and Britmums. I need to utilise the food in the cupboards and freezer, not buy any more!

  • Sunday: red onion & cheese plait, buttered carrots & roast Charlotte potatoes (with skins). The two dads (mine and The Boy's) will be having slow-cooked brisket in beer, mango chutney and mustard.
  • Monday: slow-cooked 'pulled' vegetables in wraps, ranch salad and onion rings.
  • Tuesday: Mediterranean vegetables with rice and grilled halloumi.
  • Wednesday: (work day) Primaverdi pasta. (Mr. TBaM is reading this wondering what it is: slice courgettes and half a leek, and lightly stirfry. Add half a tub of Elmlea and a handful of parmesan, along with a grind of black pepper. Cook the pasta in hot water for three minutes, strain and transfer to pan. Mix and serve with a sprinkle of parmesan. Ta!)
  • Thursday: Quattro formaggi pizza and wedges.
  • Friday: Britmums Live.
  • Saturday: Britmums Live.

I'm linking this up to Mrs. M's Meal Planning Monday

Tilda Kids (Review)

TheBoy was recently sent the new Tilda Kids rice range to try. This new range contains four, delicious, different flavours: Cheese & Tomato, Sunshine Vegetable, Sweet Vegetable & Wholegrain, and Mild & Sweet Curry Rice.

children's rice

They all sound very exotic and exciting for the average child's taste buds, but are all suitably mild in flavour so as not to cause an explosion on the tongue! Suitable for 3 years+, the range contains no nasties with natural ingredients used throughout. The back of the pack also suggests what they can be used to go with, for example the Cheese & Tomato rice will go nicely with meatballs. And because they provide 1 of your little one's 5 a day, they are a perfect accompaniment.

Available in 125g pouches most supermarkets, they cost £1.15. As The Boy is only just three he has a half portion at a time, and for busy work days it is a perfect solution to dinner times. Even Nana approves, and you know you're onto a winner when that happens!

We were sent these products for the purpose of this review. Our opinions are honest and unbiased.

Update 19/06/12

Several people asked me why it was only suitable for 3yrs+ and so I asked the PR company. They said this:

The Tilda Kids range of products are specifically aimed at 3-9 year old children as this is where our research was focused. Therefore, this age groups taste, texture, ingredient etc preferences are at the core of the range.

However, the products are suitable for children older than 9 and younger than 3 years old provided they are fully weaned and happily able to eat solids.

Hope that helps?

Meal Planning Monday #12

It wasn't until I read Kate's Meal Planning Monday earlier that I realised I'm going on holiday next week. It sounds a bizarre thing to think of from reading her post, but we are staying on the same resort next week and she prompted my brain into gear. Our week's holiday in Devon seems to have caught me unawares and I'm left with a fridge and freezer full of food that I need to try and use up. Admittedly I don't need to eat up the freezer food but I am in a pickle because I had a delivery from a PR earlier:I'm going to be trying some lunchtimes recipes with The Boy to engage him into his mealtimes more, and while I anticipated a sample from them, I didn't expect four loaves and four packs of rolls! Therefore I need to find space in my freezer because we won't eat them all in time and I'm not wasting food.

So this week I need to use food up!

  • Sunday: It was my mum's birthday so we had a small clear out of the freezer (nowhere near enough) and the fridge.
  • Monday: Pizza, salad and wedges.
  • Tuesday: Vegetable fajitas with smoky quorn chunks. (I finally remembered to add it to the planner!)
  • Wednesday: Chicken pie/vegetable frittata, salad and wedges.
  • Thursday: Spaghetti and meatballs.
  • Friday: Leftover vegetables (I anticipate leeks, mushrooms, peppers and courgettes) in risotto.
  • Saturday: Chinese.

As Kate points out, there won't be a plan from me next week as I'll be enjoying (hopefully) sunny Devon.

I'm linking this up to Meal Planning Monday at Mrs. M's.

Mediterranean Vegetables And Rice With Grilled Halloumi

Some of my best recipes arise from making stuff up as I go along. This is one of them!

It's an incredibly simple meal and is a complete and utter cheat from start to finish. I've mentioned it a few times on my Meal Planning Monday posts and it always gets an excellent response and a request for the recipe, so here it is.

But first of all, a picture:

Aubergines, courgettes, red & yellow pepper, onion, extra virgin olive oil, basil, garlic, black pepper, basmati rice, halloumi.

I'd like to make out that it's really complicated but it's not. Aldi sell a bag of chargrilled mediterranean vegetables for £1.45. They also do boil in the bag basmati rice. Ten minutes in a wok for the vegetables, ten minutes in hot water in the microwave for the rice and toss the two together. Lightly grill the halloumi on both sides. Shove it all on a plate.

Et voila!

Sponsored Video: 'What's That?'

That question right there:

'What's that?'

and:

'Why?'

Are there any other words uttered by your toddler that can drive you to distraction at least eleventy billion times a day?

The Boy's personal favourite is:

'Are you (insert action here)?'

The reason those words drive me bananas is because they usually follow me saying I'm going to do (the action) or him witnessing me doing it. It's like he's double-checking that he's not imagining it. Mr. TheBoyandMe and I have actually tried to psycho-analysis this query from him to no avail. It's just one of his little quirks.

When these questions are driving you mad and you've answered the 'why?' or 'what's that?' for the seventy-fifth time in a row, turn it around on them and ask them the 'why?' Chances are they already know the answer but just want confirmation from you.

As for the 'what's that?' mantra? Bear with them, every single thing that they come across on a daily basis is completely and utterly new to them. These tiny little beings that we created have no idea what that jumpy thing is in the grass, or what happens when you drop a cup of water on the floor.

The only time that The Boy seems to stop asking me questions is when he's eating, and even then there is some curiosity as to the substances on his plate. Maybe he's trying to tell me something?

This is a sponsored post. My ramblings are genuine as is the amount my son asks me if I've just done something that he's seen me do. 

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