Vegan Coconut Rice with Miso Tofu and Pickled Veg, with Peanut Chilli Broccoli

This vegan coconut rice is a little time consuming to make, in that involves some prep in the days before you make it with the preparation of the tofu and pickled veg. And it’s definitely not the lightest of meals as it’s full of rich flavours and textures. But it’s so worth it! Once you’ve prepped the tofu and veg, it’s very easy to throw together.

Makes 4 medium bowls.

For the rice, tofu and veg

Ingredients

1 block firm tofu

500 g brown rice

3 teaspoons brown miso paste

2 cans coconut milk

1 teaspoon ginger

Juice of half a lemon

Salt

Half a cucumber

1 carrot

3 radishes

4 oz rice vinegar

2 oz water

2 tbsp sesame oil

Method

First press and marinade the tofu. For best results, do this 48-24 hours before you make this meal – the longer you press and marinade the tofu, the better the flavour. Either use a tofu press or wrap the tofu in a tea towel, put it in a sieve over a bowl and lay some heavy books on top of it.

Make the tofu marinade. Dissolve a teaspoon and a half of brown miso paste in 14 oz boiling water. Add it to a can of coconut milk, a teaspoon of grated ginger, the juice of half a lemon and a pinch of salt.

Once the tofu has been pressed for at least two hours, chop it into cubes and add it to the marinade, in a bowl or airtight container. Refrigerate until you’re ready to make the rice – the longer the better for the tofu to absorb flavour.

Now make the pickled veg. Cut the carrot and cucumber into matchsticks and thinly slice the radish. Heat the rice vinegar, water and a teaspoon of salt in the microwave for 30 seconds and pour over the veg. Store in a jar or airtight tupperware and refrigerate.

To make the rice, weigh out 500g brown rice and rinse. Add to a pan with 1 litre water and a pinch of salt and bring to the boil over a medium heat.

At the same time, dissolve one and half teaspoons miso paste in 14 oz boiling water.

While the rice is cooking, heat 2 tbsp sesame oil over a medium heat. Add the tofu cubes and slowly adding the marinade, fry until the cubes are golden.

When the rice is cooked, add the can of coconut milk and miso water and stir it through the rice.

Serve the rice in a bowl and top with the tofu and the pickled veg.

For the peanut broccoli

Ingredients

125g peanuts

125 g breadcrumbs

Pinch chilli flakes

200g tenderstem broccoli

2 tbsp sesame oil

Method

Steam the broccoli for five minutes till cooked. Toss in a tablespoon of sesame oil and a little salt.

Crush the peanuts, either in a plastic bag with a rolling pin or a mortar and pestle.

Heat the sesame oil over a medium heat. Add the chilli, breadcrumbs and peanuts and cook for 2 minutes till the breadcrumbs are golden.

Toss the broccoli in the peanut mixture and serve!

If you liked this recipe, try –

Vegan Potato and Spinach Pakora Sandwich

Vegan Japanese Mushrooms and Greens

Bento Box Vegan Spicy Tempeh, Potato and Cauliflower

This vegan spicy tempeh, potato and cauliflower salad is a great lunch to eat at home or to make ahead for the days when we might be working from an office again (if you’re not already!) It has a spicy kick that’ll wake you up and stave off any post-afternoon slump. These quantities will make 4 lunches for one person.

Ingredients

150g new potatoes, peeled, boiled and riced or grated

Block tempeh, 200g

1 cauliflower

1/2 tsp red chilli powder

1 tsp cumin

1 tsp paprika

3 tbsp chopped spinach

2 tbsp chopped mint

1 tsp salt

Juice of 2 limes

Method

Combine the chilli powder, mint, cumin, paprika,salt and lime in a bowl.

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees.

Slice the tempeh into thin slices and coat with 2/3 of the chilli mixture. Place in a baking tray.

Slice the cauliflower thinly into slices that are as flat as possible. Coat with 2/3 of the chilli mixture and place in a baking tray.

Bake the tempeh and cauliflower in the oven for 20 minutes.

In the meantime cut the potatoes into quarters and boil till cooked. For the last couple of minutes they’re cooking, put the spinach in the pan to wilt it.

Toss the baked tempeh, cauliflower and potato in the remaining 2/3 of the chilli mixture. Serve with side salad and a squeeze of lemon or lime.

If you like this recipe, try our vegan coconut rice with miso tofu and pickled veg.

Vegan Cheese and Spinach Muffins with Sour Cream

In my pre-vegan days, I used to make cheese muffins all the time for parties, weekends and just-because-I’m-hungry days. They were so dairy heavy that I thought I’d never be able to match them with a vegan version until I made these! This vegan cheese and spinach muffins recipe makes about 16 so plenty for everyone to get tucked into as they didn’t last the day in our house!

For the vegan cheese and spinach muffins;

Ingredients

300g shredded spinach, immersed in boiling water for a couple of minutes to soften

400g self raising flour

4 tbsp nutritional yeast

1/2 tsp Dijon mustard

325ml plant milk

50ml sunflower oil

Flax egg for binding – this is 1 tbsp flaxseed plus 3 tbsp water, chilled in the fridge for 10/20 minutes

100g grated cheese, I used Applewood smoked

1 tsp salt

Method

In one bowl, mix together the flour, nutritional yeast and salt.

In another bowl, mix together the oil, plant milk, and mustard.

Combine the two bowls of wet and dry ingredients and add in the cheese and spinach. Spoon the mixture into muffin tins and bake for 30-40 minutes at 175 degrees. The bottoms can take a bit longer to cook, so check that they’re firm-ish before removing from the muffin tin – they do firm up once left for half an hour or so, but you don’t want them too soggy!

Sour cream

Ingredients

200g raw cashews, soaked overnight

160 ml water

Juice of 1 lemon

Teaspoon Dijon mustard

2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar

Teaspoon salt

Method

Very simple – just put all the ingredients together and blend!

Serve the vegan cheese and spinach muffins cut in half with the sour cream.

If you like these, try our cheesy vegan puff pastry bites.

Vegan Potato and Spinach Pakora Sandwich

This vegan potato and spinach pakora sandwich definitely isn’t the healthiest vegan meal out there, though it does contain spinach which is a great source of a number of vitamins, magnesium and iron. I made this after a bike ride in the freezing January Edinburgh winter, and it was exactly what I needed to warm me up. It’s a bit of a messy fiddly sandwich to make as it’s battered, but worth the effort.

Ingredients

Batter

250g chickpea (gram) flour

1/2 tsp red chilli powder

175 ml plant milk

1/2 tsp cumin

1/2 tsp fresh coriander

Tsp salt

Pinch bicarbonate of soda

Filling

300g new potatoes, peeled, boiled and riced or grated

1/2 tsp red chilli powder

1/2 tsp cumin

3 tbsp chopped spinach

2 tbsp chopped mint

1 tsp salt

1 lime

Plus 6 slices of white bread.

And handful of spring onions to serve.

Method

First make the filling by combining the potatoes, chilli, cumin, spinach, mint ,salt and lime.

Next ,make the batter by putting all of the batter ingredients into a food processor. You can mix by hand in a bowl too, but a food processor ensures a better distribution of the ingredients. The batter should be the consistency of runny cream – add more water if it isn’t.

Heat some oil on a medium heat in frying pan. Dip one slice of white bread in the batter, covering both sides, and drop in the pan.

Fry on both sides till golden, then press filling onto one side of the bread.

Repeat with another slice of bread – cover in batter, fry on both sides, then add filling.

Press the two slices of bread, topped with filling, into a sandwich, and fry for a further two minutes.

Cut in half and eat with spring onions on the side!

If you like this, try our vegan cheese and spinach muffins with sour cream recipe.

Vegan pancake with sour cream and avocado

This vegan pancake with sour cream and avocado is a really easy lunch  with one of my favourite herbs, turmeric! I had mine with fried potatoes, avocado and salad, but you can change up the toppings – the secret is the gram flour which is brilliant for making pancakes and omelettes.

Ingredients
150 gram (chickpea) flour
225g plant milk
Teaspoon turmeric
Teaspoon salt
Crushed or minced garlic clove 
1 avocado, sliced
5 small potatoes, parboiled and cut into small cubes
150g cashews, soaked for at least two hours in water
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon nutrititional yeast
1 teaspoon salt

Method
First make the sour cream. Place the cashews, mustard, lemon juice, nutritional yeast and salt in a blender and pulse till you achieve a smooth cream.

Then make the turmeric pancake batter by combining the flour, milk, turmeric and salt till they form a smooth batter.
Next, heat a little olive oil and gently fry the garlic for a couple of minutes, then add to the pancake batter. Pour the batter into the frying pan and let it cook for two or three minutes till the top seems firm, then flip over.

At the same time, heat a little olive oil in a separate pan and gently fry the potato cubes till golden.

Serve the pancake topped with the potatoes, sour cream, sliced avocado and salad.

If you like this, try our vegan comfort food recipes – shepherd’s pie and twice baked potatoes.

Vegan Japanese Mushrooms and Greens

This is a really easy and healthy dish to whip up for lunch or dinner, full of flavour and goodness.

Ingredients

2 tbsp olive oil

2 tbsp apple cider vinegar

1 tbsp brown sugar

1 tbsp sesame oil

Juice of one lemon

Grated garlic clove

1 tsp ground ginger

100 g mushrooms of any kind, sliced

1 pak choi, chopped

1 small carrot

250g ready cooked grains – I used these Merchant Gourmet grains

Sesame seeds

Method

First combine the olive oil, cider vinegar, brown sugar, sesame oil, lemon juice, garlic and ginger to make the dressing. Mix well together and season with salt and pepper.

Heat a tbsp of sesame oil in a wok and fry the mushrooms over a medium heat for three-five minutes till browned. Add the grains and the pak choi and cookd for another five minutes over a medium heat.

Serve with the dressing mixed through the grain, pak choi and mushroom mix, and topped with grated carrot and a sprinkling of sesame seeds.

If you like this recipe, try our Vegan Bento Box Tempeh with Spicy Potato and Cauliflower.

Vegan turmeric pasta

Turmeric is a brilliant herb to try to incorporate in your diet. Its health benefits include the potential to prevent heart disease, Alzheimer’s and cancer, and its anti-inflammatory properties can also help with arthritis. It adds an earthy taste and beautiful golden colour to food. This vegan turmeric pasta is really easy to make using jarred turmeric, though you can use fresh too if you can get hold of it.

Vegan turmeric pasta – sunshine in a bowl.

Ingredients

250g pak choi, or 2 pak choi heads and bulbs

I white onion, diced

2 cloves garlic, diced

5 tbsp nutritional yeast

100g cashew nuts, soaked overnight or for a few hours in a bowl of water

220 ml plant milk

2 teaspoons ground turmeric or grated fresh turmeric

Salt and pepper to season

300g pasta of your choice – makes 4 small bowls or two large bowls

Method

  1. Cook the pasta to your taste, drain and leave to the side.
  2. Add some olive oil to a pan. Fry the onions and garlic over a medium heat until soft.
  3. Remove the onions and garlic from the pan and replace with the chopped pak choi, again frying over a medium heat.
  4. Add the cashews to the onion and garlic in a blender, along with the nutritional yeast, plant milk, turmeric, salt and pepper. Blend to a creamy sauce.
  5. Add the pasta and sauce to a large wok or pan and combine over a medium heat for a couple of minutes. Add the pak choi and serve!

If you like this, try our Vegan Pancake with Sour Cream and Avocado

A good night’s sleep

It’s early January 2021, and here in the UK new restrictions are in place. For many of us this means being plunged back into a world of home schooling, juggling work, or worse, not having any work at all and all of the worries that that includes.

A good night’s sleep doesn’t solve any of these things, but good sleep is really important for our mental and physical wellbeing. So I’ve put together this guide to a good sleep, incorporating many of the things that I find useful in my sleep routine, that I hope are helpful to you. And for those of us who have sleepless babies or toddlers or even older children, or other responsibilities or health conditions that make a full night’s sleep impossible, I hope you can use at least some of these suggestions to make the sleep you do get better and more restful and restorative.

Limit naps during the day. I am the world’s biggest fan of naps, but they can be really detrimental to a good night’s sleep if you’re taking long ones in the afternoon. And I often find that a two hour nap can make me feel groggy, irritable and the opposite of rested. If you need a nap in the afternoon, set an alarm for between half an hour and 60 minutes. It’s often all that you need to feel refreshed, and it won’t affect your being able to sleep at bedtime.

Spend more time outside in the daylight. That’s not always easy in the winter, but where you can, try to take a walk outside every day, perhaps at lunchtime. If you walk your dog, do that during the day as well as at night. The exercise benefits will help you to fall asleep at night, too – even light exercise, like a short lunchtime walk, will have benefits for your sleep.

No screen rule. I put this in place last year after waking up at 2am one morning and automatically opening my phone and checking my emails, finding something that made me feel stressed, and realising that no one should be on their phone at that time in the morning when they should be sleeping. By bringing your phone into your bedroom, you are inviting the whole world into your bed with you. Since then I’ve stuck to it, leaving my phone in the hall or living room, and am amazed by how effective it’s been in meaning that I wake up less in the night. My one exception to the no screen rule is my Kindle, which I open up when I find myself unable to get back to sleep.

A good bedtime yoga routine is a great precursor to a restful night’s sleep. You don’t need to pull out your yoga mat – just some gentle stretching by the side of your bed works. I love this one with the wonderful Yoga with Adriene, but I also have my own shorter five minute version that I know off by heart too. It’s a good idea to create your own yoga routines, not just for sleep but for waking too, so that you’re not always dependent on a screen to practice.

Podcasts can be a great way to help you drop off to sleep at night. You might have to break your no screen rule to listen to one, so try to place your phone somewhere in the bedroom where you can’t easily reach for it if you wake up in the night. I really like Nothing Much Happens, a story podcast. I don’t think I’ve ever stayed awake until the end of the story. The Deep Energy podcast plays sounds from nature if you prefer that to the sound of another voice. Or, you could try a mindfulness meditation – there are some great ones on Headspace.

Image – Immaculate Vegan

A sleep mask is a great investment as a way of blocking out the light, as well as dust particles and other irritants, and can help you fall asleep faster. The darker your bedroom, the better your sleep is likely to be, as our brains are hard-wired to need darkness for sleep. I’m a big fan of this Billy Sleeps sleep mask made from fabric cut-offs. Scenting your mask with a little lavender oil on the outside can help you drop off, too (check with your doctor about using this if you are pregnant).

A good strategy for chasing night time worries away is key to a good night’s sleep. Mindfulness techniques can come in really useful here, when it’s 2am and you’re wide awake and worrying about your MOT bill, what your colleague meant at that meeting yesterday, and whether that pain in your back is something more serious. Remember that you don’t have to engage with unhelpful thoughts. You don’t have to find solutions to all of these problems lying in your bed in the wee small hours. Imagine yourself sitting by the side of a waterfall, where the waterfall represents your thoughts as they pass through your mind. Acknowledge them as they rush by. It can often help to name them – here is anxiety, here is anger, here is sadness – and let the torrent pass as you watch your thoughts tumble through the waterfall from your comfortable place at the side.

Image : Pixabay

And finally, make sure that your bedroom is the right temperature. The Sleep Council recommend a temperature of 16-18 C in your bedroom, as if you’re too hot or cold you won’t sleep well.

Vegan Baklava

After trying Nora and Nama’s vegan baklava in Camden Market a while back, I’ve been obsessed with this sticky delicious Turkish pudding! Here’s my vegan version.

Ingredients

200g agave nectar

200 g caster or granulated sugar

150g walnuts

150g pistachios

150g almonds

Juice of 1 lemon

24 sheets filo pastry – about one pack.

6 tbsp coconut oil or dairy free butter.

100g brown sugar.

180g plant milk

Tsp salt

Method

Put the milk, pistachios, almonds, walnuts, salt and brown sugar in the blender to make a gritty paste with 3 tbsp warm water.

Melt 6 tbsp butter or coconut oil in the microwave or on the hob.

Spread out eight sheets of filo pastry in a baking tray, lining the base with the melted butter or oil, and lining every two sheets lightly with the oil or butter. Spread the eighth sheet with the pistachio, almond and walnut paste.

Repeat with eight more sheets, topping with the paste and then eight more sheets. Spread the oil or butter on the top sheet and score it in a diamond shape with a knife – see picture above.

Bake for 40 minutes at 180 C.

While the baklava is baking, 10 minutes before taking it out of the oven melt the granulated sugar, lemon juice, plant milk and agave nectar over a low heat and simmer.

Pour this mixture over the baklava once it’s out of the oven, and serve in squares with tea or hot chocolate!

If you like this recipe, try our Vegan Coconut and Apple Breakfast Bake.

Cheesy Vegan Puff Pastry Bites

These cheesy vegan puff pastry bites are so easy to make and great for lunch, or an on the go snack.

Ingredients

1 sheet ready rolled puff pastry

Grated vegan cheese (I used Applewood Smoked)

Dijon mustard

(Optional) cookie cutters

Method

Spread half the puff pastry sheet thinly with the mustard. Sprinkle over the grated cheese.

Fold the over half of the sheet over the spread half and cut into squares or shapes with the cookie cutters (I used Christmas trees and bells). Add some more grated cheese.

Bake in the oven for 20 minutes until golden.