Chocolate & Raspberry Mousse Tart

Ingredients

Base
1 cup dates
1 cup nuts or seeds
1 cup desiccated coconut
2 T coconut oil
Pinch of salt
2 T cacao powder

18 – 20 cm baking tin, pie dish or 4 individual pie / tart dishes.

Choc mousse
3/4 c coconut cream
1 medjool date or 2-3 regular dates (soaked) Or 1 Tbsp maple syrup
1 Tbsp cocoa or raw cacao
1 Tbsp gelatin + 1/4 c water

Raspberry mousse
1/2 c coconut cream
1 c raspberries (i just use frozen)
1 Tbsp Maple syrup
1 Tbsp gelatin + 1/4 c water

optional – additional raspberries for scattering through mouse and to garnish on top.

what to do

Base – put the nuts or seeds into a food processor and break them down until finely chopped. Add the rest of the ingredients and process until it forms a sticky crumb.

Line a dish, cake tin, pie dish, whatever you are using with baking paper and press the base into the tin. Set in the freezer while you make the mousse.

Choc mousse
add the gelatin to the water and leave to ‘bloom’ – chuck the rest of the ingredients in a blender if using dates – if not then just mix all together in a saucepan. bring to a gentle heat and add the gelatin mix, stir until dissolved and pour over the base. Put back into the freezer to set.

Raspberry mousse
While the choc mousse sets you can make this part. Add gelatin to water to bloom. Because i used frozen berries i start by putting the remaining ingredients in a saucepan to gently heat. Add galtin and stir until dissolved. Add all to blender and blend until smooth. Take the mostly set (doesnt have to be fully set) tart from the freezer. If using, scatter berries over the choc layer, then pour the raspberry mouse layer on top. Put back in the freezer, or the fridge to set.

This is best served around 24 hours after making, and stored in the fridge. Sadly, unlike my cheesecake recipe it doesn’t keep quite as well in the freezer so best to prepare the day before. It *can* freeze and be stored in freezer and eaten defrosted but it slightly changes the texture of the mousse, which personally i think is best eaten fresh. This has, however not stopped me from keeping some in the freezer to pull out for pudding over the course of a few weeks!

I had heaps left over from the base recipe (which is pretty much just my simple bliss ball mix) so I roll the extra into bliss balls. For my Christmas version I’ve also doubled the sweetener, because you know, Christmas (and that it will be served to guests who are used to partaking in regular sugar filled baking and treats, so they might be a bit more inclined to prefer it sweet!)

How To help Out a New Mum with special dietary requirements!

So, as Ashton has so kindly shared with many shop checkout assistants and strangers over the last months, in December, we are going from a family of 4 to a family of 5 (humans, that is, we don’t count our pets anymore or i might just pack my bags and bugger off somewhere less crowded!)

While i’d love to say this is for all you out there who are expecting a new baby soon,  this is also aimed at hopefully helping my family and friends overcome the barriers and worries of supporting me and my family, with dietary restrictions and allergies for 3 out of the 4 food-eating family members! Though i’m not totally selfish – Hopefully, it can fulfill its purpose and also help some others out too – a resource to direct well meaning friends and family members to, if you find yourself with a new baby and a family to feed with allergy requirements.

Myself and the boys avoid dairy, soy and wheat / gluten (this includes oats, barley & rye for Felix and I). We try to eat real food – food that doesn’t come with an ingredients list, with added colors, flavors, sugars or preservatives. I don’t eat refined sugar as it makes me feel terrible, and it sends Ashton bouncing off the walls! I absolutely cannot eat any gluten, it makes me really sick, and very minimal dairy. Felix is also very strictly dairy / soy and gluten free while we continue to let his gut heal from his extreme allergies he suffered in his fist 18 months of life, to pretty much all foods.

Because of the boys’ allergies, and how they presented from birth, to foods in my diet while i was breastfeeding them, i have opted to remove dairy, soy, gluten / wheat, nuts and eggs from my diet 5 weeks before my due date, to ensure that, when baby is born, there is no trace of this in my breastmilk. Because having a newborn baby is hard enough, without adding in the harrowing experience of  a baby reacting to it’s only food source. If i opted to ‘wait and see’, by the time we recognize there is a reaction, after eliminating the offending foods, the proteins are not completely clear from my system for up to 6 weeks! So i’m getting ahead and doing it backwards, if all is well, then when baby is 6 weeks old i will introduce these back to my diet one by one, to carefully check for any signs of reaction, and hopefully, there wont be!

So while i manage to feed us breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks, day in and day out, no problems, to an outsider with no allergies, this sounds pretty bloody daunting! I know, because i once was an allergy outsider! And when you don’t live the life every day, its hard to comprehend and remember!

So – how on earth to you turn up to visit a new Mum and baby with something they can eat!? Here are some of my suggestions that comply with my family’s needs (free from – gluten, dairy, soy, eggs & nuts).

I’ve divided it into categories of time, location and expense (because, if you are buying allergy friendly packaged goods, they are going to be more expensive than their not so friendly counterparts!)

So you can choose from:

QUICK AND EASY MEAL PREP – make at home with minimal cooking & prep

QUICK PICKS FROM THE SUPERMARKET – pick up from the supermarket on the way over

ONLINE PRODUCTS – more specialty items to buy online and have it delivered straight to us (please count this as a gift for us or baby!)

HOMEMADE – or go the whole hog and bake or cook  something (recipes included!)

(**disclaimer** this post is in no way sponsored or any of that jazz by the food companies I recommend, they have never even sent me free shit! It purely based on my own personal experience and overall satisfaction with these particular products, and how they fit into our lifestyle, that i recommend them).

Quick Easy Meal Prep

ROAST VEGETABLES:

We eat all veggies, chop them up, roast them in olive oil, coconut oil, rice-bran oil, avocado oil – or give me a text to check if your oil might be ok (‘vegetable oil’ generally isn’t as it can contain soy). We love to snack on roast veggies, make them into soups, put them in smoothies even! Or serve them with meat for an easy tea. Roast some veggies, you are on to a winner, bonus is, its pretty easy and fuss free!

CHOP UP SOME VEGGIES:

Don’t even cook them! Just chop up or prep a whole bunch of veggies that we can cook or use in salads. Capsicum, lettuce, cucumber, carrots for salads or snacking or root veggies for roasting, even mushrooms, courgette, cabbage, spinach, celery will get used. I spend a lot of time cutting and preparing veggies, it is such a big help to have this done for us.

CHOP UP SOME FRUIT

Baby is due in dec, there should be some yummy fruits around by then – make us a fresh fruit salad, the boys will be stoked and it will save me cutting up fruit snacks for them for a day at least! Or just bring fruit, whole, in all its glorious naturalness.

COLD COOKED MEAT

Throw some chicken breasts, in the oven with salt and pepper, cool then slice – this is an awesome protein rich snack for everyone in the family. Even a small roast, or some steak cooked and sliced would be very well received.

 

QUICK PICKS FROM THE SUPERMARKET

PROPER CRISPS

I really should ask proper crisps if we can partner up haha, I am a fantastic source of free advertising for them! Any flavour, we love them all! Grab them from the supermarket on your way over, easy as that!

ROTISSERIE CHICKEN & SALAD BAG

Pick up a hot cooked chicken (preferably one with no stuffing please 🙂 ) and a bag of coleslaw or salad. Meal done!

DIPS

Turkish Kitchen garlic hummus or ‘Kumara & Lentil with roasted Pumpkin’ dip.

‘Lisa’s’ hummus from the supermarket are gluten free – just a quick double check of the label to make sure it’s a flavour with no dairy, soy or nuts.

COCONUT YOGHURT

Raglan Coconut Yogurt, Cathedral Cove, and Zenzo are all brands that we can eat.

COCONUT ICE-CREAM!

Little island coconut ice-cream – a delicious summer treat – any flavour – we are not fussy!

LITTLE ISLAND COCONUT MILK

Again a delicious treat, especially the chocolate coconut milk, we might not share though!

CATHEDRAL COVE CEREAL

They have one specific cereal that does not contain nuts – great for  sprinkling on coconut yoghurt and an easy snack for mum and kids. This is it here:

Online products

FRANKS SAUSAGES

Not all the sausages on the site are suitable for us .. but these ones are ok for all:

Pork, Apple & Cranberry, Pork & smoked parprika, Chicken & French Tarragon, German Bratworst, chicken & pork Chipolatas, chicken, mango & coconut, plus the mince meat selection .

HUNTER GATHERER GOURMET

The nut free baking mix is the only one I can eat, but the boys can have everything on the site! I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t mind if Mum could quickly whip them up some baking that they didn’t have to share 🙂

GREEN MEADOWS BEEF

They have a store on Katere Rd, New Plymouth, full of beefy goodness. Beef and Beetroot meatballs or patties!! Yum, this would save us so much time, and the boys would be over the moon – especially Ashton, who asks for meatballs for dinner every night!

MY FOOD BAG

The gluten free my food bag is ok for my family – 5 meals picked out and chosen with recipes, and all the ingredients delivered! I think we could manage that! Some of the ingredients contain dairy but it’s easy enough to leave out or only include for dairy eating family members. However, you would need to make sure they can deliver to your town (we would need this delivered to someone in New Plymouth, as they don’t currently deliver to Stratford).  They also do vouchers, so you could order a bag on a week that would help the most. Lots of options.

CRAFT SMOOTHIE

all the ingredients for 5 days of fruit & veg smoothies delivered to your door – all you have to do is throw them into the blender with some liquid – yes please!

From their website:

“Can I order a smoothie box as a gift?

For sure! Our smoothie kits make the perfect gift! To order a Craft Smoothie box as a gift, just email hello@craftsmoothie.co.nz with the name and delivery address of the recipient, and we’ll send you the payment details and confirm the delivery date. We will also add a personalised gift card in the box for that someone special 😊”

homemade

Have some extra time and want to attempt to make us something? Good on you – here are some recipes you cant go wrong with!

Meatballs – 4 ways

Choc Almond Cranberry Bliss Balls

Just make sure you swap the almonds for seeds 🙂

Veggie Nachoes

Chocolate Avocado Mousse

Hummus

Seed Crackers

Also i will hopefully have recipes up by the end of the month for:

Spag bowl mince

super simple curry

Taco / burrito / mexican meat and chopped salad

Roast Meat & veggies

Moroccan chicken salad

And maybe some links to other online recipes we use!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Super Simple Muffins

This muffin recipe is a super simple, one bowl wonder that can take so many variations and substitutions there is sure to be something for everyone. The basis of the recipe is banana muffins but I’ve adapted it to also be berry muffins, chocolate muffins and carrot / zucchini muffins disguised as chocolate!

Cook times depending on the size of muffin you are making:
Regular muffin size: 18-20 minutes
Large mini muffin size: 15 mins
Mini muffins: 10 – 12 mins

Super Simple Muffins

This muffin recipe is a super simple, one bowl wonder that can take so many variations and substitutions there is sure to be something for everyone.
Cook Time15 mins
Course: lunchbox
Cuisine: Gluten free
Keyword: allergy friendly, baking, dairy free, healthy

Ingredients

  • 2 bananas See notes for subsitutes
  • ¼ c milk almond, coconut, cows milk, rice milk
  • ¼ c oil light olive oil, coconut oil (melted, avocado oil – some sort of oil! – melted butter would probably work too.)
  • 1 egg or egg replacement
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup flour buckwheat, gluten free, wholemeal, white, spelt – whatever you use!
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • ¼ c sweetener sugar, coconut sugar, maple syrup, honey – whatever you use

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 180 deg c, fan-bake. Grease or line a 12 hole muffin tin, or two 12 hole mini muffin tins.
  • Mash the banana and mix together with all the wet ingredients. Alternatively, chuck them all in the blender and blend away until smooth – then put into a bowl.
  • Sift the dry ingredients over the wet and carefully fold everything together.
  • Spoon the mixture into muffin tin. See cook times below depending on your muffin tin size.

Notes

Choc muffins
Swap 1/4 c of the flour for 1/4 c of cocoa, i even swapped 1/2 cup flour for 1/2 cup cocoa once when i ran our of flour. I have also used carob powder, which worked great too. Cocoa is naturally a bit bitter, so you may need to add a little more sweetener
Zucchini & carrot muffins disguised as chocolate
I used the cocoa sub as above an also swapped one of the bananas for about 1 cup of very finely grated carrot and zucchini. I put a tiny sprinkle of coconut sugar on top of each muffin before baking since i swapped the sweet banana for veggies, just as insurance that they would get eaten!
Berry muffins
Add about 1/2 cup fresh or frozen berries to the mix with the flour.
Banana free
You can make these muffins banana free by replacing the bananas with 1 cup apple purée. You can also use 1 cup pumpkin purée – and be sure to add the sweetener to the pumpkin as well, taste the batter and adjust sweetness accordingly. I love to add cinnamon, orange juice (in place of the milk) and rind to the pumpkin muffins.
Egg free
My favourite egg replacer in these muffins is 1 Tablespoon of chia seeds + 1/4 cup water. Soak the chia seeds in the water for 5 mins, then add with the wet ingredients. You can find more egg replacement options Here.

Chicken Noodle Soup

This meal is based on leftovers from the night before’s roast – which for us usually includes an organic / free range chicken, potatoes, kumara, pumpkin, parsnip, broccoli, cauli, mushrooms, roast garlic and carrots. I use the bones to make broth and the leftover veggies in the soup – so it only takes about 10 mins to put together!

serves 4-6

Ingredients

5-6 cups chicken broth or stock*

Oil (coconut or olive oil)

200g rice noodles (about half a standard size packet) – check ingredients to make sure GF (best is rice flour, water)

leftovers from roast chicken and veggies

Some extra greens if you have some handy – parsley, spinach, kale or silverbeet

what to do

*When you have removed all the meat from your roast chicken, simmer the bones in 1.5L water for around 3-4 hours. During the last hour you can add some garlic, tumeric, onion and veggie scraps like carrot tops, celery leaves, parsnip peels – whatever you have handy. Strain the liquid into a container to store in the fridge, and add a generous pinch of salt. Store your leftover chicken and veggies in a container in the fridge. Sometimes i save my veggie scraps, onion and garlic skins and freeze them to put in the broth.

In a deep pan or pot add a decent dollop of coconut oil or olive oil, add the leftover chicken and veggies – and some garlic and / or ginger if there wasn’t any with your leftovers.

Brown everything up a bit, then pour over the broth.

Bring to the boil. Add the rice noodles and simmer for 10 mins, or until cooked.

Stir the greens through last and season well with salt and pepper. If your broth tastes a bit lifeless, chances are it needs more salt!

This is one of my favorite breakfasts and when pulled together from the leftovers, doesn’t take any longer to make than a bowl of porridge!

What’s the Deal with Food Co-ops? How they work and how to start one.

Ok so, ive been asked by so many people what is the deal is with food co-ops. How do they work, where do i find them, and how to i start one? Hopefully all the answers to your questions are here!

Dry Goods

There are two main suppliers of dry goods, that we use through our co-op, one is Chantals Organics and one is Ceres Organics. Before going straight to these places it probably pays to see if there is already an existing co-op in your area taking on new members – there are heaps out there, hopefully someone can direct you to one already set up. I do believe Ceres may have a list of existing co-ops from around the country that they can direct you to also.

There usually are some rules, when you are filling orders as a co-op. With Chantals – You can order individual items, if you order the outer/carton you get it at a slightly reduced price. so an ‘outer’ or carton might be 6 or 12 items of that product, depending on what it is. In Chantals there is no minimum spend per month, so its a good one to start with if you don’t have many people on board. There you will find many of your favorite products that are usually sold in health food stores, for cheaper prices.

If you order through Ceres there are a few more rules– You need to purchase by the ‘outer’ eg, peanut butter 6 in an outer, so you will need to buy 6. So if someone wanted 3 they that in their column. So this is where the group comes in handy as others can help, and hopefully someone else also wants peanut butter that month and you can fill the outer of 6. If not then you cannot go through with that product order.  There is an $800 minimum spend per month, usually it is helpful to set a minimum spend of x amount per family, per month to ensure the minimum spend it met. (its surprisingly easy to fill really, i usually spend around $100 a month (only $25 per week) – so you only need 8 families to do that!)

Every group runs their co-op slightly differently, but this is how ours works:

Everybody places their order in a google doc spreadsheet. Everyone places there order by 7pm on the 15th of each month, Lu, who oversees all of our ordering and places our final order (among other amazing general day to day running of the co-op stuff) checks it and on the on the 15th night or 16th .  She comes back to the group via our Facebook group with incomplete ‘outers’ and then people advise if they want to up their quantity to fill the outer or remove their order. This works really well as people will often ‘help’ others out, they may not necessarily need this month but they will get it. Or i often see stuff that i had forgotten about but all of a sudden ‘need’ so jump in to fill some of the product outer.  Then she places the order the following morning, Ceres can be done online and Chantals via email. With Ceres she cross reference prices, and makes sure the shopping cart and excel spreadsheet match up. Our speadsheet is friken huge – thousands of columns down, and forty odd across – each person / family in the co-op has a column they place their order into.

Prices are subject to changes so once she has cross referenced prices she comes back to the group and lets us know of any dramatic price increases – or decreases, last month coconut oil was reduced to a steal! In our first order some things were out of stock, so people had over paid and they were in credit so to make it clean we pay after the order is placed. The expectation is that people will pay within a day or 2 once she has send out the exact costs. It’s also a great way of earning airpoints! If you were worried about people not paying you could just get them to pay you before you place the order. Lu says “I guess I trust that if they are buying organic they will be invested in their families health and therefore will pay and I find it easier if they pay after as sometimes we have had an item missing or a packet has burst, this way it saves me having to refund people”.

Everyone pays freight for both Chantals and Ceres around $5 (was $8ish with 8 families) total regardless of whether they purchase from one or the other or both. Freight will obviously vary depending on where you live. Ceres comes from Auckland and Chantals comes from Napier. When we first started we had a minimum spend of $75 with Ceres this is so we reached the minimum spend, since we are bigger now its $75 across either Ceres or Chantals.

Everyone in our group is very open to helping, although so far it’s been pretty straightforward. With some co-ops someone might do orders/payment and the goods get delivered to someone else’s place where they sort to share the load. Everything gets delivered to Lucindas house each time. We get 6 people to come and help sort and we knock it out in two hours. 2 sort produce, 2 weigh, 2 put items in peoples boxes and tick off printed spreadsheet. There has never been any problems getting help. Everyone has been recently told to help out every 3 months or so, and a roster has been set up, which means each person does a sort about twice a year.

Ours has been going for two years now and we have added a few more suppliers in which we order from every second month these include Lifefoods, Bostocks, Franks Sausages and Goddbuzz Kombucha.  For the last 12 months we have been ordering produce from Chantals. Lu said “initially I wasn’t as driven as I have a large veggie garden however I am pleased we have as the quality and the prices are excellent in a number of instances cheaper than the supermarket last month bananas $2.60kg, apples $1.60, limes far cheaper than the supermarket”. With the produce it’s quite busy that day as she gets it sorted and people collect the same day and “if it’s not a Kindergarten day I have a little helper muddling up my orders and eating all the apples”.

Our co-op grew very easily, personally Lucinda said she doesn’t mind as “I figure the more families that are involved reduces the freight costs and gives you more people to share outers/cartons with and from a personal point of view gets people supporting smaller and ethical growers and I figure it’s my way of helping spread the real food message and my contribution for others”.  We have over 30 families now and the facebook group is always a hive of activity, including recipe sharing and some general day to day thoughts and questions between like minded people.

Produce

On a Friday, every second week, Chantals organic produce sends an email with a list of available produce, Lucinda copies it across to our spreadsheet and shares it on google docs with the group. Orders usually close on sunday night, so poeple have over the weekened to put in their order.
Monday morning she places the order and it generally arrives on the Wednesday.

Once it arrives we have the boxes labelled with each persons name and literally just weigh everything out.  When its not a dry goods week, lucinda sorts it herself, it takes about two hours to weigh the produce out and put it into peoples boxes and this is for a large number of families so anything less would only take an hour or so, then about 30 mins to reconcile the spreadsheet versus the invoice afterwards. (so thats entering the exact amounts that were weighed out because depending on whats turned up, say i ordered 2kg of bananas – not all bunches or bananas come in lots that will weigh out to exactly 2kg so adding in exactly the weight of the bananas given to me in the order.

There are some good perks to hosting the produce and doing the sort – like when they can’t count Avocados and you end up with more, or picking the biggest broccoli heads etc!

Rather excitingly, for those who are keen on affordable organic produce but for whatever reason are not keen to play an active role in a co-op Food Together runs a service where you can buy organic produce for a pretty good price too, they just started up in our area and lots of people i know have signed up, and have said nothing but good things. You could also check them out to see if they bring produce near you. There are probably heaps of other places that do something similar, its just a case of asking around!

So basically…

Ask around and join an existing co-op in your area if there is one available.

To set up a co-op you need to contact the right suppliers;

Gather up a small group of like minded people who are keen to be involved.

Make sure someone is willing to take on the main role of over seeing the co-op, the emails, communication with suppliers and / or decide what role each person in the co-op will play – where will the goods be delivered, who is going to send out the spreadsheets, do the payments, ensure there are enough people for sorting.

Send out the spreadsheet, make sure all outers are filled and minimum spend is met.

Email it back to the suppliers

Have the goods delivered

Sort the food and have everyone collect it

Send out payment info then make payment to the co-op

Enjoy your fresh organic produce and cheap organic dry goods!

 

Zucchini Cheese – Dairy free, melty delicious cheese

I am a lover of all things cheese. Cheese is life. When cheese and life begin to clash, in my world, this is quite a problem. I am 99% dairy free, as my body does not love me eating dairy. The 1% allows for me to sometimes, eat cheese. I save my cheese eating for special occasions, like when we are at a function, event or family gathering and someone brings out the cheeseboard! I allow myself some cheese, and my body seems to be ok with this (and so i sternly tell it). But at home, when life calls for cheese, i am totally happy for this replacement.

Sincerely Yours,

A fellow Cheese Lover

Recipe Notes

coconut free

Use light olive oil instead

Vegan

Replace gelatine with an equal measure of agar-agar

Cheesy Flavour

I brought nutritional yeast to try in there because apparently it tastes cheesy, i’m more than happy to leave this out, it is not to my taste! So if you like nutritional yeast then some of that too.
Half a teaspoon onion and / or garlic powder can also make this next level, or sometimes I use garlic salt instead of regular. But i don’t always have these and it’s fine without. A pinch of smoked paprika can give a subtle smokey depth and a more yellowy colour. 

Gelatin

This ‘cheese’ is set with gelatin, make sure you choose a good quality, setting gelatin (I personally use Great Lakes Beef Gelatin) cheap supermarket gelatin can sometimes have a nasty flavour. I have tons of recipes on my blog that use good quality gelatin so you will have no trouble using it up! 

Storage

It stores in a sealed container in the fridge for about 5 days to a week. You can Freeze, but on defrosting it can be a little watery, so is best used for melting and adding to meals after that, rather than snacking. 

If you are after a delicious, cheesy dairy free meal, then my Mac and Cheese  is inspired by this recipe, I highly recommend you check it out! 

You could also use this cheese sauce recipe to make your cheese instead – (a few more ingredients but the flavour is next level!)  Use 2 Tablespoons gelatin to every 1.5 cups of cheese sauce. Heat the sauce, sprinkle the gelatin on and whisk through (or blitz in blender) until melted. Then set, as below in the recipe. 

Dairy Free Zucchini Cheese

Prep Time10 mins
Cook Time10 mins
Keyword: AIP, allergy friendly, dairy free, easy recipe, egg free, grain free, paleo, SCD

Ingredients

  • 1 generous cup peeled diced raw zuchinni 2 small – med sized ones
  • 1 tablespoon coconut oil i use refined coconut oil here because i don’t want my ‘cheese’ to have lingering notes of coconut!*
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice this makes it quite lemony but i like it this way, you could reduce slightly
  • 2 tablespoons gelatine**
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • Good shake of white pepper

Instructions

  • Steam the zucchini until tender (about 5 mins if its diced small) drain all water off, and keep in the hot pan.
  • Add the coconut oil to melt. Sprinkle the gelatine over the top and let it melt and dissolve in while stirring.
  • Add the rest of the ingredients.
  • blend up everything in your blender, food processor or stick blender. I have a taste and adjust seasoning accordingly.
  • I set ours in a mini silicone loaf pan so it make about 2 mini blocks of ‘cheese’. But set in a lined container of choice, that your are happy to store and slice your ‘cheese’ from that shape.
  • Takes a couple hours to set in the fridge. Stores in there in a sealed container for about 5 days to a week.

Notes

*coconut free? – use light olive oil instead
**vegan? You can replace gelatine with an equal measure of agar-agar

Veggie Nachoes

Nachoes without meat OR beans! I’m not a huge fan of beans, i’d rather just eat veggies, so this is how we created our veggie nachoes, which came along well before we had kids, and has been a recipe I can easily adapt to suit the ever changing allergy needs of the family. Win!

 

Ingredients

Some in season root veggies – Carrot, pumpkin, kumara, potato (or whatever is in season – other veggies that work are capsicum, eggplant, zucchini, broccoli, cauliflower)
Natural corn chips (ingredients corn & oil) or kumara chips

Sauce:
1 T chopped garlic
1/2 diced onion
1 diced capsicum (red, orange or yellow or a combo)
2 tsp cumin
2 tsp ground corriander
2 tsp smoked paprika
1 jar tomato puree
optional – chilli powder or fresh chilli
salt & pepper

Cheese or dairy free cheese
Sour cream / coconut yogurt / avocado

what to do

Dice veggies (carrot, pumpkin, Kumara, potato) into small cubes and roast them in olive oil until crispy.
Dice garlic, onion, capsicum and fry off in pan. Mix up equal parts cumin, smoked paprika and ground coriander (2tsp each) Add half to each the veggies in the pan and the veggies roasting in the oven and plenty of salt and pepper.
Add a jar of tomato purée to the onion capsicum mix on the stove and blend everything until smooth to make a tomato sauce (you can also leave chunky, but my small people would no doubt try and pick out the bits!)
Can also add some chilli, we prefer to so this at the table so the kids don’t moan in-case I make it too spicy!
Serve the roasted veggies on top of corn chips, covered in the tomato sauce, cheese and sour cream. – make dairy free by using zucchini cheese or dairy free cheese, and use coconut yoghurt with a squeeze of lemon and / or mashed avocado on top (pictured: zucchini cheese & coconut yoghurt)

Party Food! Real food, allergy friendly party treats (gluten, dairy, soy, nut, egg free)

The one stop for real food birthday party food inspiration – find links to the stuff i made here! Every single thing on the party table is free from dairy, egg, soy, gluten, wheat, nuts, peanuts, refined sugar and vegetable oils. Most of the food is made from good quality wholefoods ingredients, without feeling like the party food is missing. No sugar highs or post cake meltdowns after this party! And best of all, one very happy two year old, who for the first time in his life could enjoy all the party food!

Here i used my almond cranberry bliss ball recipe, but instead of almonds i used 1/2 cup sunflower seeds and 1/2 cup pumpkin seeds to make them nut free.

this fruit creation was kindly put together by my Mum (i said she could do the fruit or some baking – good choice mother). she just used a bunch of fruit available at the supermarket, honeydew melon, pineapple, apple, grapes, strawberries and banana – a pretty impressive selection at this time of year. the the middle is half an orange (skin and all) where she stuck the skewers and threaded the fruit on. The kids loved grabbing a skewer of fruit to take to their plate.

The famous everything free chocolate cake, so delicious and fudgy. recipe here along with choc ganache and marshmallow icing.

Batman biscuits! Recipe courtesy of Mummy Made It – its the ‘healthy tiny teddy’ recipe cut with batman cookie cutter. Free from dairy, egg, soy, gluten, nut and refined sugar! Ive made this a few times and is my go to special occasion biscuit recipe.

This pancake recipe comes from Be Good Organics – it is free from gluten, dairy, soy, eggs and nuts! But not free from deliciousness! For the party i subbed the buckwheat flour for a standard gluten free flour mix, given that buckwheat can be an acquired taste to unsuspecting guests! It is also the recipe i use in our waffles. The icing is choc ganache left over from the cake and the sprinkles i found at countdown which claim to be naturally colored, perhaps I was scammed by the marketing but i was willing to forgo research on this one for the sake of the party.

this was one of my favourite platters of the party! A trio of hummus. I used our standard hummus recipe, then to one added a bit extra garlic, the other about 1/2 cup roasted carrot and a tsp curry powder and the third, two small cooked beetroot and a little honey. lots of cut up vege to dip and some of our seed crackers.

Home popped popcorn! and Proper Crisps – salted and smoked paprika flavour. I love proper crisps because they aren’t cooked in refined canola oil, and they taste so good! Best chips I’ve ever tasted, they have spoiled all other potato chips for me now! For the popcorn, i melt about 1 Tbsp coconut oil in a large pot, add 3 popcorn kernels and cover, as soon as they have all popped add half a cup of popcorn kernels, cover and keep on the heat until the first ones start to pop. then turn off the heat and take the pot off the shake it, then put back on the element (while its turned off but will still be hot) for 30 seconds, and repeat until all the popcorn is popped. add a knob of coconut oil or butter to the hot pot and let melt through the popcorn then turn out into a bowl and season to taste.

 

Jellies! i made three types of jellies about a week ahead and kept them in the freezer, then transferred to the fridge to defrost a day or two before the party. I made blueberry, strawberry and lime (sorry didn’t get a picture of those ones!) and peaches jellies. i got the heart, star, duck moulds from Kmart and the lego men from Aliexpress.

Chicken Nibbles – Bostocks organic free range chicken nibbles (my second favourite after their wings!) marinated in honey, garlic, ginger and coconut aminos. For ‘honey soy’ chicken nibbles. these were delicious!

Franks sausages – our go to for gluten free, preservative sausages, these were the chicken ones and lamb ones. They are so good, and the only sausage I’ve found with ingredients I’m happy to feed Felix. In the big drink dispenser there is soda water with frozen blueberries and orange slices, and in the glass bottle chilled water with lime wedges.

Real Food Jelly Lollies

Ingredients

Strawberry & lime

1 cup strawberries (frozen is fine)
1/4 cup water x2
1 T lime juice

1 T maple syrup (optional)

2 T gelatin*

Blueberry

1 cup blueberries (Frozen is fine)
1/4 cup water x2
1 T maple syrup (optional)
2 T gelatin*

Peaches

1 cup peaches (i used tinned – rinsed and drained)
1/4 cup water x2
1 T maple syrup (optional)
2 T gelatin*

*(you can use up to 4 T gelatin for a firmer jelly / lolly like consistency)

what to do

Put the fruit, one lot of 1/4 cup water and sweetener for your your chosen flavour in a small pot and heat through.

While its heating add the gelatin to the other 1/4 cup water and stir. It will expand and soak up the water. Add this to the hot pot and stir through until dissolved.

Remove from the heat and blend the mixture in a blender, or with a handheld blender.

Pour into moulds, or line a tray with cling wrap and pour into the tray to cut into shapes when its set.

Set in the freezer for 20 – 60 mins depending on the size, or overnight. This part is essential for making sure the jellies come cleanly out of the moulds, especially if its a fiddly mould – like a lego man! you can store them in the freezer and defrost over night in the fridge before needed, or store in the fridge for a couple of days.

They should be able to handle being at room temperature for a couple hours, but are nicest when cold.

Chocolate cake – real food and top 8 free!

So this recipe stems from an original recipe, a somewhat famous cake in the real food world – the 84th and 3rd chocolate cake! The original recipe calls for pumpkin and has eggs in it, so we have made some adjustments to the ratios and ingredients, by changing out for seasonal veggies and substituting the eggs. If you are not egg free then go check out the 84th and 3rd best real food chocolate cake recipe ever ! (but stick around here for the marshmallow icing!)

This recipe has been tried and tested half a dozen times between Justine at Our Kitchen Adventures and Myself. She was kind enough to adapt the original recipe first and share it with me! I have also made the original recipe, which isn’t egg free, for Ashton’s birthday, when Felix was too little to eat cake! I’ve made it with pumpkin, kumara (sweet potato) and carrot, i’m not a huge fan of the pumpkin version, but kumara and carrot are both delicious. This time i used carrot because kumara is like $10 a kilo right now!

Justine from Our Kitchen Adventures made the cake for her sons 2nd birthday dinosaur party.

And for her son’s Thunderbird’s birthday party

Ingredients

Cake:
1/2 c cocoa or cacao powder
1/4 c coconut flour
2 Tb psyllium husk
1 t cream of Tatar
2 t baking soda*
1/2 c maple syrup***
1/2 c water
1/2 c coconut oil
2 c Kumara, carrot or pumpkin finely grated
1 t vanilla extract
* or 1 t baking soda and 1 t baking powder

Chocolate Icing:
1 block dark dairy free chocolate (this part is not refined sugar free! the darker the chocolate the less sugar it has)**
1 400ml can coconut cream
1 t vanilla extract
** for a refined sugar free icing do try to the 84th and 3rd dairy free ‘buttercream’!)

what to do

Preheat oven 180 degrees c.

Cake

Put all the wet ingredients into a bowl and stir in the finely grated vege.

Sift the dry ingredients on top and then mix everything together, let sit for 5 mins for the mixture to thicken slightly.

line a cake tin with baking paper. I used a 18cm cake tin and split the mix in two to make two thin layers – so for the whole cake i made three batches of cake and 6 layers. (i made 1 batch a night and froze the layers to minimize the kitchen marathon!)

if you are doing two layers, bake each layer for 20 – 25 minutes, or a full cake batch for 35 minutes. lift out the baking paper and carefully place on a wire rack to cool. Without eggs to bind the cake is fragile so minimal handling works best. If you are wanting to layer or shape it, i recommend freezing for for easier handling. It freezes and defrosts beautifully, and actually tastes better after a couple days in the fridge!

icing

Melt the chocolate and add the coconut cream, refrigerate for an hour or so until firm then whip the mixture on high using an electric beater until fluffy and spreadable.

layer up with choc ganache icing between each layer, we also added strawberry chia-seed jam between each layer too, which was delicious!

If you want to add the marshmallow layer on the top then the instructions for that is here. Otherwise use this as your canvas to create whatever you want!

This part could be made a couple days in advance and stored in the fridge then the marshmallow icing added on the day or day before.

***for two of the cake batches i ran out of maple syrup! So i used coconut sugar made into a syrup, by measuring out half a cup of coconut sugar, then pouring boiling water over to reach the half cup measurement and stirring to dissolve.