Friday, 23 January 2009
How to Cook Lemon Sole
We have to be very careful when cooking lemon sole. That is why I like to prepare it in aluminium foil in the oven. The foil protects its delicate flesh from the heat and preserves its healthy oils.
Click on the link below for full instructions:
How to Cook Lemon Sole
Sunday, 21 December 2008
Who is Right: the Vegetarian or the Carnivore?
When I first came across the series of articles written to the title of this debate, I naturally found some very strong words written from both perspectives. I therefore decided to try and examine the issue neither from a vegetarian's viewpoint nor a carnivore's but rather from the neutral ground of an interested bystander. I have included the link below to what I wrote: how do you think I did?
Vegetarian or Carnivore: Which is Right?
Tuesday, 9 December 2008
Healthy Beef Recipes
Beef is an extremely versatile ingredient, perhaps more so for any other reason, the number of different cuts that there are available. We eat beef in the form of oven roasts, stews and even ground or minced beef in dishes such as Chilli Con Carne or Spaghetti Bolognaise.Beef is probably the strongest flavoured of the red meats which we commonly eat and is certainly a great personal favourite of mine. I love everything from sirloin steak, to steak and kidney pie, to boiled brisket and lots more besides. Below I have included a link to my healthy beef recipes site which affords lots of information about beef and a number of healthy beef recipes for you to prepare at home. I very much hope you like what I have compiled.
Healthy Beef Recipes
Monday, 1 December 2008
Healthy Sweet Potato Recipes
How often does your family eat sweet potatoes? Are they something which you only eat on special occasions or holidays such as Thanksgiving or Christmas?Sweet potatoes are an incredibly healthy and nutritious alternative to more traditional varieties of potato, providing of course that we prepare them in the correct fashion. I am aware that it is commonplace for some people to add such as marshmallow to sweet potatoes but this is not exactly complementing their healthy properties.
Instead, we should be looking not only at how we can prepare sweet potatoes in a healthy fashion but with what we serve them in order to improve our diet and subsequently our all round health.
Click on the links below for further details of what sweet potatoes actually are and where they come from and for some fantastic healthy recipes incorporating sweet potatoes, including the "Poached Chicken on Sweet Potato Mash" pictured above:
What are Sweet Potatoes?
Healthy Sweet Potato Recipes
Thursday, 23 October 2008
How Can I Reduce My Grocery Bills?
There is, however, a danger in this situation that while we do succeed in cutting the bills, we also tend to be purchasing products which are of inferior quality to what we are used to and less harmonious with our health and well-being. Many may view this as a necessary evil in difficult times but that is absolutely not the case! It is entirely possible to both reduce our grocery bills and maintain - or even develop - healthy eating practices at the same time. The only question we have to ask ourselves is, "How?"
That is where the site linked to below comes in to play. Allow yourself to be guided through the stages of coming up with fresh and inexpensive ingredients, preparing your list for the market or supermarket and combining the purchased ingredients in both a delicious and healthy fashion. What's not to like? Click on the link below now and start saving money today!
Healthy Eating on a Budget
Friday, 22 August 2008
Free Range and Organic Chicken
The problem facing people such as Jamie and Hugh, however, is that the difference in price between battery chickens and particularly organically reared ones is prohibitive, with organic chicken being as much as twice that of the preferred variety. This means that although a great many people who do care about cruelty and quality simply cannot afford economically to change from buying the cheaper birds. Until, therefore, a way can be found to address this disparity, be it by Government intervention or otherwise, the barbaric farming methods are certain to continue and prove extremely lucrative for their practitioners.
So what can we, the general public at large, do about this? Certainly, we can where possible choose to buy free range or organic, but we can also petition our government representatives, sign up in support of relevant pressure groups, add posts like this to our own blogs or websites and generally bring the issue to the attention of as many people as possible. No, these methods are not going to change the situation overnight, but as someone once said, "Rome wasn't built in a day!"
Why Should I Eat Free Range or Organic Chicken?
Wednesday, 3 October 2007
Sausages, Beans, Egg and Chips

This is not the title of a recipe that many people would expect to see on a healthy eating blog or site! I am sure, however, that even a cursory glance at the photograph accompanying this text will begin to tell you that all is not quite as it first may appear. I am attempting here to prove my point that simply by changing our method of preparation, meals similar to what we enjoyed before may be still be created.
The first thing we have to do is consider the type of sausages we are going to purchase. Here, I have gone for high meat content pork and apple sausages. They should be cooked in a little oil over a very low heat for forty-minutes to an hour. Do not prick them before cooking. If the heat is low enough they should not burst.
The potatoes should be peeled and chipped in the normal fashion then parboiled in salted water for 8 to 10 minutes. Drain them well and mix them around carefully (so as not to break them) in a bowl with a little olive oil. They should then be placed on to a baking tray and in to an oven preheated to 200 degrees centigrade or equivalent for half an hour.
The egg should be poached, or alternatively, scrambled. Bring a pan of water up to a boil and add a touch of vinegar. Break the egg in to a small bowl. Stir the water with a spoon to create a "whirlpool" effect and gently pour the egg in to the centre. I like mine cooked for about three to four minutes.
The beans are runner beans, chopped up and boiled in salted water for 5 minutes.
I hope you enjoy this meal and it goes some way to proving my point.

