Sunday, 20 October 2013

Fusilli Bolognaise – 10PP per serving

Fusilli Bolognaise - 10 ProPoints - Choosing Delicious
Everyone needs a few recipes that they know by heart for those occasions when time is limited and a shopping list is required at the drop of a hat. For me, this is one of those recipes – the tomatoes, herbs and stock are always in my kitchen cupboard, so all I need to buy are the vegetables and meat. It’s also one of the meals that I regularly batch cook for my boyfriend and myself at weekends to ensure that we eat healthily during the week when I don’t have time to cook from scratch.

When I first started making this dish, around five years ago, I followed the original recipe to the letter. However, recently I have begun to use fusilli rather than spaghetti, simply because it’s easier to eat. I’ve also started to add celery to the sauce to boost the vegetable content, which has had the added bonus of enhancing the flavour.

I do hope that you enjoy this meal as much as I do.

Fusilli Bolognaise

Adapted from Spaghetti Bolognaise, The Holford Low-GL Diet Cookbook
Serves 4 – 10 ProPoints per serving

Ingredients

500g extra lean beef mince
1 tsp coconut oil or olive oil
1 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 red pepper, deseeded and diced
2 sticks celery, topped, tailed and diced
200g mushrooms, wiped with a paper kitchen towel, and diced
1 x 400g can chopped tomatoes
3 tbsp tomato purée
3 tsp Marigold Vegetable Bouillon Powder
1 tsp dried oregano
Freshly ground black pepper
½ to 1 level tsp granulated sugar (depending on taste)
200g dried fusilli pasta (I used Napolina Bronze die Pasta)
30g Parmesan cheese, freshly grated

Method
  1. In a large non-stick frying pan, cook the mince until it starts to brown. Set aside.
  2. In a large saucepan, heat the oil and, over a medium to low heat, fry the onion and garlic for 2 minutes, being careful not to brown.
  3. Add the diced pepper and celery and place the lid on the pan and sweat for 3 minutes. Add a splash of water if the onion starts to brown.
  4. Add the mushrooms and replace the lid to sweat for a further 3 minutes.
  5. Add the cooked mince to the saucepan, along with the chopped tomatoes, tomato purée, bouillon, oregano and around 50 grinds of freshly ground black pepper. Cover and simmer for around 15 minutes until the vegetables are soft.
  6. Whilst the Bolognaise sauce is simmering, cook the pasta according to the pack instructions.
  7. At the end of the cooking time, add ½ tsp granulated sugar to the bolognaise sauce, taste and add the remaining ½ tsp if required. Also season with additional freshly ground black pepper if required.
  8. Drain the pasta and serve with the sauce. Sprinkle the freshly grated Parmesan cheese on the top.

Saturday, 12 October 2013

The deliciousness begins!

Welcome to my deliciously imperfect blog!

I’ve been dreaming of creating my own healthy eating and recipe blog for several years but that little voice called perfection has held me back. I follow many outstanding blogs, some of which are listed on the right, and I wanted my blog to be as good as the ones that inspire me. Some of the bloggers, like Heidi from 101 Cookbooks and Hélène from Tartelette are professional photographers, whilst others like Kathryn from London Bakes, are self-taught and working in other professions. Whilst I know that they have either been trained, and/or honed their skills over many years, and it’s only to be expected that my photos won’t be as good as theirs (for now), I’ve struggled to let go and do it anyways.

I’ve let excuses such as “my flat’s too dark to take photos” and “I don’t have the right equipment” get in the way. Now that I’ve moved into a wonderfully bright house, use my boyfriend’s Nikon D80 DSLR camera and have a cupboard full of props, I can’t use those excuses any more! The latest one is: “I’m rubbish at composing shots!” I can just about manage a decent close up, but forget anything with backgrounds!

I’ve now reached a point were it’s more ‘painful’ not to start my own blog and follow my dreams, than it is to launch it. A couple of weeks ago I realised that it’s accuracy, not perfection that I need to aim for, which is a whole lot easier to achieve!

I love to cook, try new recipes and learn about nutrition; I’ve also recently lost two stones (28lbs) through Weight Watchers by eating delicious and nutritious foods that no one would ever think were diet. Here, on Choosing Delicious, I will share my favourite ProPointed recipes, nutritional titbits and insights into my life.

Whilst Choosing Delicious won’t be perfect, it will come from my heart. My greatest hope is that you enjoy reading, and can sometimes relate to, my posts.

I look forward to connecting with you through Choosing Delicious.