Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 January 2014

Turkey on a Bed of Diddy Veg and Diced Potato

Turkey on a Bed of Diddy Veg
 
This meal feeds four and has the essential carbohydrates, protein, fibre and key vitamins. This is a cheap and healthy meal suitable for Slimming World fans too!
 


Ingredients
  • 3 tbsp. of sweetcorn per child
  • 3 tbsp. of peas per child
  • 6 tbsp. of sweetcorn per adult
  • 6 tbsp. of peas per adult
  • 2 large white potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 2 small turkey breast steaks
The Not-So Nitty Gritty

  1. Peel and dice the potatoes then put in boiling water and into the microwave on full power for 3 minutes then drain.
  2. Grill the turkey steaks for ten minutes on each side.
  3. Dice the turkey steaks, leave to rest.
  4. Fry the diced potatoes for around 15 minutes with low calories cooking spray.
  5. Place all the veg in a bowl of boiling water and whack in the microwave on full power for 6 minutes. Drain the veg and mix in the potatoes.
  6. Plate up the vegetable mix and put the bits of turkey steaks on top.


How simple was that? It is also very quick and very nutritious for all ages.


Monday, 9 September 2013

Meat & Two Veg The Healthy Way

Turkey Dinner
 
If you know me, you will know that I am big on eating white meats as they are leaner and offer great health benefits! Turkey is 70% white meat and 30% dark meat, so what's not to love?
This meal offers a filling and warming evening meal without spending the whole morning roasting meat. This meal has only 15 minutes prep time and 30 minutes cooking time. So that's the time issue solved, and the warming issue? What is not to love about potatoes, meat and two veggies? Traditional and it fills you up with goodness.
The meal will provide protein, carbohydrate, fibre, good fats, vitamin C, potassium, magnesium, vitamin A, folates and vitamin K.
Wow. I did not realise how good this meal actually was for you until I started researching what each ingredient provides.
 
Key Fact: Most of the vitamin C in potatoes is in or close to the skin. So, when  peeling, avoid excessive de-skinning. Basically don't take chunks out of the potatoes at the same time.
 
 
Benefits of Eating Turkey
 
 
  • High in protein
  • Low in Fat
  • Good source of iron, zinc, potassium, phosphorus and vitamin B6
  • Can lower cholesterol if eaten regularly
  • Contains the amino acid 'Tryptophan' which produces serotonin and this strengthens the immune system
 
 
Ingredients
 
  • 3 Turkey Breast Steaks (£1.29 on offer, Lidl)
  • 5 tbsp. Peas (£1, Iceland)
  • 5 tbsp. Carrots (£1, Iceland)
  • 3 Medium White Potatoes (£3 bag, Iceland)
  • Chicken Gravy Granules (£1, £land)
 
The Not-so Nitty Gritty
 
 
  1. Peel and chop potatoes into quarters and leave on the boil for half an hour.
  2. Prepare your turkey steaks by removing excess fat and pre-heat the grill to full power.
  3. After the potatoes have been boiling for 15 minutes, put the turkey under the grill and leave there for 15 minutes and turn half way through.
  4. Boil the peas and carrots.
  5. Use the vegetable water left from the peas and carrots after cooking, add gravy granules as the packet tells you. This will add more goodness to the meal as some key vitamins get lost during the boiling process.
  6. Serve when everything is ready.
 
 
What Little Monster Thought
 
   He loved it so much, really got his appetite going again. Even consumed a whole custard pot. He ate the turkey that had been cut up first, he does love meat but soon moved onto his potatoes and veg. He seemed to enjoy the gravy too.
   Mummy and daddy really enjoyed this meal, no idea how I pulled it off as I had a slight bit of concussion from where that little monkey smashed a vase over my head! But all went down well and mummy and daddy had raspberry steamed pudding afterwards, really should have cut Tyler in on this but he got his custard out the kitchen for me so, I let him have custard instead.
 
 
Coming up Soon..... homemade banana custard, spaghetti bolognaise and more, keep up to date by liking the facebook page www.facebook.com/feedingforthefuture or simply add your e-mail address to the subscribe box above.
 
Happy eating and don't forget I love to see the pictures and hear feedback. Apologies for no pictures this time but we sat down to eat straight away and I was starving as I hadn't had an appetite all day. 


Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Catering with those little mouths with GOR & GORD

GOR & GORD
 
   GOR and GORD are the two types of acid reflux that people can suffer with, and it is a lot more common in babies and children than I initially thought. So, here's where I find myself, I'm putting together a couple of recipes that rule out all the 'forbidden' food that could trigger reflux. Everyone's reflux has different triggers so to do something ruling out each one would have took forever! And as a busy mummy, I do not have forever, as I'm sure none of you lot do either! GOR is more common than GORD and can go on it's own. However, GORD is more serious and often needs monitoring and medication, even in babies. GORD is when the stomach acid leaks out of the stomach and into the oesophagus (the long tube that starts at the mouth and ends at the stomach).
   What I have picked up on my personal research into GORD is that most sufferers should avoid a high fat diet, avoid fizzy drinks, citrus fruits and choose white lean meat such as chicken, fish and turkey over red meat such as pork, beef and lamb.
 

Picture taken from a post on the living with reflux facebook page.
 
Farmhouse Pasta
 

Tyler is chowing down.



Ingredients:
  • 30g turkey breast (£1 per pack, Iceland)
  • 50g frozen baby carrots (carrot batons may be better) (£1 per pack, Iceland)
  • 4 baby spinach leaves (£1 large pack, Asda)
  • 20g dried penne pasta (69p, Asda)




The Not So Nitty Gritty Bit
 
  1. Add the carrots and pasta to a pan of boiling water and leave for approximately 8 minutes.
  2. I used pre-cooked turkey breast (lazy mummy day) so I sliced the chunks and cut the spinach and added to Tyler's favourite bowl (the pink one of course).
  3. Drain pasta and carrots and add to the bowl.
  4. Mix the bowl round a bit so your little one can't just see one block colour, they need stimulation to keep them interested.
  5. Serve, too easy? Yeah I agree but Tyler liked it.
 
 
And what little monster thought.....
 






Yes mummy very nice but I personally would much prefer eating it off my legs right now.
 
Loved it, ate a bit of everything but had a lot left over, but this unfortunately is due to his health at the moment not the poor cooking standard, however, let me know how you get on with your little ones. No pasatta was included in this recipe as it's for GORD sufferers and tomato can aggravate reflux sometimes, so feel free to add it if your child is happy with the tomatoes.
 
Against the Grain Chicken and Roast Veg
 
 
It looks like a hot salad!
 
What You Will Need
 
  • Quarter of a red pepper (on offer at 29p each, Lidl)
  • Quarter of an aubergine (89p, Lidl)
  • Quarter of a courgette (49p, Lidl)
  • 5 green beans (99p for a large net bag, Lidl)
  • 20g (can use less or non if vegetarian) of sliced chicken breast (£1 per pack, Iceland)
 
 
The Not-So Nitty Gritty Bit
 
  1. Pre-heat the oven to 180 degrees, add a 1 calorie oil spray (as little fat as possible used for GORD sufferers) to a roasting tin or add oil if your baby is okay with it. Place the roasting tin in the oven to heat through. This allows the veg to cook quicker.
  2. Wash all your vegetables thoroughly. Slice the pepper into thin strips, leave the green beans as they are and slice the courgette and aubergine into rounds.
  3. Add to the roasting tin and leave in the oven for five to ten minutes, do not leave any longer as they can go very dry and if you wouldn't eat dry and hard veg, why give it to the little ones?
  4. Make sure the chicken is not in pieces that are over-sized, adjust to your baby's stage of eating.
  5. Add all to a plate and serve!
 
 
And What Did The Little Monster Think?
 




 
Well, as you can see from the pictures, orange squash was added to the recipe by Master Blakemore himself! I would not recommend.
 
Well, he liked what he actually ate but he is even more off his food today then he was yesterday. Although, he was not keen on green beans but he eats them in a stir fry? I don't understand my sons logic very much.


 
Other Recipe Ideas:
 
No pictures available for these, but when they are they will be on the feeding for the future facebook page.
 
  • Little Hands Stir Fry: 20g chicken breast, 1 nest of plain dried noodles, 5 green beans, 2 tbsp. of peas, 2 tbsp. chopped carrots and 10g of chopped red pepper. All in one big wok. Takes 5 minutes to cook. Shouldn't cost more than £1 per portion!
  • Moroccan Style Chicken: 40g chicken breast, 15g roasted courgette, 5g Red Pepper and 3 tbsp. sweetcorn. Chicken should be cooked at 180 degrees for 40-50 minutes and always cover in foil to stop it going dry. This should cost no more than £1.50 per portion.
  • Bread & Fish Dippers: white bread soldiers, white fish (cod, haddock, Pollock) steak cut into chunky strips (cooked according to instructions on packet or from fish monger) and a blended avocado dip (blend half an avocado with 1 tbsp. of butter).
 
Let me know how you get on with your little ones and send in the pictures, I like to know how you do yours differently too :)