Butternut Squash & Chickpea Salad

There are so many studies confirming the positive effect eating a diet rich in fruit and vegetables can have for our health. Whether we’re concerned with issues regarding our gut or even if we’re trying to ward off illnesses, how we fuel our bodies will always be something important we need to consider. 

This Butternut Squash & Chickpea Salad is a delicious way to serve a variety of plants in one serving. I prefer to eat this dish warm, but it also serves well cold, making it a nutritious lunch to make-ahead of time. 

Enjoy!

Nessa x

Butternut Squash & Chickpea Salad

Ingredients

  • 1 butternut squash, peeled and diced into bitesize pieces
  • 1 tin chickpeas, drained, rinsed and patted dry
  • 2tbsp olive oil
  • 1tsp smoked paprika
  • 1tsp ground cumin
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper
  • 100g quinoa
  • 300ml vegetable stock
  • 200g broccoli, cut into florets
  • 100g rocket and/or spinach

For the dressing

  • 100g natural, smooth peanut butter
  • 50ml water, recently boiled
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed
  • 1tbsp light soy sauce
  • 1tbsp maple syrup
  • 1tsp sesame oil

To serve

  • 1tbsp sesame seeds
  • Coriander leaves

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/fan 180°C /Gas Mark 6.

2. Place the butternut squash and chickpeas into a large roasting tray. Drizzle over the olive oil, and add the smoked paprika, cumin and a little salt and pepper. Cook in the preheated oven for about 40 minutes, stirring regularly as they cook. 

3. Prepare the quinoa according to the pack’s instructions, by adding the hot stock and quinoa to a small saucepan, cover with a lid and place on a low heat for about 20 minutes. 

4. In the meantime, lightly steam the broccoli for 2- 3 minutes, and set to one side.

5. Make the dressing by adding the dressing ingredients to a mini chopper and blitzing gently for a few seconds to combine.

6. To serve, place a layer of rocket and spinach on a large platter, or divide between four bowls, top with the cooked quinoa, the roasted squash and chickpeas, and the steamed broccoli. Sprinkle over the sesame seeds and some coriander leaves. Drizzle over the peanut dressing and enjoy!

Winter Vegetable Soup

A bowlful of soup can be somewhat restorative at this of year, especially when it includes wholesome organically grown Irish vegetables. If you happen to have some fresh vegetables remaining from your Christmas Vegetable Box, a soup is a wonderful way to quickly transform them into a meal. If you are hosting a New Year’s party, this soup would go a long way served hot in little shot glasses, topped with a tiny drizzle of cream and a couple of thyme leaves. It’s equally delicious served in a big bowl alongside a toastie, or if you’re planning a New Year’s hike, it can be added to a warmed flask as a deliciously warming treat to tuck into when hunger strikes. Whatever way you choose to serve it, I hope you enjoy it.

Nessa x

Winter Vegetable Soup

Serves 4

Ingredients

  • 50g butter, dairy or plant-based
  • 250g mushrooms, sliced 
  • 2 leeks, washed and sliced
  • 1 small potato, peeled and diced
  • 1 onion, roughly chopped
  • 1 stick of celery, sliced 
  • Few sprigs of thyme, leaves only
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper
  • 750ml hot vegetable stock
  • 50ml cream, dairy or plant-based 
  • Method
  1. Melt the butter in a large saucepan over a low heat. When it begins to foam add the mushrooms, leek, potato, onion, and celery, stir to combine with the butter.
  2. Place a butter wrapper or a piece of greaseproof paper over the vegetables, to help them sweat. Cover with the lid of the saucepan. Sweat over a low heat for about 10 minutes, making sure the vegetables don’t stick to the bottom of the saucepan.
  3. When the vegetables are soft but not coloured, and the thyme, season with a little salt and a few grinds of pepper and add the stock. Continue to cook for another 15 minutes or until the vegetables are soft.
  4. Using a hand blender or a food processor purée the soup until it is smooth. Taste and season, if necessary. Pour in the cream and stir well to combine.
  5. Pour the soup into serving bowls and garnish with a few thyme leaves and a little drizzle of cream or add to a warmed flask to enjoy while out for a walk later in the day. 

Vegetable Wellington

If you are looking for a show-stopping main, packed with Irish vegetables, we’ve got you covered. This Vegetable Wellington not only looks the part at a Christmas feast, it tastes scrumptious too. It can even be prepared in advance of the big day and popped into the freezer, only to defrost in the fridge the night before. Serve it alongside all the trimmings and lashings of gravy.

Enjoy!

Nessa x

Vegetable Wellington

Ingredients

2 rolls of puff pastry, taken from the fridge 20 minutes before using

225g mushrooms

1 carrot

1 stick celery

1 onion

1tbsp olive oil

100ml red wine

1tbsp soy sauce

1tbsp tomato puree

1tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped

1tbsp fresh sage, finely chopped

1 tin lentils, drained

180g cooked chestnuts, finely blitzed

Salt and freshly ground pepper

1tbsp milk, dairy or plant-based

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/fan 180°C /Gas Mark 6.
  2. Add the mushrooms, carrot, celery and onion to a processor and blitz for a few seconds until finely chopped.
  3. Add the oil to a large pan, over a medium heat. Once hot, add the vegetables and cook for about ten minutes, stirring regularly.
  4. Next, add the wine, soy sauce, tomato puree and herbs. Stir to combine. Add the lentils and blitzed chestnuts. Season with a little salt and pepper. Simmer on low for another 10 minutes, stirring regularly. Take from the heat and allow to cool a little.
  5. Place one sheet of puff pastry on a greaseproof-lined baking tray. Evenly, add the cooked mixture to the centre of the pastry, leaving a few centimetres all around the mixture. Place the other sheet of pastry on top and using your hands, mould the pastry around the filling.
  6. Cut away any excess pastry – this can be used to make festive shapes to place on top. Secure the edges with a fork, score a criss-cross pattern across the top using the tip of a sharp knife. Brush with a little milk, and place in the preheated oven for 20 minutes.
  7. Slice and serve immediately with all the trimmings. Enjoy!

No thanks, free chemicals with every piece of produce.

It would certainly be much easier to farm with chemicals, apply some herbicides for the weeds, a pesticide or two to deal with the aphids and other mealy bugs, and a fungicide here and there to deal with the different fungal diseases. For good measure maybe throw in a growth inhibitor and a chemical wax coating to literally seal the deal and we have our food system all sown up.

This unfortunately is the reality of our modern-day food system. There is little doubt that the illusion of healthy food fostering great happy farmers, and a vibrant diverse landscape is very neatly packed in shiny plastic packaging on supermarket shelves. It looks lovely and shiny and clean and perfect.It is more challenging to grow food organically, you cannot reach for a bottle of chemicals to deal with every problem

When an inspector came to our farm and took a sample of kale to test for chemicals, they tested for 870 chemicals to be exact, the kale came back completely clean, but it was shocking that they tested for this many active pesticides.That is a lot of chemicals that are floating around that could potentially be used on our food. Farming with nature, protecting biodiversity, producing good clean healthy food is important to us. As I was walking up from creating this video I saw a black bird eating a worm. It struck me that if we were using chemicals on our farm then that worm would have consumed chemicals in the soil and the blackbird would then also be consuming chemicals and the cycle would go on. The lovely picture-perfect produce wrapped in plastic on the supermarket shelves is hiding so much. It is hiding how that food was produced; what chemicals were applied to the food, whether nature was harmed, whether the people producing the food were treated with respect. We can’t think about all of that, the world is too crazy, and we are too busy. The question is how did we arrive at a place where these are questions we must associate with our food? They shouldn’t be. Of course there are MRLs, (maximum residue limits) these are limits that restrict the amount of chemical allowed in a food. But not all foods are tested and when they are a scary 54% of conventional food have chemicals in them (read the report here). Now I think it would be preferable if we didn’t have to consume any toxic chemicals with our food, especially chemicals we are getting without our knowledge.

But our journey is not about fear; it’s about empowerment. By choosing organic farming methods and supporting others who do the same, we are cultivating a relationship with the land that prioritizes health and sustainability. Our commitment to nurture the earth and provide nourishing food for you our community, can only continue through your support. After a tough year, now more than ever we could do with your support

.Thank you.

Kenneth

PS thank you to everybody who has placed a Christmas order already, we are very grateful for your support, and we hope you will be delighted with the produce and groceries that you receive for Christmas. If you haven’t done so already, please have a look now on our website and remember of course you can order a Christmas box, but also you can choose whatever you need for Christmas and we will deliver that too!

Link to the report

https://www.pcs.agriculture.gov.ie/media/pesticides/content/foodsafety/pesticideresiduesinfoodfrom2020/2021AnnualReportPesticideResiduesinFood060923.pdf

Root Vegetable Crisps 

With the Late Late Toy Show on the horizon, excitement levels and festive cheer will be bubbling within every household in Ireland. On the night, young and old will come together to enjoy the show and pick what they’d like from Santa this year, all while tucking into a few tasty treats. With this to mind, I decided to create a bowlful of snacks using the gorgeous seasonal vegetables which arrived in my veg box this week. Parsnip, beetroot and of course potato all make for delicious crisps, and they really are so easy to make. However, the oil must be very hot, so this is a job for the grown-ups! I’ve sprinkled the cooked crisps in sea salt, but you could use any spice you like. 

Enjoy!

Nessa

Root Vegetable Crisps

Ingredients

Method

  1. Wash and peel the vegetables, before thinly slicing them using a mandolin or sharp knife. Add the prepared vegetables to three separate bowls and cover with cold water.
  2. After 30 minutes, drain the water from the vegetables and dry them well with some paper towels. 
  3. Heat the oil to 180°C in a high-sided, wide pan. When ready, add the vegetables in batches. Don’t overcrowd the pan and turn each one a few times during the cooking time. Each batch should take between 7-10 minutes, depending on their thickness. Once crispy and golden, remove carefully with a slotted spoon.
  4. Transfer to a paper-lined wire rack. Sprinkle with sea salt and served straightaway once cooled.

fond memories and better days…

Its funny how some memories stay with us. We all have flashes that we remember, or think we remember. I have some memories of my early years and of my grandad, he was a gardener and a farmer. He brought some of the benefits he learned as head gardener at Cregg Castle to his home garden where he grew so much lovely food. I remember his little seat in the garden where he would take a break and sharpen is always with him knife and smoke his pipe. He used to make raised beds for the carrots and potatoes. When I came back from England and started out in 2004 exactly 20 years ago, I made the same raised beds in that same garden.  

He gardened and farmed, and I don’t know if he was happy, but I have happy memories, so I assume he was. I have very little doubt that the work was hard and so much more of my grandparents’ time was devoted to work. He worked on his farm and grew as much food as he could. There was a strong sense of community back then and a connection to the food, it was essential, that connection to food and community. It was a means of survival, they needed that food, and I imagine those first new season potatoes were appreciated back then in a way we cannot imagine today.


There is little doubt that the convenience of the modern-day food system is something that would have inspired awe in my grandparents, to them it would have been a miracle. But I wonder whether they would have enjoyed the food? The variety and diversity: yes, but how about the taste and the freshness? Would they have traded their fresh carrots for the supermarket wrapped chemically sprayed, not so fresh supermarket carrots? Maybe not.


But we have traded something fundamental, something very important for our convenient food system, something that is in danger of disappearing from our way of life here in Ireland for ever. Something that has swiftly been side lined to move with the modernisation of our food system.  
We have traded part of our heritage, and our love for food and our connection to the land for convenience, and in so doing we risk losing something very valuable.  
The race to the bottom, to the cheapest food possible at all costs has a very real price. Apart from what we pay at the automated tills (These machines would have sent my grandad running back to the fields). These costs loom large, the loss of our native growers here in Ireland, the degradation of the land by polluting our soil and rivers, and the destruction of biodiversity to maximise every inch of productive land. The short-term gain of cheap food today, will not be any good to us in even half a generations time.
I loved my grandad, and the turnip juice I used to drink from a tin cup on his knee in his kitchen.  My grandparents didn’t have much but they had healthy food that nourished them and the land they farmed.


Your support gives us the courage we need to continue, thank you.


Kenneth  

PS please support local organic farms this Christmas, our Christmas boxes are jam packed full of the best local Irish organic ingredients on offer from organic farms including ours across the country.  Get your order in now to ensure delivery on the 23rd of December.  


Green Vegan Mac & Cheese 

As the evenings are getting darker and a little colder, comforting dinners, such as this delicious green vegan mac & cheese, are perfect for tucking into. The addition of romanesco to this pasta dish adds extra flavour, texture, and colour, as well as lots of nutrient. It is part of the brassica family of vegetables and tastes like a cross between broccoli and cauliflower. This stunning vegetable is grown on the farm, so nutritionally it benefits greatly from the best of soil. It is rich in fibre, calcium, and iron, and also a good source of vitamins, such as A, C and K. This dish only takes minutes to prepare and is best served with a simply green salad and chunks of crusty bread. 

Enjoy!

Nessa x

Green Vegan Mac & Cheese

Ingredients

Method

  1. Place the cashew nuts in a heat-proof bowl. Cover with boiling water and leave to soak for 15 minutes. 
  2. In a large pot of salted boiling water, cook the macaroni according to the pack’s instructions. Add the romanesco to the pot for the last 3 minutes of cooking time. Drain the pot, reserving 175ml of the cooking water.
  3. Drain the cashews and add to a processor, with the juice of one lemon, nutritional yeast, Dijon mustard, turmeric, the reserved pasta water and a little salt and pepper. Blend until combined.
  4. In a large casserole dish, combine the drained macaroni and romanesco with the sauce. Top with the vegan cheese and place under the grill for 5 minutes until golden brown. Serve straight away. Enjoy!

Spicy Peanut Noodles – Vegan

These spicy peanut noodles are so delicious and packed full of nutritious ingredients. I’ve used udon noodles in the recipe, but any noodles of choice can be used. This dish only takes minutes to assemble, and even though it is best enjoyed on the day it is made, it will keep well in the fridge for up to two days. 

Enjoy!

Nessa x

Spicy Peanut Noodles

Ingredients

  • 300g udon noodles
  • 1 carrot, grated
  • ½ courgette, grated
  • Handful of kale, finely chopped
  • Handful coriander leaves
  • 2tbsp peanuts, roughly chopped
  • 2tbsp sesame seeds

For the sauce

To serve

  • 2 scallions, finely sliced
  • 1 red chilli, finely sliced

Method

  1. Cook the noodles according to the instructions on the pack. Once cooked, add to a colander and rinse well under cold running water. 
  2. Roughly grate the carrot and courgette into a bowl. Using a paper towel, press down on the grated vegetables to soak up any excess water. 
  3. Add the grated carrot and courgette to a large bowl along with the cooled noodles, kale, coriander leaves, peanuts, and sesame seeds.
  4. To make the sauce, add the peanut butter, vinegar, soy sauce, honey, sesame oil, sriracha, and a dash of boiling water to a bowl. Whisk together using a fork. Pour over the noodles and vegetables and stir well to combine. 
  5. To serve, top with the sliced scallion and chilli. Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to two days. 

One-Pot Tomato Orzo – Vegan

This flavoursome one-pot dish is packed full of heart-healthy ingredients, thanks to the vegetables, plus the wholesome store cupboard ingredients included. While Irish tomatoes are in-season I would add them fresh to this dish, otherwise a good-quality tin of tomatoes can be used in their place. There is currently a lovely variety of lettuce available from the farm, and the tomato orzo serves well on a bed of crisp leaves, while adding an extra nutrient boost to the overall meal.  

Enjoy!

Nessa x

One-Pot Tomato Orzo

Ingredients

Serves 4

  • 1 tbsp olive oil 
  • 2 red peppers, diced
  • 1 red onion, diced
  • 1 courgette, diced
  • 100g mushrooms, diced 
  • 2 garlic cloves, crushed
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp chilli flakes
  • Salt & freshly ground black pepper 
  • 200g orzo
  • 1 tin lentils, drained and rinsed
  • 400g tomatoes, diced
  • 500ml vegetable stock
  • To serve
  • Handful of fresh basil & oregano leaves, roughly torn 
  • Zest of ½ lemon
  • Lettuce leaves

Method

  1. Place a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add the oil. Once hot, add the peppers, red onion, courgette, and mushrooms. Stir to combine. Sauté for about 10 minutes, stirring regularly.  
  2. Stir through the garlic, smoked paprika, chilli flakes, and a little salt, and a good grinding of black pepper.
  3. Add the orzo and lentils, and stir to combine with the vegetables, before adding the tomatoes and stock.
  4. Gently bring to the boil then turn down the heat to low, cover and leave the pot to simmer for about 25 minutes. Stir regularly to prevent the pasta from sticking to the bottom of the pan. 
  5. When ready to serve, stir through a handful of roughly torn basil and oregano leaves, and lemon zest. Divide the lettuce between four plates and top with the tomato orzo and a few more basil and oregano leaves. 

Delicious Rosemary and Garlic Baked Camembert

Cheese and fruit platters are gorgeous ways to graze over the festive season. They are great for sharing and require minimum effort. We like ours when we have friends over or when we watch a family movie.

We stock some gorgeous organic bio cheeses like this wheel of camembert and with a little effort it is delicious baked for your cheese board. Baked with garlic and herbs bring it to the next level, your guests will love it. Serve along side our delicious mulled wine.

Lou 🙂

Ingredients:

  • 1 (250-gram) wheel Camembert
  • 1 tablespoon (15 ml) olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon rosemary leaves, finely chopped
  • pinch salt and pepper
  • 1 large garlic clove, sliced very thin
  • To serve: crackers/grapes/bread

Method:

Step 1: Preheat the oven to 180ºC.

Step 2: Most Camembert comes in a little wooden crate. Open the cheese and place in parchment paper and put it back into the crate. If there is no crate, place it on a baking tray.

Step 3: With a thin sharp knife, make grid like cuts in the cheese, 3 or 4 in each direction, about 1 inch apart and going about 1 inch deep into the cheese but without cutting through the bottom rind. Use your knife tip to “open” each cut and your fingers to press a little sliver of garlic into each cut. Combine the olive oil with the rosemary, salt, and pepper in a small dish. Spread thickly on top of the cheese.

Step 4: Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until the cheese is loose inside the rind. Serve immediately with crackers, grapes and bread.