Showing posts with label salads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salads. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

In My Kitchen: April 2026

April was a busy month of Easter celebration food, including hot cross buns and vegan Easter chocolate ,and lots of easy meals.  We were eating more stews and baked potatoes as the weather cooled in the first half of the month before it returned to the balmy mid 20s in the second half of the month. I made old faves (zucchini slice, lentil soup, mock tuna salad) and had fun with some new recipes (a polka dot nut roast of sorts, miso bean pasta and spanikopita).  Sylvia made lots of scrambled tofu lunches.  

As always, I will also write a My Monthly Chronicles post with more about outings and eating out in April. I also celebrated my 19th blog anniversary with post on the Coconut and chocolate layer cake that I made for the Cake picnic last month.

The above picture is from the polka dot nut roast I made for a bit of fun at Easter.  I was inspired by my Christmas nut roast and my Aboriginal flag nut roast but needed to make it vegan for Sylvia.  So I added some tahini as well as besan and aqua faba.  Then I had to work out colours for each of the polka dots.  They all needed tweaking.  The beetroot colour was the best once I pureed it, I wanted the kale to be a brighter greener and the saffron was better in the Aboriginal flag than using turmeric. Another challenge was arranging the coloured dots and finding I needed more "white" batter around them and then realising I should have made the colours random rather than in a row.  It took a few hours at night and was quite an achievement.

I took the polka dot nut roast to my parents place in Geelong for the Easter Sunday roast.  I also made one for Sylvia and E to have for their Easter meal back in Melbourne.  Sylvia did not like this nut roast as much as the Christmas one that inspired it and I will have another go at veganising it.  However I was pleased with it and loved how the polka dots gave it pops of colour when slicing.  I would love to try it again and really want to play more with colours in nut roasts.  I just need more time for it.

On her first vegan Easter, Sylvia was able to find quite a few treats.  Clockwise from top left: Nomo cookie dough chocolate bunny and Mummy Meegz chucki chocolate (vegan creme egg); Plant Cocoa Hot Cross Hazelnut Easter eggs; Nomo chocolate egg with crispy pieces and a cookie dough bunny; Barbie Vegan gummy carrots (package); the gummy carrots; hot cross buns.  Sylvia loved all of it, though was disappointed she did not find any pana chocolate hot cross bun bars of chocolate.  The Planet Chocolate eggs were the best.

I baked the Sourdough Hot Cross Buns - my fave HCB recipe I make each year and experimented with (and posted) a recipe for Matcha, white chocolate and coconut hot cross buns.  They were pretty good except the matcha was too old to be very green.

I returned from Geelong with some good stuff, which is seen here with a couple of treats exchanged at home. Sylvia got the Nomo easter bunny from E, the Mummy Meegz Chickee Eggs (mini eggs) from me and I received the Health Lab Aussie lamington jam filled balls (amazing).  My sister Susie kindly found a bar of Lindt vegan milk chocolate for Sylvia, my dad organised gorgeous personalised glass Easter eggs to be made for each grandkid (Sylvia's is green and came in the unicorn bag), my mum made hot cross buns and my sister Fran gave me a jar of her Frankly Raw peanut butter.

Organising to buy vegan Easter eggs was more of a challenge than the regular milk ones in the supermarket.  I rode to a few places one afternoon to find them.  Pickles Milkbar had a good range of vegan Easter eggs.  While there I purchased a cheeseymite pastry scroll.  I asked about the sausage rolls and was given one to sample - it was a bit much mock meat for me but Sylvia loved it.  

On my travels I also purchased the Sweet William white chocolate melts, were was disappointingly thin an so sweet and the DJ&AShitake, oyster and nameko mixed mushroom crisps.  We have had the shitake crisps before and preferred those to the mix as the oyster mushrooms did not taste great.


I went to a work symposium and had a lovely time chatting to people in the breaks but did not spend much time getting myself food.  While riding home I found I was quite peckish and so I stopped at Cheaper Buy Miles in Sydney Road.  It is a grocery store with cheap remainder stock.  I bought all of this for $13: a packet of (tiny) vegetable mom, two dairy free almond Magnum ice creams, a tin of chunky pumpkin and chickpea soup, a packet of oregano Zeus Street Greek pita crackers, and a huge bag of mini potato cakes.  

Those mini potato cakes were a delightful indulgence.  I usually only have potato cakes with orders from a fish and chip shop.  These ones were so cute and lasted a while in the freezer.  They were great as a snack, a side and on pizza.

A friend offered me a monster zucchini and I could not resist.  It was from her friend's garden but she could not convince her kids to have zucchini fritters.  I made it into a vegan Zucchini slice.  Traditionally zucchini slice has been made in Australian households as an easy way to make dinner with surplus zucchini.  

I weighed this zucchini by chopping it into parts.  Initially it was more than I needed for the slice. I was surprised that the bulbous end weighed about 700g - and I thought the zucchini was much heavier than the 1kg I needed - but once I scooped out the seeds in this part, it weighed about 400g.   

This zucchini slice was much slower than the traditional one with eggs and bacon.  This one took a few hours by the time I had made a batch of tofu bacon, the tofu besan omelette mixture, grated and squeezed out the zucchini, mixed it all up and baked it.  It was amazing.  Well worth the effort.  While I used the Zucchini slice recipe from my blog, I added a bit of extra flour, besan and nooch which meant this time it was firm enough to slice.  I wish I could say how much but it was a bit of this and bit of that.  I also added panko breadcrumbs and sesame seeds on top.  This is the best zucchini slice I have ever made.  

I made my first vegan spanikopita.  I used a traditional spanikopita recipe from Somebody feed Seb with a bit of cross reference to the Lazy Cat Kitchen's vegan spinach and ricotta rolls.  I also used this vegan cashew feta recipe with olive brine that I have made previously.  I cooked it a bit longer this time and it was better for crumbling but still needs to be a bit thicker.  Sylvia was keen on making the spanikopita as a coil.  I learnt that a coil needs to be baked in a tin or it will crack and flick out at odd angles like a broken spring.  It was pretty good.  Could be better.  I am determined to try this again.

Sylvia's favourite lunch at the moment is scrambled tofu.  She fries up some chopped sausage or tofu bacon, crumbles in unpressed firm tofu and adds in lots of seasoning: nutritional yeast flakes, stock powder, dijon mustard, turmeric, smoked paprika, garlic powder, black salt and black pepper.  Then it just needs to be stirred for a few minutes until well combined and sometimes baby spinach is added after the gas jet is turned off.  It doesn't take long at all.  We had had it lots of ways.  Above clockwise from the top are scramble and lettuce in a tortilla wrap; scramble and baby spinach on toast: scramble, tomato, lettuce and rice;  and scramble with mini potato cakes and spinach.  All were excellent.  Sylvia told me that the rice bowl presentation was very la-di-dah!


One lunchtime when we had a good sourdough bread I made a Mock tuna (chickpea) salad and stuffed it into a sandwich with lots of scramble and a generous handful of baby spinach.  It was so good.  I put a skewer in it to hold it together for the photo because it was so stuffed that it was struggling to fit together.

I love tempeh but Sylvia is not so keen on it.  She has been trying some dishes with tempeh that tempts her.  tempting tempeh!  This Creamy Orzo with Tempeh Crumbles was a great dish for the tempeh doubters.  It had vegan cream, cannellini beans, roasted eggplant and sun dried tomato.  I forgot to check the eggplant while roasting and it was pretty charred.  Again I am more of an eggplant lover than Sylvia and was less fazed by her by the char.  I hope we make it again - maybe with peas for a touch of green next time!

Another delicious new meal was this Bean Miso Pasta with a creamy sauce made by blending a tin of butterbeans, including the liquid, with white miso, sesame oil, nutritional yeast flakes and lemon juice.  It was so easy and tasty that it was made two weeks in a row.

I have made this Creamy lentil and vegetable soup two weeks in a row.  It is a great way to use up vegies in the fridge.  I wonder how it would be with some pumpkin in it!  I found it in a favourite Alison Holst cookbook years ago when I cooked from cookbooks so much more than online recipes.  It has been so lovely that I have an urge to return to my cookbooks.  I just need to find more time for them!  I was pleased to update the photo in my original blog post as the first one was not pretty!!!!

I returned to this Gnocchi, Cabbage and Sausage recipe that I had made from a couple of recipes and wrote about in last month's In my kitchen post.  I tried it a different way by adding water after the initial frying so the cabbage was partly boiled and greener than when I had just fried it.  I preferred it this way but Sylvia didn't.  I think it might have had something to do with the gnocchi being cooked too much but can't remember.  This needs more work but it is a good easy meal that I want to develop.


We make pizza with my ridiculously easy Fast track sourdough pizza dough most Friday nights.  This pizza pictured was a fantastic vegan pizza I made that was topped with  tomato sauce, mushroom, capsicum, olives, chopped leftover baked potato, Damona almond feta and grated Damona American cheese.  I usually put dairy cheese on mine but occasionally make it vegan so I can share with Sylvia.

This picture is from my bed when I had pizza leftover on a Saturday morning and was reading in bed.  I don't do it too often but I am finding that occasionally reading in bed on a weekend morning is a great way to get more reading in.  Perhaps this is why I have finished as many books in 4 months as I read in the whole of 2025!  I started a couple that I could not finish as I kept losing track of them with infrequent reading.)  In April I have enjoyed reading The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (Mary Ann Shaffer, with Annie Barrows) and Inconvenient Women: Australian Radical Writers 1900-1970 (Jacqueline Kent).

(I have passed on my copy (from the op shop) of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society to my dad who is on driving around Tasmania with my mum and family friends.  He highly recommends it for holiday reading!) 


This Crispy rice salad is becoming a summer favourite.  This time we made it with lettuce, avocado, edamame, cucumber with the dressing from the Japanese cucumber salad and a sprinkle of fukikake. It is really good.  I think it wont be made much over winter but I hope it comes back into our meals again when it gets warmer later in the year.

I wrote about buying panisse from the Vegan market in My Monthly Chronicles: March 2026.  This is one of the ways we ate it.  I air fried the panisse while Sylvia fried diced potatoes.   (She preferred the panisse fried on the stovetop in our cast iron frypan).  I served mine in a bowl with lettuce, cherry tomatoes, red cabbage, red capsicum, leftover Easter nut roast, yoghurt and pickles.  I really love bringing together bits and pieces in a bowl.

Here is our cat Shadow trying to work out how to open the kitchen door.  My regular plumber (not the cheap one who is no longer answering my call and I fear has retired) came to fix some washers and leaks in the bathroom taps.  He had installed my air con and checked if I was cleaning the filters.  The shame!  After a stern talking to, I smeared them with washing detergent and soaked them in the laundry sink before scrubbing them.  He suggested they get cleaned whenever the season changes!  Must try harder!

I moved a kitchen chair to get the filters out.  Shadow will jump to grab at the round door handle to try and open it when he is desperate to go out. Yet he lives in hope and was happy to get closer where he could try and work it out.  We were laughing to much to take a photo of him jumping to try and open the door.  Sylvia managed to take a photo of him standing.  He is such a long cat!  He is more successful with door handles that we push down to open.  We sometimes hear that thump as he jumps at a door handle.  As the weather cools and we shut the doors more, I expect we will be hearing more thumping soon!  

 

My sister finally flew out from Ireland with her son, 6 weeks after her plane was turned back on her first try.  We went to visit them in Geelong at my parents' home where they were staying.  It was good to see them.  My sister kindly brought presents.  Fruit candles for me.  Percy pig lollies from Marks and Spencer for both of us.  Vegan chocolate truffles from Marks and two gorgeous hair clips that you can't see well in the photo - a peacock and a parrot.  I also brought home leftover fried rice with tofu that my mum had made for lunch; it made a great work lunch.  Sylvia declared the chocolate truffles were wonderful and made her feel so much better that Lindt balls are not vegan.  

My sister also visited us in Melbourne while she was on our side of the world.  We had all sort of plans which changed as her plans changed.  There is never enough time for her on a quick visit home.  Sylvia and I went to Terre Mardre in Sydney Road where we bought lovely hummus, grapes, salad leaves, vegan tomato deli meat slices and a great sourdough baguette.  We served these with some tofutti, carrots, red capsicum, and celery.  The snack platters were great for my sister to fortify her for the epic journey back to my parents' on the bus that was so much slower than the train it was replacing.  Sylvia grazed on them platters with Chris and ate the rest for our dinner!


I am sending this post to Sherry of Sherry's Pickings for the In My Kitchen event. If you would like to join in, send your post to Sherry by 13th of the month.  Or just head over to her blog to visit more kitchens and her delightful seasonal hand drawn header.  Thanks to Sherry for continuing to host this even that brings together some wonderful bloggers who share glimpses into their kitchens.  

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

In My Kitchen: March 2026

 

March brought darker evenings and cooler days.  Our salad days were transitioning to days of hearty fare.  It was such a busy month that we cooked less at home but brought home lots of good food.  Over the month I had the the Sydney Road Street Festival, a Pulp concert, a family wedding, a short trip to Sydney, a trip to the hospital Emergency Dept, the Cake Picnic, local theatre, a vegan market and a trip to the cinema.  It was exhausting though (mostly) lots of fun.  I will write up a lot more about it in My Monthly Chronicles (March 2026) but you will see quite a bit of it below.

The Iran war has put pressure on budgets with rising petrol costs and another interest rate rise.  In addition I have had a plumber call-out  and holes to repair at the dentist.  I am fortunate that we have some backpay coming up from the implementation of our Enterprise Bargaining Agreement at work (they always have a lag between agreement and implementation).

Above is my brilliantly green St Patrick's Day dinner.  I was sad I forgot to wear green at work in the morning so when I got home that evening - soaked by riding in a rain that would have made Ireland proud - I changed into green tracky daks and a green t-shirt.  Sylvia celebrated by making Zucchini pesto pasta -  which was lovely with lettuce, green capsicum, rocket and celery, and a squeeze of lime juice (from the garden).

It is nice to see that the Take Me Home Gnoccheria at 89B Harding Street has expanded into a Grocer and Mangia (cafe) to replace the space that was Harding Street Convenience Store at number 89A.  The milk bar had been run for 18 years by Andy and Phoebe Lee until the landlord sold the building last year.  I am glad the space continues to be one for community, albeit a more gentrified version of the once common milk bar.

We enjoyed browsing through the interesting rage of groceries with some vegan offerings - pistachio spread, choc top ice cream cones, burgers, fresh fruit and vegetables and Back Alley Bakes breads.  We left with a bar of Alessandro Luppolo smoked dark chocolate.  It was a very nice smooth chocolate with ingredients listed as cocoa beans, sugar and paperbark smoke! But at $13.50 for a 68g block it would be a rare treat.  Sylvia caved to the temptation of a vegan tiramisu. The ingredients list was longer with a lentil-based cinnamon cream layered with chocolate and biscuits soaked in coffee.  She was most impressed.  Later in the month, we also had a packet of Take Me Home's delicious green olive, parsley & chilli gnocchi from their stall at Coburg farmers market.


We have had this excellent  TikTok viral dumpling bake twice in March (we got the recipe from #kuzyinks).  Vegetables, coconut milk and Thai curry paste are mixedin a large baking dish and then gyoza dumplings are arranged on top so the bottoms are soft and their tops crisp..  The first time Sylvia made it with enoki, been sprouts and bok choy as on the recipe but the second time (photo above) we wnt with our preferred combination of edamame, napa cabbage and enoki mushrooms.  On the second outing, we also mixed about a teaspoon of cornflour into the sauce, which has to be thin to cook the dumplings but a slight thickening was prefereable to the watery sauce of our first go.  The dumpling bake is great with basmati rice.

We returned to the  crispy rice salad (from emily's eatings on tik tok) that we enjoyed only weeks before.  This time we didn't have most of the ingredients so we winged it and made the crispy rice to serve with lettuce, chickpeas, corn, green capsicum, and celery.  It was really good, yet again!

Another favourite salad is this Carrot, couscous, bean and feta salad that we enjoyed over the past couple of summers.  This time we veganised it with Damona feta and garnished it with cornichon pickles.  Sylvia had a few weeks where she was eating cornichons on everything.  I think life got so busy that she forgot about them and this week we found one of the jars at the back of the fridge and put it to good use.

We recently had too much cabbage and I looked up ways to use it up.   I found a recipe suggesting that it goes well with gnocchi in the way cabbage and potato go well in pierogi.  Then I found a couple of recipes that added sausage to the mix and I was sold.  The photo looks pretty beige but it was a really nice way to fry up the cabbage as a meal.
 

Another TikTok recipe from rhi.scran,  Sylvia was really keen to make these veagn meatballs (cheatballs?).  They were a matter of squeezing vegan sausages from their skins (we used Beefy Brats from the 'unreal co'.  These were air fried until crispy.  While they fried, Sylvia made a sauce of coconut milk and Thai curry paste and served it over the meatballs and rice.  I served mine with Japanese cucumber salad, red cabbage and red capsicum.  The success of the meatballs depends on the sausages and if we tried them again, we would use different sausages.  It was a pretty good meal, nonetheless!  

After our trip to Sydney, we brought home a wonderful loaf of light rye bread from the Bourke Street Bakery in Surry Hills.  It was so good I could have eaten it slice but slice but needed more veg in my life.  So I rescued a box of neglected Casarecce pasta and added it to a stew of old cherry tomatoes, the remains of a bunch of celery, as well as reliable onion, carrot, a tin of tomatoes, a tin of chickpeas and frozen peas for a token green vegetable, plus tahini and seasonings.  It was lovely with the bread and I stored some in the freezer for work lunches.

Here is another of Sylvia's gorgeous collage cards that she made for my sister's wedding in March.  The wedding was a great and I was very relieved to be able to wash my hair before the wedding after a bit of pre-wedding drama.


A couple of days prior, our washer gave out and we could not turn off the kitchen sink tap without turning it off at the mains.  I had a look at the tap but it was so old it was probably the original from the 1960s and I could not get the handle off the spindle.  It was the Friday night before the long weekend.  We had to do an after hours call out because 3 days were a long time without running water.  My regular plumbers were not available.  I asked for advice but ended going to HiPages to find a plumber with a reasonable rate who was able to get to our place in about 30 minutes and replace the kitchen taps. An experience like that really made me appreciate being able to turn on and off the tap.



I have written about our experiences at the amazing Cake Picnic, Melbourne 2026 run as part of the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival in March.  I still plan to write more about the chocolate coconut layer cake I made.  Today I will share a bit of the cake picnic in my kitchen.  Above is our fridge when we parked our cakes into cake boxes there overnight after hours of baking and decorating.  You can see that we had to squeeze everything else in the fridge on other shelves.


After the cake picnic we brought home some of the goodies.  Queen was a sponsor and as part of our entrance price, we got the merch bag of a tote bag, vanilla essence, fondant letters and a choice of a wooden spoon or a tea towel.  We got one of each.  

The cake picnic vanilla essence bottle was gorgeous.  When the organisers announced at the picnic that there were lots of leftover bottles of vanilla essence if anyone wanted more.  We were about to get more until we saw the queues the announcement had created.  It wasn't worth that much hassle!

This is my cake picnic box of slices.  A lot of them went into the freezer and I still cannot face all the sugary cake.  So much frosting!  I was sad that it was such a mess that I could not take it to work or share it with my neighbours.  I don't think I will be able to eat a lot of it but will probably pick at a bit of it eventually.

The day after the cake picnic, I went to a community play (Little Voice) with a couple of neighbours to see one of our neighbours perform in the play.  We brought food to eat at the tables and it was fun that we were the cabaret audience in the play.  There was some great singing and great piano, but a lot of sadness in the story line!  I took along hummus and vegies with some Arnotts seeded crackers.  One of my neighbours was very happy that the crackers were gluten free.  It was good to eat some fresh vegies after the sugar fest at the cake picnic.

Sylvia had tickets but needed a day of rest after the cake picnic.  She had been so determined to go there after being in the Emergency Department at hospital for acute tonsillitis only two days prior to the picnic.  After making a big effort to attend the picnic, she was pretty worn out and needed a quiet day.


We went to the Vegan Market at the Coburg Town Hall at the end of the month.  By then I was so tired and had eaten such indulgent food that I wasn't that keen on buying a lot.  However, I will always ben tempted by Dubai chocolate and really loved it in a slice from the Little Sweet Things stall.  

Sylvia was excited about the Better Now Bakes stall.  They do amazing baking (as any former Great Australian Bake-Off contestant should) and bought a great though a bit spicy kimchi and cheese scroll; a lovely pandan lamington that was green under the coconut; and a slice of the superb "Jai's wedding cake: lemon myrtle cake slices with a strawberry & pepperberry jam filling, dressed in hibiscus buttercream".  We ate well when we got home.

Sylvia was keen to eat a borek and a burger but I really really loved the South-Co panisse.  I admit to tasting a few of the crispy fried squares of chickpea 'tofu' with smooth soft flavoured insides.  It was all I wanted for lunch so we walked across the road to the Coburg farmers market to buy a fine loaf of Flinders Sourdough bread.  We also bought kale, tomatoes and yellow zucchini.  This was the sort of good food I really needed.

Here is a close up of the slab of pesto-flavoured Panisse that I crisped up in the air fryer and ate on sourdough with relish the next day.   Right after the market we had air-fried panisse with lettuce, tomato and mayo in a sourdough sandwich.  Fried panisse is the best!  It is not just how wonderfully soft it is inside but the delicious mellow chickpea flavour with the addition of aromatic pesto.  

When Sylvia found that Sebby Scrolls were serving vegan cinnamon scrolls in the Melbourne Food and Wine Festival Bakers Dozen in Fed Square, she organised to go with her dad.  They told me it was very busy and bought back some of the lovely mini scrolls - that were sold in pairs - for us to enjoy at home.  They were very soft and very sticky with all that frosting.

As the fickle autumn weather veered from balmy warmth into a rainy day, I made gravy. We don't have it often but it is great comfort food.  I had planned to serve baked potatoes for tea but had a problem when I remembered I had forgotten to buy some big potatoes. We had sausages and a couple of small potatoes.  Sylvia was delighted to have sausages covered in hearty gravy.  I didn't use a recipe but just fried onions, added flour, vegemite, tomato sauce, seasoning and water.  It was so so good.  I must make it again now that the weather is cooling as we gallop towards winter!

I am sending this post to Sherry of Sherry's Pickings for the In My Kitchen event. If you would like to join in, send your post to Sherry by 13th of the month.  Or just head over to her blog to visit more kitchens and her delightful seasonal hand drawn header.  Thanks to Sherry for continuing to host this even that brings together some wonderful bloggers who share glimpses into their kitchens. 

Saturday, 7 March 2026

In My Kitchen: February 2026

February was busy with back-to-school, birthday celebrations, Shrove Tuesday, a mouse murder (by our cat), bike rides, and quite a few new recipes. We ate lots of Asian and Mexican recipes as befits a month of hot weather.  I am glad summer is now over and we will have cooler weather but I will miss all the salads and summer fruit.  It was also a month of big religious events such as Lent, Ramadam and Lunar New Year. 

Above is one of our thrown together salads.  This one had fried caramelised tofu, which we first had in rice paper rolls but found it is every bit as good in a bowl with sticky rice (from a microwave packet), edamame, cucumber, red cabbage, carrot, spring onions and furikake.
 

 

We are still trying new vegan foods since Sylvia went vegan at the start of the year.  We have had Milk tea boba mochi and Pickle crisps both of which have been new favourites for Sylvia.  I liked the crisps but am not a mochi fan.  Sylvia tells me not all mochi is created equal and she loved the above milk tea boba one much more than the below matcha mochi with the bean paste.

More vegan goodies: agar agar (for feta cheese below), Beefy Brats (still unopened but destined for greatness, we hope), the not good mochi, Wildy Good Cheese Cauli Poppers (excellent) and Pana vegan Rocky road Chocolate.  The chocolate was amazing.  Sylvia was excited she could eat it because it was peanut-free and had vegan marshmallow.  It is lucky to get one or the other and rare to get both of them in a any sort of rocky road.  This one also had vegan raspberry lollies and finely chopped almonds.  

Many months ago, I was given the olive oil bottle on the left by a friend who had two.  In February I finally finished the commercial oil spray can.  Since then I have had my olive oil in this bottle with a pouring spout and a spray mechanism.  This spray doesn't froth up like the commercial one so I like it better.  Next to my new olive oil is a pretty bottle of LaEspanole olive oil with an olive flower pattern and my favoured local olive oil from Cobram.

Sylvia has had some chia pudding breakfasts in the last few weeks.  She makes chia pudding with soy milk and serves it with coconut yoghurt, thawed strawberries, sliced bananas and my toasted muesli.  This seems too much milkiness for me but Sylvia really enjoyed it.

 

I was intrigued by this vegan cashew feta recipe which had agar agar and olive brine.  It was blended and then cooked.  As I have not used agar agar much, I was unsure if I cooked it long enough.  It tasted delicious as a spreadable feta but not quite as easy to crumble as the recipe suggested.  I definitely want to try it again.

Sylvia made a really nice Pasta salad with jalapeno and chorizo from TikTok.  It was quite spicy for me with the jalapenos but I really loved the vegan chorizo chopped up small and fried into crispy crumbles.  It was great for one of the last warm days of summer.

 

We have enjoyed the spiced rice from the meal prep burritos in a few meals - it is an easy way to add more flavour to meals.   In the above photo I had quesadillas with the spiced rice, lettuce, cabbage, red capsicum, yoghurt, salsa and feta.

This is another very satisfying meal with spiced rice topped with lettuce, red cabbage, tomatoes, corn, seasoned black beans, feta and crispy fried Field roast chorizo crumbles (leftover from the pasta salad).  

We have been enjoying La Costena whole black beans in Mexican style bowls.  Then we accidentally bought the La Costena refried pinto beans.  The labels are pretty similar.  We used it because it was there and enjoyed it.  When we went to buy it again, we checked the ingredients in the supermarket and found it had pork lard in it.  Urgh!  So sadly this is off the menu now.  But the whole black beans are vegan so we are still buying those.

My worst cooking experience of the month was making a stuffed onions recipe that Sylvia had chosen.  It was a recipe I didn't understand, it took forever, the ingredients didn't work as I expected and I thought the end result was not worth the stress.  My idea of stuffed onions was a British one where the onions are hollowed out and stuffed.  Sylvia's stuffed onion recipe was more Greek and Middle Eastern where each layer of onion is boiled and stuffed.  I learnt the hard way that you don't separate the layers until you boil the onions.  I didn't like having the different size layers and also having to cut down the side of the layers being stuffed, Even worse was adding faux mince meat for Sylvia.  Of course it knocked all the ingredients off balance and I had to tweak and tweak and tweak!  Next time I will make these baked onions with hazelnut, sultana and feta stuffing.


Sylvia made Sesame noodles from TikTok (rhi.scran): ramen noodles with a sauce of tahini, soy sauce, rice vinegar and maple syrup.  We served it with lettuce, red cabbage, carrot, cucumber and furikake.  After the photo, I remembered to eat the edamame we had heated.  I enjoyed the noodles much more than Sylvia, which is not surprising given that I love tahini and she is not much of a fan. 

Sylvia made some very impressive Tempah and black bean tacos for dinner.  Another TikTok find from rhi.scran.  I had mine  -  The filling were made in the frypan with tempeh and blackbeans, onions, garlic, seasonings, lime juice and water, staffed into tortillas and baked in the oven.  I served mine with guacamole, yoghurt, pickled red onion, lettuce and cabbage. 

I made the Sticky miso tofu that Sylvia found on Plant Based RD (I found out that RD at means registered dietician not Road).  The miso made it a lot creamier than the fried caramelised tofu you can see at the top photo.  I prefer the caramelised tofu but both are great.  What was a great revelation was tossing the chunks of tofu into cornflour and seasoning and then air frying it.  It was so crispy and delicious.  We served it with sticky rice, lettuce, cabbage, cucumber, carrot and edamame.  You might have noticed how much we have loved pairing lettuce and raw cabbage this summer!

I found this Sweet Plus Dubai chocolate in Terra Madre.  It was pretty delicious and cheaper (and smaller) than some other bars I had seen.  I can't find it on their website so will need to check it out in store when I am next there.

Sylvia's favourite chocolate of the month was also pistachio.  She was very happy to find the Loco Love's Pistachio Mylk Praline.  It was pricey at $11 for 70g.  It had not been easy for Sylvia to find so she was delighted both to be able to eat it and with the bar.  She thought it a bit like a vegan Dubai chocolate but I did not, though we both agreed it was delicious.


Shrove Tuesday always a great reason to make pancakes.  I have fond memories of eating pancakes at this time of year as a kid before giving up dessert (which we called "sweets") for Lent.  My childhood pancakes were never as decadent as these vegan chocolate pancakes I made this year.  I wanted them extra chocolate so I added an extra 1/2 cup cocoa instead of 1/3 cup of the flour.  I did not have choc chips but added 2 extra tbsp of sugar and used wholemeal flour.  I cooked them with olive oil spray over medium to medium hot heat on my cast iron frypan for 3 minutes on each side.  (The timer was more reliable than checking for bubbles.)  They were delicious and not too sweet.  

I served the chocolate pancakes with a strawberry chia jam (1 cup frozen strawberries, 1-3 tbsp water, 2-3 shakes of mixed spice, the juice of half a lemon, 2-4 tbsp maple syrup cooked on the stovetop  about 5 minutes till thickened slightly), Sanitariums's vegan chocolate soy ice cream, Billy Van Creamy's vegan caramel cashew ice cream and maple syrup.  Totally amazing!  The recipe made a lot for the two of us.  (This is not in the spirit of Shrove Tuesday to have pancakes leftover for Ash Wednesday when Lent starts but we are not practicing Catholics!)  Next time I think that half the pancake mixture would be find and we would both love more of that chia strawberry jam.  

We held a Birthday tea for Sylvia's birthday.  She had cucumber and cashew cheese spread sandwiches, sushi stacks, crisps, fairy bread, vegan marshmallow teacups, pink iced cupcakes and fruit.  It was a small and relaxing get together.  My mum brought the cupcakes and my dad helped saw through the old padlock on our back shed that refused to open up after I locked it (and I remembered the code).

Here are some of Sylvia's birthday presents: an Angelina ballerina book, stickers, snacks, chocolates, jewellery, a butterfly hair piece, a photo frame, a Tori Amos CD, a tapestry purse, a tiny tea set and jewellery holders.  So much good stuff.


I also took Sylvia for a little drive in the west of Melbourne which included a visit to the Damona vegan cheese factory where we got all these offcuts cheaply.  There are packets of American cheese, feta, Pecorino, Brie which cost $35 in total.  We weighed the huge bag of feta a week or two after buying (and using) it.  It weighed almost 700 grams and it was excellent.  The American cheese was great on pizza and quesadillas.  The Pecorino was really good on a Minestrone but had to be crumbled because it did not grate well.  We still have quite a bit of it left.

While out in the West I bought some Pistachio Kunafa Sptead from ipantry in Sunshine.  I bought a jar of this from a local Middle Eastern shop last year and loved it so much I went back for more a few months later.  They had stopped selling it as the Dubai chocolate craze is on the wane, apparently.  Sunshine was the closest place I could buy it, though I had to order online at the door so they could give me the jars.  I bought two because if it is not being sold widely I probably wont go out of my way to buy it again for a long time.  It is so delicious and creamy and crunchy but is so sweet and decadent too!

My final meal for the month was a quick Burger bowl (inspired by the one I made in my July 2025 IMK post).  I really loved the vegan cauliflower and cheese burger from the Coles plant based range called Nature's Kitchen.  We are not going to Coles very often lately due to the some of their underhand practices but these burgers call my name.  I at it with tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, carrot, cornichon pickles, pickled red onions, yoghurt and tomato sauce.  (The tomato sauce is one from my sister at Christmas that has a personalised label! So cool!).  

I also used up the last of the packet of parmesan cheese.  Sylvia had loved it before going vegan but I don't eat it nearly as much.  With her now being vegan, my eating habits are also changing.  I am not sure I will continue to buy parmesan regularly, I haven't bought eggs fall year and I only have bought the vintage tasty cheese but none of our regular mozzarella grated blend.  I am eating less sweet foods as being vegan has limited the amount of sweet baking Sylvia and I are eating from fancy bakeries.  Overall the change is positive and as you can see, we are finding lots of new vegan meals to enjoy!

I am sending this post to Sherry of Sherry's Pickings for the In My Kitchen event. If you would like to join in, send your post to Sherry by 13th of the month.  Or just head over to her blog to visit more kitchens and her gorgeous hand drawn header.  Thanks to Sherry for continuing to host this even that brings together some wonderful bloggers who share glimpses into their kitchens.