Chromatic
Legendary Member
- Location
- Gloucestershire
I remove the hard outer layer and eat the stalks raw .... Yummy!
I eat them raw too.
I remove the hard outer layer and eat the stalks raw .... Yummy!
Don't eat the tins!!I've been (for easiness sake and not having to faff with making proper food when hungry) been using Weight Watchers frozen meals for some of my starvation days. They have bloody sugar in them. Who wants sugar in their lasagne? Even worse was one of their tuna/sweetcorn tins - so sweet it was inedible. Why do they think people want sweet tuna?and thrice
These people are supposed to be selling stuff that helps weight loss!
Master SHK loves his Yeo Valley natural yoghurt (preferably on its own). I prefer mine sweeter, but to keep temptation out of his reach we only have this one in the house. https://www.yeovalley.co.uk/things-we-make/yeogurt/natural.
The only problem is that natural yoghurt is absolutely inedible, one of the most sour and foul tasting foods going. Thats why yoghurt is stuffed full of sugar to make it taste half decent.
You'd be surprised. I seem to crave some foods that it's been discovered years later are actually helpful for my chronic illnessIf it tastes nice it's probably bad for you![]()
Many suppose they do that, but...! Those tins really annoy me: it's not like sweetcorn isn't already sweet enough and it kills what should be a fairly quick and reasonably healthy way to make an impromptu picnic on tour. Oh well, back to the sausage!Even worse was one of their tuna/sweetcorn tins - so sweet it was inedible. Why do they think people want sweet tuna?and thrice
These people are supposed to be selling stuff that helps weight loss!
YesThere must be a recipe out there for quick and easy soup.
If it tastes nice it's probably bad for you![]()
True, I thinks it's major effect is to help pull the moisture out of the fish and prevent any unwanted fermentations (except maybe some lactic) whilst it's hanging around.
There must be a recipe out there for quick and easy soup.
Possibly not the cheapest, but nice: pea and ham soup
Fry up a couple of onions, add stock and tip in a load of frozen peas. Cook until peas thawed, then stick in a few bits of ham and whiz till smooth. Add a few more lumps of ham for texture.
I think 'normal' pea and ham soup is made using dried peas, but this is much quicker and tastes of fresh peas...
Which are you using? Green / brown / red / yellow? Brown here take 20 mins to cook but stay crunchy-ish (good for lasagne); red go mushy properly and quickly.Is there such a thing as a "quick cook" lentils? When I have made lentil soup, they take a long time to soften.
leaf coriander or seed coriander? Both have good (but different) tastesI will try the red lentils again then.
Carrot and coriander is one of my favourite soups.
I think I will be following your good example @phil_hg_uk.
I will stop adding sugar to my porridge and my first two coffees of the day. The rest of the day I do not have sugar in drinks anyway.
About once a week, I have a tin of soup when I cannot be bothering with preparing something for my evening meal. I will be looking closely at the sugar content of those, and try to get in the habit of making soup myself. There must be a recipe out there for quick and easy soup.
Cutting out all sugar could be tricky. Can I assume that 5g of sugar (as in the ingredients list) is equivalent to one teaspoon of sugar?