Quinoa, broccoli & red pepper salad with herby tahini dressing
Nutritious and tasty, this salad delivers a ton of flavour and over 10 of your 30 plants a week! Nutrition researchers at the Zoe project recommend eating 30 different types of plants weekly to support gut microbes, long-term general health, and weight management (read more).
The veggies and quinoa are full of fibre, which feeds gut bacteria and has been linked to weight loss, improved energy levels, and even reduced menopausal symptoms such as hot flushes, mood swings, and anxiety.
This recipe is also a good source of B vitamins (tahini and veggies), which can help with weight management; B1 (thiamine) helps the body burn calories from carbohydrates, and B6 and B9 (folate) can boost metabolism.
Quinoa and chickpeas contain manganese, a co-factor for many different enzymatic reactions in the body, including those that support weight management by encouraging carbohydrate and fat burning. Manganese also protects against oxidative stress by neutralising free radicals.
Oxidative stress occurs when our body has high levels of free radicals that can damage the surrounding cells and tissues. When free radicals react with important molecules in our cells, like DNA, proteins, or fats, they can disrupt their normal function and lead to damage. This damage is associated with health issues, such as accelerated aging, inflammation, and increased risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers. The good news is that broccoli and red pepper also contain high levels of antioxidants, including vitamin C, which reduce the risk of oxidative stress and inflammation by supporting the immune system
It’s a vegan salad, but you can eat whatever you want with it … last night, we had Mexican-spiced fried chicken breast, and leftover carrot, and kohlrabi slaw, but grilled meat, fish, halloumi, fried tofu, feta, edamame would all work really well.
If you want to simplify the recipe, you can use raw chopped cherry tomatoes (vine if possible for flavor) or roast the tomatoes for 15-20 minutes at 180°c rather than the slow and low method I have used to dry them out. You can also swap the crispy chickpeas for toasted pumpkin, sunflower seeds, or hazelnuts. I recommend you try the chickpeas once, though, as they are super delicious and add a nice crunch.
ingredients
Serves 6 as a side dish
250g vine cherry tomatoes, halved
1 tsp balsamic vinegar
1 x 400g tin chickpeas
½ tsp sweet smoked paprika
150g quinoa (I used tricolour, but you can use ‘normal’)
200g tenderstem broccoli, ends trimmed
1 large red pepper, thickly sliced
30g fresh herbs (any combo of flat-leaf parsley, coriander, dill, basil) chopped roughly
Dressing
4 tbsp tahini
6 tbsp chickpea water
½ clove garlic, peeled
Juice of ½ lemon
10g herbs (taken from the 30g listed above)
method
Heat the oven to 120 °c
Drain the chickpeas and retain the liquid. Pat dry with a paper towel.
Spread the tomatoes on a baking tray, drizzle with olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and sprinkle with salt.
Next, spread the chickpeas on a baking tray, drizzle with olive oil, and sprinkle with paprika and a pinch of sea salt.
Place both trays in the oven and cook for 1 hour. The tomatoes should be caramelized and blackened on some edges, with most of their liquid evaporated. The chickpeas should be very crunchy; if not, put them back in for 10-15 minutes.
Simmer the quinoa for 20 minutes, then drain and rinse in cold water. Set aside to drain well.
Once the tomatoes and chickpeas are cooked, turn the oven to 180°c.
Put the broccoli and peppers on a baking tray, drizzle with olive oil, and sprinkle with salt.
Place in the oven for 10 minutes, then remove the broccoli and put the peppers back in for 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, chop the herbs and make the dressing; put all the ingredients, including ⅓ of the chopped herbs, into a small mixer and blitz.
Assemble the salad by layering quinoa, veggies, herbs, dressing, and repeat, finishing with veggies, dressing, herbs, and chickpeas. I like drizzling each layer with extra virgin olive oil and a squeeze of lemon to add flavour and moisture.
Tip
If you don’t have a mixer, use a whisk and bowl if you don’t have a small mixer, but make sure your herbs are chopped finely.
Quinoa & red pepper nut roast
ingredients
Serves 8-10
150g mixed nuts, sunflower and pumpkin seeds, toasted
150g quinoa
1 red onion, chopped finely
1 red pepper, small dice
1 clove garlic, chopped finely or grated with a Microplane
150g mushrooms, chopped roughly, but fairly small
180g cooked chestnuts, chopped finely or blitzed in a food processor
1 tsp dried oregano
5 tbsp plain or GF flour
2 heaped tbsp tomato purée
2 heaped tsp Dijon mustard
150g cheddar cheese, grated
2 tsp sea salt
3 large eggs, beaten
Black pepper
Method
Preheat the oven to 180ºc. Line a 2lb loaf tin with parchment, or I like to use a liner as they just slot in.
Put the nuts, sunflower and pumpkin seeds on a tray and roast for 7-8 minutes. Set aside to cool.
Heat the olive oil in a large pan and add the onions, pepper and garlic, frying gently for 10-12 minutes until soft.
Next add the mushrooms and cook for a further 8-10 minutes, letting any excess liquid evaporate.
While the veg is cooking, blitz the chestnuts in a food processor to a bread crumb texture and then put in a bowl. If you don’t have a processor, just chop finely.
Add the chestnuts, oregano and flour, mixing well and then the tomato purée, mustard, cheddar, nuts, seeds, salt and finally the beaten eggs. Combine well.
Spoon the mix into the tin, press it down lightly, so it sticks together and cover with a piece of tin foil. Place in the oven for 30 minutes then remove the tin foil and put back in for another 15 minutes.
Serve with my red onion gravy roasties and lots of greens.
tip
If you have any left overs, once cooled, slice the roast and freeze with baking parchment separating each piece, so they don’t stick together. As my daughter is veggie, I like to have a few slices in the freezer ready for when we have a chicken roast.
I also do the same with my red onion gravy - freeze a few portions so I always have a nice homemade sauce for her.
Purple broccoli & potatoes with celeriac, quinoa & green tahini
Bit of a different one from me today as I don’t often cook with blue anneliese potatoes or celeriac, but wow, I need to pick them up more often! This salad was so tasty and even won over my celeriac-hating other half! I think the way forward is roasting the celeriac to get the sweetness and a softer flavour.
The veggies all arrived in my Able & Cole box (as did the celeriac); I’ve been trying them for the past few weeks and I’m really enjoying cooking with different ingredients and creating dishes to include them in.
This salad was so tasty and amazingly healthy, here are a few nutrition facts you might find interesting:
purple potatoes have more potassium (fluid balance, muscle contractions and nerve signals) than bananas surprisingly and contain lots of antioxidant polyphenols, which mop up the free radicals in your body that cause cell damage.
Celeriac is also packed with antioxidants plus Vit C (immunity), K (blood clotting and bone health) and B6 (supports neurotransmitters that regulate mood, such as serotonin, dopamine and GABA).
Purple sprouting broccoli is another great source of antioxidants (like anything purple!) , Vit K, C, folate (mental health, cardiovascular and immune system health, cell division and DNA creation) .
And last but not least quinoa, a complete source of protein as it contains all 9 essential amino acids. Amino acids are the building blocks of protein, and protein forms the basis of all tissues in your body. It is also packed full of: manganese (metabolism, growth, development), phosphorus (tissue health), copper (heart), folate, iron (energy), magnesium (muscles, energy), zinc (immunity, growth and around 100 essential enzyme reactions).
Note: if you can’t get blue anneliese then switch for sweet potatoes.
Ingredients
Serves 4-6, or 8-10 as part of a mezze
3 blue anneliese potatoes, 1cm slices, halved
½ large celeriac, 2 cm rough cubes
Pinch of dried thyme
150g tri-colour quinoa
100g purple spouting broccoli
Dressing
100g tahini
20g fresh parsley
1 small garlic clove
Juice 1 ½ lemons (approx 3 tbsp)
3 tbsp water
¼ tsp sea salt
Method
Pre heat the oven to 180ºc.
Spread the potatoes and celeriac on 2 large trays with a pinch of thyme and drizzle with 1-2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil, roast for 20-25 minutes until soft and browned.
Rinse the quinoa really well and cook as per the packet instructions, rinse and drain well. Toss in a good pinch of salt and set aside in a pan with the lid on to keep warm.
Blitz the dressing ingredients in a mini chopper or use a stick blender in a deep jug.
While everything is still warm layer the quinoa, veggies and dressing, serve immediately if you can, but if you have to make ahead then this salad is lovely at room temperature too.
Roast tomato, sweet potato & quinoa salad with tahini dressing
My new favourite salad: red and white quinoa with tomatoes, sweet potato and red onions roasted with cumin, fennel and coriander. Ok, so my favourite changes weekly, but this is a super tasty and definitely one to add to your menu! The dressing is made with roast garlic, tahini and deglazed tomato juice from the roasting tray (see the swirls in the little bowl), to really pack in the flavour. It would also be nice to add some crunch by serving with toasted nuts, or feta if you want to add cheese - I had both!
Ingredients
Serves 4 as a main, or 6-8 as a side
250g baby plum tomatoes
2 large garlic cloves
1 small sweet potato, 1cm cubes
1 medium red onion, half moon slices
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp fennel seeds
½ tsp ground coriander
250g quinoa
¼ tsp sea salt
A handful of parsley and/or coriander, chopped
Dressing
6 tbsp tahini
100ml water
¼ tsp sea salt
Method
Preheat the oven to 180ºc. Spread out the tomatoes and garlic on a roasting tray, drizzle with rapeseed or olive oil and add a pinch of salt, mix well.
Put the sweet potato and red onion on two halves of large tray, drizzle with oil and sprinkle with ½ tsp cumin seeds, ½ tsp fennel seeds and the coriander, plus a pinch of salt. Mix well and place all the vegetables in the oven for 15 minutes. Turn and put back in for another 5 minutes. The sweet potato and onion should be cooked by now, but the tomatoes will need about another 10-15 minutes - they should be starting to blacken.
While the vegetables are roasting, rinse the quinoa really well and then simmer in boiling water for 20 minutes. Drain and set aside.
Put the remaining cumin and fennel seeds in a frying pan and warm gently for about 1 minutes util you can smell their aroma, set aside.
Use the two roasted garlic cloves in the dressing - squeeze the soft clove out of the skin and mash in a small bowl. Next add the tahini and mix well. Deglaze the tomato tray with 6 tbsp of boiling water and mix into the tahini. Add an extra tablespoon of water if needed. Stir in the salt.
To serve, put the quinoa in a large bowl, gently stir in the vegetables, herbs, salt, then pour over the dressing and lastly sprinkle over the cumin and fennel seeds. If you’re not eating all the salad straight away, leave the dressing separate, so it stays fresher.
Tip
After roasting vegetables, I always deglaze the tray with a 2-3 tablespoons of boiling water to get extra flavour into my salad dressings, stocks and stews. Even if you don’t need that flavour now, it’s worth doing as you can freeze the liquid in an ice cube tray and add to another dish as an extra flavour boost. It also helps to clean your tray before washing up!
Broccoli, sweet potato & tahini salad
Salad season is back! I feel ready to say goodbye to soups now! Or may be I’m getting over excited as it’s sunny AND warm today. Feels really good after a long Covid lockdown winter and now we can have friends in our gardens, life just feels that bit better. I’ve missed seeing my family and friends so much!
This was a hastily put together salad based on what I fancied last night. It was a rare evening when everyone else had either leftovers or a packet pie (yes, they’re my lifeline some days) to eat and I was left to my own devices. So I made a salad with roasted vegetables, harissa spices, quinoa and tahini dressing, which I enjoyed so much. I took the rest to eat lunch with a friend in the park and added some falafels and pitta, which felt like a real treat!
* If you want to make the salad vegan, just leave out the feta and top with a few toasted seeds.
Ingredients
Serves 2 as a main, or 4 as a side
1 red onion, sliced
100g tenderstem broccoli
1 medium sweet potato, 1½cm cubes
1 tsp dried harissa spice blend
120g quinoa
A handful of coriander leaves
100g feta, crumbled (optional)
Dressing
3 tbsp tahini
5-6 tbsp water
Juice of ¼ lemon
¼ small clove garlic
Pinch of sea salt
Method
Preheat the 200ºc. Mix approx 1 tbsp olive oil and the harissa into the onions and sweet potatoes and roast for 15 minutes.
Turn the onions and potatoes, then add the broccoli to the tray and drizzle with a little oil. Roast for 15 minutes and then set aside to cool a little.
While the vegetables are roasting, rinse and cook the quinoa as per the packet instructions - I usually rinse it 3-4 times so the water runs pretty clear and then simmer for 20 minutes.
Make the dressing by putting all the ingredients in a jar and mixing well. Just add the water slowly until you get the right consistency - tahini sometimes varies with the amount of water it needs to let it down.
Drain the quinoa and allow to cool, or run it under some cold water if you’re in a hurry and then drain again.
Layer the ingredients, including the dressing, in a large bowl or platter, finishing with feta and coriander on top.
Coconut & lime quinoa
This makes a great alternative to rice in tacos or with my Vegan Protein Chilli. It’s super simple and full of nutrients as quinoa is protein rich (making up 15% of the grain), B vitamins, magnesium and iron. I’ve used tri-coloured quinoa here, but you could use any single colour if you prefer.
Ingredients, serves 4 as a side
200g quinoa
1 x 400ml tin coconut milk
1/2 lime, zest and juice
3/4 tsp sea salt
Method
Start by rinsing the quinoa throughly to get rid of all the husky bits and also the bitter earthly flavour that you get if you just cook it straight from the packet.
I put the quinoa in a pan and cover with lukewarm water, swizzle with my hand, allow to settle and drain as much water off as I can without pouring the quinoa down the drain. I find this easier than passing through a sieve. Repeat a further 3 times until the water runs clear and there are hardly any bits in the water.
Keep the wet quinoa in the pan and don’t worry about draining all the water off, there will be some left. Add 1/2 teaspoon sea salt, the coconut milk - use a little water to rinse out the tin and pour in as well.
Simmer for 25 minutes.
Add 1/4 tsp sea salt, lime zest & juice
Shown here with vegan bean chilli, avocado, coconut yoghurt & homemade tortilla chips.
Roasted carrot & quinoa salad with wilted spinach & dukkah
Ingredients
Serves 6-8
180g quinoa, cooked as per the packet instructions - usually rinse well until the water runs clear and then simmer for 20 minutes
5 carrots or approx 300g, chopped in thick batons
2 red onions, sliced in half moons
6 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp white wine vinegar or lemon juice
2 1/2 tbsp dukkah spice mix (recipe linked here)
2 handfuls of spinach
Handful of parsley or coriander to serve, optional
200g crumbled feta, optional
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°c.
Cook the quinoa and add 1 tbsp of dukkah spice mix to the water, then drain and put back in the pan with the lid on to keep warm.
Put the carrots and onions on a large tray, or split between two so you have space between all the veggies to allow them to roast and brown rather than steam. Drizzle with 2 tbsp olive oil and sprinkle over 1 tbsp of dukkah, then mix to coat well. Place in the oven.
After 15 minutes check the veggies and turn to brown on the other side. Cook for a further 8-10 minutes.
Meanwhile get a large serving dish and spread out the spinach.
Mix the remaining 4 tbsp olive oil and lemon juice (or vinegar) into the drained quinoa and then spoon about 1/3 on to the serving dish covering the spinach. Add a scattering of carrots and onions, then repeat until you’ve used everything up.
You can sprinkle in the herbs while you’re layering or just add a handful on top to finish with the last 1/2 tbsp of dukkah.
I also love to top this salad with feta as it’s creamy saltiness goes so well and makes it a complete lunch. If you’re vegan you could add some toasted sunflower or pumpkin seeds for extra protein instead.
Camargue red rice, quinoa, apricot & pistachio
I've had a packet of red rice in the cupboard which has been sitting looking at me for a while, so I thought I'd try find a recipe to use it up. After a quick search I found one by Yotam Ottlenghi, which sounded really interesting, with ingredients I wouldn't have put together myself. That's the nice thing about other people's recipes, right? This salad looks quite unassuming when made up, but it has a lovely delicate flavour which is quite different from any other I've tried.
Ingredients
Serves 4-6
60g shelled pistachio nuts
200g quinoa
200g camargue red rice
1 medium onion, sliced
150ml olive oil
grated zest and juice of 1 orange
2 tsp lemon juice
1 garlic clove, crushed
4 spring onions, thinly sliced
100g dried apricots, roughly chopped
40g rocket
salt and black pepper
Method
Boil two medium sized pans of salted water.
Add the quinoa to one and the red rice to the other. Cover and simmer over moderate heat until tender, about 12 minutes for the quinoa and 35 minutes for the rice, then drain the grains and spread them out on baking sheets to cool.
Heat 1 tablespoon of the olive oil and gently fry the onion (I actually used red onion as I didn’t have any spring). Season with salt and pepper. Cover and cook over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until golden brown - about 10 minutes. Allow to cool.
Get a large bowl, mix the orange juice, orange zest, lemon juice, garlic and the remaining 3 tablespoons of olive oil; season.
Add the quinoa, rice, onion, apricots, pistachios and spring onions and mix together. Serve with rocket on top.
Tip
If you want to prep this salad the day before then just keep the dressing and nuts separate. Toss the salad together when you're ready to eat it.
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