Recipe

Try Adam Guthrie's delicious Vegetable Curry Pie Recipe

Vegetable Curry Pie Recipe

Clive of India curry powder is one of my favourite curry powders when it comes to making pies. When the spices combine with the puff pastry, it’s incredibly moreish. I also love this curry mixture without pastry, in a bowl with brown basmati rice.

2019 eat well yummies awards winners

Meet the winners of the EatWell Yummies Awards 2019

This year, the EatWell Yummies Awards received a huge number of votes. After poring over more than 18,000 votes, we couldn’t be more excited to announce the EatWell Yummies Awards winners for 2019. A huge congratulations to you all!

Try Lee Holmes' Spinach Goat’s Cheese and Pine Nut Tarts

Spinach Goat’s Cheese and Pine Nut Tarts Recipe

This tart is a trusty friend when you want to take something simple but special along to a potluck feast or lunchtime communal gathering. Its gluten-free almond crust, filled with the flavours of creamy goat’s cheese, cumin, nutmeg and earthy pine nuts, just begs to be shared with others. A beautiful recipe to extend love through food.

Try Georgia Harding's hearty Shepherd's Pie Recipe

Mum’s Ultimate Shepherd’s Pie Recipe

This pie is a far cry from the basic meat and potato pie that most of us remember. The spices and long list of vegetables make it a truly healthy and hearty meal.

Meg Thompson's Brussels Sprout, Kale and Feta Pie Recipe

Brussels Sprout, Kale and Feta Pie Recipe

Paying homage to the humble Brussels sprout, this pie is a lovely combination of deliciousness and goodness. Packed with fibre, protein, calcium and the goodness of greens, it makes a delicious dinner but also travels well in lunchboxes for a nice surprise.

Roasted Cauliflower and Potato Curry with Turmeric

Roasted Cauliflower and Potato Curry Recipe

Turmeric has been used and well respected for 2500 years in India as an Ayurvedic medicine. This brightly coloured spice, which gives curry its lovely orange-yellow colour, has many outstanding health-boosting properties. Curcumin is also a highly effective anti-inflammatory as well as having strong antioxidant properties. Regular consumption of turmeric in the diet could protect you against infections, especially those of the digestive tract, as well as relieving arthritic conditions and helping protect you from cancers and Alzheimer’s disease.

Try Danielle Minnebo's Pumpkin and Chickpea Curry Recipe

Pumpkin and Chickpea Curry Recipe

I can’t tell you how important it is to follow a soaking process when preparing any legumes or pulses. If you have a careful look at your soaked legumes after 24 hours, you begin to see the sprouting shoots pop up underneath the skin. This sprouting process reduces the amount of phytic acid in legumes, which makes them much easier to digest. Phytic acid can also bind to essential nutrients, making them less available to the body. Reducing phytic acid levels releases more of these essential nutrients to the body. I find it easiest to soak, sprout and cook a lot of chickpeas at once. Then I freeze them into smaller containers and have them ready for use in a dish like this.

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EatWell shares their favourite recipes from Naked Foods Products

Sponsor Recipes: Naked Foods Products

Discover some of the delicious creations you can make with Naked Foods Products.

Delicious recipes you can make with EatWell's sponsors, Cabot Health

Sponsor Recipes: Cabot Health’s Nature Sweet

Delicious recipes you can make with EatWell’s sponsors, Cabot Health.

Try our Curry, Baked Tempeh and Vegie Bowl Recipe

Curry, Baked Tempeh and Vegie Bowl Recipe

Having a curry spice on hand is such a delicious way to diversify the way you cook vegies and proteins and this recipe is a wonderful example of just that. If you don’t have tempeh then an organic tofu, chicken or fish will work well, too.

Try our delicious Indian Coconut Lentil Curry Recipe

Indian Coconut Lentil Curry Recipe

Lentils and other legumes are considered a low-GI food as they are digested slowly and won’t cause a sharp rise in blood sugar and insulin levels. The high protein and soluble fibre content of legumes slows the rate at which they leave the stomach and delays the absorption of its glucose. This makes them an ideal addition to the diet, especially for anyone having to watch their weight and blood sugar levels.