Freshly Picked with Simon Toohey – Recipes

Episode 20

Spinach & Almond Curry  

Recipe by: Alice Zaslavsky  

Time: 30 minutes 

Serves: 2 for a main or 4 for a lighter meal 

Ingredients 

80ml light extra virgin olive oil  

1 thumb’s worth of ginger, peeled and roughly chopped 

2-3 garlic cloves, roughly chopped 

1 brown onion, sliced  

2 tsp ground coriander 

1 tsp ground turmeric 

1 tsp ground cumin 

1 tsp ground fenugreek 

1 tsp salt flakes 

2 bags of baby spinach, washed and spun 

½ cup flaked almonds 

200g baked almond feta  

To serve 

Basmati rice 

Coriander, roughly chopped  

Method 

Cook rice according to packet instructions (I prefer the stove-top absorption method best).  

In a large, heavy-bottomed flat casserole dish or heavy-based saucepan, heat a tablespoon of the olive oil and pop in the diced onion and ginger. Stir about, cover with the lid, and turn the heat down low. Allow the onion to sweat away for 8-10 minutes.  

Once the onion has softened, add garlic, salt and spices and stir until fragrant.   

Pop the spinach leaves on top, stir and cover with the lid for 4-5 minutes on low heat.  

Once the spinach has wilted, transfer everything to a blender and blitz. Pour the rest of the olive oil or any oil from the feta jar (about 60ml) in slowly to emulsify and become a creamy gravy. 

Meanwhile, heat a small pan until smoking. Turn it off, add the flaked almonds and toss about a little. Leave to colour (the residual heat is enough).  

Add the gravy back to the pan, and gently stir. Arrange your bits of almond feta to the pan and warm through with the residual heat. 

Serve on basmati rice, topped with the toasted flaked almonds.   

Fried Gochujang Glazed Eggplant in Lettuce Cups with Yuzu Cream  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 25 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients  

1 eggplant 

40ml vegetable oil 

2 tsp white sesame seeds, toasted 

For the sauce 

2 tbsp gochujang  

2 tbsp brown sugar 

4 tbsp water 

Tofu cream  

300g silken tofu 

60ml yuzu (lime juice if yuzu is unavailable)  

1 tsp salt 

To serve 

1 iceberg lettuce 

1 carrot, peeled and sliced into matchsticks  

1 bunch coriander 

Method 

Cut the eggplant into cubes.  

In a bowl add the gochujang, sugar and water and whisk until it combines and the sugar dissolves.  

Add oil and eggplant to a hot pan over medium-high heat, stir and then leave the eggplant to begin caramelizing, stirring occasionally. Once the eggplant begins to colour pour over the gochujang sauce and cook until the sauce thickens, and the eggplant goes sticky. Pour the eggplant into a bowl and stir through sesame seeds.  

In a blender, or with a stick blender, blend the tofu, yuzu and salt until combined. 

Cut the stem off the iceberg and peel away the layers so each can be a cup. Cut the carrot into matchsticks.  

To assemble, start with everything in the middle of the table.  Add the fried eggplant into the lettuce cups.  Add the carrot, and top with the cream. Garnish with coriander.  

Confit Garlic with Slow Braised Leeks 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 1 hour 

Serves:

Ingredients:  

2 bulbs garlic 

200ml grapeseed or neutral oil 

1 bunch rosemary 

1 tsp peppercorn 

Salt  

For the leeks 

2 leeks 

2 tbsp vegan butter 

1 lemon juice only 

1 tbsp coriander seeds 

300ml vegetable stock  

1 slice stale sourdough 

1 bunch parsley 

1tbsp nutritional yeast flakes 

20g roasted macadamias 

2 tbsp vegetable oil 

Salt & pepper 

Method: 

Place everything into a pan and cook on low for 30 minutes or until the cloves are super soft. 

Place the leeks in a pan with the butter and stock and lemon juice and coriander seeds. Place over medium-low heat with a cartouche over the top and cook until the leek is soft and tender. Remove and reduce the stock until it is a dressing like consistency. 

While the leek is cooking, blend the bread, nuts, parsley and nutritional yeast flakes to a crumb.  In a pan over medium heat cook the mixture until golden brown and crisp. 

Once the leek is cooled enough to touch, cut length-ways down the middle.  Opening it up.  sprinkle over the crumble mixture and finally pour over the sauce  

Classic Ratatouille  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 2 hours 

Serves: 6  

Ingredients 

For the sauce 

30ml extra virgin olive oil 

1 brown onion, diced  

2 Roma tomatoes, diced  

1 red capsicum, diced  

3 cloves garlic, diced  

Pinch salt 

20ml extra virgin olive oil 

4 banana eggplants 

5 Roma tomatoes 

3 yellow zucchini, or yellow squash 

3 green zucchini 

2 sprigs rosemary 

Salt & white pepper 

Method 

Preheat the oven to 150C. 

Cook down the onion, garlic, capsicum and tomatoes in a pot with 30ml olive oil with a pinch of salt, stir and cover with a lid to sweat down for 20 minutes.  Stir occasionally so it doesn’t stick to the bottom. 

In the meantime, with a mandolin,  thinly slice the tomatoes, zucchini, squash and the eggplant about 3ml thick.   

Once the pot mixture has cooked down, broken down and lost a lot of its moisture, place them in the blender and blitz to a smooth paste. Season salt and white pepper to taste.  

Pour 100ml the bottom of a non-stick pan then layer the slices, alternating between the vegetables. Stack them around the dish, starting from the outside of the pan and working all the way around until you have reached the middle.  Chop up the rosemary and place on top and drizzle with the remaining olive oil, season with a pinch of salt.  Cover with foil and bake at 150 degrees for 60 minutes, if you have the time cook this dish for up to 90 minutes.  

Episode 19

Zucchini & Corn Fritters with Whipped Bean Curd  

Recipe by: Lynton Tapp 

Time: 30 minutes  

Serves:

Ingredients 

For the fritters 

2 large zucchinis, grated  

Corn kernels from 2 cobs of corn (200g kernels, you could use frozen kernels) 

200g cooked quinoa 

150g cornflour 

1 tsp smoked paprika 

1 tsp salt 

Whipped Bean Curd 

150g silken tofu  

Lemon juice, to taste 

Salt, to taste 

Extra virgin olive oil  

To Serve 

¼ cup coriander leaves 

¼ cup mint leaves 

Pickled jalapenos  

Extra virgin olive oil 

Method 

In a large bowl prepare your fritter mix. Add the zucchini, corn, quinoa, cornflour, smoked paprika and salt. Mix thoroughly until you have a chunky batter. 

Preheat a non-stick frying pan over medium-high heat and allow to come to temperature before adding a good drizzle of olive oil and placing heaped tablespoons of the batter into the pan. Cook the fritters for 3-4 minutes a side or until golden brown and crispy. 

Meanwhile to make the whipped bean curd, place the silken tofu into your food processor along with a squeeze of lemon juice and a pinch of salt before blitzing on high for 2-3 minutes until you have achieved a smooth consistency. You may have to wipe the sides of the bowl down with a spatula to ensure it is evenly mixed. Adjust the seasoning and set aside. 

Once the fritter mix is completely cooked divide the fritters among 4 plates and top with a good dollop of whipped bean curd before giving a generous topping of herbs. 

Tahini Neri with Fresh Berries, Orange & Vanilla 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time:  

Serves:

Ingredients 

For the dressing 

3 tbsp tahini 

1 tbsp icing sugar 

1 vanilla bean pod 

1 lemon , juiced 

1 punnet strawberries 

1 punnet blackberries 

1 valencia orange, cut into bite-size pieces 

1 bunch mint 

Method 

Add tahini to a bowl, and add the juice of one lemon. Whisk together until it comes back together, then add the icing sugar and whisk into paste. Add some water to turn it into a pouring consistency. 

Cut the vanilla bean pod in half and remove the seeds. Add to the tahini dressing and stir through.  

Add fruit into a bowl and toss through.  

Pour ¾ of the tahini dressing into a serving bowl, add the fruit on top and drizzle the remaining dressing on top. Add sprigs of mint for garnish. 

Olive Oil Mash with Herby Green Sauce  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves: 4-6 as a side 

Ingredients 

450g Kipfler potatoes 

Salt & pepper 

¼ cup extra virgin olive oil 

Herby Green Sauce  

1 bunch chives 

1 bunch basil, leaves picked  

Salt & pepper  

2-3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 

½ lemon, juice  

Method 

Boil the potatoes with their skins on until tender.  

Remove the skins from the potatoes while they’re still warm. Mash the peeled potatoes to the texture of your liking. Add a nice pinch of salt and olive oil, stir through.  

Pulse the basil and chives with a pinch of salt and pepper. Pour into a bowl and top with extra virgin olive oil and a squeeze of lemon juice, stir through to combine.  

Spoon the green dressing over the mashed potatoes to serve.  

Baked Rice & Eggplant Hotpot with Olives, Dill & Parsley 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 1 hour 

Serves: 2-3 

Ingredients 

5 tbsp vegetable oil 

1 leek 

1 eggplant, cubed 

2 garlic cloves, chopped  

¾ cup basmati rice 

50g black olives, seeds removed, roughly chopped 

½ bunch dill 

¼ bunch parsley 

1 tsp cumin  

1 tsp coriander seeds 

½ tsp fennel seeds 

500ml vegetable stock 

Pinch saffron (optional) 

Drizzle extra virgin olive oil, to finish 

Salt & pepper 

Method 

Preheat the oven 180 degrees.  

Add vegetable oil, eggplant, garlic, rice, olives, parsley, coriander seeds, cumin, fennel seeds, saffron and vegetable stock. Stir so that all of the ingredients are evenly distributed. Place the leeks on top of the stirred mixture, drizzle over olive oil and season with salt and pepper.  

Place the lid on, and put in the hot oven for 30 minutes, remove the lid and cook for a further 10 minutes.  

Episode 18

Spicy Beetroot Harissa 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients: 

1 red beetroot 

3 cloves garlic 

6 dried ancho or cashmiri chillies  

1 tsp coriander seeds 

1 tsp cumin seeds 

1 tsp caraway seeds 

2 tbsp tomato paste 

Extra virgin olive oil 

Salt 

For the leaves 

1 bunch beet leaves 

1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 

1 tbsp red wine vinegar 

1 pinch brown sugar 

Method: 

Steam the beetroot until tender making sure the water doesn’t evaporate from the pot. Take out and let cool completely, then peel. 

In the meantime. Cook the garlic, and dried chillis in a dry pan to release their oils. Remove the garlic and set aside, place the dried chillies into a bowl and put a plate on top to submerge. Leave for 15 to 20 min until rehydrated. 

While the dry pan is still hot, add the seeds and cook until they are smoking lightly and the smelling aromatic. Place in a mortar and pestle and grind to a rough powder. 

In a blender (or this can all be done in a mortar and pestle and maybe a box grater) blitz the hydrated and drained chillies, also add the garlic and spices and blitz until it comes to a rough paste. Then with the cooled beet, chop into quarters and place in the blitzer, and pulse until it is now a paste. 

In the water that the beet was steamed with, place the leaves.  then shock in cold water.  squeeze all the water out as best as possible.  In a very hot pan, place the oil, then the greens, the vinegar and the sugar and cook until dry.   

Spoon the beet harissa into a bowl place the green in the middle and top everything with oil. Serve with veggie sticks or crackers.  

Rigatoni with Kale Sauce


Recipe by: Tobie Puttock  
Time: 10 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients 
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil 
2 cloves of garlic, smashed, skin removed 
500g kale, washed and thick stalks removed 
½ lemon 
Salt & pepper 
250g rigatoni or other pasta 
¼ cup freshly grated vegan parmesan or nutritional yeast (optional) 
Extra virgin olive oil for finishing 
Fresh or dried chilli to taste (optional) 

Method 
Put a large pot of water on for the pasta, bring to the boil with a generous pinch of salt.  

In a small pot add the ¼ cup of extra virgin olive oil, add the garlic and heat over medium heat until the garlic starts to brown. Once quite browned add the oil and garlic to the bowl of a food processor. 

Plunge the washed kale into the boiling water for 3-4 minutes and then use tongs to remove from the water and place into the food processor, don’t be scared to drag some of the water over also. Blend the ingredients until you have a totally smooth puree, we are looking for a sauce consistency so if it looks too thick take a small ladle of the pasta water to loosen it up. 

Cook the pasta as per the manufacturer’s instructions but cook for 2 minutes less. Strain the pasta (reserving a cup of the pasta water) and add back to the pot, pour the pureed kale mixture over and place over low heat. If you are worried about overheating the sauce pour a little into a bowl and heat the sauce with the residual heat from the pasta. Use a wooden spoon to gently stir the pasta, onCe again if it’s looking too thick add a little water into the pot to loosen it up. Have a taste and adjust with salt and lemon juice to balance the bitterness from the kale. Add a pinch of cracked pepper, a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil, the vegan parmesan (if using), fold through and serve right away with chilli if using.

Deep Fried Broccoli Po’Boy 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 1 hour  

Serves:

Ingredients   

1 broccoli 

Tempura batter  

½ cup flour 

¼ cup cornflour 

1 ½ tsp baking powder 

150ml ice-cold soda water 

Pinch salt  

300ml fry oil (vegetable, canola) 

150g silken tofu 

1 tbsp white wine vinegar 

3 dash hot sauce like tobacco 

1 tsp salt 

To serve  

1 French stick or white roll 

2 big tomatoes, roughly diced 

1 iceberg lettuce, sliced  

Method 

Place the silken tofu in a blender,  tabasco and white wine vinegar.  Blend until it is smooth and tasty. Set aside.  

Cut the broccoli into manageable bite-size pieces.  Cut the end and outer edges of the broccoli stem off, cut into bite-size pieces.  

To prepare the batter, put everything into a bowl except the fry oil (and the broccoli at this stage) and mix, try to get as many lumps out as possible- don’t worry if you can’t get all of the lumps out, they can create extra crunch.  

Put the fry oil in a deep pan or pot and bring it to 180C degrees (get a thermometer to check this, they are cheap and so useful). If not, test by putting a little of the batter in.  If it starts bubbling nicely, it’s ready. 

Put the chopped broccoli into the batter and move it about to coat all of the pieces. Then, a few at a time, take out of the batter, give a little wobble to get rid of the excess batter then place gently into the hot, hot oil.  Don’t overcrowd the pot, otherwise the oil temperature will drop and make the broccoli soggy and oily. 

Fry for about 8 minutes, turning halfway through, take out and place onto a drying rack or a bowl with a paper towel lining the bottom.  Season with salt and repeat until all of the broccoli has been cooked.  

To finish, slice the iceberg into strips, dice up the tomato and put the bread in the oven for 5 minutes at 180C or until crisp.  

Slice the bread, place the mayo on one side, add the lettuce, tomato and fried broccoli.  

Best Vegetable Stock Ever 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 1 hour (however, the longer you can reduce the stock the better!)  

Serves: Makes around 2 litres  

Ingredients 

2 tbsp vegetable oil 

2 carrots 

2 brown onions 

2 celery sticks 

1 clove garlic 

¼ fennel bulb 

5 black peppercorns 

1 bay leaf 

6 parsley stalks 

3 sprigs thyme 

2 cloves 

½ glass white wine 

1.75 litres water  

Pinch salt 

Method 

Grate everything with a cheese grater except the herbs, spices and wine.  

Put the oil into the pan on medium-high heat. Dump in the vegetables, a good pinch of salt, herbs and spices and saute until they become soft, approximately 7 minutes. 

Add the wine and cook off, then add 1.75 litres of water. Simmer for a minimum of 20 minutes with the lid off. The colour of the water will change and the flavours will leach out of the vegetables. 

Pour the stock into a large bowl through a strainer. Use the stock straight away or cool it down and keep in the fridge for up to 5 days or freezer it to use later. 

Episode 17

Pistachio Custard Filo Tarts 


Recipe by: Walleed Rasheed  
Time: 1 hour 
Serves: 6  
 
Ingredients  

Filo cups  
2 cups of coconut oil 
8 sheets filo pastry 

Toasted Pistachios 
2 tbsp coconut oil 
3 cups slivered blanched pistachio 
 
Vegan Pistachio Custard  

1 cup toasted pistachios  
2 cups of macadamia milk 
½ cup sugar  
3 tbsp of cornflour + splash macadamia milk to make a slurry- no lumps 
 
Syrup  
2 cups of white sugar 
1 cup water 
2 oranges, juice and peel 
 
Pistachio Jam 
1 cup reserved roasted pistachios 
½ cup syrup  
¼ cup coconut oil  
3 tsp cinnamon 
Pinch salt  

Pistachio Crumb  
1 cup roasted pistachios  
Pinch salt  

Method: 


Preheat your oven to 170C.  
For the filo cups melt 2 cups of coconut oil. Lay 8 sheets of filo, with coconut oil brushed in each layer.  

With a circle cookie cutter, 5cm in diameter, cut 6 circles from the layered filo. Brush some coconut oil in a multi muffin tray, gently press the filo discs into the muffin holes. Don’t throw away the leftover pastry, bake it and use it for decoration or a snack.  Then place each circle in each muffin hole, making sure they are tightly and evenly inside the muffin hole. Bake for 15-18 minutes or until golden brown. Once cooked set aside to cool down.  

Fried Bread with Sesame Tofu & Spiced Onions 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients 

100g wholemeal flour 

150ml water 

Pinch salt and pepper 

40ml extra virgin olive oil 

1 red onion, sliced into wedges 

1 tsp smoked paprika 

1 tsp garlic powder 

1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 

1 tbsp soy sauce 

½ tsp salt 

200g semi-firm tofu, cut into cubes 

1 tbsp sesame oil 

1 tsp black sesame seeds 

1 tsp white sesame seeds 

To serve 

1 bunch coriander 

Method 

Preheat the oven to 170 degrees.  

Coat the onion in olive oil, soy sauce, garlic powder and smoked paprika, place on a lined baking tray and bake in the oven for 30 minutes or until caramelised.  

In the meantime, mix the flour, water, and salt together until a loose batter is made, you may need a little more water if you find the batter too thick.  

In a heavy-based frying pan or cast-iron pan put on high heat and place the oil.  Once the oil is super-hot pour in the batter and spread it around so that it is relatively thin.  Let it fry away until it is golden brown and crisp, being careful not to burn it.  If it’s colouring too quickly you may need to turn the heat down to medium heat. Flip and repeat.  

Take the now crisp pancake out of the pan and place it on a chopping board.  place the sesame seeds in a pan and toast lightly.  Once the white sesame seeds start to change colour, add the sesame oil and then the silken tofu and salt.  Cook on medium heat until the liquid leaches out of the tofu.  Cook most of this out but keep some.  Finish with salt. 

On your pancake top with tofu, making an even spread, finishing with the coriander and reserved sauce from the baking tray. Serve. 

Cauliflower Steak with Cauliflower Puree & Pomegranate Molasses  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 1 hour  

Serves: 

Ingredients  

1 cauliflower with leaves attached 

60ml vegetable oil 

Sauce  

¼ cauliflower 

100-200ml oat milk 

1 bay leaf 

2 thyme sprigs 

2 garlic cloves 

Splash of water 

Pinch of salt  

25g panko bread crumbs, toasted  

To serve  

½ tsp cumin seeds 

30g hazelnuts, toasted and roughly chopped  

1 bunch chives, finely chopped 

1 pomegranate, seeds  

20ml pomegranate molasse 

Pinch salt & pepper 

Method 

Preheat the oven to 200C.  

Remove the leaves and quarter the cauliflower. Trim a few of the bottom pieces of cauliflower off and place in a saucepan with any other florets that may have come off.  

Heat vegetable oil over a heavy-based pan and colour the cauliflower on cut sides, season with a pinch of salt and pepper. Once coloured, add a splash of water to the tray and cover loosely with foil, so that some of the steam can escape. Put in the oven and cook for 15-20 minutes, or until the cauliflower is tender.  

Add half the oat milk, 1 clove of garlic, bay and thyme to the cauliflower in the saucepan.  Cook on medium-low with the lid on until the cauliflower is super soft. If it looks like its drying out too much, add a little more oat milk.    

Finely chop 2 of the reserved cauliflower leaves to resemble the size of bread crumbs (the rest will last for ages in the fridge). Toast bread crumbs with oil and finely chopped cauliflower leaves in a frying pan until golden brown.  

Once the cauliflower is tender, remove the herbs from the sauce and pour into a blender with half of the toasted breadcrumbs, blitz until super smooth. Add more milk if the mixture is too thick. Taste and season.  

In the meantime, roast the hazelnuts and roughly chop.  

Spoon the cauliflower sauce onto a plate, flatten until smooth. Place the cauliflower in the centre of the sauce, top with cumin seeds, pomegranate seeds, chopped hazelnuts, sliced chives and a drizzle of the pomegranate molasses.  

Episode 16

Southern-Fried Drumsticks  

Recipe by: Zacchary Bird 

Time: 1 hour + setting time 

Makes:

Ingredients 

2 x (565g)cans young green jackfruit, rinsed and drained 

375ml (1½ cups) chicken style stock 

2 tsp nutritional yeast 

1 tsp onion powder 

5-10 drops liquid smoke 

1 cauliflower  

185 ml (¾ cup) aquafaba 

Canola oil, for deep-frying 

Drumstick spice mix 

110g (¾ cup) plain flour, plus extra for dusting 

1 tbsp brown sugar 

½ tsp sea salt 

½ tsp smoked paprika 

½ tsp onion powder 

½ tsp chilli powder 

¼ tsp garlic powder 

¼ tsp celery salt 

¼ tsp ground sage 

¼ tsp ground allspice 

¼ tsp dried basil 

Pinch of dried oregano 

½ tsp kala namak (Indian black salt or use extra sea salt) 

1 tsp MSG/torula yeast (optional) 

Method 

Jackfruit is often mistakenly labelled as ‘vegan pulled pork’ by those who have merely drowned it in barbecue sauce. Instead, try this recipe which allows the jackfruit’s stringy texture and ability to absorb flavour sing. Track down a tin at your local Asian supermarket; you’re looking for the young green jackfruit in brine, as the ripened versions are sweetened in syrup and only appropriate for desserts. The jackfruit is actually a cousin to durian, so don’t bother messing with the fresh stuff unless you absolutely have to. 

Cutaway the hard core from the jackfruit, then squeeze each piece so that any seeds pop out and any excess liquid is removed. Gently pull the jackfruit pieces to make them stringy, then rinse away the remaining brine under warm running water. Squeeze the jackfruit dry. 

Place the jackfruit in a saucepan with the stock, nutritional yeast, onion powder and liquid smoke. Bring the mixture to the boil, stirring frequently, for 10 minutes, then reduce the heat to low and cook for a further 10 minutes or until the liquid has evaporated. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool. Divide the mixture into four portions. 

Starting at the base, cut the cauliflower into quarters. You want to keep the stalk attached to the florets as this will be your ‘chicken bone’. Use a small knife to carefully remove the leaves. Trim the stalks into a rounded bone shape, then cut off the majority of the florets so you are left with a basic chicken drumstick shape. Use the florets to make the Southern-fried cauliflower, by dipping them in leftover aquafaba and spice mix and deep-frying.  

Place a large square of plastic wrap on your work surface and spoon half of one portion of the jackfruit mixture towards the edge closest to you. Lay a cauliflower drumstick on top of the jackfruit mixture with the stalk sticking out the end of the plastic wrap. Add the remaining half portion of jackfruit mixture on top, filling in and loosely covering the florets. 

Pick up the four corners of the plastic wrap and fold them over the jackfruit mixture, twisting to enclose the jackfruit around the florets. Once sealed, gently squeeze the jackfruit mixture to let the excess liquid run down the ‘bone’. Use your hands to mould the jackfruit inside the wrap to evenly cover the cauliflower and mush it into the perfect shape. Repeat for each cauliflower ‘bone’, then place the drumsticks on a tray in your freezer for at least 1 hour to firm up. 

Combine the spice mix ingredients in a large bowl and pour the aquafaba into a separate shallow bowl. Heat the canola oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium-high heat. Test if the oil is ready by inserting a wooden skewer or the handle of a wooden spoon into the oil; if it begins to bubble quickly then you’re ready to go. 

Once the drumsticks have firmed up, take them out of the freezer and unwrap the plastic wrap – this is where it gets tricky, because as soon as the jackfruit hits the aquafaba it will want to fall apart, so you need to work quickly. 

Holding a drumstick in one hand, drizzle over enough aquafaba to coat, then place the drumstick into the spice mix and toss extra on top to coat. Use floured hands to press the drumstick back into shape if necessary, then repeat the coating process and set aside while you repeat with the remaining drumsticks. 

Cook the drumsticks in two batches, turning constantly, for 3–5 minutes, until golden on all sides. (Use tongs to turn the drumsticks and make sure you grip them by the fleshy part so they maintain their shape.) Drain on paper towels and serve immediately, picking your jaw up off the ground once you realise how good they are! 

Sesame Smashed Cucumbers with Avocado 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 20 minutes 

Serves: 1

Ingredients 

2 Lebanese cucumbers 

½ tsp black sesame seeds 

½ tsp white sesame seeds 

Dressing 

1 tsp sesame oil 

1 tbsp soy sauce 

2 tbsp malt vinegar 

Salt and pepper 

1 sheet nori 

2 spring onions 

1 bunch coriander       

½ cup steamed rice 

1 avocado 

Method  

Chop the cucumber into unusual shapes but approximately an inch in length. Put them into a mortar and pestle and break up.  Or alternatively, wrap them in a clean tea towel and hit them with a rolling pin. Toast the sesame seeds and add to the smashed cucumber. Add the soy, sesame oil, malt vinegar, salt and pepper to the cucumbers and mix around.  

Cut the avocado in half, remove the skin and thinly slice, set aside. Wave the nori sheet over the flame of the stove until it becomes soft.  Let sit for 5 seconds and the sheet will become super crisp.  

Cut the spring onion greens on the diagonal, pick a handful of coriander, sprinkle on top. 

Add rice to your serving bowl, top with cucumber, avocado slices, spring onion and coriander. Crush the crispy nori sheet over the dish and pour over the dressing to serve.  

Roast Tomato, Cavolo Nero & Pearl Barley Stew 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 1 hour 

Serves:

Ingredients  

4 large ripe tomatoes 

30ml extra virgin olive oil 

1 onion, roughly chopped 

1 bunch cavolo nero 

1 bunch rainbow chard, roughly chopped (reserve the stalks)  

1 stick celery, roughly chopped  

1 carrot, chopped into bite-sized pieces 

4 garlic cloves, roughly chopped 

2 yellow zucchinis, chopped into rough segments   

100g fresh peas 

1.5 litres vegetable stock 

½ cup pearl barley (soak overnight to speed up cooking time)  

1-2 tsp sugar, optional  

Green Sauce  

1 bunch parsley 

1 bunch basil 

1 lemon, zest and juice 

½ garlic clove 

40ml extra virgin olive oil  

Salt & pepper  

Garnish 

Rainbow chard 

Crusty bread, to serve 

Method 

In a large heavy cast iron pan on high heat, add the olive oil and the tomatoes and allow to blister like crazy. Keep cooking and cooking until they darken on the skin, split and start to break down.  Turn the heat down if the oil really starts smoking.  Should take approximately 10 minutes.  

Turn the heat to a medium and add the onion celery and carrot, cooking for another 5 minutes or until the onion turns translucent.  Add the pearl barley and cook for 1 minute.  Add the cavolo nero, it might seem like a lot, but these leaves will wilt down to nothing.  Add 1 litre of vegetable stock, reserving the remaining half a litre, then add salt and pepper. Turn the heat down to medium-low and slowly cook away for 10 minutes. The idea is to have the leaves break down and then soak up all the flavour.  Cook for a further 20 minutes.  

In the meantime, in a blender or mortar and pestle add the leaves of the basil and parsley, zest and juice of half a lemon, garlic, olive oil and salt. Blitz until it comes together.  

Finally with 10 minutes to cook, take the lid off and add the squash and rainbow chard, stirring on occasion to make sure everything is cooked. Stir the peas through and turn the heat off, they will cook in the residual heat. Taste the stew and check the seasoning, it may need a little more salt and possibly a small amount of sugar to balance the sweetness.  

In a bowl, ladle in the soup then add a generous spoonful of the green sauce on top. Serve with crusty bread and additional rainbow chard on top. 

Olive & Hazelnut Paste with Grilled Cabbage 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 25 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients:  

For the paste 

100g kalamata olives 

50g roasted hazelnuts 

2 tbsp tomato paste 

30ml extra virgin olive oil 

For the cabbage 

¼ green hispi or regular (not savoy) cabbage 

20ml vegetable oil 

2 tbsp maple syrup 

2 tbsp margarine 

1 clove garlic 

2 tbsp dukkah 

1 bunch chives 

Salt & pepper 

Method:  

Warm all the ingredients with a little oil in a pan,  pour into a blender or mortar and pestle and blitz to a paste. 

Steam the cabbage for 10 minutes. Then in a hot pan add the oil and bring the heat right up. Place the cabbage in. Cook for 5 to 10 minutes on one side, flip the cabbage gently and cook for 5 minutes. Place the maple syrup and margarine into a pan, smash the garlic and place in with the butter. Using a spoon, based the cabbage. When the other side is cooked, remove the cabbage. Chop up the chives finely and blend with the dukkah. Using a spoon, sprinkle over the cabbage, pushing it down, making sure it is sticking. 

Place the olive paste on the bottom of the pan then the cabbage on top pouring a little of the syrup around the cabbage. 

Episode 15

Tomato Entrecote Steak  

Recipe by: Afik Gal  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves: 4 (adjust the number of tomatoes to match the number of people you are cooking for)  

Ingredients 

4 large red bull’s heart tomato 

1 piece of focaccia 

Few sprigs sage\oregano, leaves 

Extra virgin olive oil 

Spicy Green Sauce 

8 green chillis, tops removed halved lengthways, seeds removed, roughly chopped 

3 cloves garlic  

1 small bunch coriander  

Pinch salt  

Pulse, chop  

Pour into a bowl, pour enough olive oil over to cover stir through  

Tomato foam  

1 large tomato  

Reserved tomato  

Blitz in a food processor until smooth  

Pour into a strainer over a bowl, this will help to remove some of the liquid  

Method 

Preheat your oven to 250C.  

Remove the tops and bottoms of your tomatoes, reserve the tops and bottoms for the tomato foam.  

Place little pieces of focaccia between the spaces in the tomato steak, as well as a small tear of sage/oregano. Salt and generously sprinkle with olive oil.  

Drizzle a small amount of olive oil onto the tray, place the tomato on top. Bake in the oven for 20-30 minutes, or until the tomatoes are seared and coloured.  

While the tomatoes are roasting prepare the spicy green sauce. Remove the tops and seeds from the chillis, slice lengthways and roughly chop. Add the coriander, garlic and salt. Pulse to roughly chop the ingredients. Pour the ingredients into a small bowl, cover with extra virgin olive oil and stir through.  

To prepare the tomato foam, roughly chop a large tomato and add it and reserved tomato to a blender. Blitz until smooth and foam. Pour tomato foam into a sieve over a bowl, this will help to remove the liquid from the foam before you serve it.  

Once the tomatoes are ready, strain the tomato foam onto a plate, top with the roasted tomato and sprinkle over droplets of the spicy green sauce. Season with salt and drizzle over extra virgin olive oil to serve.  

Rose Harissa Scramble with Baby Spinach on Toast 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 15 minutes  

Serves:

Ingredients  

10ml vegetable oil 

½ red onion, diced 

300g silken tofu 

1 tsp cumin seeds, whole 

1 tbsp rose harissa paste 

1 jarred roasted red pepper 

15ml extra virgin olive oil 

Salt & pepper 

2 slices sourdough 

Cultured oat butter 

1 clove garlic 

Method 

Toast the sourdough bread. 

In the meantime, place a frying pan on medium-high heat and add the vegetable oil.  Add the onion and sweat down until they have become soft and begin to caramelise. Add the tofu, smashing it and mixing it up until it becomes like a scramble. Add the harissa and stir through. Add spinach and leave to wilt down. 

Toast your bread and rub with a clove of garlic. Butter the toast and top with tofu, slices of pepper, a pinch of salt and a drizzle of olive oil.  

Grilled Peaches with Oat Milk Custard 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 15 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients:  

3 peaches 

1 watermelon radish 

1 punnet elderflower 

20g roasted hazelnuts 

Oat custard 

200ml oat milk 

80g icing sugar 

1 tsp cornflour 

1 tsp vanilla essence  

1 lemon, zest only 

Method: 

Cut two of the peaches in half and rub the cut side with a little oil. Place on a hot griddle pan and cook until the lines are showing nice and dark. Crosshatch the lines and cook for a little longer. Remove from the heat and allow to cool. 

Place the oat milk in a small pan, mix the icing sugar and cornflour together then mix in a very small amount into the dry mixture to wet it.  This helps to stop the dry mixture clumping.  Pour this sludge back into the oat milk, add the vanilla and mix until thickened. 

Place the fruit in a bowl, pour the custard on the side, add the flowers and hazelnuts and small wedges of the fresh remaining peach. 

Brownies 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 1 hour 

Serves: 9-12 

Ingredients  

2 tbsp ground flax (heaped) 

½ cup water 

½ cultured oat butter, melted 

¾ cup granulated sugar 

1 cup brown sugar, lightly packed 

1 tsp pure vanilla extract 

½ cup all-purpose flour 

1 cup cocoa powder 

Pinch salt 

1 tsp baking powder 

200g 85% dark chocolate, chopped up roughly 

Method 

Preheat the oven to 180C, line a square baking tin with baking paper with little flaps hanging over the side. 

Mix the ground flax and the water together and set aside to thicken and set – this will act as a binding agent. 

In a bowl, whisk the butter, sugar, vanilla extract and flax until all combined. In the same bowl, sift the flour and baking powder, cacao and salt. Mix gently until everything is combined but do not over mix. 

Fold in ¾ of the chopped up dark chocolate, pour into your baking tin and top with leftover chocolate pieces and a tiny pinch of salt. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes.   

When taken out, it might not look cooked, but let cool and the ingredients will start to set.   

Slice into pieces and serve. 

Episode 14

Tempeh & Pesto Wraps 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 20 minutes 

Serves:
 

Ingredients 

For the tempeh 

1 portion/packet tempeh 

1 clove of garlic, minced 

1 bunch chives, finely sliced 

2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 

Salt & pepper 

For the pesto 

1 bunch basil 

50g pine nuts 

30ml extra virgin olive oil 

1 tbsp nutritional yeast flakes 

Salt & pepper 

For the wrap 

1 packet wrap style bread 

1 punnet alfalfa sprouts 

1 red or pink cabbage 

2 tbsp vegan Mayo 

½ lemon, juice only 

3 spins of the pepper grinder 

Method  

Marinate the tempeh and let sit for as long as possible. Then steam till tender (approx 7 min).   

While the tempeh is steaming, make the pesto.  Add pine nuts to the mortar and pestle and the salt and grind to a paste. Add the basil and grind as well to a paste, finally add the nutritional yeast flakes, grind one more time, then with a spoon, stir in the olive oil to make an amazing paste and set aside. 

Place out the wraps 1 on each plate spread out the alfalfa sprouts.  Then in a separate bowl, shred the red cabbage and pour in the mayo and lemon juice, pepper and mix until combined.  Place these on top of the sprouts. Put on the warm tempeh, pour over the pesto and wrap it up. 

Mushroom Ragu Lasagne with Celeriac Béchamel 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 2 hours + resting time 

Serves: 
 

Ingredients 

Ragu 

100g swiss brown mushrooms 

4g salt 

50ml vegetable oil 

1 leek, diced 

1 red capsicum, diced 

1 long red chilli, 2 bay 

3 sprigs thyme 

1 stalk celery, diced 

1 carrot, diced 

1 onion, diced 

2 bay 

3 sprigs thyme 

3 cloves garlic, sliced 

300g mixed mushrooms 

30g dried shiitake  

1 tbsp tomato paste 

100ml red wine 

1 x (400g) can cherry tomatoes 

300ml vegetable stock 

½ tsp smoked paprika 

Bunch parsley stalk, roughly chopped 

Plant-Based Bèchamel  

1 celeriac 

300ml oat milk 

2 tbsp nutritional yeast 

¼ tsp salt 

Thyme 

1 packet vegan lasagne sheets 

200g bread crumbs 

2 cloves garlic 

3 sprigs thyme 

Extra virgin olive oil 

Salt 

Method  

Preheat the oven 180C.  

Start by making the cheats mushroom soy sauce. Blitz up the Swiss brown mushroom in a food processor with some salt. Spoon into a bowl and let it sit for as long as it takes to make the rest of the ingredients. 

In the meantime place a large saucepan on medium heat and add the vegetable oil, dice up the leek, capsicum, red chilli with the seeds removed if you would like, celery, carrot, onion, garlic, bay and thyme and place into the pan and cook away for a 10 minutes or so until the onions have become translucent.  This part is the most important part… the longer and slower you cook this part, the deeper and sweeter the flavour will be. But I understand the time thing isn’t everyone’s best ingredient, so cooking it faster is just as delicious.  

Dice up the mixed mushrooms and bung them in. Blend the dried shitake to a powder and throw that in too.  Cook the mushrooms until the liquid has been cooked out. Add the red wine, vegetable stock tin tomatoes, smoked paprika, parsley stalks.  Then add your secret weapon.  Squeeze the liquid out of the salted mushrooms into the pot.  Reserve the mushrooms till the end and keep cooking on medium heat until the liquid has been cooked out again. Cook over a low heat for a further 40 minutes, or until the mixture has reduced.  

In the meantime, peel the celeriac and chop it up into small inch sized bits. Add them to a saucepan with the oat milk, nutritional yeast and salt and pepper and cook until it has gone super soft. Remove the bay leaves and thyme stalks and blitz to a smooth paste. 

Combine the bread crumbs with the thyme and minced garlic.  

Lay a ladle of the mushroom ragu at the bottom of a baking tray, then lay some lasagne sheets on top then more mushroom, then the béchamel then pasta sheets and repeat until you run out of either space, pasta sheets or ragu.  You always, however, want to finish with the béchamel. Top the béchamel with the garlic bread crumb mixture, drizzle a small amount of olive oil to help the breadcrumbs go crispy and top with a pinch of salt. Cover with foil and bake in the oven, after 20 minutes remove the foil and continue baking for another 20 minutes or until the top is delicious and roasty dark and bubbling away. Allow to sit for 30-45 minutes before serving.  

Mushroom Ragu Jaffles with Rocket, Pear & Red Pepper Salad 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 15 minutes 

Serves:
 

Ingredients 

200g leftover ragu 

4 pickled onions 

2 big pickles 

4 white bread slices 

20g margarine, room temperature 

For the salad  

2 handfuls of rocket 

1 roasted red pepper skin removed, sliced 

1 pear, sliced  

10ml red wine vinegar 

30ml extra virgin olive oil 

Method 

Spread margarine over both sides of the white bread – place the ragu in the centre. The goal here is to fill it the right amount so a little spills out the side when you press it down. Thinly slice the onion and layer on top. Place the other slice of bread on top, put it in the jaffle machine or you can easily do this on a pan on medium-low heat with some oil in to get it nice and crisp and turning it relatively regularly so it doesn’t burn. 

Press the jaffle machine together and cook until it’s all crisp. 

In the mean-time chop up the red pepper and thinly slice the pear and mix it together with the rocket in a bowl. Combine the oil and vinegar, pour over the salad and toss to combine.  

Cut the jaffle into the classic triangle and put on a plate. Hug it with the salad and finally add a pickle.  

Classic Tiramisu 

Recipe by: Nadia Fragnito  
Time: 35 minutes + chilling time 
Serves: 6-8 

Ingredients 

½ cup brine from a can chickpeas  

½ cup icing sugar, sifted 

Custard 

2 cups full fat soy milk  

⅓ cup cornflour 

½ cup sugar 

½ cup vegan butter or margarine 

1 tsp vanilla extract  

250g tub vegan cream cheese 

1½ cups brewed espresso coffee, room temperature 

300g vegan sweet biscuits or slices of vegan cake 

4 tbsp coffee or nut liqueur 

½ cup cocoa powder 

To serve (optional)  

1 block 85% dark chocolate (vegan) 

Berries, such as strawberries or raspberries  

Method 

Pour the chickpea brine into a very clean bowl. Beat with an electric hand beater or stand mixer on high until stiff peaks form, gradually adding the icing sugar. This could take 5-10 minutes. To check if it is ready, carefully invert the bowl of the aquafaba ‘egg whites’. If the aquafaba doesn’t slide down the bowl then it is ready. 

To prepare the custard, into a medium saucepan, add the soy milk and cornflour and whisk to combine, ensuring the cornflour has dissolved. Add the sugar, butter, vanilla and whisk well. Heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally.  

Once the custard thickens, reduce heat to low and continue to stir for a further 1-2 minutes. Take off the heat and pour into a large bowl.  

Scoop the cream cheese into the custard and beat together with an electric hand mixer until smooth. Fold in the aquafaba a little at a time until it is well combined. This is your custard cream. Set aside. 

Combine the coffee and liqueur in a medium bowl. Dip the biscuits in one at a time for a few seconds, to allow the coffee to soak in a little. If you’re using cake slices, dip into the coffee only briefly. You don’t want the cake to go soggy. Line your dishes or glasses with a layer of the dipped biscuits or cake. 

Scoop custard cream over the biscuits, creating a thick layer. Repeat with another layer of dipped biscuits or cake and a layer of the custard cream. Garnish with a generous dusting of cocoa powder. 

Cover and refrigerate for a minimum of 2 hours to overnight. The tiramisu is best served the next day. Garnish with optional grated dark chocolate and berries.  

Episode 13

Creamy Parsnip Pasta with Leftover Bread Crumble 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 40 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients  

2 parsnips, chopped into small pieces  

200ml nut or oat milk 

2 bay leaf 

½ brown onion, quartered 

2 thyme sprigs 

½ tsp salt & pepper 

1 packet of your favourite pasta 

2 tbsp nutritional yeast flakes 

200g leftover cornbread or regular bread (can be as little or as much as you have) 

1 garlic clove, minced 

½ tsp smoked paprika 

½ bunch parsley, finely chopped 

1 lemon, zest only 

40ml extra virgin olive oil 

Method 

Fill a saucepan with water, bring to the boil then add a generous pinch of salt. 

In a pot put your nut milk, I usually use oat as I like the thickness and flavour. Add nut/oat milk to a pot with chopped parsnips, onion, thyme, bay leaves, salt and pepper. Bring to a simmer. Cook for 10 minutes on low to medium heat, or until the parsnip is soft.  Place the ingredients into a blender, or use a stick blender, and blitz until super smooth.  The consistency should resemble béchamel.  

Pulse the bread, garlic, nutritional yeast and paprika in a food processor until they are a nice bread crumb consistency. 

Add oil to a warm pan over medium heat. Add the breadcrumbs and cook until they start turning in colour.  Finely dice the parsley, add to the breadcrumbs with the lemon zest and keep cooking until the bread becomes toasty and crunchy. Set aside to cool- it will become crispier as it cools down.   

Add the pasta to the pot of boiling salted water.  When cooked strain the water from the pasta but be sure to save some liquid. Pour the creamy sauce into a pan, add the cooked pasta and a tablespoon or two of the reserved pasta water and mix around until it is all incorporated.   

Divide your pasta amongst plates and sprinkle with the crisp bread crumbs to serve.  

Charred Brussels Sprouts with Pomegranate Molasses & Pistachios 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 30 minutes  

Serves: 4-6 as a side  

Ingredients 

300g brussels sprouts, halved lengthwise 

20ml vegetable oil 

Glaze 

½ tsp cumin powder 

½ tsp coriander powder 

Salt & pepper 

30ml pomegranate molasses  

100ml water  

1 radicchio, roughly torn 

To serve 

1 pomegranate, seeds  

100g pistachios, lightly roasted  

Method  

Add vegetable oil and sliced brussels sprouts to a hot pan over medium-high heat. Stir the brussels sprouts through the oil and arrange so that the sliced side faces down in the pan.  

Mix the ingredients for the glaze in a small bowl, once the brussel sprouts have coloured, pour in the glaze. Season with salt and pepper. Roughly tear the radicchio and add it to the pan.  

Pour the brussels sprouts into your serving bowl, top with pistachios and pomegranate seeds to serve.  

Bánh Củ Cải – Steamed Radish Cake with Sa Tế  

Recipe by: Thanh Truong 

Time: 1 hour + 20 minutes  

Serves: 6  

Ingredients 

Radish Cake 

Mushroom Filling 

6 medium-large dried shiitake mushrooms 

4 Thai red shallots, diced 

1½ tbsp vegetable oil 

1 tbsp light soy sauce 

½ tsp salt 

Daikon 

750g white radish 

1½ tbsp vegetable oil 

2 cloves garlic 

2 shallots 

1 cup water 

1 tsp sugar 

1 tsp salt 

½ tsp onion powder  

¼ tsp ground white pepper 

¼ tsp garlic powder 

Batter 

120g rice flour (extra fine) 

30g tapioca starch (extra fine) 

⅔ cup water (or use residual mushroom water) 

Sate Paste 

2 tsp red pepper flakes 

2 birdseye chillies (seeds removed) 

2 tsp garlic minced 

3-4 stalks lemongrass  

5 red Thai shallots, or 10 Thai shallots  

1 thumb length galangal – blitz  

1 tsp fermented chilli tofu (replacement for fish sauce) 

1 tsp sugar 

6 tbsp vegetable oil 

Salad Mix 

½ navel orange  

2 sticks celery 

1 punnet qukes (mini cucumbers) 

1 pot micro herb – lemon balm, or mint  

Pickled vegetables 

2 carrots 

1 white radish 

60g sugar 

150ml water 

2 tbsp salt 

100ml apple cider vinegar 

Garnish 

A handful of finely chopped spring onions or coriander on top of radish cake 

Method 

For the radish cake, soak the dried shiitake mushrooms in water overnight. Keep the water. Remove stalks and chop the mushrooms. 

Heat saucepan, add boiling water and mushrooms and cook for 2 minutes, adding water as necessary to keep mushrooms moist. As moisture disappears turn heat to medium, add oil, diced shallots, soy sauce and salt. Combine well then transfer to a bowl.  

Cut the white radish top off, peel the skins off removing the fibrous outer shell. Place a wide bowl under grater, and grate the white radish using the large hole side of the box grater. 

Heat oil in a saucepan over high heat and brown diced shallots and garlic for 1 minute. Add grated radish and juices into the saucepan, add water, sugar, salt, and powders into the saucepan and stir well. Cover and cook for 5 minutes.  

Start on the batter mix: Mix rice and tapioca starch well in a bowl and the combine with residual mushroom water and stir until batter is smooth. 

Turn off saucepan cooking the radish and add the cooked mushroom mixture and stir well. Then, add the batter and stir well.  

Oil the cake tin/pan and then move combined batter mix into the pan, flattening the top with a spoon or spatula.  

Add water to the steamer and bring water to boil, ensuring the water level is just below where the cake tin will be placed. Place the cake tin in the steamer. Cover with lid and steam for 30-35 minutes. 

Uncover the wok. And let radish cake cool for 10 minutes. Remove any water on the top layer of batter mix. Cool the cake tin in the fridge (covered in glad wrap)  

Once the cake has been chilled to room temp (about 30 minutes in the fridge), Slice the cake into 3 x 2” rectangles. Heat oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Dust the radish cakes with rice flour for extra crisp and then cook in a saucepan for 4 minutes on each side until the skin is crispy.  
 

For the sate paste, blitz shallots and galangal into a fine texture, then add to a large pan with lemongrass stalks and shallow fry on medium-low heat for 10 minutes. Add all of the sate paste ingredients into the pan and fry on low heat for a further 12-15 minutes. Remove the large lemongrass pieces, add fresh chilli and season with fermented tofu and sugar. 

For the pickled vegetables, cut white radish and carrot into 3mm matchsticks. Rub chopped white radish with salt well to remove excess water and odour. Allow to sit for 20 minutes, then rinse thoroughly and drain. 

Combine wet ingredients and sugar to make pickling juice. Whisk well. Split pickling juice into two batches and steep carrots and white radish separately. Allow to pickle for 30-45 minutes. 

For the vibrant greens, cut celery thinly sliced 45° angle, 3mm slices and cucumbers diagonally or use a peeler to make strips. 

Squeeze the juice out of half an orange in a bowl, toss celery and mini cucumbers in a bowl. Place greens on a plate and place lemon balm micro herb and generously place over the greens 

To plate, stack 3 cakes on top of each other. Place sauce ramekin on a plate beside pancakes. Place pickled vegetables and greens adjacent to garnish. 

Apple Fritters with Apple Juice Glaze 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 20 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients: 

1 granny smith apple 

2 tbsp raw sugar 

1 tbsp caster sugar 

½ tsp salt 

1½ cups all-purpose flour 

¼ cups warm water 

⅔ cup warm oat milk 

7g dry active yeast 

For the icing  

1 cup icing sugar 

¼ cup apple juice 

Vegetable oil, for frying 

1 granny smith apple, cut into matchsticks for serving 

 
Method:  
In a large bowl combine the flour, warm oat milk, warm water, salt, sugar and yeast. 

Grate the fresh granny smith apple, add to the batter mixture and stir through.  

Heat oil to around 170-180 degrees celsius. Use hands or spoon to drop apple batter into the oil to make fritters and leave to cook for 7-8 minutes or until golden and crispy.  

Add icing sugar to a bowl, and whisk in the apple juice one tablespoon at a time until resembling a glaze consistency. 

Take out the apple fritters and drain on paper towel. Add glaze on top and finish with fresh apple matchsticks. 

Episode 12

Strawberry Sofrito with Steamed Beetroots 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time:  

Serves:  

Ingredients:  

For the sofrito 

1 fennel bulb 

1 white onion 

50g pine nuts 

½ cup extra virgin olive oil 

2 punnets strawberries 

Salt & pepper 

For the beetroots 

2 golden beetroots 

1 bunch chervil  

Method:  

Finely dice the fennel and onion and add them to a pan with the oil and nuts. Cook slowly for 30 minutes. In the meantime take the tops off the tomatoes and wash. Crush with a fat knife or use your hands. Place the juice along with the tomatoes into the pan and cook for another 30 minutes. 

While the sofrito is cooking, add the beets to a steaming pot and steam for 30 to 40 minutes or until a knife slides in with a little give so not to lose the texture. 

Place the sofrito at the bottom of the wide bowl. Add the beetroots whole or halved, then add the chervil.  Serve 

Roasted Cauliflower with Burnt Orange & Kimchi Cream  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 40 minutes 

Serves: 4 as a side  

Ingredients 

1 cauliflower 

Salt  

1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 

200g kimchi  

150g silken tofu  

2 navel oranges  

1 tsp sugar 

Chives, finely chopped   

Method 

Preheat the oven to 200C.  

Break the cauliflower into bite-sized florets and add to a big bowl. Toss with a pinch of salt and drizzle with olive oil. Roast on a tray in the oven for 30 minutes or until golden brown.  

In a blender add tofu, kimchi, juice of one orange and sugar and blend until smooth, then strain.  

Cut the remaining orange into segments and cook in a pan until caramelised.  

Fried Beans with Hazelnuts & Preserved Lemons  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 10 minutes  

Serves: 4-6 as a side 

Ingredients 

500g green beans 

100g hazelnuts, roasted  

1 preserved lemon, cut into small cubes 

2-3 tbsp vegetable oil  

To serve 

Drizzle extra virgin olive oil  

Method 

Roughly chop the preserved lemon into small cubes.  

Roughly crush the hazelnuts, not too small as we still want them to have texture.  

Add vegetable oil to a hot wok, and heat until smoking. Carefully add your beans to the wok, toss in the oil, leave the beans until they begin to colour and blister, then toss them to colour on all sides. Add the preserved lemon and hazelnuts to the beans, don’t get too much heat on these, toss through to warm then serve.  

Drizzle some extra virgin olive oil over the beans to serve.  

Banana, Walnut & Chia Bread 

Recipe by: Tobie Puttock  
Time: 50 minutes 
Serves: 1 loaf 
 
Ingredients:  

4 medium-sized super ripe bananas, roughly chopped 
1½ cups flour 
½ cup extra virgin olive oil or coconut oil 
½ cup brown sugar 
1 tsp vanilla essence 
½ tsp cinnamon  
¼ tsp nutmeg 
1 tbsp chia seeds 
½ cup walnuts, slightly crushed 
1½ tsp baking powder 
½ tsp baking soda 
Pinch of sea salt 
 


Method: 


Preheat the oven to 180C. 

Grease a bread tin with a little bit of olive oil or coconut oil. 

Bring together the bananas and the sugar in a mixing bowl and mash them using a fork. Fold through the oil, vanilla essence, cinnamon, nutmeg and a pinch of sea salt. 

Sieve in the flour, baking powder, baking soda and fold thoroughly with a wooden spoon. 

Fold through the chia seeds and the crushed walnuts and pour the batter into the prepared bread tin. 

Cook the bread in the preheated oven for 35-40 minutes or until a small knife pulls clean when inserted into the centre of the bread. 

Once cooked remove from the oven and allow to cool almost completely in the tin before turning out. 

Episode 11

Tomato & Almond Feta Salad 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients 

1 Adelaide tomato 

1 green tomato or black tomato (or just a few different varieties)  

1 bunch purple basil (preferably with flowers on them) 

1 baby chicory/radicchio  

1 jar almond feta 

Salt & pepper 

For the dressing 

1 tbsp red wine vinegar 

1 tsp mustard seeds 

3 tbsp oil from the jar of feta 

Method  

Thinly slice the tomatoes lay them on a large flat plate alternating colours, peel the leaves of the lettuce and squeeze in. Pick the basil and wash, crumble the feta on top. 

Make the dressing in a jar, drizzle over the top. Finally, drop the basil leaves over everything add a couple more pieces of the feta and serve. 

Broccoli, Cranberry & Cashew Pizza 

Recipe by: Tim Bone  

Time: 30 minutes 

Serves: 1-2 

Ingredients 

Pizza dough  

1 cup plain coconut yoghurt 

1 cup self-raising flour, plus extra to knead 

1 tsp extra virgin olive oil 

Salt & pepper 

1 tsp fresh lemon juice 

Toppings 

2 cloves of garlic finely chopped  

1 head of broccoli, cut into small florets  

¼ cup dried cranberries 

¼ cup toasted cashews 

2 cups plant-based shredded mozzarella or cheddar 

1 tsp dried chilli flakes 

Sea salt flakes  

Freshly cracked pepper 

To serve  

1 lemon, zest and juice 

1 bunch of basil 

Method 

Preheat the oven to 250C. 

To make the dough in a bowl (or can be done in a mixer with a dough hook) add sifted flour and yoghurt, olive oil, squeeze of lemon and a pinch of salt and pepper then mix until combined. Knead on a floured bench until dough is a soft springy consistency.  

Knead the dough on a clean board that has been lightly dusted with flour until it comes together in a smooth ball. If the dough is too sticky, add a little more flour. Roll dough out 1/2 cm thick and place on a tray lined with baking paper. 

Mix garlic with 2 tbsp of olive oil and brush onto the base of the pizza. Add some cheese to the base to act as the glue for the other toppings. Top with broccoli florets, dried cranberries, cashews and more cheese, sprinkle with chilli flakes and season with salt and pepper. 

Cook pizza in a hot oven for 8-10 minutes or until the base has browned and crisped. Serve with some freshly grated lemon zest and torn basil leaves on top. Season with salt and pepper. Finish with a squeeze of lemon juice and a drizzle of olive oil. 

Soy Milk Broth 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 20 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients 

¼ cup toasted amaranth or perilla seeds  

½ cup salted mixed nuts  

500ml soy milk 

1 tbsp soy sauce, or to taste  

Serving suggestion 

Hokkien or ramen noodles  

Bok choy, lightly steamed  

Mushrooms 

Baby corn  

Chilli oil 

Method  

Pour amaranth into a hot saucepan over high heat. Heat the amaranth until it pops, swirling the pan to ensure it doesn’t burn. Once most of the amaranth has popped, turn the heat off and allow it to cool slightly in the pan.  

Add soy milk, mixed nuts and cooled amaranth to a blender and blend until everything has combined.  

Strain the mixture into the saucepan with soy sauce and simmer for a few minutes to warm the broth. If the broth thickens too much add a dash of water.  

Place your favourite ramen ingredients into a bowl, pour over a generous amount of broth and top with your favourite condiments. I suggest noodles, lightly steamed bok choy, mushrooms, baby corn and a generous spoonful of chilli oil.  

Fried Bean Empanadas with Coriander Dipping Sauce 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients 

40ml vegetable oil 

1 garlic clove 

2 leeks 

1 red capsicum 

1 x (400g) can pinto beans 

1 tsp cumin seeds 

½ tsp smoked paprika 

Pinch salt & pepper 

Dough  

300g white cornmeal 

450ml water 

½ tsp salt 

Coriander Dipping Sauce  

1 bunch coriander 

1 bunch mint, leaves 

2 limes, juice only 

1 long green chilli, remove the seeds and vein for a milder spice 

2 tbsp caster sugar 

½ cup water 

500ml vegetable oil for frying 

Method  

In a pan on medium heat, add diced garlic, diced leeks, diced red capsicum and a pinch of salt until the leek is translucent and the peppers have leached out their red colouring, for about 10 minutes stirring slowly.  Add the whole cumin and smoked paprika and cook for another 30 seconds.  Add the tin of pinto beans, cooking for 5 more minutes on medium heat. With a masher, mash the ingredients roughly.  You don’t want the consistency of mashed potatoes as a little texture is always nice. Set aside to cool. 

Mix the cornmeal, water and salt in a bowl.  Take out 1 sheet of baking paper (about A4 size) and a mug.  (this is a cheats way. Super easy). Very lightly spray oil on the paper or rub the oil with your fingers.  Take out a golf ball-sized piece of dough and roll it to 1.5mm thick on the baking paper, as close to a circle as possible.  Then with a dessert spoon, lay the filling in the middle of the dough.  Picking up the baking paper, gently fold the dough in half so that the filling is being covered in the middle.  Using the side of the mug you drink from, place it over the filling but only about halfway as you want to create a half-moon shape. Once pressed, take the newly formed empanada and place on a baking tray for frying. Keep going until all the filling or dough mixture is used up. 

Add 500ml of vegetable oil to a pan and bring to 170-180 degrees. Fry for approx. 7 minutes or until super crisp and golden on the outside.  

With the sauce. Add all the ingredients to a blender and blitz until a wet sauce has formed. Serve. 

Episode 10

Burnt Pineapple with Coconut Cream & Toasted Coconut Crumble 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  

Time: 45 minutes 

Serves:

Ingredients  

¼ pineapple, skin and core removed  

1 tsp vegetable oil  

Coconut caramel  

75g caster sugar 

25ml coconut rum  

75ml coconut cream 

Chantilly coconut cream 

1 x (400ml) can coconut cream, chilled  

3 tbsp icing sugar 

½ tsp vanilla extract 

Crumble 

½ cup toasted coconut flakes 

½ cup toasted almonds, roughly chopped  

½ block (40g) mylk white chocolate, grated 

To serve 

Roasted coconut  

Lime, zest  

Method 

Add pineapple and oil in a hot frypan over medium heat. Caramelise on each side 

Add ingredients for your cream to a large bowl and whisk until stiff peaks form.  

Pulse coconut and almonds until they break down to a crumb-like consistency. Place in a bowl and mix through the grated chocolate.  

Once the pineapple has caramelised, remove from the pan and set aside. Add the caster sugar to the pan and dissolve. Flambe with coconut rum. Add coconut cream and stir through to create a smooth caramel. Turn off the heat and return pineapple to the pan coating it in the caramel.  

To serve, place a generous spoonful of the crumble on a plate, top with the grilled, caramel-coated pineapple and spoonfuls of your chantilly coconut cream. Top with roasted coconut pieces, a drizzle of any remaining caramel and lime zest for a pop of colour.  

Bánh Xèo – Turmeric Pancake  

Author: Thanh Truong 

Time: 1 hour 

Serves:

Ingredients 

Pancake Batter Mix (Bánh Xèo) 

220g rice flour (00 fine, erawan brand) 

1 tbsp of tapioca starch 

2 tsp of turmeric powder  

325ml juice of fresh young coconut  

200ml coconut milk  

½ tsp salt  

⅓ bunch of spring onion (green part) 

Stir Fry Condiments 

200g baby spinach leaves 

1 shallot, diced  

1 clove of garlic, diced 

1 birdseye chilli, deseeded 

1 tsp of salt  

1 tsp of sugar  

3 cubes of fermented chilli bean curd 

1 tsp of cornflour (dissolved in 1 tbsp cold water) 

100g dried mung beans 

250g fresh bean shoots  

Dipping sauce 

2 tbsp light soy sauce 

1 tsp apple cider vinegar 

2 tsp sugar 

1 clove of garlic 

1 birdseye chilli, seeds removed, finely diced  

Garnishes & Serving Bowl 

1 purple oakleaf lettuce 

1 bunch Vietnamese mint 

1 bunch mint 

1 bunch purple perilla leaf  

Method 

Put Mung beans in a small pot of cold water, and boil on low heat for 30 minutes. Pot Ratio should be ¼ beans ¾ water, so plenty of water. When the beans start to split, they are ready. Remove from pot, drain and remove. 
 

Mix Pancake Batter ingredients in a large bowl. Let it rest for 10 minutes. 

Heat wok, add vegetable oil, add shallot. Let onion brown, then add the garlic. Let garlic brown then add the spinach. When the spinach starts to wilt (1 min) and then add cooked mung beans. Add salt, sugar and fermented bean curd. Toss well and then immediately add cornflour and cook through for 1 minute to thicken the sauce. Add the chilli, and stir through. Add water if required. Set aside. 

Frying Pancake Technique – Using a 28cm diameter non-stick pan, heat on medium heat for a good 1 minute, the pan must be dry, fuming, and importantly sizzling hot –  make sure flame is just hitting the base of the pan, the flame should not be curving around the upward lip.  

Pour oil in the pan, spread by handling the wok and angling in all directions, pour out all oil into a bowl. 

Pour 1 mixture from the rice bowl (approx. 150mls) into the pan.  

Immediately turn the mixture around clockwise to spread the mixture around the wok. Be STEADY, not too quick. 

Close lid for 2 minutes, set a timer. 

Remove the lid, using a teaspoon gently drip oil onto the sides of the pancake, swirling the pancake on an angle at the same time. Add ingredients immediately to one side. Add (1) Mung Bean & Spinach Stir Fry, then place the fresh bean shoots on top. Do not put the lid back on as you want the pancake to dry!! When right crispness, turn over for several seconds and you’re done. 

For the dipping sauce, dissolve sugar in soy sauce and ACV and finely dice garlic and chillies (seeds removed). 

To plate up, place pancakes on 1 side of the dish. Place lettuce, herbs and dipping sauce on the other side to garnish. 

Arepa Stuffed with Avocado and Fried Beans  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 

Time: 50 minutes 

Serves: 4-6 

Ingredients 

Arepa dough  

300g white cornmeal 

525ml water 

½ tsp salt 

2 avocados 

20ml extra virgin olive oil 

Salt 

Lemon juice  

Lemon Tofu Cream 

200g silken tofu  

45ml lemon juice 

Generous pinch salt  

1 tsp sugar 

Fried Beans 

2 tbsp vegetable oil 

1 red capsicum, diced 

2 cloves garlic, roughly diced 

1 onion, diced 

1 x (420g) can kidney beans 

50ml water 

Salt & pepper 

To serve 

1 bunch coriander 

Method 

Preheat your oven to 180C.  

In a bowl, mix the cornmeal, water, salt together to make a very pliable dough.  If you are of the age, then playdough texture is what you are looking for, without the spring back.  

This is the difficult part.  Take 80 grams of dough from the bulk amount and roll into a ball in the palm of your hands. Then press and turn and press back and forth between your palms until the dough has turned into a round patty like shape. Alternatively, you can use two pieces of baking paper and use something flat to press it down.  Don’t make it too thin as you want to be able to cut it open and stuff it. Repeat until all the dough has been used.  

Use some paper towel to spread a small amount of oil in your pan. Place the arepa onto the pan on medium heat and cook for 7 minutes on each side.  Then place them on a lined baking tray and in the oven for 15-20 minutes.  They will take longer than you think to cook all the way through. 

While they are cooking, mash the avocado with olive oil, a squeeze of lemon and salt. Mix together so that the ingredients have combined but the avocado is still a little chunky.  

To prepare the lemon tofu, place silken tofu into a blender with lemon juice, and a pinch of salt and sugar and blitz to a cream.  

Place capsicum, garlic and onion in a frying pan on medium heat with some oil and slowly cook, trying not to get any colour on them.  Cook for 10 minutes or until the onions and garlic have become translucent.  

Add the kidney beans and 50ml of water. Cook slowly until most of the water has been cooked out. Use a masher to mash the beans. You don’t want to mash them all, just enough to make the bean mixture thicken. If you feel that the mixture is becoming too dry, add more water. Taste and season with salt and pepper.  

Cut along the edge of the Arepa, opening it up like a pita. If it is still soft inside, scrape out the soft parts. Fill it with the bean mixture, avocado and lemon tofu, garnish with coriander to serve.  

Episode 9

Soy Bean Falafel Pita 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 1 hour  
Serves:

Ingredients

Falafel  
1 bunch parsley, chopped 
2 slices of bread, blitzed into breadcrumbs  
Big pinch salt 
½ tsp smoked paprika 
½ bicarb 
1½ tbsp chickpea flour 
½ tsp baking powder 
1 tsp cumin seeds 
5 spring onions, finely chopped 
3 cloves garlic, minced 
20ml extra virgin olive oil 
3 cracks of black pepper

Vegetable oil, for frying 
1 red onion, thinly sliced  
40ml red wine vinegar 
More parsley 
2 carrots, grated  
1 cucumber 
1 tsp sumac 
½ lemon – juice only 
100g hummus 
4 flatbreads 

Method

  • Soak the soybeans overnight.  Pressure cook for 15 minutes.   
  • Place the beans, bread crumbs, salt, smoked paprika, bi-carb, baking powder, spring onions, minced garlic, cumin seeds, pepper, olive oil and chickpea flour in a large bowl and mash with a potato masher until everything is broken down. The mixture should be mashed until it becomes combined and slightly rough.  If there are some full beans that is fine too this doesn’t have to be perfect.  The different sizes of the soybeans create a better texture at the end. 
  • Roll into balls and set aside. Heat some vegetable oil in a pan over medium heat, fry the falafels until golden brown on both sides.  
  • Thinly slice the red onion and place in the red wine vinegar.  
  • Chop a few bunches of parsley. Grate the carrot.  
  • Cut the cucumber into long strips and place in a bowl with oil, sumac, salt and lemon juice. 
  • Warm the flatbreads in the oven until nice and warm. Cut the top off the flatbread and push 3 soybean falafels down the centre and with a fork, squish them down.  Then add the onion, cucumber, carrot and parsley and finally a generous amount of hummus. Drizzle over a squeeze of lemon to serve.  
  • Roll the baby up and enjoy. ‘

Cornbread with Zucchini Tomato Salad 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 40 minutes  
Serves:

Ingredients

2½ cups cornmeal or polenta 
1¾ cup oat milk 
½ tsp baking powder 
½ tsp bi-carbonate 
2 tsp salt 
2 tbsp flaxseed mixed with 4 tbsp water 
½ cup + 2 tbsp vegetable oil 
4 tbsp cultured oat butter, softened  
Pinch salt

Zucchini Tomato Salad 
1 yellow zucchini (green will be fine too) 
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil  
Pinch salt 
1 punnet ripe cherry tomatoes (different colours if possible) 
1 bunch basil 
1 bunch parsley 
1 bunch dill 
2 tsp fennel seeds 

Dressing  
2 tbsp golden syrup 
4 tbsp lemon juice 
8 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
½ tsp salt & pepper 

Method

  • Preheat your oven to 220C.  
  • Place a 10 or 12-inch pan into your pre-heated oven.  It is important that this is searing hot as it will create an amazing crunch bottom and sides.  If you don’t have a cast-iron then a heavy-based frypan will work well enough. 
  • Place everything into a bowl and mix until combined.  Don’t work it too hard as you want the mixture to be slightly crumbly.  This is a dryer style bread, so it really craves liquids as a topping. 
  • Pull the pan out of the oven and onto your stove with an element on high to keep the temp of the pan.  Add the reserved tablespoon of oil in the pan and let it start smoking.  
  • Pour in the mixture (please be gentle not to splash yourself here) spread the mixture evenly with the back of a spoon or spatula.  Let it cook for 1 minute on the pan then place it in the oven for 12 minutes, check with a skewer, if it comes out clean it’s done.  
  • Take the cornbread out of the oven and let it cool in the pan.  By letting the mixture cool, you are letting the bread set and become solid.  This will mean the bread won’t break or crack when transferred to a chopping board.  Place the oat butter on top of the cornbread and spread it around so it soaks up all the flavour. 
  • Roughly chop the zucchini, toss with some olive oil and salt and pour into a hot pan. Cook for a minute or so, or until the zucchinis have coloured but haven’t cooked through, add to a bowl season with a pinch of salt and add fennel seeds. Cut the tomatoes into different shapes and add to the zucchini. Pick the leaves from the basil, parsley and dill and run a knife through them to break up lightly but keep them chunky.  Throw them in the bowl as well. 
  • In a jar use a stick blender to combine the golden syrup, lemon juice and salt. Slowly add the olive oil in the jar, continue to blitz until the dressing has combined.  
  • Pour the dressing into the salad and mix it all together. 
  • Slice a nice slice of cornbread and place the salad next to it.  Finishing with a good sprinkle of salt. 

Whipped Hummus 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 15 minutes 
Serves: 1-2 cups worth 

 Ingredients

1 x (400g) can chickpeas, ½ the aquafaba (liquid in the tin) reserved  
¼ clove garlic 
1 lemon, juiced  
3 tbsp tahini 
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
Salt & pepper  

Method

  • Drain the chickpeas, but reserve the liquid.  
  • In a blender place the chickpeas (minus the liquid), garlic, lemon juice and olive oil, salt and pepper, and blend to a smooth paste.  In a separate bowl whisk the aquafaba until it has aerated and become light.  Then whisk through the hummus mixture.  
  • Pour more olive oil over the top to serve.  

Chai-spiced Granola with Poached Prunes & Nut Mylk 

Recipe by: Alice Zaslavsky 
Time: 1 hour (+ overnight soaking time)  
Serves: makes approx. 1kg 

Ingredients

Dry ingredients 
2 cups oats 
1 cup brown rice flakes 
1 cup coconut flakes 
½ tsp ground cardamom  
½ cup roughly chopped macadamia nuts 
½ cup roughly crushed almonds 
1 cup dried apricot 
1 cup dried cranberry  
½ cup sunflower seeds 
½ cup pepitas 
1 tsp salt flakes 
1 tsp cinnamon  

Wet ingredients 
1 orange, zest and juice 
½ cup maple syrup 
½ cup veg/peanut oil 
30g wet chai mix (my favourite is Monks Chai) 

Macadamia milk 
2 cups raw macadamia nuts 
4 cups filtered water 
1 pinch salt flakes 

Poached prunes 
250g un-pitted prunes 
1 cinnamon quill 
2-3 star anise 
5-6 cardamom pods 
5-6 cloves 
1 cup water, boiled 

To serve (optional) 
Coconut yoghurt  
Banana (or a fruit of your choice), sliced  

Method

  • Preheat oven to 160C and line an oven tray with baking paper. 
  • Pop all of your chosen dry ingredients into a big bowl.  
  • Meanwhile, heat the maple syrup, oil, and chai in a small saucepan until it starts to bubble. Remove from the heat and add your orange juice.  
  • Pour the syrup over the dry ingredients through a fine sieve and stir together with a wooden spoon or silicone spatula.  
  • Spread granola mix over the lined oven tray. Whack into the oven.  
  • After 5 minutes, pull the tray out and stir the mix around. Do this again 3 more times, for 20 minutes in total (or 25 minutes if you prefer slightly more golden granola!). On the last stir around, mix through your orange zest.  
  • Allow the mix to cool on the tray.  
  • Once the granola has cooled, transfer to an airtight container(s) and store in a cool dark place for up to 3 months.  
  • For the macadamia nut milk, blitz macadamias and filtered water together, then pass through a clean muslin cloth or nut mylk bag. Store in the fridge for up to 48 hours. Nut mylks will separate, so give it a little stir before you use it.   
  • For the prunes, boil a cup of water, and pour over prunes and spices in a glass container with a lid (a pyrex is perfect). Allow to steep overnight.  
  • Serve with macadamia milk, coconut yoghurt (born cultured is my preference), poached prunes, banana, or just scoff straight out of the jar.  

Episode 8

Asian Style Guac  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 15 minutes 
Serves: 4-6 

Ingredients

3 avocados  
½ shallot, diced   
3 kaffir lime leaves, thinly sliced  
1 red chilli, seed removed, finely diced 
1 tbsp toasted sesame oil 
2-3 limes 
2 tsp coconut aminos – mash 
Salt  
2-3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil  

To serve 
1 tsp black sesame seeds 
½ bunch chives 
1 packet corn chips  

Method

  • Add the avocados, shallot, lime leaves, chilli, sesame oil, juice of 2 limes and the coconut aminos to a bowl. Mash to bring everything together. Taste and season with salt and extra lime if it needs it. Loosen with extra virgin olive oil and stir through.  
  • Spoon into a serving bowl, top with black sesame seeds and chives. Serve with corn chips. 

Dark Chocolate Tart 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 2 hours  
Serves: 10-12

 Ingredients

Pastry 
200g all-purpose flour 
125g vegan butter 
1 tbsp caster sugar 
½ tsp salt 
2 tbsp ice-cold water 

Filling 
200g 85% dark chocolate or any vegan chocolate of your choosing 
300g silken tofu 
50ml soy milk (or any other nut milk) 
60g coconut sugar 
Pinch salt

Spiced figs- if you can’t find any spiced figs to buy you can make them  
5 figs  
100ml water 
20ml balsamic vinegar 
50g caster sugar 
1 cinnamon stick 
2 cloves 
1 bay leaf

To garnish  
Dried rose petals (optional) 

Method  

  • Preheat oven to 180C.  
  • For the pastry, chop the vegan butter up into manageable chunks, then pulse in a blender with everything until it comes together to a crumbly dough.  If it doesn’t add another tablespoon of water.  Alternatively, squeeze the cold butter between your fingers until it is all broken up and the dough is looking a little like cornflakes mixed with bread crumbs. Add the water sugar and salt and work in briefly but do not overwork, otherwise the butter will melt and the gluten will start to activate. 
  • Wrap in baking paper and set in the fridge for 30 minutes. 
  • Gently roll the dough out between 2 pieces of baking paper to 2ml thickness.  Using a 22cm tart tin, place your tart tin upside down over the dough, gently cut around, don’t cut too close to the tin, you can always remove any excess pastry.  
  • Turn the tart tin back over and slide the rolled and cut dough into the tin.  Gently pushing it down to cover all the available space.  For best results, place the tart tin with the pastry in the fridge for another 30 minutes.   
  • Take the baking paper and scrunch it in your hands. Place the paper on the dough and pour rice or grains over it to cover and make sure it is hitting all sides.  Bake in the oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until it is golden brown.  Remove from the oven and let it cool. 
  • To make the filling, set a bowl over a pot with water and place on the stove on high heat.  Chop up the chocolate into small chunks and put in the bowl along with the sugar, a pinch of salt and the milk. 
  • As the chocolate melts keep stirring until it all is melted and the sugar is pretty much dissolved.  Place the tofu and the choc mixture into a blender or a bowl with a stick blender attachment and blitz until smooth.  Pour into your pre-baked tart tin and place in the fridge to set. 
  • For the figs,  slice a cross in the top that goes halfway down the fig.  Put all the ingredients in a saucepan and place on medium heat.  Reduce the liquid by ¾ but always be gentle when stirring as you don’t want to break them up.  The syrup should be sweet sticky. Remove the fig.   
  • Top the set tart with the spiced figs, a few spoonfuls of the fig syrup and a scattering of rose petals. 

Hemp Burgers with all the Trimmings 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 30 minutes  
Serves: 4

Ingredients

¼ cup hemp seeds 
1 x (420g) can chickpeas (with 40ml of the liquid) 
3 tbsp chickpea flour or hemp flour or plain flour 
1 tsp cumin seeds 
1 garlic, roughly diced 
¼ brown onion, diced 
1 tsp coriander powder 
1 tsp salt & pepper 
40ml extra virgin olive oil

To serve 
1 iceberg lettuce 
Brown onion (reserved from the onion used in the patty)  
2 tomatoes 
100ml rose harissa 
4 bread buns 
50g cultured oat butter 

Method

  • Add the hemp seeds, chickpeas, chickpea flour, cumin seeds, garlic, onion, coriander powder salt and pepper to a bowl and with a masher, mash to a paste.   
  • Divide the mixture into 4, using wet hands shape the mixture into a patty shape, place on a baking tray lined with baking paper and lightly oiled. Repeat until all the mixture is done.   
  • Heat 40ml of vegetable oil in a large, nonstick frying pan, on medium-high heat. When the oil is hot gently place the hemp burgers in the pan and press very lightly with a spatula. Cook on each side for 5 to 10 minutes, turn and repeat for an extra 5 minutes. 
  • Meanwhile, slice the tomato and other half of the onion in rounds. Tear the leaves off the iceberg, slice the buns in half. Spread the insides of the rolls with oat butter. Remove the burgers from the pan and place the buttered buns down to toast while the burgers rest. 
  • Once toasted, layer the bun with some rose harissa, chickpea mayo, the hemp seed patty, onion, lettuce, tomato and then burger bun.  

Tomato Lox & Schmear Bagels

Recipe by: Zacchary Bird 
Time: 1 hour + marinating  
Serves:

Ingredients

Cream Cheese (makes 600g) 
400g (14 oz) raw cashews 
150g (5½ oz) dairy-free yoghurt 
2 tsp lactic acid (or ½ tsp citric acid) 
1 tsp sea salt, plus extra if needed 
2 tsp white vinegar, plus extra if needed 
1 tbsp nutritional yeast, plus extra if needed 
1 lemon, juice and zest  
2 tsp capers with 2 tsp of brine 
Large handful dill 

Lox  
6 firm, slightly under-ripe tomatoes 
4 nori sheets, shredded 
125 ml (4 fl oz/½ cup) soy sauce 
1 tbsp ground ginger 
1 tsp liquid smoke 

To serve 
4 bagels, sliced in half 
250g (9 oz/1 cup) Dill cream cheese (from the recipe above) 
1 red onion, thinly sliced 
2 tbsp capers, rinsed and drained dill fronds, to garnish (optional)

Method

  • To prepare the creamed cheese.  
  • Soak the cashews in plenty of cold water for at least 8 hours, or boil for 15 minutes, then drain and set aside to cool. 
  • Place the cashews in a food processor and process for 1 minute, scraping down the side of the bowl as necessary. Add the yoghurt and continue to process until the mixture becomes smooth. 
  • Add the remaining ingredients, then taste and adjust the flavour if necessary, adding more salt, vinegar or nutritional yeast. Process for a few more seconds – you’ll know it’s ready when the cheese is creamy without any graininess from the nuts. 
  • Transfer to an airtight container and store in the fridge for up to 1 week. 
  • To make this cream cheese even more spectacular, make a dill cream cheese by adding the zest and juice of 1 lemon, 2 teaspoons of capers along with 2 teaspoons of brine from the jar and a garlic clove to the cream cheese mixture before processing to combine. Add a large handful of dill fronds and process briefly, then store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 1 week. 
  • To prepare the lox, score a shallow cross into the top of each tomato. Bring a saucepan of water to the boil over medium-high heat, add the tomatoes and boil for no more than 1 minute. Drain and plunge the tomatoes into a bowl of ice-cold water. This means you can easily remove the skins while keeping the raw tomato texture we want for this dish. 
  • Cut each tomato into eight wedges. Use your fingers to remove and discard the seeds and squeeze out any liquid, leaving only the core and firm flesh. If desired, slice these pieces even more thinly to replicate the thickness of smoked salmon. Pat dry with a paper towel. 
  • Place the nori in a small bowl of hot water for 1 minute to hydrate. Drain, then place in a large bowl with the soy sauce, ginger, liquid smoke and tomato. Set aside in the fridge to marinate for at least 1 hour or until required. 
  • Toast the bagels, then smear 2 tablespoons of dill cream cheese on each toasted bagel half. Top with the marinated tomato, red onion and capers, then garnish with a few dill fronds (if using). Serve warm. 

Episode 7

Roast Cauliflower Soup with Deep Fried Black Olives 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey
Time: 45 minutes
Serves: 3-4

  Ingredients

1 cauliflower
3 cloves garlic
1 brown onion
Salt & pepper
1L vegetable stock 
2 bay leaves 
2 thyme sprigs 
¼ tsp ground nutmeg 
50ml extra virgin olive oil

Deep Fried Black Olives 
100g Kalamata olives, pitted
200ml vegetable oil 

To serve 
Bunch parsley, roughly chopped 
4 slices of sourdough bread, toasted 
Chunk cultured oat butter

Method

  • Preheat the oven to 180C. 
  • Chop the cauliflower up roughly.  It doesn’t matter how, it just needs to be chopped up.  The smaller the pieces are, the quicker they will roast and go brown.   
  • Place in a bowl and add the garlic and the onion that has been quartered leaving the skin on. Drizzle with some olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Toss everything in the bowl to ensure the vegetables are coated in olive oil. Divide between trays and roast for 30 minutes or until the cauliflower is dark brown (but not burnt). Allow everything to cool slightly on the tray. 
  • Meanwhile in a pot, add the stock, bay leaves and thyme and bring to a boil. Remove the skin from the roasted onions. Add the cauliflower, onion and garlic to the stock. Turn the heat down to medium-low so that the soup is just simmering.  Put a lid on and cook for 10 minutes. 
  • While the soup is simmering. Pour the vegetable oil into a pan and heat to 160-170C. Chop up the Kalamata olives into a crumb-like consistency and place into the hot oil. Fry until there are hardly any more bubbles coming from the olives. Use a slotted spoon to carefully remove the fried olives from the oil and place in a bowl lined with a paper towel to soak up any residue oil. The olives will go crispier as they cool.  
  • Remove the herbs from the soup, add a pinch of nutmeg and the remaining olive oil and blend until the oil is fully incorporated and the soup is smooth and creamy.  
  • Pour into a bowl and top with chopped parsley, fried olives and a drizzle of olive oil. Serve with sourdough.

Sichuan & Chilli Tofu

Recipe by: Simon Toohey
Time: 30 minutes
Serves:

Ingredient

1 tub silken tofu cut into 
2 tbsp sesame oil 
4-5 tbsp vegetable oil 
1 cinnamon stick 
4 dried Sichuan chillies (Kashmiri would work too) 
3 cloves garlic 
1 thumb ginger 
2 long red chillies 
1 tbsp Sichuan pepper 
1 tsp mushroom powder (4 shitake mushrooms blended to a powder) optional 
1 tsp caster sugar 
3 tbsp soy sauce 

To serve 
Steamed rice  
2 spring onions, greens roughly chopped 
Bunch coriander, roughly chopped 

Method

  • Fill a small pot with water and 2 tablespoons salt.  Bring to a simmer.  Cut the tofu into 1-inch cubes and put in the salted water letting the tofu warm through. This will create a skin and set the tofu.  
  • In the meantime slice the cloves of garlic, thinly slice the ginger, dice the spring onion, keeping the greens for later separate from the whites, de-seed the long red chilli and slice up.  Cut up the dried chilli. 
  • In a heavy-based pan or a wok, place the oil in and bring to a smoke.  Add the cinnamon and heat through to infuse the oil.  Add the dried chilli to do the same.  
  • Add the garlic, ginger and fresh chilli and fry briefly at high heat for about a minute.  Turn the heat down to medium and add the  Sichuan peppers, mushroom powder, sugar and fry off to incorporate all the ingredients. Add soy and sugar and stir through.   
  • Finally, turn the heat back up and scoop the tofu out of the pot with a holed spoon, frying and tossing the mixture, try not to break up the tofu. 
  • Pour into a bowl and serve with rice and garnish with coriander and green spring onion tops. 

Spinach Pancakes with Avocado & Blistered Tomatoes  

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 45 minutes  
Serves:

Ingredients

Pancakes 
100g spinach
200ml oat milk
200g self-raising flour
Pinch salt & pepper 

1 punnet coloured cherry tomatoes
1tsp balsamic vinegar
1 tsp brown sugar
50g baby rocket

To serve 
50g plant-based feta

Method

  • Add a drop of vegetable oil and the cherry tomatoes to a hot pan. Leave to blister for about 5 minutes, tossing occasionally. Pour into a bowl and cover with a lid to steam.  
  • Blitz spinach in a blender, gradually adding all of the oat milk until it all comes together. Place flour into a large bowl, slowly pour the spinach mixture into the flour while whisking, bringing all the ingredients together. If the mixture is thick, add a little water or a little more oat milk until it reaches a thin, paint-like consistency.  
  • Wipe out the pan. In a non-stick pan on medium heat, pour the mixture in and spread around.  Cook on both sides until they are just set and not too much colour has been put on it.  Once they are all done, cover with a tea towel and set aside. 
  • Add sugar and vinegar to the tomatoes. Squeeze the tomatoes in the bowl to help release some of the juices- be careful they can retain heat. Add the tomatoes to the rocket and stir through.  
  • Stack your pancakes, top with a generous serving of the tomato salad, drizzle over any reserved juice and top with pieces of plant-based feta.  

Vegetarian Kebabs with Burghul 

Recipe by: Walleed Rasheed  
Time: 45 minutes 
Serves: 4

Ingredients

For the kebabs 
2 zucchinis 
2 green capsicum 
2 red onions 
2 red capsicum 

For the Burghul 
1 cup fine Bulgur 
2 cups of vegetable stock 
2 cups of sultanas 
2 cups of slivered almonds 
Coconut or extra virgin olive oil for toasting

For the dressing  
3 cloves garlic crushed 
1 tbsp cumin 
1 lemon, juiced 
¼ cup of extra virgin olive oil 
Small bunch of coriander 
Salt & pepper

Method

  • Kebab skewers 
    Chop up zucchinis, green capsicum, onion and red capsicum into small pieces to assemble the kebab skewers.  
  • Before making the skewers, soak the skewers in some water to avoid burning 
     
    Assemble the skewers then BBQ on a hibachi or a grill pan and lightly brush some olive oil and salt on the skewers and cook until slightly soft. Baste with the dressing while cooking. 
  • Set aside once cooked  
  • Burghul 
    In a bowl add one cup of fine bulgur wheat.  
    Boil 2 cups of vegetable stock and then pour into the bulgar wheat and cover immediately with a lid and set aside for 10 minutes or until the liquid has been absorbed.  
  • While the bulgur wheat is absorbing, in a pan fry 2 cups of slivered almonds with some coconut or olive oil for about 2-3 minutes. Set aside in a bowl, then repeat with the sultanas.  
  • Then add the almonds and sultanas into the bulgar and mix around, leave some almonds and sultanas for garnish at the end. 
  • For the dressing, mix in garlic, olive oil, lemon juice, cumin, salt, pepper, and coriander 
  • To assemble, pile the bulgar in a large bowl, then place the skewers on top, sprinkle some more roasted almonds and sultanas on top. Then add the dressing all over and some more fresh coriander on top! 

Episode 6

Chips with All The Seasonings 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey
Time: 30 minutes
Serves:

Ingredients

4 large Desiree potatoes 
1L vegetable oil 

Chilli Garlic Salt 
2 tbsp fried garlic chips 
1 tsp salt 
¼ tsp sugar 
¼ tsp chilli powder

Mortar and pestle all together 

Lemon Australian Bush Pepper Salt 
1 tsp salt 
½ tsp native bush peppers 
1 lemon – zest only 
¼ tsp sugar 

 Mortar and pestle all together 

Nacho Cheese Seasoning 
¾ tsp smoked paprika 
¾ tsp onion powder 
¾ tsp garlic powder 
2 tsp nutritional yeast flakes 
1 tsp salt 
½ tsp sugar 

 Mix together 

Green Dressing 
1 bunch parsley 
1 bunch dill 
½ clove garlic 
1 tbsp golden syrup 
¾ tsp  salt

 Mortar and pestle all together 

Method

  • Prepare your favourite topping (or all of them!) 
  • Heat vegetable oil to 140C. 
  • Chop the potatoes into lengths, to get nice and thick chips. Rinse under cold water to remove excess starch.  
  • Place the chips in the oil at 140C for 8 minutes to cook through and take out of the oil and place into a tray. You don’t want too much colour on the chips at this stage. Let rest for 10 minutes to cool. 
  • Raise the temperature of the fryer up to 180C and re-fry the chips for a few minutes until they are crisp golden and delicious.  
  • Drain for a few minutes to remove excess oil. Pour into a tray and season with your topping. Or, serve with all of your toppings in separate bowls and let people season with their favourite combinations.  

Dal with Tempered Spices 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 45 minutes 
Serves: 4-6 

Ingredients

1 cup toor dal/arhar dal/split pigeon peas lentil
, soaked overnight in 2L water with 1 tsp turmeric  
1 medium red onion, diced 
4 large garlic cloves, minced 
1 thumb ginger, minced 
3 tbsp vegetable oil
 
1  tsp cumin seeds
 
1 tbsp coriander seeds
 
1 tsp fenugreek seeds (optional) 
2 medium tomatoes chopped
 
1 tsp coriander powder
 
1 tsp garam masala
2 tsp Kashmiri red chilli powder 
1  tsp turmeric powder
Salt, to taste
 

Tempering 
4 tbsp vegetable oil 
½ red onion diced 
1 clove garlic 
1 tsp cumin seeds 
2 dried long red chillies
 
1 heaped tsp Kashmiri red chilli powders  

To serve  
2 tbsp coriander, chopped 
 
Steamed rice 
Naan 

Method

  • Pour lentils in a large bowl with water and turmeric, leave to soak overnight.  
  • Add the vegetable oil to a pan on medium heat. Chop the onion, ginger and garlic and add to the hot pan. Cook for a minute until everything becomes fragrant.  
  • Add the coriander seeds, cumin seeds and fenugreek seeds, stir through the onions then add 1 teaspoon of coriander powder, 1 teaspoon of Kashmiri chilli and a ¼ teaspoon of turmeric powder.  Add the lentils, with the water they were soaked in into the pot then add the chopped tomatoes and cook until they become soft and broken down – about 20 minutes. Taste and season with salt.  
  • Pour the vegetable oil into another pan and add the tempering ingredients to it. When everything starts sizzling, cook for another 2 minutes and then pour over the dal. 
  • Serve with rice or Naan or Idli, garnish with coriander.  

Slow Grilled Cauliflower Steak

Recipe by: Tobie Puttock  
Time: 30-40 minutes 
Serves: 4

Ingredients

1 whole medium-sized cauliflower 
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
Pinch salt

Sauce  
2 tbsp sesame oil 
90g white miso paste 
100ml rice wine vinegar 
1 tbsp maple or brown rice malt syrup 
50ml water 
Soy sauce to taste

To serve 
1 tbsp sesame seeds, lightly toasted 
1 tsp black sesame seeds, lightly toasted  
1 sheet nori (edible seaweed)

Method

  • Preheat a griddle pan or a normal pan over medium-low heat. 
  • Trim the base of the cauliflower and remove any leaves. Slice the cauliflower into four steaks, being careful not to break them, lightly season with a pinch of salt- the sauce will be fairly salty so don’t over season.  
  • Cut 4 pieces of baking paper double the size of the cauliflower steaks so that you can fold the paper over enclose the cauliflower. Rub a little bit of olive oil on the paper and gently place the cauliflower on the baking paper, and fold over to cover both sides.  
  • Cook the cauliflower steaks over low heat in a grill pan or in a large pan. Unless you have multiple pans, you may need to do this in batches as it’s important that the steaks have full flat contact with the heat. You can place a heavy saucepan on the cauliflower to help it cook evenly. After 10 minutes carefully flip the steaks and continue to cook until tender. 
  • Pop the miso, rice wine vinegar, maple, sesame oil, soy sauce and water into a saucepan, whisk or stir to bring the ingredients together, and gently heat through. Bast the cauliflower with a brush a few times during the cooking process.  
  • Once the cauliflower is cooked arrange the steaks onto serving plates and distribute the dressing over the hot cauliflower, finally finishing with a super generous sprinkling of the nori and sesame mixture. 

Spiced Chai Apple & Rhubarb Crumble with Earl Grey Custard 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 1 hour 
Serves: 8

Ingredients

Apple and Rhubarb  
4 rhubarb stems chopped to 1-inch lengths 
4 apples 
3 tbsp brown sugar 
1 lemon, juice only 

Crumble 
200g oats 
50g flour 
150ml melted oat butter 
3 tbsp raw sugar 
1 Dilmah spiced chai tea bags cut open 
Big pinch salt

Custard 
400ml oat milk 
1 earl grey tea bags cut open 
2 tbsp cornflour 
3 tbsp water  
1 tsp vanilla extract 
70g caster sugar

Method

  • Preheat the oven to 180C.  
  • Take the rhubarb and apple and chop it up. Doesn’t have to be uninformed. Place into a bowl and add brown sugar and lemon. Pour into your tin or baking tray you would like to cook your crumble in.   
  • Make the crumble mixture by adding everything together and mixing until it turns into a dough-like consistency. 
  • Spoon it over the apple and rhubarb mixture, place it in the oven for 25 to 30 minutes or until the top is nice and crisp. 
  • While the crumble is cooking make the custard. Put the milk and earl grey tea in a pot until it is close to a boil. Add sugar and vanilla. Mix the cornflour and the sugar together in a separate bowl and add the water.  Pour into the oat milk mixture and stir until it becomes thick and creamy. Finally, strain the ingredients to remove the large tea leaves. Pour the custard into a jug and set aside. 
  • Take the crumble out of the oven and let stand for approximately 20 minutes. Spoon a large amount into a bowl and then pour over as much custard as you like…. Heaven. 

Episode 5

Caramelised Baby Carrots with Puy Lentils 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 50 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients

1 bunch baby carrots, 3 cm stalk reserved  
Vegetable oil  
1 heaped tbsp brown sugar 
1 cup vegetable stock  
2 tbsp oat butter 

Lentils  
1 cup puy lentils  
¼ cup red wine 
1 bay leaf  
3 sprigs thyme  

Garnish  
Reserved carrot tops 
Wedge of lemon 

Method

  • Remove the carrot tops, reserving 3cm of the stalk.  
  • Add carrots and oil to a hot pan, cook for a few minutes to colour.  
  • Add the lentils, vegetable stock, red wine, bay leaf & thyme to a pot, cover and cook over low heat for 25 minutes.  
  • Add stock, brown sugar, oat butter, salt and pepper to the carrots, cover with a cartouche and cook over medium-low heat for 25-30 minutes or until the liquid has reduced. Remove the cartouche and season with salt.  
  • Serve the lentils, top with the caramelised carrots and spoonfuls of the sauce. Garnish with sprigs of reserved carrot tops and serve with a wedge of lemon.  

Cheats Pizzas 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 30 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients

1 pack flatbreads  

Toppings- the toppings are really up to you, choose your favourite combinations, these are some ingredients I love to use  
200g tomato paste with no cheese pesto or hummus or any sauce 
50ml water 
½ tsp dried oregano 
½ tsp dried thyme or fresh 
½ tsp salt and pepper 
1 red, brown or white onion, sliced 
1 red, green or yellow capsicum, sliced 
1 tub fresh cherry tomatoes 
100g Kalamata olives, pitted  
100g sundried tomatoes 
200g sweet potato or pumpkin, roasted 
Any fresh herbs 
1 tub plant-based cheese 
30ml balsamic vinegar 

Salad  
1 packet rocket 
½ red onion, thinly sliced 
Any fresh herbs like basil, parsley, thyme 
Balsamic vinegar  
Extra virgin olive oil  
Salt & pepper 

Method

  • Preheat your oven to 190C. Prepare your trays with baking paper and place in the oven to heat up.  
  • Spoon your choice of sauce, or hummus, onto the flatbread.  
  • It is now up to you – the combinations you would like.   I like tomatoes, olives, cherry tomatoes, capsicum and onion.  But it is totally up to you.  Pesto, rosemary and olive oil with flaked salt or the classic throw everything on there and hope for the best.   
  • Put the pizza in the oven and bake for only 15 minutes or until everything is nice and colourful- charred in places, melty in others and the edges of the flatbreads are crisp and delicious.  
  • Toss all of your salad ingredients in a large bowl, dress with extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar, season with salt and pepper. Serve your pizza with a generous serving of salad on the side.  

Coconut Ice Cream with Bananas & Caramel 

Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 1 hour + freezing time  
Serves:

Ingredients

400ml coconut cream, placed in the freezer for a few hours before using 
100ml coco lopez 
50ml coconut flavoured rum 
2 bananas, chopped  

Caramel  
1 tbsp vegetable oil 
2 tbsp brown sugar 
2 tbsp coconut cream 
1 tbsp water 

To serve 
2 tbsp coconut slivers 
2 tbsp slivered almonds 

Method

  • In a large bowl whisk coconut cream and coco lopez until it forms stiff peaks. Use your whisk to gently fold through the coconut flavoured rum, being careful not to knock out too much air. Pour into a container and freeze for a few hours, or overnight.  
  • Add oil to a pan over medium/medium-high heat. Once the oil has started to heat up, place the banana slices in the pan. Carefully flip so that the banana caramelises evenly.  
  • Remove the bananas from the pan and add the brown sugar. Dissolve the sugar in the pan, once the sugar has dissolved add the coconut cream and stir to combine. Add the caramelised bananas back in the pan and carefully coat in the caramel. Allow to cool in the pan, add a little bit of water to loosen the caramel if it becomes too thick.  
  • Divide the ice cream and bananas between bowls, top with coconut, slivered almonds and spoonfuls of caramel.  

Golden Eggplant with Tomato Foam & Tahini 

Recipe by: Afik Gal  
Time: 2 hours  
Serves: 2

Ingredients

1 elongated eggplant, firm, light and shiny 
Extra virgin olive oil 
Sea salt 

Diluted Tahini 
2 tbsp tahini 
1 tsp lemon  
Small pinch of salt  
¼ cup water 

Tomato foam  
1 large tomato  
Reserved tomato  
Blitz in a food processor until smooth 
Pour into a strainer over a bowl, this will help to remove some of the liquid 

Spicy Green Sauce 
8 green chillies, tops removed halved lengthways, seeds removed, roughly chopped 
3 cloves garlic
1 small bunch coriander  
Pinch salt  
Pulse, chop  
Pour into a bowl, pour enough olive oil over to cover stir through  

Method

  • Preheat the oven to 150℃. 
  • With a sharp knife, slice the whole length of eggplant to 3cm steaks. Peel the skin off the steak, but leave the top on (stalk). That way you get a steak that resembles a whole eggplant.  
  • Pour a little drop of olive oil in the palm of your hands and coat the eggplant chunks from all sides, so its spongy flesh can absorb the oil. Avoid burdening the eggplant with too much oil, the slice doesn’t need to shine.  
  • Place the eggplant slices on a tray covered in parchment paper, with the inner side of the eggplant facing up. Leave 1cm space between slices. Season the eggplant with a sprinkle of salt and place in the oven. The eggplants should be ready in 1.5 hours, when they’ve goldened and softened, like paté. Leave the eggplant on the tray and allow to cool to room temperature. 
  • While the eggplant is baking, prepare the other elements.  
  • Remove the tops and seeds from the chillies, slice lengthways and roughly chop. Add the coriander, garlic and salt. Pulse to roughly chop the ingredients. Pour the ingredients into a small bowl, cover with extra virgin olive oil and stir through.  
  • To prepare the tomato foam, roughly chop a large tomato and add it and reserved tomato to a blender. Blitz until smooth and foam. Pour a small amount of foam into a sieve over a bowl, this will help to remove the liquid from the foam before you serve it.  
  • Place tahini in a bowl with lemon juice and salt- be careful not to add too much, it shouldn’t be lemony or salty it should just be balanced. While stirring slowly add your water. Add small amounts of water gradually so that you don’t make the tahini too runny.  
  • Strain the tomato foam onto a plate. Spin and drizzle over the tahini, creating a unique pattern (a motion of struggle between tomato foam and tahini). Place one chunk of eggplant in the plate, and position it according to the spinning movement. Sprinkle some of the spicy green sauce over the eggplant and on its sides to serve.  

Episode 4

Mushroom & Leek Potato Pie with Mushy Peas  


Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 1 hour + 10 minutes (+ cooling time)  
Serves:

Ingredients


30ml vegetable oil 
6 portobello mushrooms, roughly chopped  
4 leeks, washed and roughly chopped 
Pinch salt 
Water 
2 peaches, sliced into wedges  
1 sprig tarragon, finely chopped 
2 tbsp flour 
500ml vegetable stock  
1 cup peas 

Mash 
4 medium Desiree potatoes 
50ml extra virgin olive oil 
Salt & pepper 

Finish 
1 bulb garlic 

Method

  • Preheat your oven to 180C.  
  • Heat a large pot over medium heat. Add oil, leeks, mushrooms, a pinch of salt and a splash of water, cover with a lid and sweat down for a few minutes. Add thyme to the mushrooms, remove the lid.  
  • Add the peaches and tarragon to the mushroom mixture, stir through. Cook, uncovered until the liquid has cooked off.  
  • Add flour and stir through, this will prevent the flour clumping when you add the stock. Add the stock and stir through, coating everything. Cook for a few minutes until the sauce thickens. Stir in the peas and pour the mixture into your baking tray.  
  • Layer the mashed potato over the mushroom mixture, don’t worry about making it too smooth the lumpy bits will crisp up in the oven. Finish with olive oil and finally cut the bottom and top off the bulb of garlic placing it in the middle of the pie and pushing it down so it is half out and half in. 
  • Cook for 35 minutes or until the potato is golden brown. Remove from the oven and set aside for 30 minutes before serving. Squeeze the garlic bulb over the pie, be careful it will retain its heat, releasing the roasted garlic cloves to serve.  

Polenta Fries with Truffle Syrup & Thyme

 
Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 1 hour (+ 1 hour cooling time)  
Serves:

Ingredients


4 cups vegetable stock 
1¼ cup polenta  
5g salt 
1 tbsp chopped rosemary 
1 tsp chopped thyme 
1 tsp smoked paprika 
¼ cup oat butter 
½ cup polenta, to coat the fries  
500ml vegetable oil for frying 

Topping 
30ml truffle oil 
15ml lemon juice 
15ml golden syrup 
Salt  

Method

  • Place the polenta, vegetable stock, oat butter and salt in a pan and mix around and cook until the polenta has thickened to a paste. Add the chopped rosemary, thyme and paprika and nutritional yeast.   
  • Once thick, pour into a square 8 x 8-inch baking pan that has been lined with baking paper, cover with cling film so it doesn’t form a skin. Place the mixture in the fridge and let cool and set for about an hour. 
  • Once cooled, take the mixture out of the fridge and out of the tin. Then carefully cut the polenta lengthways to look similar to a thick cut chip. Roll them in some polenta to form a crust before frying. 
  • Heat a neutral oil (such as vegetable oil) to 180C. Fry the chips in batches for 5 minutes or until the outside is nice and crispy. Remove from the oil and place on a wire rack to drain excess oil. Season with a pinch of salt.  
  • With a whisk or a stick blender, blend the syrup and lemon together. While blending, slowly pour in the oil until it emulsifies. Taste and season with a pinch of salt.  
  • Stack your fries on a serving platter and drizzle with the truffle syrup.  

Rich Walnut Ragu

 
Recipe by: Nadia Fragnito  
Time: 35 minutes 
Serves: 4  

Ingredients 


2 cups walnuts  
1½ slices of bread, broken into pieces, approximately 60g (I like using day-old ciabatta style) 
1 tbsp stock powder (I like using plant-based beef-style stock) 
½ garlic clove, crushed 
Handful of fresh parsley  
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
700g good quality tomato passata or diced canned tomatoes 
Few basil leaves (optional) 
Salt & pepper, to taste 
500g dried or fresh fettuccine or pappardelle pasta 

Method

  • Add the walnuts, bread, stock powder, garlic, liquid smoke and parsley into a food processor and process until it resembles a medium-fine crumb. If you’d prefer a chunkier mince, your ragu will turn out a little crunchy in texture. To avoid this, you can soak walnuts overnight to soften. 
  • Heat the olive oil in a large non-stick frypan. Fry the walnut mince for a few minutes until brown. Stir through the passata and basil and simmer on low for 20 minutes, stirring often. 
  • Meanwhile, cook the pasta in a large pot of salted water until al dente.  
  • Before turning off the heat, check the ragu for seasonings, adding salt and cracked black pepper to taste. 
  • Stir the cooked pasta through the walnut ragu, adding a dash of reserved pasta cooking water if the sauce is too dry. Taste and season with salt and cracked black pepper to taste.  
  • Serve with a sprinkling of vegan parmesan cheese and a generous drizzle of olive oil. 

Roasted Radish & Kohlrabi Salad with Apple, Pine Nuts & Puffed Rice 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 45 minutes 
Serves: 2  

Ingredients 


1 bunch red radishes 
10ml extra virgin olive oil 
Pinch salt & pepper 
1 kohlrabi, remove leaves and outside  
1 green apple 

Dressing  
2 tsp Dijon mustard 
2 tbsp maple syrup 
½ lemon, juice 
1 bunch radish stems 
100ml vegetable oil  
2 tbsp toasted pine nuts 
2 tbsp puffed rice (optional) 

To serve 
1 radish, thinly sliced  
2 tbsp raisins  

Method

Preheat your oven 180C. 

  • Remove leaves from the radishes, clean and reserve. Place the Radishes in a bowl with oil, salt and pepper and bale in the preheated oven for 15 minutes. 
  • Meanwhile, cut the kohlrabi and the apple into thin rounds, then use a knife to cut the rounds into matchsticks. Place the apple matchsticks in acidulated water (a big bowl of cool water with lemon juice). This will stop them from going brown and will season with a soft flavour of lemon juice.  
  • Meanwhile place the cleaned radish stems in a bowl with the mustard, maple syrup, apple cider vinegar, lemon juice and blitz with a stick blender. While blending, slowly pour in the oil until it starts to emulsify.  Pour through a fine sieve or cheesecloth to remove any bits. 
  • Remove the radish from the oven and let cool slightly.  Slice in half.  Squeeze the water from the apple and kohlrabi and dry on to a paper towel.   
  • Place radishes, apple, kohlrabi, pine nuts and puffed rice in a large bowl. Pour over half of the dressing and toss together with your hands. Place the salad on a large platter, top with raisins and disks of thinly sliced fresh radish for a pop of colour. Serve with remaining dressing. 

Episode 3

Coconut Mushroom Soup 


Recipe by: Alice Zaslavsky 
Time: 1 hour 
Serves:

Ingredients

1 thumbs-worth of ginger, peeled 
2-3 cloves of garlic, peeled 
1-2 birds eye chillies 
100ml rice bran or peanut oil 
5 young coconuts 
250g fresh shiitake mushrooms, finely sliced 
200g baby king brown mushrooms, cut in half 
250g oyster mushrooms, torn into strips with your fingers 
150g king brown mushrooms, cut in half lengthways and cross-hatched 
150g fresh wood ear mushrooms, torn into forkfuls 
100g lion’s mane mushroom, torn into forkfuls  
100g enoki mushrooms, torn into noodle shapes 
75ml coconut amino  
50g tamarind paste 
1 tbsp coconut sugar syrup (optional) 
Fysh sauce (optional), to season  

Garnish 
1 bunch Thai basil, leaves and flowers picked 
1 bunch fresh coriander, torn into bite-sized leafy bits 
1 red chilli, finely sliced (enough to your taste) 
1 lime, sliced into cheeks for serving and squeezing as need be

Method

  • In a heavy-based pot, pop shiitake and baby king browns in the pan and, keeping the heat super high, wet fry the mushrooms off with a splash of water, until they start to colour. Keep a close eye on the water, if the pan looks to be a little dry, add another splash of water to keep everything loose and moving.  
  • Meanwhile, take the open coconuts and tip the juice through a fine strainer and into a jug or bowl. Scoop out the flesh from those coconuts using a large spoon and rinse lightly (the husk tends to stick, but if some doesn’t budge, it’s just ruffage!). Cut the flesh into strips and set aside. 
  • Heat a griddle pan to smoking hot and cook the king brown mushrooms until browned on both faces.  
  • Pound the garlic and ginger to paste with the chilli. Once you’re happy with the colour of your mushrooms, add some oil to the pan and chuck in the aromatic paste. Fry off until fragrant.  
  • Pour in the coconut juice and add the seared king brown mushrooms, oyster mushrooms, wood ear, lions mane (these mushrooms are more delicate, so are better off un-fried). Bring to a simmer and allow it all to bubble away for 20-25 minutes. With a couple of minutes to go, add the coconut amino and tamarind (and extra chilli, if you’re that way inclined). Taste for seasoning, add coconut sugar syrup if more sweetness is needed, or fysh sauce for more salt. Add enoki and turn the heat off.  
  • Arrange coconut flesh strips and grilled mushrooms in a bowl, pour over hot broth and mushrooms. 
  • Garnish with herbs, lime cheeks and extra chilli and serve.

Mixed Leaf Salad with Chickpeas & Currants 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 20 minutes 
Serves: 4  

Ingredients


200g leaves 
50g walnuts, roughly chopped 
1 x (420g) can chickpeas 
1 Lebanese cucumber, chopped 
1 cup cooked quinoa  
Extra virgin olive oil  
¼ cup currants 

Jar Dressing 
1 tbsp Dijon mustard 
2 tbsp red wine vinegar 
6 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 
Salt & pepper 

Method

  • Add oil to a hot pan over medium heat and shallow fry the currents for a few minutes or until they puff up. Pour into a bowl and set aside to cool.  
  • Place all the remaining salad ingredients into a bowl.   
  • With the dressing, in a jar, add all the ingredients and shake.  Once it has come together, pour over the salad and mix to coat the salad in the dressing. Add the currants and stir through.  

Sago Pudding 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 45 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients


900ml water 
6 tbsp sago 
1 x (400ml) can coconut milk 
3 pandan leaves, tied in a knot  
1 tbsp water 
2 tbsp water 
3 tbsp organic sustainable dark palm sugar 
¼ tsp chilli powder 
¼ tsp fine salt 

Garnish 
50g roasted peanuts, roughly chopped 
Chilli powder 

Method

  • Cook the sago in the water until fully see-through, about 5 minutes. Strain and rinse with water to remove as much starch as possible.  Place in a baking tray, place in the fridge for 20-30 minutes or until it has cooled completely. 
  • In the meantime, put the coconut milk in a pot with the pandan leaves and water, bring to a simmer then turn off the heat.  
  • In a small pot add the palm sugar with the 2 tbsp water, a pinch of salt and chilli and melt. 
  • Finally, pour the hot coconut milk into the sago tray and drizzle with the syrup, top with roasted peanuts and pinch of chilli.  

Spanish Style White Bean Casserole with Spinach & Tomato 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey 
Time: 45 minutes  
Serves: 4-6 

Ingredients


50ml vegetable oil 
1 brown onion 
3 cloves of garlic 
1 red capsicum 
1 green capsicum 
Salt & pepper 
3 sprigs of thyme 
2 bay leaves 
½ tsp smoked paprika 
1½ cups vegetable stock 
2 x (420g) can white beans (eg Cannellini, navy or butter beans) 
1 large potato, diced roughly 1cm cubes 
3 ripe tomatoes, diced roughly 1cm cubes  
120g baby spinach   
1 lemon, zest  
Bunch parsley, roughly chopped 

Method

  • Place a medium to large pot on the stove on low heat with the vegetable oil in it. Dice up the onion, garlic, red and green capsicum and place in the pan with the oil and a good pinch of salt and pepper.  Slowly fry this mixture for as long as time will allow you. This is the base that will make the dish sing at the end. Cook until the oil is released from the ingredients but there is no browning at all. It is important to cook the ingredients low and take your time. This can take up to 30 minutes. But if you don’t have the time – quick and hot in the pan will be fine too.   
  • Add in the paprika once all is cooked and then the bay and thyme and cook for 30 seconds. Pour in your stock, cans of white beans with one tin of the juice and discard the juice of the other, tomatoes and potatoes in the pot.  Cover the pot with a lid and let it cook away for 30 minutes up to an hour.  
  • Just before serving, stir through baby spinach and with a potato masher, mash a few times, this will make it creamy, rich and delicious.  
  • Finish by sprinkling over the parsley and lemon zest.

Episode 2

Baked Strawberries with Chocolate Ganache


Recipe by: Simon Toohey
Time: 50 minutes
Serves: 4-6

Ingredients


1 punnet strawberries
175g 85% dark chocolate, roughly chopped
150g silken tofu
45ml oat milk
Sea salt
Extra virgin olive oil

To serve
2-3 fresh strawberries
Pink peppercorns (optional), ground
Raw sugar (optional)
Fennel fronds

Method

  • Preheat your oven to 180C.
  • Remove tops from the strawberries and place in a baking tray, cut side down. Bake in the oven for 10-15 minutes or until plump.
  • Warm the oat milk in a saucepan over low heat until it begins to simmer. Pour over the chopped chocolate and stir. The residual heat will melt the chocolate.
  • Blitz the silken tofu with the chocolate and a pinch of salt until it all comes together. Pour into a bowl and set aside to set at room temperature for half an hour.
  • Place a spoonful of ganache on a serving plate. If you want to take this dish to the next level, sprinkle raw sugar over the ganache, use a blowtorch to dissolve the sugar and form a Brulee. Top with roasted strawberries, slices of fresh strawberry for a pop of colour, fennel and a sprinkle of ground pink peppercorns.

Momos with Spicy Cabbage and Mushroom


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 1 hour 20 minutes 
Makes: 25-30 momos 

Ingredients 


Dough  

2 cups all-purpose flour 
¾ cup warm water 

Filling  
4 tbsp vegetable oil 
½ green cabbage 
100g button mushrooms 
3 cloves of garlic 
½ red onion diced 
Big thumb ginger 
1 tsp cumin powder 
1 tsp coriander powder 
½ tsp turmeric powder 
Pinch salt  

Red Sauce  
1 x (410g) can whole tomatoes 
¼ cup water 
2 tbsp soy sauce 
2 tbsp malt vinegar 
1 tsp caster sugar 
1 tsp Kashmiri chilli or ¼ tsp chilli powder 
5 almonds 
Pinch salt 

Method

  • Mix the flour and water together and knead for 5 minutes. Cover and let rest for 30 minutes.  
  • Thinly slice the green cabbage, fine dice the mushrooms, onion, garlic and ginger. 
  • In a pan add the vegetable oil and place on high heat. When the oil is hot, place the chopped cabbage in with a pinch of salt and fry for 3 minutes, stirring as little as possible. Now add the mushrooms. Cook until the mushrooms have released their water, and the water has been cooked out.  Add in the rest of the chopped ingredients with another pinch of salt and stir to fry it all off.  You are aiming for colour on the cabbage here and not really on the garlic or anything else.  Cook for another 5 minutes. 
  • Finely stir in the spices and stir for 30 seconds to remove the raw spice taste.  Place the mixture into a tray to cool and wipe out the frying pan. 
  • For the sauce, place the can of tomatoes, water, soy, malt vinegar, caster sugar, chilli and almonds into the same frying pan and cook for 15 minutes on medium heat until the mixture starts to bubble then reduce so the bubbles aren’t so crazy.  Place the ingredients in a blender and blend until smooth. Pour into a serving bowl and set aside.  
  • Back to the dough. Cut your dough in half and pat down on a folded bench. Place the dough into a pasta roller or use a rolling pin, folding the dough each time you roll it. Lightly dust with flour if it begins to get sticky. Use a cutter, or even a mug, to cut out your dumplings.  
  • Place a round of dough in the centre of your hand, and place a dessert spoon amount of mixture in the middle of the dough and fold internally, pleating one fold over the other and so one until it is all connected. 
  • If like most people trying to fold dumplings (for the 1, 2, 3 or even 10th time), it isn’t as easy as the pros make it out to be. So here is my cheat way because, in the end, I want fully formed momos, not broken crazy ones that have lost all their filling.  With the strip of dough from the pasta machine, place it along a floured surface,  place a dessert spoon of filling in the middle and all the way along the dough. Then, fold one side of the dough over the other like a book.  With a cup or a pastry cutter cut the dough gently press the edges together to seal the dumpling. 
  • Place the dumpling in a steamer and steam for 5 minutes or until the pastry is cooked. 
  • Serve with red sauce.  

Mushroom & Leek Toastie 


Recipe by: Tim Bone  
Time: 30 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients 


1 loaf sourdough bread, sliced 
Nuttelex spread 
500g mixed mushrooms e.g oyster, Swiss brown, enoki, Shimeji. Sliced.  
4 cloves of garlic finely chopped 
2 leeks, white part only washed and sliced  
6 fresh thyme sprigs 
4 sprigs of fresh rosemary chopped 
Vegan feta style cheese 
Salt & pepper 
Extra virgin olive oil 

Method

  • Heat 2 pans on the stovetop, with 1 tbsp of olive oil in each pan. In one pan sweat the leeks over medium-low heat until nice and soft. In the other pan over medium-high heat add the mushrooms, rosemary and thyme, with a pinch of salt, and fry until nice and caramelised. Add garlic and season, cook for a further minute. Pour the cooked mushrooms and leeks into a bowl and stir to combine.  
  • Spread the nuttelex on the bread slices, the buttered sides will be the outside of the toastie. Build the toasties by topping a slice of bread with the leeks and mushrooms, crumble over the feta and top with another piece of bread. and spread Nuttelex on the outside of both slices of bread. 
  • Cook toasties in a pan over medium heat on both sides with a lid on until golden and toasted. Once the toastie is almost ready add a little splash of water to the corner of the pan, put the lid back on and cook for a further 30 seconds.  
  • Slice toasties and serve with a sprinkle of sea salt on top

Sate Tempeh with Pan Fried Bok Choy  


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 35 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients 


1 block of tempeh 
1 tbsp peanut oil 

Sate 
2 garlic cloves 
2 shallots  
3 red chillies seeds removed 
½ cup smooth peanut butter 
1 cup coconut cream 
¼ cup ketchup manis 
2 tsp soy sauce 
¼ cup unsalted roasted peanuts 
1 lime, juice only 
1 tsp sugar  
Salt, to taste  

Bok Choy 
10ml peanut oil 
1 bunch bok choy, sliced lengthwise 
1 clove garlic, roughly sliced 
1 lime 
Salt  

To serve 
½ cup rice 
1 bunch coriander 
1 long red chilli, sliced  
¼ cup unsalted roasted peanuts, roughly chopped  

Method

  • Chop the block of tempeh into lengths.   
  • Blitz chilis, garlic, shallots, peanuts splash peanut oil to a crumb consistency.  
  • In a pan place the oil, mince the garlic, dice the shallots and the red chillies and put in with the garlic. Mortar and pestle the peanuts to a crumble and stir through.  Bring the mixture to a quick bubble, reduce the heat and cook until it is slightly thickened.  Add the lime juice and stir. 
  • In a frypan, place in more peanut oil, the tempeh and fry until crisp on one side.  Turn the tempeh over and paint the satay over the cooked crispy side.  Repeat when turned one more time then take out and let rest, the sauce will colour quickly so be quick at this stage.  
  • Slice the bok choy lengthwise, leaving on the stems.  In the same pan turn the heat up until it is smoking hot. Pour in peanut oil and put in the bok choy cut side down and cook on this side for 2 minutes.   
  • Add garlic and lime juice to the bok choy and cook for 30 seconds. Sprinkle with salt and take out of the pan. 
  • Bowl of rice on the side.  Coriander and sliced red chilli with a couple more crushed peanuts to finish. 

Episode 1

Banana Bake 


Recipe by: Lynton Tapp 
Time: 1 hour 15 minutes  
Serves: 10 

Ingredients 


6-8 bananas, mashed  
¼ tsp salt  
2 tbsp chia seeds 
½ cup water 
¼ cup macadamias, roughly chopped 
¼ cup pistachios, roughly chopped  
¼ cup sesame seeds 
¼ cup dried cranberries 
¼ cup dried apricots, roughly chopped 
¼ cup pitted dates, roughly torn 
1 cup desiccated coconut 
1 tbsp wattleseed 

Garnish  
Macadamias 
Pistachios 

Method

  • Preheat the oven to 160C.  
  • Soak chia seeds in ½ cup water for a few minutes until they form a gel-like consistency.  
  • In a large mixing bowl mash, the bananas with the salt until you have a coarse paste. To the mixing bowl add the remaining ingredients and use a spatula to fold everything through. Place contents into a lined 20cm brownie tin (you want the slice to be about 4cm in thickness). Top with some extra macadamias and pistachios and bake for 1 hour. 
  • Remove from the oven and allow to cool in the tray.  

Rosti with Tomato Salad & Avocado 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 30 minutes  
Serves: 2  

Ingredients 


2 Dutch cream potatoes, grated 
30ml vegetable oil  
1 avocado 

Tomato Salad  
½ lemon, juice only 
2 tbsp agave 
100g cherry tomatoes (different colours), roughly chopped  
30ml extra virgin olive oil 
Salt & pepper  
½ bunch basil, roughly torn 

Method

  • Heat oil in a pan over medium-high heat. Add the grated potato to the hot pan and cook until it becomes crispy on one side, in the best way. Flip the rosti and cook again on the other side. 
  • While the rosti cooks, chop the tomatoes. Before adding the tomatoes to a bowl, squeeze the juice into the bowl to help release some of the juice. Add agave, lemon juice, olive oil, salt, pepper and basil to the tomatoes, stir through.  
  • Once the rosti is golden brown, slide onto a serving plate. Top with the tomato salad and generous spoonfuls of the dressing. Scoop avocado onto the rosti, season with salt to serve.  

Soba Noodles with Smashed Cucumber & Sesame 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 20 minutes 
Serves: 1-2 

Ingredients 

1 packet soba noodles 
3 spring onions, finely sliced 
1 tbsp + 3 tbsp sesame oil 
2 tbsp golden syrup 
½ tsp chilli flakes 
½ cucumber 
½ bunch mint 
½ bunch coriander 
1 tsp toasted white sesame seeds 
1 tsp toasted black sesame seeds 
1 lemon 
Pinch sal

Method

  • Fill a pot with water and bring to the boil. 
  • Pick and wash the mint and coriander. Roughly chop the cucumber into small but odd shapes, place in a mortar and pestle and smash, then cover with the 1 tablespoon of sesame oil and half the toasted sesame seeds along with salt, chilli, golden syrup. Add the juice of half a lemon, mint and coriander. 
  • Turn a burner on a low flame and cover with a heatproof wire wrack. In the mean-time, season the whites of the spring onion with a pinch of salt and a drizzle of sesame oil. Place them on the wire rack and cook for a few minutes, turning occasionally, until they begin to colour.  
  • Mix the soy, golden syrup, 3 tablespoons sesame oil, 1 tablespoon water and chilli flakes in a bowl and add ¾ of the chopped spring onions.  
  • When the water starts boiling, pour in 1 tablespoon salt and place the soba noodles in, giving a gentle stir so they are all immersed in the water and not sticking together.  After 3 minutes or when they are cooked through, remove from the water and rinse with cold water to cool them down. 
  • Transfer your noodles to a serving bowl.  Top with the cucumber and herb salad, finish with the leftover sesame seeds, spring onions and drizzle over the dressing. 

Tempura Eggplant Tacos 


Recipe by: Simon Toohey  
Time: 45 minutes 
Serves:

Ingredients 

500ml vegetable oil 
1 eggplant cut into strips 1 inch thick – at least 1 slice per tortilla that you will be using  
½ cup plain flour 
¼ cup cornflour 
½ tsp smoked paprika 
1 ½ tsp baking powder 
160ml soda water, chilled 
½ tsp salt 
1 tbsp aquafaba cream 

Salsa  
10 cherry tomatoes 
¼ red onion 
1 lime juice and zest only 
1 red chilli, halved, seeds removed  
½ tsp caster sugar 
½ tsp cumin seeds 
Salt  
1 tsp extra virgin olive oil  
10 sprigs coriander roughly chopped, to garnish 

Aquafaba Mayonnaise  
100ml aquafaba (liquid in chickpea tin)  
100ml extra virgin olive oil  
1 lime, juiced  
1 tsp sugar  
Pinch salt 
10 tortillas 

To serve 
Fresh limes, wedged  

Method

  • Pour the vegetable oil into a wok or pan and heat to approximately 180C. 
  • Use a whisk to mix the plain flour, cornflour, paprika, baking powder and cold soda water together in a bowl.  With chopsticks or tongs, coat the eggplant strips into the tempura batter mixture and then place gently into the oil.  Cook for 3 to 4 minutes, you don’t want any or very little colour on the tempura).   Take out of the oil and rest on a cooling rack. Season with salt. The batter will go crisp as it cools.  
  • Place the tomatoes, onion, chilli, lime juice, cumin seeds, caster sugar, salt and oil in a stick blender and pulse so that it comes together, this will keep everything chunky yet relatively similar sized pieces. Pour the salsa into a bowl and garnish with a few sprigs of coriander. This salsa is fresh and light to counterbalance the fried eggplant. 
  • To make the aquafaba mayonnaise, add aquafaba, lime juice, sugar and salt to a stick blender. Bring together and gradually add the oil in a slow stream, as the mayonnaise begins to form you can begin to add the oil quicker.  
  • In a large dry pan on medium-high heat place the tortillas.  Heat them through for 30 seconds on each side, put on a plate and cover with a tea-towel to keep warm. 
  • Place the warmed tortillas on a plate with 1 or 2 strips of fried eggplants, top with the salsa, and aquafaba mayo. Season of salt and a squeeze of lime to serve.