Honestly Healthy for Life

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One thing that may not be obvious, although I have alluded to it, is the fact that I am vegetarian (occasionally pescetarian).

I often don't raise it with people unless specifically asked or if I have been invited to someone's for dinner for the first time. There is no particular reason for this other than the fact that I view it as very much a personal choice and I don't wish to prothlytise. 

There are however a few difficulties with not eating meat; you are lucky if you have more than one main meal choice in a resturaunt and cook books often only have a few recipes you can try and they are usually starters or involve mushrooms. As a side note I know more vegetarians who dislike mushrooms than like them which is problematic when most resturaunts have a mushroom risotto as their only vegetarian option. 

I am therefore disproportionately excited when I come across vegetaterian cook books that offer more than the usual bland fare. Last year I bought Honesty Healthy by Natasha Corrett and Vicki Edgson and I absolutely adored the recipes. I initially bought it on kindle but used it so much that I bought the hardback as well. You can see a few of my attempts here and here. 

The philosophy behind Honestly Healthy is that you should avoid acid forming foods and aim to eat a balanced diet based around foods that metabolise as alkaline. But whether or not you subscribe to an alkaline diet or not the recipes are a great way to increase your vegetable and fruit content and are packed with flavour. 

So when a second book  Honestly Healthy for  Life was announced I preordered a hard copy from Amazon with all the excitement of a child on Christmas morning. Then I had to wait. 

Finally it arrived and this is my review having had an oppertunity to try out some of the dishes and you will see a few of the pictures I have taken of my endeavours tomorrow. 


Layout
One if the really good things about both of the Honestly Healthy books is that they are filled with pictures. Not only does this allow you to see what you meal should look, albeit perfectly presented, but it also makes you reconsider recipes that you might otherwise have brushed over from their title (I am thinking of the rainbow salad with roasted vegetables). 

However the thing that really makes the new book stand out from others is the way it has been organised beyond simple breakfast, lunch and dinner sections. Instead the book is made around your life style indicating recipes that can be made ahead of time, to share with friends, Sunday Roasts with the family etc. 

In fact the layout is so good that my brother Al, who once cooked my veggie sausages in bacon fat to give them flavour and then didn't understand why I didn't eat them, spent an afternoon looking through the pages over Easter identifying meals he liked the look of. 

I loved the last section which looked as food as mood medicine with tummy flattening soup and break up hot chocolate. Showing that food not only plays a role in our bodily health but also our mood. 

Recipes
The recipes are relatively simple to follow but you will need quite a few different flours and nuts if you want to try the baked goods. Because I have been using the earlier book I have managed to stock pile a few of these but that said I substituted gluten free flour for a few recipes when I could not find the flour required locally and that seems to work when needed. 

You do need to be good at preplanning if you want to follow the book as a lifestyle choice as there are recipes that require you soak ingredients overnight although there are other ways to make the recipes more convenient by using tinned beans and shop bought nut milks rather than make your own. However this book assists better with this than the last book by recommending recipes requiring preparation that can be made on a Sunday that will feed you across the week. 

One of the critisms that I have seen of the Honestly Healthy brand on the internet is that you need to buy expensive ingredients to eat the alkaline way and there is a degree of truth to this however once you have stocked up on the store cupboard items they only need to be topped up from time to time and efforts have been made to include multiple recipes requiring the rarer ingredients. I do however think that as I am already a vegetarian this helped significantly as I had a fairly well stocked herb and spice rack which gives a lot of flavour to the food and I am used to adding nuts to food to increase my protein content. 

Along with the recipes there is helpful nutritional information as to the benefits of certain ingredients so you feel virtuous as you cook. 

There are also drink suggestions which would be particularly helpful for entertaining and they even include the odd alcholic suggestion. This was not present in the earlier book but is a very welcome addition to this one. 

What is lacking is calorie content which would be useful for those who are using it as part of a weightloss programme or who do a lot of excercise. 

Opinion
Often with books of this ilk you feel like there is a lot of repetition in the recipes between the first and second book and I did not get a sense that the authors of these books were struggling for material, and I have sense that the next book will be equally inspiring. 

For a vegetarian these books are a god send full of origional ideas that fill you up without relying upon cheese or mushrooms, although both feature. When I used the previous book I found myself feeling lighter and less bloated and this book continues in that tradition. 

What I love most about these books is that they encourage you to experient in the kitchen discovering ingredients and giving me a new outlook on food. This had crossed over into recipes I make that are not in this book including a gluten free feta macaroni cheese for winters days requiiring comfort food. 

All in all I would thoroughly recomend this book to meat eaters and veggies alike and I am very excited that they are in the process of finalising the third book which will be added to my Amazon pre order list. 

Check the blog over the next week for my attempts and top tips on where to get the harder to locate ingredients.  

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Dishing in Dish

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"I'm only a beer teetotaller, I am not a champagne teetotaller. I do not like beer " George Bernard Shaw

For me May is a slightly odd month. If you are arround no one else is but when you go away everyone else is back. I blame the bank holidays! 

Between my weekend in Edinburgh and Lydia's week in Rome we were due a catch up so we hot footed it to Dish on Boar Lane to dish our gossip. 

The resturaunt downstairs is perfect for groups of friends gathering for celebrations but the bar didn't really somewhere I have considered hanging out before. 

Well they are looking to overhaul that and have hired a new head barman, Jamie. He treated us to a sneak peak of the new cocktail menu which will launch as soon as the menu's arrive from the printers. 

We told him our liquor of choice and whether we liked sweet, sharp or cirtrusy flavours. From which he created a concoction to make even the most sceptical drawl. I picked gin whilst Lydia went for ameretto. 

I am afraid I can not recall all of the names of the cocktails but look how pretty they are. 

Duchess Trevlyn 

This was my favourite. A mixture of gins, floral and botanical elements and apple juice. 


Eventually we rolled ourselves home. 

The new cocktail menu is launching in July so keep an eye out for the launch night. 

Photo of the rum punch curtsy of Lydia's twitter feed. 
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The Witchery by Castle

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Sometimes you have to go away to actually spend time with someone. Which is how I came to be in Edinburgh last weekend.

We arrived on Friday and headed to the Witchery by Castle for dinner and some one on one time. Located at the top of the Royal Mile just as you approach the Castle this resturaunt and hotel has a formidable reputation not only for it's atmosphere but also it's food. 


This is the sort of olde world decor that you expect from Edinburgh with heavily decorated wooden panels and thistle center peices topped off with lashings of candles. 


We elected to have the set menu and started off with Hendricks gin and tonics before the starters. 


I went for the Wild Garlic Veolute and smoked cauliflower. Which looked a little like a witches brew with small peaks of the smoked cauliflower peaking through. However it was a beautifully delicate combination of flavours without the overwhelming scent you normally associate with garlic. 


My fellow diner elected to have the scallop with broad beans and chorizo. Which came with a delicately wrapped lemon to keep the pips out. 


My main was a tender stem broccoli, baked goats cheese pine nut crumble. It was all very green whilst my dining partner's scallops and chicken was all very beige. The vegie option was inventive as options went and it's definitely something that would be good to try emulate when wanting to impress dinner guests but I was left feeling a little under whelmed. My partner in crime enjoyed his dish but stated that he could have done with some vegetables. 

You know how often resturaunts are let down by their deserts as if it was an after thought. Well not at the Witchery where I could happily have eaten three courses of desert. I went for the Glazed Lemon Tart and it was wonderful. I came with a smearing of dark bitter chocolate on the plate which worked beautifully with the texture of the tart and cream. And I demolished it all before a camera could come out whoops. 

Whilst my meal was enjoyable I think that it was the setting of the resturaunt that made it and I suspect that I went with too high expectations. The resturaunt seems to have a particularly good reputation for seafood and if you are an oyster fan this will be the place for you. Certainly the couple who were sat near us tucking into a platter of oysters and lobsters looked like they were in heaven. 

The set menu is £35 per person and you can make reservations online or just pop in and see if there is a table free. 
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Making Scents of it all

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"A woman's perfume tells more about her than her handwriting" Christian Dior

The other day in Edinburgh the Boy came into our hotel room and announced that when he had been in the bath he had seen a bottle on the side assumed it was from the hotel and sniffed. He then thought to himself ah that's what Amy smells like. 

When I turned 29 I sat down and wrote two lists one looking back at the things I had achieved and another seting down a list of things to achieve over the next year. One of the items was to find a signature purfume. Which ended up being the Bottle that the Boy sniffed. 

The story of my scent begins with my trip to Nottingham last year to visit RM. Whilst we were out and about wandering the streets RM decided to pop into Boots for a new bottle of purfume. We tested and unfortunately I also tasted a few concoctions before she settled on her purchase. I however struggled finding that the jasmine (my normal note of preference) based purfumes smelt too saccharine for my taste or too darkly powerful for everyday wear. 

We contemplated what to do next before Wandering into the Jo Malone shop. I have adored Jo Malone ever since a work client event where Pomegranate Noir and Blue agava and cacao where layered and massaged onto my arms. 

RM and I played and sprayed and generally were a bit silly before I settled upon Peony and Blush Suede cologne. Fresh but warm, sweet but with a hint of musk and feminine it just felt right. 


I have now been wearing this purfume since October last year and it still feels fresh but as the Boy, who has only known me since the end of November will tell you it now smells just like me. 
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The Wilson Women

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As part of my continuing 30 before 30 I arranged a day with my Mum and Sister in law (Little W) to do something that they wanted to do. At Easter we brained stormed options and settled on afternoon tea. As you will be aware this year has been a little cream tea heavy what with the Tetley, Chesterfield and Gomshall Mills, so I suggested that we picked to go to a stately home where we could wander arround the grounds as well. 

As we all live in different places Mama Wilson travelled up from London staying with Al and Little W the night before. They then drove over to Leeds collecting me en route to Castle Howard. 

Castle Howard is one of those stately homes that people inevitably recognise as it has featured as the setting for various films and TV programmes ahem Brideshead revisited. 

On arrival we met the resident peacocks (who after many attempts finally posed for us) 

We had hoped to wander the grounds and soak up the grandure but instead it rained in only the way that England can. 

We retreated to the indoors and took refuge in the opulent great rooms. 



Surrounding ourselves with the Stoney faced inhabitants (sorry I can hear your groan!)



Before coming across the breathtaking entrance made infamous by Brideshead Revisted. 


From which we preambulated through the exhibits of the fire and subsequent restoration. 


Stumbled across the kids mad hatter tea party


Flitting through the gallery


And the amazing arts and crafts chapel 



At which point we headed for warming soap and heavily laden scones. 

Before attempting the rain soaked grounds



As a side note recently the TeenageCancer Trust have been in the national news but before they were Little Mrs W was one of their last year when she was diagnosed with non Hodgkin's lymphoma aged 23.

It is easy to be impressed with the efforts of an individual but it is also easy to forget the human face of those who benefit from their efforts. Hopefully Stephen's legacy will mean that the Teenage Cancer Trust can continue to support and provide respite to other young adults such as my sister in law, who is now fortunately in remission. 
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