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Tag Archives: cookbook

10 Questions with Voula Halliday on getting kids to eat well

Posted on November 21, 2017 by Urban Suburban Mommy Posted in 10 Questions With .

The struggle is real. You pack what you think is a healthy lunch and when you clean out their lunch box after school you see the apple untouched, one bite out of the sandwich and the half-eaten yogurt is covering everything with a thin, disgusting layer of congealing goo. I know – sometimes I just want to throw the whole lunch box out. But those containers are expensive! And then on to dinner, which is a negotiation situation that rivals any Wall Street lawyer’s skill for arguing a case.

Urban Suburban Mommy caught up with one of this country’s national treasures, Voula Halliday. She’s prized for being able to overcome the irrational demands of any child’s appetite. A Le Cordon Bleu-trained Chef, she was the featured chef on the Steve and Chris show and has written for many publications on the subject. She has also written the must-have cookbook Eat at Home. We had the chance to ask her the 10 questions you know you want to know about just getting your kid to eat!

1. What does the ideal school lunch look like? Hot or cold?

[Laughing] I say ask your kid this question! The ideal school lunch is one that is nourishing and one that they will eat. Conversation is the key to establishing this. Ask your child to share with you what she or he enjoys to eat at lunch. Sometimes food that they love eating at home isn’t as appealing after it’s been sitting in a lunch box for a few hours so it gets set aside and left uneaten, even if they are hungry. Here’s an article I wrote on this subject for Today’s Parent.

2. What do you recommend for picky eaters?

I’m not a big fan of defining kids as “picky” because I think that kids are still learning what they like and don’t like, and that’s okay. I suggest encouraging children to try new things all the time. And don’t give up after the first time they taste something and say “yuk”. New flavours and textures sometimes need to be experienced a few times before they are embraced.

3. Some parents think there should be a main, a fruit and a snack in the school lunch; others throw in 5 or 6 small graze-able items. What’s the best route?

I think it’s perfectly fine to go with either option. It’s more about packing a lunch that your child will enjoy and that will give them the fuel they need to get through the day. If you know your child is better with fewer choices at mealtime, go with a square meal. If they are someone who likes to move around a plate that is a mix of things, then offer small portions of a variety of items. Something important to watch out for is that you don’t put too much food in their lunch because that can be a turnoff for kids.

4. Does having a special lunch box – a bento or timpani – help for kids? Does the visual presentation impact their appetites?

I am very much a visual person and I appreciate a special lunch box, but I don’t think that you have to use fancy lunchboxes to make lunch more appetizing.

For kids one of the biggest barriers to eating lunch is access to their food. Some containers are so difficult for little hands to open so look for easy-to-open lids. If you are buying a bento style box, look for ones with partitions so that the food inside doesn’t get tossed about or mixed up. No one wants their blueberries tasting like tuna. It’s a good to go shopping with your child so you can ask if they can open a container easily before you purchase it.

5. What super-foods should always be in lunches – meals in general?

There are so many wonderful whole foods that can go into creating a balanced meal for lunch. Visualize half the meal made up of vegetables – peppers, peas, tomatoes, zucchini, cucumber, chopped lettuce or cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, and pickles too. I could go on! A combo of their favourite vegetables, either raw or blanched (to keep them bright and flavourful it’s better not to over-cook veggies) and cut into bite-size pieces is great on its own or as part of something like a salad or a pasta dish.

Make the rest of the meal up from a balance between a protein such as chicken, fish, eggs, beans, cheese, yogurt, tofu – whatever your child enjoys – and a super-healthy starchy carbs. Quinoa, rice, fruit, beans or sweet potatoes are all great choices.

Sometimes I combine quinoa or rice or rice pasta with black beans, chicken, and a variety of my daughter’s favourite veggies that I have finely chopped. I add a bit of lemon and olive oil and some seasonings and create something tasty and super nourishing. She loves it.

6. Some parents say, “It’s just a treat” while others feel sugar is a total no-no in school lunches. Some teachers send home shaming notes for bad food choices. Is sugar a hard “no” in your books?

I’m always so surprised at how much refined sugar is showing up as an ingredient in processed food. It offers no nutrient value so it’s one of those ingredients that we all should be careful to note how much we are consuming.

I’m against shaming because it doesn’t provide parents or children with what they really need – to know what is in their food so they can make informed choices. My approach isn’t a “total no-no”, instead I use my skills to help guide people with ease and I offer solutions that are accessible for all sorts of meal requirements in my cookbook – even for sweet treats – often using honey or maple syrup instead of refined sugar.

When balanced by a diet that is overall healthy – based on whole foods, not processed – and an active lifestyle, having a portion of brownie or cake is okay.

[Brownies in my cookbook are made with black beans!] (Urban Suburban Mommy says: And they’re delicious! Your child will never know. We taste tested two batches “on the kids” lol. So good!)

7. With the peanut butter ban in most schools, is there a good way to get protein into their diet in another easy go-to sandwich?

Yes, besides the usual sandwich fillings of meat or fish you could instead go add sliced boiled egg, or slices of cheese.

I like making a sandwich spread in the food processor combining one can of drained chickpeas or black beans, a clove of fresh garlic, extra virgin olive oil, lemon juice and some seasoning. It’s very handy to have this in the fridge as a handy source of protein. You can make a spread like this out of edamame too.

8. Making lunch is time consuming, any tips on short cuts?

So many tips! At home my mantra is “Cook once, eat thrice!” We’ll cook with a plan to have leftovers so that meal prep during the week is easier. Eat at Home is full of what I call Loveable Leftovers – ideas for how to turn what’s left from one dish, into another meal. One of our favourite lunch box items is a savoury muffin I make from leftover chicken or ham, cheddar and little chunks of green apple. It’s so good! I’m the kind of person that would take leftover blanched broccoli and chopped leftover roast potatoes and turn it into a salad with the addition of whatever else I could pull from the fridge.

Other tips: We pre-cut veggies so that we can whip up a salad easily. We cook extra rice, pasta or quinoa at dinner to add to lunch and we regularly roast skinless chicken thighs or breasts to have in the fridge to add to mix in with our grains and veggies.

Another thing I find that comes in handy for lunch is finely sliced cabbage or Napa cabbage –it holds up so well and provides great crunch and nourishment to any salad or grain bowl.

9. What is the hardest part about feeding kids?

I think the hardest part for all of us, is time.

It’s hard to come home at the end of a long day, deal with homework and then have time to prepare a tasty and nourishing meal. So what to do? First, start having conversations as a family about foods you like – and involve children when you can in mealtime prep. You can learn a lot when you are all hands-on in the kitchen.

10. What is the best advice to parents on how to approach feeding kids healthy meals? Sometimes it’s chicken nuggets or pizza slices just to avoid a fight, how can parents move past that?

Involve them! Go to the grocery store as a family activity one day – when you aren’t stressed and racing against time. List favourite foods and talk about how to incorporate them into meals you will all enjoy. And during the week, keep it simple – it’s okay to cook the same things, or variations of the same, more than twice or three times in a month. If you can, create habits that help you – like making extra portions of favourite things to freeze and freeze leftovers in single servings that can go from the freezer to the lunch bag.

And yes, sometimes it’s going to be pizza or chicken nuggets – not necessarily to avoid a fight, but because you feel confident and good that you have established overall healthy balanced eating at mealtime so occasional convenience foods are perfectly A-OK!

EAT AT HOME contains over 150 recipes that show how easy it is to cook fresh, healthy, tasty meals every day of the week, including how to buy only what you will use, use everything you have on hand, swap ingredients without sweating it, and transform extras into Loveable Leftovers so you waste nothing.

About Voula:

Voula Halliday is a chef, writer, and artist with diverse and extensive experience in the food industry. A proud graduate of Le Cordon Bleu, she has presented her work on morning television and radio shows, and was one of the chef experts on CBC Television’s award-winning daytime show Steven and Chris. Most recently, she appeared on CTV’s Your Morning to whip up her yummy Apple Cheddar Chicken Muffins (see recipe on UrbanSuburbanMommy.com) and Bacon and Cheddar Quinoa Fritters. You can view the segment here:

Voula’s first appearance on Steven and Chris came about after she was discovered by one of the producers who was volunteering at a Public School where Voula served as the executive chef and program coordinator. She brought Voula onto the show after being taken by her warm personality and the way in which she transformed the usually mundane and unhealthy school lunches into fresh, nutritious and delicious meals for the students and faculty. Voula’s work has appeared in print and digital formats in a variety of publications, including Chatelaine, National Post, Reader’s Digest, and Bon Appétit.

 

Tags: cookbook, eat at home, food, healthy food, picky eater, recipe, school lunch, voula halliday .

Consider a Plant-Based Life and Live Longer

Posted on January 30, 2017 by Urban Suburban Mommy Posted in The Best You .

In our continued quest for wellness this month, we had the pleasure of speaking with fellow mom and A Plant-Based Life Cookbook Author Micaela Cook Karlsen.  She shared her take on why plants trump meat in the quest for a healthier lifestyle.  She was even kind enough to share some delicious recipes to prove it. You’ll be fascinated by the benefits of leading a plant-based life – it’s good for the whole family.  You’ll want to pick up a copy of her new book to learn more.

1. Why did you choose to lead a Plant-based life?

In the very beginning, around age 16 or 17, a couple of my friends were vegetarian, and I wanted to give it a try! I felt drawn towards eating more healthfully, but since I had struggled with feeling overweight for some time, I think the goal more in the forefront of my mind was to lose a little weight and maintain what I felt was a comfortable body weight for me. Over the years, my goals have shifted to be more focused on health for me and for the planet at the same time – and it’s nice that now that I’m so much more knowledgeable about a truly health idea, it’s very easy to meet both of those goals at once!

2.Why do you think it is important for people to consider living a plant-based lifestyle?

So many people in Westernized countries are facing either chronic illness or overweight. (Most people have heard that 2/3 of Americans are overweight and half those are obese.) As someone who has cancer, heart disease, and rheumatoid arthritis in the family, I’m concerned with living well into my old age, not just living longer. And as someone who struggled with weight and feeling comfortable in my body for many years, I feel so much compassion for anyone trying to lose weight unsuccessfully. As far as healthy weight goes, a whole food, plant-based diet is absolutely the easiest, most straightforward path to success because you can eat until you’re full without worrying about calories. I do believe with all my heart that important to accept yourself and your body wherever you are and whatever you look like. At the same time, for me, that’s balanced with my experience that when I finally got to a healthy weight for a woman my height, I started to feel so comfortable in a way I never had before! It’s easier than most people realize with plant-based eating.

3.How do you respond when critics say that a plant based lifestyle doesn’t taste good?

Many people mistakenly believe that tastes are fixed – almost as though your taste preferences were part of your personality. We enjoy what we are used to – so what we’ve eaten over the last few months, few weeks, few days, and even from morning to evening shapes what we want to eat and what we enjoy. Most people can recognize this with sugar – don’t eat it for a long time, and the attraction fades, but eat syrupy waffles on a Sunday morning and you’re probably in the mood for dessert that evening. People who say plant-based eating doesn’t taste good are simply accustomed to eating heavier animal foods and foods with added salt, sugar, and fat. If you switch to a plant-based diet without telling yourself you have to stick with it forever, if you can just stick with it for a few weeks, you’ll notice yourself starting to lose interest in some of the old foods. This means everyone has the ability to train themselves to genuinely enjoy healthy food!

4. What is your favorite plant based dish?

There are so many! Like most people who eat this way, I felt like diet expanded my diet rather than the reverse. Right now, one of my favorites is my own recipe Interstellar Lasagna in A Plant-Based Life. It’s a food I could eat for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

5. How do you recommend parents introduce a plant based lifestyle to their children?

It really depends on whether you are introducing it when they are little or older and have already established their own eating preferences. The second can be much more challenging. As parents, it’s inevitable that our children will exercise more and more free will as they get older. I think the best strategy is to help them develop good judgement, make sure they don’t feel judged for their eating habits, and then engage in a lot of dialogue with them about your own reasons for eating this way and your hopes that they will also choose a path of healthful eating – because, of course, you care about them! The biggest bang for your buck is cooking together. Let them choose plant-based recipes they are interested in, go shopping together, and then let them cook and experiment with minimal assistance from you. The more experience they have in the kitchen, the more empowered they’ll feel and the more ownership they’ll take over the food. Of course, make sure you keep delicious options on hand yourself in case what they’re making doesn’t turn out well!

6. What are the benefits of living this kind of lifestyle?

The benefits are many – you can easily achieve your ideal weight, you lower your risk for all types of chronic disease, and you can even arrest or reverse certain chronic diseases such as heart disease or diabetes. You’re doing something good for the planet, as a plant-based diet has been identified as the most environmentally sustainable choice we have. And of course, you’re living a compassionate lifestyle which millions of animals will appreciate.

ABOUT MICAELA COOK KARLSEN

Micaela Karlsen

MICAELA COOK KARLSEN is a founding employee and former Executive Director of the T. Colin Campbell Center for Nutrition Studies. A contributor to the New York Times bestseller Forks Over Knives and the creator of www.PlantBasedResearch.org, a free online database of research on plant-based nutrition, she holds an MSPH in Human Nutrition from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and is a PhD candidate in Nutritional Epidemiology at the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy. She is the author of A Plant-Based life: Your Complete guide to Great Food, Radiant Health, Boundless Energy, and a Better Body (AMACOM). She lives in Boston.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Plant-Based-Research-303384226459892/

Blog:  http://micaelakarlsen.com/blog/

Website:  http://plantbasedresearch.org/

Tags: A Plant-Based Life, cookbook, healthy, Micaela Karlsen, Vegan meal .

A picnic fit for a queen

Posted on June 14, 2016 by Urban Suburban Mommy Posted in Fame & Fam .

photo: PolizeiBerlin

Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II photo: PolizeiBerlin

While we’re not your typical obsessed Royal watchers, we’ve got to admit that there’s something enchanting about the fairytale family, and we wish Her Majesty a very happy 90th birthday.

Carolyn Robb, was the personal chef to the Royal Family for a decade. She fed Prince Charles and Lady Diana when Harry and William were just little princes that enamoured the world. Robb shared some of the  favourite Royal dishes – and she’s got the inside scoop on the royal faves. So to celebrate Her Majesty’s 90th birthday, we recommend this picnic of dishes created by Robb. These dishes are perfect for packing up and literally fit for a Queen!

The menu – click on any of the descriptions for the full recipe: 

SALAD OF PROSCUITTO-WRAPPED PEACHES WITH FIGS & BUFFALO MOZZARELLA: This is a wonderful way to begin a picnic and the salad can be presented in a salad bowl or in a box for ease of packing and transporting it.

SALAD OF PROSCUITTO-WRAPPED PEACHES WITH FIGS & BUFFALO MOZZARELLA:
This is a wonderful way to begin a picnic and the salad can be presented in a salad bowl or in a box for ease of packing and transporting it.

CURRIED CHICKEN SALAD WITH FRESH MANGO & TOASTED CASHEWS: 'Coronation chicken' was originally created to celebrate HM The Queen's coronation in 1953. This recipe is my interpretation of the dish and what better recipe to use for a picnic in her Majesty's 90th birthday year!

CURRIED CHICKEN SALAD WITH FRESH MANGO & TOASTED CASHEWS:
‘Coronation chicken’ was originally created to celebrate HM The Queen’s coronation in 1953. This recipe is my interpretation of the dish and what better recipe to use for a picnic in her Majesty’s 90th birthday year!

ASPARAGUS, SWISS CHARD & GOATS CHEESE TART: This tart is a must for a picnic; accompanied by a simple salad and minted new potatoes. The filling can be varied according to taste and what ingredients you have available. You can make one large tart or individual ones with different fillings, to satisfy all tastes!

ASPARAGUS, SWISS CHARD & GOATS CHEESE TART:
This tart is a must for a picnic; accompanied by a simple salad and minted new potatoes. The filling can be varied according to taste and what ingredients you have available. You can make one large tart or individual ones with different fillings, to satisfy all tastes!

SODA BREAD: I made this bread almost every day during my years as a royal chef. It is very quick and simple to make and I don't think you will find a more delicious loaf than this. It is best eaten freshly baked, but makes really good toast on day two. If it comes out of the oven just before you go on your picnic you can wrap it in baking parchment and a tea-towel to keep it warm!

SODA BREAD:
I made this bread almost every day during my years as a royal chef. It is very quick and simple to make and I don’t think you will find a more delicious loaf than this. It is best eaten freshly baked, but makes really good toast on day two. If it comes out of the oven just before you go on your picnic you can wrap it in baking parchment and a tea-towel to keep it warm!

LIME, RASPBERRY & WHITE CHOCOLATE DRIZZLE CAKE: Cut into hearty chunks and served with a dollop of thick cream or Greek yoghurt this is the best way to round off a lovely picnic lunch. You could use blueberries or blackberries instead of raspberries.

LIME, RASPBERRY & WHITE CHOCOLATE DRIZZLE CAKE:
Cut into hearty chunks and served with a dollop of thick cream or Greek yoghurt this is the best way to round off a lovely picnic lunch. You could use blueberries or blackberries instead of raspberries.

the royal touchEnjoy the picnic! If these aren’t enough and you’re craving more royal recipes, there are 100 more delicious dishes created by Robb, in her new cookbook: The Royal Touch: Simply Stunning Home Cooking From A Royal Chef. And if you’d like your very own copy, ACC Art Books is offering Urban Suburban Mommy’s readers a 35% discount, just use promo code: ROYAL to save on your order!

7/5/15 Carolyn Robb and daughters Mandy (youngest and ..... pics David Poole mobile 00447530348498

Carolyn Robb was Personal Chef to TRH Prince and Princess of Wales, Prince William and Prince Harry for ten years. 

 

Tags: 90th birthday, Carolyn Robb, cookbook, featurexx, HRH, Lady Diana, Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Prince William, princes, Queen Elizabeth, recipes, royal chef .

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