Quinoa has become a new favourite of mine as it is hearty, versatile, easy to freeze, is a complete protein source, is gluten-free and has a high nutritive value.
It also tastes good.
Tonight I made a quinoa salad using fresh vegetables and fruit from yesterday's market.
I wanted to make a zesty salad that would keep well - so something light on dressing and with vegetables and fruit that wouldn't go mushy by tomorrow (yes tomato - I'm talking to you;)
I am very happy with how this recipe turned out - use it as a template, adding in veggies and fruit you like/have in the fridge that won't go soggy. You can't go wrong!
What You'll Need - The Salad:
- 1 cup quinoa
- 1 red pepper
- 1/4 head of broccoli
- 1 crunchy apple
- 1/4 cup of raisins (dried cranberries would also be nice)
- 1/4 cup chopped walnuts (almonds would also work well)
- 1 large carrot
What You'll Need - The Dressing:
- 1 Tbps liquid honey
- 1 Tbps curry powder (I used the Silk Road Spice Merchants Madras Curry Powder. This one is heaven)
- 1.5 Tbps olive or grapeseed oil
- 2 Tbps fresh lemon juice
- Twist of fresh pepper
- 1 Tbps dried dill flakes (not necessary, but I love dill...and just dried some and wanted to use it)
What You'll Do:
- Cook your quinoa (1 cup quinoa, 2 cups water. Boil water and slowly add quinoa, turn the heat down to a simmer, cover and cook for 15-20 minutes or until all the liquid has been soaked into the grains)
- Dice your vegetables - make them as small as you can, so each bite has more than one piece of fruit or vegetable on it
- Crush your nuts
- I just typed 'crush your nuts'...(insert immature giggle)
- Once your quinoa is cooked, let cool completely. Hot quinoa = soggy & soft veggies
- In a small jar, add in the oil, lemon juice, honey, curry powder, dried dill and pepper
- Put the jar lid on, give it a good shake until combined
- Stir in your dressing into the quinoa grains until absorbed
- Add the quinoa into the bowl of diced veggies and fruit
- Stir until completely mixed through
- Enjoy!
If you overdid it on the quinoa and cooked too much, good news is this grain freezes beautifully.
A trick I like is to use ziplock freezer bags instead of tupperware to store the excess.
This way you can squeeze all the air out of the bag, leaving little room for freezer burn to sneak in. You can also make the grains lay flat, so they defrost way faster than a deep container full.
The STEWART SCORE:
Appearance: 2
Taste: 2
Ease: 1.5
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