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KEYWORDS: HEALTHY FOOD
Oodles of
boodles
Year of the Rooster?
More like the year of
boodles! While those-who-
come-up-with-food-trends might have
exhausted all options when it comes to
zucchini and caulifl ower, the trend of
replacing processed carbs with vegetables
is staying. The new subs are pumpkin
spiralised into ‘boodles’ (butternut
squash noodles); eggplants turned into
‘chips’; and sweet potato sliced and
popped into the toaster for ‘toast’.
Do the
char-char
You’ve maybe seen
the face masks
(Dermalogica, for
one) and the toothpaste (Colgate,
for another), but now eating charcoal
= a red-hot trend. It’s been used for
thousands of years as a natural detox
as it soaks up toxins in the body. The
form found in food and drink is activated
charcoal, made from natural sources
such as coconut shells, and you can
expect to fi nd it in anything from tonics
and cocktails to eye-catching black
burger buns, savoury wafers and
biscuits, macaroons and ice-creams.
On the drinks front, Pressed Juices
(pressedjuices.com.au) is leading the
way with their Black Lemonade tonic
made with activated coconut charcoal,
alkaline water, lemon and cayenne.
One person’s
trash
...Is tomorrow night’s
dinner? You might
be horrifi ed to know
Australians bin $8-10 billion of food
every year, but luckily there’s an
increasing movement towards fi nding
ways of tackling the issue – like pickling
and soup-making with leftovers (visit
lovefoodhatewaste.vic .gov.au for recipes
that use up the most commonly thrown-
out foods). You could also ease your
conscience by purchasing wonky goods
at grocery stores such as Harris Farm
Markets (harrisfarm.com.au) – they have
an ‘Imperfect Picks’ range of fruit and
veg that might look weird on the outside,
but are perfectly fi ne on the inside. This
helps grocers take more of the farmers’
crops (did you know 25 per cent of
crops don’t even leave the farm just
because they look a bit ugly?!), which
in turn helps reduce food wastage.
Bowled over
At the time of going to
print, #buddhabowl was
featured in more than
74,500 posts on Instagram.
Buddha (or nourish) bowls combine
the principles of Chinese medicine –
a kaleidoscope of greens, raw or roasted
veg, proteins (like tofu or fi sh), grains (such
as brown rice or quinoa), seeds and topped
with spicy or creamy dressings. Don’t be
intimidated by the Insta crowd though; you
don’t need to be a Canon pro to build your
own nourishing bowl of goodness.
Sustainably
fi shy
Love cooking with fi sh
but concerned about
overfi shing, modern
farming practices and the impact they
have on our oceans? You’re part of a
growing trend. In response to consumer
feedback, brands are listening up and
delivering more certifi ed sustainable fi sh
products – think John West, Tassal,
Coles and even Ikea. Given seafood is
such a big part of the Aussie diet (we eat
around 25kg of seafood per person every
year, FYI), this is good news. All you’ve
gotta do? Look out for the Marine
Stewardship Council (MSC; msc.org)
blue label on your packaging. You can
also download Australia’s Sustainable
Seafood Guide app (free, iTunes and
Google Play) for choosing seafood (and
restaurants) responsibly on the go.
Cottage cheese
comeback
It was the slimmer’s food
du jour back in the ’70s
and, although it’s never left
our supermarket fridges, this nutritious
dairy food is creeping onto our plates
again, thanks to our hunger for high-
protein foods. Dating back to the ancient
Greeks and Egyptians, cottage cheese is
made by curdling milk and draining away
most of the liquid whey, resulting in
a fresh-tasting dairy product that’s high
in protein and low in fat. It’s also a source
of vitamin B12, phosphorus, calcium
and ribofl avin, among other valuable
nutrients. Get your serve by spreading it
onto your sandwiches and toast, dipping
some crackers in for an afternoon snack,
or dolloping it into quiches.
Cross-breeding
veggies
If you haven’t already
spotted them in your
local Coles, kalettes are
a British-bred cross between kale and
Brussels sprouts, look like mini cabbages
and taste milder and sweeter than
Brussels sprouts. When they hit Australia
in 2015, kalettes were the fi rst new veggie
launched in the country in more than
a decade (since broccolini!). They’ve
inherited a bunch of nutritional benefi ts
from their parents – like vitamin K, folate,
vitamin C and carotenoids, so blanch ’em,
stir-fry ’em, roast ’em, or grate ’em raw!
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EatFIT
WORDS
CLARE HARGREAVES
PHOTOGRAPHY
ISTOCK; THINKSTOCK