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Tuesday, 21 October 2014

Please Vote for Us in the QHotelsFamily Ambassador Competition

A few weeks ago, I entered the QHotels Family Ambassador Competition, and along with all of the other applicants, was shortlisted. You can see our entry here . Our entry was made before the first initial closing date, and so the girls were the first of the competition applicants to make videos, and others followed suit after seeing our videos on how the girls would revamp the Quackers Packs.

It would be great to win, and get the chance to help improve the Quackers Pack, and improve a stay at a QHotel for families, and hopefully for vegetarians and those with special diets too. 

We would LOVE a vote to help us to win if you would be willing. Just click on the badge below, and search Clare Rudd. 

If you also want to tweet "I just voted for @veggiexperience (Clare Rudd) in the QHotelsFamilyAmbassador Competition - You can too http://www.qhotels.co.uk/family-ambassador/" it would be much appreciated 

Thanks so much!!





Featured Post: HouseTrip UK Vegetarian/Vegan "Where to Eat" Guide

I love travelling, and especially enjoy indulging in a city break with the family. I also love eating out when we go away, however finding places to eat with good vegetarian food when you are travelling can be a bit like searching for a needle in a haystack. The Vegetarian Menu in restaurants can be so hit and miss, and so sometimes it can be tricky to decide where to go and eat. 

Recently I was introduced to a new eating guide from HouseTrip UK, one of Europe’s leading home rental companies. They have published an exclusively vegan and vegetarian ‘Where to Eat’ guide for London, Berlin and Paris and will hopefully be adding more cities in the future.


I think that this is a fantastic idea, as it enables you to research places to eat before you travel to your city of choice, and plan where you are going to eat. It also gives you an idea of how much your meal might cost for those traveller's who may be more budget conscious.

You can view the guide in "Location View", which helps you to work out what restaurants are near to the part of the city, or the sights you are visiting. In Location view, you can search by "best for families", "best for occasions", and "vegan". You can also view the guide in "Directory View", enabling you to peruse all of the restaurants, and search them A-Z. The website also gives a picture, bio of the restaurant, and top tip. It also includes links to their website, so there is lots of information included to help you make your choice of restaurant.

The London Guide is clearly well researched as it features some of my favourite London Vegetarian and Vegan Restaurants including The Gate, Tibits, and Mildred's.

I would thoroughly recommend taking a look at the HouseTrip UK Vegetarian and Vegan ‘Where to Eat’ guide for London, Berlin and Paris as it is a great resource for those who like to eat out when they travel, but may be struggling to find meat or fish free restaurant options.

Disclosure:I received payment for this post. Please see my Featured Post Policy

Thursday, 16 October 2014

Vegetarian Meatballs with Peanut and Tamarind Sauce

Another spicy recipe to celebrate Curry Week today, made from The Spice Tailor Chutni range developed by Anjum Anand. Today, I am featuring the range's Peanut and Tamarind Chutni, which can be transformed into a delicious sauce for a tasty Vegetarian dish with just a bit of help from a few other ingredients. The recipe I am using is adapted from Anjum Anand's Lamb Kofta in Peanut and Tamarind Sauce recipe. I have basically replaced the Lamb Kofta's with Vegetarian Meatballs instead, to make the dish vegetarian friendly. This dish is fantastic served with plain rice or naan bread, or it could form part of a bigger Indian buffet. How are you celebrating Curry Week? Any tips for Vegetarian Curry?

Spiced Vegetarian Meatballs with Peanut and Tamarind Sauce

Ingredients
For the Sauce: 
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tsp. sweet paprika
¼ tsp. red chilli powder
1 onion, finely chopped
1 tbsp. tomato purée
½ jar The Spice Tailor Peanut and Tamarind Chutney
200ml coconut milk

300g Meat Free Meatballs 

Method
  • Fry the meatballs in a little oil for a few minutes until browned. 
  • Removed from the heat, drain the oil and leave on a plate with kitchen towel to absorb the excess oil. 
  • Fry the onion in some oil, and cook until golden brown. 
  • Add the tomato purée and stir well for a minute or so. Add the spices and a splash of water and cook for another 1-2 minutes. Stir in the chutney and coconut milk and a little splash of water and bring to a simmer. 
  • Add the veggie meatballs to the sauce and partially cover the pan with a lid. Lower the heat and gently cook for 15-20 minutes until the meatballs are cooked through and the sauce has thickened. Serve while still hot.

Products Offered in consideration for review

Wednesday, 15 October 2014

National Curry Week with "The Spice Tailor"

This week is National Curry Week, which is running from the 13th - 19th October. Traditionally, many curries have always been Vegetarian, although in the UK, we tend to add meat and fish to our curry dishes.

Curry Week is a fantastic time to celebrate Indian Cuisine, and indulge in some of the premium curry sauces and chutneys which are available in the supermarkets. Unless you have grown up cooking curry from scratch, it can be tricky to know where to start, and so getting a helping hand from something pre-made can be a great idea.

To celebrate Curry Week, I was sent a selection of sauces and chutni's from The Spice Tailor range, which is produced by TV chef and cookery writer Anjum Anand. Anjum features in the hit BBC2 series Indian Food Made Easy and has a best-selling book of the same name.

As well as the fantastic sauces in the range, I was really interested in the chutney range, which comes in really delicious, interesting flavours I haven't cooked with before, including fruity and sticky Green Papaya, fragrant and zesty Mama’s Lime Chilli Pickle, bright and herby Mint Leaf Chutni, spicy and tangy Tomato, Garlic & Chilli Chutni and roasted and savoury Peanut and Tamarind Chutni.

To celebrate Curry Week, I will be featuring a few different recipes using The Spice Tailor Range this week, starting today with Goats Cheese Beetroot and Papaya Chutni Tartlets, featuring The Spice Taylor Green Papaya Chutney. I know these are not strictly curry related, but they would make a good addition to an Indian themed meal!


I found these tartlets so supremely quick and easy to make. I loved the idea of mixing the green papaya with the chutni to form a paste as the base to place beetroot and goats cheese on, and to give the tartlets a lovely spicy twist. They also tasted absolutely delicious - fruity and yet creamy at the same time. You could also possibly use mango or another fruit chutney to make these.

You can find the recipe for Goats Cheese Beetroot and Papaya Chutni Tartlets here.

Check Back tomorrow for another Vegetarian recipe to celebrate Curry Week

Disclosure: Products offered in consideration for review. All views are my own.



Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Vapiano Restaurant Soho - A Review

Recently we were invited to Vapiano in Soho to sample the Vegetarian menu. Vapiano in Soho is newly opened, and is one three Vapiano restaurants in London. There are around one hundred and forty Vapiano restaurants around the world. Vapiano is a restaurant which is a little different from the rest, in that it operates on a card system. You go to the counter to order your food and drinks, and you pay for the food at the end. The restaurant sells Pasta, Pizza, Antipasti and Salad which is ordered directly from the counter with separate counter's for each type of food. The food is prepared fresh in front of you, and then charged to your card. The restaurant's system reminded me of an upmarket fast food chain or modern school cafeteria. I quite like this idea in principle, however, I wouldn't say it works for everyone. There is also the danger you may lose track of what you are spending and get a surprising shock at the end.

Our Experience

Decor/Feel of the restaurant - I really loved the decor of the restaurant. The counters are bright, fresh, and enticing. The dining areas are spacious, and yet intimate, and there are beautiful oak tables to sit at and dine. I also loved the lighting. There is a lovely mural on the back of the wall in the downstairs seating area.  

The Service - The service at this restaurant wasn't amazing. The manager and staff at the front desk were very friendly and helpful, but those behind the counters serving food and drink were a little surly and rude, and didn't really ooze customer service. 

The Set-Up - You have to queue up for different courses and mains, at different counters at this restaurant, so you queue up for pasta in one place, pizza in another, drinks somewhere else and starters in another place. Personally, this wasn't my cup of tea as I found it really disjointed and the restaurant was really busy, so we spent ages queuing for different things. The mistake we may have made when going to this restaurant was taking our children with us, as the premise of this restaurant is not really geared up for children. Although there is a nod to children with a children's menu, and colouring, the fact that you have to keep jumping up and down every two minutes to get food from different queues is not conducive to having children with you since you can't really leave them. Also, if one person wants pizza, and one person wants pasta, you then have to queue up twice, meaning that everyone gets their food at different times which does not really make for family friendly dining. 

However, I would add a caveat here and say that we were probably not the demographic who the restaurant is targeting themselves. The market this restaurant is targesting is most likely the London suburbanite or "lovey" who wants a healthier alternative to a fast-food joint, and perhaps just wants to pop in for a quick bite and leave. Indeed, there were quite a few actors/actresses who were "in between" their matinee and evening performances eating in the restaurant when we went. I am guessing that the set-up of this restaurant works in principle if you are on your own, or with a group of friends as it saves splitting the bill as you all pay for what you had. It does not work with children though, or if you are perhaps disabled or find it hard to walk or stand for long periods of time. I would have liked to have seen a table service option offered for those who may not find counter queuing an easy experience. 

The Menu - There are separate menus for pizza and pasta. However, a big negative to the menu for the Vegetarian/Vegan is that nothing is labelled. There is no labelling system to tell you what is and isn't vegetarian. Of course some ingredients are quite easily decipherable as vegetarian but some aren't - such as Pesto. I asked one of the chef's if he knew whether the pesto was vegetarian, and he didn't know. There needs to be clarification on the menu. Additionally, the vegetarian selection is a bit hit and miss, especially the antipasti options. It actually took me quite a while to even decide what to order, as I had to scrutinise the menu so much. 

The Food - The food was a little above that of a typical buffet self serve fast food restaurant, however, being out on display all day, the quality and the freshness wasn't what I would expect of an Italian restaurant. It was evident nothing was covered to retain freshness, as things did have that "been out slightly too long" taste. The food was reasonably priced for a London restaurant, and was also quite pocket friendly too. We started off with the antipasti. I was disappointed there was not a vegetarian version of this, as the dish on offer was very meat heavy. The components to the antipasti were all just thrown on a huge plate in front of me without much care and attention. I was a little disappointed to find when I tasted the dish that cheese tasted a bit hard since it had been left out for a while and the bread was a little stale too.  The vegetables were also off and I had to push them to the side of the plate. Additionally when preparing the Antipasti server, the girl behind the counter used the same gloves to put everything onto the plate - meat, cheese, bread and all, and didn't use serving implements. This is not great if you have vegetarians who will be sharing the platter due to cross contamination. I also ordered a Punpkin Soup, which was really delicious, but on the whole was a bit of a rubbish portion size, and was also not hugely warm. 

After ordering the Antipasti for us, hubby then left the table and queued up to order the kids Pizza's. The pizzas were made in front of him, and then we were given a buzzer take back to the table to wait for them to cook. My kids ordered ham and pineapple, and as you can see from the picture, the ham was just sloshed on the pizza, and two random pieces of pineapple chucked on as an after thought. It would have been nice to have them spread out evenly, or even cut into smaller pieces. Again, it felt very conveyor-belt like, with not much attention given to the end product. 

When we had finished our Antipasti. Hubby went up again to order our meals, whilst I stayed with the kids and helped them cut up their pizza's which had cooked and which I had collected. For main course, I chose the Mozzarella Pomodoro with Tagliatelle. He waited twenty minutes to get to the front of the queue, by which time, the kids had finished their pizza's and were starting to ask for dessert. 

After waiting twenty minutes to get to the front of the queue, hubby ordered my pasta, and was just about to order his, when the server went onto the next person's counter order, and said he could only order one meal at a time, and would have to queue again for another dish. You can guess what we thought of that. He had waited so long queuing anyway, and it seems that the server was unable to deal with making two meals for the same person at the same time. He bought my Pomodoro back to the table and was not happy. However, we decided to share the dish. 

We tucked in, only to find that although it looked very appetising and delicious, underneath, the taglliatelle was congealed, and stuck together, because it was cooked in boiling hot water in a deep fat fryer. There was also so much pepper and chilli put into the dish that we couldn't eat it - which is rare for both of us as we use lots of seasoning in cooking. At this point, we decided to cut our losses and leave. 

On the whole, I wouldn't say that we had a great experience here. However, as I said before, I don't think that we were the right demographic for the restaurant. I think if you were just nipping in for a quick bite, and were happy to get your own food, and, you eat meat, you would probably fare better. 

I would like to see the Vegetarian food improved - firstly by indicating on the menu what is vegetarian and what isn't. Then by introducing some more vegetarian friendly dishes. Also by encouraging good food handling practices in staff.  

I probably would return to a Vapiano restaurant again, but I would return without children as I didn't find visiting Vapiano a relaxing family dining experience. It was really stressful having to jump up and down, leaving the kids, to then have to go to different places for drinks, starters, pizza and pasta, never mind the toilet trips all the way downstairs at the back of the restaurant. I think this is a good concept, but it doesn't work for everyone. 

Disclosure: Meal offered in consideration for review. All views are my own. 


Sunday, 5 October 2014

Vegetable Soup for the Soul

After a lovely summer, we currently seem to be entering the season of coughs, colds and sickness in our family. All of us have fallen victim to the dreaded sickness lurgy over the last week, and I also picked up a rather nasty cold, which wiped me out for around ten days.

I always find when I'm ill that all I want is someone to put a plate of wholesome, hearty, healthy food on the table in front of me for me to tuck into. Meat Eater's seem to thrive on Chicken Soup to cure all ills, but us veggies obviously need to find a different alternative.

At the point of the week where I felt my worst, and after two days of being sick, all I wanted was to put some "proper food" inside my body. Something which was made from scratch and which had some good nutrients in it was calling out to me. After feeling ill for so long, I decided to make some vegetable soup to try and make me feel better. Eating a meal with some vitamins and nutrients, and which was quite light was a good idea as it made me feel much better.

I have featured the recipe before, under the banner of Tomato Soup, However, you can pretty much add whatever root vegetables you have available to the pot. This time around, I left out the pepper, and added a potato to make the mixture a bit thicker. Here is the recipe below.

What do you like to eat when you are feeling poorly?

Ingredients
1 Onion, peeled & chopped
2 tbsp Olive Oil
2 Garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
1 Potato, peeled and chopped
2 Carrots, peeled and sliced
2 Parsnips, peeled and sliced
1 x 400g chopped Tomatoes
700ml Vegetable stock
1 tsp caster Sugar

Method
  1. Fry the onion in the olive oil for a couple of minutes until transparent. Next, add the garlic, carrot, pepper and parsnips and cook for a further 5 minutes
  2. Add the remaining ingredients, bring up to the boiling point and then simmer for 20 minutes, or until the vegetables are soft.
  3. Allow to cool a little, and then puree in a blender and reheat gently to serve.