Have you been Sudhafed?

Recipes

Poached Chicken in Banana Leaf

Poached Chicken in Banana Leaf
• 4 Chicken Thigh Fillets cut in half
• 8 Banana Leaf segments
• 8 Skewers
• 300ml Chicken Stock
• 400ml Coconut cream
• 1 Knob Ginger sliced
• 1 tspn Palm Sugar
• 3 Garlic Cloves crushed
• 1/2 cup Basil Leaves torn
• 1 tspn Sea Salt
• 10 White Peppercorns ground
Wrap your half chicken thigh fillets in a banana leaf
segment & secure with a skewer. In a large frypan
add your remaining ingredients & place over a
medium heat. Place the wrapped chicken parcels into
the poaching liquid & simmer for 12-15 minutes.
Serve the parcels on jasmine or sticky rice.

©Sacred Chef

Sacred Chef sunshine coast cooking school Thai cooking class featured recipe.


Take Control of Your Diet

One of the most empowering things that you can do in your life is to take control of what you are eating. If you are eating a lot of processed foods bought in the supermarket, then you are not in charge of what goes into your body. How much salt and fat is inside that product and what kind of fat is it? How does the chemical balance, which has been put in place by the manufacturer to preserve that product, react with your own metabolism? There are so many variables to consider when you are not eating fresh food, and equally importantly, preparing it yourself.

Learning to cook and discovering the nutritional make-up of foods can really benefit you in so many ways, including losing weight and feeling more alive. Recently there have been huge leaps in the understanding of nutritional science and how foods are processed by our bodies. The importance of certain essential fatty acids, like omega 3, and redressing the imbalance of omega 6 essential fatty acids in our foods, with too much soy, grain fed livestock and vegetable oils – all rich in omega 6 – in our diets, which is often something like 40 times that of omega 3. We are generally not eating enough oily fish, nuts and seeds in our diets today.

What is the result of this? Too much omega 6 causes inflammation within our bodies and what are some of the chronic conditions this causes? Arthritis – inflammation of the joints; cardiovascular diseases – inflammation of the heart’s arteries; strokes – inflammation of  the cerebrovascular; and there is speculation that depression may be caused by inflammation of the brain. Diet/ what we eat and how we eat is the most integral factor in our propensity to develop diseases. A lot of foods in the supermarket do not address this and their prime reason for existence is to make money for their manufacturers – food technology is about durability not nutrition.

Food is your best medicine, not some vitamin pill or pharmaceutical – these are again mainly about making money for their manufacturers – otherwise they would be free wouldn’t they? My advice is take charge of what you eat and how that food is prepared. You will find it can also be highly creative and you may derive some pleasure and pride in the act of cooking a great meal – which is healthy and delicious. You can also save money along the way.

Cooking classes are a great way to discover nutritional information whilst having some tasty fun. My Sacred Chef cooking school, here on the sunshine coast, focuses on preparing food that is both healthy and delicious – you will also receive a take home recipe pack with additional nutritional notes and articles, which I wrote for magazines like WellBeing, Conscious Living and Eco Living Health Aware; plus you receive a free health magazine too!

©Sacred Chef

Every class is full of healthy information and great recipes.

www.nofreudnoprozac.org for more information about omega 3

www.sacredchef.com


Sunshine Coast Vegetarian Cooking Class with the Sacred Chef

What a great way to spend a day!

Learning new recipes and techniques.

Enjoying good food and company.

Discovering nutritional information that can make you feel healthier, lighter and more alive.

Organic produce and local ingredients.

Cook with the Sacred Chef and take home recipes, articles and nutritional notes.

Plus a goodie bag and a free magazine!

This Saturday 21 Jan 2012 in Maleny, on the Sunshine Coast hinterland, a vegetarian cooking class and gourmet lunch to remember

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE YOUR SACRED CHEF COOKING CLASS GIFT VOUCHER


Sacred Chef Hen’s Lunch a Real Joy

The Sacred Chef hosted a delightful hen’s lunch and cooking class, for nine lovely, gorgeous women and it was one of the most enjoyable day’s we have entertained. Fantastic people who played, cooked and had a great time, sharing their stories and excitement about the impending special day for bride and bride’s maids.

We made fresh rice paper rolls with crab, bean shoots and glass noodles with a hoi sin dipping sauce; arancinni risotto balls with a tomato and basil coulis; local mussels opened with wine and chilli; panfried crumbed butterflied whiting fillets with roasted garlic aioli; Reggiano Parmesan, asparagus and baby spinach salad with a balsamic dressing; and a pure chocolate tart with raspberry coulis and double cream.

 

 

Sacred Chef cooking classes on the sunshine coast are a great way to celebrate being a vibrant and juicy woman!!!!

 

Pure Dark Chocolate Tart
This is a yummy gluten free dessert served with
raspberry coulis & double cream.
• 5 eggs separated
• 200g dark chocolate 70%
• 200g butter
• 1 tspn vanilla extract
• 1 cup mascobado (raw brown sugar)
• 1 cup castor sugar
Line a cake tin with baking paper and set oven to
1600 C in a fan forced oven. Melt butter & chocolate
together in a bowl. Beat egg yokes, mascobado sugar
& vanilla extract together in a large mixing bowl. In
a separate bowl whisk egg whites unitil stiff peaks
form, gradually adding castor sugar as you go. Add in
melted butter & chocolate to egg yolk mixture, gently
mixing together before folding in egg whites.
Transfer to prepared cake tin and bake until skewer
comes out clean, usually around 40 minutes.
Serve with double cream and raspberry coulis.
©Sacred Chef
Raspberry Coulis
This uplifting sweet concoction is great with lots of
desserts and keeps in the fridge for about a week.
• 250g frozen or fresh raspberries
• 1 tbspn freshly squeezed lemon juice
• 1 cup icing sugar
Whip ingredients together in a blender until they
form a uniform consistency. Transfer to a squeeze
bottle to make artistic swirls on your dessert plates.
©Sacred Chef

Smoked Tofu & Slow Roasted Tomato Lasagne with Ricotta Pesto.

 

Smoked Tofu & Slow Roasted Tomato Lasagna with Ricotta Pesto.

250g lasagna sheets

6 vine ripened tomatoes

1 block smoked tofu crumbled

2 cups soft ricotta

2 tbspn basil pesto

1 tbspn chopped garlic

1 tspn chopped rosemary

2 tbspn fresh basil chopped

1 tbspn olive oil

1 tspn chopped oregano

½ cup parmesan

½ cup white wine

1 tspn sea salt

1 cup shallots

black pepper to taste

 

This is a slow food dish & I recommend that you devote at least half a day to the relaxed creation of this very tasty meal.

Set your oven to a very low heat 100 degrees.

On a baking sheet lay out your thinly chopped tomatoes, garlic, sea salt, rosemary & oregano & slowly oven dry for several hours. The smell that begins to emanate from these after sometime is heavenly & you begin to understand what this slow food thing is all about.

In a heavy based saucepan sauté your shallots, salt, tofu, oil & wine.

When your tomatoes are ready fold into the sauté mixture & set aside.

In  a bowl fold together ricotta & pesto.

Pre-heat oven to 180 degrees.

In  a greased loaf tin or baking dish lay out a sheet of lasagna pasta, top with the smoky tofu & tomato mix, another layer of lasagna & then ricotta pesto. Repeat again & sprinkle over parmesan to finish. Cover with grease proof paper & alfoil. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes until pasta sheets are cooked.

Remove & slice into serves.

Serves 4.

©Sacre Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef

 


Healthy Noni Chai Fruit Muffins

These muffins are delectably different and a great way to start the day!

 

Noni & Chai Fruit Muffins

1 cup wholemeal plain flour or gluten free flour

1 ½ cups wholemeal SR flour or gluten free SR flour

1 cup psyllium husks

1 cup desiccated coconut

1 tsp baking powder

1 cup yoghurt

2 tbspn chai spiced tea syrup

1 cup dried mixed fruit

1 cup finely chopped almonds

1 tsp grated lemon peel

200g unsalted butter

4 whole 60g FR eggs

1 cup soy milk or alternative

1 cup raw sugar or mascobado

½ cup blue berries

2 cups chopped banana

1 tspn cinnamon ground

1 tspn mixed spice

 

Preheat oven to 180C. Grease muffin trays & or line trays with muffin cases. Sift flours & dry ingredients in to a large mixing bowl. Either rub in softened butter by hand to this dry mix or whizz together in a food processor until you achieve a breadcrumb-like consistency. In a separate bowl whisk eggs, sugar, yoghurt, soy milk, lemon peel & chai, before folding in banana, blue berries & dried fruit. Slowly & gently fold this wet mixture into the dry ingredients. When well mixed spoon cake like mix into individual muffin rings. Bake for 25 to 35 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Cool on wire rack & serve with butter. Serves 6-8.

©Sacred Chef

Sacred Chef cooking school on the sunshine coast


Blood Cleansing Morning Heart Starter

Ganesh god of fresh beginnings.

Wicked Juice

1 large beetroot

1 tbspn size piece of ginger

1  pear

1 green apple

1 lime

½ lemon

1 orange peeled

10 carrots.

A stimulating & evocative concoction that will put hairs on your chest, figuratively speaking of course (but I have heard a fashion whisper that hirsute is making a comeback) . The beetroot & carrot  are great blood cleansers.

Drink this juice every morning for a month and you will notice the difference in your energy levels and perhaps some weight loss too!

Sacred Chef was WellBeing’s food editor for many years and wrote and read many articles about good health and nutrition.

Sacred Chef WellBeing articles click here

For more Sudha Hamilton articles www.midasword.com.au

Sacred Chef cooking school on the sunshine coast is a healthy and delicious way to spend a day!

 


Sacred Chef News

Hi All,

I thought that I would summarise much of the intense goings on with the Sacred Chef cooking school, here on the sunshine coast as so much has happened in such a short space of time.

We have had 12 members of the local branch of McDonalds, here on the sunshine coast, attending a Sacred Chef cooking class and lunch – which I thought was brilliant and possibly a move in the right direction.

The Real Food Festival generated vegetarian cooking lessons for upwards of thirty people, who all attended the Sacred Chef vegetarian cooking classes under the festival’s auspices. It was such a big response we are still taking bookings now, weeks later, and the classes/lunches have been a real delight – with lovely groups of people having a great day! My conclusion is that vegetarians, and those interested in vegetarian cooking, are very nice people to have to lunch. We have another vegetarian cooking class and lunch on the 8 Oct – a couple of places remain available.

 

The Sacred Chef was host to a number of hen’s lunches and cooking classes, which are a great way to spend a fun day with friends and family! Why not celebrate your hen’s day or night with some tasty fun?

The Cooking the Great cuisines from around the world has been in full swing now for two weeks and we have visited Spain and Thailand. These classes and the following gourmet lunches have been fun and seriously delicious. Apart from the odd bump on my head from a flying pepper grinder I have thoroughly enjoyed these gastronomic Sundays – a really great way to spend a day in Maleny.

The Sacred Chef 6 week vegetarian cooking series, concluded last Thursday evening, with Japanese slippery silky textures on my lips. I would like to pay tribute to the class members for making my last month and a half a real joy, thank you.

In between all of this cooking school activity, Sacred Chef  has catered for several large wedding anniversaries and a few smaller events, with many gracious thank yous coming our way.

Coming up we have weddings booked in November and a three day seminar in late October.

Recipe of the week:

Vegetarian Laksa with Tofu
Laksa Paste
• 4 Birds Eye Chillies
• 4 Large Garlic Cloves
• 2 Tbspns Ginger Chopped
• 2 Stalks Lemongrass Chopped
• 10 Macadamina Nuts
• 1 tspn Asafoetida
• 10 Vietnamese Mint Leaves
• 2 tspns Ground Coriander Seed
• 2 tspns Ground Cumin Seed
• 2 tspns Ground Turmeric
• 2 tspns Paparika
• 2 Tbspsns Canola Oil
• 2 tspsns Sea Salt
Pound ingredient in a mortar or blend in a food
processor until smooth. Store in an air tight jar in the
fridge.
Laksa with Tofu & Egg Noodles
• 1 cup Laksa Paste
• 250g Egg Noodles or Rice Noodles
• 2 cups Sweet Potato Cubed
• 2 cups Potato Cubed
• 2 cups Tofu Cubed & Fried
• 1 cup Black Fungus
• 1 cup Baby Corn
• 1 cup Bok Choy Chopped
• 1 cup Green Beans
• 1 litre Vegetable Stock
• 1 can Coconut Milk
• 2 cups Bean Shoots
• 1 cup Fresh Coriander Leaves
• 1 cup Fresh Basil Leaves
In a large saucepan pour in your stock, add both potatoes
and bring to boil before simmering until they
are tender. Add in your beans, fungus, corn, tofu, bok
choy and cook for a further five minutes.
In a seperate saucepan boil noodles until just ready,
drain and set aside still hot.
In a small frypan saute your laksa paste for a couple
of minutes before adding to your main pan, along
with coconut milk and stirring in.
In large soup bowls place noodles, then fresh herbs,
bean shoots and ladle over laksa vegetable soup.
Finish with fried shallots and serve with chopsticks
and Chinese soup ladle.
©Sacred Chef

Vegetarian Laksa

Vegetarian Laksa with Tofu

Laksa Paste

 

4 Birds Eye Chillies

4 Large Garlic Cloves

2 Tbspns Ginger Chopped

2 Stalks Lemongrass Chopped

10 Macadamina Nuts

1 tspn Asafoetida

10 Vietnamese Mint Leaves

2 tspns Ground Coriander Seed

2 tspns Ground Cumin Seed

2 tspns Ground Turmeric

2 tspns Paparika

2 Tbspsns Canola Oil

2 tspsns Sea Salt

 

Pound ingredient in a mortar or blend in a food processor until smooth. Store in an air tight jar in the fridge.

 

Laksa with Tofu & Egg Noodles

 

1 cup Laksa Paste

250g Egg Noodles or Rice Noodles

2 cups Sweet Potato Cubed

2 cups Potato Cubed

2 cups Tofu Cubed & Fried

1 cup Black Fungus

1 cup Baby Corn

1 cup Bok Choy Chopped

1 cup Green Beans

1 litre Vegetable Stock

1 can Coconut Milk

2 cups Bean Shoots

1 cup Fresh Coriander Leaves

1 cup Fresh Basil Leaves

 

In a large saucepan pour in your stock, add both potatoes and bring to boil before simmering until they are tender. Add in your beans, fungus, corn, tofu, bok choy and cook for a further five minutes.

In a seperate saucepan boil noodles until just ready, drain and set aside still hot.

In a small frypan saute your laksa paste for a couple of minutes before adding to your main pan, along with coconut milk and stirring in.

In large soup bowls place noodles, then fresh herbs, bean shoots and ladle over laksa vegetable soup.

Finish with  fried shallots and serve with chopsticks and Chinese soup ladle.

©Sacred Chef

Sacred Chef sunshine coast cooking school, have you been Sudhafed?


Sweet Potato, Coconut & Mussel Soup

Sweet Potato, Coconut & Mussel Soup

 

  • 12 local mussels
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 1 cup vegetable stock
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 birds eye chilli sliced in half
  • 1 tbsp grated ginger
  • 1 tsp seas salt

 

  • 1 large kumera sweet potato chopped into chunks
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 tbsp finely sliced lemongrass
  • 1 tbsp grated ginger
  • 2 cups chicken or vegetable stock
  • 1cup purified water
  • 1 can coconut milk
  • 1 cup chopped fresh coriander
  • 1 tsp red curry paste
  • 1tsp sea salt
  • ½ tsp ground cummin
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • dash of fish sauce
  • ½ cup finely chopped spring onion

 

In a heavy based large saucepan place your sweet potato, stock, water, lemongrass, garlic & ginger & cook over a moderate heat for 20 minutes. In a separate pan with a lid, place your mussels, white wine, stock, garlic, ginger, chilli & over a high heat with the lid on steam open your mussels (5 minutes on the boil).

Blend your sweet potato mix when cooked & then return to the pan where you can stir in your coconut milk, red curry paste, fish sauce, cummin & coriander. Finish with spring onions & ladle into bowls. Arrange 3 mussels into each bowl & drizzle coconut cream over the top, before grinding fresh black pepper to finish.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast, with the Sacred Chef, where the coconut captures hearts and taste buds daily!


Crispy Tempeh with Grilled Tomatoes & Garlic Mushrooms

Crispy Tempeh with Grilled Tomatoes & Garlic Mushrooms

 

  • 1 block tempeh cut into 12 fingers
  • 4 ripe roma tomatoes
  • 12 small button mushrooms sliced
  • 2 cloves garlic finely sliced
  • 1 tbsp chopped fresh basil
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 1 tsp ground black pepper
  •  squeeze of lemon juice
  • dash of soy sauce
  • dash of extra virgin olive oil
  • canola or light olive oil for frying

Start with your grilled tomatoes as they will require the most cooking. Slice tomatoes in halves sprinkle with sea salt & extra virgin olive oil & place under griller for 5-10 minutes. Meanwhile in a saucepan with olive oil & over a moderate heat sauté your mushrooms & garlic for 5 minutes. Before this is complete heat up your fry pan with some canola oil & shallow fry your tempeh fingers until gold & crispy. Return to your mushrooms & finish with dash of soy sauce, lemon juice & black pepper. Arrange your grilled tomatoes on  a plate, sprinkle with black pepper & fresh basil. Add to this a spoonful of garlic mushrooms & 3 crispy tempeh fingers. Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef

Vegetarian cooking classes on the sunshine coast, with the Sacred Chef are a tasty way to transform your eating habits and to feel more alive!


Turmeric & Coriander Panbreads

  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup yoghurt
  • 1 cup LSA mix
  • 1 tbspn ground turmeric
  • 1 tspn ground garam masala
  • 1 tspn salt
  • balck pepper to taste
  • 2 cups chick pea flour
  • 1 cup buck wheat flour sifted
  • 1 cup desiccated coconut
  • 1 tbspn canola oil
  • 3 cups soy milk
  • 1 cup chopped fresh coriander

Whisk eggs, yoghurt & spices together before adding soy milk, oil & the remaining ingredients. Beat batter to a smooth consistency & ladle into hot crepe pans. Flip & cook until golden brown on each side. Stack on a plate.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef, where everyone is welcome and good food is abundantly served.


Spring Food Recipes

 

Spring Food

By The Sacred Chef.

Published in Eco Living Magazine

 

Celebrating spring is very much about the birds and the bees, sowing seeds and enjoying the fecundity of nature. So what foods stimulate the arousal of life inside us by their essential chemical make-up and perhaps by their shape and form? Eating well – beautiful organic food presented naturally and eaten after some blood pumping exercise is the first step. Food tastes so much better when you have a healthy appetite for it. Don’t eat out of habit. Don’t eat the same boring thing every day. Don’t eat if you are not hungry. Food like love making is better when it is special. Food is an essentially visual art medium, like painting it is an arrangement of form and colour on the plate. Glistening green spears of asparagus with a dollop of basil, macadamia nut and honey mayonnaise; freshly shucked oysters alive in their sea salty liquor; ripe red strawberries perfect in their natural state; a salad of warm artichoke hearts, goats cheese, fresh figs and baby spinach leaves; or a tangle of fettuccine slippery with extra virgin olive oil, cherry tomatoes, chillie and chunks of ocean trout. Each dish can be a moment of poetry involving all the senses – what other art form do we literally consume. Let the smears on your serviette be a testament to the abundance of your life.

Zinc is one of the most important minerals to be aware of in relation to our libido and fertility levels. It helps maintain sperm count and levels of testosterone in men and in women it is involved in a healthy menstrual cycle; it is vital for cell division during pregnancy. Zinc is also needed for the parts of our brains that activate our sense of appetite, taste and smell. Oysters are packed full of zinc as are fish, green leafy vegetables, lean meats, nuts and pulses. Organic veggies have higher levels of mineral content than those grown with chemical assistance. Why not grow your own organic veggies? Spend a weekend digging in a patch and readying the soil for sowing – you will be amazed when green things start sprouting and you will feel a quiet pride when you first serve the progeny of your garden. The taste, oh the taste will blow your mind. You get the complete package – exercise by honest toil to build appetite, pheromones from perspiration to attract the opposite sex, superior nutritional value from organic produce and the best flesh for taste and colour.

Avocadoes were known as testicle fruit by the ancient folk in Central and South America. They are rich in phytochemicals and are linked to lowering cholesterol. Their creamy texture, gorgeous colour and reputation as an aphrodisiacal food make them an ideal ingredient in dips, salads and wraps. Three quarters of the avocadoes’ which we consume in Australia are of the Hass variety – with distinctive purple black skin and oval shape. Other varieties are the Shepard – green skin with golden buttery flesh and the only avocado not to turn brown once cut open – it is available from Feb to April; Reed – green skin when ripe, round shape and peaks in November; Sharwil – smaller pear shaped avocado with a rich nutty flavor, winter/spring variety;  and the Wurtz – a smaller winter avocado grown in Queensland. Try spreading avocado, a good local honey and cracked black pepper on some lightly toasted sour dough rye bread for a delicious and nutritious start to the day.

Tropical fruits are pretty much sexy per se – things that like to grow and ripen under the sweaty equatorial sun. Biting into beautifully coloured fruits that explode in your mouth and send streams of juice running down your chin are experiences to surrender to. Fresh pineapple slices are particularly like eating sunshine and of course mango is the queen of the slippery fruit affair. These fruits are full of antioxidants, vitamin C and a diet rich in them can make you feel vital and youthful.

©Sacred Chef

Appeared in Eco Living Magazine

 

 

Excerpt from Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

Penguin Books ISBN 9780143038412

 

Holy of Holies – Perfect Pizza in Italy

“Pizzeria da Michele is a small place with only two rooms and one non-stop oven. It’s about a fifteen minute walk from the train station in the rain, don’t even worry about it , just go. You need to get there fairly early in the day because sometimes they run out of dough, which will break your heart. By 1pm, the streets outside the pizzeria have become jammed with Neapolitans trying to get into the place, shoving for access like they’re trying to get space on a lifeboat. There’s not a menu. They have only two varieties of pizza here – regular and extra cheese. None of this new age southern Californian olives-and sun-dried tomato wannabe pizza twaddle. The dough, it takes me half my meal to figure out, tastes more like Indian nan than like any pizza dough I ever tried. It’s soft and chewy and yielding, but incredibly thin. I always thought we only had two choices in our lives when it came to pizza crusts- thin and crispy, or thick and doughy. How was I to have known there could be a crust in this world that was thin and doughy? Holy of holies! Thin, doughy, strong, gummy, yummy, chewy, salty pizza paradise. On top, there is a sweet tomato sauce that foams up all bubbly and creamy when it melts the fresh buffalo mozzarella, and the one sprig of basil in the middle of the whole deal somehow infuses the entire pizza with herbal radiance………”

 

 

 

Recipes

A different kind of sexy is the feeling you get sliding a warmed spicy olive into your mouth.

Warmed Kalamata Olives in Infused Oil

 

Into a fry pan over a low heat pour 2 tbspns of extra virgin olive, then chop up a lime & 6 cloves of garlic and a piece of ginger, a sprig of rosemary, a cinnamon quill and add this to the warming oil, before adding in 3 cups of Kalamata olives. Stir through for 5 minutes and add salt & pepper to taste. Serve on a platter.

 

Salted fresh pineapple is a great way to serve the tangy flavor sensation of fresh ripe pineapple. Choose a ripe pineapple by its aroma, if you can find one that has not been too dulled by refrigeration, and cut it up into bite sized pieces and lightly salt with a special sea salt freshly ground down in your mortar and pestle. Accompanied by a fresh lime soda or a cold beer — and heaven is right there on that tropical island inside your taste buds.

Fresh Asparagus Spears dipped in Basil, Macadamia Nut & Honey Mayonnaise

 

Whole free range egg or egg yolk mayonnaise with a teaspoon ofDijonmustard ;

3 Tsp honey

1 Tbsp white wine vinegar

1 Tbsp fresh lime juice

1 cup fresh basil leaves torn

½ cup roasted macadamia nuts

1 ½ cups extra virgin olive oil drizzzled in slowly.

Freshly ground black pepper & sea salt to taste.

 

Whizz it by hand or in the blender adding in your oil slowly as you go.

Lightly steam or blanch your asparagus spears and serve accompanied by your tangy mayonnaise.

 

Warm Salad of Artichoke Hearts, Chorizo, Goats Cheese and Spinach Leaf Salad

4 Globe Artichokes Steamed Peeled and halved

1 Chorizo sausage grilled and sliced

120g fresh goat’s cheese served at room temperature

1 cup chopped fresh parsley

1 bunch asparagus steamed

3 cups baby spinach leaves

3 Romano tomatoes sliced lengthwise into quarters

Dressing – ½ cup extra virgin olive oil

1 Tbsp balsamic vinegar

1 Tbsp lemon juice

sea salt & black pepper to taste.

Begin with the warm artichoke hearts and asparagus, cover them with dressing before gently arrange dobs of the goats cheese amid the slices of Chorizo, tomatoes, parsley and spinach leaves on a platter and lightly toss before serving.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Pleasures of Food

Pleasures of Food

By Sudha Hamilton

Published in WellBeing Magazine

 

I have always been passionate about food. It has, in fact, been a cornerstone of my existence. I recognised the signs early on, when I did not come off the bottle (alas breast feeding was out of vogue at this time) until I was about four years old, and I made quite a commotion about it then. That warm white milk spurting forth from that rubber teat was obviously a sensual and nourishing feed. Following that I remember a wonderful meal that mother used to make me, consisting of warm runny soft boiled eggs mashed up with torn crustless fresh white bread, the merest splash of milk and salt and pepper, mmmmm.

 

Ah food…it is a heady mix of psychological spells wound up in tasty matter. Foods that comfort us, foods that excite us and foods that calm us down. Our palate and our attachments to certain foods are I think all born of a time when we inhabited a yeasty humid world of milk sops and wet nappies. Textural considerations are of utmost importance when discovering dishes that provide us with inner sensual happiness: viscous soups and sauces, gooey eggs and soft steaming scoops of mashed potato, or balls of sweetened sticky rice and slippery steamed dim sum.

 

Eating food is pleasure and filling the empty tummy with something very scrummy is best. Pleasure. Is it a universal primary motivation? Or is it simply the avoidance of pain? Is hunger, once satisfied, the end of the matter? Or do we seek to enter that satiation by choosing just what we put in our mouths? The pursuit of pleasure: to achieve sensual gratification. Is it inextricably linked with our need for nourishment? Babies must have succour and must be touched to survive, and thrive to adulthood. Food in my opinion is not just fuel and not simply the sum of its parts. It is more than a list of kilojoules, fats, carbs and proteins. Like love it must be made pleasurable to do its work well.

 

Greek philosopher Epicurus (341-270 B.C.) states: “The magnitude of pleasure reaches its limit in the removal of all pain. When such pleasure is present, so long as it is uninterrupted, there is no pain either of body or of mind or of both together.  The flesh receives as unlimited the limits of pleasure; and to provide it requires unlimited time. But the mind, intellectually grasping what the end and limit of the flesh is, and banishing the terrors of the future, procures a complete and perfect life, and we have no longer any need of unlimited time. Nevertheless the mind does not shun pleasure, and even when circumstances make death imminent, the mind does not lack enjoyment of the best life.”  However, perhaps Oscar Wilde put it more succinctly when he said, “Pleasure is the only thing to live for.”

 

Has my passionate relationship with food ever got out of hand? Yes. I was a fat child for a couple of years, and I paid the price with my slim, bordering on acetic father, ridiculing me whenever possible about my new found weight. Lolly addiction was a real problem for me at this time, as my mother, who did not enjoy making cut lunches, would endow me with forty cents tuckshop money and I would invest it at the corner shop in a large white paper bag stuffed with mixed lollies. I would share these with my best friend at the time, and he would entertain me with half his lunch, which consisted of sliced white bread sprinkled with hundreds and thousands.  So as you can see my flirtation with food as pleasure flourished a long time ago. Trips to the dentist, despite all that fluoride in the water, were far too common.

 

Appetite and control

Appetite – the desire to eat until one is full, or to eat a certain kind of food; to experience a particular feeling as that substance slides down your gullet. Control or denial – the decision not to satisfy that desire and to go without, or to distract oneself by exercising; having sex or working. Or to appease or tease, by allowing only one mouthful, or two or three mouthfuls, or just a homoeopathic dose of your bodies desired dish. The sins involving food and the bible’s condemnation of gluttony inhabit us culturally and permeate all realms of our western civilisation. The way fat people are ostracised in our communities and portrayed in popular media as sad laughing stocks, and perhaps we all secretly feel that our derision will inspire them to lose weight and return to the company of the slim.

 

Can you remember the power of the lolly? Or do you have children who have reignited your experience with this over whelming obsession with these sugared jewels? The startling variety of colours, shapes and flavours. Surely these are the building blocks of taste experience for us all, as we sit quietly on the footpath outside the local deli sucking upon that first lozenge of truth. Milk bottles; musk sticks; bananas and sherbets, cobbers, raspberries, snakes and jelly babies, just to name a few of these highly desirables. Of course these addictions were managed in a cloak of normality, whilst competing at sport and doing homework, but always at the core of the pleasure principle was the lolly… and for me pleasure was life. I remember going to visit my maternal grandfather who was a doctor and lived in another geographical state, and he had a huge jar of jelly babies on top of the fridge. I thought this was great as we didn’t have anything like this at home and he was a doctor after all. Such was the alluring power of the lolly that it permeated even the highest levels of society.

 

Later, working in a liquor store I came upon that same phenomenon again; but this time for adults. Shiny bottles of spirits and wines were their lolly equivalents. I could feel their hardly suppressed excitement as they fingered the bottles and read those colourful labels with gleaming tiny gold and silver medals stuck to them. Alcoholics; drug addicts and sugar fiends we are all dependent on the balance between our appetites and controls, and the psychology of our passions. What did the Buddha say, “that all life is suffering and suffering is caused by desire.”

What about the neurological pleasure systems in the brain? Michael A. Bozarth from theUniversity ofNew York’s Dept of Psychology says “Neurological research has identified a biological mechanism mediating behavior motivated by events commonly associated with pleasure in humans. These events are termed “rewards” and are viewed as primary factors governing normal behavior. The subjective impact of rewards (e.g., pleasure) can be considered essential (e.g., Young, 1959) or irrelevant (e.g., Skinner, 1953) to their effect on behavior, but the motivational effect of rewards on behavior is universally acknowledged by experimental psychologists.

Motivation can be considered under two general rubrics—appetitive and aversive motivation. Appetitive motivation concerns behavior directed toward goals that are usually associated with positive hedonic processes; food, sex, and wine are three such goal objects. Aversive motivation involves escaping from some hedonically unpleasant condition; the pain from a headache, the chill from a cold winter’s night are among the list of conditions that give rise to aversive motivation.”

 

Hedonism then appears to be something that we should understand. The Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary defines hedonism as “belief in pleasure as the highest good and mankind’s proper aim”. Personally I have been a big fan of hedonism and have lived my life as hedonistically as possible. However, having been brought up in a Christian /Presbyterian household, where hedonism was given a pretty bad name, it was necessary to throw off the shackles of the church’s wowserism and to embark single mindedly upon the pursuit of pleasure. I imagine that many people reading this have felt similarly about their lives in terms of giving to themselves and grasping the true meaning of ‘charity begins at home’ – and in my case the kitchen.

 

One of the most fulfilling aspects of cooking that I have found is making up new dishes. When you are cooking everyday for hundreds of people, and although often making batches of the same dishes, it is in my nature to want to break out and try something completely different. I was at this stage in my own little restaurant cum takeaway and like many young people I found pleasure in novelty and variety. I had one particular customer, who by tacit arrangement, would receive whatever I could challenge myself to come up with. A dish or plate created right then and there with no prior thought, and as luck would have it, he would often arrive at the busiest possible time during service. I would be swearing sweating and smiling, and making haste with the pans. Usually the result would be rather good, and although frazzled by the experience it was ultimately rewarding. Creativity can be a hard task master, especially when you operate out of chaos. Cooking is however one of the few great arts that you physically put inside yourself, try eating a painting for instance.

 

So food has always been important to me and although when I first began cooking professionally I had not really recognised that, as I always thought that it would be something I would do until I found my true vocation. Cooking was not the supposedly glamorous job, that it is perceived to be today. Then, no, it was just another trade but I found it to be a very satisfying one. It was essentially creative once you had mastered technique, each day I would be challenged to come up with new and diverse dishes. Regular trips to the produce markets would have me coming across vegetables that I had never seen nor heard of. What does one do with a box of Kasava?  Well here’s one fromAfricato get you started:

 

Kasava Cake
Ingredients:
3 cups (or 2lbs.) grated kasava or manioc root
1 cup shredded frozen fresh young coconut
1 12 oz. jar of Macapuno Balls
1/3cup evaporated milk
1 14 oz. can unsweetened coconut milk
1/3cup. whole milk
1/4tsp salt
1/2cup white sugar
3 eggs
1cup light brown sugar
1tbsp melted butter

Mix everything together, and bake in a buttered 9 X 13 inch pan for 2 hours at 325 degrees.

 

Other pleasurable delights…

 

Sudha’s Baked Spinach Pie

2 bunch field spinach washed and bottom stalks removed

2 med brown onions diced

½ cup strong white wine

4 large cloves garlic minced

1 Tsp ground cumin

1 Tsp ground coriander

2 Tbsp olive oil

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

2 cups fresh ricotta

1 cup grated cheddar cheese

2 free range eggs lightly beaten

1 cup chopped fresh basil

½ cup chopped fresh oregano

1 cup chopped walnuts

12 sheets filo pastry

½ cup melted butter

 

Sauté your onion, garlic spices in olive oil until translucent, cook in wile lastly before setting aside. Steam or blanche your spinach until just done immerse in cold water to stop the cooking process and then gently wring out excess water and chop into smaller segments and add a squeeze of lemon juice or a teaspoon preserved lemon rind finely sliced. In a large bowl mix together spinach, cheeses, egg, herbs, walnuts and your onion sauté and salt pepper to taste. I often add a little splash of a good quality soy sauce here and to most dishes really.  In an appropriate baking dish spoon out your filling before laying sheets of filo pastry and brushing every second one with melted butter. Bake until golden brown in a moderate to hot oven. Serves 6-8.

 

Pumpkin and Pistachio Nut Soup

1 ripe butternut pumpkin peeled and chopped

2 large brown onions

1 Tsp minced fresh ginger

1 cup dry white wine (optional)

4 large cloves garlic minced

2 Tbsp olive oil

salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

½  Tsp ground cumin

1 cinnamon quill

1 tsp freshly grated nutmeg

½ Tsp ground coriander

1 cup peeled pistachio nuts

2 cups chicken or strong veggie stock

2-3 cups purified water

1 cup watercress

1 cup pouring cream (optional)

 

In a large heavy based saucepan sauté your onions, garlic, ginger and spices in olive oil until translucent adding your wine in a few minutes before they are ready. Add in your pumpkin, stock and cover with water and continue to simmer for at least 40 minutes. In a blender blend your remaining ingredients with the cooked pumpkin and onion mix, leaving your cream if desired to whisk in by hand at the end. Serve with a sprig of watercress, a few sprinkled sliced pistachios and a dob of sour cream and fresh black pepper.

 

Oven Dried Tomatoes

Doing these at home will fill your house with an irresistible aroma that will have you salivating against your will. Hedonistic terrorists could use this process in their battle against the forces of parsimony.  This operation will take a considerable amount of time and consumes quite a bit of energy/electricity or gas, so you get maximum slow food brownie points and I recommend that you do a big batch at one time to conserve energy and because they are so delicious you will kick yourself if you only do a few.

 

Lots of tomatoes (Cherry Tomatoes or small Romas)

Corn of garlic

Bunch of fresh rosemary

Bunch of fresh oregano

Bunch of fresh marjoram

Salt and pepper to sprinkle

 

Set your oven really low to around 80 degrees Celsius.  Slice your tomatoes in half or quarters depending on size but smaller is quicker, place on baking trays sprinkle with finely sliced garlic, chopped herbs and salt and pepper and bake or dry for around eight hours. Serve on fresh crusty Italian bread with the finest extra virgin olive oil and your favourite cheese.

 

Savoury Mediterranean Vegetable Muffins

I made these muffins recently to take along to a night of chanting for Guru Purnima day, an Indian religious festival celebrated by those in the Hindu faith. I took along a journalist friend, Chris, and he enjoyed them so much that he has been haranguing me ever since to include the recipe in one of my columns.

 

11/2 cups plain flour

2 cups SR flour

1 tsp baking powder

200g unsalted butter

Salt and pepper to taste

5 whole 60g eggs

1 cup milk

1 cup sauted chopped onion

1 cup roasted chopped red capsicum

1 cup grilled chopped eggplant

½ cup black olives pitted and chopped

1 cup pecorino grated cheese

1 cup crumbled fetta

1 cup chopped fresh basil

1 cup chopped fresh parsley

 

Preheat your oven to 180 degrees C. Grease muffin trays at least 12 muffin spaces. Sift flours, spices, baking powder into large mixing bowl and rub in butter to form a bread crumb like consistency – can do this in your mix master if you like. In a separate bowl beat your eggs, milk and add in cheeses, gently pour this into your big bowl of dry ingredients and fold remaining ingredients in to form raw cakey base glug with visible chunks of vegetable. You may like to stir in a further splash of extra virgin olive oil for consistency. Spoon into muffin trays and bake until golden brown and cooked through for about 40 minutes check with skewer.

 Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef

For more recipes and food articles www.sudhahamilton.com

or www.sacredchef.com


Mediterranean Savoury Muffins


Mediterranean Savoury Muffins

• 1 cup plain flour
• 1 ½ cups SR flour
• ½ cup LSA
• 1 tsp baking powder
• 1 tsp sea salt
• 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
• 1 tsp finely chopped fresh rosemary
• 1 tsp grated lemon peel
• 180g unsalted butter
• 4 whole 60g FR eggs
• 1 cup milk or alternative
• 2 medium sized brown onions roughly chopped
& liberally braised in olive oil
• 1 cup chopped roasted red capsicum
• 1/2 cup pitted olives chopped
• ½ cup parmesan grated
• 1 cup crumbled sheep’s feta
• 2 tbspn pinenuts toasted
• 1 tbsp chopped fresh basil
• 1/2 cup parsley chopped

Preheat oven to 180C. Grease muffin trays & or line trays with muffin cases. Sift flours & dry ingredients in to a large mixing bowl. Either rub in softened butter by hand to this dry mix or whizz together in a food processor until you achieve a breadcrumb-like consistency. In a separate bowl whisk eggs, milk, lemon peel & herbs, before folding in fetta & parmesan cheeses & cooled braised onions & capsicum. Slowly & gently fold this wet mixture into the dry ingredients. Add in extra grind of black pepper & sea salt. When well mixed spoon cake like mix into individual muffin rings. Bake for 25 to 35 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Cool on wire rack & serve with butter. Serves 6-8. ©Sacred Chef
Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef

 



What will you be doing this Christmas?

Heart of Gold

What will you be doing this Christmas? Will you be sitting down at someone else’s table or will you be dancing around your own kitchen in prayer for a tender bird or at least for the presentation of a sumptuous feast? Summer can mean hot times in the kitchen, often with the added strain of several seldom seen relatives out there in the living room staring uncomfortably into space. Again my advice is don’t over do it, keep it simple, most people are there for the company and good cheer, not for elaborate fine dining. Our warm weather suggests small amounts of food that zing on the palate. Things like dips and exotic chips, marinated olives, grilled seafood, crudités, and finger foods of all persuasions, are guaranteed to please, especially when accompanied by a superior liquid refreshment. May your mantra be – relax, enjoy and allow it to happen organically, meaning don’t impose too many uptight rules of engagement, give life a chance to unfold unpredictably, it’s the secret to actually having fun.

For more Sacred Chef summer madness click here

 

Sacred Chef cooking school on the sunshine coast is the place to learn how to prepare a sensational Christmas banquet.


Fig & Dark Chocolate, Macadamia Nut Muffins

Fig & Dark Chocolate Macadamia Nut Muffins

Delicious melt in the mouth muffins that are energy giving and healthy too.

  • Flour plain 1 cup
  • SR wholemeal flour 2 cups
  • Baking powder 1 tspn
  • Cinnamon ground 1 tbspn
  • Butter 200g melted
  • Linseed sunflower almond LSA ground 1 cup
  • Coconut shredded 1 cup
  • Macadamia nuts 1 cup chopped
  • Eggs FR 6 beaten
  • Honey 1 cup
  • Vanilla Essence 1 tsp
  • Raw sugar ½ cup
  • Yoghurt 1 cup
  • Milk ½ cup
  • Lemon peel 1 tsp grated
  • Figs dried 1 cup chopped

Preheat oven to 170C. Grease muffin trays and drop in muffin cases. Sift flours and add in to large mixing bowl, with spices, baking powder and melted butter, mix well. Fold in LSA, macadamia nuts, coconut, lemon and figs. In a separate bowl mix beaten eggs, vanilla, sugar, honey, yoghurt and milk, before folding into the bowl with the remaining ingredients. Mix evenly before spooning into muffin cases and baking for 30 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean. Makes 18 to 24 muffins.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast


Rainbow trout poached in tomato, leeks and wine

Rainbow trout poached in tomato, leeks and wine

  • 2 med size whole rainbow trouts salt skin
  • 1 leek chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic chopped
  • 1 cup celery chopped
  • 300g mushrooms sliced
  • 2 cups white wine fruity style
  • 1 sprig rosemary
  • 1 tspn pickled lemon slivers
  • 2 tbspns olive oil
  • 1 tspn dried chilli flakes
  • 2 rashes streaky bacon chopped
  • 400g crushed tomatoes
  • 2 tspns dried oregano
  • 2 tbspns roasted pine nuts
  • Sea salt to taste
  • Freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 2 tbspns flat leaf parsley chopped
  • 1 lemon squeezed

In a large saucepan or frypan sauté oil, bacon, leeks, celery, garlic, chilli, salt, rosemary for a few minutes before adding wine and cooking for a further five minutes. Then add in mushrooms, crushed tomatoes, lemon, oregano and cook for a further ten minutes before adding in your fish and covering with a lid, poach fish eight minutes each side. Finish with pine nuts, black pepper, chopped fresh parsley and a squeeze of fresh lemon. Debone fish in the pan and serve one fillet per person on a bed of rice, ladle poaching sauce and vegetables over the fish. Great with roasted Jerusalem artichokes.

Serves 4

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast


Red Lentil Dhal

Red Lentil Dhal

 

1 cup red lentils

3 cups water

2 tbspns canola oil or ghee

1 tbspn minced garlic

1 tbspn minced ginger

1 tspn yellow mustard seed

1 tspn cumin seed

2 tspns turmeric ground

1 onion minced (optional)

salt to taste

In a saucepan fry one tbspn of the oil with the garlic and ginger for a couple of minutes before adding your salt, turmeric, lentils and water. Bring to the boil and then simmer for 15 minutes. In a second saucepan fry spice seeds in oil with onion until translucent before adding to your cooked lentil mix.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking school on the sunshine coast with the Sacred Chef


Lingiune Vongole

Lingiune Vongole

In my version of this classic Mediterranean dish, I use

leeks, bacon, chicken stock, rocket & white wine to accompany

•             500g fresh linguine pasta

•             2 whole leeks chopped

•             4 large cloves garlic chopped coarsely

•             2 rashes streaky bacon chopped

•             1 sprig fresh rosemary

•             3 tbspn olive oil

•             500g baby clams

•             1 tspn chilli flakes

•             1 cup white wine

•             1 cup wild rocket chopped

•             2 tbspns parsley chopped

•             1 tbspn fresh lemon juice

•             salt & black pepper to taste

Cook your pasta in a generous amount of salt till

al dente. In a large pan saute rosemary, chilli, garlic, bacon,

leeks, olive oil, salt and clams for a few minutes

before adding wine and then placing a lid on

your pan – cook for a further 10 minutes over a

moderately high heat. Stir clams as they open in the cooking

liquir before adding in your cooked lingiune, rocket leaves, parsley & lemon juice. Finish with  black

pepper to taste. Pasta should be slippery with oil and juices.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking School sunshine coast


Tapas King Prawns

Tapas King Prawns

Mooloolaba king prawns panfried in garlic, chilli and

fino sherry.

•             500g king prawns peeled tails on

•             1 tbspn garlic minced

•             1 sprig fresh rosemary

•             1 tspn chilli flakes

•             2 rashes streaky bacon chopped finely

•             2 tbspn fino sherry

•             1 tbspsn fresh lime juice

•             1 tbspn parsley chopped

•             salt & black pepper to taste

In a large frypan saute oil, salt, rosemary, chilli, garlic

& bacon until bacon is crispy, before adding prawns

and cooking both sides for 5 minutes . Finish with

sherry, lime, parsley & black pepper and enclose

pan with lid for a minute or two to infuse flavours.

©Sacred Chef

Cooking School on the sunshine coast


Chickpea and Lemongrass Curry

Chickpea & Lemongrass Curry

Curry

4 Finger Eggplants halved

3 cups cooked chickpeas

1 can crushed tomatoes

1 can coconut milk

1 tbspn ghee or canola oil

2 cups sweet potato chopped

3 brown onions chopped

1 tbspn chopped garlic

1 lemongrass stalk chopped into segments

2 tbspn finely sliced ginger

1 tspn yellow mustard seeds

2 tspn fenugreek

1 tspn coriander seeds

2 tspn cumin seeds

3 tspns ground turmeric

3 tspns sea salt

2 cardamom pods

1 cinnamon quill

2 tspn garam masala

2 whole dried red chillies

1 cup chopped fresh coriander

black pepper to taste

Grind your spices in a mortar with pestle & as the irritation & impatience strikes at the indignity of having to do actual physical work, think of the connection you are forging with hundreds of previous generations who have ground their spices in just this way. Leave a few mustard & cumin seeds whole to accompany the cinnamon, cardamom & vanilla in their unground states.

Dry roast the spices for a few minutes in a large heavy based saucepan, before adding ghee or oil & onion, chillies, lemongrass, sweet potato, ginger & garlic. Sweat & sauté for 10 minutes before adding crushed tomatoes & eggpant. Simmer for 30 minutes to 1 hour, checking on liquidity factor & adding a little water if needed.

Add in chickpease & grilled eggplant fingers 20 minutes before serving.

Stir in chopped fresh coriander just before serving.

Serve with your choice of basmati or jasmine rice, turmeric coriander pan-breads, fresh mint raita and tomato chutney.

©Sacred Chef

Delicious vegetarian dishes from the Sacred Chef cooking school sunshine coast


Zucchini Cardamom Macadamia Nut Cake

Zucchini Cardamom Macadamia Nut Cake

1 cup plain flour
1 cup SR flour
1 cup LSA (linseed sunflower almond meal)
1 cup macadamia nut meal
1 cup desiccated coconut
1 tspn lemon zest
1 tspn baking powder
1 tspn cardamom grnd
4 eggs
2 cups canola oil
1.5 cups mascobado sugar
1 cup zucchini grated
1 cup soy or rice milk
1 tspn vanilla extract

Preheat fan forced oven to 170 degrees

Grease & line a cake tin. In a large bowl sift flours, then add all dry ingredients to this mix. In a separate bowl beat eggs, lemon, sugar, vanilla, soy milk, oil & zucchini. Fold mixtures together with all remaining ingredients & pour into cake tin & bake for 35 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.
Ice with a coffee or chocolate frosting.

©Sacred Chef.

Great vegetarian cooking at the Sacred Chef cooking school sunshine coast

Midas Word


vegetarian cooking class series sunshine coast maleny

Vegetarian Cooking Classes in Maleny

Would you like to extend your vegetarian, culinary repertoire and feel more confident in tackling a vast array of vegetarian ingredients? In most of the great cuisines of the world 90% of the ingredients are from the vegetable kingdom, so it makes sense to know how to treat the numerous, delicious, members of this most healthy family.

Each vegetarian cooking class includes a delicious lunch at the conclusion of each  2 hour session in the cooking studio.

Let me know what you would like to learn more about or explore and we will cater for your requirements during the course!

You will receive a take home pack of recipes, notes, articles and nutritional information each week!

What a great way to spend a day on the sunshine coast, in the green and beautiful hinterland, overlooking the Glass House Mountains!

My vegetarian background is that I had my own vegetarian restaurant in Kings St, Newtown for nearly 10 years. Prior to this I was the chef at Zorba the Buddha vegetarian restaurant in Taylor Square, Sydney; and before this Commune Chef for Satprakash Rajneesh Centre. More recently I was WellBeing Magazine’s food editor for five years. 

NEXT SERIES BEGINS 8 OCTOBER 2011.

AMAZING VALUE – Includes a lunch to really live for!

$69 per person per class.

$399 per person for the series.

Class numbers are limited to 6 participants

Give a gift that changes lives for the better!

Bookings 5499 9280 orsacredchef@midasword.com.au

the sacred chef

Information & Bookings 5499 9280

sacredchef@midasword.com.au


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