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Posts tagged “eco living

Why We Eat What We Eat

As a cooking teacher, who regularly meets people through my cooking classes, here on the sunshine coast, I get to see what a cross-section of society likes to eat and feels comfortable with on their plate. It is interesting to observe shared traits amongst the groups of people, who pass through my cooking school, and it gets me thinking about the whys and why nots. I wonder why most of us tend to eat from a similarly small selection of meals, despite the fact that we now have available in our supermarkets a far greater choice of ingredients than ever before. I think about what food represents, in terms of its psychological ramifications within our lives, and whether these settings can be adjusted.

It seems to me that many of us retain attitudes towards foods, which were garnered in the family home when we were children; and that the apple generally falls close to the tree. If mum and dad liked certain foods and cooked these foods more often, then for many people these influences remain strong throughout their adult lives. A bit like the children, who upon leaving the nest, build their own homes in the same street, suburb or town as mum and dad, keeping extended family close. Food like shelter is a primal need and is intimately tied up with our notion of emotional security.

As we expand the concept of family outwards and it becomes our cultural heritage, food choices again are inextricably linked to our regional and national identities. Here in Australia we can celebrate the rich diversity of our many multicultural strands and this happens most often through experiencing the foods and culinary dishes of these transplanted cultures, like Italian, Thai and Chinese foods – made available by the restaurants and takeaways, which have been created by the sons and daughters of foreign shores.

We are enriched by experience when we allow ourselves to move beyond the close confines of who and what we think we are. Just as our human species is strengthened biologically when we mate and breed outside of those whom we call our own. The cross fertilisation of genes, ideas and even recipes can make us all healthier, smarter and our lives definitely tastier. Our predominantly Anglo-Saxon backgrounds, have unfortunately, cursed many of us somewhat with limited culinary antecedents and if we do not break out of these restrictive walls, then we are condemned to eat poorly and to miss out on the more sublime flavours that life has to offer.

What and how we cook is often a bit like how we make love, we learn from experience a few things and then tend to groove these moves; somewhat unchangingly. Primal activities are a bit like that, not something that we muck about with too much, and what and how we eat falls into this category. We eat to refuel, to derive energy and sustenance from food, but eating is also a profoundly sensual activity. The nerve endings and taste buds inside our mouths feel every morsel as it slides about, and we experience our food in full technicolour, sensorama – if we are lucky enough to be in touch with our full five senses of taste, smell, sound, sight and feel.

So eating is a very personal activity, it is close to who we are, and yet we often eat in public, unlike other intimate activities like sex and going to the toilet. This sharing of the eating experience in communal structures, like cafes, restaurants and workplaces is a ritualised cultural activity. We bring our own mores, likes and dislikes, to this public performance of consumption. I am always reminded of the recounted experience of migrant children in the Australian school yard at lunchtime, as the contents of their lunch boxes were reviled by the Anglo kids because of their peculiar differences. As children we often fear what is not customary and uniform, and unfortunately many of us remain in this childish state, particularly around our foods and what we consider acceptable.

When people form intimate relationships, like marriage and close friendships, they are often confronted with the need to move beyond their culinary comfort zone in a bid to cement the stability of their relationship. The desire to share tastes and flavours is sometimes paramount to couples and their ongoing sense of emotional security. I regularly hear about the compromises being made by one partner or the other, and the effect that the changes to their diets has upon them, both positively and negatively. In fact this can be a major motivating impetus in getting people to come along to my cooking classes. A bit like going into relationship counselling I suppose, with both parties hoping that the inspirational influence of a neutral teacher may magically impart some shift in the culinary status quo of their relationship; and it sometimes does.

Seafood is a commonly held culinary ‘no go zone’, among many of the people who attend my classes. I hear again and again the refrain, “Oh I didn’t know that seafood could taste this way!” Whether they had an unfortunate early experience with a bad cook or perhaps have actually never tried the said example of fish or shellfish, due to the fact that mum or dad likewise had avoided the experience and did not cook these critters at home, the fear based result was the same. We often work out who we are by declaring the things we know that we dislike, “Oh I don’t eat fish, or oysters, or mussels.” I may have made this decision when I was 6 years old but I unquestioningly stand by it today. The walls around this individual are close and in yours and their face, perhaps it makes them feel safe. Eventually however there comes a time when the individual feels somewhat cramped by their stated dislikes, and this is when they often find themselves in one of my cooking classes, either alone or with their partner.

I speculate that the adolescent or young adult who has consciously rebelled against the tastes and predilections of his or her parents, usually has developed a wider and more far-reaching culinary diet – they still may not be able to cook but they may consume more different foods. This individual has broken away from the invisible ties that bind the obedient child to the emotional strings surrounding mummy and daddy. We are all on variable time lines regarding this necessary rebellion, some do it early and some very late, but eventually we all need to break the moorings and swim free; and perhaps then taste the sea.

Sacred Chef Cooking School on the sunshine coast.

©Sacred Chef

House Therapy – Discovering Who You Really Are at Home.

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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


Is the Sacred Chef a rooster in the hen’s house, tempting brides with tapas and tarot?

Extra virgin olive oil? Will it protect you?

From good taste and yummy food?

Are you curious about the future?

Do you long for lingering tastes of delicious food?

Will the Sacred Chef cook for you?

Sacred Chef catering and cooking school on the sunshine coast - hens are lining up for the experience.

Make your day or night a special one!


Sacred Chef Hen’s Night in Montville

The Sacred Chef was lucky enough to cater for a hen’s night in Montville, at the Montville Mountain Lodge , on Friday night and a more delightful group of 12 women could not be imagined. Beauty, grace and good taste are rarely met in one such collection of lovely women and it was a privilege to cook for these ladies.

Tapas was the order of the evening and it was prawns in garlic & sherry; scallops in the shell; olive tapenade crostini; Spanish omelette with roasted garlic aioli; local mussels in wine, chilli & tomato; Chorizo sausage, goat’s cheese pastries; stuffed baby capsicums; asparagus, rocket & balsamic salad; and veal & chicken mince croquettes with a leek & tomato coulis.

Gorgeous women, impending marriage, tarot cards and flashing smiles were all ingredients in beautiful surroundings and the Sacred Chef was weak in the presence of such beauty, but still managed to impress the taste buds of goddesses!

Sacred Chef catering and cooking school on the sunshine coast - a perfect way to celebrate a hen’s night or day!


Hazelnut & Banana Cake

Hazelnut & Banana Cake

1 cup plain flour

1 cup SR flour

1 cup LSA mix

1 cup hazelnut meal

1 cup desiccated coconut

1 tspn lemon zest

1 tspn baking powder

1 tspn mixed spice

4 eggs

150g unsalted butter

1 cup castor sugar

2 bananas mashed

1 cup soy milk

1 tbspn canola oil

Preheat oven to 180 degrees

Grease & line a loaf tin. In a large bowl sift flours & rub or blend in butter, then add all dry ingredients to this mix. In a separate bowl beat eggs, sugar, soy milk & banana. Fold mixtures together with all remaining ingredients & pour into cake tin & bake for 35 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Steamed Sweet Polenta Fingers with Coconut, Almonds & Mixed Fruit.

Steamed Sweet Polenta Fingers with Coconut, Almonds & Mixed Fruit.

2 cups fine polenta

1 cup desiccated coconut

1 cup LSA

2 tbspn honey

1 cup roasted almond slivers

1 cup mixed dried fruit

3 cups purefied water

Mix your polenta with the water & cook slowly in a heavy based saucepan – I usually do a mix of 1 cup cold water to 2 cups boiling water. Cook for 10 minutes. Then stir in all the other ingredients. Cook on a low heat for another 5 to 10 minutes. Transfer to a greased dish & refrigerate for an hour. When solid cut into fingers & steam. Serve with whipped cinnamon & honey yoghurt.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Warm Salad of Baby Beetroot, Sesame and Goats Cheese

Warm Salad of Baby Beetroot, Sesame & Goats Cheese

1 bunch whole baby beetroots boiled in their skins

220g goats cheese sliced

150g mixed lettuce leaves

1 cup baby spinach leaves

½ cup purple basil leaves

1 tspn sesame oil

1 tspn avocado oil

1 cup cooked green beans

1 tspn balsamic vinegar

1 tspn sea salt

black pepper to taste

lemon juice

In a large bowl arrange all your greens & herbs. Toss through vinegar, lemon juice, sesame oil, avocado oil, salt & pepper. Remove beets & peel whilst still hot using rubber gloves & cut in half. Arrange greens on plates & lastly add beets & goats cheese slices.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Sardine and Fetta Cheese Pastries

Sardine & Fetta Pastries

Pastries

1 packet filo pastry

2 cups crumbled fetta

250g tinned sardines in spring water

1 cup spanish onion diced

1 tbspn garlic minced

2 tbspn capers

1 tbspn fresh dill

1 tbspn fresh parsley

2 tbspn butter melted

½ cup kalamatta olives sliced & pitted

½ cup ground parmesan

1 tbspn olive oil

1 tspn sea salt

black pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 180 degrees C.

In a saucepan over a medium heat, add in oil, garlic, Spanish onion, capers, salt and pepper and cook for 5 minutes. Remove from heat & transfer to a large bowl, mix in sardines, fetta, parmesan, fresh herbs & olives. Allow to cool for 10 minutes in fridge before wrapping in filo.

Lay out 2 sheets of filo & brush with with melted butter, spoon a desired size of filling & fold into desired shape & brush outside again with melted butter. Repeat until you have enough pastries & then place on tray & bake for 20 minutes or until golden brown.

Serve with a tomato chutney or tangy salad.

Serves 4

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Thin Crusted Pizza with Goat’s Cheese and Chorizo

Thin Crusted Pizza with Goats Cheese, Chorizo & Mediterranean Vegetables.

Pizza Base

Sour Dough Starter or Bakers Yeats

3 cups best bakers flour or wholemeal flour

1½ cups warm purified water

1 tspn sugar

1 tspn sea salt

Topping

1 punnet cherry tomatoes sliced in half & dry roasted

1 cup drained & pressedcrushed tomatoes

1 red capsicum sliced into strips & grilled

1 chorizo sausage grilled & sliced

1 lime

6 slices butternut pumpkin grilled

6 slices eggplant grilled

3 cloves garlic finely sliced

220g fresh goats cheese

1 tbsp fresh rosemary chopped

1 tsp minced preserved lemon

1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

1 cup ground parmesan

1 cup buffalo mozzarella grated

2 tbsp chopped fresh basil

sea salt & black pepper to taste

Pre-heat oven to 220C

In  a large bowl stir yeast into warm water & sugar, or conversely add sour dough starter to flour & water. If using bakers yeast place bowl in warm place & stir yeast mix until it foams up, ensuring a powerful rise. Then add in sifted flour & salt, working into a dough & kneading until smooth & stretchy. Place in a covered bowl & allow to double in a warm place.

“double, double, toil and trouble,” as Macbeth’s witches warned us. The alchemy of food is with us if we take the time to be part of it & forget the fast food shortcuts.

Whilst our dough is rising use your griller to pre-cook our chorizo & then slice into fine rings & drizzle with fresh lime before scattering over our pizza. Likewise grill eggplant, pumpkin & capsicum with  a little oil to get a smoky blackened edge effect.

Roll out a ball of dough to a very thin consistency to cover your pizza tray. Gently spread crushed tomato base over & arrange vegies, chorizo, cheeses, herbs, and pepper.

Bake for 10 to 15 minutes until crispy edged & slice & serve.

Serve with a salad of rocket leaves & balsamic.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Carrot and Roast Almond Soup

Carrot & Roast Almond Soup

6 carrots chopped into chunks

2 brown onions chopped

2 cloves garlic

2 tbspn roasted almonds chopped

1 cinnamon quill

1 tbsp grated ginger

2 cups chicken or vegetable stock

1cup purified water

1 can coconut milk

1 cup chopped fresh coriander

½ tsp ground nutmeg

1tsp sea salt

½ tsp ground cummin

1 tsp black pepper

½ cup finely chopped spring onion

In a heavy based large saucepan place your carrots, onions, stock, water, spices, garlic & ginger & cook over a moderate heat for 20 minutes. Blend your carrot mix when cooked & then return to the pan where you can stir in your coconut milk, almonds & coriander. Finish with spring onions & ladle into bowls. Fresh black pepper to finish.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Midas Word


Spicy Beans with Cous Cous

Spicy Beans with Cous Cous

A simple yet very satisfying dish, which is packed with good nutrition, as legumes are a wonderful food to eat several times a week. For absolute best flavour results make the spicy beans the night before & let them stew gently in the fridge overnight & serve with cous cous the next evening.

1 cup cooked kidney beans

1 cup cooked borlotti beans

1 cup cooked pinto beans

2 brown onions sliced

1 tbspn olive oil

2 red chillies

1 tbspn sweet paprika

1 tbspn ground cumin

1 tbspn ground coriander

1 tsp fresh rosemary or a stalk

1 can crushed tomatoes

1 tsp sea salt

1 tbspn white vinegar

½ cup red wine

1 tbspn raw sugar

1 cup chopped fresh coriander

2 cups cous cous

1 tspn dried vegetable stock

In a heavy based saucepan sauté oil, onion, sugar, vinegar, spices & rosemary for 5 minutes before stirring in wine & tomatoes. Simmer for another 10 minutes before adding in your beans & cooking for another 40 minutes over a low heat. Add in fresh coriander just before serving.

Pour boiling water to cover your cous cous & dried stock & leave for 5 minutes.

Fork through to fluff cous cous before serving over heat if need be.

Serve spicy beans atop cous cous.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Vegetarian Cooking Class Series

Midas Word


Smoked Tofu and Tomato Lasagna

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.

©Sacred Chef. Vegetarian Cooking Class Series

Midas Word


Poached Egg with Dukkuh

Poached Egg with Dukkuh on Spelt Bread with Garlic Mushrooms

4 slices of toasted spelt bread

4 FR eggs

2 cups sliced cap mushrooms

1 tbspn olive oil

1tbspn chopped garlic

1 tbspn chopped parsley

sea salt & black pepper to taste

In shallow saucepan pour in 3cm of purified water, pinch sea salt & place over medium heat to reach a steady boil & gently crack your eggs into rings or free form. In a separate saucepan sauté your oil, mushrooms, garlic, salt & pepper. On a plate place your toasted spelt bread & arrange with perfect poached egg & garlic mushrooms.. Sprinkle with wonderful Dukkuh & Salt & pepper to taste. Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking School Sunshine Coast

Eco Living Magazine

Midas Word


Noni Chai Fruit Muffins

Noni & Chai Fruit Muffins

1 cup wholemeal plain flour

1 ½ cups wholemeal 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

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. Vegetarian Cooking Classes in Maleny

Midas Word

Eco Living Health Aware Magazine

Eco Living Health Aware Magazine


Beetroot Risotto

Roast Beetroot Risotto with Oyster Mushrooms

1½ cups Arborio rice

6 cups vegetable or meat stock

2 tbspn olive oil or butter

4 cloves garlic

1 tspn sea salt

1 cup pinot noir

2 beetroots finely sliced and roasted

1 punnet oster mushrooms

1 cup freshly ground parmesan

1 tbspn chopped parsley

black pepper to taste.

The magic of risotto always enthralls me, its metamorphosis from rice and water to creamy, rich food of the gods. What price this piece of divinity? The commitment to stay with it and stir for 20 minutes. The key is a really good stock, so I recommend making your own.

Pre-heat your oven to 200 degrees for the beetroot & roast with some sea salt for 10 minutes or until cooked & set aside.

You will need one saucepan with your stock simmering gently with a ladle ready for the gradual inclusion into the rice.

In another heavy based saucepan add in your oil & or butter, garlic, salt & rice sautéing for a few minutes before adding in your wine. Cook wine off for a couple of minutes before adding your first ladle of delicious stock. Wait for that to be absorbed by the rice & continue to repeat the process for 15 minutes. At this point you can stir in your beetroot, parsley & parmesan & continue to cook for another few minutes. Gently fold in your oyster mushrooms just before serving & add black pepper to taste.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Vegetarian cooking classes in Maleny

Eco Living Magazine

Midas Word

frisson online magazine

frisson online magazine


Canned Tuna Fettucine

Fettuccine with Tuna, Tomato & Kalamatta Olives

This is a dish where you can use canned tuna & still get a really good eating result. It is great when the cupboard is bare & time is fleeting.

250g fettuccine

2 cups leeks sliced

1 can tuna in water or brine.

2 cans crushed tomatoes

1 tbspn garlic chopped

2 tbspn olive oil

1 tbspn fresh basil chopped

1 tbspn fresh parsley chopped

1 cup merlot

2 tspn sea salt

½ cup kalamatta olives pitted & chopped

1 fresh lime juiced

½ tspn fresh chillie

2 tbspn fresh parmesan (optional)

In a large enough saucepan boil your pasta with salt.

In a heavy based large frypan or saucepan sauté your oil, leeks, garlic, chillie & salt for a couple of minutes before adding your wine & tomatoes. Simmer for 5 to 10 minutes or until leeks are soft. When your pasta is al dente & draining fork a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil through it & a little black pepper. Add your basil & parsley to the sauce & black pepper. Serve pasta onto plates & cover with a ladle of sauce. Open & drain tuna before forking a portion onto the top of the sauce on each plate & drizzling with fresh lime juice. Arrange a spoonful of olives around the tuna & serve. Parmesan is optional.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Cooking school on the sunshine coast

Eco Living Magazine

Midas Word


Tofu and Mushroom Wellington

Tofu & Mushroom Baked Wellington with a Shiraz Red Wine Sauce

1 block tofu sliced & marinated in soy & ginger

2 brown onions finely sliced

3 cups sliced cap mushrooms

1 tbspn garlic chopped

1 tbspn olive oil

1 cup cream cheese

½ cup yoghurt

½ cup chopped roasted almonds

1 tbspn chopped fresh basil

1 tbspn chopped spring onions

1 tspn sea salt

1 cup shiraz

black pepper to taste

4 sheets puff pastry

Preheat oven to 180 degrees.

In the midst of cold winter a baked Wellington with creamy mushrooms & a red wine sauce can really warm your soul.

Pan fry your 8 slices of tofu gently on both sides in a little olive oil until golden & set aside on kitchen paper.

In a heavy based saucepan sauté onions, garlic, oil, salt & mushrooms for 5 minutes before adding in your Shiraz, yoghurt & cream cheese. Cook these in for another 5 minutes before finishing with basil, pepper, almonds & spring onions. Remove from heat & cool down in a bowl in the fridge.

Defrost your sheets of puff pastry & one at a time lay out a sheet & place a slice of tofu in the centre. Cover this with a liberal dollop of creamy mushrooms & one more slice of tofu. Fold up the pastry to form a parcel, your Wellington. Repeat the process until you have 4 & then bake for 20 minutes or until golden.

Shiraz Red Wine Sauce

2 cups shiraz

1 cup butter chilled chopped into small pieces

1 tbspn finely sliced garlic

1 cup finely sliced Spanish onion

1 tsp sea salt

black pepper to taste

In a heavy based saucepan sauté onion, garlic, salt & little butter for a couple of minutes before adding in the Shiraz. Turn the heat right up & begin adding the remaining butter pieces. As the wine reduces it will begin to thicken with the butter & intensify in flavour. Finish with pepper.

Pour sauce over baked Wellingtons & serve.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef. Vegetarian cooking classes in Maleny

Eco Living Magazine

Midas Word


Poached Salmon Fillet in Miso Soup

Poached Salmon in Miso Soup

with Udon Noodles.

I like to use a lighter coloured miso, like a rice & soy miso paste.

1 cup miso paste

1 tbspn mirin

1 tbspn minced garlic

1 tbspn finely sliced ginger

1 tbspn bonito flakes

1 cup shitake mushrooms sliced

1 cup button mushrooms sliced

1 tbspn umeboshi vinegar

1 tspn sesame oil

1 tbspn soy sauce

1 fillet salmon chopped into chunks

1 cup shimenji mushrooms sliced

2 tbspn chopped spring onions

250g udon noodles

1 tspn sea salt

6 cups purified water

black pepper to taste

In a large heavy based saucepan begin with your water & heat over a medium flame. Add in your garlic, ginger, bonito flakes, salt & mushrooms & cook for 5 minutes. Mix your miso paste with a little of the stock that you have been creating in the large saucepan in a separate bowl until you have a creamy consistency. When the stock is at a steady simmer add in your noodles & salmon, about 4 minutes before serving. Then stir in your miso & season with mirin, soy & umeboshi vinegar. When the salmon is perfect begin serving into bowls & top with black pepper, tiny drizzle of sesame oil & black pepper.

Serves 4.

©Sacred Chef cooking school sunshine coast

Midas Word

Eco Living Health Aware Magazine

Eco Living Health Aware Magazine


Eco Living Magazine

Heading: Eco Living Magazine

Subheading: Australia’s best quality eco living health aware publication.

Eco Living Magazine is the latest and greatest holistic health and eco magazine to hit the shelves of newsagencies around Australia. Beautifully presented and containing inspiring information, Eco Living Magazine, is great reading for the twenty first century.

If you are interested in healing, natural health, green issues and consciousness then Eco Living Magazine is for you. With articles on NLP, Theta Healing, sustainable building, green cleaning, tantric sex, retreats and spas – there is a wealth of positive information. Anthony Ackroyd commedienne extraordinaire shares the secrets of the funny bone; Bernie Prior writes about love as a pathway to enlightenment; and Dixon Hammer points the way to making relationships work. Eco Living Magazine is the freshest new voice in the media.

As an editorial  contributor, the Sacred Chef is excited to be involved with a magazine that sparkles with elan and good living – Eco Living Health Aware. Grab a copy at the newsagency and check out a great magazine.

Cooking school sunshine coast


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