Healthy, nutritious, easy, 15 minute dinner!

Many people struggle to find the time to cook or eat properly. We’re all so busy all of the time. Most people want to be healthy but find it difficult and inconvenient to cook. As a student of nutrition, I’m keen to change that and to help you eat better, sleep better and generally feel better!

A super quick, easy and nutritious meal is chicken or salmon noodle soup. This is full of protein and vegetables, as well as water. It’s quick to make and easy to digest, so makes an ideal meal if you’re late home from work. This recipe has the added benefits of tasting like you’ve spent a lot more time preparing it than 15 minutes and can all be cooked in one sauce pan, saving time and washing up!

Ingredients (for one, but double/triple etc depending how many people you’re cooking for)

  • One salmon fillet or chicken breast
  • A few broccoli florets
  • 1/3 of a leek
  • 1/3 courgette
  • 1/2 an onion
  • 1 garlic clove
  • A small grating of ginger
  • Soy sauce
  • One medium saucepan
  • One ‘nest’ of wholewheat egg noodles
  • 300 ml boiling water from the kettle

Firstly, chop up the onion, leeks, courgette and garlic and sauté lightly in the saucepan a drop of olive oil.

Now decide if you fancy salmon or chicken noodle soup. If salmon, remove the skin by placing the fillet skin side up. Slide a knife under the skin at one end and hold the fillet down with one hand, carefully slice your way under the skin and discard (in the compost/ food waste bin!). Chop up the salmon or chicken fillet into small bite sized pieces and cut off any fat from the chicken.

Pour 300 ml of boiling water to the saucepan containing the onion, leeks, courgette and garlic, and add the salmon/chicken pieces. Put the water on to continue boiling until the salmon / chicken is cooked all the way through (take out the biggest piece and check it is cooked through).

After a couple of minutes add two tablespoons of soy sauce and the broccoli florets to the boiling water. Also stir in chopped/grated ginger and give it all a good stir.

Once you’ve checked the chicken/salmon is cooked all the way through, add the noodles and simmer for a further two – three minutes, until the noodles are cooked.

Ladle the noodles, veg, chicken/fish and ‘soup’ into a dish and dinner is served! You may wish to add extra soy sauce to suit your taste.

You could also use any other green veggies which might be lurking in the fridge and need to be eaten – including pak choi, fennel, cabbage, spinach although you might want to give the cucumber and lettuce a miss this time.

Remember you can always chop the rest of the courgette/leeks and freeze these to use another day.

Let me know what you think of this recipe on Facebook and post some of your own favourite healthy recipes!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Combat the winter blues with a 10% discount off all hot stone treatments in November

To help combat the onset of winter and dark evenings, I thought you might enjoy a special offer on hot stone treatments during November! I’m offering 10% off any hot stone treatment during November* – a warming, luxurious treat, which is also great for relieving deeply held muscle tension, and wonderful for relaxation! In fact, many of my clients who have a hot stone treatment once, now only come for hot stone massages!
Just to dispel a myth about hot stone treatments – hot stones are used to massage you, instead of the therapists hands. The stone are not simply placed on the body and left there, as you may have been led to believe by in some pictures! At the beginning of your hot stone treatment, I will use my hands initially to spread the oil on your body, but you will quickly experience a different sensation when, instead of my hands, I use the smooth hot stones to massage you. The stones are polished and smooth all over and using the oil, glide on your body, their heat melting away tension and stress.
The hot stone treatments really are a little bit of affordable luxury, perfect to help you relax, de-stress or recover from a hard week at work, in the gym or in the garden, when a deep tissue treatment would be too much.
Do get in touch if you have any questions about hot stone treatments and please book early for your November discount to avoid disappointment!

Hawaiian honeymoon smoothies!

Having returned earlier this summer from an amazing honeymoon in Hawaii, we got used to having wonderful, exotic, tropical fruits every day, particularly in a smoothie at breakfast time. As I’m keen to eat seasonally – it’s cheaper and better for the environment – I was wondering how to keep up our weekend smoothie intake, particularly as we move into winter. So, I have two options for you, one is to buy frozen tropical fruit in your weekly shop. You can whizz this in your food processor straight from frozen, or let it de-frost a little overnight. Add in some water, your favourite fruit juice, a couple of spoonfuls of yoghurt and a little milk if you want to add a bit more protein. Some people also add a teaspoon of honey or cinnamon – particularly nice with bananas and yoghurt! My favourite is (frozen) mango, strawberry and papaya; throw in a few mint leaves from the garden and a little bit of yoghurt – delicious and healthy! Whizz for 30 seconds or a minute in the food processor and you’re ready for a fruit fantasy!

Another option is to use up whatever fruit is leftover in your fruit bowl and needs eating. Did you know that the average household wastes over £50 a month by throwing away good food that could have been eaten? In the UK we throw away 7.2 million tonnes of food every year – that’s worth £12 billion pounds – and most of it could have been eaten. A fabulous website is Love Food Hate Waste which gives loads of tips about making your food last longer and reducing how much food you throw away – saving you money and helping the environment!

Obviously you don’t want to be drinking smoothies ALL the time, as fruit does contain a lot of sugar, and you might prefer to use low fat milk/yoghurt too. Ours are a weekend treat and certainly don’t replace adding fruit to our cereal or as a snack during the day. There’ll be another post coming soon about how to ensure you’re getting your five + a day of fruit and veg…

Energy muffins for the Oxford half marathon!

My husband is running the Oxford half marathon this Sunday so between clients and lectures I’ve been perfecting my recipe for banana and nut energy muffins!

This is loosely based on a recipe by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, but I’ve added lots of extra slow release energy in the form of bananas, nuts, oats, oatmeal and using wholemeal flour to keep you going for longer. I first tried these out on some friends about a month ago when we did the Vitruvian triathlon in Lincolnshire, and since we all managed to finish one way or another, I reckon they must have enough energy for the half marathon!

They really are super easy to make and take about 15 minutes to prepare and 30 minutes to cook. You also don’t need any fancy baking equipment – just a couple of bowls, pestle and mortar and muffin cases. If you don’t have a pestle and mortar, you can crush the nuts between two spoons.

Makes about 6 – 10 muffins (depending on the size of your muffin cases!):

  • 2 bananas mushed up
  • Small handful of pumpkin seeds
  • 4 brazil nuts
  • Small handful of almonds
  • Small handful of macadamia nuts
  • 100g porridge oats
  • 100g oatmeal
  • 100g wholemeal flour
  • Drizzle of honey if you wish
  • 100g sugar (I use brown sugar but caster works too)
  • 75g melted butter
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • 125g plain yoghurt (I use low fat but choose your favourite)
  • 125ml milk (I use skimmed but choose your favourite)
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • Sprinkle of cinammon if you wish

Bash up the nuts with a pestle and mortar and mush up the bananas with a spoon.

In a separate bowl, whisk the flour, oats, oatmeal, salt, sugar and baking powder lightly together.

In another bowl mix the eggs, yoghurt, milk and melted butter together gently and then add to the dry ingredients, along with the mushed banana, pumpkin seeds and bashed nuts. If you want to add in a spoonful or two of honey, add that now (I tend not to as the sweetness of the bananas and sugar is enough but adjust to your taste).

Mix everything together gently so it is just about combined, being careful not to overmix. Spoon the mixture into the muffin cases and bake at 180 degrees for about half an hour until they’re golden brown on top.

Eat warm on their own or dipped into some natural yoghurt or smoothie. Now, this energy booster breakfast should have you finishing the half marathon in record time too! Let me know what you think – email me or get in touch on Facebook.

Welcome!

Welcome to my new website and business! Katie Wheater Wellbeing is a new massage business, recently opened on Morrell Avenue, east Oxford.

Did you know that massage has been used around the world since ancient times to promote and restore health and relaxation? During the Roman times, Julius Caesar was said to have received daily massages – lucky him!

As most of us won’t be receiving daily massages, this blog hopes to bring you inspiration on leading a more sustainable life – with tips on taking care of yourself, others and the planet.  I hope to bring you tid-bits of interesting information on massage, links to interesting articles (although I won’t be commenting on the validity of the science – you’ll have to decide that for yourselves!), special offers, healthy recipes and anything else I can think of that might benefit your wellbeing.

So, tip number one: when did you last stand still and breathe in the smell of the seasons? I love this poem to remind me of all the beautiful things in danger of being missed out on if we’re forever rushing around, trying to tick things off our never-ending to-do lists!

What is this life, if full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

No time to stand beneath the boughs,
And stare as long as sheep or cows.

No time to see when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.

No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.

No time to turn at Beauty’s glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.

No time to wait till her mouth can,
Enrich that smile her eyes began.

A poor life this, if full of care,
We have no time to stand, and stare.

It’s by William Henry Davies. So, my challenge to you is to go outside – take your coffee if you like – look up at the sky, notice the colour of the leaves on the trees, the sound of the wind and the birds…. and breathe, great big, deep breaths expanding your chest. Be conscious of where you are right now and all of the positive things in your life, forgetting your to-do list for just a few minutes and re-connecting with yourself. I’d love to know how you get on – get in touch or visit me on Facebook!