Saturday, 22 September 2007
Five ways with celery
An underappreciated vegetable, celery is great for many reasons – it is grown all year long in the UK (though it’s best in December) and it is extremely versatile. Cold and crunchy, celery works well in snacks, sandwiches, salads and soups. (Not to mention that rumour that the act of eating celery burns off any calories incurred through eating it.)
Update a classic
Waldorf salad was originally created over 100 years ago and includes celery, apples, walnuts and mayonnaise. Apples traditionally dominated the salad. Update the salad with more celery to increase the fruit and vegetable count.
(serves 2)
2 apples of your choice
1 pack of celery hearts
a handful of walnuts, chopped
4 tablespoons light mayonnaise
lemon juice
4 pieces of cos lettuce
Core the apples and chop into bite-size pieces. Sprinkle with lemon juice to keep from browning.
Chop the ends and the leaves off of the celery and slice into 1-cm sized pieces. Mix the apples, celery, walnuts and mayonnaise and serve on a leaf of cos lettuce. Sprinkle with a little sugar if desired.
All aboard
Use celery as “boats” and stuff with fun fillings. These snacks work well for kids, who will enjoy the activity.
(serves 4 children)
1 pack of celery hearts
4 tbsp hummus
4 tbsp peanut butter
4 tbsp cream cheese
Chop each of the celery hearts into two separate sticks.
Use a butter knife to fill up the celery with the individual fillings.
If you don’t like one of the fillings, simply use more of one of the others.
Make it light: use reduced-fat versions for a lower-calorie treat.
Cheeseboard sandwich
A cheeseboard doesn’t just have to be eaten after a posh meal. It makes an excellent sandwich as well.
(serves 1)
2 slices of seeded bread
2 stalks of celery, shaved or sliced thin
a bunch of grapes, sliced in half
20 g of farmhouse cheddar
20 g of stilton or blue vinney
butter, margarine or mayo
How to do it:
Smear a bit of your spread on the bread.
Stack the celery, then the cheese and finally the grapes (with the cut side against the cheese).
Modern tuna salad
An old sandwich filler gets a clean update with fresh tuna and butter beans.
(serves 2)
2 pieces of fresh tuna
1 tin of butter beans, drained
6 celery hearts, chopped or shaved
2 tablespoons of olive oil
Heat ½ of the oil in a saucepan until very hot, then add the tuna, searing for 3 minutes on each side. Remove from heat. Chop the tuna into thin slices.
Add the tuna, celery, butter beans and the rest of the oil. Sprinkle with black pepper and a pinch of salt. Serve in individual shallow bowls.
One-pot risotto
Almost any vegetable tastes great in a risotto – so why not celery? Add it to this vegetarian one-pot dinner.
(serves 2)
4 stalks of celery, trimmed and sliced thinly
1 onions, peeled and sliced thinly
1 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1 tablespoons of olive oil
½ litre of hot chicken or vegetable stock
100 g Arborio rice
50 g parmesan shavings
Heat the oil in a large saucepan and gently sauté the onion, celery and garlic over a medium heat until soft. Add the rice into the pan and allow the oil to coat, sautéing for a further few minutes.
Add the stock from a measuring jug bit by bit, allowing only enough to just cover the rice. Stir often, and keep adding the stock until the rice is soft and creamy, about 25 minutes.
Stir the parmesan into the risotto and serve in bowls.
If the stock runs out and the rice is not yet done, just make up some more stock.
Update a classic
Waldorf salad was originally created over 100 years ago and includes celery, apples, walnuts and mayonnaise. Apples traditionally dominated the salad. Update the salad with more celery to increase the fruit and vegetable count.
(serves 2)
2 apples of your choice
1 pack of celery hearts
a handful of walnuts, chopped
4 tablespoons light mayonnaise
lemon juice
4 pieces of cos lettuce
Core the apples and chop into bite-size pieces. Sprinkle with lemon juice to keep from browning.
Chop the ends and the leaves off of the celery and slice into 1-cm sized pieces. Mix the apples, celery, walnuts and mayonnaise and serve on a leaf of cos lettuce. Sprinkle with a little sugar if desired.
All aboard
Use celery as “boats” and stuff with fun fillings. These snacks work well for kids, who will enjoy the activity.
(serves 4 children)
1 pack of celery hearts
4 tbsp hummus
4 tbsp peanut butter
4 tbsp cream cheese
Chop each of the celery hearts into two separate sticks.
Use a butter knife to fill up the celery with the individual fillings.
If you don’t like one of the fillings, simply use more of one of the others.
Make it light: use reduced-fat versions for a lower-calorie treat.
Cheeseboard sandwich
A cheeseboard doesn’t just have to be eaten after a posh meal. It makes an excellent sandwich as well.
(serves 1)
2 slices of seeded bread
2 stalks of celery, shaved or sliced thin
a bunch of grapes, sliced in half
20 g of farmhouse cheddar
20 g of stilton or blue vinney
butter, margarine or mayo
How to do it:
Smear a bit of your spread on the bread.
Stack the celery, then the cheese and finally the grapes (with the cut side against the cheese).
Modern tuna salad
An old sandwich filler gets a clean update with fresh tuna and butter beans.
(serves 2)
2 pieces of fresh tuna
1 tin of butter beans, drained
6 celery hearts, chopped or shaved
2 tablespoons of olive oil
Heat ½ of the oil in a saucepan until very hot, then add the tuna, searing for 3 minutes on each side. Remove from heat. Chop the tuna into thin slices.
Add the tuna, celery, butter beans and the rest of the oil. Sprinkle with black pepper and a pinch of salt. Serve in individual shallow bowls.
One-pot risotto
Almost any vegetable tastes great in a risotto – so why not celery? Add it to this vegetarian one-pot dinner.
(serves 2)
4 stalks of celery, trimmed and sliced thinly
1 onions, peeled and sliced thinly
1 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1 tablespoons of olive oil
½ litre of hot chicken or vegetable stock
100 g Arborio rice
50 g parmesan shavings
Heat the oil in a large saucepan and gently sauté the onion, celery and garlic over a medium heat until soft. Add the rice into the pan and allow the oil to coat, sautéing for a further few minutes.
Add the stock from a measuring jug bit by bit, allowing only enough to just cover the rice. Stir often, and keep adding the stock until the rice is soft and creamy, about 25 minutes.
Stir the parmesan into the risotto and serve in bowls.
If the stock runs out and the rice is not yet done, just make up some more stock.
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