Good food: Take two
By Andrea Steer
It’s easy to eat well when you are pregnant if you are inspired. Here are two breakfasts, two lunches and two suppers to give you all the energy you need.
Breakfast for 2
Day 1
Yoghurt-soaked oats with fresh fruit, seeds and honey
serves 4
1 cup raw oats
1 cup low-fat Bulgarian yoghurt
1 cup apple juice
freshly cut fruit: any mix of strawberries, bananas, pawpaw, apple, etc
4 T mixed pumpkin, linseed and sesame seeds (look out for ready mixed jars in supermarkets or health stores)
4 T honey
dried cranberries
- Stir the oats, yoghurt and apple juice together and refrigerate covered, overnight.
- Toast the seeds in a pan, add the honey, and stir until it becomes runny and bubbles.
- Spoon some oats into a bowl and top with the fresh fruit.
- Drizzle on the warm seeded honey and sprinkle with dried cranberries.
- A batch of oats can be made and stored in the fridge for up to a week.
- To soften the honey mixture, heat it in the microwave for a few seconds or over a bowl of hot water.
Day 2
Fruit, almond and yoghurt breakfast smoothie
serves 1–2
2 cups papaya chunks
1 banana
2 T ground almonds
a big pinch of ground cinnamon
½ cup cranberry juice
½ cup plain, low-fat yoghurt
1 T honey
for serving
- Rye toast buttered and spread with Marmite or Bovril
- Blend all the ingredients together until smooth, thinning if desired, with more juice.
- Substitute the papaya with defrosted frozen berries for a variation. If you like it icy, don’t defrost them.
Lunch for 2
Day 1
Grilled salmon with citrus, walnut and sweet potato
serves 2
500 g sweet potato chunks
1–2 T olive oil
salt and milled pepper
1 orange
1 T chopped walnuts
1 T chopped coriander
1 tiny clove garlic, crushed
2 salmon or salmon-trout fillets, about 180 g each
baby spinach, watercress and rocket leaves
- Tip the sweet potato onto a baking tray and toss with the olive oil and some seasoning.
- Roast at 200ºC for 30 minutes or until tender and browned on the edges.
- Finely grate ½ tsp zest from the orange. Combine with the walnuts, coriander and garlic. Season to taste.
- Season the salmon and place skin-side down in a non-stick pan over a low- to medium-heat. When the skin has crisped (about 5 minutes), flip and cook the other side for a minute or two until cooked through, but still moist.
- To serve, pile greens onto plates and top with the potatoes and salmon.
- Squeeze on some orange juice and sprinkle with the walnut mixture.
Day 2
Chicken salad pittas with hummus and sesame
serves 3
1 T olive oil
400 g chicken mini fillets
salt and pepper
3 wholewheat pitta breads
hummus
a handful of rocket
2–3 baby cucumbers, sliced lengthways
100 g rosa tomatoes, halved
a lemon for squeezing
1 T toasted sesame seeds
- Heat the oil in a non-stick frying pan and fry the chicken until golden brown and cooked through. Season with salt and pepper.
- Gently toast the pittas, then halve across and split to create a pocket in each half.
- Spread the inner sides thickly with hummus, then fill with rocket, chicken, cucumber and tomatoes.
- Squeeze on some lemon juice and top with toasted sesame seeds.
Supper for 2
Day 1
Spring vegetable steam-fry with tofu, ginger and ponzu sauce
serves 3-4
297 g firm tofu
cornflour
olive oil
salt
1–2 t crushed garlic
1 T crushed ginger
½–1 t crushed chilli
1 punnet salad onions, halved lengthways
1–2 baby cabbages, thinly sliced
140 g sugar snap peas
135 g asparagus tips
130 g baby corn
3 T ponzu sauce
sprouts (optional)
for serving
- Steamed brown and wild rice with lentils (see ready-mixed selection from supermarkets)
- Drain the tofu and pat dry with paper towel. Cut into cubes. Tip some cornflour into a wide bowl, then add a third of the tofu, turning it to coat.
- Heat 1–2 T olive oil in a non-stick pan. Gently fry the coated tofu until golden. Remove to a plate and sprinkle with a little salt.
- Repeat with the remaining tofu.
- For the steam-fry, heat 1–2 T olive oil in a wok. Stir in the garlic, ginger, chilli and spring onion. Add the remaining vegetables. Stir-fry for a minute, then add 3 T water.
- Lower the heat, cover and steam for 5–10 minutes or until the vegetables are tender-crisp.
- Stir in the ponzu sauce and tip into a serving bowl.
- Top with tufts of sprouts if using and serve with the rice and lentils.
Day 2
Ostrich stew
serves 3–4
1–2 T olive oil
500 g ostrich cubes
salt and pepper
230 g baby roasting leeks, halved across
6 celery fingers, halved across
1 fat clove garlic, crushed
400 g chopped tomatoes
a few sprigs of thyme
1 cup orange juice
350 g baby carrots, trimmed and peeled
160 g fresh or frozen peas
for serving
1 T chopped parsley
1 t finely grated orange zest
1½ cups instant polenta cooked according to the packet instructions
- Pat the ostrich cubes dry with paper towel. Heat the oil in a heavy-based saucepan.
- Brown half the meat, then remove to a plate and season with salt and pepper. Repeat.
- Return the meat to the saucepan together with the leeks, celery, garlic, tomato, orange juice and thyme. Bring to a bubble, then reduce the heat and simmer, covered, for 30 minutes.
- Sprinkle the carrots on top of the stew, cover and simmer for another 30 minutes or until both meat and vegetables are tender.
- Add the peas five minutes before serving.
- Adjust seasoning and top with the parsley and orange zest.
- Serve in wide bowls with soft polenta.