Tuesday, 21 April 2020

Anzac Cookies


Anzac Day is on Saturday the 25th April. Anzac cookies were sent to troops in the war and they are still a popular cookie to make now and are great as a snack.
There are many recipes for Anzac cookies, we have one on the blog Anzac Cookies and here is the link to a recipe for Anzac cookies with a twist See in the Dark Anzac Biscuits
 
I sometimes like to melt some cooking chocolate and drizzle the chocolate over the top of the cookies after they have come out of the oven and are cool.
Nadia Lim has a dairy free recipe using coconut oil Nadia Lim dairy free Anzac Cookies
Healtheries NZ has a gluten free recipe Healtheries Gluten free Anzac cookies or you could use any recipe and replace the flour with gluten free flour and the rolled oats with quinoa flakes. 
You might like to add your own secret ingredient to make your own version of Anzac cookies! I would love to hear about your creations - you can comment below.


Sunday, 12 April 2020

Gardening from your food cupboards

Mrs Masters has put together some fabulous activities that you could try at home. 


This celery has been in the glass container with wet paper towels for two weeks. We have harvested the big stems. Little roots are starting to grow so it can be planted in a pot or the garden to keep growing.  

“Observe” sprouting kumara and  potatoes in the pantry.. don’t throw them out, grow them. Plant potatoes in a big pot or in the garden. 
Kumara can be grown inside in a jar with a little water or planted as a pot plant. Vines of green leaves will festoon your house and give you leaves to add to stirfrys. 
The vine shoots can be carefully snipped away from the kumara in late spring to grow a crop of kumara tubers in a sunny part of your garden. 
Another food cupboard growing experiment to “observe”.. 
cut about a quarter from the bottom (root end) of an onion while you are cooking. Save it and put over a small jar etc of water so the old roots are just touching it. When the roots start to grow or you see the green shoot coming out on the onion rings you know your onion is starting to regrow. These ones in my kitchen have been sitting over water for 4 days. Plant in a pot or the garden and let’s see what we get. My red onion has new roots and the brown onions have the little shoots so they are getting planted today.  I have never done this before, so I’m waiting to see what happens. Try more than one onion and don’t leave them for too long in the water as rotten onions are disgusting!
 Shallots, spring onions and garlic can be grown from extras in your kitchen. Leave the shallots and garlic (only use New Zealand grown - not imported garlic) on some damp kitchen paper till roots start to grow from the blunt end. Then plant with the pointy end pointing up and just covered in a pot or your garden.
 Spring onions can be used from the green leaves down to about 6 cm of the white and then put the white part with the root end in water or plant in the garden and they will regrow then you can just trim the tops off when you need some. 


Saving seeds from old beans harvested before we left school. These will be stored for next summer. Observe and collect seeds in your garden ; leave them to dry and then put them in jars of paper packets.. label them and we can have a seed sharing time when we get back to school. 


 Try growing some sprouts or micro greens. These are two types of whole dried lentils on the left with mung beans at the back that my family are growing to add to stirfrys, salads and a sprouted lentil dhal. 
Check online for seeds that you can experiment with straight from the supermarket now. 
Sunflower seeds are another one to soak and rinse twice a day and then nibble on or add to salads. 
Because the seeds are starting to grow their nutrients are easier for us to digest  and more valuable as food. 


Last one to experiment with .. carrot tops for all the hens, rabbits and guinea pigs. When you are cooking up some soup, carrot cake or just chomping save 4 cm or so of the top of the carrot. Then put into an egg cup or dish on damp kitchen paper and put on your window sill. The leaves will start to grow up again and your bubble friends will have a nice fresh salad! 

Make sure to keep us updated with your GTT experiences at home via email!

Monday, 2 March 2020

2020 begins

What a great start to 2020! 
The excited faces of the Year 4 children as they have experienced their first sessions in the garden and kitchen, and the attitudes and skills of the Year 5 children who are in their second year of the programme. We have been super impressed. 
We are so thankful to have so many amazing volunteers. Parents who come regularly, those who take time off work to help out, grandparents and community volunteers. Even visiting family from overseas!



Sunday, 17 November 2019

Pizza and Pasta

The gardeners have been super busy. Planting, mulching, tidying the gardens and plenty of watering. Harvesting of a variety of salad greens, silverbeet, kale, cavalo nero, parsley, mint, coriander, spring onions, chives, sprouting broccoli, beetroot and new seasons asparagus.






 In the kitchen we have made pizza and homemade pasta. It has been a busy term of visitors. We hosted a Garden to Table Open Day and had a large group of interested people through who were amazed by what all the children had been doing. Year 13 Food Technology students from Mahurangi College ventured down to Auckland and spent the day teaching the children how to make pasta.














Monday, 5 August 2019

Citrus crazy and the Root to Tip Competition

Meadowbank School (and Mrs Masters and Mrs Crews especially) are super proud of the 2 teams that made it into the Regional finals of the annual Root to Tip competition roottotip.org.nz open to all Year 5 and 6 children nationwide. The judges were highly impressed with the talents of all the participants and although they didnt make it through to the final they should be so pleased and proud of their achievements. We were impressed with their skills and the the knowledge they have of using seasonal food from the root to the tip!We are also proud of the many teams that entered but didnt make it through. Well done to all.
The citrus fruit this year is amazing. We have lots of lemons on our own school trees and have been gifted lots more lemons, grapefruit, oranges, tangeloes and limes.
We used them in the kitchen to make a delicious lemon curd that we served on homemade mini pancakes. Lemon cordial, crunchy lemon muffins and lime shortbread have also been on the menu.
Braised seasonal vegetables with coconut and coriander rice was popular too. Gardeners harvested 15-19 different vegetables from the garden for this dish!