EAT GREEN BY MELISSA HEMSLEY:INTERVIEW FOR EVENING STANDARD
What ingredient could you not live without?
I’m all about having trusty store cupboard staples to make regular home cooking easier and more enjoyable. Convenient tins of cooked beans and pulses are great and I turn to them regularly. It’s all too easy to turn to chickpeas or the same type of bean for every meal, but variety is the spice of life so take a chance on a new bean! Check out HODMEDODS (the british pulse pioneers who are growing forgotten grains and pulses like Carlin Peas which make a great sub for chickpeas). I’ve got a red lentil hummus in my book, which is so delicious, easy to make and is as frugal and tasty as chickpeas. Lentils are also brilliant to use in a meat-free bolognese, in curries and soups, or added to veg balls or fritters and packed lunch salads.
What’s your ultimate cooking hack?
I’m a big fan of cauliflower at this time of year. My favourite way to eat it in the winter months is in this zero-waste golden cauliflower soup. It uses all the bits you might throw away with fried cauliflower leaves giving a lovely crunch. The whole cauli is used in all it’s glory and goes in along with turmeric, ginger & some beans to make a creamy hearty base. Perfect for making a big batch and freezing for a rainy day.
Your favourite quick midweek/no fuss meal. Which recipe from the book should we head to?
I always look to my fridge for inspiration when I’m busy, I haven’t had time to go shopping, and need something quick, nourishing and tasty. Some of the best and tastiest dinners I’ve ever made have been ‘fridge raids’ and lots of the recipes in Eat Green have come from this. One of my favourites is my Fridge Raid Frittata.
The beauty of a frittata is that anything goes – really it does! In Eat Green, I’ve used broccoli in all its glory, stems and stalks and all, with garlic and a couple of handfuls of cheese, but you can let whatever is in your fridge take the lead. I sometimes throw in fresh herbs, wild garlic when it’s in season or chilli. It’s also divine with cauliflower and tastes a bit like cauliflower cheese.
Top 3 favourite restaurants to eat out at?
Native restaurant. I love their menu that champions zero-waste and foraged foods, as well as wild game and biodynamic wines. The menu changes regularly with the seasons but if it’s on, you should also try the South Downs venison and any - actually all - of their desserts.
The new Stoney Street at Borough Market. From the team behind 26 Grains and with head chef and master baker Henrietta Inman, this is one of my favourite veg-centric restaurants to go. A real emphasis on seasonal, local veg!
Plates, Shoreditch. A creative food studio and restaurant, Plates opens to the public on Saturdays. They’ve got a beautiful space, which is so worth the visit and Chef Kirk Haworth makes plant-based food that is so tasty beautifully presented.
And another all time favourite is Skye Gyngell’s Spring and specifically her early evening SCRATCH menu
Your ultimate dinner party dish. Failsafe and impressive?
The best celebrations are the ones that are unfussy and relaxed. One of my favourites from the book is my Dosa-style Pancakes and Veg Masala with chilli herb chutney. It’s colourful, easy to adapt depending on the seasons, and the spices fill your kitchen with delicious smells and it very much has an element of help yourself and pass it along, which I love when I’ve got people around the table.
Or I’d make chermoula cauliflower on a green bean dip with a beautiful red cabbage slaw. I’d definitely follow up with the tahini choc chip cookies
Tahini Choc Chip Cookies
Makes 16 cookies, takes 25 mins
The vegan version of these are just as delicious, none of us can decide which we love the most. Store these cakey cookies in an airtight container for 5 days.
You could warm them briefly in the oven to give them a little crispening boost.
The dough freezes well so double up and save half for a rainy day. Just defrost, then slice into portions before putting in the oven.
2 eggs
2 tsp baking powder
4 tbsp maple syrup
2 tsp vanilla extract
150g light tahini
110g smooth nut butter
100g good-quality dark chocolate, broken up into squares, or chips
30g black and white sesame seeds
pinch of sea salt
Flexi Swap
For vegans, replace the 2 eggs with 1 large mashed ripe banana. You can also swap the nut butter for the same amount of a seed butter or tahini for a nut-free alternative.and/or white sesame seeds
A pinch of sea salT
Preheat the oven to fan 170°C/gas mark 5. Line a large baking tray with reusable baking paper.
In a large mixing bowl, whisk the eggs then mix in the baking powder, maple syrup and vanilla extract. Adhe tahini and nut butter and mix together until very well combined.
Roughly chop the chocolate (if not using chips) and fold through the batter along with the sesame seeds.
Measure out 16 balls of the cookie batter, roughly 1 tablespoon each, and bake for 10–15 minutes on the lined baking tray (making sure to leave a little room between each one) until the cookies are just set. Remove from the oven, sprinkle with a little sea salt and allow to cool on a wire rack before serving.
Who is exciting you in the world of food right now?
Seeing food waste being celebrated on menus around london. SILO London is trail blazing this. I’d really recommend everyone checking out Doug McMaster and his restaurant SILO (previously Brighton for 5 years).
Who has influenced you and your approach to food the most?
I’ve always been an adventurous eater. I have an eclectic way of cooking thanks to the way my filipino mum cooked (often a hybrid of Asian and British dishes), growing up in England and Germany where I fell in love with sauerkraut and greens, and having access to the huge diversity of foods London has to offer.
When I left home at age 18, I missed mum’s home-cooking so much I taught myself to cook, asking mum for advice and seeking out recipes to cook for friends who were letting me stay with them in London while I was working my first job and I’d thank them by making them their dinner.
I’m lucky that my mum taught me the value of food. Growing up her mantra was ‘every grain of rice’ whether it was on the plate, fallen onto the table or stuck onto the spoon. She always cooked thriftily. Often on a Sunday, the fridge was emptied into the soup pot – to this day soup is my favourite of comfort dishes – and she always got it to taste delicious. From the time I started cooking for myself, I’ve taken on her waste-free approach, reinventing leftovers, raiding my fridge and seeking out in-season foods, which have dictated how I cook – simple and seasonal, feel-good and delicious. Mum’s always right!
What are you most proud of?
Helping people build their kitchen confidence! Based on feedback I get from my readers and social media audience and the cookery classes that I do, that I’ve helped get people into the kitchen cooking their dinners….and enjoying it. Plus cooking with veg they thought they didn’t like and parts of the veg they’d ordinarily throw away
What’s next for you?
I’m about to start my book tour for Eat Green, lots of cooking demos around the country visiting bookshops for talks and events, teaming up with restaurants I love to put on special suppers like The Ethicurean and Heckfield Place (Skye Gyngell) and River Cottage
I’m now planning the next series of my Sustainability Sessions after a very fun successful launch in Autumn 2019 – they are an ongoing series of community panel discussions with experts from Anita Rani, Grace Dent and Skye Gyngell to Bryony Gordon, June Sarpong MBE, Matt Haig and Fearne Cotton. The sessions range from farming, travel and plastic pollution to mental health, fast fashion, green beauty and slow living with the aim to connect, empower and motivate our offline communities to make meaningful sustainable changes in our daily lives. I’m excited to announce the next speakers and events soon. ⅓ of the ticket price goes to a charity myself and the panelists pick together like The Felix Project, Beauty Banks, Surfers Against Sewage and Mental Health Mates