Sunday, 29 March 2015

Globe-cooking recipe : Horenso No Shira-aé (Japan)


Despite absolutely loving Kamo No Teriyaki (Teriyaki Duck with Soba Noodles), the first dish from my Japanese-themed Kitchen Trotter box, I really wasn't sure about the other recipes because they just didn't sound like things we'd really enjoy. In for a penny, in for a pound though, so I decided to see if they were as unappetising as I expected ! This was the first of the Japanese starters and it wasn't actually as bad as I'd thought, although I did find it a bit bland.

Horenso No Shira-aé


ingredients :

300g tofu
300g spinach
1 carrot
1tbsp mirin sauce
1tbsp soy sauce
1tbsp sugar
80g walnuts (or I used pine nuts)


The recipe needed two ingredients from the Japanese box : tofu and mirin sauce.


Empty the tofu into a saucepan, just cover with water and bring to the boil then drain.


Don't worry if it falls apart as you'll be mashing it up in a while anyway.


After chilling in the fridge for a while, mash the tofu then add the sugar, soy sauce and mirin seasoning.


Mix it all up then pop it back in the fridge. It looks decidedly unappetising at this point !


Cut a carrot into 2mm thick slices and boil in salted water for a few minutes until soft. In a separate saucepan, blanch some spinach - ideally fresh but I used frozen which worked fine too. Drain both and add them to the tofu.


Mix it all up and put back in the fridge to chill for a while before serving. Serve in individual ramekins sprinkled with walnuts or pine nuts.

*** Don't miss my country-by-country globecooking recipe index ! *** 

#SilentSunday 29/3/15



Sunday weigh-in : A Bump in the Road


This week has been a bit of a meh-week. I had to console a desperately unhappy teen when Zayn quit One Direction (and figured baking cookies and fridge cake would help put a smile on her face - well,you HAVE to taste the first one to check they're ok, don't you ?!). I've been flat out at work with school reports and after school meetings, so it's been a case of speedy eating rather than healthy eating. It's been raining hard so long walks and geocaching are off the menu. It's also that time of the month. So today the scales said 85.7kg, a 500g gain, but I can deal with that !

Positives of the week

- Last week I noticed my ring and my watch have been feeling looser, this week it's my coat and jeans, so even if the scales didn't move in the right direction, something must be happening !

- I'm freshly motivated to start finding time in my busy week to dust off my fitness DVDs and the Wii Fit again

Current targets 

Last week's target : Keep making good choices and listening to the SlimPod. Throw in one session of sport. C'mon, bring on the 84 point somethings ! (HALF DONE, HALF FAILED !)

This week's targets : Let's try again - Keep making good choices and listening to the SlimPod. Throw in one session of sport. C'mon, bring on the 84 point somethings !

Short-term targets 21kg to lose sounds a lot but breaking it down, aiming for 1kg a week, that's only about 5 months - plenty of time for heading off to Turkey in August !

first target, get my "weight to lose" badge down into the 40's (it's currently on 51lb) (done),
 second goal - get back to 85.9kg, my pre-xmas weight (done )
third goal : get my "kg lost" badge back into double figures 
fourth goal : get my "weight loss" badge higher than my "still to go" badge
fifth goal : get back into my (smallest) bright blue jeans comfortably
sixth goal : get back to 77kg - my lowest weight since my pregnancies

Longer-term targets :  Hit my target weight of 68kg. 

START WEIGHT :93.7kg
TARGET WEIGHT : 67.8kg
WEIGHT LAST WEEK  : 85.2kg 
WEIGHT TODAY : 85.7kg
WEIGHT LOST SO FAR :  8.1kg
STILL TO GO : 17.6kg
CHANGE THIS WEEK : +0.5kg

Feel free to add your weightloss posts to my weekly linkie - it's great to see how everyone else has been getting on and give each other support and encouragement. You can even grab the linkie code and add it to your own blog if you like. :)









get the InLinkz code



Created by MyFitnessPal - Free Calorie Counter

 MyFitnessPal - Nutrition Facts For Foods


Saturday, 28 March 2015

Kärcher SC1 Steam Stick review


I'm sad to say, my time as a Kärcher Clean Ambassador has drawn to an end. Well, actually, I can't be too sad because I think I've reviewed pretty much all of their products over the past year ! You can check out my previous reviews to see what we thought when we roadtested their pressure washersteam cleaner, vacuum cleanerfloor polisher and Window Vac, as well as some of the accompanying accessories. For our final review, we received a brand new product from Kärcher, the innovative Steam Stick which is the first handheld steamer that can also clean your floors.


Inside the box you get a small handheld steamer unit with various attachments - a hand tool, a floor mop tool, an extension hose, a power nozzle, a detail nozzle, a round brush and two Terry cloth covers, one for the hand tool and one for the floor.


What I love about Steam Cleaners is that they deep clean without chemicals, killing 99.99% of all bacteria just using tap water. When Allergy UK independently tested them, they concluded that Kärcher steam cleaners remove 99.99% of House dust mites, 99.83% of Cat allergens, 99.01% of Dog allergens, 99.37% of Pollen allergens and 100% of Fungal spores. All without bleach or harsh chemicals so it's better for the planet and safer if you have kids or pets around.


It's not just the hidden germs though, steam cleaning is a fabulous way of tackling the stubborn grime that you never thought you'd get rid of - limescale build up on the shower walls, the grime around taps, the nooks and crannies in the oven, the extractor fan filter, ...


Kärcher are very proud of their new addition. They explain : "In a recent independent study the Kärcher Steam Stick outperformed all leading competitors using just tap water. It features an innovative new boiler system which combines the deep cleaning power of steam with the latest safety functions in a light-weight handheld design. With up to 3 bars of pressure in the palm of your hand, the Steam Stick is able to blast away the most stubborn of stains in the hardest to reach places. The Steam Stick is the ideal solution for all of your household chores, able to clean your kitchen and bathroom on just a single tank of water."

It is a really good product, although I'd have to say it's no better than the original SC 2.500 C Steam Cleaner that we reviewed. It heats up very quickly and provides consistent powerful steam cleaning. It has the advantage of being lighter and smaller, so it's easier to manouever and takes up less space in storage, and it also has a lower price tag (RRP £99.99 as opposed to £219.99 for the larger model, although you can find cheaper deals online). As we already have a bigger Steam Cleaner, I wouldn't bother buying a Steam Stick because they both do basically the same thing, but if you haven't got one yet, it's definitely a suberb ally for the spring cleaning (and winter, summer and autumn cleaning too, for that matter !). It makes cleaning much quicker and easier as well as - dare I say it ?! - rather fun. I may have been heard shouting "I'm a dragon" as I tackled the shower, but it was only to make Pierre laugh, honest !

star rating : 5/5

RRP : £99.99

For more information on the Kärcher Steam Stick and other home and garden products visit www.karcher.co.uk

Disclosure : As a Kärcher Clean Ambassador, I have received a selection of products throughout the past year in order to write honest reviews.

Book review : White Hunger - Aki Ollikainen


Pereine Press always surprise me with their quirky, translated, contemporary European novellas. I tend to think of them as "Quick Reads for Intellectuals" and The Times Literary Supplement described them as "two-hour books to be devoured in a single sitting : literary cinema for those fatigued by film." That is actually a really good description because, despite being short (this one is only 136 pages long), they manage to sweep you away to a time and a place that you can see, smell and even taste, as they are so rich and evocative in their descriptions.

I recently received White Hunger by Aki Ollikainen, translated from the Finnish by Emily Jeremiah and Fleur Jeremiah, which is the 16th Pereine title and included in the Chance Encounter series. (An annual Pereine subscription consists of three books chosen from across Europe and connected by a single theme.)

White Hunger takes us to Finland in 1867, a year which saw a devastating famine that wiped out the population in vulnerable farming communities and left the glacial wastelands dotted with starving beggars, wandering from farmstead to almshouse, hoping for a charitable bowl of gruel and a safe place to lay their heads for the night before resuming their hopeless trek to St Petersburg (this intially confused me but I learnt that northern Finland was part of Russia at the time) or another bigger town which may provide salvation. Despite the universal hardship they encounter - at best, people have watery gruel or stale bread made from ground bones or bark to offer - most people accept to provide them a safe place until morning, particularly the women, who ignore their less charitable husbands who often say that they have enough trouble feeding themselves.

The narrative follows the plight of Marja, a wife and mother of two who makes the heart-wrenching decision to leave her dying husband and set off into the white wilderness with her two children in the hopes of finally reaching a better place, where they will at least have bread made with flour to eat. As she crosses the icy landscapes, encountering the best and worst of humanity, protecting her children as best she can, you get the sense that nothing is happening - just an endless chain of days spent walking through the unforgiving snow and nights hoping for enough warmth to live to see another day - but when you take a step back, there is actually a lot going on. The death of loved ones, rape and violence, loss of hope - all traumatic events that are shrugged off as trivial in bodies anaesthetised by the biting cold and wracked with constant gnawing hunger.

The book follows one mother's plight but the writing also has a universal quality, not just describing the Finnish famine of the 1860's but also today's refugees, hopelessly plodding on in the hopes of finding a safe place to survive in. It's a bleak read that will haunt you long after you have turned the final page.

star rating : 4.5/5

RRP : £12

Paperback: 128 pages
Publisher: Peirene Press Ltd (1 Mar. 2015)
ISBN-10: 1908670207
ISBN-13: 978-1908670205
Product Dimensions: 12.5 x 1 x 19 cm


Disclosure : I received the book in order to write an honest review.

There's more to Costa than Coffee ! (review)


When I was a teen spending my Saturday afternoons hanging out in the town centre of Hastings with my best friend, this used to be a shoe shop. That was actually the last time I went in there because, for the last few years, it's been a Costa coffee shop. I don't drink coffee, or tea come to that, so I've never had any desire to call in to Costa Coffee. Until an email landed in my inbox inviting me to go along and try out some of their tasty baked products. It turns out that, all this time, I've been seriously missing out. Costa do so much more than just posh coffee !

To be honest, I did actually know that they served sweet treats to go with your shot of caffeine, but I didn't know they also sell paninis, toasties, sandwiches and wraps. They look really nice and fresh so it's definitely another option to look into when we need a quick family meal out and want to avoid the usual fast food suspects.


But on to the task at hand. We'd been invited along to try out their limited-edition Easter Teacake, described as "a soft sweet dough, jam-packed with juicy sultanas and jumbo Chilean flame raisins and hand finished with an Easter cross."


I'd have called it a Hot Cross Bun rather than an Easter Teacake, but whatever you call it, it was very nice. I usually eat hot cross buns cold, straight from a pack plucked off a supermarket shelf and spread with butter, but toasting them does give them a lovely texture. The Costa Easter Teacake is soft and chewy with a lovely crunchy crispness where it's been toasted. They haven't skimped on the raisins so you get a lovely sweetness coming through - basically, it's a very nice hot cross bun. It's not as spicy as I'd have liked - I always like the warming spices coming through as you chew a hot cross bun - but the kids actually preferred this. I was impressed with the price too - £1.65, which is cheaper than a lot of options, especially as it's big enough to cut in half and share.

The Hot Cross Teacake isn't the only seasonal treat on offer - the Easter specials also include  Chocolate Cornflake Crunch (cornflake cakes topped with Mini Eggs, what's not to like ?!), Pecan and Maple Muffins, Malty Chocolate Crunch and Mini Lemon and Raspberry Cakes.


We'd been given a second task though - it's such a tough life being a blogger ! - and settled down to sample their Layered Carrot Cake. The kids were not at all sure about eating a cake containing carrots - they thought I was joking initially ! - but they were reassured when they saw that it wasn't bright orange, as they expected ! They had a taste and loved the soft texture and the cream cheese icing but they were put off by the nutty flavour of the cake. Which wasn't a bad thing because it meant all the more for me ! The Carrot Cake is apparently Costa's most popular whole cake and since its launch in 2009, Costa has sold over 5.9 million slices, which corresponds to a whopping 23,517 slices every week - I can see why ! The £2.10 price tag is again quite reasonable for the size of the slice.

This was our first venture into Costa but it certainly won't be our last !

Disclosure : We received a voucher to sample the products and write an honest review.

Friday, 27 March 2015

Giveaway #467 : Win 2 x Shaun the Sheep: Picture Perfect and Bing on DVD - closed - winners Harley Richardson, Tracy Nixon


There seems to be a sudden influx of DVD releases at the moment, many of which I also have up for grabs in giveaways - right now, you can win copies of Fairytale : A True Story, Chuggington Turbo Charged Chugger, Ribbit and Two Night Stand right here on my blog. But that's not all - I have two more family-friendly titles for you to win that will be perfect for keeping the kids entertained over Easter.

First up is Shaun The Sheep : Picture Perfect, available on DVD from 30th March. Shaun is a sheep who doesn’t follow the flock – in fact, he leads them into all sorts of scrapes, turning the peaceful Mossy Bottom Farm into mayhem in the meadow. Shaun and his pals run rings around their poor sheepdog Bitzer, as he tries to stop the Farmer finding out what's going on behind his back.

PICTURE PERFECT brings you the following episodes, available to own on DVD for the first time since their TV airing: Duck • Bitzer for a Day • Bitzer’s Secret • The Stare • Ping Pong Poacher • Save the Dump • Picture Perfect • Hidden Talents • Fruit and Nuts • The Intruder

The DVD bonus content also contains a huge treat from Aardman Animations – a further 5 brand new Morph episodes, from the makers of Shaun the Sheep.

The Madhouse kids didn't know Morph but they thought he was great fun - it was a real blast from the past for me too, as I remember watching him on Take Hart when I was a kid. Shaun The Sheep : Picture Perfect is also great fun movie and the whole family enjoyed watching it. If you want to keep the kids busy over the Easter holidays, maybe you could tie it in with going out to spot the newborn lambs in the countryside or even tracking down some of the fabulous Shaun In The City models that will be popping up across London this weekend.

Cert. U | Combined Running Time: 70 mins approx. | RRP: £9.99




The second DVD introduced us to Bing, a lovely character we were unfamilair with, who, along with his carer Flop (voiced by Mark Rylance) and all their friends, celebrates the noisy, joyful messy reality of being a pre-schooler. Bing is a CBeebies series, based on the books by Ted Dewan, and this is its first time on DVD.

The DVD contains the following episodes: Swing - Bye Bye - Ducks – Growing - Hide & Seek - Lost - Frog – Bake - Atchoo! – VooVoo. The DVD also comes with a ‘Grow With Bing’ height chart which will look great in a child's bedroom. This is a lovely DVD to watch snuggled up on the settee with a pre-schooler and each episode covers everyday experiences that your child will be familiar with, such as going to the park or making cakes.

Cert. U. | RRP: £9.99



Two lucky Madhouse Family Reviews readers can win one of each of the DVDs (Shaun the Sheep: Picture Perfect and Bing : Swing). Fill in your entries in the Rafflecopter widget below :



UK only. Closing date : 12/4/15

T & C's : Entries close at midnight on the closing date. Winners will be selected with a random number generator and announced on facebook, twitter and in the giveaway post subject line. Please note, you will be contacted by email and/or twitter and if I haven't heard from you after a week, I'll have to pick another winner. Prizes will be sent out by the companies or their PR directly to winners. Madhouse Family Reviews cannot be held responsible for any prizes that go astray !

Other giveaways you may be interested in :

#KitchenClearout : Mojito Lime Salmon with Cheesy Veg


I'm trying to keep the momentum going for my #KitchenClearout, which is still very much an ongoing work in progress - I seem to be replacing things faster than I'm using them, which is how the problem started! Having defrosted some salmon fillets, I couldn't decide what to do with them - I usually smother them in garlic salt and lime juice but recently I tried Grilled Salmon with Moroccan Spices which was equally delicious so, looking for something original to try, I turned to my tin of seasoning sachets and came across this Mojito Lime Marinade Mix - perfect.


The packaging suggests mixing it with white wine vinegar, white rum and oil but I just added oil to mine, then smeared it all over the salmon fillets to form a crust. Off to the oven they go !


While in my seasoning sachets tin, I saw a packet of cheddar cheese sauce mix and decided to use that up too. I fried off some mushrooms and red onions in a pan.


I had a good clear out in the veg compartment of the fridge and put a couple of carrots and some chicory (endives) on to boil. 


Once tooth-tender, I drained off the water and reused the pan to make up the cheese sauce. I always find packet cheese sauce quite bland so I added some minced garlic and smoked paprika to give it a bit of punch.


Once thickened, I stirred through the carrots/chicory and the mushrooms/onions. Usually I put this in an ovenproof dish with extra grated cheese on top but tonight, I couldn't be bothered (and the oven was in use for the salmon so I was worried about the flavours mingling !) so I served it straight from the pan.


And there you have it. Zesty, zingy mojito lime salmon with a side serving of cheesy veg. Two sachets down, many more to go !


Fancy having a #KitchenClearout too? Join in the linky here !

What's Cooking at The Madhouse? menu plan 27/3


On to a busy week of after-school meetings so I'm back to family faves that I can throw together blindfolded !

Saturday 

lunch - time to start the weekend with a trip to McDonalds for the soft play - salmon salad for me

dinner - Madhouse Daddy hasn't made soup for a while so maybe he'll make his signature veggie soup - I need to dust off the bread machine too

Sunday

lunch - traditional Sunday roast - probably chicken, maybe pork

dinner -  sandwiches or apple cinnamon baked porridge

Monday 

dinner -  chicken & veg pie with garlic mash

Tuesday 

dinner -  chicken pesto pasta with cherry tomatoes and mushrooms

Wednesday 

lunch - homemade hamburgers and spicy wedges with salad

dinner - chilli con carne and rice

Thursday 

dinner - ham and cheese toasties

Friday

dinner - chicken chasseur casserole with baked potatoes


***Click on my Menu Plans tag to see all my other weekly menu plan blogposts.***

Meal Planning Monday

Want to see what everyone else is eating ? Head over to Meal Planning Monday at Mrs M's blog !

Thursday, 26 March 2015

Giveaway #466 : Win a £25 amazon voucher with a2 milk - closed - winner Leanne V McKenna


a2 Milk is real, fresh cows’ milk for people who don’t get on with milk. It’s different to regular cows’ milk because it contains only the A2 protein, rather than the more common A1 protein found in the majority of milk we keep in our fridges. It’s this A2 protein that makes all the difference because it’s easier to digest and kinder on the stomach. No more bloating and discomfort. It also means that the 1 in 5 Brits who struggle to digest dairy may now be able to drink cows’ milk again with no associated problems.

We've tried a2 milk in all sorts of ways - in hot drinks, in cheese sauce, in mash, on cereal, ... - and we couldn't notice any difference at all - you can read our review here.

If you've been avoiding milk because you love it but it doesn't like you, I've no doubt you can identify with the mum in this advert !



Find out if you can drink real milk again at www.a2milk.co.uk

a2 Milk have kindly offered to send a £25 amazon voucher to one lucky Madhouse Family Reviews reader. Fill in your entries in the Rafflecopter widget below.


UK only. Closing date : 10/4/15

T & C's : Entries close at midnight on the closing date. Winners will be selected with a random number generator and announced on facebook, twitter and in the giveaway post subject line. Please note, you will be contacted by email and/or twitter and if I haven't heard from you after a week, I'll have to pick another winner. Prizes will be sent out by the companies or their PR directly to winners. Madhouse Family Reviews cannot be held responsible for any prizes that go astray !

Other giveaways you may be interested in :

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...