Showing posts with label Winter Warmers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winter Warmers. Show all posts

The chilly winter weather often has an influence on your diet. You find yourself eating more comfort foods and drinking more hot chocolates, but can’t your winter warmers also be healthy? If you want something warm and flavourful, while still taking care of your wellness, we’ve got the answer for you: chicken and pasta. The following recipes are vastly beneficial for your wellbeing – both physically and emotionally – and they’re also pretty easy to make!


 


1. Chicken Pasta in Spinach Sauce: This recipe is good for your heart. To start, cook 500g of fresh spinach in a pot containing 1½ cups of chicken broth until the spinach softens. Then, drain and stain the spinach and keep the broth to one side. Keep things as is if you want a rough sauce, but if you want something smoother you should use a food processor to blend the cooked spinach and a few tablespoons of the broth. Add 250g pasta shells into a large pan of boiling water, and cook until froths appear on the top. Drain the shells and keep aside. In a pan, heat two teaspoons of olive oil on a medium flame, add four cloves of chopped garlic and sauté, making sure not to let the garlic turned brown. Add your spinach and sprinkle on ½ a teaspoon black pepper, ½ a teaspoon nutmeg and ½ a teaspoon salt. Add 250g of chicken breast sliced in to cubes, and the remaining broth, cover and cook for 10-15 minutes or until the chicken is tender. Then, stir in the cooked pasta, stir and for two to three minutes for all the flavours to come through.


 


2. Mexican Style Chicken Pasta:Wash and chop six thoroughly drained canned tomatoes, four chopped Scallions and one large green bell pepper. Set these aside and pour five cups of salted chicken broth into a pan. Add in one teaspoon chilli powder, two cloves of minced garlic and one teaspoon cumin. Bring these ingredients to a boil on medium flame and stir in the chopped vegetables. Cut up 250g of skinless, boneless chicken and add this to the pan, covering and simmering for 10-15 minutes on low flame. Once the chicken is tender and the vegetables are mushy, take the pan off the heat. The liquid should have reduced and thickened. Cook a packet of spaghetti and, while that’s cooking, heat two tablespoons of olive oil in a heavy bottomed pan. Add another clove of minced garlic and throw in the cooked spaghetti. Toss around till the spaghetti is well coated with garlic infused oil. Throw your chicken mixture into the heavy bottomed pan and add in six to eight chopped green chillies. Simmer for 5 minutes on a medium flame to blend all the flavours together, then garnish with ½ a cup of chopped coriander and one cup of shredded cheese.


 


3. Greek Penne with Chicken: In a large vessel of salted water, boil a packet of penne pasta, drain and keep aside. Hold on to ½ cup of this boiled water. Place a heavy skillet on high flame and melt in two tablespoons of butter. Add one tablespoon of olive oil, then place in two minced garlic gloves and two chopped red onions. Stir fry until the ingredients turn pink; add 250g of chicken breast cut in to small pieces, and sauté for 10-12 minutes. Reduce the heat and add in a can of artichoke hearts, a can of chopped tomato, a cup of shredded feta cheese, ¼ cup of chopped parsley, ½ cup lemon juice and a tablespoon of dried oregano. Stir in the pasta and, if it seems too dry, add ½ cup of water you boiled the pasta in to make a sauce that coats the pasta well. Cook for about three minutes to let the flavours to combine. Season with black pepper and salt and serve.

As the winter weather slowly starts to creep in, you start to put away the fans and swimwear and bring out your woolly jumpers and electric blankets. However, covering up isn’t the only way to get warm this winter; you can also keep warm and cosy by including certain foods in your diet.


 


1. Spices – For a warmer body temperature, as well as flavour and aroma, you can’t go wrong with warming spices like cinnamon sticks, cloves, ginger and pepper. Ginger contains thermogenic properties that help to increase your body temperature – as well as being extremely beneficial for your digestive wellness – while cloves have an amazing capacity to warm the body and freshen the mouth.


 


2. Vegetables – Whether you boil them, steam them or blend them up in soups and smoothies, nothing warms your inner furnace as quickly as vegetables. As an added bonus, eating plenty of veg helps to boost your immunity, increase your blood flow and give those cheeks a rosy glow.


 


3. Honey – The winter blues can send your sugar cravings into overdrive, and so honey is a great, healthier alternative to refined sugar. Adding it to warm water makes for the perfect drink on a long winter’s night, and the natural sweetener is also works wonders for your complexion.


 


4. Onion – So it gives you bad breath and may induce tears, but all will be forgiven when you realise how beneficial onions are to your winter wellbeing. If you include onion as part of your daily diet, it acts as a persistent body heater, helping to ward off that constant chill.


 


5. Chillies – As chillies are so hot and spicy, they work to stimulate your body temperature by enhancing your blood circulation. Plus, the reason why chillies’ flavour is so pungent is due to a substance called Capsaicin, which also works to increase thermo genesis.


 


6. Green Tea – This beverage packs a triple threat to fight that winter chill, as green tea contains caffeine, catechins and antioxidants. The latter component helps to improve your metabolism, which warms you up, while the other two together increase thermo genesis by up to 77%.


 


7. Coconut Oil – As coconut oil is mostly made up of medium-chain fatty acids, it’s an excellent way to increase thermo genesis and help to raise your body temperature.