The viral strawberry sandwich from Japan - just strawberries, cream and brioche. A fridge-set favourite that’s all over your feed.
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Parboiled, floured, and roasted in hot oil — the crispiest parsnips you'll make all winter. Golden outside, fluffy inside.
Creamy, cheesy mushrooms with a spinach filling — ready in under 20 minutes and made entirely in the air fryer.
Cheesy, flaky broccoli pinwheels that use the whole head — stalk and all. Ready in 40 minutes and brilliant in lunchboxes.
Crispy pastry baskets, jammy stone fruit, whipped cheesecake cream. A make-ahead Easter treat that looks far more impressive than it is.

One eggplant, fanned out and loaded with mozzarella over a garlicky tomato sauce. Impressive-looking, low-effort, and completely worth it.
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Crispy-bottomed pork dumplings cooked upside-down — fridge odds and ends turned into something properly good. 18 dumplings, 20 minutes.

One pan, no fuss. Chicken (or chickpeas), rice, and a coconut-curry sauce baked together for a weeknight win that doubles as meal prep.

Salty, sticky, sweet — hot honey halloumi over juicy melon and cherry tomatoes is the salad that actually earns its place at the table.

These vegetarian meatballs really hit the spot. Serve with pasta for a crowd pleasing Italian-themed vegetarian dinner!

This is a comforting bowl of goodness using eggplant herbs and pickles. Don't be put off by the amount of ingredients; this Asian-inspired recipe comes together quickly and easily.

This recipe is a combination of sumac-roasted carrots complemented by creamy tzatziki yoghurt - these flavours are delicious together and make a tasty lunch, side dish or dinner.
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Caprese salad is a simple Italian salad, traditionally made of sliced fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, and basil. This version is extra summery and as fresh as it gets.

This dish is full of flavour and extremely versatile. If you're short of a variety of produce, play around and swap for anything else you've got a surplus of.
1/3 of food globally is wasted and it’s estimated that up to 40% of produce grown doesn’t leave the farm gate.
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