Turn last night's mash into a crispy, cheesy toastie — no bread required. Ready in under 15 minutes.
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Turn last night's mash into a crispy, cheesy toastie — no bread required. Ready in under 15 minutes.
Pop it in the slow cooker before work. Top with puff pastry when you're home. Dinner is basically done.
All the depth of French onion soup, minus the bread bowl — this creamy one-pan pasta is a weeknight winner.
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One rice cooker, frozen dumplings, and whatever greens need using — a proper cosy bowl of noodle soup in under 20 minutes.

Crunchy greens, crispy rice and a creamy lemony dressing. A salad that actually keeps things interesting.

Buttery croissants stuffed with eggs, capsicum and feta, then crisped up in the air fryer. Breakfast, sorted in 20 minutes.

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.

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.

Char cabbage wedges until sweet and tender, then drown them in basil garlic butter. Simple winter cooking that tastes expensive.
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Fold pastry around jammy stone fruit for a simple, shareable dessert that looks far fancier than the effort suggests.

Spiral-cut golden potatoes grilled on skewers, topped with melted cheese, sour cream, charred corn kernels, jalapeños and fresh herbs
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Fresh watermelon, peaches and tomatoes meet torn mozzarella and basil in this summery twist on a caprese salad.

Scrunched filo, tangy lemon custard, and fresh blueberries baked into a showstopping dessert that's easier than it looks.
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Crispy outside, fluffy inside - these potato and corn fritters turn leftover mash into something properly good.
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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