What would you do with your 4 hours and 21 minutes?

Posts Tagged ‘make’

Make your own pot pourri | comments

Pot pourriEnjoy a more natural fragrance in your home.

The thing with aerosol and other shop-bought room fresheners is that they can have a rather ‘chemical’ aroma.

For a more natural and much more subtle way to add fragrance to your room, make and display your own pot pourri.

It’s incredibly simple to make, and you can chose your own petals and spices depending on the aromas that you prefer.

And the really great thing is you’ll know that no one else’s home will have exactly the same fragrance as yours.

Use the website inks below to get started:

Make Stuff

Save On Crafts

DIY Life

Go veggie | comments

If you’re a dedicated meat eater, it’s worth trying a week of vegetarianism, your colon will thank you for it!

VegetablesWhy not spend the morning investigating recipes and ideas using the websites below, or get started with our delicious Cauliflower & Asparagus Tart, which includes Quaker Oats for an even healthier veggie meal.   

Ingredients

For the pastry:
300g self-raising wholemeal flour
1 tsp vegan bouillon powder
125ml rapeseed oil
125ml rice milk or Soya milk

For the filling:
olive oil, for oiling and frying
1 medium cauliflower, broken into florets
125g asparagus, trimmed and washed
2 red onions, chopped
50g shiitake mushrooms, sliced
125g frozen sweet corn, mashed
250ml sweetened Soya milk
250ml rapeseed oil
1 lime, juice only
2 tbsp Quaker Porridge Oats
2 dessertspoons vegan bouillon powder
2 tbsp vegan tomato sauce
1 tbsp Dijon mustard
smoked paprika
freshly ground black pepper

Method

1. Oil a 30cm/12in flan or pie dish. Preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas mark 4.
2. To make the pastry, place the flour and bouillon powder in a bowl and rub in the oil, then mix in the milk. Knead the pastry gently for a few moments, then roll out on a floured surface and use it to line the prepared dish. Bake for 10-15 minutes, until just cooked through.
3. Meanwhile, steam the cauliflower and asparagus until hot but not cooked – about 4-5 minutes.
4. Heat a little olive oil in a frying pan and fry the onions and mushrooms until soft. Add the mashed sweet corn and stir until hot.
5. Heat the soya milk in a saucepan until hot but not boiling. Transfer to a food processor or liquidiser, add the rapeseed oil, season with pepper and mix well. With the machine still running, add the lime juice and mix thoroughly to prevent curdling.
6. Add the oats, bouillon powder, tomato sauce and mustard to the milk mixture and blend again.
7. Oil the inner base of the pie crust, then spread a thin layer of the oat mixture over it. Place a layer of the mushroom mixture on top, then a layer of the cauliflower, followed by the remaining oat mixture.
8. Arrange the asparagus spears on top and sprinkle with smoked paprika. Return the tart to the oven and cook for a further 20 minutes. Serve with a green salad.

Enjoy!!

Try a pottery taster class | comments

There are few more enjoyable ways of getting your hands really dirty than squidging, pummelling and squeezing sticky wet clay between your fingers.

PotteryMany adult education centres and course organisers offer free pottery taster classes to give you a feel for it before you plunge in.

Use the websites below to find a class or course near you.

Websites:

Hot Courses

Craft Tracker

Education & Learning

Enjoy a bracing morning at the coast | comments

DeckchairsBingo on the pier, fish and chips for lunch, and a paddle in the sea.

Well, it might be a bit nippy for paddling, but it can still be invigorating to have a stroll along the promenade.

And if all that sea air works up and appetite, take along some of our delicious Brownie Oat Cookies.

Ingredients

85g all-purpose flour
135g white sugar
80g Quaker Oats
30g unsweetened cocoa powder
5g baking powder
2g salt
2 egg whites
80ml light corn syrup
5ml vanilla extract

Method

1. Spray the cookie sheet with non-stick spray. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).

2. In a bowl, mix the flour, sugar, oats, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt. Mix in the egg whites, syrup, and vanilla. Drop spoonfuls on the prepared cookie sheet.

3. Bake for 10 minutes in the preheated oven.

4. Enjoy!!

Create a photo screensaver | comments

All you need is a scanner and a piece of software to create your own unique screensaver full of your favourite photos.

Old photosThere is lots of photo screensaver software that you can download – many of which are free.

Use the websites below to find one that suits you and start your own personal screensaver this morning.

Websites:

My Photos Screensaver

Google Photos Screensaver

Host a coffee morning | comments

FlapjacksRound up some friends or neighbours and have a good old natter over a pot of coffee and these delicious chewy cherry and sultana flapjacks.

Ingredients

200g unsalted butter
200g Demerara sugar
200g honey
400g Quaker oats
50g glacé cherries
50g sultanas

You will also need a 20cm x 30cm (8in x 12in) cake tin, greased.

Method

1. Put the butter, sugar and honey in a saucepan and heat, stirring occasionally, until the butter has melted and the sugar has dissolved. Add the oats, cherries and sultanas and mix well.

2. Transfer the oat mixture to the prepared cake tin and spread to about 2cm (¾in) thick. Smooth the surface with the back of a spoon. Bake in a preheated oven at 180C/350F/Gas 4 for 15-20 minutes, until lightly golden around the edges, but still slightly soft in the middle.

3. Let cool in the tin, then turn out and cut into squares.

4. Enjoy!!

Make your own Easter Eggs | comments

Chocolate EggsAdd a really personal touch to Easter this year by making and decorating your own chocolate eggs.

All you need are some plastic moulds, a cooking thermometer, greaseproof paper and plenty of good quality chocolate.   

Jane Asher’s website below supplies moulds and chocolate direct.

Jane Asher

Imaginative Icing

Home Chocolate Factory

Make a pasta picture | comments(1)

Use whatever you have in the store cupboard and get creative with the kids.

dried foodsDried peas, lentils, pasta shells, rice, beans, Quaker Oats and many other things can be used to make a picture that children of all ages can get involved in.

Start by drawing out a very basic template. It could be fields with sky, clouds and perhaps a little house, a bowl of fruit or a face. You really don’t need any artistic skills for this.

Then gather as many different dried foods as you have in the cupboard. Get the children to help – they may spot ideas that you miss.

Shop bought glue such as a ‘sticky stick’ is ideal but a good alternative is flour and water with a pinch of salt. Mix to a consistency that is spreadable with a pastry brush but not too runny.

Then get the children to paste sections of the picture and stick on the food. Try to cover all the paper and leave to dry. That’s it. Fun and simple. Why not give it a go now?

Some ideas to try:

  • Malted cereal squares make great fences and roofs
  • Pasta shells make a great choppy sea
  • Rice is a good general filler and ideal for clouds
  • Bright yellow and orange lentils make interesting sunsets
  • Spinach pasta is ideal for grassy areas
  • Pasta spirals are great for frizzy hair

*Of 146 people surveyed, 67 first felt hungry after 4 hours, 21 minutes.

Eat Quaker Oats as part of a varied and balanced diet and healthy lifestyle.