Hope everyone’s doin’ great! Made this fast veggie pasta recipe, and it’s de-light-ful. It really works with any veggies you got laying around in the fridge. Took a break from the #everythingpumpkin season, which really got to me this year 😅…
Fun, Healthy, Delicious Recipes
By DIYBITES
By DIYBITES
Check out these pretty colors having a party in my bowl🌻 🙆🏼
We’ve got baby spinach, red beans, avocado, carrots, cherry tomatoes and spring onions topped with seeds, lime juice and balsamic vinegar. It’s a fast, healthy, delicious salad recipe, ready in 10 minutes.
We’ve also got 253 grams of Calcium going on, 17 grams of fiber, 67 mgrams of vitamin C, 6 mgrams of iron, 6 mgrams of vitamin C, and 186 mgrams of Magnesium.
Full recipe and nutritional info ⤵️
By DIYBITES
So I opened my fridge, made eye contact with this avocado and he was totally giving me the “put me into a sandwich” look 👀 ✨. And I did. Aaaaand it was pretty much heaven, probably because of the freshly baked bread I got 15 minutes before, and the mix of flavors that almost brought a couple of tears to my eyes.
I used whole wheat mini baguettes for the sandwich, and I would recommend (based on my personal preferences) using a crusty bread. It just makes a better match with the tzatziki and avocado combo. But hey, you can use whatever bread you like the most or whatever bread you have at home. However, if you use sliced bread, toast it for a couple of minutes before using it for the sandwich 👌. If you don’t have one of your own, check out my tzatziki recipe here. It’s SO simple and tastes way better than the store-bought ones. #ikidyounot 😋
Recipe and nutritional information below ⬇️
By DIYBITES
Look at how pretty this looks 💜 What’s up with these awesome colors? Well, the purple color from red cabbage comes from these badass pigment molecules called anthocyanins. Anthocyanins pigments also produce magenta, pink, and red colors in plants and you can see them in leaves and flower petals.
Red cabbage is a rich source of fiber, iron, vitamin C and vitamin A. It actually has 10 times more Vitamin A and twice as much iron as green cabbage. This recipe calls for vinegar. And that’s for two reasons: it tastes realreal good and because normally, red cabbage would turn blue when cooked 😀
Fun fact. Because red cabbage contains anthocyanins, its juice can be used as a pH indicator. Red, purple or magenta in acids [pH < 7], purple in neutral solutions [pH ~ 7], and ranges from blue-green-yellow in alkaline solutions [pH > 7]. Yup, science. Recipe and nutritional information below. 👇