We had a pomegranate and some spinach in our organic veg box that needed using, as well as some homegrown mung bean sprouts,* and this is what I came up with.
This is such a colourful, nutritious and satisfying salad, full of antioxidants, protein, fibre, B viamins, minerals and healthy fats.
Vegan, Gluten-free, Organic where possible.
Ingredients
Romaine lettuce leaves
Thinly Sliced Cucumber
Grated Carrot
Sliced ripe Avocado
Spinach
Tinned Mixed Beans, drained and rinsed
Mung bean sprouts (or any other sprouted beans or seeds, but not the commercially packed long beansprouts)
(See * Sprouting for Health, Energy and the Environment! For how to make homegrown sprouts and their benefits)
Pomegranate seeds*
Tamari and Virgin Olive Oil Dressing
Black Pepper
Method
Arrange the torn Romaine leaves around the plate, leaving a space in the centre
Place the thin cucumber slices, then the grated carrot and avocado slices on top around the circle
Lightly warm the beans, stirring gently to prevent them sticking or over-heating, and gently wilt the spinach – this releases the iron in the spinach and makes it more bio-available.
Arrange them in the centre
A few twists of black pepper over the salad
Pour over some Tamari & Olive Oil Dressing
Scatter the Pomegranate Seeds around the beans**
Top with beansprouts
**To remove the seeds, gently roll the whole fruit between your hands, cut in half, invert over a bowl and whack the end with a wooden spoon. If it’s ripe, the seeds should fall out. Otherwise, scoop them out with a metal spoon. See The Healing Powers of Pomegranate + Recipes for the health benefits of this bejewelled fruit.
Copyright: Chris McGowan
I love all the ingredients… will definitely try… thanks for sharing
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Thank you so much for reading and taking the time to comment, hope you like it 😊
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What a beautiful pic! I agree with the comment on the pomegranates. I remember my Dad spending what seemed like hours peeling them. Perhaps that’s why I’m so drawn to a banana!
JP
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When I was at school – many moons ago – girls who were much better off than I would sometimes bring a pomegranate for break, and they would use what today looks like an acupuncture needle to pick out the seeds, I think they came along with the fruit. It put me off for several decades, it looked so fiddly and hardly worth the effort. I had my first one last year!
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I have to try this! Thanks for posting.
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Thank you for reading and commenting 😊
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Now I particularly like the pomegranate whacking, oh yes! I love them but always found the seeds such a fiddle. The dish looks very delicious too!
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