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Photography by Ali Allen

Wellbeing Recipe | Honeyed Blood Orange & Bay Truffles

Iona Bower October 26, 2024

Eating for wellness should never be about feeling worthy. Especially in winter when we need all the comforts we can get.

Here’s a recipe that includes natural ingredients that will help ward off winter bugs, but is also comfort on a plate. These Honeyed Blood Orange & Bay Truffles are a pleasure to make on a blustery afternoon and go beautifully with a massive cup of tea and a box set on the sofa.

Whipped into a glossy ganache with a hint of honey, these truffles are full of calming ingredients and immune-boosting properties, too. Because a little of what you fancy does you good.

Makes 12 truffles

90g dark chocolate, finely chopped
1-2 tbsp honey
1 blood orange
6 bay leaves
1 cinnamon stick (or ½ tsp ground cinnamon)
Pinch of flaky sea salt

1 Set a heatproof bowl over a small pan half filled with simmering water. Add the chocolate and 1 tablespoon of honey and allow it to gently melt – don’t stir as it can cause the mixture to split. Remove from the heat just before all the chocolate has melted.

2 While the chocolate melts, use a veg peeler to strip 3 long pieces of peel from the orange and place in a separate saucepan. Juice the orange and measure 100ml, then add the juice to the orange peel. Save 1 bay leaf for garnish and tear the edges of the remaining bay leaves, scrunching a little to help them release their natural oils and fragrance, then add to the pan along with the cinnamon and simmer for 10 mins.

3 Take the juice off the heat. Remove the bowl of chocolate from the pan. Set a fine sieve over the chocolate and pour the warm spiced orange juice over the mixture. Gently fold together until you have a glossy mixture. Taste and add more honey, if needed. If your chocolate splits, vigorously whip in 1 tbsp of boiling water (or hot cream) until the chocolate comes back together into a silky ganache.

4 Line a small loaf tin with greaseproof paper. Gently spoon the truffle mixture into the tin and pop it in the freezer to set for 10 mins.

5 Cut into little squares and finish with a dusting of flaky sea salt, a little grated orange zest and some fine slivers of bay leaf.

The truffles recipe is from our November feature, Winter Wellness, by Rachel de Thample, with photography by Ali Allen. The feature includes lots more delicious recipes to fend off winter bugs, including Chinese Chicken Soup, Black Garlic Marmite, Lemony Parsnip Houmous with Sage, Cavolo Nero Risotto and Pomegranate Fizz. You can find more easy ideas for supercharging your winter eating below and you’ll find all the recipes in the November ‘Jewel’ issue, in shops now.

More ways to super charge your winter eating.

Solar-power your mushrooms

Mushrooms are like sun sponges. They contain a compound called ergosterol which, when exposed to sunlight, transforms into vitamin D. Any mushrooms can be exposed to sunlight at any point to enrich their vitamin D content, even dried mushrooms from the supermarket that have been grown indoors under artificial light. Put the mushrooms in sunlight for 6-8 hours at any point up to a month before consuming them and they’ll experience the heightened levels of vitamin D. A good reason to incorporate more mushrooms into your diet in the winter, when sunlight is scarce and vitamin D levels are low.

Boost brassicas

The brassica family includes Brussels sprouts, kale, cabbage and cauliflower, and most of their health benefits are reaped when eaten raw – however, if you chop them 40 minutes before cooking, they produce a powerful antioxidant called sulforaphane. If you cut and cook straight away, the sulforaphane doesn’t have time to develop, so being organised means you get more from every bite.

Garlic without the breath

Chop or crush it and set aside for 10 minutes before using. This preserves the allicin in the garlic, keeping it intact during cooking. Research shows that allicin lowers blood sugar and cholesterol and, when you eat cooked garlic, you also avoid punchy raw garlic breath or the intense heat of raw consumption.

Squeeze lemon on your greens

History is rich with recipes tailored for health, especially in the East and much of the Mediterranean, where adding a squeeze of lemon to a salad or dark leafy greens is the go-to final flourish to make greens sing. Not only does the citrus enhance the taste but vitamin C-rich ingredients like lemon help you absorb more iron from foods like greens, which are a rich source.

Add cumin to dishes

Spices not only add warming comfort to food, but many are also great for digestion. Cumin is a particularly wonderful aid for cleansing the small intestine, which plays an important role in digestion in terms of nutrient absorption. Cumin is also thermogenic, so it can help boost your internal temperature, and improve circulation, thus serving as a proper winter warmer.

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Wellbeing | Ways to Enjoy November

Iona Bower November 7, 2023

Photography by Stocksy

Lots of people find November a bit of a difficult month, with long nights, and cold weather to get through, too far from summer and too long until Christmas. But if you look carefully, there are lots of small celebrations to be had and important moments to mark. 

Making the most of seasonal moments is just one way to embrace the colder, darker days, giving you reasons to look forward to the month rather than to fear it. Browse our bumper ‘could-do’ list of ways to enjoy November below. You could do them all, pick just a few, swap them or customise them as you wish. Here’s to learning to love November!

1st: Celebrate Mexico’s Day of the Dead with paper flower garlands and a feast

2nd: Bake Soul Cakes for All Souls Day

3rd: Toast marshmallows on a firepit (or indoors if it’s too wet)

4th: Make a Guy from newspaper and old clothes for Bonfire Night

5th: Watch some fireworks and say ‘oooh’ and ‘aaah’ as warranted

6th: Make autumnal squash or pumpkin soup

7th: Spend some time with your Teddy Bear for Hug a Bear Day

8th: Get some early mince pies in and start writing Christmas cards

9th: Compile a November reading list of cosy books

10th: Light a candle in the evening

11th: Wear a new, non-plastic, poppy for Remembrance Day, or just remember a loved one in your own quiet way

12th: Spend a day slow cooking, savouring the time simply spent on the task

13th: Go for a walk somewhere new at lunchtime to make the most of the daylight

14th: Start a new craft project to see you through winter

15th: Make up jars of toppings for porridge to make your mornings cheerier

16th: Tell ghost stories with friends

17th: As if you needed an excuse, it’s Homemade Bread Day, so get kneading

18th: Re-read an ‘old favourite’ book

19th: Make your bedroom cosy and winter ready with blankets and throws

20th: Mark World Television Day by cosying up with a box set

21st: Celebrate ‘World Hello Day’ by greeting 10 strangers

22nd: Collect colourful leaves on a woodland walk

23rd: Invite friends over for a board games evening

24th: Buy an advent calendar (a proper one with beautiful pictures) ready for next week

25th: Mark Thanksgiving with a meal for family or friends or just a quiet moment of counting your blessings

26th: Make your Christmas pud on Sitr-up Sunday

27th: See if you can spot the full moon today. It’s called the Beaver Moon, or Frost Moon

28th: Hug a tree to mark the second day of National Tree Week

29th: Embrace the dark with a night hike

30th: Cook a Scottish dish such as kedgeree or haggis for St Andrew’s Day

For more inspiration on feeling better about this time of year, read ‘How I Learned to Love November’ in our November (of course!) issue.

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Featured
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

Buy, download or subscribe

See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Feb 27, 2025
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The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

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