Failed Experiment Leads to Delicious New Spread!

4 recipes in and I’ve failed.

The great thing about failure is that sometimes a failure leads to an amazing new product and so halva spread is born.

Firstly, let’s figure out why it failed. That one’s easy, I woke up before my alarm with a craving for halva. In my bleary haze I tried to rectify one problem (using the wrong equipment and being too lazy to switch to the right equipment) with another (adding water).

Not wanting to waste the resulting half blended mush I tasted it and it was delicious, just nowhere near the texture of halva. This recipe makes nice little halva flavoured balls for a snack or a delicious spread which is a nice nutty alternative to peanut butter.

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Best Ever Bread and Butter Pudding

What should you do with hot cross buns on Easter Monday? They’re slightly stale but you know they won’t be back for nearly a year so they can’t go to waste. You could toast them and put a slab of butter between their warm cheeks or you could make the best ever Bread and Butter Pudding!

Clearly I love hot cross buns so much that they rarely last long enough to go stale, but this pudding is so good that you’ll make extra so you have enough buns left over for Easter Monday.

You can go two ways with this dish, cut down on the butter and sugar for a pudding so healthy you could have a warm gooey bowl of it for breakfast, or add cream and serve it with icecream for a delicious pudding to warm the coldest hearts.


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Bean Lasagne

You know you’re on a winning vegetarian dish when your husband gets excited that you’re making bean lasagne and it’s so easy he’s even made it for me before!

While I’ve called it lasagne it has very little in common to a traditional lasagne other than the layering pattern. The original version was a dish Mum made for us called “ribbon bean bake” when I was a kid, boy I hated it then, but now I love it! I’ve scaled back some of the less healthy elements while making sure it is still super tasty. The result is a man-friendly, no pasta, low fat, vegetarian lasagne.
Bean Lasagne

This dish takes a little while to prepare (about the same as a traditional lasagne), so it’s a good weekend meal, plus it freezes well so you have leftovers for the week.
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Perfect Hot Cross Buns

I love hot cross buns.

Actually, ‘love’ isn’t strong enough to explain my emotions about hot cross buns. One year I bought 8 dozen and froze them to ration throughout the year because I was so upset that there weren’t going to be any in the stores for 9 months. They took up our whole freezer.

So to rectify my predicament that I love a seasonal food I embarked upon a mission to perfect a hot cross bun recipe, and this is it.


There are so many things you could title these hot cross buns:

  • No knead hot cross buns
  • Homemade artisan hot cross buns
  • Vegan hot cross buns
  • Fruity hot cross buns

But really they are just perfect and even better they can be customised to however you like them because they are super versatile. Don’t like peel? Leave it out. Like them light and fluffy? Let them rise the second time for 3 plus hours. Change the fruit, change the spices, make a loaf not buns, do as you please, this recipe will oblige your whims.

Don’t be scared of the 20 hour time frame, surely you can happily give up kneading for sleeping. I would recommend mixing your dough in the afternoon/evening, making the buns for the second rise in the morning to cook in time for morning tea on Easter Sunday. Continue reading

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About the LAB kitchen

Lentils with Mushroom & Bacon

Simply, LAB is me. It’s my first three initials.

But LAB is more than that, it is also about the labrador that sits at the edge of the kitchen. Labradors are the best kitchen assistants – their eyes tell you that whatever you’re cooking is GOOOOOD. So it is symbolic of the approval you want when a new creation comes out of the oven.  Most of my life there has been a labrador at the edge of the kitchen who pined for a crumb to fall from the good experiments and enthusiastically ate the failures to show me I was improving and should keep cooking.

But mostly LAB is my philosophy for food, or at least it is how I justify why I never follow a recipe.

Food is science. Food is the fuel for your body, the mix of energy and nutrients to make you as healthy as possible. Also there is science in the chemical reactions that make bread rise or jelly set or meat cook. But most of all, to me, food is about experimenting with flavours, combining new ingredients and ultimately putting something healthy and tasty on the table every day.

LAB is also highlighting the way most of our food is created. It is processed, artificially flavoured, created by food scientists in laboratory kitchens before being mass produced with a focus on cost not quality or health. Do you know that there is gelatin in most yoghurt? Do you care? The point is not to say that ingredients are good or bad, but to be aware of what we consume. You are what you eat, right? So if you are ignorant of what you consume… So this LAB is about being aware of what you eat while making sure that flavour is a key priority.

You may question why so many recipes are vegetarian or vegan as the recipes build up. This is because non-meat and non-animal product based dishes are often really inventive in being flavourful while usually being super-healthy. So vegan challenges get the experimenting juices flowing (that would probably be beetroot & carrot juices for vegans – haha) and they really suit my food philosophy. Also, even if you’re not vegan, it’s good to have recipes on hand in case a vegan friend comes around for dinner.

So have a go! What can go wrong? I’ll post the good and the bad. As Thomas Edison is credited with saying “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” The worst that can happen is the dog might have to eat it and he’ll make sure you know he is grateful for your mistake.

What is your food philosophy?

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The LAB Kitchen will commence in 7 days…

The LAB Kitchen will be born with its first official post on Easter Sunday with a befitting recipe: An Experiment in Perfecting Hot Cross Buns

Until then I must go back to the lab to continue my research (by which I mean back to studying econometrics).

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