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Super spiralized cookbook recipes: Three fresh ways to use your spiralizer

If you're bored of courgetti and have already mastered turning butternut squash into pasta strips, don't think you've tired of your spiralizer too: there are plenty more ways to use it

Orathay Souksisavanh
Wednesday 08 March 2017 15:35 GMT
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Vegetable spring rolls

If you are not serving the rolls straight away, place them on a plate, cover them with a clean, damp cloth and store them in the fridge This will prevent them from drying out. Vary the vegetables you use to fill the rolls (shredded daikon, carrot, celery, for example). You could even include fruit (such as mango, green apple or avocado) and prawns (shrimp), duck breast or smoked salmon. The choice is yours.

1 large chicken breast
salt and pepper
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 cucumber
1 raw Chioggia beetroot (beet) or red beetroot
10 small round rice paper sheets
1 lettuce heart, leaves separated
1 bunch of mint, leaves picked hoisin sauce
1 bird’s eye chilli (optional), deseeded and finely chopped
1 tablespoon chopped peanuts (optional) 

Season the chicken breast with salt and pepper and fry in the oil until golden. Leave to cool, then cut into 5 mm- (1⁄4 in-) thick slices.

Shred the cucumber and beetroot using a julienne peeler fitted with a fine julienne blade. Alternatively, you can use a spiralizer for the cucumber. Set aside.

Soak the rice paper sheets in cold water, then lay them on a board and fill them. With each sheet, start with a lettuce leaf, then add two or three mint leaves, some cucumber, some beetroot and two slices of chicken. Allow the filling to poke out of one side of the sheet. Roll up the sheets tightly, cutting o any excess rice paper at the bottom of the roll.

Pour some hoisin sauce into a small bowl and stir in the chilli and peanuts. Serve the spring rolls with the hoisin sauce.

Vietnamese sandwiches

Serves 3

2 large chicken legs (thighs and drumsticks), boneless if possible
200g daikon (10 cm/4 in in length)
200g carrots
½ cucumber
1 baguette a few sprigs of coriander (cilantro)
3 tablespoons mayonnaise strong liquid seasoning pinch of chopped chilli, to taste pepper 

Chicken marinade

20g lemongrass, finely chopped thumb-sized piece fresh ginger, finely chopped
3 garlic cloves, finely chopped 
1 tablespoon fish sauce
1 teaspoon caster (super fine) sugar
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon pepper 

Vegetable marinade

50g caster (super ne) sugar
3 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
1 small chilli, finely chopped 

Prepare the chicken by boning it if necessary. Mix all the chicken marinade ingredients together. Put the chicken in a dish, pour over the marinade and turn to coat well. Leave to marinate overnight if possible.

The next day, preheat the grill. Peel the daikon and carrots, then shred using a julienne peeler fitted with a fine julienne blade. Mix together the vegetable marinade ingredients, pour over the shredded daikon and carrot and leave to marinate for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, grill the chicken until golden. Leave to cool, then cut into pieces.

Shred the cucumber using a julienne peeler. Cut the baguette into three equal lengths, then cut lengthways into halves. Spread the mayonnaise over one half of each sandwich, arrange some pieces of chicken on top, then add a generous helping of marinated vegetables and some strips of cucumber. Add some coriander leaves, a little liquid seasoning, some pepper and a pinch of chopped chilli to taste. Serve immediately.

Chef ’s tips: It’s handy to ask your butcher to bone the chicken legs for you. Prepare the chicken in large quantities. Marinate, then freeze it for next time.

Vegetable rostis

Serves 4

600g potatoes, peeled
250g butternut squash (pumpkin), peeled and deseeded
2 onions, finely chopped
½ bunch of flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
salt and pepper
vegetable oil 

Shred the potatoes and butternut squash using a julienne peeler. Put in a bowl and add the chopped onion and half the chopped parsley. Season with salt and pepper and mix to combine.

Heat some oil in a frying pan. Take a handful of the julienne mixture and press it together in your hands to form a fairly thick patty. Repeat until you have used up all the mixture

Gently lower the patties, a few at a time, into the hot oil. Carefully turn them over when the edges begin to turn golden. Add more oil to the pan for subsequent batches if necessary. Drain the röstis on kitchen paper, then serve hot, sprinkled with the remaining chopped parsley.

You can replace the butternut squash with sweet potato or parsnip if you wish, but you will need to keep the potato as the starch it contains serves to bind the ingredients together.

Super Spiralized by Orathay Souksisavanh & Vania Nikolcic (Hardie Grant, £7.99) Photography © Charlotte Lascève

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