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3 new Jamie Oliver recipes for a health kick this autumn

The TV chef is back with his new cookbook Eat Yourself Healthy.
The TV chef is back with his new cookbook Eat Yourself Healthy.

"So many of us have good intentions to eat healthier, but time and time again, convenience always rules and it’s never been easier to just order a takeaway," says Jamie Oliver.

"And it’s totally understandable when so many of us have never been taught to cook at home or at school so at large, people have lost their confidence – and life is busy! But convenience only wins if you don’t know how to cook."

The chef’s latest cookbook, Eat Yourself Healthy, and accompanying Channel 4 TV show by the same name, aims to prove that good nutrition can be simple and achievable, and that we can all be in better control of our own health, with some colourful go-to recipes and a bit of practice in the kitchen.

Here are three simple, nutritious recipes to get started.

Golden cheese and jammy berries

In the Mediterranean, fried cheese is often served with fresh or jammy fruits – a magical combo.

A plate of food with toasted bread, halloumi and berries
(David Loftus/PA)

Ingredients:
(Serves 2)
Total time: 12 minutes
2 of your 7-a-day

Olive oil
80g halloumi or paneer cheese
320g mixed berries, such as strawberries, raspberries, blueberries
1tsp balsamic vinegar
2 sprigs of basil
2 slices of wholemeal sourdough bread
1tsp runny honey

Method:

1. Put a non-stick frying pan on a medium heat with one tablespoon of olive oil. Slice and add the cheese, cook until golden on both sides, then remove.

2. Hull and halve any strawberries, then put all the berries into the pan. Cook for three minutes, or until soft, gently stirring occasionally. Drizzle over the balsamic, pick in most of the basil leaves, and stir gently until just wilted.

3. Toast the bread and divide between your plates, then spoon the jammy fruit on top. Pick over the remaining basil leaves, add the golden cheese, drizzle over the honey, and tuck right in.

Energy: 330kcal
Fat: 15.1g
Sat fat: 6g
Protein: 11.7g
Carbs: 37.1g
Sugars: 20.9g
Salt: 0.8g
Fibre: 3g

Chopped rainbow salad

Delicious just as it is, or paired with couscous or a steaming jacket potato.

A colourful plate of food
(David Loftus/PA)

Ingredients:
(Serves 1)
Total time: 11 minutes
10 of your 7-a-day

80g each pomegranate seeds, yellow pepper, ripe tomatoes, red onion, cucumber, tinned chickpeas, radishes, ripe avocado, little gem lettuce
30g dried mango
½ a bunch of mint (15g)
1 lime
Extra virgin olive oil

Method:

1. Leaving the chickpeas and pomegranate seeds whole, trim, peel or deseed and finely chop all the veg and fruit, along with the dried mango and the mint leaves, then dress with the lime juice and one tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil.

2. Season to perfection with sea salt and black pepper, and serve.

Energy: 539kcal
Fat: 26.2g
Sat: Fat 4.4g
Protein: 12.2g
Carbs: 66.6g
Sugars: 45.6g
Salt: 1.2g
Fibre: 11.8g

Easy prawn curry

Popular prawns cook very quickly, so they’re perfect for this quick, speedy, fragrant curry.

A bowl of curry with rice
(David Loftus/PA)

Ingredients:
(Serves 2)
Total time: 10 minutes
4 of your 7-a-day

1 onion (160g)
250g ripe cherry tomatoes
1 x 50g sachet of creamed coconut
1 x 400g tin of chickpeas
1 bunch of coriander (30g)
2tbsp of your favourite curry paste
Olive oil
250g frozen mango
165g raw peeled king prawns, from sustainable sources
1 x 250g packet of cooked wholegrain basmati rice
30g Bombay mix

Method:

1. Put a large non-stick frying pan on a high heat. Peel and very finely slice the onion and place in the pan to dry fry with the tomatoes, tossing regularly for four minutes, while you put the creamed coconut in a blender with half the chickpeas and all their juice, half the coriander leaves and all the stalks, and a splash of water. Tip in half the onions and tomatoes from the pan and blitz until smooth to make a sauce.

2. Stir the curry paste and ½ a tablespoon of olive oil into the pan, followed a minute later by the frozen mango and remaining chickpeas, then the sauce. Toss over a medium heat for two minutes, then add the prawns and let it bubble away until the prawns are just cooked, loosening with splashes of water, if needed. Season to perfection.

3. Cook the rice according to the packet instructions, then divide between plates. Chop and stir most of the remaining coriander leaves into the curry, spoon it on top of the rice, then scatter over the last few coriander leaves. Crush and crumble over the Bombay mix for added crunch, to finish.

Energy: 600kcal
Fat: 17.8g
Sat fat: 6g
Protein: 30.9g
Carbs: 79.5g
Sugars: 27.7g
Salt: 1.2g
Fibre: 14.4g

The cover of Jamie Oliver's cookbook 'Eat Yourself Healthy'
(Penguin Michael Joseph/PA)

Eat Yourself Healthy by Jamie Oliver is published by Penguin Michael Joseph © Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited (2025, Eat Yourself Healthy). Photography by David Loftus, available now