The Sunday Post (Dundee)

A batch made inheaven: How a best-selling but reluctant cook predicted thenewnorm­al in our kitchens

Cookery writer reveals how her pre-covid tips to make

- By Alice Hinds ahinds@sundaypost.com

Her debut cooking book may have been a runaway success, climbing to the top of the bestseller­s list, but Suzanne Mulholland has a terrible secret. She doesn’t actually like to cook.

Well, that’s not strictly true. The mum of two, from the Borders, does enjoy whipping up fresh, home-cooked meals – but only when she has the time. Rather than spend hours in the kitchen every night, Suzanne is a firm believer in “batching”, a cooking method that sees her prepare up to 10 meals at a time, which are then stored in the freezer for another day.

The process, which she first started documentin­g on Youtube in 2017, has made Suzanne an online hit with thousands of digital followers, leading to two cookbooks and a third in the works. “People often ask me how I got into cooking and where my love for cooking came from,” said Suzanne, who is better known to her more than 200,000 online followers as The Batch Lady.

“I don’t have a love for cooking. It’s just something that needs to be done. Batching is about getting stuff done in advance so you don’t have to cook when you don’t want to.

“I’ve written two cookbooks but I’m really not a chef. I never use chef-y words and, quite often, when I read a cookbook I don’t know all the terminolog­y. My batching method is just normal home cooking that 90% of us are already doing because, let’s face it, very few of us are pulling out a fancy cookery book every night to make a vast feast.”

Showing her fans how to efficientl­y prepare fresh, home-cooked meals in a hurry, Suzanne’s method means busy parents and singletons alike can produce a week’s worth of food in as little as one hour, and includes time-saving tips, such as buying ready-chopped frozen vegetables.

Her first cookbook was published just prior to lockdown, and Suzanne admits she could never have imagined how relevant it would become, especially as more families have returned to the traditiona­l weekly shop during the pandemic.

She laughed: “If I was going to write a book with lockdown in mind it would definitely have been about batch cooking! It seems like, all of a sudden, so much as changed about the way we cook. A year ago, most people were doing day-to-day shops when they needed something.

“Now, most of us are going back to that big weekly shop and trying to make it last so we don’t have to nip back and forth. And I think, now, people want to be in control – they want to make sure if anything happens, like a local

lockdown, they’re prepared and the fridge or freezer is stocked.

“My motto right now is, ‘Be kind to your future self’. When you take a batch out the freezer, and it’s a lovely home-cooked meal for the family, you can say a little thank-you to your past self.”

Suzanne’s new book, The Batch Lady: Healthy Family Favourites, features more than 80 recipes for everything from “fakeaways” like prawn curry and stir-fries to chicken bakes and pork schnitzel, which are perfect for midweek suppers.

If the first book was perfect during lockdown, the 45-year-old says the new recipes are essential for when we finally have more freedom in our daily lives.

“It’s all healthy, calorie-controlled batching, which is what a lot of people – myself included – will be looking for when we have to put our normal clothes back on,” she laughed. “Batch cooking doesn’t naturally lend itself to healthy recipes because you need a certain amount of fat within a recipe for the food to freeze well.

“If you try to freeze something very low in fat, it will almost separate and curdle. So, for example, you can freeze double cream really easily but you can’t low-fat crème fraiche.”

Although she has written a bestsellin­g cookbook – the award for which is framed and hanging in her bathroom – it’s not accolades that keep Suzanne motivated.

“It’s a lot of hard work behind the scenes, between writing, doing Youtube videos, and keeping on top of social media – it’s beyond a full-time job”, said Suzanne, who lives with her family on their 3,000-acre farm.

“But, actually, what keeps me going is the comments from fans. People who have a disability or a medical issue, for example, tell me batching works for them because they can cook on good days and then, when they have bad days, there’s something ready for them to eat. It helps a lot of different people, and it’s heartwarmi­ng to get such amazing feedback from people.”

She added: “The main reaction I get from people, which you don’t get with normal cookery books is, ‘ This is life-changing’. It’s not about cooking normal recipes. It’s about taking a huge compulsory part of your life and doing it when it suits you. If you can then why wouldn’t you?”

The Batch Lady: Healthy Family Favourites is out now

 ??  ?? Working her magic in the kitchen has earned cook
Working her magic in the kitchen has earned cook
 ??  ?? Suzanne Mulholland the title of The Batch Lady
Suzanne Mulholland the title of The Batch Lady

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