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How To Use Leftover Lemon Peel – 10 Amazing Top Tips

How To Use Leftover Lemon Peel – 10 Amazing Top Tips

Lemon water makes a wonderfully refreshing drink in the summer. Just squeeze or juice a few lemons into still and sparkling water and you have a lovely drink with an extra boost of vitamin C! But what could you do with the leftover lemon peel? 

8 Great Meal Prep Ideas For The Busy Family

8 Great Meal Prep Ideas For The Busy Family

In order to slow down your life, you need to find out where you can save time. These meal prep ideas will help you do just that. Spend less time on chores around the house and spend it more on activities that are more meaningful. 

Overripe Bananas – 10 Easy Recipe Ideas

Overripe Bananas – 10 Easy Recipe Ideas

The first thing that comes to mind when you have overripe bananas is to make banana bread. It is easy and quick to make and this banana bread recipe is absolutely delicious and moist. But what to make with overripe bananas if you already made banana bread and still have lots of bananas? I collected my favourite ideas in this blog post. If you have any other ideas please leave a comment with your idea and I will add it to this post.

1. Freeze Overripe Bananas

If you have enough space in your freezer then freeze them. There are different ways to freeze bananas and they all work well.

If you want to freeze the banana in slices: peel the banana, cut it into even chunks, place these chunks on a cookie sheet or similar and put it in the freezer for a few hours. Then store the frozen banana slices in a container or freezer bag. Then when you need them you can use either frozen or defrosted.

You can absolutely freeze the bananas whole. I’ve done that before and had no issues. You can peel them or not. Either works. Just put the bananas in the freezer and if did not peel them thaw them before peeling when you use them. If you peeled them before freezing the bananas you can use them either frozen or thawed.

2. Smoothies

Smoothies are such a great breakfast alternative if you have a blender! Just use the overripe bananas (frozen or fresh) and add some fruits of your choice. You can also add soya yoghurt, chocolate powder or anything else that takes your fancy. I like to experiment and add whatever I have in the kitchen.

overripe banana smoothie

3. Make A Chocolate Treat

You can also make a little treat with the bananas. They go really well with chocolate – so why not freeze the banana in even chunks on your cookie sheet and add some vegan chocolate on top? This is such a nice little treat and so easy to make!

4. Banana Chips

If you have a dehydrator you can make banana chips easily. Just slice in even thin slices and dehydrate! This makes an easy and healthy snack for the whole family! If you feel like it dip the chips in chocolate for an extra special snack!

5. Sorbet/Icecream

If you decided to freeze your bananas why not make banana sorbet out of them for those warmer days? Just add the frozen bananas, frozen blueberries and a little peanut butter in a blender and mix well. You could also add additional ingredients like walnuts of chocolate chips after making the sorbet.

Alternatively, if you have frozen fruit you don’t have to freeze the bananas! Use 1 bag of frozen fruit of your choice, 2 bananas (more if you don’t mind the flavor), half a cup or so of plant milk and then place all ingredients in your blender. Blend until it’s sorbet/sherbet texture and enjoy.

6. Breakfast Drink With Coffee

For this yummy breakfast drink, you will need a blender and use 1/2 cup of whatever milk you like, for example, oat milk, 1 frozen banana, 1 tablespoon cocoa powder, 1/2 cup strong brewed coffee or espresso, 3-4 cubes of ice. Then you just blend everything together and enjoy a special breakfast drink with a coffee kick!

7. Make A Cocktail

Take your frozen bananas, add some strawberries, some orange juice & ice cubes and put all of these in your blender. Blend until well mixed and then add as little or much vodka as you wish. Cheers!

Obviously you can also leave out the vodka for a mocktail version.

8. Oatmeal Banana Pancakes

Use 1 cup of oat flour (or blend up 1 cup of quick oats if you don’t have oat flour), add half a mashed banana, 2/3 cup of your preferred plant milk, add vanilla and/or cinnamon to taste. Then use the mixture as you would normally for pancakes. You could also add some cocoa powder if you want a chocolate version of these pancakes.

9. Fried Bananas

Cut the banana in slices of about 1 inch and dip them in cinnamon. Then fry on each side for a few minutes. You can eat as they are or at these fried bananas on porridge or chia pudding.

10. Cookies

Fancy making some cookies with your bananas? Mash up the bananas and then mix with oats and pat out to form little cookies. These will not spread like normal cookies so make desired shape and size. Bake at 350°F for about 10-15 min to your desired crunch. Add peanut butter, nuts, vegan chocolate chunks or dried fruit.

These are my favourite ideas for overripe bananas. If you you have a great idea that is not listed please leave a comment so I can add it to this list.

I’m sure you will find one idea you like and you won’t have to waste those overripe bananas you have in your kitchen at the moment! Enjoy and let me know how you liked the ideas!

If you enjoyed the recipe and want to find more head over to my recipe section and join my Facebook Group which focuses on homemade vegan recipes that are affordable and healthy.

5 Effective Tips On How To Stay Organized

5 Effective Tips On How To Stay Organized

It may sound easy but we all know staying organized can be hard at times. I want to share my 10 top tips on how to stay organized at home so you find time in your day to actually do the things you want to 

How To Make Aquafaba In A Few Easy Steps – And How 2 Store It

How To Make Aquafaba In A Few Easy Steps – And How 2 Store It

Disclaimer: This post contains affilitate links – I will earn a commission if you buy any item. Aquafaba is a versatile ingredient in the vegan kitchen. If you are wondering how to make aquafaba I want to share a few tips with you. I also 

How To Become A Freelance Translator – 5 Actionable Steps To Secure Your First Remote Job

How To Become A Freelance Translator – 5 Actionable Steps To Secure Your First Remote Job

Freelance translators usually work for a variety of clients and translate from one language into their native language. If you speak more than one language this may be a great remote opportunity for you. Learn how to become a freelance translator and work from home. You can set your own hours and decide which clients to work for.

What Is Freelance Translating?

In my career, I’ve switched between full-time employment and freelance opportunities. I love the freedom you have when you work as a freelancer and are able to set your own rates, hours and workload.

If you consider freelance translating as a career there are a few things you should be aware of. As a freelance translator, you ideally want to work with a variety of clients and I will share with you why and how to find your first client. Are you interested in learning how to become a freelance translator?

How to become a freelance translator

Usually, as a freelance translator, your main task will be to translate or localize text from one language into your native language. Most respectable companies prefer it that way as a native speaker will know cultural relevance and spot anything that may be problematic in the target language.

If you are now intrigued and want to learn how to become a freelance translator, read on.

1. What Are the Prerequisites?

Many translation companies will ask you if you have a translation degree. However, very specialised companies usually also hire subjects matter experts. So you may not have a translation degree but worked in a specific field for a few years and are therefore deemed a subject expert. Smaller companies sometimes also hire native speakers without a translation degree. It is possible but maybe a bit harder to land your first project.

One important piece of advice is that a freelance translator you need good time management skills. Your goal should be to work for a variety of clients as you never know when one client pulls the budget and has no translation jobs for you for the next six months. Working for more than one client means you may have to juggle short conflicting deadlines. Sometimes projects drop very short notice so you want to make sure you can schedule your time accordingly. Especially when you set out. Some clients are quick to move on to a translator who can accommodate their urgent deadline.

2. How To Find The First Client

This can be tricky but help is at hand these days. Traditionally, you would do outreach and contact potential clients but these days my advice is to google “Freelance Translator” + Your language pair to find clients looking for translators.

How to become a freelance translator

The easiest way to find clients is through a network of translators. Say you know someone who translates from English into French and the client now wants to also have a Spanish translation. Often these clients reach out first to their network of current translators so they suggest relevant translators. If you know someone who already is a translator for a few clients this may be the easiest way to break into this field. It is how I found quite a few of my translation clients in the past and how I helped a few of my friends to start out.

Another option is signing up to platforms such as People per Hour, Freelancer or Upwork. The tricky bit here is that you are competing with very established freelancers. My advice is here to check out a few profiles of other translators and see their rates and what they offer. If you are just starting out you want to be a bit cheaper but not the cheapest. Remember you are trying to make a living out of this – so don’t sell yourself too cheaply!

3. How To Become A Freelance Translator

In the beginning, you will spend a lot of time doing outreach and finding new clients. Although your priorities will shift once you have found a handful of clients my advice is to always lookout for new potential clients. Yes, you want to make sure not to take on too many projects but if you find a better paying client you may want to drop the client that pays the least.

Yes, you will set your own rates but you should also increase them over time as you gain more experience. Be prepared to set your rates and stick to them. Most clients pay per word or 1,000 words but sometimes clients pay per hour. I had clients for both of these and generally preferred to be paid by hour.

Always ensure you take into consideration that you have admin time when setting your rate. It is astonishing how often you may end up chasing an invoice or resending it or similar work. It is also a good idea to consider breaks and add these into your rate and work day. You don’t want to be chained to your chair and laptop for 10 hours a day to make ends meet!

It is also good to know, that most clients will see you as an expert and it is up to you to suggest to them if they are going wrong. Using very formal language on their website or not being consistent – this is a great opportunity to reach out to them and make them aware. This way I got several proof-reading jobs to ensure their tone of voice was consistent throughout. Be smart and have the interest of the client in mind and you will create a client who will stick with you and provide you with more and more work.

4. Tools Needed To Start Working as a Freelance Translator

Generally, there are few tools that you will need. It is helpful to have access to a CAT tool like Trados which help you translating faster by storing words you have translated in the past. Some companies will provide you with access to the CAT tool that they are using internally. Others will just work with Excel sheets. It is a good idea to ask a new client up front what the translation process is like and what tools they are using internally.

Other than that you won’t need anything. You could investigate a tool for invoice creation and keeps also track of your taxes. I’ve preferred to keep track of everything via Excel and manually sending invoices.

5. What Is the Earning Potential As A Freelance Translator?

This depends a bit on your negotiation skills and your experience level but t is important that you have an idea of your rate before you start pitching for translation projects. As a new translator, you will most likely earn a bit less than established translators. It also depends if you or the client use a CAT tool. If one is used then pay tends to be lower as the tool will speed up your work significantly by memorizing words and phrases.

An average charger per word for European languages averages about between US$0.10 to US$0.17 per word if no CAT tool is used. I was averaging about £20 to £30 per hour (about US$25 to US$40) for simple non-technical translations where no translation degree was needed. Depending on the amount of work I earned about £1,000 to £2,000 per month after about 6 months. This was for English into German for Marketing copy. As I have extensive experience in Marketing this was a natural fit.

The First Few Months Of Work

It is normal that when you pitch for a new client that they may want to see a sample of your work. Most clients will actually send you a short translation and you just send it back to them. Some clients will pay you for this sample translation, most will not. So yes, that is completely normal but be aware not to get tempted to work too much for free. Generally these texts are short, maybe a few hundred words so the client can judge your translation ability. If it is more than that be wary and maybe find other clients.

This will be tough in the beginning. The first few months up to about a year or two you will do extensive client outreach and money might be irregular. It is also good to know that especially bigger clients will only pay you after two to three months. Most smaller clients are good at paying pretty quickly within a few weeks to a month. However, bigger clients have long payment terms written in their contracts so this is a good thing to know when you start out.

As mentioned before, it is extremely useful to know other translators. If you don’t know any at the moment I recommend to join a few communities or meeting up with other local translators. Build up a network of translators who be able to help you if you have questions and are usually a good source of new clients.

Advantages Of Being A Freelancer

The advantages are obvious: you are your own boss and you have the opportunity of setting your own hours. You decide which client to work for and which project to accept. Sometimes a client will reach out with a quick turnaround but generally the deadlines are very realistic in my experience and you can work when it suits you best. You are an early bird? Then work in the mornings. You are more energised working late into the evening? No problem. You set your own hours. As long as you are hitting the deadlines the clients really don’t mind.

I also liked that you can work from whereever you are. You can travel and explore new countries, as long as you are mindful of timezones (and deadlines) this is no issue at all. I also worked while travelling and used the time to earn money. I worked from parks, coffee shops and so many other places!

These were my tips on how to become a freelance translator and start working remotely. If you have any specific questions on how to become a freelance translator please feel free to leave them in the comment section and I am more than happy to help where I can.

Share this article on how to become a freelance translator with your friends. If you are interested in more freelance, remote opportunities have a look in my side hustle category. Do you have any tips on how to become a freelance translator then please leave them in the comment sections.

Classic Vegan Paella Recipe – Delicious and Filling Meal For A Family

Classic Vegan Paella Recipe – Delicious and Filling Meal For A Family

Easy recipe for delicious vegan paella like in Spain. All you need is a cast iron pan and a few ingredients. Add veg acoording to your own taste and make it your own family paella!

Best Vegan Waffles – 2 Easy Recipes

Best Vegan Waffles – 2 Easy Recipes

Two easy recipes to make the best vegan waffles. Take your pick of a recipe with aquafaba to replace the eggs in a traditional waffle recipe or a recipe that has no aquafaba in it. Both result in delicious waffles that are crispy on the outside and soft on the inside.

Transitioning A Family To A Plant-Based Diet – 6 Actionable Top Tips

Transitioning A Family To A Plant-Based Diet – 6 Actionable Top Tips

Great to see that you are interested in a plant-based diet. Maybe it is just for yourself or you are thinking about how to start transitioning a family to a plant-based diet. Everyone has to start somewhere so take it easy and I hope this blog post will help you on your way.

The first thing to remember is that this is a transition process and you know yourself and your family best and can adapt the below process to your needs. Good luck and congratulations on choosing this step to a healthier and more wholesome lifestyle. Find some ideas on how to start transitioning a family to a plant-based diet.

Transitioning A Family To A Plant-Based Diet

If you are considering switching to a plant-based diet and it is just yourself it is easy. However, if there are other family members involved – how do you approach this? This will be easier if your partner is on board with the idea and your children are younger. If this is not the case you first will need the buy-in from other family members. My recommendation is to take it easy and take small steps in the transition phase. Some family members may not understand why you want to transition so my first tip is to educate them gently on the topic.

Educate Your Family On The Benefits Of A Plant-Based Diet

When transitioning a family to a plant-based diet consider educating your family on the benefits of this new diet and find some documentaries that explain why a plant-based diet is not only healthier for us but also better for the planet we live on. Ensure the resources you have shown are relevant and suitable for your family and the age of the children.

Involve your family in this process and ask them about what ressources they have read or what documentaries they have heard of. You could also ask them what questions they have and find ressources that are relevant to the topic. This way you are ensuring that you involve your family from the start and it feels more like something the family is achieving and doing together. The last thing you want is for your family to feel like they have no say on this topic.

Make A List Of Plant-Based Basic Foods

One of the struggles that people may have when transitioning a family to a plant-based diet is that they don’t know what to eat. Make a list of the plant-based basic items your family likes and come up with a list of recipes. Again, I recommend involving your family in coming up with recipe ideas. This way they feel heard and it will be easier to have their support when you start having plant-based meals.

Transitioning A Family To Plant-Based Diet - Top Tipps
Transitioning A Family To Plant-Based Diet – Top Tipps

Don’t fall into the trap of replacing meat with plant-based items for every meal. Embrace this step and see what new options of meals are opening up for you. Transitioning a family to a plant-based diet is an opportunity to find new meals as well as adapting family favourites.

Plant-Based Meal Transition

The speed of the transition depends on yourself and your family. Most people find it difficult switching from one day to another and start craving specific foods and it is easy to fall of the wagon and start feeling bad about oneself. Personally, I found a more gradual transition more favourably. I’ve started by switching individual meals. First I started with breakfast and found several options that are plant-based. I wanted to make sure I have options so I don’t get bored. And slowly I adapt more recipes to be plant-based. My favourites at the moment are my homemade granola and English breakfast muffins.

Here are few ideas for breakfast options when transitioning a family to a plant-based diet and I will expand this list when I add more recipes on my blog: fruits, smoothies, granola, oat milk, oat bars, pancakes, English breakfast muffins, palmiers.

Kid-friendly lunch/dinner ideas which they may enjoy helping with: pizza, pasta, tomato soup.

Some snack options that you may want to have ready: sourdough crackers, kale chips, vegan spreads.

Of course, all of these options may be found in good supermarkets but I enjoy preparing these food options and meals from scratch as it helps me on the journey to being vegan/plant-based. This way I can tweak the recipe to suit me and my tastebuds rather than having to eat pre-cooked meals.

Be Prepared For Set Backs

This is normal. No one is 100% perfect all the time. Allow yourself and your family enough time for the transition. But even once you have fully transitioned there may be times when someone is tempted and goes for the easy option. Maybe you go out with friends and get offered something that is not plant-based and you want to try. It’s ok. Slowly over time you will learn how to gently refuse this temptations.

But even then you may find that sometimes you are being offered food and you did not know if the food was fully plant-based. People may not understand and just offer you meatless food. This has happened to me before on travels but I’ve embraced it and when possible used it for an opportunity to educate the other party. Just be prepared that sometimes this may be longer discussions.

Eating Out And Being Plant-Based

Transitioning a family to a plant-based diet is, of course, an opportunity for everyone to get involved and cook more meals from scratch but it is always good to have options.

And eating out and finding plant-based options is getting easier. More and more restaurants have noticed the growing trend in plant-based food and have more options on their menu. Sometimes you may be able to ask for a specific meal but if you can support restaurants that cater for a plant-based diet.

Be prepared that sometimes you may have to explain what food you avoid. I know my family had this before, especially when travelling outside of the UK – however, it has also happened at home. Not everyone has all the information and sometimes people are confused about what is ok and what is not. Take it easy and use it as an opportunity to educate more people on the topic.

Quick Steps For The Transition Period

I hope this has been helpful for you. Congratulations on your resolve to transition to a plant-based diet. To summarize these are my top tips:

  1. Get the family on-board with the plan and involve them as much as possible in the transition. Make sure this is a decision each of them can take and listen to their questions.
  2. Educate your family on the benefits of a plant-based diet for themselves and for the planet.
  3. Make a list of plant-based essential items and see what you and your family like. Also, good idea to check for items family members may be allergic to or simply do not like.
  4. Transition at your own speed. Find meals that you can introduce slowly. Ideally, you want suggestions from your family so they feel involved. Maybe they are supportive enough and start cooking and preparing their own plant-based meals.
  5. Be prepared for education opportunities with friends, other family members or in restaurants.
  6. Forgive yourself and other family members if they slip up. It happens. 🙂

Hope these tips are helpful for you while you are transitioning a family to a plant-based diet. If you are looking for plant-based meal ideas head over to my recipe section and join my Facebook Group which focuses on homemade vegan recipes that are affordable and healthy.

The Best Plant-Based Recipes For Beginners – 12 Easy Recipes

The Best Plant-Based Recipes For Beginners – 12 Easy Recipes

The plant-based diet focuses on foods sourced from plants and many people new to this diet will wonder what they can eat. No don’t worry you won’t just have to eat salads all the time, the plant-based diet is much more varied than that. Below