Deliciously Ella is back with a brand new cookbook – these are our favourite recipes (2024)

If you’re one of the 2.3 million of Ella Mills’ (@deliciouslyella) Instagram followers, chances are you’ve:

  • Drooled over a date brownie
  • Tagged a friend in a peanut butter-topped overnight oats bowl
  • Bookmarked a veggie stew, never to revisit the post in your many collection folders

Deliciously Ella wrote her first, of many, cookbooks 10 years ago. It became the fastest-selling debut cookbook ever. And now, she’s published her seventh book, Healthy Made Simple, which features more than 75 simple, vibrant, plant-based recipes that feature no more than five simple steps, and contain 10 ingredients or fewer.

Healthy Made Simple is the summary of everything I’ve been cooking at home. It’s all the goodness, none of the fuss,’ she says.

‘This is a book dedicated to delicious flavours packed with goodness that will help you get healthy food on the table in less time, with less work and with fewer ingredients.’

To save you from scrolling, we’ve chosen our favourite recipes from the book for you to print off, stick on your fridge and try yourself at home.

They all take less than an hour and a half and can be boxed up for easy meal prep lunches for the rest of the week. Win, win.

3 Deliciously Ella plant-based recipes to try from Healthy Made Simple

Comforting Udon Noddle Bowls with Mushroom and Coconut

‘Whenever I’m feeling a bit run down or coldy, I make these bowls. They’re so cosy, comforting, really nourishing and absolutely delicious. You want to serve them with lots of lime so that they’re nice and zesty, and be generous with the miso for that rich umami flavour.’

Serves 2 | Time 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 × block of firm tofu (about 300g), drained and cut into bite-sized pieces
  • 3 shallots, finely sliced
  • 2 garlic cloves, grated or crushed
  • small chunk of ginger (about 15g/2cm), peeled and grated
  • 200g mixed mushrooms (use shiitake mushrooms if you can find them), sliced
  • 3 tablespoons brown rice miso paste
  • 1 × 400ml tin of coconut milk
  • 500ml hot vegetable stock
  • 2 servings of udon noodles (about 50g per person)
  • 3 large handfuls of baby spinach (about 150g)
  • grated zest and juice of 1–2 limes
  • sea salt and black pepper

Method

  1. Warm 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large frying pan set over a medium–high heat. Add the tofu and cook for 10–12 minutes, turning every 2 minutes or so, until crisp and golden all over. Remove from the pan and set aside on some kitchen paper.
  2. While the tofu is cooking, set a large saucepan or wok over a medium–high heat and add the remaining oil. Add the shallots, garlic, ginger and mushrooms and cook for 8–10 minutes, stirring often, until softened and fragrant.
  3. Next, whisk in the miso, coconut milk and vegetable stock and bring to the boil. Add the noodles, cover with a lid and cook for 8–10 minutes or until the noodles are just cooked.
  4. Stir through the spinach and tofu, then divide them between bowls, add the lime juice and scatter over the zest.

‘This is a great base recipe that you can adjust based on what you’ve got in the fridge. Add greens, such as bok choy, with the mushrooms, a little turmeric for more colour, or extra chilli for more heat.’

Deliciously Ella is back with a brand new cookbook – these are our favourite recipes (3)

15-minute Black Dhal

‘This is a shortcut recipe for a quick, creamy, deeply flavoursome dhal. Traditional black dhal uses black urad dhal (lentils), but cooking those from scratch takes a long time, so we’ve swapped them for pre-cooked Puy lentils so that you can get lunch on the table in 15 minutes, making it an easy option for a quick lunch. The chilli, ginger, red onion and coriander give it a punchy flavour that’s equally warming and invigorating.’

Serves 2 | Time 15 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 medium red onion, finely chopped
  • small chunk of ginger (about 20g/2cm), peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 long green chilli, finely chopped
  • 1 × 250g pack of cooked Puy lentils or 1 × 400g tin of green lentils, drained and rinsed
  • 1 heaped tablespoon tomato purée
  • 125ml coconut cream, plus extra to serve
  • 2 teaspoons medium curry powder
  • 2 large handfuls of spinach (about 100g)
  • juice of 1⁄2 lemon
  • 1⁄2 bunch of coriander (about 10–15g)
  • roughly chopped sea salt

Method

  1. Warm the olive oil in a saucepan set over a medium heat. Set aside about a third of each of the chopped onion, ginger and chilli, then add the remainder to the pan. Cook for 8–10 minutes, until soft and fragrant.
  2. While the onion is cooking, add 2 tablespoons of lentils, the tomato purée, coconut cream, curry powder and a pinch of salt to a food processor or mini chopper and blitz until completely smooth.
  3. Add the spice paste to the onions and cook for another minute, then add the remaining lentils and 200ml of boiling water. Bring to a simmer then add the spinach and lemon juice, stirring until the spinach has wilted. Taste to check the seasoning and adjust as needed.
  4. Divide the dhal between serving bowls and scatter over the reserved onion, ginger and chilli, followed by the coriander, a pinch of salt and an extra spoonful of coconut cream.

‘If you don’t have any coconut cream, swap it for coconut yoghurt, stirring it all in at the end.’

    Deliciously Ella is back with a brand new cookbook – these are our favourite recipes (4)

    Creamy Leak, Spinach and Butter Bean Bowls

    I’m always thinking about different ways to get more veggies into my meals and this recipe is such a great way of upping your greens, with spinach in both the sauce and the broth. It’s delicious as a light supper and feels like a mix between a soup, broth and a stew; equally serve it with brown rice or another grain, a toasted piece of sourdough, a jacket potato, roasted veggies or pan-fried greens.’

    Serves 4 | Time 20 minutes

    Ingredients

    • 1 tablespoon olive oil
    • 2 shallots, thinly sliced
    • 2 leeks, cut into 1cm slices
    • 4 garlic cloves, finely chopped
    • 1 vegetable stock cube
    • 2 × 400g tins of butter beans
    • 4 large handfuls of spinach (about 200g), roughly chopped
    • grated zest and juice of 1 lemon
    • sea salt and black pepper

    For the sauce

    • 100ml oat milk
    • 1⁄2 teaspoon brown rice miso paste
    • 2 tablespoons nutritional yeast
    • large handful of baby spinach (about 50g)

    Method

    1. Set a heavy-bottomed saucepan over a medium heat and add the olive oil. Once the oil is warm, add the shallots, leeks and a pinch of salt. Cook for 8–10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until they soften. Add the garlic and cook for a further 2 minutes, until it’s golden and fragrant.
    2. Next, add the stock cube and butter beans, along with the liquid from each of the tins. Bring to the boil, then cover with a lid and simmer for 10 minutes, until thickened.
    3. While the beans are cooking, make the sauce. Simply put the oat milk, miso, nutritional yeast and the baby spinach into a high-speed blender and blitz until perfectly smooth.
    4. Once the beans are ready, pour in the sauce and add the spinach, stirring until it’s wilted. Stir in the lemon juice and season to taste with salt and pepper. Scatter over the lemon zest before serving.

    ‘For anyone that grows fresh thyme, definitely add it to this recipe, just add a small handful of picked leaves with the garlic at the start.’

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    Deliciously Ella is back with a brand new cookbook – these are our favourite recipes (2024)

    FAQs

    What was Deliciously Ella diagnosed with? ›

    The chef and author, 25, began her blog, Deliciously Ella, in 2011 when she was diagnosed with postural tachycardia syndrome, which affects heart rate and digestion. Through changing her diet, she says she made her condition more manageable.

    What happened to Deliciously Ella? ›

    Deliciously Ella says she retreated from public life as a result of 'overwhelming trolling' and she now 'wants to be vanilla' Plant-based food influencer Deliciously Ella has revealed she faced horrendous trolling and 'retreated from public life' after being attacked online.

    What is the history of Deliciously Ella? ›

    Deliciously Ella started in an unassuming fashion: as a recipe website. After being diagnosed at 19 with a condition that affects the autonomic nervous system and finding medications ineffective, founder Ella Mills began exploring how a plant-based diet and wellness lifestyle may be able help.

    What does Deliciously Ella do? ›

    Ella started the Deliciously Ella recipe website, writing simple, plant-based recipes from her parents kitchen in the hope that changing her diet would improve her health. Deliciously Ella takes off as Ella's health improves, amassing over 130 million hits on the website.

    Why do people not like Deliciously Ella? ›

    Deliciously Ella became a huge success, bringing an army of fans, but also some very vocal haters. Ella was touted as a figurehead of the 'clean eating' movement (a term she never used), and accused of inciting eating disorders.

    What disease does Ella Mills have? ›

    Eventually diagnosed with postural tachycardia syndrome and prescribed drugs that still weren't working a year later, the then 21-year-old was running out of options. “I just hit an absolute rock bottom with my physical health, but also with my mental health,” she recalls.

    Who is Deliciously Ella married to? ›

    Are Deliciously Ella bars ultra processed? ›

    Deliciously Ella 'Salted Dark Swiss Chocolate'

    As lots of you will know, making products without any ultra-processed ingredients sits at the heart of what we do at DE, so making a really good UPF-free chocolate has been a longstanding dream of mine.

    What is Deliciously Ella's sister brand? ›

    We have worked with husband and wife duo Ella and Matthew Mills on a new visual identity and packaging for Plants, a sister brand to the plant-based food and wellness platform Deliciously Ella.

    Who is the owner of Deliciously Ella? ›

    Ella Mills is the founder and driving force behind the deliciously ella plant-based food brand and platform, which advocates for a sustainable and simultaneously healthy life.

    Is the Deliciously Ella app worth it? ›

    Excellent value for so many delicious recipes

    The recipes are simple, easy to follow and adaptable. I don't eat garlic (which seems to appear in most recipes) but I simply leave it out or substitute with something else. The workouts are great too, but I would like to see a few new ones, especially barre.

    Who is Deliciously Ella's mother? ›

    Does Deliciously Ella eat meat? ›

    Seeking an alternative to medication for treatment, she eventually turned to a plant-based diet free of gluten, meat, sugar, and dairy. Inspired by the life-changing results, she launched her blog Deliciously Ella the following year, sharing delectable recipes with equally mouth-watering visuals.

    Where are Deliciously Ella products made? ›

    Deliciously Ella products made in the Milton Keynes factory currently account for “about 15%” of the business' revenue. However, the business had ambitions to increase this over the next year to 18 months, so that “more than half of our revenue will be manufactured at the site,” said Mills.

    How to eat Ella? ›

    Take Ella as soon as possible and within 5 days (120 hours) after unprotected sex or a known or suspected birth control failure. Ella is only for emergency contraception and is not to be taken frequently or as your regular birth control. Do not take Ella more than 1 time in the same menstrual cycle.

    How did Deliciously Ella cure PoTS? ›

    She was diagnosed with Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, external (PoTS) which affects the central nervous system and found that clean eating helped her health.

    Does Ella Mills have PoTS? ›

    If Mills is an evangelist for vegetarianism, she says she's proof of its benefits. At 21, she was diagnosed with postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), a condition in which the heart rate increases quickly after getting up from sitting or lying down.

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