Student Life 2013/14 January 2014 | Page 13

you out of your comfort zone, it’s massive diversity in culture, cuisine, language, geography, and culture, is truly mind blowing. Education is about a tool for life and travel is about sharpening that tool. It’s invaluable in my view. Any tips for students cooking on a tight budget? My suggestion would be to research when and where your local market is. They have little overheads meaning they can keep the cost of produce low, and the quality of ingredient is always far greater. add hot vegetable or chicken stock with salt and pepper. Cook away on the hob until the lentils are soft and form a soup. In another pan, chop up an onion and fry with a teaspoon of ground coriander, wait until the onion is nice and golden and caramelised, add a little salt. Spoon the lentil soup into a bowl, then add your fried onion on top with a big dollop of harissa. Delicious! What would you recommend as a cheap, but tasty student meal? Ok, so this is a really really simple dish using lentils, the perfect blend of carbohydrate and protein. All you do is take a quarter of a pack of red lentils, grate 2 carrots into them, a teaspoon of ground cumin and then www.accommodationforstudents.com 13