Sabine Seilliere*

Passionate about health and sustainable living, Sabine hung up her coat as a successful corporate executive for fresh food and humanitarian work. After living in 5 different countries working across marketing, communications and IT, Sabine was struck by the variety of succulent fruits and vegetables in Singapore’s wet markets. The rest is history! She founded Sabine’s Baskets and she made it her mission deliver the freshest wet market produce to families all over Singapore. Aside from sourcing fresh veg and friendly drivers, Sabine runs a not for profit dedicated to building schools and subsidising bicycles for women and children in Burkina Faso, Africa. Browse Sabine’s Baskets and connect with Sabine to talk food, business or social entrepreneurship!

With lots of snow-filled, winter scenes, and ads for warm clothing popping up on my email/Facebook/Instagram feeds, it makes me want to curl up by the fire with a hot chocolate. But I live in Singapore and it’s about 30 degrees outside- so I found an alternative…fresh mint tea!

 I usually make soup with pumpkin, but this time I happened to stumble on another recipe of DeliciouslyElla: pumpkin bread!

  Do you ever get that feeling you are throwing your money away when you throw limp, un-fresh or over-ripe fruit and vegetables? Use these tips to keep your produce fresher for longer and make use of them rather than filling your garbage bin.

Our bodies are made up of 60% water so it is no surprise that drinking more water is the secret to clear skin, good digestion, healthy organs and joints, efficient detoxing, brain function and even weight loss. We all know we should drink around 2 litres of fluids every day – or more if you are exercising, pregnant or breastfeeding, or simply out in Singapore’s hot, humid weather.

Our bodies are made up of 60% water so it is no surprise that drinking more water is the secret to clear skin, good digestion, healthy organs and joints, efficient detoxing, brain function and even weight loss. We all know we should drink around 2 litres of fluids every day – or more if you are exercising, pregnant or breastfeeding, or simply out in Singapore’s hot, humid weather.