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Monday, 30 August 2010
Chicken and Sweetcorn Chowder
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Banana and Walnut Teabread
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Sunday, 29 August 2010
Bruschetta with Roasted Tomato and Goats' Cheese
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Roast Plums with Kentish Cob Nuts and Clotted Cream
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Mexicano cocktails
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Saturday, 28 August 2010
Beetroot and Carrot Soup
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Thursday, 26 August 2010
Marrakesh Meatballs and Eggs
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Labels:
Josceline Dimbleby,
lamb,
meatballs,
spice,
tomato
Tuesday, 24 August 2010
Carrot and Leek Soup with Tarragon
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Mary Berry's Pasta Amarilla
This is a recipe I return to
over again - using, as it does, smoked haddock, one of my most favourite things to eat. Essentially, it is a cheesy pasta bake (I use big tubes of rigatoni) with fresh tomato, chunks of smoked haddock (no need to cook first), blanched spinach and today I added some fresh sweetcorn kernels. Mix all this with a good cheddary white sauce with some fresh chives, if you have them. Tip into a baking dish, sprinkle more cheese on top, and bake in a hot oven for 25 minutes until bubbling and brown, and the chunks of fish have cooked. Allow to settle for a few minutes and devour. The fish imbues the whole dish with a lovely smokiness. Heaven. This changes each time I make it, and I have used sweated leeks, peas, cooked mushrooms, broccoli - let your imagination rip. Probably wouldn't use blueberries, though. This is based on a recipe from Mary Berry and her 'Cooking at Home' book, which is a very dear old favourite of mine.
Sunday, 22 August 2010
Meredith's Zucchini Cake [#251]
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Sweet Pickled Cucumber
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Saturday, 21 August 2010
Chilli Meatballs with Sweetcorn
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Wednesday, 18 August 2010
Chicken, Vegetable and Lentil Soup
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Tuesday, 17 August 2010
Courgette, Ham and Cheese Fritters
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Monday, 16 August 2010
Ham, Leek and Courgette Risotto
Sunday, 15 August 2010
'Crimean' Cocktail
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Plum Jalousie
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Orange and Chocolate Cake
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photo courtesy of BBC Good Food
Friday, 13 August 2010
Patatas a lo Pobre
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Runner Bean 'Ratatouille'
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Chickpea and Chorizo Stew
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Monday, 9 August 2010
Courgette and Roast Tomato Sauce
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Sunday, 8 August 2010
Bream Baked 'En Papillotte' with Garlic and Rosemary [#251]
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Saturday, 7 August 2010
Baked Aubergines with Yoghurt and Cucumber [#250]
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Simple Carrot and Raisin Cake
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Now, much as I am a fan of luscious carrot cakes topped with an inch-thick layer of sweet cream cheese, even I (yes, EVEN I!) recognise the need for restraint and for consuming something like that on a special occasion. So, this cake is a more subdued affair - repressed, even. A very British carrot cake, rather than the overblown version beloved by our American cousins. A simple blend of flour, sunflower oil, eggs, unrefined light brown sugar, grated carrot, orange zest and juice, raisins, cinnamon and nutmeg. Worthy, yes, but a good, relatively healthy (can a cake EVER be health food??) tasty bite, and perfect for our lunchboxes throughout the week. Just make sure you get the very best ingredients - organic, where possible - and the flavour will out.
Brandied Cherries
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Alice Waters (of Chez Panisse fame) has produced some wonderful cookbooks. This recipe (from 'Fruit') is simplicity itself, and I can't wait until Christmas now to be able to eat them (and drink the cherry brandy left over - hic!). Remove the pits from a pound of washed, stemmed cherries - I have a nifty cherry and olive pitter which is invaluable for the job. Keep the pits. Take a sterilised Kilner jar (don't forget to sterilise the rubber seal, too) and put the cherry stones in the bottom - apparently, they contribute hugely to the flavour. Now add the cherries and pour over half a cup of granulated sugar (about 125g) and then cover with brandy - you don't have to get the best cognac for this, but don't use stuff that could also clean the bathroom tile grouting! Seal the jar and give it a shake. Now, keep somewhere dark and cool for a week or so, and remember to shake the jar each day to dissolve the sugar. After that, let the whole lot mature for at least three months. It will keep longer, but once the jar is opened, the fruit should be consumed within a month and the jar kept in the fridge. The resulting cherry brandy should keep for ages - who am I kidding? This treatment can also be given to raspberries, which I will try next week.
Ratatouille
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We eat so much of this stuff at this time of year - pasta with ratatouille, baked chicken with ratatouille, salmon with ratatouille, ratatouille fritatta..... I make large quantities and it matures in the fridge and freezes well too. Tonight, we used some to stuff a gorgeous yellow marrow that a neighbour gave us from their allotment. I halved it and scooped out the seeds, then filled the cavities with ratatouille, put in a roasting tin with some veg stock, covered with foil and baked for a good hour and a half until the marrow was meltingly tender. Then, I topped the lot with sliced cheddar and browned under the grill. Delicious with lots of fresh peas and crusty bread.
I make the ratatouille unconventionally - I slowly roast chunks of aubergine, courgette, onion and peppers. In the meantime, I make a sauce with lots of garlic, olive oil and a mix of tinned and fresh skinned tomatoes. When the roasted veg are ready - well cooked but not charred - I gently combine with the sauce. This way, the vegetables stay discrete and identifiable, rather than turning into a mush. It cuts down on the amount of oil you need to use, with no laborious frying at the start - the oven does all the work.
Labels:
aubergine,
courgette,
peppers,
tomatoes,
vegetarian
Monday, 2 August 2010
Spanish Pork and Chorizo Stew
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This is largely based on Delia's Spanish Pork recipe, but I added a jar of Spanish butterbeans instead of potatoes this time. I love this recipe - it works in the summer as well as winter, and the smoky paprika from the chorizo is addictive. If possible, make it the day before, as you can remove any set fat (oily sausage and fairly fatty pork shoulder give flavour but render a lot of fat on cooking) and the flavour only deepens with a bit of maturing.
Carrot Fritters [#249]
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These are a cross between a Nigel Slater and a Bill Granger recipe, so I suppose they count for the challenge? Essentially, grated carrot, grated onion (a good-sized one in each case) mixed with an egg, a heaped tablespoon of flour, and a little milk it it is all too stiff. You should have a mixture that coheres, yet plops gently off a spoon if tapped. You now have some seasoning options: I added a finely chopped green chilli, mainly as I had one in the house and wanted to add a bit of 'poke' to proceedings. I crumbled in a little feta too, which is the Bill way, but Nigel suggests grated cheddar. Not too much, an ounce or two. Season well with pepper and some salt if the cheese isn't included. A herb is needed - I used coriander, but parsley would be nice too, as would some mint.
Now, heat a couple of tablespoons of oil in a non-stick pan, spoon tablepoons of batter into the pan, and flatten a little. Cook for a couple of minutes each side, drain on kitchen paper and serve with Greek yoghurt into which you've stirred some sweet chilli sauce, more of your chosen herb, and perhaps some chopped or grated cucumber. Lovely with a green salad and some roast tomatoes for a hearty veggie supper and enough for 2.
Cooking note: these are quite fragile, so don't worry if they break up when you turn them over, just squidge them back together again. I placed them on a parchment lined baking sheet and finished cooking in a hot oven for 10 minutes - this helped them firm up and also allowed some of the oil they inevitably absorb to come out.
Cherry Clafoutis
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The English cherries this year are truly glorious - plump, purple and exploding with juice. We made the oh-so-simple but so delicious cherry clafoutis for dessert to celebrate them, and to make a change of just eating them out of the hand. Pitted cherries are marinated and then cooked in kirsch and a knob of butter until tender, tipped into a dish and then a batter is poured over (made of: 2 eggs, 3 tablespoons of plain flour, 2 tablespoons of sugar, 125 ml of a mixture of single cream and milk and a teaspoon of vanilla essence). Bake at 160 degrees (fan oven) for about 25 minutes until set and starting to puff up at the sides. Serve just warm, dusted with icing sugar, and cream if liked - although it is moist and rich enough on its own. This quantity serves 4. Recipe adapted from Alice Waters' "Fruit"
Sunday, 1 August 2010
Blueberry Apple Cake
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I love 'pound cake' recipes, with equal quantities by weight of butter, sugar, flour and eggs - infinitely variable, much easier to make than a victoria or genoese sponge, and lasts longer. Just get the butter nice and soft and mix it all up, then flavour as you like. The only difference with this cake was that you rub the butter into the flour and sugar first, then remove some of the'crumble' to add to the top later. Mix in the wet ingredients - here, eggs, lemon juice and zest, grated apple and some blueberries, and then pour into a baking tin, lined with parchment. Top with the reserved crumble, into which you've added a spoonful of demerara or Bajan granulated sugar and some cinnamon, spoon over the top and bake. Lovely!
Veal Meatballs with Creamed Beetroot and Lemon Sauce
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Now, stick with me here. Firstly, people tend to be funny about veal. But, good British veal is reared humanely, and I always look for meat that has been pastured with its mother, too. Much better than allowing veal calves to be exported to Holland in crates, or worse, shot at birth (males) as being surplus to requirements. Get the good stuff and you have a mild, lean alternative to beef that makes delicious eating. This was minced veal, mixed with chopped rosemary, garlic, lemon zest and parmesan, then sauteed and eaten with beetroot sauce. Fresh baby beetroot, boiled until tender then peeled, sauteed in a little butter and then a little single cream and lemon juice added at the end. Stir the meatballs through to combine with lots of chopped parsley, and serve with pappardelle pasta - a memorable and delicious meal, vaguely Scandinavian and made a change from the usual tomato-based sauce, albeit a rather startlingly coloured dish.
Time to get back in the blogging saddle
OK, so after taking a month off to deal with 'stuff' - health work, work and more work - I shall try to hop back on to the blogging saddle. Obviously, the challenge has slipped badly this year - I think I really missed Nigel and the focus of a single book. I have still been cooking though, and managing lots of baking, for some reason. In the oven now is a blueberry, apple and lemon cake - I shall post the recipe when it comes out of the oven.
We have also been inspired by the fabulous produce from the Riverford Organics veg boxes every week. last night, we had a brilliant Veal Meatball and Beetroot dish with Pappardelle pasta, for example, and today I am planning a Spanish Pork stew for dinner, with chorizo, pepper, olives and potatoes all cooked in it. So - I haven't been idle in the kitchen, just online. Here's to more blogging!
We have also been inspired by the fabulous produce from the Riverford Organics veg boxes every week. last night, we had a brilliant Veal Meatball and Beetroot dish with Pappardelle pasta, for example, and today I am planning a Spanish Pork stew for dinner, with chorizo, pepper, olives and potatoes all cooked in it. So - I haven't been idle in the kitchen, just online. Here's to more blogging!
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