I
couldn’t resist. Actually, I’d like to say that I made this South American
feast of a meal in celebration of the amazing feat that getting those poor
miners up and out was, but it was more a case of greedily salivating over a
recipe shown on ITV’s ‘This Morning’. How embarrassing! Lisa Faulkner who won
Masterchef was on the show cooking Chilli
with Chocolate (as it is national chocolate week – who knew?!) and I felt
I had to try it as I love anything that cooks for a long enough time to
completely forget about it, as the meat gets so tender. Also I have never tried
savoury in chocolate so thought I’d give it a go. It’s absolutely delicious and
very rich, mainly from the addition of balsamic vinegar, sugar and ketchup
rather than the chocolate which I think serves to give the dish depth and
glossiness (does that make sense?) rather than sweetness as it is dark
chocolate. As she suggested I served it with tortilla chips and soured cream
and also made an avocado salsa with 1 chopped avo, 1 finely chopped shallot, 1
tsp rock salt, a squeeze of lime and a dash of Worcestershire sauce – I like to
think this made it more celebratory!
Thursday, 14 October 2010
Autumn is here!
I
say this merely because it is cold and crisp today which means an end to the
very welcome but disconcerting Indian summer we've been having. What to eat in
October is often easy: slow cooked stews, roasted squash and apple pies are
what I would usually be cooking but the warm weather has made me less inclined
for heavy food (actually less inclined to cook at all as you can see by my lack
of posts!) so I compromised last night with a coconut squash soup which
was light and comforting served with some homemade soda bread.
Coconut Squash Soup
Serves 4
- Chop 1
Butternut Squash into large chunks, reserving the Seeds. Drizzle the
chunks with Oil and roast at 200˚C for 20-30 minutes until soft.
- Meanwhile,
cook 1 Medium Onion, finely chopped, in a large casserole dish over a
medium heat until golden.
- Add 1
stalk of Lemongrass, split down the middle, 1 Red Chilli, seeds removed
and chopped, 20g Fresh Ginger, finely grated, 2 tsp Ground Coriander, to
the onion and stir.
- When the
squash is cool enough to handle, remove the skin and add to the pot.
- Add 1 400g
tin Coconut Milk and 500ml Vegetable Stock. Bring to the boil and simmer
for 15 minutes.
- Liquidise
and return to the pan to warm. Season to taste.
- Heat a
non-stick pan and add the Seeds. Sprinkle over a large pinch of Sea Salt
and a tsp Dried Coriander. Cook until the seeds are crisp but be careful
they don’t burn.
- Serve with
a dollop of Crème Fraîche and a sprinkling of the seeds.
Thursday, 7 October 2010
Happy Birthday!
Last
weekend was my Dad’s birthday and my Dad LOVES violet creams so I tried to make
him a violet cream inspired cake. You can just see the violet coloured butter
icing spilling out, the sponge was a plain Victoria sponge but with a bit of
cocoa powder mixed in and the topping was a chocolate ganache to give it the
shiny look with crystallised violets to sit on top. For supper we had a light
meal (we’d eaten a delicious meal at HIX in Soho) of takeaway sushi and the
most beautiful rainbow chard, stir fried with garlic, ginger, soy sauce and
sesame seeds.
Friday, 1 October 2010
Beauty and the Beast: A Tale of Two Suppers
You might be able to guess, but just to make clear;
the former I refer to is the salad and the latter, the pie. However, perhaps
this is unfair on the humble pie, for this de-licious dish only looks like a
dogs dinner due to my poor photography skills and in actual fact is rather
pretty for a pie – honestly, I even cut out pastry leaves to decorate the top!
The golden puff pastry gives way to a bright green leek and tender chicken
filling and tastes divinely comforting – just what one needs when the weather
is so horrid. If I was to attempt to make this dish more stylish (in accordance
with my blog, but there is no need bar aesthetics) I’d try it in individual
pots. The recipe is adapted from Jamie Oliver’s ‘Turkey and Sweet Leek Pie’
which he uses to serve all the leftovers from a Christmas dinner (adding in any
stuffing and rolling chopped chestnuts and sage into the pastry) but I felt
that it was too good a recipe to save for just once a year, so omitted the
Christmas trimmings and swapped the meat.
So on to the beauty which is simplicity itself. Of
course, there is nothing groundbreaking about this salad – I eat this kind of
thing on a regular basis – but one particularly wet lunch time this week I felt
like playing with the arrangement on the plate - I obviously had too much time
on my hands! There is no recipe as it is purely about contrasting ingredients:
crispy bitter chicory, creamy avocado, cucumber sliced on a sharp diagonal,
strong parmesan shavings and boiled eggs (from my diligent chickens) drizzled
with a dressing made up of 1 tbsp of balsamic vinegar, olive oil, agave nectar,
wholegrain mustard and a twist of salt and pepper.
Chicken and Sweet Leek Pie
Serves 6-8
- Preheat
oven to 190°C/375°F/gas 5. Put 2 Rashers Smoked Streaky Bacon, chopped, in
a large pan on a medium heat and add ½ Bunch of Picked Thyme Leaves. Add a
lug of olive oil and a Large Knob of Butter and let it all fry off a few
minutes.
- Add 2kg
Leeks, washed, trimmed; white ends chopped into chunks and the green ends
finely sliced, and fry them off for about 3 minutes so they are
well-coated in the butter. Add a pinch of salt and pepper then pop the lid
on top, turn the heat down to medium and let them cook away gently for 30
minutes, stirring every 5 to 10 minutes to make sure they don't catch.
- Meanwhile,
if using uncooked chicken, poach 800g chicken (breast or thighs, or a
mixture) in enough water to cover the chicken, 1 Carrot and Celery Stick,
chopped, 4 Bay Leaves, Tbsp Black Peppercorns, until cooked. Drain,
reserving the liquid and leave to cool. Remove any skin and bones and chop
into chunks. Otherwise use 800g of cooked chicken meat.
- When your
leeks are ready, add the chicken to them and stir. Add 2 Heaped Tbsp
Flour, mix it in well then pour in 2 pints of the Poaching Liquid or stock
from a cube and stir again. Add the 2 Tbsp Crème Fraîche then turn the
heat up and bring everything back up to the boil. Have a taste and add a
bit more salt and pepper if it needs it then turn the heat off. Pour the
mixture through a sieve over another large empty pan and let the gravy
from the mixture drip into the pan while you roll out your pastry.
- Get a deep
baking dish roughly 22 x 30cm. Spoon the thick leek mixture from your
sieve into the pie dish and spread it out evenly. Roll out 450g shop
bought Puff Pastry until it’s slightly bigger than the dish, lay over the
top of the dish and tuck the overlapping edges down the sides of the pie,
then gently score the pastry diagonally with your knife or add a
decoration with any excess pastry. Add a pinch of salt to 1 Beaten Egg
then paint this egg wash over the top of the pastry. Bake for about 35 to
40 minutes or until the pastry is puffed up and golden brown. When the pie
is ready, re-heat the Gravy and serve with your pie, along with some peas
tossed in butter, lemon, salt and pepper.
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