Saturday, 28 November 2020

Margaret's Christmas Box!

Before our second lockdown I saw my friend Margaret once a week, distanced, for coffee. I should explain that Margaret is a very fit 89 year old. During one of our coffee mornings I asked her what she thought of my latest nocturnal thought – being awake at 2am has its rewards - and pitched my idea of making a selection of her chosen favourite home-made treats as a Christmas Box.

In my head it was a personal gift and ticked more than one box – she got to choose what she wanted and I didn't have to shop for a gift which I knew she'd like – but I could do better. One of my best hits in recent years was to buy her an advent calendar and in each “window” was a small jar of preserve, all different, for each day.

Not only did Margaret love the thought, she admitted being concerned about the difficulty for her of being able to go out shopping – spare a thought for the people out there who do not use modern technology! We had so much fun bouncing around ideas for her “Christmas Box” and my gift from Margaret is a donation to The Donkey Sanctuary!

Here's a taster from her preliminary list – lemon drizzle syrup :

I “borrowed” this syrup from my Lemon Tiramisu recipe - any leftovers were committed to the freezer in small pots. I may even zhuzh it for the festive season and add a generous drop of Limoncello liqueur.

I gave Margaret a pot of syrup to try over desserts - fresh fruit or the last piece of cake that needs reviving, anything goes. The only problem was she finished up with a drop left and didn't want to waste it – here's her tip – poor into a tall glass, add a good glug of chilled soda water and swizzle – result – absolutely refreshingly fabulous! I do love it when nothing gets wasted – who'd have thought it!

At the time I pitched the idea we didn't know about the second lockdown - now we do know it would appear that our ideas are even better than we first thought. Now I'm expanding the “Christmas Box” to include a selection of stuff – so far I have four boxes to fill … and counting.

Thinking “outside the box” has now become thinking “inside a box”.

Gotta go … choices to make, boxes to fill!

BPP – bags for chocolate!

there's a large cellophane bag underneath

the pennant shaped bag and then the red ties – it's

to give an idea of choice and what size chocolate delight

will fill them

the measurements of both are set down below

large clear cellophane bag

28x12cms/11x5” - with side gussets

pennant shaped bag

29cms/11” long (to the tip) x 13cms/5” wide



I've scrunched the large cellophane bag so that

you can get a better idea of size when the sides are

opened and scrunched!

 


These bags are really festive and smaller

than the other example so you'll fill more of these

with a batch, say, of Rocky Road


Note to self : if you're going to make Rocky Road, make

sure you cut it into small pieces


Next up – deciding on the contents of your package

Brown paper packages … the photos

 

I sourced my boxes locally from SCS Packaging

in Finedon, NN9 5JG – check out their website

www.scspackaging.co.uk


I bought 25 - only because they were flat packed in

25s so any I didn't use wouldn't take up space

storing for another day – a bargain at £4.30

the measurements of the boxes is as shown



At this time of year even the larger supermarkets

sell what they call a “crate gifting pack”

the twine and tag will be excellent to complete

the vision of a brown paper package, tied

up with string


If you'd like to go smaller, here's another

idea – this box comes flat packed and if I can

assemble it believe me anyone can

the measurements are 16x16x7cms/6x6x3” 


I've had these a while and so can't remember what

I paid – all I do know is that they weren't expensive

and don't take up space – flat packed x 4 boxes


There's more … bags for chocolate to follow



Brown paper packages tied up with string

I realise it's nothing new to make your own gifts to give at Christmas – lots of us having been doing it for years. In 2019 I made pies and the year before I made more Rocky Road than I thought was possible to ship to friends and family.

This year is so different for everyone that I've decided to broaden the idea of making my own gifts, based on the title above – it's time to step it up!

If you like the idea, even in principle, choose items you know you can make with both arms tied behind your back – tried and tested – don't make life difficult for yourself. Think about how you're going to “present your present” it doesn't have to be big – small is beautiful – for example if you're great at making chutney or relish go for it.

A few hints and tips :

Have a root around your store cupboard and where you keep your food related stash too. You know exactly what I mean – that pack of six small jars with lids that was such a bargain at the time, hmm where did I put them?!

Decide what you'd like to make – are you good at jam, chutney, biscuits, festive cupcakes, the list is endless and the world is your lobster.

Your gift doesn't have to be a huge selection of stuff – one pot or jar or bag that looks pretty ticks just as many boxes. If however you are creating a package then odd numbers work well when snuggled into a bed of shredded paper or scrunched tissue paper.

Choosing the packaging for your festive treats is important and fun too. You may have your own ideas already but in case you need food for thought – sorry – have a glance at the photos that follow – they may give you a shove in the right direction – either way, fab!

Packaging photo guide up next …




Saturday, 21 November 2020

The real deal – a photo guide

 

thinly sliced potatoes – I used Charlottes


rinsed thoroughly and dried in a clean

tea towel


prepped and ready for the oven


out of the oven, ready to roll!

Next – brown paper packages tied up with string …

The real deal – hints, tips and kitchen kit

You can make a larger dauphinoise using the dish measurements already given in “Zhuzh your leftovers” and upping the recipe – 1.350g/3lb of potatoes and adding 725ml/1¼ pints of of cream – ensure your dish is filled to within 2cms/¾” from the top.

You can save yourself time if you like prepping ahead. I peeled the potatoes, placing them immediately into a bowl of cold water, ready to rinse and dry. I didn't use a mandoline – unless you're proficient and a lover of washing up difficult kit with deadly blades I'd suggest a smaller, but effective alternative – an onion & potato holder. Such holder secures the peeled potato thus enabling you to slice the potatoes thinly and evenly.

Here it is :


You can pay as little as £2 – I chose the one shown because it's food grade stainless steel - £7.99 – more robust for frequent use!

As for the number of serves you'll get – for the smaller version it depends on the appetites so could be 3 or 4 – I'd go 3 but it depends on what else you're serving. The larger version will give you between 6 or 8.

My tester has already had the “cheats way” version which she served with ham hock. I have done a doorstep delivery of the “real deal” this morning … watch this space for the verdict!

Photo guide up next


The real deal – gratin dauphinois

450g/1lb waxy potatoes – peeled and sliced

no thicker than a two penny piece


300ml/10fl oz/½ pint of double cream


unsalted butter for greasing your dish

knobs of unsalted butter to scatter over the

completed gratin – a 30g slice divided into six


2 cloves of roasted garlic


celery salt and black pepper to season

Pre-heat the oven 130f/150c/Gas 2.

Rinse the potatoes thoroughly in cold water, shake them dry in a clean tea towel. Grease the baking dish generously with unsalted butter and add the garlic.

Layer the potatoes in your dish, season well, pour over the cream and then add the knobs of butter.

Bake in the oven for 1½ hours. Set your timer for 1 hour 20 minutes – for the remaining 10 minutes turn the oven up to high for a golden crust.

Hints and tips and kitchen kit up next ...

Zhuzh your leftovers … and the real deal

Whether you opt to make the cheats' version or the real Gratin Dauphinois it would take your leftover roast of beef, pork or chicken (or a Quorn alternative for the veggies) to a whole new level. It doesn't have to be leftover roast, you could choose a selection of charcuterie i.e. a combination of cooked and cured meats – ham hock or gammon would be perfect too. I'd definitely serve with a relish - beetroot would be an excellent choice – the sharpness of the beetroot against the richness of either version - cheats or real deal.

It has to be the easiest and tastiest Monday evening supper ever.

It was the custom in France back in the day to serve an authentic dauphinois as a first course on its own and then followed by meats as outlined above and a salad.

I remember years ago watching James Martin make a huge dishful of dauphinois – deliberately creating leftovers - as a guide the dish measured 23x23x5cms/9x9x2”. The next day he re-heated what was left, still in its original dish, preheating the oven 140fan/160c/Gas 4 for 15 minutes, to crisp the edges - he then promptly devoured the remains straight from the dish. There's only one drawback – the dish will have to be soaked before washing properly – is it worth it – without question!

There are heaps of recipes out there for dauphinois – the one I use belongs to Elizabeth David and in her immortal words, defending extravagance …

if it seems to the thrifty minded outrageously

extravagant to use half a pint of cream to one pound

of potatoes, I can only say that to me it seems a more

satisfactory way of enjoying cream than pouring it over

tinned peaches or chocolate mousse”


Taken from “French Provincial Cooking” published

in 1960 – that's 60 years ago – gulp!

Absolutely spot on.

Now for the real deal a la Elizabeth David …

Saturday, 14 November 2020

The final photos and advantages using the “cheats' way”

 Bake for 30 minutes until it looks like this :

AFTER THE OVEN

after the oven – ready to devour

I'm really sorry you don't get the waft

of cheese and cream!


MY FAVOURITE COMFORT BOWL

my favourite comfort bowl


It's a great way to make use of baked jacket potatoes – as I'm fond of saying, if my oven is turned on I make the best use of the space and so always bake at least four potatoes, sometimes six at a time. All you have to do is peel and slice – what's not to love.

The Alfredo sauce can be made ahead and fridged until ready to use.

It's fast and it's easy – it may not be authentic but if you've not got the time it takes to prep and cook the real deal then this is for you.

Next – zhuzh your leftovers and the real deal!





Assembly - the cheats' way

 The best way to illustrate assembly is to give you a photo guide :

thinly sliced cooked jackets – baked at your

convenience, then cooled – peeled and sliced at

your convenience too


here's the dish – greased generously with unsalted

butter and then the roasted garlic, dotted around

my dish is cast iron and measures 24cms/9½” x 17cms/6½”

x 5cms/2” deep


Pre-heat the oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 when you are ready to bake.


you'll get two layers of potato, divide in half, place

the first layer in the bottom of the dish, add a sprinkle

of celery salt and black pepper then spread half the

quantity of Alfredo sauce – repeat!


the final photos and the advantages to follow


The humble potato

Weekend suppers should be special but not involve hours of prep and stress. Everyone has a favourite “comfort” ingredient and mine has to be potatoes. Probably my favourite indulgent potato dish is “Dauphinoise” the only trouble is it's a lot of work and takes a long time to cook.

For the uninitiated Dauphinoise is a classic French potato dish made simply with thin slices of potato and double cream. It takes time and technique since the potatoes have to be raw wafer thin slices and to achieve said thin slices you need to use a mandolin – not an easy piece of kit but we'll come to that later.

In the meantime, here's my solution – cheat!

Dauphinoise – the cheats' way


3 large jacket potatoes, baked, cooled then

peeled and sliced thinly – as a guide 500g

I used Maris Piper potatoes, they become waxy in texture when baked and are easy to slice thinly and become sticky - easy to arrange.

a sprinkle of celery salt and black pepper

two roasted cloves of garlic

large knob of unsalted butter for greasing

400ml double cream

You'll need a heavy earthenware or cast iron

serving dish


Alfredo Sauce

double the quantities given in the original recipe

50g unsalted butter

400ml double cream

100g freshly grated Parmesan

freshly ground black pepper

Gently heat the butter and the cream together, stirring until the butter has melted, then add the Parmesan.

Slowly bring to a gentle boil, turn down the heat and simmer, stir continuously for a minute or so until you have a smooth, creamy sauce, season.


This sauce can be made ahead, cooled, boxed and fridged or you can freeze it.

Assembly and photos next!




The back-burner ideas list

 … and here we are again – another lockdown.

When I thought about the back-burner stuff I had in mind the Christmas holidays – however it may be that the ideas might come in handy now and not for the back-burner after all.

Over the last months lots of us have struggled getting to grips with cooking at home - at the beginning it was a challenge and even, dare I say, fun. The trouble is that we're all now fed up and weary of being confined - the restaurants and pubs are on hold again and it's back to our own kitchen.

Boredom weakens our resolve and the temptation to throw food on a plate willy-nilly and to eat badly is all too easy. What might help is a new piece of kit which almost does the work for you in that its shape tailors how you serve food and the amount too.

Do you own decent sized bowls aka deep pasta bowls? If no, then you might want to consider making an investment – they are excellent pieces of kit for the winter months. I've used mine many times.

Here's an example :

the bowl measures 29cms/11½”

the broad rim 5cms/2”


the cutter measures 10cms/4”

and is a perfect size to place a circle of food


You don't have to be absolutely accurate – the photo and measurements are meant as a guide - it's easier to centralise a portion and then build upon it.

Even the most enthusiastic and committed of cooks lose the will and run out of ideas sooner or later so, in an attempt to raise your spirits coming next is the basis for a comfort bowl of weekend food that hasn't been thrown onto a plate. It's not cheffy or fussy - it's easy and what you add to it is simply whatever you fancy.

Coming next – my favourite comfort bowl

Saturday, 7 November 2020

Sidetracked … from the memory bank!

Frittata takes me back to the best breakfast I've ever eaten – in Jake's Grill, Portland, Oregon.

Admittedly it was a late breakfast – the ultimate indulgence – an omelette made with Oregon Dungeness Crab. Its season is December through to April – supplies are limited from then on. If you're ever in that neck of the woods treat yourself – it's still on the menu, served with breakfast potatoes.

Some may say it's extravagant to put crab in an omelette – hey, it's a treat and I say a little bit of what you fancy does you good!

I've also discovered that they serve a Dungeness Crab Benedict – what a glorious thought!

I wouldn't normally mention Christmas yet awhile but it has been such a strange year nothing is “normal” as we know it so anything goes! I'm suggesting “back-burner” ideas that might appeal when you want to push the boat out. A crab benedict sounds like a great place to begin.

Add a packet of buttermilk muffins to your shopping list - you can stash in them in the freezer - they don't take up too much space - ready to toast and butter – add the crabmeat, not forgetting a drop of lemon juice and a sprinkle of celery salt and black pepper and then drizzle generously with a mornay sauce.

As I've said previously a mornay sauce is definitely less stressful than Hollandaise and to serve it with fish is a marriage made in heaven. Not for nothing did Wheeler's, the famous fish restaurant include a mornay in their sauce list to accompany their fabulous fish dishes so why not over crab for a Christmas morning breakfast!

If you like the idea then you might want to check out your supermarket ahead of the game – most sell crab meat – white or a mixture of white and brown and some is suitable for freezing which would be a good idea. Crab meat is also available in tins. If you're feeling very extravagant then you could buy it direct from specialist seafood suppliers – from Orkney to Folkstone and Cornwall to Cromer (in Norfolk) there's so much choice out there!

The “back-burner” ideas list begins ...



Frittata – more bits and pieces

Frittata means “fried”. As we all know frittata is a great way of using up leftovers, worthy of a rummage in your fridge, all your favourite bits brought together. The great thing about a frittata is that you can make it as big as you like!


Use your leftover chicken, roast potatoes and any

cooked vegetables – dice and set aside


Raid the fridge for any raw veggies. Using a large

frying pan, sauté a finely chopped onion in a drop of

rapeseed oil


Add any raw vegetables, i.e. peppers, courgettes,

carrots – sliced and diced to a similar size – cook until soft


Add the cooked chicken, potatoes and cooked veggies


Whisk four eggs in a large mixing bowl, add a couple

of handfuls of cheese and black pepper


Serve with whatever floats your boat – bacon, sausages, fried chorizo and its oil, any cold meats and a salad – roasted portobello mushrooms make a perfect veggie addition. You could use Quorn pieces instead of chicken.

If your budget doesn't run to chorizo then use a packet of smoked bacon, place the rashers on a baking tray and bake for 15 minutes – 180fan/200c/Gas 6 – turn and repeat. Set aside to cool – the bacon will be crispy – deliberately! When the bacon has cooled, break into tiny pieces, box and fridge.

Here they are :


A very handy “savoury sprinkle” over scrambled eggs, fold into mashed potatoes or add to chicken casserole – the list is endless.

Frittata is never wasted - it's perfect the following day as part of a lunch box – if there's any leftover!

Sidetracked … from the memory bank



Frittata photos and bits and pieces

 

leftover roasties – too good to waste

the frittata from the grill


a generous slice


Quick, easy and delicious. It is perfect on its own as a breakfast treat – if you prefer a brunch you could serve with, as I did, coleslaw – because I love it. You could serve wedges on the side or beetroot relish would definitely work well too.

More bits and pieces …







Another weekend breakfast treat …

 or brunch if you prefer, with add-ons – a frittata hits the spot.

My next suggest is a combination of leftovers, staples and a treat.

I had leftover roasties – never wasted! I had the usual suspects – eggs and mature Cheddar cheese and a bunch of spring onions. The treat – smoked salmon.

Smoked Salmon Frittata

Serves 4

You'll need a large frying pan

240g roasties, cut into small pieces – plus

any crispy bits too!

1 bunch of spring onions, finely chopped

3 large eggs, beaten

2 handfuls of grated mature Cheddar cheese -

as a guide a handful weighs 75g approximately

100g packet of smoked salmon, snipped into

small pieces

a drop of rapeseed oil

black pepper

Heat a drop of rapeseed oil in your frying pan. Add the roasties and the spring onions and sauté for 3-4 minutes. Add the snipped pieces of smoked salmon and fold into the roasties and onions, sauté for 2 minutes.

Pre-heat your grill – BEFORE YOU TURN IT ON

ENSURE THAT THE FRYING PAN YOU'RE USING

WILL SLIDE EASILY INTO THE SPACE LEAVING AT

LEAST TWO INCHES GAP BETWEEN THE PAN AND

THE GRILL ITSELF, OTHERWISE YOU'LL BURN

THE TOP AND THE MIDDLE WON'T BE COOKED

Add the grated cheese to the beaten eggs to the roasties, onions and smoked salmon and cook on a medium heat on the hob for 2/3 minutes. Transfer the pan to the grill - cook for 2/3 minutes Remove the pan from the grill - USING OVEN GLOVES.

Using a fish slice gently flatten down the frittata so that you break the top – you'll find that the egg mixture is still not quite cooked. Place back under the grill for another 2/3 minutes and check – it should be golden brown but if your preference is for a darker colour carry on to your desired taste.

Serve on warmed plates – photos and bits and pieces to follow!