Saturday, 25 September 2021

The bites of time

10 minutes here, 10 minutes there Part 2 – The bites of time


The first ten minutes …

is taken up with prepping your whole chicken and placing in the slow cooker as per the recipe given in Bite size cooking.

Next ten minutes …

When the chicken is cooked and cooled strip it and cut into medium chunks, wrap and fridge. Strain the stock into a jug, cover and “fridge”.

If you wanted to be exceptionally economical you could place the carcass in a large saucepan with an onion, leek, carrot and celery, garlic, mixed herbs and 12 black peppercorns, cover with water, bring to the boil and then simmer for 1½ – 2hours. Your very own home-made stock, which can then be frozen in small amounts, ready to use.

Next ten minutes …

Seal a gammon joint (smoked or unsmoked to suit your taste) and slow cook in vegetable stock (or chicken if you prefer).

Next ten minutes …

Remove the gammon joint and cool, cut into similar sized chunks as the chicken, then wrap and fridge – reserve the stock and when cooled freeze it for another day and don't forget to label and date – as previously mentioned small amounts are more practical.

Next ten minutes …

Make your Velouté sauce and/or your Sauce Supreme using your stock from the slow cooked chicken – cool, cover and fridge. At the same time you can multi-task and sweat 2 leeks, sliced, in a glug of rapeseed oil and an optional knob of unsalted butter – this will take 2/3 minutes on a low heat. Cool, box and fridge.

Next ten minutes …

Assemble all your elements to create your pie. In a large mixing bowl combine the chicken, gammon and leeks, sprinkle generously with black pepper and then fold in the sauce. Tip your pie filling into a casserole or foil tray. Top with sliced cooked jacket potatoes and sprinkle with grated cheese. (You shouldn't need any salt, you've already seasoned the Sauce Supreme and there's salt in the smoked gammon, the stock and in the cheese topping).

Bake in a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 30 minutes until your cheese is golden. Freeze two portions individually, for another day.

You might want to add the Campbell's condensed chicken soup to your store cupboard – there's a mushroom version too – another very useful emergency stand-by for making another sauce.

Now for a sample menu ...


Bite size cooking

10 minutes here, 10 minutes there – Part 1


Everyone cooks differently - if you are a household of only two it's probably more difficult not to waste food. For example, buying a smaller chicken isn't necessarily better value – you're paying for less meat.

If you're giving this “getting organised” malarkey a go you can use the slow cooker principle even in a household of two in fact it's very economical, all that happens is divide your ultimate pie into portions that suit your family appetites and freeze what's left. It's the beginning of your ready-meal stash in your freezer that now has heaps of newly created space.

You may pass the “meal deals” by, thinking you can't take advantage because there's too much or it's not convenient this particular weekend, but that ain't necessarily so – invariably whole chickens are part of the deal and they can be frozen whole but I appreciate that freezer space may be an issue – aim for a weight 1.5kg – 1.75kg. The cost is £3.33 ish – ignoring the bottle of wine in the equation. Instead of using chicken fillet in the pie recipe, slow cook a whole chicken and get the best value for your money.

It's the easiest recipe :


Slow cooked whole chicken


1.5kg chicken

1 chicken stock pot

generous sprinkle of oregano or

garlic Italian seasoning

2 tsps of garlic paste


Place your chicken in the slow cooker and mix the garlic and stock pot together and spread over the chicken. Sprinkle with herbs. Switch your slow cooker on low and leave it for 8 hours – no liquid required.

The resultant juices give you approximately half a pint (300ml) of stock. Strain the stock, cover and refrigerate until cold, ready for use or freeze if preferred.


Similarly don't rule out the deals on gammon joints - they usually have a good use by date because they are vac packed or they can be frozen. The gammon joints can usually be found at 3 for £10 – aim for a weight between 500g – 750g.

If you're following “getting organised” I'm taking it as read that you'll already have cooked, baked jacket potatoes and a box of grated cheese stashed in your fridge.

What follows is a series of 10 minute bites of time that, pulled together, create a supper and freezer stash using inexpensive ingredients and smart shopping! Each bite of time can be fitted in to suit you.

I should point out that you won't produce a dish until all the 10 minute bites have been completed. The idea is that you have a spare 10 minutes one day and may be two separate 10 minute time bites the next day and so on. Every element along the way is easily fridgeable so you can pull it all together when the mood takes you. If the mood doesn't take you, you can freeze it all and use when it does – a practical and efficient way of cooking!

Here we go ...



Option 2 – not as healthy – Option 3 - somewhere in between!

This is definitely a luxury version, perfect for a supper with friends.

Replace the soup with a Velouté sauce. A Velouté sauce is one of the “Mother Sauces” - a light white sauce made with chicken or fish stock and a roux – it is also used as a base for other sauces, for example, a Sauce Supreme, known as a “Daughter Sauce” using Velouté and then enriched with cream.

Here's the Sauce Supreme recipe :


half a pint (300ml) of cold stock

15g unsalted butter

15g plain flour

½ tsp Dijon mustard

200ml double cream

salt and black pepper


Melt the butter, take the pan off the heat, add the flour and whisk. Return to the heat and cook out the flour for 2/3 mins, stirring continuously – do not walk away.

Then tip your cold stock straight into the roux and whisk until smooth, then cook on a low heat for 30 minutes. Season with salt and black pepper.

Add the mustard and cream and simmer for 5 minutes.

Fold your gammon, chicken and leeks into the sauce.

Top your sliced potatoes with seasoning and 2/3 knobs of butter, finish with a mixture of grated Red Leicester and mature Cheddar cheese. Bake as before.


Option 3 – somewhere in between

Omit the potato, butter and cheese topping and replace with a puff pastry lid. This option can also apply to Options 1 or 2. Bake as before. You could “hit the middle” and make Option 1 enriching the tinned soup by adding double cream. The world is your lobster or in this case your pie!

For those sceptics among us who think that a slow-cooker is only capable of producing stews and casseroles I hope you might be persuaded otherwise.

Bite size cooking to follow ...

I have a plan … liberation!

I find slow-cooking liberating – not a word that immediately springs to mind where cooking is concerned – there'll be no bra burning!

It might sound a touch dramatic but to illustrate how much time, effort and money you'll save I give you, the gammon, chicken and leek pie. There are three options here from the same recipe. The first is a healthy version, the second is not and the third is somewhere in between.

I will concede that you'll have to think about your shopping list but if you are now subscribing to “getting organised” you'll have jacket potatoes on your list ready to bake.

Here we go :


Option 1 – healthy


Gammon, Chicken and Leek pie


Serves 4 generous portions


You'll need a casserole or foil tray 23x23cms/9” square


Gammon joint – smoked or unsmoked to suit your taste – approx 500g

4 chicken breast fillets

2 stock pots – chicken or vegetable

4 medium leeks, topped, tailed and sliced thickly

Rapeseed oil – approx 1 tbsp

black pepper

2 tins (295g) of Campbell's condensed low fat chicken soup (this is now low salt, low fat and only 77 calories per serving)

3 large jacket potatoes, baked, cooled, then peeled and sliced

Salt and black pepper for potato topping


Seal your gammon joint and slow cook in the stock pots, repeat with the chicken fillet. If your slow cooker is big enough cook them all together. 4 hours is fine. Leave to cool.

Break up the gammon and the chicken into medium chunks and transfer for the moment into a large food bag and fridge. Reserve the stock and fridge.

Peel and slice your leeks, then soften in the rapeseed oil, set aside.

Tip the soup into a large mixing bowl. Next add a ladle of stock into the soup to loosen it, then fold in the gammon, chicken and leeks. Transfer the filling into your casserole or foil tray.

Place your sliced potato on top, season with a little salt and black pepper.

Pre-heat your oven and bake at 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 30-40 minutes – check after 30 - until the top is golden and crispy.


Then there's options 2 – definitely not as healthy and 3 – somewhere in between …



Saturday, 18 September 2021

Autumn comfort and joy!

Here's the thing – a meal should be a pleasure – it should make you happy – all the more so when the weather changes into Autumn - there's nothing more welcoming than “a comfort blanket” aka a slow cooker full of whatever takes your fancy.

The trouble is we live our lives at warp speed – constantly chasing our tails, juggling balls, whatever the description they mean the same. There are not enough hours in a day and it's so easy to resort to the ding of the microwave and a processed meal or rely on takeaways.

We don't have the time to cook from scratch every day and even if we did I'm not sure we would.

I've had a lot of practice planning meals. Three hours a day commuting to London every day before the advent of home delivery shopping taught me that life was too short to wing it. I planned weekly meals on the train and then made my shopping list. The earlier I made my weekly plan the better – it gave me an opportunity to check my store cupboard for the bits and pieces I'd forget about – you know seasoning, stock pots, condiments blah, blah. I gained valuable weekend time, was definitely less stressed and saved dosh too!

If you've been kind enough to follow my blog for a while you'll know that my mantra has always been to save yourself time, money and stress. If you're in the kitchen then make the best use of the time – what I call the “whilst I'm at it, I might as well” principle.

Here's what I mean :


If you have turned on the oven, fill it.


Bake half a dozen jacket potatoes – they don't take up too much space if, for example, you're cooking a roast. Prick them and wrap in foil – bake for an hour – check – depending on the size they make take a little longer. Set them aside to cool and then bag and fridge.


If you are cooking a roast, get into the habit of prepping extra veggies – you won't be sorry. Bag your extra roast potatoes and parsnips, carrots et al when cooled and fridge.


Slow cook a whole chicken – it takes 10 minutes at the most to place the chicken in the cooker and then spread with garlic and a stock pot (mixed to a paste) then sprinkle with oregano.

If you have sufficient space in your oven you could use a roasting bag until you

buy your slow cooker!


Grate mature cheddar cheese - bag, box and fridge. Grate Parmesan too – bag, box and fridge.


Start thinking about cooking more than you'll use so that you create your own home cooked ready meals to freeze, so, when you're suffering from the revolving door syndrome, it's easy peasy – it's in the freezer.

I have a plan!



Check out your kitchen kit!

My “I can't do without” pieces of kitchen kit range from - the smallest - a timer – inexpensive and comes into its own when you're doing your circus juggling act. There is nothing more infuriating than spoiling the supper because you've forgotten what's in the oven whilst supervising homework, sorting laundry or splitting the atom. The largest piece of kit is my slow cooker, so from one extreme to another!

If you don't own a slow cooker, may I respectfully suggest that you treat yourself, although treat is the wrong word – a slow cooker is an absolute must on every level. An electric slow cooker saves on your fuel bills – much cheaper than using a traditional oven – economical, saving time, money and waste. I could drone on, and on.

If there is anyone out there saying “but they are huge, I'm only cooking for one” - wrong on two counts – I cook for one meat eater using a medium/large slow cooker – I never slow cook for just one meal – I cook and freeze. The theory is that you get into the habit of deliberately cooking more than you'll use. You then create your own home cooked ready meals to freeze, so, if you suffer from what I call “revolving door syndrome” – you know what I mean - everyone coming and going at different times - you're able to pull your own ready meals out of the freezer.

I would accept that the larger versions take up space and not everyone has a large kitchen – you can buy tiny slow cookers, ideal for one person. If you've never used one, you'll never look back. The smallest capacity is 1 litre for one person, 1.5 would be sufficient for 1-2 people. They are inexpensive but shop around, the cheaper supermarkets have great deals so keep your eyes peeled!

Check out reviews – personally I'd go for a larger capacity than you think you'll need – you'll regret not buying a slightly larger version - give it some thought before you invest.

Just imagine coming home to a welcoming casserole on a chilly Autumn night.

My final “I can't do without” piece of kit is my frying pan.

Many moons ago I invested in a frying pan (available with or without lid) that is suitable for use from hob to oven. It did not cost a fortune and has been worth its weight in gold. There are loads to choose from but, as a rough guide, approximately 28cms in diameter costs £15ish – if you shop at the right places.

For the best value check out IKEA – they tick all my boxes :


suitable for gas hobs

induction

glass ceramic

cast iron


they are also oven safe


I've had mine for at least four years now and the best recommendation I can give is that when it finally wears out I'd replace it immediately.

There's a really good range of smaller frying pans too, again suitable as above – definitely worth a look!

Now for some Autumn comfort and joy ...

Then there's your store cupboard

Okey dokey, that's the freezer done and dusted now for your other store cupboard - or pantry if you prefer.

Time to be as ruthless with your store cupboard or pantry as you were with your freezer.

It's no use relying on a store cupboard if you don't know what's in it or more particularly that your ingredients are well within “best before date(s)”.

If you have a reasonably well stocked store cupboard then you'll be able to plan your meals more easily, it will save you time and money. My pantry is one extreme to another, from the usual staples - tuna, small chunk Branston, tomato paste, stock pots, cornflour, passata, suet, Worcestershire Sauce, noodles and orzo – to name but a few - to what some may call the more “out of the ordinary” ingredients, a small tin or jar of black olives, a small jar of capers, Grapeseed oil for stick blender mayo and lets not forget the preserved lemons!

Once again you may not relish the idea but I promise you'll find it cathartic!

If you are easily bored sort and check a shelf at a time – if you want to be really organised you can re-organise as you go – baking and all things relating, sweet and savoury ingredients, tinned goods – again sweet and savoury – everyday stuff – teas, coffee, I could go on!

If you have a separate space for your herbs and spices check these out too – they lose their potency over time, so any that are out of date should be replaced. I should add that unless you use large quantities of particular herbs and spices it's a false economy to buy in large amounts – they'll finish up out of date and will be thrown away.

If you want to be really organised you could make a shopping list as you re-organise of any ingredients that are out of date and need replacing.

Kitchen kit is up next ...

Food for thought – you bet …

... especially in light of my recent price checking light bulb moment.

I'm reminded too of my own words in my ebook Splitting Atoms and Grating Cheese or, life's to short to faff around, published in 2019 – it's shown just above the labels, the top right-hand side of the blog.

The essence of “Splitting Atoms ...” was to inspire you to change how you plan, shop, cook and eat and as a consequence save you time, effort and dosh too.

It asked :


How do you shop and cook now?”

How many times each week do you visit a supermarket?”

How much food and consequently money, do you waste each week?”

Are you constantly asked – what's for tea?”


If your answers are along the lines of, “badly”, “more than I should”, “too much” and “yes!” then you might find what follows useful!


You've heard of a Spring Clean – this is going to be an “Autumn Clean” - of your kitchen.

First and foremost and I know it won't be popular, it's time to empty and defrost your freezer, embarking on a voyage of discovery, setting aside in a large freezer bag the items that are in date and you want to use.

Discard the spoilt and out of date items and after cleaning and bringing back up to temperature, return the items you've kept.

I've no doubt there'll be a few surprises - you remember – that deal you couldn't do without – the posh loaf of bread that now has freezer burn and scarily some you don't even remember buying, all buried at the bottom, lost and forlorn.

I realise it's a boring and tedious job but you'll thank me when you see how much space you've created.

Next up, we need to look at your other “store cupboard”!








Saturday, 11 September 2021

Your food shopping

Until the pandemic I used to vary my shopping and would go to certain supermarkets for different reasons – convenience in terms of how much time I had or for certain products I knew I couldn't get at one or another. The lockdown put paid to that routine and, like all of us, whether shopping once a week or on-line you were still at the mercy of whatever was available.

With the recent easing I have resumed my old routine, albeit very carefully and always at 8am when the “traffic” in both senses is quieter - on the road and in the supermarket too.

Have you caught the supermarket ads on the tv – the ones saying they have price checked and/or matched products with the cheaper supermarkets?

I thought you might be interested in my results. I'm not going to drone on and on, simply take three random items and their comparative costs. I have to confess I was gob-smacked at the results.

Here goes :

I suggested to my friend that we go to Aldi – like me she's an early riser so we could shop before anyone else had got out of bed!

Here's my random sample :


500g box of seedless green grapes – described

as “wonky” which means not all the same size - £1

with a use-by date four days hence


1.75L carton of pure orange juice - £1.55


480g British pork loin steaks - £1.89


My comparison is with Waitrose simply because it happened to be my next port of call.


500g box of seedless green grapes - £2

in the interest of fairness they were all the same size

with a use-by date two days hence


1.75L carton of pure orange juice - £3

which was an offer - normally £4


480g British pork loin steaks - £4.50


I think my maths is accurate – by my reckoning I saved £5.06 - £1 on grapes, £1.45 on the orange juice (based on the offer price of £3) and a staggering £2.61 on the pork loin steaks – just three items - I dread to think what the saving would be on a full shop. It's true to say that I can't get everything I want at Aldi but it does show that if you become a savvy shopper with selected items you'll save a lot of dosh!

Two other random points to raise for those who may not shop at Aldi or Lidl – they've never made a secret that their fruit and veg needs to be used straight away – I found their use-by dates were as good as, in this case, Waitrose.

My original reason for shopping at Aldi was the excellent quality and cost of their cod loin. I should say that it's still £3.79 for 280g (£13.54 per kg). During the lockdown the only “supermarket” I could get cod loin was Marks and Spencer, sold in different weights, but typically £6.56 for 285g (£23 per kg).

Food for thought – you bet!

It's time to take stock, literally, and look at how you plan, shop, cook and eat.

Now for the *cake notes and decoration choices

 *Cake notes :

You could bake your own Madeira cake if you wish but it seems unfair on the cake when you're going to dunk it in syrup! Why note use an “economy” range Madeira cake available in most supermarkets – a word to the wise – they vary in size so I'd buy two to be on the safe side.

You could bake a lemon drizzle cake instead of the Madeira or again, use shop-bought if that's more convenient or you're not a baker!

Now for the decoration choices :


2 x Cadbury's Flake – perfect for the kids

or

grated plain chocolate – or small chocolate

drops if you have them - perfect for the big kids

or

crushed Amaretti biscuits - perfect for those

who don't like chocolate and/or added crunch


A tip if you're using the Flake for the kids, bash it in its packet so that it doesn't fly all over the kitchen worktop, open carefully and sprinkle over to decorate. If you want grown-up “sprinkles” grate plain chocolate or use small plain chocolate drops if you have them in your pantry!

Crushed Amaretti biscuits are a great addition for “crunch” and texture – with or without the chocolate choices - since they are an iconic Italian ingredient it seems only fitting to include them.

That's the end of my entertaining stint for a while – I'm hanging up my apron!

Coming next – do you pay any attention to the supermarket ads that “price check” with other rivals?


A Tiddy Tiramisu – hints and tips

If you'd like to make a tiddy version here are some hints and tips!

The glasses I use have a capacity of 160ml – they measure 7 cms in diameter and 7 cms deep. The tiddy benefits from being made ahead – time to soak up all that lovely lemon syrup – and the alcohol too if you are indulging in a grown-up version.

For the size of glass mentioned you'll need a 4cm cutter and your cake should be 1cm slices.

The method for the syrup and the cream, mascarpone cheese and sugar mixture is exactly the same as for the larger recipe and will give you six tiddys.

The idea is to give the tiddy height using a circle of cake at the bottom of the glass and then line the glass with circles of cake. Place a generous blob of mixture on top of the circle in the bottom, then repeat with another circle of cake and mixture – you should get three tiers finishing with a circle of cake on the top.

You don't have to line the glass, you can just alternate layers of cake and mixture finishing with a cake top. Add a teaspoon of lemon curd to the cake top then cling film loosely and fridge until you're ready to decorate and serve.

Just before serving sprinkle with your decoration of choice – the curd “glues” the sprinkle in place.

Here's a photo of the latest :

If you'd like to see a photo guide, check out “A Tiddy Tiramisu” on the Desserts label. I'm amazed to see that these pieces were published in June 2017!

Now for the *cake notes followed by the decoration choices ...







A fishing expedition – here comes the pud!

Fishing for a pud was easy – tiramisu was unanimous and when I mentioned a lemon version even better, their favourite flavour!

I suppose if I had a “signature” pud it would be tiramisu - but not as you know it.

If you like the idea of tiramisu but not the coffee, here's an alternative that I hope will appeal to everyone, erm, unless of course you don't like lemon!


Lemon Tiramisu


Serves 4 large or 6 smaller

servings


Lemon syrup – 4 tbsp lemon juice, 100g icing sugar

20 fl oz whipping cream

4 tbsp Limoncello liqueur (optional)

20 sponge fingers or Madeira cake * see note that follows

4 tbsp caster sugar

225g Mascarpone

2 heaped tbsps lemon curd to fold into Mascarpone mixture

To make the syrup place the lemon juice and icing sugar into a small saucepan and heat gently so that the sugar dissolves. Set aside to cool.

If you are using Limoncello liqueur for a grown up version, add it to the cooled syrup.

Mix a little of the cream carefully with the caster sugar and mascarpone to combine and loosen, gradually add the remainder of the cream and then, using a hand mixer, whisk gently to thicken slightly. Add the lemon curd to the mixture and use the disconnected blades from the mixer fold in the curd so that it gives a ribbon effect.

For one large tiramisu and using sponge fingers, a rectangular dish is the best shape. Dip the fingers into the syrup and arrange in a row, then add the mascarpone mixture and repeat.

Cling film and fridge until you're ready to decorate and serve.


Coming up – the tiddy (individual) version …


Friday, 3 September 2021

A fishing expedition – the pastry and the photos

As always you have “lid” options – for me it has to be puff or flaky pastry – here's my usual recipe if you want to make your own.

You will need a batch for each pie!


Fast flaky pastry


150g of unsalted butter – chilled in the freezer

220g plain flour

pinch of salt

8 tablespoons of ice cold water


Plan ahead - before you begin weigh out your butter, wrap it in foil and put it in the freezer – 30-40 minutes. Place the flour and salt in a mixing bowl. You'll need a cheese grater on stand-by. Remove the butter from the freezer and fold back the foil – it's easier to control when you grate the butter into a heap in the middle of the flour and salt. You can dip the butter into the flour to stop any sticking.

Using a round bladed knife mix the butter into the flour and salt. Sprinkle four tablespoons of water into the pastry and mix well. Add another four tablespoons and continue to mix. Finally use your hand to bring together – you're aiming for a clean bowl so no bits of pastry left in the bowl. Have a sheet of cling film ready – you can now use both hands to mould the pastry into whatever shape you require. Place on the cling film and wrap.

Rest the pastry in the fridge for 30 minutes before use or place the cling filmed pastry in a bag and freeze.

On a lightly floured surface roll out your pastry – dust your rolling pin too. Roll out as evenly as you can turning the pastry as it takes shape – always roll backwards and forwards and quarter turns so that it keeps to a circle. If you roll side to side you'll stretch the pastry and it will shrink when cooking!

Tip the filling into the pie dish. Egg wash the rim of the dish and then gently lift the pastry lid on top of the filling. The egg wash will glue the pastry in place and you can press the lid onto the filling gently. You can use a sharp knife to remove any excess pastry then, using a pastry fork edge the pie. Egg wash the pastry and add two cuts in the centre of the pastry to vent the pie.

Bake in a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 40 minutes. I'd check after 20 minutes and turn the pie so as to give an even colour. It depends on your oven but I've found that even with new fan ovens the baking isn't always evenly browned.

There's always a plan B – cheat – buy puff pastry sheets – 320g x 2.

Here they are :


Yum!

Double yum!

Last but by no means least, here comes the pud!



The pie plan - Cheese, potato and onion filling

It's no surprise that both these pies already figure on the blog – what I suppose it shows is their popularity – it's the simple things in life.

This filling is easy peasy, just three elements all of which can be made ahead, bagged, boxed and then fridged!

Serves 4


4 medium sized baked jacket potatoes, peeled

and cut into cubes measuring 1.5cms/½”

approximately


2 medium onions, finely diced and

sautéed with a knob of unsalted butter and

a drop of rapeseed oil until softened – 5 minutes

add 1 tablespoon of Dijon mustard to the onion


300g of grated cheeses – 100g each of Mature

Cheddar, Red Leicester and Gruyere


Black pepper


you'll need a pie dish – measuring 23x23x5cms/9x9x2”

foil or ceramic – ceramic if you're serving at the table


Using a large mixing bowl add the potatoes, onions and mustard – season generously with black pepper. Fold in the cheeses.


Both the pie fillings benefit from being made a couple of days ahead and then fridged until you're ready to complete.

All that remains is the pastry!


The pie plan!

As you'd expect I'm cooking ahead – the steak and kidney was slow cooked on Thursday, cooled, bagged and fridged, ready to pull together.

To make life easier, here are the recipes for both pie fillings – first up :


Steak and Kidney Pie filling


1kg/2.2lbs braising steak or stewing steak, cubed

275g/10oz lambs kidneys, diced

glug of rapeseed or Canola oil

2 x Knorr beef stock pots

2 heaped tbsp tomato paste

2 cloves of roasted garlic or fresh crushed garlic

salt and black pepper


You'll need a pie dish measuring 23x23x5cms/9x9x2”


Brown and season the steak in a large frying pan, using a drop of rapeseed oil – do this in small batches – if you don't you'll get grey looking meat, it will take ages and it will stew. Using a slotted spoon pop the browned meat into the slow cooker. Toss the kidneys in a little plain flour then brown in the frying pan and add to the steak in the slow cooker.

Dissolve the stock pots, gently, in the residual pan juices, then add the tomato paste – make sure the paste is properly melted and “cooked out” - if you don't do this you'll have a bitter taste. Add a glug of water to the melted stock pots and the tomato paste, stir well to combine, repeat until your pan is two thirds full. Bring to the boil and then tip – carefully – into the slow cooker. The “gravy” should cover the steak and kidney – if it doesn't top it up with boiling water. Slow cook for on low for 4 hours. If your gravy is too thin – it's personal choice - add a little slaked cornflour and thicken to taste. If you decide to thicken the gravy then I'd take the steak and kidney out of the gravy before thickening. It might seem a bit of a faff but it's worth it – the meat won't break up.

Set the slow cooked steak and kidney aside and fridge until you're ready to roll.

Now for the Cheese, Potato and Onion filling ...



A fishing expedition and a dinner party

We have new neighbours who are lovely. It's their birthdays close together in August and during an impromptu early evening glass of wine we invited them for dinner as a birthday gift.

It was vital that I found out what foods they enjoyed – hence the title “fishing expedition”. During our glass of wine I fished for their favourites and, as importantly, the opposite!

Here's the menu :


Garlic Mushrooms with Ciabatta


for the boys

Steak and Kidney Pie

Roast potatoes

Steamed mixed veggies


for the girls

Cheese, Potato and Onion Pie

Coleslaw

Beetroot


Lemon Tiramisu with Limoncello Shots


I picked up all the ideas during the evening – I have to confess it was a very large glass of wine – as a consequence they had no idea I was on a mission.

They adore mushrooms and in particular the retro “garlic mushrooms”. You've got to have good bread to dunk and soak up all that garlicky, buttery deliciousness. One plain, one black olive ciabatta will be perfect. I didn't know but, as it turned out, one didn't like olives, one did – big fat tick!

I didn't want to serve a giant starter – with pies for the main course I wanted to make sure there'd be room. I pondered about serving dishes for the mushrooms, here's what I chose :

 


Le Creuset Stoneware Petite Round Casseroles


Perfect for single portion servings of the mushrooms,

measuring 9.5cms as a guide. Ideal for oven to table

and quite stylish!

I've had a set of 4 for years and gulped when I saw the current price - £21 each – although you can buy sets of 4 Le Creuset Mini Cocottes at £75.53.

I'm not suggesting you rush out and spend big money – if you like the look of the casseroles you might want to keep an eye out for sales or outlets or, there are similar casseroles but not of the same quality, check out your favourite search engine.

Up next – the pie plan!