Wednesday, 27 September 2023

Sauces for fish

This is the easiest mayo you'll ever make – no fuss, no faff – take your time, you don't want to break the yolk.


Stick blender mayonnaise


1 egg

1 tbsp Dijon mustard

pinch of salt

juice of half a lemon – 2 tbsp

350ml of grapeseed oil



Break an egg into the stick blender jug. It's important that the yolk doesn't break. Add the mustard, salt and lemon.

Add the grapeseed oil, again being careful not to break the yolk. Insert the stick blender, be sure that the blades completely cover the yolk.

Blend – after a couple of seconds you'll see white ribbons rising through the oil. Slowly pull the blender up through the oil so it amalgamates and push down again to incorporate all the oil.

Serve!


Variations on a theme :


For a French mayonnaise swap the lemon juice

for white wine vinegar, keep the remaining ingredients


Smoked mayo – stir in a few drops of Liquid Smoke flavouring

to the mayo – substitute 1 tbsp of cider vinegar for the

white wine vinegar. Add a few drops of maple syrup

on each dollop of mayo. Fab on fries!


It does exactly what it says on the tin, here's a photo :



This recipe is an old one but trusted – it came from Matt Preston late of MasterChef Australia and it's delicious with the fishcakes!

It's that time again … Autumn

Here we go again! I've decided to begin the Autumn season with fish – I can hear you groaning but you might change your mind when you see how simple, quick and easy this recipe isnot to mention scrumptious!

A fishcake is a fishcake – boring! It's not true try these and you will change your mind.


The Ivy Fishcakes


(makes 8 – freeze what you don't use)

800g dry mashed potato, no cream or butter added

650g salmon fillet poached in fish stock and flaked

2 tbsp tomato ketchup

2 tsp anchovy essence

3 tsp English mustard

salt and black pepper

Plain flour for coating


Mix together the potato, half the salmon, the ketchup, anchovy essence, mustard and seasoning until smooth. Fold in the rest of the salmon. Mould the mixture into 8 round cakes and refrigerate.

When you're ready to serve preheat the oven 180fan/200c/gas 6. Lightly flour the fishcakes and fry them until they are coloured on both sides. Bake for 10/15 minutes.

From “The Ivy The Restaurant and its Recipes by the late AA Gill”.

These are perfect for the freezer!

Coming up … what sides to serve?


Wednesday, 20 September 2023

Bits and pieces & hints and tips

If you're using Sundae pots you want a size of 150ml approximately.

You might think it'll be fiddly filling them – I have a plan!

The neatest and least messy way of decanting the ice cream is to use a disposable piping bag – don't snip the end until it's full. Fold the edge of the bag back over your hand and spoon in the ice cream, when it's full then you can snip the end – it needs to be wide enough to allow the mixture to pass through the opening and then pipe into the Sundae pots!

Alternatively spoon into suitably sized containers with lids of say 4-6 scoops.

Here's a few photos that will help:





If you're interested, the origin of Rocky Road ice cream is said to have been created in March 1929 by William Dreyer … and his partner Joseph Edy with many variations along the way. After the Wall Street Crash of 1929 Dreyer and Edy gave the flavour its current name “to give folks something to smile about in the midst of the Great Depression”. Alternatively Fentons Creamery claims that William Dreyer based his recipe on a Rocky Road-style ice cream flavour invented by his friend, Fentons' George Farren.


Food for thought – there's a certain symmetry me thinks!


Rocky Road ice cream

Here's another idea for a no-churn recipe!


Vanilla ice cream


100g salted, toasted pecans, finely chopped

50g cocoa powder, sieved

50g mini marshmallows

1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk

1 x 600ml double cream

2tsp vanilla bean paste


8 x Sundae pots with lids

or suitably sized containers to split

the ice cream into say 4 – 6 scoops


It's a good idea to salt and toast the pecans the day before – they need to cool!

Heat a small knob of butter, gently, in a pan and when foaming tip in the pecans with a pinch of sea salt flakes. Stir over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes or until toasted – the delicious aroma will tell you when they are ready – don't leave them! Tip the nuts into a bowl and leave to cool.

On the day – empty the condensed milk into a large mixing bowl and gradually sieve in the cocoa – I use a tiny sieve, tapping the side with a spoon – you have more control - use a manual whisk to combine.

Then add the cream and vanilla bean paste and use an electric hand whisk until you get stiff peaks – i.e. stand on their own when lifting the mixing blades from the mixture.

Combine the pecans thoroughly.

Fold in the mini marshmallows gently so that they are covered in the ice cream.


Bits and pieces and hints and tips coming up!

Saturday, 16 September 2023

There's more ...

... cherry alternatives and assembly ideas


OR instead you could invest in Frozen Dark Sweet Cherries – 450g Sainsbury's £2.50 or £2.00 with Nectar. Defrost and reserve the juices, thicken with arrowroot, heating gently and then cool and fold in the cherries – fridge until required.

Assemble with the meringues, add a dessert spoon of cherries then add tiny pieces of chocolate of your choice – the list is endless but here's an idea or five :


plain chocolate drops

crushed Maltesers

small pieces of Rocky Road

bash a crunchy (in its wrapper – so convenient, no bits

other than where you want them to be!)

bash a flake (in its wrapper)


Add another dessert spoon of cherries. Drizzle generously with the thickened juices.

You'll have cherries with the thickened juices left over but I can't believe this is going to be a problem. You could either repeat the dessert or use as a topping over ice cream. If you want a grown-up version, add a drop of Kirsch to the juices but don't tell anyone I said so!

P.s. An optional extra – add a scoop of chocolate ice cream in between the cherries. There's a thought.


A variation on the theme!

 

Cherry and Chocolate Hodgepodge


Serves 1


1 410g can of Black Cherry pie filling with

fruit separated from juices

3 meringue kisses, crushed

25g of chocolate – see below


As with the previous Hodgepodge recipe a glass bowl or sundae dish is perfect for this dessert.

Tip the cherries into a sieve and let the juices drip through – this will take a while since they are dense – it's worth the wait.

OR instead you could make a quick, soft set cherry jam :


Cherry Jam


250g tinned black cherries, stoned

2 tbsps of arrowroot

2 tbsps Kirsch or Cherry Brandy - optional

4 tbsps maple syrup


Drain the tinned cherries – keep the syrup. Using a blender, blend half of the cherries with 120ml (4¼ fl oz) of the cherry syrup from the tin, arrowroot, 2 tbsps of Kirsch or Cherry Brandy and the maple syrup. Blend until smooth then pour into a saucepan, bring to the boil and let it reduce for 10 minutes until it becomes jam like. Pour into a bowl and leave to cool and thicken.

I'd not recommend using cornflour as a thickening agent – your jam will be cloudy. Arrowroot gives you a glossy jam.

By way of explanation, cornflour comes from corn and arrowroot from the roots of the plant of the same name. Cornflour makes the water opaque and arrowroot doesn't!


The “cherry jam” will not last for ever and has a “soft set”.

OR instead you could ...

Saturday, 9 September 2023

Store cupboard sweet – a photo and hints and tips

Here is the result :


You have options – you can choose to make one or all of the elements or you can opt for shop-bought!

Taking the recipe in order :

You have chapter and verse on meringue kisses – posted on 29th July

You have the vanilla ice cream recipe posted on 22nd July

You have both versions of the Sticky Toffee Sauce – the original posted with the ice cream on 22nd July and the plant recipe “Plant your strawberries” posted on 5th August.

The choice is yours!

Next … a variation on the theme

A store cupboard sweet

and “store cupboard” includes your freezer too!

A Hodgepodge ...

aka a mess. I just love to be able to pull ingredients for a speedy sweet straight from the store cupboard/pantry and freezer and serve a dessert worthy of the extra calories! I like to be prepared - what follows is a series of recipe ideas and variations - the components of which can either be made ahead and frozen or can be part of your store cupboard/pantry.


Hazelnut Hodgepodge


Serves 1


3 meringue kisses, crushed

1 scoop of vanilla ice cream

A sprinkle of toasted, chopped hazelnuts – 25g approx

30g frozen raspberries – defrosted – do not sweeten and keep the juices

1 tbsp sticky toffee sauce – loosen in microwave for

15 secs on medium


Assembly


A glass bowl or sundae dish makes this

dessert stand out, layer as follows :


crushed kisses

scoop of ice cream

sprinkle of hazelnuts

raspberries but reserve the juices

drizzle of sticky toffee sauce

drizzle of raspberry juices

Add a final sprinkle of hazelnuts


Coming up – a photo and hints and tips …

Saturday, 2 September 2023

Honeycomb!

The third chocolate recipe is another quick and easy one to make. It's perfect in that you can make a batch and freeze half. It's a hit with fresh fruit and ice cream. It's a sweet treat on its own – kept in the fridge you might want a secret stash but be careful it's addictive!

You have to be a certain age to remember cinder toffee – it's downside was that it almost always stuck to your teeth – not a good look! The recipe that follows gives you a honeycomb hit but because it's with toasted salted pecans, chocolate and bashed crunchie bars it's dangerously moorish!


Hokey-Pokey


75g unsalted butter

100g pecan halves, roughly chopped

sea salt flakes

300g dark chocolate

2 tbsp golden syrup

3 x 40g Crunchie bars


Heat a small knob of butter in a pan and when foaming, tip in the pecans with a pinch of sea salt flakes. Stir over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes or until toasted – you will smell them when they are ready. Tip the nuts into a bowl and leave to cool.

Break the chocolate into small pieces and melt, in a medium pan, with the rest of the butter and the syrup, stirring. Once the chocolate mixture is smooth, take the pan off the heat. Bash the Crunchie bars (in the wrappers – less messy!). Add the Crunchie pieces, along with the toasted pecans, to the chocolate mixture. Gently mix together before transferring to an 18cm round or square foil tray 23x23cms/9x9” (or cake tin if you prefer to wash-up!)

Leave to set in the fridge.

Remove the slab from the foil tray and cut in half – have the long side in front of you. Cut into similar size strips – cut those strips in half and keep going until you have small squares measuring 1.5cms/½”. As a guide if you follow the above you'll get 84 pieces per half, so 168 in total. If you want larger squares you'll obviously get less. I find a Chef's knife is the best kit to cut the squares.


Without doubt what lifts this treat to another level is the salted toasted pecans – make ahead and box when cooled until you're ready.

If you haven't made this before then be prepared … to get repeat orders, you'll be a very popular person.

Next up … a store cupboard sweet


Pizookie photos

 Here's the proof – and options :

Straight from the oven

and can be straight to the table

not forgetting the ice cream of course


You don't have to serve it “as is” -

you can let it go cold and then cut a

slice – it actually looks like the slice

is made of pastry – pastry it is not!


20 seconds later it looks like this!


Chocolate recipe number three ...