Showing posts with label Condiments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Condiments. Show all posts

Friday, 1 August 2025

Variations on a theme!

If you wanted to change the mood depending on what you're serving then why not try these ideas!


For a French mayonnaise swap the lemon juice

for white wine vinegar, keep the remaining ingredients


Smoked mayo – stir in a few drops of 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 of the original :



What's not to love!

It's really useful – so many other recipes contain mayo, the most obvious being coleslaw – with the home-made mayo it takes it to the next level.

I don't think you'll ever buy mayonnaise again – goodbye shop bought.

If ever there was a recipe “for keeps” this is it!

Speaking of coleslaw ...

Make your own mayo!

The simple things in life – and your kitchen – are the best!

One of the best salady sides has to be mayo – but not any old bottle or jar – a mayo you've made yourself.

A good mayo recipe is pure gold and the following recipe is easy peasy. I cannot take the credit for the recipe – it belongs to Matt Preston late of MasterChef Australia. It never fails!

A small dish served as a side – a central part of sharing plates of mixed meats or fish and seafood – or both - is delicious.

Here goes :


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!


Stick Blender Mayo is not as stiff as shop bought since it does not contain preservatives so the consistency should be spot on – if you think it's too stiff for your taste then add a drizzle of double cream.

The mayo recipe includes lemon juice and Dijon mustard, an excellent “good to go” base. All that's needed is extra seasonings – celery salt and white pepper as a suggestion.

An added bonus - you get 425g from a batch of mayonnaise and it will keep in the fridge for 3 days, so loads left over for other stuff!

Now for the variations ...