Showing posts with label Freezer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freezer. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 November 2025

A big tip ...

use a foil tray with 2 tbsp plain flour – it enables you to roll around the koftas to coat with flour without having to “assist” them.


Here's the photo guide :





If you would prefer a larger version then use a dessert spoon of mixture, treated in exactly the same way, like these :



Here's an idea – serve the koftas with Bombay Aloo – both dishes can be frozen, in fact the flavours are enhanced by freezing. An excellent choice for a mid-week supper! A tip – freeze the koftas in amounts that suit you – and again the same with the Aloo in small containers, you can always take out more if you need it!

Bombay Aloo coming up ...


Saturday, 10 August 2024

If on the other hand …

 … you wanted something special, try this fast flaky pastry recipe which I promise you is easy – it may take a little longer but it's worth it. I've included a step by step guide with hints and tips too!

You will need :


75g of unsalted butter – chilled in the freezer

110g plain flour

pinch of salt

4 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 two tablespoons of water into the pastry and mix well. Add another two 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.

You can now rest in the fridge before use or place the cling filmed pastry in a bag and freeze.



Microplane graters are a great piece

of kit!


The butter in its foil jacket with the grater

over the bowl of flour and salt – you can just as

easily use the grater vertically if that's more

comfortable


The grated heap of butter


The ball of pastry sitting in the bowl


The empty mixing bowl – not a crumb left behind


Next up – the filling and the final fotos!


Saturday, 16 March 2024

Assembly …

...and the leftovers.

Okey dokey, slice the sub, spread the sauce and add the meatballs on one side.

On the other side add mayo or mango chutney (to suit your choice of meatballs or koftas), then layer salad ingredients of your choice, then finish with mozzarella or paneer and top with optional bacon and eggs.

There's a meal!

As for the leftover meatballs and tomato sauce and the koftas and curry sauce, the good news is you can freeze them for another day.

For the Italian meatballs and tomato sauce, defrost in the fridge. When defrosted cook pasta of your choice – as a guide allow 90g of penne pasta for 180g of cooked per serving.

Whilst your pasta is cooking heat the meatballs and tomato sauce together gently. Drain the pasta and add it to your meatballs and sauce. Serve!

For the koftas and curry sauce defrost in the fridge. Heat the koftas and curry sauce together gently for 10/15 minutes and 2 minutes before the end of heating time microwave steamed pilau rice – as a guide a 280g pack from Aldi serves 2. Serve!

The joys of batch cooking – two ideas for a “sub” weekend treat and leftovers for a quick and easy, but home cooked mid-week meal.

Result!

A post script for spuds ...

Wednesday, 27 September 2023

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?


Saturday, 4 February 2023

The Pasties – the photos

Have a look at the results :


These are large pasties – they measure 22cms/8½” x 12cms/4½” over the middle. Cut in half or leave whole if you're feeding hungry hoards or have a very large appetite!

The bonus – you can make a batch of the pastry, divide, weigh and wrap and treat the filling in the same way. I took my own advice and made two pasties and popped the remaining portioned pastry and filling into the freezer, ready for when I needed a comfort food fix.

I should also say that authentic Cornish pasties are cooked with raw ingredients – I've “borrowed” the pastry, used my own filling and am very pleased that I did!

A small tip - pasties will keep warm for a long time - wrap them straight from the oven in either greaseproof or baking paper and then a clean tea towel. It does work and the pasty will stay warm – it definitely saves burning your mouth when you're itching to devour.

Ta dah – and economical too!

Saturday, 21 January 2023

The Pasties - hints and tips

It may seem a bit of a faff but I'd recommend weighing both your pastry and your filling, you don't have to be obsessive about it – an “ish” will do.

As a guide you'll have 1lb 13oz or 840g of pastry – divide into four weighing approximately 7oz ish/210g each. Place each portion on a sheet of cling film, gather and wrap, moulding into a ball shape. Bag all four and fridge.

Treat your filling in the same way. It's much easier to deal with the filling when it has cooled – it won't interfere with your pastry and you won't scald your hands! You should have 1.346g of filling, divide into four portions of 11½oz ish/ 336g each, cling film and mould in the same way as the pastry.

Here's a couple of photos :



By weighing, wrapping and moulding your pasties are of a similar size so no arguments! 

Can be used for all manner of pastries pasties and whatever takes your fancy!

Now for the filling ...

Saturday, 3 July 2021

Sally's favourite Homity Pie – the leftover pastry

I don't like wasting food and I never waste pastry.

In my kitchen I've got tart tins of all sizes – perfect for my leftovers.

Here's the tart tin I used :


the tin measures 10cms in diameter x 2.5cms deep


I had enough leftover pastry to line three

tart tins



bagged and ready for the freezer, for another day!


I had leftover filling too and yep, boxed and into the freezer.

A very satisfying use of all the ingredients and the best bit – Sally loved it!

Now for the next piece of kitchen kit ...

Saturday, 20 February 2021

Batch cooking and freezing your own pies

If you've been used to buying ready-made pies for emergencies you may have been disappointed. One thing is for sure they are not cheap so if you finish up with only half a filling and the remainder is fresh air it's not good for your meal or for the money you've wasted. That's why I make my own – it doesn't have to take forever – you don't have to go learn the art of pastry making – cheat, buy the sheets – either puff or shortcrust – like I've said the pastry police are in lockdown too!

If you feel brave you could have a go at batch cooking and freezing your own pies – there's every shape and size of foil pie dishes known to man to suit everyone – single deep dishes, shallow versions and larger too. Equally there's the same choice of enamel pie dishes or ceramic if you prefer.

The world is your lobster – you can spend very little or mega bucks. Personally I find that foil is convenient and doesn't take up too much space in my freezer although I do get that you wouldn't want to serve a glorious pie for a supper/dinner party in a foil tray so may be treat yourself for special occasions.

Have a go – you've nothing to lose and everything to gain. In these miserable times when you're having to produce meals every day just think how great it'll feel when you can pull out your own from the freezer!

There are loads of different pastry recipes and styles but I don't want to drone on ad nauseam so we'll take a break – here's another sauce idea.


Saturday, 16 January 2021

Here we go again folks!

I think we've got used to lockdown over the previous months – now though we have the added challenge of being in the depths of winter and miserable weather so no benefit of even queuing in the sunshine. After the disappointment of the strangest Christmas and New Year too we need to give ourselves a kick in the posterior and get on with the next two to three months at the end of which, hopefully, we'll have had a shot in the arm – I've never ever looked forward to an injection – bring it on!

Down to business. During the last lockdown I gave you a weekly menu of suggested meals, the purpose of which was to give you ideas of your own that you could tweak to suit you. It's more difficult in the winter – we've probably over indulged at Christmas and New Year and so added to the misery is an extra pound or two (or kilo if you prefer).

January is a long month and normally challenging for the already stretched budget, so all the more reason to get organised.

Most of you know that I'm a list maker – here's where it comes into its own but first :

Check your freezer – I'll bet that you filled it with all sorts of goodies most of which have sunk to the bottom and you've no idea what's buried in there. I'm no different and have got used to biting the bullet and doing a stock check. What I loathe and detest is that rummage into the depths and finishing up with fingers I cannot feel. Here's my tip – pull out a large portable freezer bag and don a pair of rubber gloves then empty your freezer contents into the portable bag, check as you go. There'll be gremlins that are too late to save so sadly you'll have to commit bits to the freezer burn mountain. Now you've rotated your stock and discovered stuff you'd forgotten you can use your freezer the way it's meant to be used and create meals using the contents!

Do exactly the same with your store cupboard and/or pantry. Check dates and be brave.

Now you're ready to make your shopping list!





Saturday, 3 October 2020

A soup and a cobbler – hints, tips and a gamble!


The original recipe says “about 14” blobs of cobbler and that's exactly what you'll get following the ice cream scoop measurements as a guide. Then another light bulb idea – I decided to cook eight blobs and then wrap the remaining six, bag and freeze so that I can see how they behave on another day when I need a cobbler – watch this space!

Here are the final photos :

the remaining six, ready for wrapping

the remaining six, bagged ready for the freezer

here's the soup and cobbler – I shouldn't
have done but I ate them both – yum!

This ticks more than one box. If you're tired and in need of comfort, the soup and cobbler is the answer, it absolutely hits the spot. The gamble paid off!

It's economical too – perfect for a mid week Autumn meal. Further news on the frozen cobbler soon.

P.s. Interestingly there are only 12 pieces of cobbler shown in the Waitrose Food Magazine – pages 60 and 61 – where are the other 2 – or is is that “about 14” actually means 12. Thank you to my ice cream scoop!

Coming up, more Autumn comfort food ideas ...



Sunday, 22 December 2019

Would you like the recipe?


I know you're used to me saying buy a ready to use puff pastry sheet … if it's good enough for chefs to use it's good enough for me.

For my home-made Christmas gifts I wanted to make all the elements myself and so I made the flaky pastry – quickly – from scratch.

To clarify “flaky pastry” is another name for “rough puff pastry”, in other words it's lumps of butter mixed with flour and traditionally rolled and folded – a similar method to puff pastry. The following recipe does not involve all the faffing around of folding and resting etc., rather a throw it all in a bowl method! I've not made this pastry for ages, so much so I can't even remember where I found it. It does remind me of a similar pastry recipe contained in my series on Cornish pasties posted in June this year – that pasty pastry recipe was the strangest I'd come across but said at the time, “not only does it work I'd say it's the best result I've ever had”. If you're interested check out The Cornish pasty – the recipes 1stJune 2019 and the series with a photo guide.

The following fast flaky pastry recipe falls into the same category. It's kind too. You can use it, having rested for 30 minutes or make up a batch and then freeze it. All you need to remember is to form the pastry into a shape of your choice before wrapping in cling film and fridging or freezing.

Recipe up next ...

Sunday, 29 September 2019

Some hints and tips - your fridge, your freezer and your fruit bowl!


In a hurry? You don't have to roast fresh beetroot if you have no time. The organic vac packs you can buy are a great product and are not soaked in vinegar. The vac packs have good “best before” dates and so are a perfect fridge stand by.

I always have a small jar of creamed horseradish in my fridge too – you can make and box the smoked mackerel, horseradish and mayonnaise and fridge it, ready to use whenever you are.

You could buy the smoked mackerel when it's a good price and freeze it. It also has a reasonable fridge life so long as you keep it in its sealed pack.

Finally your fruit bowl – Autumn brings delicious apples. I know there are many different varieties to choose from - personally I love a Cox - it lends itself well with the smoked mackerel and the beetroot.

You don't have to go to the trouble of a stack if you've no time and want a quick healthy “salad” style supper. It takes minutes to flake the smoked mackerel and mix with the mayonnaise and the horseradish.

If you fancy treating yourself make the smoked mayonnaise for added zing! Check out Matt's mayonnaise for the stick blender recipe and method.

The moral of this missive is that there's no shopping required – all your ingredients are in your fridge, your freezer and your fruit bowl.

Have a look at the photos coming next for an alternative beetroot idea.