Sunday, 6 March 2016

Class Report : A decadent dessert

After an appetiser and a main that were relatively healthy it would be boring not to indulge when it came to pud!

The Orange Tiramisu first appeared in GOM: Chapter 16 “The Dinner Party ….” it was well received on that occasion – it is easy to make, can be made ahead, covered and fridged. For the purists – not everyone likes coffee – so a variation on a theme.

Orange Tiramisu

Grated rind and juice of 2 oranges
20fl oz whipping cream
4tbls Cointreau (optional)
20 sponge fingers or Madeira cake
4tbls caster sugar
8oz Mascarpone or curd cheese (Philadelphia)
2oz plain chocolate (grated)



Mix the orange rind and juice with the Cointreau.

Mix the cream carefully with the sugar and mascarpone.

Cut up the cake in shapes that suit the bowl you are using and dip into the orange mixture.

Grate the chocolate

Layer the mascarpone mixture with the sponge and sprinkle with chocolate.

I'm stating the obvious that you'd omit the Cointreau if serving to kids.

A couple of variations – decorate with small amaretti biscuits. You don't have to use plain chocolate to decorate – crushed flake works well for the milk chocolate lovers or you could combine the two as illustrated below :



Finally a thank you to my husband who made the template for me so that I'd get straight lines of chocolate for the decoration – left to my own devices it would not have been a pretty sight!

Here's the serving bowl – diameter 20 cms and with the template over the top. The Tiramisu will serve six generous portions.




Class Report : Miso and Maple

The idea for the main dish came about from an impromptu conversation during the previous class. Don't ask me why the subject of miso came up, such is the nature of the classes that completely random questions pop out of nowhere! Anyway on that occasion I uttered those immortal words, “hold that thought” and disappeared into my pantry returning clutching a packet of sweet white miso.

This is what it looks like :



It's available from most supermarkets – mine came from Daily Bread Co-operative Ltd www.dailybread.co.uk.

I first mentioned Miso Maple Glazed Chicken in The Method in my Madness – The Creaking Table as part of a supper for Christmas Eve.

For ease, here it is :

Miso Maple Glazed Chicken

4 chicken breasts
1 tbsp baking powder*
4 fl oz/½ cup maple syrup*
2 fl oz/¼ cup white miso paste*

Mix * together, add the chicken breasts and
marinate for 24 hrs

Sprinkle with chopped spring onions

Bake in a pre-heated oven 180 fan/200c/Gas 6
for 35 minutes

Again, takes no time at all and, if you marinate the chicken in one of my famous, washing-up free foil dishes, it can go straight from the fridge, into the oven.

This recipe is as easy as falling off a log.

Continuing with the “flying by the seat of my/your pants” theme, serve with :

Maple Glazed Veggies

100ml dark soy sauce
50ml Maple syrup

1 tsp garlic paste
2 tbsp light olive oil
black pepper

You can choose any veggies you like, here's my choice :

Mange tout – cut in half diagonally
Baby sweetcorn – cut in half lengthways
Carrots – peeled, topped and tailed and cut into batons -
5 cms long x 1cm, as a guide – you'll get approximately
28 batons from 1 large carrot
Red Romano pepper – topped, tailed, de-seeded and
cut into a similar size to the batons
Salad onions – topped and tailed and cut diagonally.

A word of caution – it's important that your veggies are of a similar size so that they cook evenly. Some veggies take longer than others, so, when making your choice bear that in mind.

Heat the oil until hot in a frying pan (or wok) add the salad onions and garlic paste and cook for 1 minute, tossing as you go. Add the baby corn, carrots and red pepper for 2 minutes and then finally add the mange tout for another minute.

Add the soy/maple syrup mixture and toss through the vegetables for another 2 minutes, season with black pepper.

Serve immediately in bowls and top with sliced Miso Maple Glazed chicken.

The food you eat should look appetising, hence the expression “you eat with your eyes”, more than that it has to taste good. I chose the veggies because they ticked all the boxes – eye catching colours, great flavour and great taste. An additional bonus - a carb free speedy lunch or supper.

Here are a couple of photos of the finished dish.




P.S. I know that many of you will know about miso, but, for those that may not, it is Japanese. I'm not going to blind you with science – suffice it to say it's a seasoning in a paste, made from fermenting soybeans with salt and koji, or rice or barley. There are many types but the two most common are white and red. The white is sweet and lighter in taste. The red is aged, darker and a stronger flavour. Probably the most well known miso dish is the soup – it has many other uses, in casseroles and sauces. Its benefits are that it is high in protein and rich in vitamins and minerals but above all, it tastes great!

Pps.  Another bonus - the miso is organic and gluten-free too!

Class Report

This time I decided to mix it up a bit and “fly by the seat of my pants”.

I know that I'm always suggesting using the humble beetroot and one of my most favourite recipes is Honey Roasted Beetroot. Recently I demonstrated a pie with the beetroot recipe as a side. One of my friends, who has been coming to my classes since they began had clearly missed the previous occasions when I'd used it – she absolutely loved it. So, that set me thinking and here's the result.

Honey Roasted Beetroot
& Goats cheese Crostini
or
Fly by the seat of your pants!


Ciabatta, sliced
Goats' cheese, sliced
Garlic paste, mixed with a glug of olive oil

*Balsamic vinegar – 2 tsp
*Olive oil – 2 tbsp
*Clear honey – 2 tbsp
Cooked beetroot – 500g
Salt and black pepper
*Chopped fresh thyme – 2tsp or a sprinkle
of dried if you can't get fresh


If fresh beetroot is in season, choose beets of a similar size and roast in foil - @ 180f/200c/Gas 6 for an hour and then test, leave to cool, peel and slice thinly.

For speed and/or when beets are not in season, you can use the vac packs you can get in the supermarket - as an indicator I choose beetroot that is approximately the same size – a 300g vac pack gives you 8 small to medium beetroots. Slice thinly but not so that you can see through – don't use the ends of the beets – they won't “sit” on the bread evenly – save them for a salad or a sandwich.

Combine the ingredients marked * above and season with salt and black pepper. Arrange your slices of beetroot in a foil tray, overlapping the slices to a similar size as your slices of ciabatta. Pour your combined ingredients over the beetroot. Roast in a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/gas 6 for 10 minutes until the beetroot is sticky and glazed. Set aside.

To assemble your crostini, toast one side of the bread and spread the other, sparingly, with the garlic and oil paste, layer with beetroot and top with goats' cheese. Warm through in the oven for 10 minutes and serve.

I'll save the comments from the Ladies until later, in the meantime, here's a couple of photos




The beauty of this recipe is that you can leave it as it is – an appetiser, or you can scale it up for a lunch or a supper with a side salad.


Saturday, 27 February 2016

Easter & the egg - The Barks

There are two versions mentioned here – the first I've used on many occasions, it's quick and easy and looks good bagged and bowed, or arranged in a small pot.

Chocolate Bark

Handful of chopped dried cranberries, chopped dried apricots and toasted, roughly chopped hazelnuts.

Line a baking sheet with clingfilm. (Baking sheet should be approximately 30cm x 18cm) You will find the clingfilm easier to control if you oil the baking sheet.

Break 300g of dark or milk chocolate into pieces and put in a bowl over a pan of barely simmering water. Melt.

When the chocolate has melted pour it onto the clingfilmed sheet.

Scatter over the fruit and nuts. Wear a disposable glove and very gently ease the fruit and nuts into the chocolate.

Leave to set for 4 hours before breaking into chards.

You can use any combination of fruit and nuts to suit your taste – tailor the recipe to suit your favourites – it is Easter after all and you deserve a treat.

If you wanted to add an extra dimension – discover your inner Jackson Pollock – melt 100g of white chocolate and, using a fork – holding it high above the tray, drizzle the chocolate over the bark. Note to self – make sure you place kitchen roll underneath the baking sheet so that you don't cover everywhere in chocolate.

The second version is probably more to the grown-up taste :

Pistachio and tart cherry chocolate bark

400g plain chocolate, chopped
200g white chocolate, chopped
300g pistachio nuts (minus shells) toasted
200g dried tart cherries

Before you begin, oil a baking sheet 30x20 cms approx and line with cling film. You have two options – you can melt the chocolate in the microwave – if you choose this method then, using a microwave-proof bowl and based on a 700w oven, the plain chocolate should take 1 minute 35 secs. The white chocolate should take 1 minute 30 secs. Ensuring that the plain chocolate is melted stir in the nuts and cherries but reserve some of each to decorate. Tip the chocolate onto the sheet and spread until it's approximately 1cm thick. Drizzle the white chocolate over the top, then, for example, use a bamboo skewer (the type you'd use for kebabs) and drag the pointed end through the white chocolate in different directions. Decorate with remaining nuts and cherries and fridge for minimum of one hour. Cut the bark into chards and bag or box, add a gift tag.

If you'd prefer to not to use a microwave then melt the chocolate by placing in a large bowl over a pan of simmering water. The downside to this method is that you're creating lots of washing up since you'll have to melt the plain and the white chocolate.

The bark should be kept in the fridge until ready to devour. If you are making the bark for your own indulgence then store in a sealed container – it will keep for up to a month – in your dreams!




This recipe will give you approximately 1kg of bark – halve the quantities and use a smaller baking sheet if you don't want so much – I believe you!

Easter & the egg - The kit and the cost

Despite what I said about paying for packaging I do have a couple of inexpensive but effective ideas. Check out your “bargain” shops – these pretty boxes shown below cost 89p for a pack of 3 and each holds four Easter nests. The cases cost 49p for 60.

Here's what the kids can produce easily :



There's a whole range of stuff to choose from – here's a photo of a few bits and chicks!




The Easter chicks in various sizes are 99p per pack. The cellophane treat bags are 79p for 12.

I'm not sure who'll have the best time – the kids or the grown-ups!



Easter & the egg

… the chocolate version that is.

Now I'm not being a misery but I really object to paying for packaging and very little chocolate and for chocolate that never tastes the same as it does in “bar” form - at astronomical prices. Never has foil and card been so expensive.

I'm not sure what the “bah humbug” equivalent is for Easter but you see where I'm coming from!

So, here's a few ideas for creating your own treats – especially if you want to entertain the kids during the holidays – what about them creating their own Easter treats and gifts.

This first recipe must be 50 years old if it's a day.

Easter Nests

200g plain chocolate, broken into small pieces
30g golden syrup
50g unsalted butter
100g cornflakes
36 mini eggs – 3 per nest -
you could add more if you wish

Makes 12


Place the chocolate, syrup and butter into a bowl and melt over a pan of simmering water.

While this is melting, line a muffin tray with 12 paper cases.

Whisk the chocolate mixture together until it's smooth and shiny, then remove from the heat. Add the cornflakes and mix to coat evenly.

Portion out the mixture into nest shapes in the paper cases and put 3 mini eggs in the middle of each. Place in the fridge to set.

I made the nests using rice krispies and milk chocolate. You could mix plain and milk chocolate if you preferred - whatever takes your fancy, but I hope you'll agree the ingredients won't break the bank.

A helpful note or two about chocolate :

When melting, do so in a large bowl.

No water and/or metal in the bowl.

Do not overheat, gently does it.

Leave melting chocolate alone – resist the urge!

Ensure that the simmering water does not touch the bottom of the bowl. It should be the steam from the water that melts the chocolate.



Easter & the egg - The cooler and the hunt

Never let it be said that I haven't had the most out of the wine coolers, first mentioned in Sweet Surprises for Summer, used for an alfresco birthday party.

Are you by any chance expecting and feeding visitors over Easter and are you organising an egg hunt?

Here's my take on a table centre for Easter Sunday :



You could actually put the eggs to further use after using the table centre - for the egg hunt – two uses for the price of one.

If you are organising an egg hunt you can even get tiny, appropriately decorated buckets too. Having said that, if like me, you accumulate small wicker baskets that you couldn't bear to part with because you knew they'd come in handy some time - they make great receptacles for eggs!



See what I mean.