Sunday, 17 June 2018

The browse …


I've chosen dishes from the blog that require very little effort – you just need to have a look and see what takes your fancy. I've given you the appropriate label so you can check out the recipes.

I'd settle down in your favourite chair and browse – armed with a pad and a pen and of course a glass of whatever you fancy.

The easiest and least complicated is the “one pot” principle - “pot” can be substituted with platter, wok, large frying pan.

Chicken is a versatile protein but on its own is boring, I think we'd all agree.


Chicken Gallimaufry
Chicken Salad – but not as you know it
Chicken Tray Bake
Miso Maple Glazed Chicken with Maple Glazed veggies


Salad revival Italian style
a sharing platter – a mezze in any other name
Have a look at Stromboli – an easy “rolled up” pizza
Frittata too, makes an easy and tasty part of a sharing plate
served cold, cut into triangles

There's coleslaw – from basic to a
Coronation version


An all time favourite in our house is Nasi Goreng -
one for the wok


Under the “Chicken” label there's a Chicken & Mushroom
Pie

Under the “Comfort Food” label there's a Rummage Pie

Under the “Crowd Pleasers” label there's the Homity Pie -
there's also koftas and burgers too

This is not meant to be an exhaustive list – just food for thought – sorry about that.

I have a new dish for you – which also qualifies – again pardon the pun in football speak.


The Beautiful Game …


I hate to break it to you but there's a month of football (soccer) from 14th June to 15th July. In the UK we also have two weeks of Wimbledon in that mix so it is going to be a stressful time if you're not that keen on sport!

You may decide to embrace the football – it's every day and lots of matches – will you have a get together at weekends or will you want to fill the fridge with food so that everyone can help themselves whilst you beat a hasty retreat – a spot of retail therapy? In our house it's supper on a tray in front of the tv – I do use plates too.

My plan is to do just that – plan – if only in a relaxed fashion. I'm going to make life easy and decide what to cook – freeze as much as I can so that I can then pull it out as the mood takes. I concede that I will shop for fresh stuff and may be beer and snacks too.

I thought you might like to share my thoughts.

I always begin in the same place – if the oven is on then I'll do my best to fill it. I'll bake jacket potatoes and cook double the amount of roast potatoes and vegetables. I'll fill the slow cooker too.

I think the mantra for the month is quick, easy and tasty. You'll not get any accolades because quite frankly they are too busy watching. I would definitely advise not planning on cooking that really complicated cordon bleu meal you've been thinking about yet awhile. Unless of course you have an urge to drive yourself bonkers.

There's no doubt that the biggest problem is not the cooking but what to cook. I'd definitely recommend you add a bottle of your favourite tipple to your shopping list – if all else fails you can retire to a darkened room with said bottle and a straw – who needs a glass – more washing up!

I'm going to do my best to help ...



Sunday, 10 June 2018

Saucepans – the funny side


I said in my previous post that I replaced my saucepans because of the wooden handles not being suitable for a dishwasher – it wasn't the only reason …

In the early 90ies I lived in Kent and commuted into The Temple in London for my then day job. H worked 5 minutes away from where we lived. He was asked to mentor an accountancy student. The student was living away from home for the first time and so to help her settle in we invited her to supper.

Midweek entertaining when I'd done a full days work - plus a minimum 2-3hr commute each day wasn't usually the norm but because of the circumstances I made an exception.

I caught an earlier train and arrived home in good time. I'd prepped what I could but had to zoom around the corner to the supermarket for an item I'd forgotten. I placed a pan of potatoes on the hob leaving strict instructions to keep an eye for them coming to the boil and then to turn down to a gentle simmer. At the same time a little pixie on my shoulder whispered in my ear “don't do this”.

Our guest arrived whilst I was out. I should just mention that our back door was on the side of the house. We had a stable door into the kitchen. When I pulled onto the drive I could smell the burning … whoever said that men can't multitask especially when it concerns the kitchen … were entirely correct.

The smell was horrible and I suppose I should be grateful I had a house left and a kitchen come to that. I have never seen a saucepan so burnt – you could actually see the imprint of each potato as it had welded itself and turned to carbon on the bottom of the pan. I could have wept, my beautiful copper bottom saucepan. All I can say is it's a good job we had a guest!

Fast forward to the next day. When I arrived home the following evening the saucepan was clean. I have to say it was a great effort, the saucepan was not the same again, it had lost its shine – still usable but sad somehow.

Which is why I bought another set of Prestige copper bottom pans. After service above and beyond what any normal saucepan should have to suffer, they deserved my dosh.

The moral of the story – a pot that's not watched boils dry and burns!



Kitchen Kit – saucepans


It has been a while since we talked about kitchen kit and I don't think I've ever mentioned saucepans.

I think long and hard these days before I spend dosh on kitchen equipment. I don't want to repeat the bread maker debacle. You remember – everyone needed a bread maker and couldn't possibly survive without. Three months later when you'd used it three times and you got so fed up with moving it to create space you finally committed it to the top shelf in the garage so that it could gather dust until you forgot about it altogether!

These days we are bombarded with advertisements promoting expensive kitchen kit – usually endorsed by a celebrity chef. Where saucepans are concerned you'd think they'd been in the foundry forging the pans themselves – pardon the sarcasm.

I've used the same make of saucepans since “Adam was a lad” - stick with what you know is my motto! My Dad bought me my first saucepans - a set of Prestige saucepans with copper bottoms. They served me well for 20 years and so when they became tired and it transpired that the wooden handles weren't suitable for a dishwasher, I replaced them with a new set complete with handles that would. If it ain't broke ...

Fast forward to last week.

On holiday in Cornwall for a week with friends (Rose came too) we rented a house. The house had a very well equipped kitchen – very impressed. I was even more impressed with the saucepans.

If you're in the market for new pans check out “Procook Gourmet Stainless Steel Induction Strain & Pour”. There are offers out there – I found a set of 4 pans reduced from £204 to £79.99 with free delivery. What I loved about these pans, apart from being a good weight – it's a fine balance between breaking your wrist trying to lift without any contents, or so lightweight that the pan will tip over without any help – not good and certainly not safe. The strain and pour element worked really well too – you may never need a colander again! Finally, as well as being suitable for induction the pans are suitable for any hob – gas, electric and ceramic. Dishwasher safe and oven safe too, up to 260c – which is very hot, that would be 240fan and gas mark 10 - in other words you can move from the hob straight to the oven. I think a pair of industrial oven gloves would be in order too.

I'm sure you know what's coming next – the new saucepans are on their way as I write.

Excited and what a bargain – how sad am I?!

P.s. I'm not deserting my copper bottoms – it's a bit like a shoeaholic except with saucepans.

SHS – Mac n Cheese Photos – Part II


The end is in sight!


I ate the vegetarian version, i.e. without the chorizo and oil drizzle. Believe me I am my own worst critic – I ate the lot and may be I shouldn't say so – it was delicious.

I hope you'll give it a try.

SHS – Mac n Cheese Photos – Part I


I apologise in advance - there are quite a few photos - which is why they are in two parts – it's no good doing half a job!


Stay with me – I think you'll be glad you did.



Sunday, 3 June 2018

Summer Holiday scoff - Mac n Cheese …


... my way

Everyone has their own version of this classic dish. Here's mine - designed as always, to be quick, easy but above all tasty.
Mac n Cheese

Serves 4

Alfredo Sauce
125g diced chorizo
50g Parmesan, finely grated
16 Cannelloni tubes
2tbsp flat leaf parsley, finely chopped

Make an Alfredo Sauce – there's a surprise – and ahead of the game is even better. Remember though - it only has one downside and that is it cannot be microwaved – it will split, so cover - let it cool in the saucepan and then fridge. Here's a quick reminder :

Alfredo Sauce

2 tbsp unsalted butter (50g)
400ml double cream
100g freshly grated Parmesan
freshly ground black pepper

Gently heat the butter and the cream together, stirring, until the butter has melted, then stir in the Parmesan. Slowly bring to a gentle boil, turn down the heat and simmer, stir continuously for a minute or so until you have a smooth, creamy sauce.

The sauce can be made ahead and fridged or you can freeze it too.

For the diced chorizo

125g diced chorizo

Using a frying pan, heat the pan and fry the chorizo until it's just beginning to crisp and releasng its delicious oil. Remove the chorizo, cool fridge and box. Leave the oil in the pan. Cover and set aside in a cool place. Again, can be made ahead.

For the Parmesan Tuile

Pre-heat oven 160fan/180c/Gas 4.

Line a baking tray with baking parchment. Place a 5cm circular cutter onto one corner of the tray. Using it as a template fill the ring with ¼ of the parmesan to create a disc shape. Repeat with the remaining cheese until you have 4 discs on the tray. Place the tray of discs in the oven and bake until golden brown – 8-10 minutes. Set timer for 8 and check. Remove from the oven and set aside until you're ready to serve.

Last minute :
The cannelloni

Bring a large saucepan of salted water to the boil over high heat. Add the tubes and cook until al dente, about 9 minutes – drain and set aside. Set your timer for 6 minutes – reset it for 3. Warm your Alfredo Sauce and the chorizo oil during the 3 minute interval.

Assembly :

Divide half of the Alfredo between 4 shallow serving bowls. Arrange 4 of the cannelloni tubes on top of the sauce, dress with the remaining Alfredo and sprinkle with chopped flat leaf parsley followed by the diced chorizo – again divided between the 4 bowls and drizzle with the warmed chorizo oil. Garnish each bowl with a parmesan tuile.

This seems like an awfully long winded recipe but I promise you it's not. Another bonus – you can feed the veggies too – omit the chorizo and oil. The veggies might like a drizzle of sweet chilli sauce instead!

Loads of photos on their way.

P.s. Use the end of a wooden spoon to lift out the cannelloni and drain on kitchen roll – you won't damage the cannelloni or scald yourself - check out the photos.