Saturday, 22 December 2018

Resourceful and creative starters …


or a lunch – or a supper!

Here's another idea that can be whatever you want it to be!

Two essential items for your freezer – a bag of scallops and ditto king prawns.

Add a good quality stir fry sauce to your list – you don't have to make a sauce from scratch if it's not your strong suit. Black bean works well, so does Hoisin and spring onion.

This is a versatile stir fry using ingredients to suit your own taste – how much veg you use is entirely up to you – fly by the seat of your pants!

Here's my suggestion and a guide for a starter portion :

Scallops and King Prawns, stir fried with
broccolini, sweet peppers in black bean sauce

My scallops were frozen and the cooked king prawns too - on the morning of the evening required, I took them out of the freezer. I allowed 3 medium sized scallops and six king prawns per person. Make sure you box and fridge both to defrost until required later in the day.

I chose broccolini – sometimes called tenderstem broccoli - because of it's colour and because it's finer than the grown-up alternative and is therefore perfect to blanch and refresh, dry, box and fridge ready for later. I buy it in 200g/7oz bags – don't forget to trim it to an even size.

I sliced the sweet peppers to a similar size so they'd stir fry evenly and chose vibrant orange and yellow – perfect with the green of the broccolini. I use baby sweet peppers for stir fries, available in 300g punnets. I used three of each colour, approximately half the punnet.

You can make your own black bean sauce if you wish – there are good quality shop bought versions out there too – the choice is yours – I use Sharwoods Black Bean Stir Fry Sauce - 195g. A good quality shop bought makes sense in that it's in your store cupboard – perfect for those unexpected visitors!

This appetiser is ready to roll later and will take minutes to stir fry and serve.

Read on …


Resourceful and creative – home-made bread


I'm a sucker for home-made bread and so for the holidays I would definitely recommend the two fast breads I make all the time. For those of you who read my blog regularly – thank you – you'll know that I'm always banging on about soda bread – the fast version. More recently the beer bread has been very popular too.

Essentials for your shopping list - for the soda bread a pot of buttermilk 290/300ml – the “use by” dates are generally kind but check! For the beer bread add a 330ml bottle of IPA – India Pale Ale.

Here's an idea for either bread, once again keeping it simple.

Soda bread, toasted and topped with bazzin' beetroot
relish and goats cheese

Keep it simple – three elements – I made my soda bread the day before and the beetroot relish too. I used small discs of goats cheese so pretty on the plate.

I pre-heated my oven to warm – 150fan/170c/Gas 3 Fill a foil container with enough beetroot relish for the number of servings. Place your cheese discs on a double sheet of foil. Toast your soda bread and place on a serving plate, add the relish and top with goats cheese. To complete your dish add a generous drizzle of Balsamic vinegar or, if you really want to push the boat out, make your own Balsamic Glaze.
Balsamic Glaze

50g/2oz demerara sugar
250ml/9 fluid oz balsamic vinegar

Place the sugar and vinegar in a medium saucepan (19cms or 7½” in diameter) and heat slowly, stirring allowing the sugar to dissolve. Bring to the boil, then reduce and simmer for 20 minutes – until the glaze is reduce by half. It should coat the back of a spoon. Decant into a clean jar with a lid – fridge it.

The best 20 minutes you've ever spent in your kitchen – you'll never buy it again!

For both bread recipes check out the Bread label on the blog

Resourceful and creative – New Year bits and bats


It will be the 23rd December when you read this post, so too late for Christmas ideas but not for celebrations you're planning for New Year.

My suggestion for New Year – whether it's as part of a lunch, a supper or even an informal dinner party is my most favourite potato dish – Tartiflette. It's no surprise that it's French using Reblochon cheese. Reblochon is expensive but worth the treat so why not indulge - however it's quite difficult to source, especially if you live “in the sticks” - in other words the countryside. I found it impossible to find in the US so, if you need an alternative basically any cheese that melts easily will do – for example two of my absolute favourites gruyere and taleggio or even a ripe camembert.

Traditionally Tartiflette includes bacon – dry cured if at all possible. I'm a spanner in the works being a veggie – I'd omit the bacon.

Tartiflette

1.5kg/3lb 5oz all purpose potatoes, e.g. Desirée, peeled
and cut to a similar size
1 large onion, finely chopped
4 thick dry cured smoked streaky bacon rashers, finely chopped
50g/2oz butter
1 garlic clove or roasted garlic
250g/9oz Reblochon cheese, rind trimmed and removed

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

Boil the potatoes until cooked, cool, then slice.

Melt the butter in a frying pan and cook the onion and bacon until softened. Cut the garlic clove in half and rub the inside of an ovenproof dish – or foil if more convenient – my dish measures 23x23x8cms – 9x9x3¼” . If you're using roasted garlic, spread it around the inside.

Place some of the potato slices in the bottom and season with salt and black pepper then layer with the onion and bacon, repeat until all the potato slices have been used, seasoning between each layer.

Chop the cheese and scatter over the potatoes and cover with foil. Bake in the oven for 1 hour, remove the foil for the remaining 15 minutes to enable the tartiflette to crisp around the edges.

The beauty of this dish is that it can be prepared ahead. If you're a lover of garlic then don't be afraid to include 2 tsps of garlic paste when you're cooking the onions and bacon – rules are made to be broken.

If I were you I'd be keeping my fingers crossed for leftovers – it's even better the following day warmed, creating even more crispy edges. Happy days.

Thank you for reading my missives – Merry Christmas everyone!



Thursday, 13 December 2018

Praline sprinkle photos



doesn't look much


hang in there – it's on its way


told you so


 looking good


leave it 'snapped' if you prefer


tiny bits of twinkling toffee



Resourceful and creative bits and bats


the praline sprinkle

This “sprinkle” is another addition to your “store cupboard” that can be made ahead. Perfect for your alternative trifle or just plain useful!

Praline

75g/3oz almonds, unblanched
75g/3oz caster sugar

Praline is largely used for adding to and flavouring cream, ice cream, butter cream or whatever takes your fancy. You can use it in large pieces or shards or blitzed into a coarse powder. It keeps well so long as you transfer it into an air-tight jar. Should the mood take you it can even be blitzed into a paste.

Place the sugar into a frying pan (I used a pan measuring 28cms/11” in diameter) and then the almonds on top. Heat the sugar and almonds on as low a heat as possible. Resist the urge to prod/stir/mess with! Patience is eventually rewarded the sugar begins to melt and when the almonds begin to “pop”, and your sugar is a good colour - turn it out onto a non-stick sheet (or oiled slab if you want to be posh). The melting of the sugar takes approximately 20 minutes.

Leave the praline sheet where it is until it is well and truly set. You can then break it up and blitz into a coarse powder or as you wish. It's stating the obvious I know – you'll get 175g/6oz of praline.

Please note that when blitzing you will need ear plugs and warn anyone nearby that isn't totally deaf they soon will be!

Photo guide coming up.

Resourceful and creative bits and bats ...


... the biscuit photos

I use these biscuits for so many occasions – to serve with pre-dinner drinks, with cheese and chutney – you could be cheffy and add piped patĂ© - serve as a canapĂ©.



ready to roll, or rather bake.



don't forget to egg wash.



they really do smell wonderful.

The world is your cheese biscuit!

Resourceful and creative bits and bats …


the tried and tested are the best!

What follows is the easiest and best biscuit recipe you'll ever use. Stand by and watch a whole batch disappear. These biscuits will become your best friend.

Parmesan biscuits

Makes 25-30

100g/4oz cold unsalted butter, cut into chunks
100g/4oz plain flour, plus extra for dusting
pinch salt
pinch cayenne pepper
1 heaped tsp mustard powder
50g/2oz finely grated mature cheddar cheese
50g/2oz finely grated Parmesan, plus extra to decorate
1 egg, beaten


Preheat oven to 180c/160fan/Gas 4.

Place the butter and flour into a food processor with the salt, cayenne, mustard powder and cheeses. Process together then pulse the mixture in short spurts until you notice the mixture coming together. It will eventually bind without the need for egg or water. Tip the mixture onto a sheet of cling film and use the cling film to bring it together into a round. Chill in the fridge for at least 30 minutes. Leaving longer will do no harm.

Lightly flour a work surface and roll out the pastry thinly. Cut out the biscuits in shapes to suit the occasion. Lay them on a greased or non stick baking tray – 2cm apart. You'll need two trays.

Brush the surface with egg and sprinkle over a little of the finely grated Parmesan. Bake for 10 minutes or until golden brown.

Use a palette knife to ease the biscuits off the tray and place on a rack to cool.

They will keep for a few days – good luck with that - take my advice and bake and freeze when there's no-one around – otherwise the aroma from the oven will bring everyone into the kitchen and it'll be bye bye biscuits!

Photos up next.