Sunday, 17 February 2019

Trove for your treasure chest


I've mentioned more than once that the aim is to make life easier for you and to begin stocking your freezer with your home-made food that you can use whenever it suits you. You may have already begun by freezing some of the chicken that you slow cooked whilst you were cooking Sunday lunch.

Since then you could have added banana timbales and the compote.

Freeze the compote in small pots, they take up less room in your freezer and you won't waste it. You can always take out two pots!

To illustrate the many and varied uses of the compote :

cherries and chocolate – another marriage made
in heaven - add the compote to a rich chocolate cake or fondant

add a layer of compote to a lemon pot – check out the
and Traffic Light photos for the recipe and
photos

pour the compote over vanilla ice cream and seasonal
fresh fruit – check out On location in S.C. - Dessert – a
light bulb moment and the Verdict – Dec 2017 for the ice cream recipe
and a photo

pour the compote over your breakfast granola or any
cereal - add a spoonful of plain yogurt too

I have another use for the compote but I'm keeping that up my sleeve for the moment – all will be revealed.

More trove for your treasure chest on its way.





What to serve with …


Cherries are perfect partners for bananas so it makes sense to serve the timbales with a cherry compote – the recipe that follows is the best I've ever used :

Cherry and Raspberry Compote

350g cherries, stoned – can use frozen
150g caster sugar
juice of 1 lemon
150g raspberries – can use frozen
4 tbsp water or juice from defrosted fruit

Pour the water into a pan and add the cherries, sugar and lemon juice. Place on a medium heat and stir until the sugar dissolves. Cook the cherries over a low heat for 5-10 minutes until they have released some juice but are not overcooked. If you are using frozen cherries you will have the fruit juices when defrosted – use this juice instead of the water and reduce the cooking time to 5 minutes.

Add the raspberries to the pan and cook for a further 1-2 minutes until they start to soften. Remove the pan from the heat and leave the mixture to cool, then chill it well before serving.

You can keep the compote as is or blitz in a processor and pass through a sieve – purely a matter of personal preference – some people aren't fond of raspberry pips.

I topped the timbale and compote with clotted cream – here it is :




If you're a lover of custard omit the clotted cream – anything goes!



Sunday, 10 February 2019

Go bananas – the photo guide


The butter and sugar, creamed together


The ingredients, mixed


The disposable piping bag


In the dariole moulds, ready to bake


Just out of the oven


Out of the dariole mould, into a timbale! X 2 photos
As a guide the moulds measure 6cms/2½” in diameter x
6cms/2½” deep and you'll get 10 or 12 from the recipe
10 if ¾ full, 12 if ½ full



Now all I have to decide is what to serve with!



Go bananas!


After the birthday bowl I thought it only right that I follow with a sweet treat. Can someone explain how come I always seem to finish up with at least two or three bananas past their best even though they have come from the same bunch – it's one of the great mysteries of life.

Since the emphasis recently has been on regaining control after our holiday excesses this is the perfect recipe to use up those over-ripe bananas hanging from the tree.

You may think that bananas are too lowly in the fruit chain to qualify for a supper/dinner party dessert – I hope I'm about to change your mind.

This recipe is the epitome of versatility :

as a traditional sandwich cake, filled with whipped cream
and dusted with icing sugar – 2 x sandwich tins, greased
20.5cms/8”

as a tray bake, cut into squares and served with vanilla
custard or ice cream – or both

Today it's timbales but before we go any further I should explain, a timbale is anything you make in a dariole mould, so perfect for individual servings. If you're not sure what to look for I've included a photo in the guide that follows - here's the basic recipe:

250g/9oz self raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
150g/5oz unsalted butter
250g/9oz caster sugar
2 eggs, beaten
3 bananas puréed, mixed with 1 tbsp
milk

Sift the dry ingredients together.

Cream the butter and sugar, then add the eggs gradually. Add the dry ingredients alternately with the bananas and milk. To make life easier I transfer the mixture to a disposable piping bag – less messy – fill the moulds half to three quarters full. Bake for 25 minutes 160fan/180c/Gas 4.

This recipe is perfect for freezing, stating the obvious I know, but if you make the sandwich cake freeze it unfilled!

I make my timbales ahead and freeze – they take one minute to microwave (on high).

Photos coming next.







The birthday bowl photo guide



Heat the butter and the cream
together


Add the Parmesan and heaps of
black pepper


The bowl


The bowl with petit pois


I didn't have any fettuccine in my pantry but I did have spaghetti – if you're not fond of “ribbony” types of pasta just choose your favourite.

Happy Birthday to me!



The birthday bowl!


I know we've been chatting about all things sensible but I have to interrupt that train of thought since it's my birthday and I get to choose what's for supper.

The simple things in life are the best. I know the immortal words “keep it simple” aren't mine but it's true.

Here's what I cooked and a word of warning it's definitely not what you'd describe as “fat-free”!
Fettuccine Alfredo

Here are the bits of information that I always find interesting . Fettuccine Alfredo was invented by Alfredo di Lelio who had restaurants in Rome in the early to mid 20th century. Traditionally the dish was cooked at your table. As the dish became more popular it appeared in the USA. I was in Vermont when I sampled my first bowl – it was without doubt, the finest bowl of pasta and sauce I've ever eaten and the only one I've ever finished. That was a long time ago – yikes 1997! Since that time my quest has been to find a recipe as near as I could to that bowl of magic, here it is :

1 tbsp unsalted butter
200ml double cream
50g freshly grated Parmesan, plus more for sprinkling
Salt and 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.

This sauce can be made ahead.

The above recipe would be sufficient for two servings – enough to coat 225g uncooked pasta. Traditionally there are no additions to Alfredo although I've had it served with petit pois. If you've never tried it I'd highly recommend this sauce.

The sauce is so good and tasty it lends itself to other dishes and particularly leftovers.

Photos up next.





Sunday, 3 February 2019

Or is it Steak Haché? ...


Steak Haché, as you may have gathered is French – it's a posh burger without the bun and uses high quality ground beef - as fresh as you can get. I used Aberdeen Angus 5% fat minced steak for my burgers and was delighted with the result. If you're serving to people who say they don't like burgers then call it steak haché and they'll never know!

I digress - back to your Sunday cooking stash and the jacket potatoes and grated cheese. I'd like to point out the obvious, it's Friday and you're exhausted. Slicing cooked jacket potatoes into wedge shapes and placing on a baking sheet and then sprinkling with grated cheese isn't too taxing.

Your burgers and your wedges need 20 minutes although if you like your wedges crispier then pop them in for 10 minutes and then add the burgers for 20 – don't forget to set your timer. You can reduce the cooking time if you like your burger/haché medium – it depends on the size of burger. As a guide if you pan fry for 3-4 minutes each side you'll get slightly pink.

Whilst you're waiting slice an onion – a sweet variety or Spanish is good too, slice a beef tomato and place on top of the onion and add a generous drizzle of Balsamic glaze – salt and black pepper to suit.

Here are the photos :


my bowl of ingredients – it looks
positively artistic!


in the pan


on the plate

To answer my question, I think it's both – the purists may scoff but I don't care.

Enjoy your supper!