Saturday, 11 January 2020

Time to clear the decks …

it's not that long ago that we were “decking the halls”, now it's time to clear the decks – literally. If you ever want to fit into those jeans start the way you mean to go on. Have you still got Christmas food and treats left over?

If you've got boxes of biscuits and chocolates give them away – a Food Bank would be a good shout. If you can't bear to surrender the chocolates then freeze them.

Do a stocktake of your freezer – if you've got frozen party food use it or commit it to the recycling. Your freezer is about to become your best friend – not just a storage unit for all the deals you can't possibly live without. Home-made ready meals here we come!

I hate to be a party pooper but we're all now addicted to sugar, salt and fat and have to set about weaning ourselves off any or all of the above.

I have a plan … it's not rocket science. It's get organised, do some planning and the results will you save time, money and stress and hopefully have you back in those jeans in no time at all!

I'll come back to the organisation and planning – in the meantime, to show you where I'm coming from - do you have leftovers? If you don't you might want to reconsider and create them deliberately as I do.

One of the greatest “leftover” dishes has to be Bubble and Squeak, (Squeak) which began life as leftover cabbage and potato from Sunday lunch. It has since morphed into whatever leftover veggies you might have.

Read on for my version … and a few photos






Wednesday, 8 January 2020

Radio Recipes – 13th January, 2020


As promised here are the recipes and the bits and pieces mentioned during my chat with Bernie Keith, on his Radio Show, The Bernie Keith Show, BBC Radio Northampton on Monday 13th January, 2020 at 10.10am

Bubble and Squeak (Squeak)

This is a “fly by the seat of your pants”/”live dangerously” recipe! Normally I wouldn't give a recipe, it depends on what you've got leftover, how many mouths you are feeding and how big are their appetites!

Squeak
Serves 2

250g (ish) cooked potatoes, sliced or cubed
125g cooked sprouts, finely sliced
1 medium onion, finely diced
Salt and black pepper
20g unsalted butter & glug of rapeseed oil
125g of diced chorizo
1 egg per person
Glug of malt vinegar
Water for poaching eggs

You'll need one large frying pan for the Squeak
- preferably one that can be transferred to the oven

One small frying pan for the chorizo

One small saucepan, with water and a glug of
malt vinegar

Melt the oil and butter in a large frying pan, add the diced onion and sauté on a medium heat for 2/3 minutes. Add the potato and mix together, sauté for a further 2/3 minutes fold in the sprouts and cook for a further 2/3 minutes. Transfer the Squeak to a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6.

Heat the small frying pan then add the chorizo and fry on a medium heat.

Bring the water to the boil, add the vinegar and turn down to simmer, ready for the poached eggs.

As soon as the chorizo begins to crisp immerse the eggs bring to the boil and set your timer for three minutes – long enough to heat your serving bowls!

You can serve this dish as large or as small as you like – Jackson Pollock style or posh :






The old ones are the best!

Here are two more variations on the theme of Bubble and Squeak – they are all “much of a muchness” as we say – they are all delicious, made from leftovers or, as I prefer to say, “deliberates”.
Pea and Spring Onion Champ

1.5kg Potatoes, scrubbed
100g butter
500ml/18 fl oz milk (or if a richer consistency
75% milk to 25% double cream)
450g frozen peas
75g spring onions, chopped
4 tbsp chopped parsley
salt and black pepper

Cook the potatoes in salted water until tender, drain, peel and mash. You could use a ricer for absolute “lump free”. Add half the butter – 50g, after mashing or ricing. Place the milk/cream in a pan with the peas and onions and boil, gently, for 4/5 minutes. Add the parsley, take off the heat.

Add the potatoes, keep some of the milk back – you may not need it all. Season to taste and beat until creamy and smooth – add more milk if required.

Serve piping hot with a knob of butter melting in the centre.

P.s. If you wish you could add grated mature cheddar cheese.

Colcannon

Savoy cabbage, finely shredded – half a cabbage
approximately 350g in weight
30g butter
Bunch of spring onions finely chopped
1.5kg Maris piper potatoes,
Salt and black pepper

There are no exact weights here – you may have leftover mashed potatoes and cabbage – it really doesn't matter.

If you've not got leftovers, cook the potatoes in salted water until tender, drain, peel and mash. You could use a ricer for guaranteed lump free.

Put the cabbage in a pan with the butter and cook over a low heat for 2-3 minutes until tender, stirring frequently.

Add the spring onions and cook for another minute or two. Mix with the mashed potato and season well.

If you've cooked your potatoes ahead or are using leftovers, pop the completed dish into a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 20 minutes. You could use oven-proof ramekins and serve straight to the table.

Dorset Apple Cake

225g cooking apples, peeled and chopped
slice an extra apple to decorate the top
juice of half a lemon – 1 tbsp
225g plain flour
1½ tsps baking powder
115g unsalted butter, diced
165g dark muscovado sugar – gives a dark
Chrismassy style cake or use light for a lighter
version – golden demerara too – reserve 50g of this
for the topping
1 egg beaten
2-3 tbsp of milk
½ tsp ground cinnamon
25g ground almonds

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

Grease and line a 8” round cake tin.

Toss the apple with the lemon juice and set aside. Sift the flour and baking powder together then rub in the butter until you get breadcrumbs then add the ground almonds.

Stir in 115g of the sugar, the apple and the egg, mix well, adding a drop of the milk at a time to make a soft doughy mix.

Transfer to your tin.

Finally, mix the reserved 50g of soft brown sugar, sliced apple and cinnamon and arrange on top of the cake mix.

Bake for 45-50 minutes. Leave to cool in the tin for 10 minutes then transfer to a wire cooling rack.

As is obvious this cake uses cooking apples – you'd never know – they are soft and taste like plump pieces of squidgy toffee apples.

More pluses - this cake is good warm or cold – serve with vanilla ice cream, clotted cream, custard or a combination of all three. It keeps well. I made it on a Friday and double wrapped in foil when cooled. By Tuesday it was as good as Friday – just that there were only two portions left!

I'm not a huge cake eater but I loved this. It's a perfect Winter comfort blanket with a cuppa on a chilly afternoon which is why it's now known as Comfort Cake!

If you want to see a photo or three, check out the Cake label on the blog 5/10/19.

Calvados Dessert Sauce

as a drizzle over the Dorset Apple Cake

50g caster sugar
20g unsalted butter
40g Cox apple, peeled, cored and
diced
80ml of pressed apple juice
½ tsp of arrowroot, diluted in a drop
of water
1 tsp Calvados

Heat the sugar in a small non stick frying pan (I used a pan measuring 23cms/9” approximately) until it's a dark golden caramel. Stir in the butter and the diced apple. Cook for 30 seconds – do not interfere with the pan – resist the urge to prod. Add the apple juice and bring to the boil. Add the slaked arrowroot, a drop at a time until it thickens. Remove from the heat and add the Calvados.

This is a perfect drizzle for the Dorset Apple Cake. If you want more than a drizzle then make double the recipe!

The drizzle will keep – I covered the pan when cooled and fridged it. When I wanted to serve the sauce I warmed it gently.

Enjoy!

Sunday, 5 January 2020

Whilst I'm on the subject of cherries …


Here's another addition to your speedy dessert recipe section but before I begin, you have a choice of cherries :

Frozen cherries create their own juice.
I use frozen Dark Sweet Cherries which I get from
Sainsbury's - they come in 500g bags.
Tinned cherries have syrup or juice

Fresh cherries will need extra juice – you can
get cartons of cherry juice from either Waitrose or M&S.
Bear in mind their season is short and they are expensive
for jamming

Cherry Jam

250g black cherries, stoned
2 tbsps of arrowroot
2 tbsps Kirsch or Cherry Brandy - optional
4 tbsps maple syrup

If using frozen cherries defrost and set aside the juice. If using tinned cherries drain and set aside the syrup. Using a blender, blend half of the cherries with 120ml (4¼ fl oz) of the juice from the defrosted cherries or the cherry syrup from the tinned, arrowroot, 2 tbsps of Kirsch or Cherry Brandy and the maple syrup. Blend until smooth then pour into a saucepan, add the remaining cherries, bring to the boil and let it reduce for 10 minutes until it becomes jam like. Pour into a bowl and leave to cool and thicken.

I'd not recommend using cornflour as a thickening agent – your jam will be cloudy. Arrowroot gives you a glossy finish.

The “cherry jam” will not last for ever and has what I call a soft set. A soft set jam makes for a perfect layer in a cherry version of the emergency desserts.

Use either raspberries or cherries and layer with the compote and/or jam, using the crushed Amaretti biscuits and meringues in the December thoughts … as mentioned in the previous post. If you want a grown up version add Cherry Brandy or Kirsch to the cherries or Chambord Raspberry Liqueur or Framboise to the raspberry. The almond in the Amaretti goes well with both fruits.

The time has come to measure your waistline or try on those jeans that did fit and discover how much damage you've done over the holidays!

Alternative stress free desserts

If you're not keen on the citrus flavours mentioned in December thoughts and your emergency dessert kit 7/12/19 there are alternatives :

The raspberry route -
have frozen raspberries in your freezer

make a raspberry compote and freeze it

The cherry choice -
have frozen cherries in your freezer

make a cherry compote and freeze it

Here's a recipe that will cover both the raspberry and cherry compote :

Cherry and Raspberry Compote

350g cherries, stoned – can use frozen
150g caster sugar
juice of 1 lemon (2 tbsps)
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. Blitz the compote and pass through a sieve. You'll get 400ml.

Whilst I'm on the subject of cherries – and stress free .... read on



The all important layers ...


here's what I transported :
Lactose free Halloumi 250g
A box of spice mix – see below for recipe


If you'd like the recipe for the Halloumi

Vegan Mayo – had I been at home I would have
made the Stick Blender Smoked Mayo – instead I took
Hellman's Vegan Mayo

An Avocado Pear
A lemon
black pepper
The avocado can be sliced or mashed, then
add lemon and black pepper, ready to assemble


Instructions were duly passed on … standby for the results!

Whilst we're waiting, if you'd like a meat eaters version of the layered sandwich with festive leftovers, here it is.

Leftover sliced turkey, chicken or pork
stuffing and bread sauce
redcurrant jelly
mayonnaise

a relish of your choice – mine would be
Sliced black olives – add a zing

The wraps are huge so if you're ravenous they will hit the sandwich spot – divide in half and share otherwise. There are no “quantity” rules here – live dangerously and fly by the seat of your pants!

Now for a dessert …



A serious sandwich …


is just that, a serious business. A final treat before you decide you have to do something about the over indulgence and measure your waistline in January.

A serious sandwich is all about layering your favourite ingredients.

I took the ingredients for just such a sandwich with me for Christmas at my Sister's, specifically designed for my Nephew Lucas who is lactose intolerant – why should he miss out!

The bread, as with any sandwich, is the key. I chose Piadina wraps, the large version – they are suitable for vegans and vegetarians and there's a smaller option available too. I bought them ahead and popped into the freezer – easy and convenient for the freezer bag and transit.

Milk is included in the majority of processed bread making so you need to check labels – there are brands that don't – Warburtons is one such. Many of their bakery products do not contain any dairy and are therefore suitable for vegans but are produced in bakeries that use dairy ingredients making milk rolls and milk bread.

Here's what the Piadina looks like and there's a choice :





Next up, the all important layers!




Saturday, 28 December 2019

Another retro thought …


and another candidate to dunk in the mayo – Stromboli – it would also be perfect to pop on a buffet table, especially if you've got younger guests – it's just rolled up pizza after all!

Stromboli

400g prepared pizza dough or ready-made base
4 tbsp tomato paste
100g thinly sliced salami
120g baby spinach
100g thinly sliced mozzarella cheese
1 tbsp olive oil
Generous sprinkle of oregano or garlic Italian seasoning


Pre-heat your oven 220fan/200c/Gas 8. Place a large baking tray in the oven.

Place a dampened J cloth on your work surface. Place a piece of baking parchment on top of the cloth – it will stop it sliding – make sure you leave enough to get hold of – you're going to lift it onto the hot baking tray that's in the oven at the moment. Unroll the pizza dough gently on the parchment.

Spread the tomato paste onto the base. Add the slices of salami, followed by the spinach and then the mozzarella and sprinkle with the oregano or garlic Italian seasoning. Roll up the base from the shortest side and brush with the olive oil - make sure it's seam-side down when placed on the tray.

WITH CARE remove the tray from the oven and then carefully lift the parchment and the rolled up pizza onto it. Place back in the oven for 20/25 minutes until golden brown – check at 20 minutes.

When removed from the oven slice into portions to suit and serve.

Choose any of your favourite pizza toppings to create your own Stromboli – the fastest pizza ever.

You'll need an oblong base for the Stromboli – it looks like the biggest sausage roll ever that you'll then slice! I'd suggest Asda's own brand - found in the chiller cabinet - for the prepared pizza dough - £1.00 per 400g pack.

Another perfect emergency item for your freezer stash.

The holidays are short this year – they fall in the middle of the week – however there's a weekend to follow after New Year so still time for a final festive treat or two before reining in the waistline!