Sunday, 5 July 2020

Dive in desserts – aka Dids!

In this utopian dream we have of gathering with friends and family from our existing dystopian state you'll definitely need a dive in style of dessert!

You could spend a while creating a fancy dancin' posh pud but if you choose this route you might want to check your pantry for ingredients and whether or not you'll be able to get any that you do need since availability has been random nay bizarre during these testing times!

What follows is a series of ideas – a pick and mix!

You could consider a “Lazy Susan” principle - those of us who are of a certain age will remember them from the 60s (in my case) and I think Tupperware produced something similar which they called a “Party Susan”. In other words a large central circular platter with different compartments for different treats, sweet or savoury. There were also larger and very popular versions of a turntable - practical too – usually found in Chinese restaurants which made sharing banquets easy and fun.

Steal the idea - create a central turntable with small, colourful and pretty bowls and/or jugs of sweet treats – your own pick and mix - where everyone can dive in and create their own bowlful - you could use funky, disposable (and safe) pots for serving. Believe it or not the “Susans” are still available! The downside is if you invest in one they'll probably only have five or six “serving” spaces. Anyway, you don't have to spend dosh – I just wanted to paint a picture to give you ideas.

Here are my suggestions for your “Susan” :

Choices of texture and crunch, colour and above all flavour that you know your friends and family enjoy are the most important and similarly the size of your “bowls” is relative to the number of guests. You'll always be able to refill them as it all vanishes before your very eyes!

Lets begin with probably the most popular – that most of us love – chocolate.

Bowl 1 or may be 2!

Two recipes that immediately spring to mind are Hokey Pokey
and the recent Flourless Chocolate Cake – both of which
are perfect to cut into small cubes for bowls

with each of these you have tempting morsels that will
not disintegrate and an instant chocolate hit - if you know
that your guests are chocoholics you could make both

Chocolate Hokey-Pokey

75g unsalted butter
100g pecan halves, roughly chopped
sea salt flakes
300g dark chocolate
2 tbsp golden syrup
3 x 40g Crunchie bars
Heat a small knob of butter in a pan and when foaming, tip in the pecans with a pinch of sea salt flakes. Stir over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes or till toasted – you will smell them when they are ready. Tip the nuts into a bowl and leave to cool.

Break the chocolate into small pieces and melt, in a medium pan, with the rest of the butter and the syrup, stirring. Once the chocolate mixture is smooth, take the pan off the heat. Bash the Crunchie bars (in the wrappers – less messy!). Add the Crunchie pieces, along with the toasted pecans, to the chocolate mixture. Gently mix together before transferring to a square foil tray - 23x23cms (or cake tin if you prefer to wash-up).

Leave to set in the fridge – a minimum of four hours. Once set, remove from the tray and cut in half, repeat and keep going until you have small pieces to suit the size of your serving bowl.

The Flourless Chocolate Cake recipe and photos too were posted on the 2nd May 2020.

Bowl 3 :
A drizzle (aka a compote or a coulis) to go with – serve in small jugs
if you have them or a large one if not – as for flavour – the choice
is yours and I've included some recipes

Bowl 4 :
For texture or crunch you could use Amaretti biscuits, crushed to
a crumb or left whole – nuts of your choice, chopped or left whole

Bowl 5 :
A sprinkle is essential! By sprinkle I mean a real one like blitzed
praline – a sprinkle of gold – tiny bits of twinkling toffee

Bowl 6 :
Sticky Toffee Sauce gets a big tick!

Bowl 7 :
Fresh fruit in season – at the moment strawberries and
raspberries are good, add some fresh pineapple, segmented oranges
whatever floats your banana boat!

Bowl 8 :
Meringue kisses – make your own or cheat – I won't tell

Bowl 9 :
Lets not forget the ice cream!

If you want to make certain elements ahead and freeze or store (as with meringue kisses) you can save yourself time, take short cuts or cheat – it matters not.

Coming up … selected recipes from my store for the “Susan” and more ideas too!



Saturday, 27 June 2020

The holiday that never was ...

Last November we booked flights to make a long overdue visit to our dear friends in North Carolina, scheduled for May 2020 ... here's what happened next. 

Nasi – zhuzhed up

The easiest way to show the “zhuzh” is to give the recipe again and underline the alternative ingredients.

Here goes :
Nasi Goreng

Serves 4-6

3 eggs
1 tbsp water
1 tbsp oil

4 tbsp vegetable oil
2 onions, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed or garlic paste
half tsp chilli powder – instead of using chilli
powder use ½ tsp of sambal paste *

8oz (225g) cooked rice – instead of using plain rice, use bags
of frozen rice with added veggies *
6oz (175g) cooked chicken or turkey meat, diced
6oz (175g) peeled prawns, defrosted if frozen

2 tbsp dark soy sauce
1 tsp soft light brown sugar
1 tbsp lemon juice
instead of using soy, sugar and lemon juice use
60ml of soy sauce and 120ml of Kecap Manis *

6oz (175g) cooked wafer ham, thinly sliced
instead of using cooked wafer ham use cooked
shredded ham hock *

black pepper


Beat the egg lightly with the 1 tbsp water. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok or frying pan. Pour in the egg and cook until set underneath, flip it and repeat. Slide the omelette out of the pan on to a board, roll up into a cigar shape and slice into strips – set aside.

Add the vegetable oil to the wok and heat gently. Add the onions, garlic and chilli powder* and fry until lightly browned. Add the rice* and cook for a few seconds then stir in the chicken and prawns. Cook for 2/3 minutes.

Mix the soy sauce, sugar and lemon juice* together, then stir thoroughly into the rice mixture. Stir in the ham* then season to taste with pepper. Spoon the mixture into a serving bowl and garnish with the omelette strips.

Optional sides :

Add a dish of chopped honey roasted cashews
Add bowls of soy and Kecap Manis for extra drizzle
Add a stack of small thin wraps – small wraps are easier
to control for little fingers
Add a stack of Little Gem lettuce cups – ideal for
filling with the Nasi and devouring – you'll save on
cutlery too!

Whichever variation of The Gorengs you choose the principle is the same – it's the perfect vehicle for using leftovers and adding treats like prawns and ham hock. It's quick and easy to produce and so satisfying to place a large wok full of deliciousness on the table with additional sides – more chopped cashews, bowls of soy, kecap manis, a heap of small thin wraps and a stack of Little Gem lettuce cups.

I think that has just about covered The Gorengs – here's a couple of photos of the zhuzhed version :



a perfect “dive in dish”

Time for more “dive in” ideas - next up desserts.

Nasi – but not as we know … or

a variation on a theme.

Here's an alternative “fish” Nasi recipe :

Nasi but not

4 tbsp vegetable oil
2 onions, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed or garlic paste
half tsp chilli powder or sambal paste

8oz (225g) cooked rice
6oz (175g) cooked salmon fillet, flaked
6oz (175g) smoked salmon, finely sliced
6oz (175g) peeled prawns, defrosted if frozen

120ml Kecap Manis (sweet soy sauce)
60ml dark soy sauce

4-6 hard boiled eggs, quartered

black pepper

Serves 4-6

Add the vegetable oil to a wok and heat gently. Add the onions, garlic and chilli powder and fry until lightly browned. Add the rice and cook for a few seconds then stir in the salmon and prawns.

Mix the kecap manis and soy sauce together, stir into the rice mixture, then season to taste with pepper.

Add the eggs, folding in gently, serve immediately, straight from the wok.

You can adjust the amounts of fish/seafood to your own personal taste – bearing in mind that you have two elements to replace from the original recipe – chicken and ham – 175g each plus 175g of prawns. You are adding hard boiled eggs and although these are a garnish they are definitely an integral part of the dish since the sauce is quite punchy and the fish quite salty so they play an important part in the balance.

Once again though, make it your own – adjust to suit yourself, if you want more prawns then adjust the amount of salmon accordingly. The great thing about this recipe is that it is a “leftovers” dish i.e. everything in it, apart from the onion, garlic and chilli and the sauce, is already cooked.

It's quite “kedgeree-esque” in that both contain fish and boiled eggs and both started life as breakfast dishes – now you have a choice – Asian or Indian!

Finally … the zhuzh

Mie to follow

Here's the Mie Goreng - the noodle version of the Nasi Goreng. The Mie includes two ingredients you may not have come across previously – kecap manis – aka sweet soy sauce and sambal paste – a paste made from chillies and spices and both ingredients are easily available in larger supermarkets.

Mie Goreng
Serves 4-6

3 eggs
1 tbsp water
1 tbsp oil

1 onion, finely sliced
Drop of rapeseed or vegetable oil
3 cloves of garlic, crushed or tsps of paste
2 carrots, finely sliced (you could use cooked leftovers)
2 spring onions, finely sliced
Pinch of ground ginger
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp ground cumin
1 red chilli, seeded removed and finely diced
1 tsp sambal paste
250g medium egg noodles, cooked
30ml dark soy sauce
60ml kecap manis
100g beansprouts
350g cooked prawns, defrosted
100g chopped roasted peanuts to garnish (optional)

Beat the egg lightly with the 1 tbsp water. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok or frying pan. Pour in the egg and cook until set underneath, flip it and repeat. Slide the omelette out of the pan on to a board, roll up into a cigar shape and slice into strips – set aside.

Heat a large wok or frying pan and add a drop of oil. Add the onion and stir fry for 2 minutes, then add the garlic, ginger and carrots and fry for a further 2 minutes. Add a drop of water to prevent drying out.

Add the sambal paste, coriander and cumin and fry for 20/30 seconds – again you can add a drop of water if required. Add the cooked noodles, spring onions, beansprouts and prawns – turning until warmed through. Add the dark soy sauce and the kecap manis and repeat.

N.B. For a vegetarian version, substitute the prawns with 300g of shredded Chinese cabbage – aka bok choy or pak choi and 1 yellow pepper (cored, deseeded and diced). Sweet baby peppers – red, yellow and orange – would work well too.

Serve straight from wok or spoon into individual bowls and garnish with the omelette strips and peanuts.

You could add sliced water chestnuts and/or bamboo shoots. If you've other leftover vegetables or cooked chicken or meat – dice and add too.

On the other hand – if you love fish …




How to please a crowd … The Gorengs

I've made this dish for over 30 years – which was a bit of a shock - I still have my diary notes from 1987!

Nasi Goreng is Indonesian and began life as a breakfast dish using up leftover rice from the previous evening but has evolved into a popular street food choice, right up to being served in posh restaurants. It can be spicy or not depending on your taste and vegetarian or not. There's Mie Goreng too using noodles instead of rice.

What follows is a series of variations on this original recipe, all of which qualify as candidates for “dive in” dishes.

Nasi Goreng

Serves 4-6

3 eggs
1 tbsp water
1 tbsp oil

4 tbsp vegetable oil
2 onions, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed or garlic paste
half tsp chilli powder

8oz (225g) cooked rice
6oz (175g) cooked chicken or turkey meat, diced
6oz (175g) peeled prawns, defrosted if frozen

2 tbsp dark soy sauce
1 tsp soft light brown sugar
1 tbsp lemon juice

6oz (175g) cooked wafer ham, thinly sliced

black pepper


Beat the egg lightly with the 1 tbsp water. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok or frying pan. Pour in the egg and cook until set underneath, flip it and repeat. Slide the omelette out of the pan on to a board, roll up into a cigar shape and slice into strips – set aside.

Add the vegetable oil to the wok and heat gently. Add the onions, garlic and chilli powder and fry until lightly browned. Add the rice and cook for a few seconds then stir in the chicken and prawns. Cook for 2/3 minutes.

Mix the soy sauce, sugar and lemon juice together, then stir thoroughly into the rice mixture. Fold in the ham then season to taste with pepper. You can place the wok in the middle of the table and “dive in” or spoon into serving bowls and garnish with the omelette strips.

If this dish doesn't fit the “dive in” category then I don't know what does. It's an all time favourite in our house. A definite crowd pleaser and lip smackingly good to boot.

There's Mie to follow, a variation on a theme and time to zushz up the original!



Saturday, 20 June 2020

Foolproof Yorkshire Pudding – by a Yorkshireman!

In the Tarragon Chicken – hints and tips I mentioned creating a “roast” and Yorkshire Pudding.

Everyone has their favourite “go to” Yorkshire pudding recipe but if by chance you haven't and need one – here it is – it does exactly what it says “in the tin”!

This recipe belongs to Brian Turner a well known Chef and Yorkshireman to boot, so well qualified. The recipe's success is because it works not by weight but by volume. Use any size cup but measure each ingredient with the same cup. Not sure what the vinegar does but his Granny used it and it seems to work so why change it!

1 large cup plain flour
pinch of salt
1 large cup of eggs
1 large cup - 2/3rds milk and 1/3rd water
1 tbsp malt vinegar

beef dripping for pudding tin – use vegetable
or rapeseed oil if preferred

Pre-heat oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6.

Sift the flour and salt into a large bowl.

Add the eggs and beat well with half the liquid until all the lumps have disappeared.

Add the rest of the liquid and the vinegar and allow to stand.

In a pudding tin put a dessert spoon of dripping in each and place in the oven until it is very hot.

Ladle the batter into the individual sections of the tin and place back in the oven.

Bake for 25 minutes without opening the oven if possible. Serve immediately.

It really is foolproof.

Up next - more “dive in” recipe choices for your family and friends ...