Turkey curry is always on the list. This year Turkey biryani was a new find (have frozen half the sauce for some left over chicken at some point).
Some others
http://www.stiltoncheese.com/us/recipes/baconfettucine.html
http://www.kalofagas.ca/2011/05/27/ribeye-steaks-with-blue-cheese-sauce/
http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/5011/coronation-turkey
Saturday, 31 December 2011
Wednesday, 28 December 2011
Christmas 2011
Christmas Eve saw a gathering here feasting on a 3kg gammon from Sandridge Farm. Cooked this using Nigella's gammon with cola recipe that others have raived about. Must admit to not being convinced that the cola adds anything. I might be one of those who don't repeat. Don't get me wrong - it was still a good tasty gammon. Maybe one to do with a cheap gammon joint not a Sandridge Farm £30 one? Simmer with root veg, bay leaves etc and then glaze in oven as per norm will be approach next year for Sandridge Farm joints. Mashed potatoes, mashed swede and carrot, french beans (frozen from our garden this summer), along with redcurrant and balsamic vingegar sauce were the accompniaments.
Christmas Day the turkey was cooked as last year but I included the bramley, chestnut and watercress stuffing this time. Brussel Sprouts done this way are excellent - go for 'undercooked' rather than 'overcooked' and 2tbsp (rather than the 2tsp I used this year) of chopped sage will probably be very good. Roast potatoes, roast parsnips, carrots and peas were the rest of the veg.
Need some more practice making Pavlova as in it needs more time to cook. I am told the vanilla ice cream recipe used is not worth repeating :( Must try another one .... or this one again when can find some decent vanilla pods.
Christmas Day the turkey was cooked as last year but I included the bramley, chestnut and watercress stuffing this time. Brussel Sprouts done this way are excellent - go for 'undercooked' rather than 'overcooked' and 2tbsp (rather than the 2tsp I used this year) of chopped sage will probably be very good. Roast potatoes, roast parsnips, carrots and peas were the rest of the veg.
Need some more practice making Pavlova as in it needs more time to cook. I am told the vanilla ice cream recipe used is not worth repeating :( Must try another one .... or this one again when can find some decent vanilla pods.
Labels:
brussel sprouts,
pavlova,
turkey
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
Thai Green Chicken Curry
Dry fry 0.5tsp coriander seeds with 0.5tsp ground cummin
Blend with large handful fresh coriander, 2 fresh green chillis, 6 spring onions, 2cm root ginger (minced), 2 cloves garlic, 1tsp minced lemon grass, juice of a lime
Fry the resulting paste over medium heat for a couple of minutes then add 250 ml coconut milk and upto 120 ml water (depending on how thick you want the sauce.
Add chicken (either 4 chicken thighs boned or 3 chicken breast fillets - cut into bits) and 200 g green beans, halved.
Cook for 20 minutes/until chicken is cooked through.
Blend with large handful fresh coriander, 2 fresh green chillis, 6 spring onions, 2cm root ginger (minced), 2 cloves garlic, 1tsp minced lemon grass, juice of a lime
Fry the resulting paste over medium heat for a couple of minutes then add 250 ml coconut milk and upto 120 ml water (depending on how thick you want the sauce.
Add chicken (either 4 chicken thighs boned or 3 chicken breast fillets - cut into bits) and 200 g green beans, halved.
Cook for 20 minutes/until chicken is cooked through.
Labels:
Thai Green Chicken Curry
Saturday, 21 May 2011
Tomato Soup
Mr B made chicken stock from bones left from pot roast chicken last weekend. A long overdue write up of tomato soup recipe (made with aforementioned stock for lunch during the week).
Chop two onions, two carrots and two sticks of celery and sweat in two tablespoons of olive oil along with stalks from small bunch of basil (reserve the basil leaves).
When onions are just translucent add 1.8 litres of chicken stock (or vegetable), 2 cans of chopped plum tomatoes and 5 chopped large fresh tomatoes. Bring to boil and then simmer for 10 minutes.
Remove from heat and add basil leaves. Using hand blender process until smooth. Taste and season prior to serving.
Chop two onions, two carrots and two sticks of celery and sweat in two tablespoons of olive oil along with stalks from small bunch of basil (reserve the basil leaves).
When onions are just translucent add 1.8 litres of chicken stock (or vegetable), 2 cans of chopped plum tomatoes and 5 chopped large fresh tomatoes. Bring to boil and then simmer for 10 minutes.
Remove from heat and add basil leaves. Using hand blender process until smooth. Taste and season prior to serving.
Labels:
tomato soup
Monday, 16 May 2011
Falafel
400g can of chickpeas
1 large onion
2 cloves of garlic
3 tablespoons of fresh parsley
1 teaspoon coriander
1 teaspoon cumin
2 tablespoons flour
Put onions, garlic and parsley in food processor and 'chop'. Add to food processor all other ingredients and process until smooth-ish paste. Form into balls and deep fry in oil until golden brown (5-7 minutes). Alternatively form into patties and shallow fry until brown.
Serve in pitta bread with shredded lettuce, cucumber and a tahini dressing (equal parts tahini and yoghurt with lemon juice to taste - try 1.5tbsp with juice of half a lemon)
Friends who we haven't seen for 7 years came for lunch yesterday. Lunch consisted of Pot roast chicken and rhubarb and ginger icecream. Catching up on 7 years including the wedding of their eldest last year was brilliant. Sounds like we might be meeting up again in a couple of months time as he turns 60.
1 large onion
2 cloves of garlic
3 tablespoons of fresh parsley
1 teaspoon coriander
1 teaspoon cumin
2 tablespoons flour
Put onions, garlic and parsley in food processor and 'chop'. Add to food processor all other ingredients and process until smooth-ish paste. Form into balls and deep fry in oil until golden brown (5-7 minutes). Alternatively form into patties and shallow fry until brown.
Serve in pitta bread with shredded lettuce, cucumber and a tahini dressing (equal parts tahini and yoghurt with lemon juice to taste - try 1.5tbsp with juice of half a lemon)
Friends who we haven't seen for 7 years came for lunch yesterday. Lunch consisted of Pot roast chicken and rhubarb and ginger icecream. Catching up on 7 years including the wedding of their eldest last year was brilliant. Sounds like we might be meeting up again in a couple of months time as he turns 60.
Saturday, 30 April 2011
Wedding feast
After weeks of worrying about mouth sized jam sandwiches, bananas and rice crispie slices for the Devizes to Westminster canoe marathon and then recovering from ensuring said items were fed to M and his teamate along the banks of the Kennet and Avon Canal and the Thames, a great day yesterday was spent with a group of friends watching the wedding followed by a barbeque. Everyone came with meat and a salad or pudding. Part of my contribution was the rest of a rhubarb sauce that I made last week to go with duck breast - it went very well with the pork fillet that one of my friends contributed to the feast.
Chinese spiced Rhubarb sauce
200g rhubarb roughly chopped
2 tbsp orange juice
1 tsp chinese 5 spice
Honey to taste
Simmer until rhubarb is cooked through. Taste and adjust sweetness with honey
Chinese spiced Rhubarb sauce
200g rhubarb roughly chopped
2 tbsp orange juice
1 tsp chinese 5 spice
Honey to taste
Simmer until rhubarb is cooked through. Taste and adjust sweetness with honey
Labels:
rhubarb sauce
Sunday, 3 April 2011
Beef Braciole - Roast Pork and Rhubarb
My new favourite dish cooked by Mr B yesterday:
http://www.italianchef.com/braciole.html
For Mothering Sunday today I cooked Roast Pork and Rhubarb. A recipe that I can't find online but definitely will do again and goes something like:
Prepare the pork joint for crackling (score, dry, rub in oil and salt) and put in hot oven for 30 minutes. Take out and put pork onto a plate turning oven down to 170C. Make a layer of sliced red onions, thyme leaves (from about 6 sprigs of thyme), 2 star anise, 3 bay leaves. Put the pork back on top and pour 1 pint of dry cider around it. Cook for remaining cooking time minus 20 minutes. Total cooking time will be 30 minutes per lb and 30 minutes over.
For those remaining 20 minutes again put pork onto plate, drain off any fat in the pan then add 1lb+ chunks of rhubarb on top of the onions and drizzle with 3-4 tbsp runny honey. Put pork back on top and cook. At the end, leave the pork to rest, stir the onions and rhubarb etc together and serve with the pork.
http://www.italianchef.com/braciole.html
For Mothering Sunday today I cooked Roast Pork and Rhubarb. A recipe that I can't find online but definitely will do again and goes something like:
Prepare the pork joint for crackling (score, dry, rub in oil and salt) and put in hot oven for 30 minutes. Take out and put pork onto a plate turning oven down to 170C. Make a layer of sliced red onions, thyme leaves (from about 6 sprigs of thyme), 2 star anise, 3 bay leaves. Put the pork back on top and pour 1 pint of dry cider around it. Cook for remaining cooking time minus 20 minutes. Total cooking time will be 30 minutes per lb and 30 minutes over.
For those remaining 20 minutes again put pork onto plate, drain off any fat in the pan then add 1lb+ chunks of rhubarb on top of the onions and drizzle with 3-4 tbsp runny honey. Put pork back on top and cook. At the end, leave the pork to rest, stir the onions and rhubarb etc together and serve with the pork.
Labels:
beef braciole,
pork and rhubarb
Sunday, 27 March 2011
Spiced Beetroot Salad
I had this salad with some roughly chopped onion bhaji and spinach pakora left over from the curry instead of naan. The next day I mixed the remaining salad in with the rest of the pilau rice from the curry meal, and had with naan. Spiced Beetroot Salad 250g cooked beetroot chopped into cubes Stir in: - good pinch each of cumin and paprika - 1 tbsp chopped coriander leaves - 2tbsp olive oil - juice of half lemon - salt and pepper Taste and add more of the spices and/or lemon juice. Cover and chill for at least an hour. Serve on a bed of lettuce leaves and cucumber pieces. Top with a dollop of natural yoghurt and a sprinkling of cayenne pepper. Serve with naan bread Menu this week: Shoulder of pork roasting in the oven as I type. Am roasting it on top of thick slices of apple - just because I had a couple of apples that need using. M Jacket potatoes, sausages and coleslaw T Sliced pork in piquante sauce W Mozzerella and Tomato Pasta bake Th Pork rissoles F Root vegetable bake with Ham
Labels:
Spiced beetroot salad
Sunday, 20 March 2011
Moroccan Chicken Pie
4 friends from the village came round for supper on Friday. Such a fun evening! The meal started with greek dishes - dolmades, marinated aubergine and tomato keftedes served with pitta bread pieces and a garlic and chive yoghurt and mayonnaise dip. The Moroccan Chicken Pie, served with a green salad, was followed by a selection home made ice cream and sorbets with my own shortbread. There was still room for cheese and a glass or two of last year's sloe gin for some. A number of recipes to write up but here is the main one:
Moroccan Chicken Pie
Put a 1.5kg chicken into a pot and cover with cold water. Peel an onion and 6 cloves of garlic and add to the pot along with 2cm piece of root ginger, halved, the rind of half a lemon and half an orange, a cinnamon stick and the stalks of a small bunch of corainder. Bring to boil and then simmer for about 45 minutes until chicken is tender. Remove chicken from liquid and leave to cool. Strain the poaching liquid and reserve 25 fl oz.
When cold remove the flesh and shred (don't use the skin).
Heat oven to 175C
Finely chop 2 onions and fry over medium heat in 1tbsp olive oil until soft. Add 4 crushed garlic cloves, 2cm grated root ginger. 1tbsp turmeric, 3tsp ground coriander, 3tsp ground cumin and cook for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in chicken, chopped leaves of 1 bunch coriander and half bunch flat leaf parsley.
Moisten with some (to all) of the reserved poaching liquid then stir in 2 beaten eggs, 125g chopped almonds and 175g roughly chopped dried apricots. Season to taste.
Mix together 1 tbsp caster sugar with quarter tsp ground cinnamon.
Butter a 5x20x25cm baking dish and layer with 5 sheets of filo pastry, ensuring that there is excess filo pastry overhanging, brushing each sheet generously with melted butter and lightly sprinkling with the sugar/cinnamon mixture. Fill with the chicken mixture and fold over the overhanging filo to cover the top. Brush top with melted butter, sprinkle over the rest of the sugar/cinnamon mixture and a handful of flaked almonds. Cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove foil, turn oven upto 200C and cook for a further 5-10 minutes until browned on top.
Freezes well uncooked. Cook from frozen in 175C for an hour removing foil for last 15 minutes (leave oven at 175C). Ensure heated through before serving.
--
Beef brisket, pot roasted in the slow cooker, tonight. The menu for the week is:
M Something from freezer
T Phili Steak 'Sandwiches'
W Chicken Curry (probably Korma from a jar)
Th Mr B's sticky sausage casserole
F TBD
S Pasta and fish
Lovely weather looks to continue so a number of salads for lunches.
Moroccan Chicken Pie
Put a 1.5kg chicken into a pot and cover with cold water. Peel an onion and 6 cloves of garlic and add to the pot along with 2cm piece of root ginger, halved, the rind of half a lemon and half an orange, a cinnamon stick and the stalks of a small bunch of corainder. Bring to boil and then simmer for about 45 minutes until chicken is tender. Remove chicken from liquid and leave to cool. Strain the poaching liquid and reserve 25 fl oz.
When cold remove the flesh and shred (don't use the skin).
Heat oven to 175C
Finely chop 2 onions and fry over medium heat in 1tbsp olive oil until soft. Add 4 crushed garlic cloves, 2cm grated root ginger. 1tbsp turmeric, 3tsp ground coriander, 3tsp ground cumin and cook for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in chicken, chopped leaves of 1 bunch coriander and half bunch flat leaf parsley.
Moisten with some (to all) of the reserved poaching liquid then stir in 2 beaten eggs, 125g chopped almonds and 175g roughly chopped dried apricots. Season to taste.
Mix together 1 tbsp caster sugar with quarter tsp ground cinnamon.
Butter a 5x20x25cm baking dish and layer with 5 sheets of filo pastry, ensuring that there is excess filo pastry overhanging, brushing each sheet generously with melted butter and lightly sprinkling with the sugar/cinnamon mixture. Fill with the chicken mixture and fold over the overhanging filo to cover the top. Brush top with melted butter, sprinkle over the rest of the sugar/cinnamon mixture and a handful of flaked almonds. Cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove foil, turn oven upto 200C and cook for a further 5-10 minutes until browned on top.
Freezes well uncooked. Cook from frozen in 175C for an hour removing foil for last 15 minutes (leave oven at 175C). Ensure heated through before serving.
--
Beef brisket, pot roasted in the slow cooker, tonight. The menu for the week is:
M Something from freezer
T Phili Steak 'Sandwiches'
W Chicken Curry (probably Korma from a jar)
Th Mr B's sticky sausage casserole
F TBD
S Pasta and fish
Lovely weather looks to continue so a number of salads for lunches.
Labels:
moroccan chicken pie
Saturday, 26 February 2011
Honey ice cream
The Duckworth's, parents of M's team mate for the Devizes-Westminster canoe race, came for supper on Friday to discuss support team tactics. Menu was Chicken Tagine with herby cous cous and a green salad with pomegranate seeds followed by honey ice cream, meringues and a melon and pomegranate fruit salad.
Honey Ice Cream
Beat 5 egg yolks with 10 fl oz runny honey in a bowl. Heat 1 pint milk until boiling. Reduce heat so that milk reduces to a simmer. Pour over the egg and honey mixture stirring continuously. Return to the saucepan and stir until thickened. Remove from heat and strain. When cool stir in half pint double cream and 1tsp vanilla essence. Taste and add more honey if necessary (as with all icecream/sorbets, the mixture should be slightly too sweet to taste prior to freezeing). Freeze using ice cream maker.
Honey Ice Cream
Beat 5 egg yolks with 10 fl oz runny honey in a bowl. Heat 1 pint milk until boiling. Reduce heat so that milk reduces to a simmer. Pour over the egg and honey mixture stirring continuously. Return to the saucepan and stir until thickened. Remove from heat and strain. When cool stir in half pint double cream and 1tsp vanilla essence. Taste and add more honey if necessary (as with all icecream/sorbets, the mixture should be slightly too sweet to taste prior to freezeing). Freeze using ice cream maker.
Labels:
Honey ice cream
Sunday, 20 February 2011
Chicken in Barbeque Sauce
Another good recipe for using up any cooked chicken
I large onion finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed
14oz tin tomatoes
1 carrot cut into fine sticks
2 tsp Worcestor sauce
2 tsps lemon juice
2tsps soft brown sugar
1tsp mustard
few drops Tobasco
1/4 lb frozen peas
12 oz cubed cooked chicken
Heat 1 tbsp oil in a saucepan and fry onion and garlic over medium heat until soft. Add rest of ingredients apart from peas and chicken. Mix well and then bring to boil; reduce to medium heat, cover and simmer for 10 minutes. Add peas and chicken and cook for further 10 minutes. Season to taste and serve with plain boiled rice.
It has been a week of eating out of the freezer as the number of meals in the freezer has been building up over the last couple of months. The above was the 'leftover' from the roast chicken last weekend. We've had roast beef today (request from youngest) and Mr B has list of meals planned for the week.... will write them up one evening if Imanage to make time.
I large onion finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed
14oz tin tomatoes
1 carrot cut into fine sticks
2 tsp Worcestor sauce
2 tsps lemon juice
2tsps soft brown sugar
1tsp mustard
few drops Tobasco
1/4 lb frozen peas
12 oz cubed cooked chicken
Heat 1 tbsp oil in a saucepan and fry onion and garlic over medium heat until soft. Add rest of ingredients apart from peas and chicken. Mix well and then bring to boil; reduce to medium heat, cover and simmer for 10 minutes. Add peas and chicken and cook for further 10 minutes. Season to taste and serve with plain boiled rice.
It has been a week of eating out of the freezer as the number of meals in the freezer has been building up over the last couple of months. The above was the 'leftover' from the roast chicken last weekend. We've had roast beef today (request from youngest) and Mr B has list of meals planned for the week.... will write them up one evening if Imanage to make time.
Labels:
chicken in bbq sauce,
leftover
Saturday, 12 February 2011
Pork in a Sweet and Sour sauce
A firm favourite for use of pork left over from a Sunday lunch. This is a minor variant of a recipe in 'Left Over for Tomorrow' by Marika Hanbury Tenison of which my second copy is now going the way of my first copy as in it is falling to pieces.
Had enough pork left for both the shepherds pie and this recipe during the week. Used the rest of the beanspouts in Thai soup for lunch on Friday.
10oz cooked pork cut into thin strips
1 medium onion roughly chopped
3 carrots diced
4oz beansprouts
Cook onion and carrots in 1 tbsp oil until onions are transparent. Add meat and beansprouts and cook for 10 minutes on medium heat.
Combine 4 tbsp sugar, 3 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp cornflour with half pint water mixing until smooth.
Pour sauce over meat and vegetable mixture, bring to boil stirring until the sauce is thick (about 5 minutes).
Serve with noodles and stir fried vegetables. Or just rice.
Had enough pork left for both the shepherds pie and this recipe during the week. Used the rest of the beanspouts in Thai soup for lunch on Friday.
10oz cooked pork cut into thin strips
1 medium onion roughly chopped
3 carrots diced
4oz beansprouts
Cook onion and carrots in 1 tbsp oil until onions are transparent. Add meat and beansprouts and cook for 10 minutes on medium heat.
Combine 4 tbsp sugar, 3 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp cornflour with half pint water mixing until smooth.
Pour sauce over meat and vegetable mixture, bring to boil stirring until the sauce is thick (about 5 minutes).
Serve with noodles and stir fried vegetables. Or just rice.
Labels:
pork in sweet and sour sauce
Sunday, 6 February 2011
Marmalade time and recipe for Caramelised Red Onion and Feta Quiche
Seville oranges are in season and we are down to the last few jars from the batch I made two years ago (even though the recipe makes 20+ jars we don't eat it every day).
Recipe is here. It takes a couple of days elapsed time and a VERY large pot.
I was invited out for supper with a couple of friends on the spur of the moment yesterday evening. A delightful evening with Naomi, Jane and new friend Kate. It meant my eldest took on cooking the pasta with saffron pea and ham I had planned for family last night. Great success all round.
Meals for the week, including using remains of pork roast from today:
Toad in the hole with red onion gravy
Chicken wrapped in Parma Ham with creamy tomato sauce - the one we have is from a magazine as stored in Mr B's folder of good recipes. Closest online is this
Pork Shepherds Pie
Chilli Enchilladas as requested by eldest which must mean the cook for the night will be...!
Something from the freezer
For lunches
Couple of packs of 'salad cheese' (a cheap imitation feta that is only good for cooking and something I will not buy again) that need using. I cooked a caramelised red onion and feta quiche in the oven once I had removed the roast to rest today and will try out an olive and feta gratin from the Stones recipe book for the rest. Gravy and vegetables left over to make either bubble and squeak or 'left over soup'; not quite enough for two portions of b&squeak so soup it is. That's at least three lunches sorted!
Caramelised Red Onion and Feta Quiche with salad (see below)
Left over soup
Quiche and salad again?
BBQ pork and coleslaw salad
Olive and Feta gratin
Caramelised Red Onion and Feta Quiche
Pre heat oven to 180C.
Line a 24cm quiche dish with a pack of pre rolled ready made (sorry Curly) shortcrust pastry.
Prick thoroughly with a fork and bake blind for approximately 15 mins.
In the meantime finely slice 4 medium, or 2 large, red onions and cook slow and long in a frying pan with a bit of oil until very soft. Sprinkle over a couple of teaspoons of sugar and cook on higher heat for a few minutes. Put to one side.
Chop approximately 300g feta into cubes.
Beat 5 medium eggs plus 2 extra egg yolks with good pinch of pepper. Beat in 500ml of milk.
Spread the red onions on the base of the quiche then scatter the feta pieces on top. Half fill the dish with the egg mixture, move to the oven and once the dish is on the oven shelf finish filling with the egg mixture. Bake for 45-60 minutes until a knife/skewer come out clean.
Bonus bits
All from the excess pieces from making the quiche; well my family were impressed!
Feta and Olive Tartlets : use the pastry trimmings to line as many pattie pan/yorkshire pudding tin 'cups' as possible. Bake blind as per above but for closer to 5 minutes than 15. Quarter one black olive per tartlet and put along with feta cubes into base of tartlet tin. Fill with egg mixture from above. Bake for 15 minutes, depending on size of tartlet.
Meringues: two egg whites left over from making the quiche so Whisk egg whites until stiff. For each egg white you will need 2 oz caster sugar (thus 4oz needed today). Keep whisking whites whilst gradually adding the sugar until mixture is stiff and glossy. Spoon mixture, a good tablespoon for each meringue, onto lined baking trays. Bake in 150C (fan) oven for about 30 minutes. Turn off heat but leave fan on for another 30-45 minutes. Turn off fan and leave for a number of hours to fully dry out (make in evening and leave in oven until morning is probably the ideal.
Mine never make it into a tin in fact my offspring have a tendancy to ensure that I don't eat any!
A top tip - use Magic Liner to line baking trays for meringues, almond biscuits etc
Recipe is here. It takes a couple of days elapsed time and a VERY large pot.
I was invited out for supper with a couple of friends on the spur of the moment yesterday evening. A delightful evening with Naomi, Jane and new friend Kate. It meant my eldest took on cooking the pasta with saffron pea and ham I had planned for family last night. Great success all round.
Meals for the week, including using remains of pork roast from today:
Toad in the hole with red onion gravy
Chicken wrapped in Parma Ham with creamy tomato sauce - the one we have is from a magazine as stored in Mr B's folder of good recipes. Closest online is this
Pork Shepherds Pie
Chilli Enchilladas as requested by eldest which must mean the cook for the night will be...!
Something from the freezer
For lunches
Couple of packs of 'salad cheese' (a cheap imitation feta that is only good for cooking and something I will not buy again) that need using. I cooked a caramelised red onion and feta quiche in the oven once I had removed the roast to rest today and will try out an olive and feta gratin from the Stones recipe book for the rest. Gravy and vegetables left over to make either bubble and squeak or 'left over soup'; not quite enough for two portions of b&squeak so soup it is. That's at least three lunches sorted!
Caramelised Red Onion and Feta Quiche with salad (see below)
Left over soup
Quiche and salad again?
BBQ pork and coleslaw salad
Olive and Feta gratin
Caramelised Red Onion and Feta Quiche
Pre heat oven to 180C.
Line a 24cm quiche dish with a pack of pre rolled ready made (sorry Curly) shortcrust pastry.
Prick thoroughly with a fork and bake blind for approximately 15 mins.
In the meantime finely slice 4 medium, or 2 large, red onions and cook slow and long in a frying pan with a bit of oil until very soft. Sprinkle over a couple of teaspoons of sugar and cook on higher heat for a few minutes. Put to one side.
Chop approximately 300g feta into cubes.
Beat 5 medium eggs plus 2 extra egg yolks with good pinch of pepper. Beat in 500ml of milk.
Spread the red onions on the base of the quiche then scatter the feta pieces on top. Half fill the dish with the egg mixture, move to the oven and once the dish is on the oven shelf finish filling with the egg mixture. Bake for 45-60 minutes until a knife/skewer come out clean.
Bonus bits
All from the excess pieces from making the quiche; well my family were impressed!
Feta and Olive Tartlets : use the pastry trimmings to line as many pattie pan/yorkshire pudding tin 'cups' as possible. Bake blind as per above but for closer to 5 minutes than 15. Quarter one black olive per tartlet and put along with feta cubes into base of tartlet tin. Fill with egg mixture from above. Bake for 15 minutes, depending on size of tartlet.
Meringues: two egg whites left over from making the quiche so Whisk egg whites until stiff. For each egg white you will need 2 oz caster sugar (thus 4oz needed today). Keep whisking whites whilst gradually adding the sugar until mixture is stiff and glossy. Spoon mixture, a good tablespoon for each meringue, onto lined baking trays. Bake in 150C (fan) oven for about 30 minutes. Turn off heat but leave fan on for another 30-45 minutes. Turn off fan and leave for a number of hours to fully dry out (make in evening and leave in oven until morning is probably the ideal.
Mine never make it into a tin in fact my offspring have a tendancy to ensure that I don't eat any!
A top tip - use Magic Liner to line baking trays for meringues, almond biscuits etc
Sunday, 30 January 2011
Chicken Tagine
Based on this recipe from James Martin. Slight variation:
Take 4-6 chicken skinless breasts and toss in spice blend made of 2tsp ras-el-hanout (I have found this in a local Tesco's), 0.5 tsp turmeric and 1 tsp ground cinnamon.
Fry in large pan for 2-3 minutes on each side.
Remove and then fry onion, garlic and ginger until onion are translucent. Add stick of cinnamin stick and any of the spice blend remaining and fry for further minute. Return chicken to pan - continue with James' recipe adding pinch of saffron at same time as stock. Season to taste
I served with cous cous with chopped parsley and coriander as is not the season for mint.
Take 4-6 chicken skinless breasts and toss in spice blend made of 2tsp ras-el-hanout (I have found this in a local Tesco's), 0.5 tsp turmeric and 1 tsp ground cinnamon.
Fry in large pan for 2-3 minutes on each side.
Remove and then fry onion, garlic and ginger until onion are translucent. Add stick of cinnamin stick and any of the spice blend remaining and fry for further minute. Return chicken to pan - continue with James' recipe adding pinch of saffron at same time as stock. Season to taste
I served with cous cous with chopped parsley and coriander as is not the season for mint.
Labels:
Chicken Tagine
Sunday, 23 January 2011
Monday, 3 January 2011
Turkey - Christmas 2010
We ended up spending Christmas at my mother-in-law's; so the local free range happy turkey we had ordered, and had been feeling smug about having managed to get on the supplier's list, ended up having a few days in the freezer and was then eaten at lunchtime on New Year's Eve. I used the same recipe (2021 - updated link) as last year but included the stuffing (stuffed the neck only); the bird was 6+kg and needed the additional 20 minutes. I SO need to get a different roasting tray ahead of next Christmas as my halogen hob and the current tin do not get on well. With VAT going up in a few hours time maybe I ought to go look online once I have finished writing this!
Along with turkey sandwiches for lunch yesterday and a very tasty soup from stock made from bones etc to be had for some lunches this week the meals for the week, mainly using up the turkey, are:
Turkey Curry: to date I have used a different more tomato based recipe (not written up as yet) that does well for any cooked meat, but this one went down well on Saturday. I used low fat creme fraiche rather than the yoghurt/cream/lemon mix. It could have done with a squeeze of lemon and some toasted almonds.
Beef braised in Guiness with Pickled Walnuts: A Delia recipe from her original Cooking series. I cannot find the recipe online but this one with Venison is a variant.
This evening we will try out this pasta and leftover turkey recipe. I won't put in the leftover stuffing as these have been formed into 'patties' to be fried up and served with chips and peas tomorrow. Update: use low fat soft cheese and try adding artichoke hearts next time.
IF we have any turkey left, which I doubt, I will look at trying out this potted turkey recipe to go with the various pickles I have either made myself, been given or found have been bought in.
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