Showing posts with label Appetite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Appetite. Show all posts

Monday, 1 August 2011

30 July - melon & mozzarella and spicy meatballs

The weekend started with another trip to Ruby & White for some more meat - I think it's going to prove quite difficult to resist! Lunch was a lovely, summery salad of canteloupe melon with parma ham and creamy mozzarella, scattered with a few basil leaves and dressed with a little olive oil and lemon dressing.


For dinner, I made meatballs based on a Nigel Slater recipe:
  • Mix 300g pork mince, a handful of lardons, a chopped shallot, some chopped lemongrass, chopped red chilli and a handful of fresh chopped coriander. And shape into small (walnut-sized) balls - today I made 10.
  • Gently fry a few mushrooms with some sliced garlic and chilli in a wok.
  • Add about 500ml chicken stock and a bashed stalk of lemongrass. Throw in a good handful of fresh peas and simmer.
  • Fry the meatballs in vegetable oil for a few minutes until cooked through and nicely caramelised on the outside.
  • Boil a few noodles. Add some chopped mint, coriander and basil to the broth.
  • Serve a pile of noodles in the bottom of a large bowl with the meatballs on the top and the broth poured over.
The first time I came across the idea of meatballs in soup, it seemed a bit odd, but it's actually a really good combination - substantial (with the meatballs and noodles), but fresh and herby too.

Thursday, 28 July 2011

25 July - hot chicken salad and plum tart

Dinner tonight's a Spanish-inspired hot salad; red onion, butter beans, green beans, tomatoes, sweetcorn, new potatoes, a bit of chopped chorizo and some hot chicken.

We got some lovely English plums in Friday's vegbox that I didn't get round to cooking over the weekend, so I make them into a favourite tart - another Nigel Slater recipe, from Appetite, and one of the very few times I ever make pastry.
  • For the pastry put 90g butter and 150g plain flour in a food processor and whizz to 'breadcrumbs'. Add an egg yolk, 2tbsp sugar and just enough water to make a dough. Wrap in clingfilm and pop in the fridge.
  • Make a caramel with 50g butter and 4 tbsp flour in a small ovenproof frying pan. Push the plums, cut in half and stoned, cut-side-up into the caramel.
  • Roll out the pastry and lay over the plums, roughly tucking in the edges. Bake at 190C for about 45 mins.
  • Leave to cool a bit in the pan before turning out.
It's sweet and naughty and even better served with a bit of cream!

Monday, 30 May 2011

30 May - a rescued hollandaise and lamb with mint sauce

I had a fancy for a proper bank holiday brunch, so made up a batch of hollandaise sauce to go with poached eggs on toast and asparagus. Making hollandaise can always be a bit stressful, but using Nigel Slater's Appetite recipe as my guide, I usually get through. I use the yolk of one egg in a Pyrex bowl over a pan of gently boiling water, then whisk in about 60g cold butter, a few cubes at a time until it's all melted into a thick yellow sauce. I add a squeeze of lemon juice and a bit of salt and cover until needed. The problem usually comes when the eggs are cooked and the toast toasted ... when I go back to uncover and stir my sauce, it can, as it did today, split into a nasty-looking, curdled mess. Nigel's solution of adding a splash of cold water and whisking again, worked a treat as always! Unfortunately, all that rich sauce and eggs seems to have given me indigestion for the rest of the day ... probably serves me right!

Dinner started off with the jar of homemade mint sauce still in the fridge from the week before last, which I thought I ought to use up, so it called for lamb, again. I quickly sealed a couple of chunky, Welsh rump steaks in a frying pan, then popped them in the oven for about 8 minutes to cook through. I did some braised, French-style veg - a leek, some fresh peas and broad beans, softened gently in some butter with a sliced clove of garlic and some chopped mint, then I added a slurp of white wine and let them cook gently, covered for about 15 mins. Together with some new potatoes - briefly boiled, then squashed and roasted with some sea salt and chopped rosemary - and of course, the mint sauce. Spot on. Sorry, it's a bit of a blurry photo, but I was eager to dig in!


Saturday, 14 May 2011

12 May - roast veg salad and garlicky chicken

When I was making the pasta last night, I bunged some bits of pepper and courgette that I wasn't using in the sauce in the oven to roast and I had them as a roast veg salad for lunch today, combined with some cherry tomatoes and served with some new potatoes and a few slices of mozzarella.

For dinner, it was another Nigel Slater favourite; chicken thighs browned in a frying pan with a little butter and some oil, then turned down, covered and cooked very slowly over a low heat for about 30-40 mins with some whole cloves of garlic and some thyme leaves. Then I took out the chicken, poured off most of the fat, put the pan back on a high heat and poured in a good slurp of white wine. I let it bubble, scraping up any bits from the pan and squashing the soft garlic cloves. Usually, I add a bit of butter at the end to make a really rich sauce, but today, still on a health drive, I just added a squeeze of lemon juice and poured it over the chicken - less rich, but lovely and sharp and garlicky. No potatoes tonight either, just a plateful of veg; spring greens (from the vegbox), asparagus and a few green beans.

Monday, 11 April 2011

10 April - Thai prawn curry

I make variations on several different Thai curry recipes, mostly from Nigel Slater. This one is based on his Thai noodles recipe from Appetite ... but without the noodles!

For the spice paste:
one red chilli
one large clove of garlic
fresh ginger - about the same amount as the garlic
fresh lemongrass - the soft bit in the middle of two stalks
fresh coriander leaves - a good handful
half teaspoon of turmeric
grated lime zest
groundnut oil

shiitake mushrooms
spring onions
raw king prawns
125 ml vegetable stock
coconut milk - most of a tin
lime juice
fish sauce

I chop and whizz all the spice paste ingredients together using a hand blender. Add the spice paste to a hot wok, stir it about and add the chopped shiitake mushrooms and sliced spring onions. Fry for a few minutes adding a little more oil if they look dry.

Next I add the stock and the coconut milk, stir and turn down to a gentle simmer for 10 to 15 minutes. Add the prawns and simmer until they turn pink, just a couple of minutes. Then season with a squeeze of lime juice and a few drops of fish sauce.

Today I served it in dishes with plain steamed basmati rice, plus a bit more fresh coriander and a couple of leaves of Thai basil scattered over the top. It didn't come out very spicy this time, perhaps because it was a rather elderly chilli from the bottom of the fridge, but it was wonderfully fragrant and herby nonetheless.