Enjoy food? Here's a selection of recipes and thoughts which I'd liked to share. Ideas come from all over the place; begged, borrowed, adapted or straight in off the ether. Rather than being a place for text book instructions, this is intended to be much more in the style of sharing recipes with a friend; enjoy!
Monday, 25 June 2012
Is it Summer yet? (shields eyes from the light)
It has been far too long since I’ve written anything and I’ve
missed it. There are several reasons for this. Firstly, I think the recent lack of seasonal variation
in weather led to a very repetitive cycle of food; a constant stream
of cold wet weather meant an equally repetitive stream of hot steaming food and, in all honestly, there
are only so many times you can mention hot stew or chicken pie or other tummy
lining treats. The other main reason has
been an undeniable lack of time. A full
throttle surge into the maelstrom of brownie baking and selling has meant
little time for anything other than opening and shutting the oven door and packing
and unpacking the car (more brownie tales another time). For now this blog remains my own personal
antidote to chocolate.
Perfect desserts
I’ve always had a theory that the perfect dessert should contain
at least one (preferably more) of the following indulgent elements: cream,
citrus flavour, chocolate and (in moderation only) fruit. Today, despite the hayfever, (a horrible assault
on the senses which reduces me to a snivelling wreck, permanently leaking fluids from orifices
above the neck). Anyway, despite this,
it is now officially Summer! For me, the
main indicator of this seasonal change are the elderflowers blooming out along
the hedgerows. Summer food is now
filling my mind. So here we go; an
entire meal provided for; the drinks, the main course and a dessert. Ok so there’s no starter but on a sunny day what
else do you need other than a good dose of vitamin D from that big golden globe
in the sky.
Elderflower Fizz
I’m bizarrely
grateful for the recent awful weather in so far as it has delayed the
blossoming of elderflower thus giving me time to go through those early thought processes (in May) about doing something productive
with the blossoms until finally getting around to doing something about it (June).
Usually the whole window of opportunity would have been and gone before I picked anything
flowery and stocking up with any bottles. I
smiled when I looked up a variety of recipes for Elderflower Champagne (Pah to
the French and their appellation control-freakery guarding of the term
‘Champagne’). Instead of shelling out on relatively expensive glass bottles, at least one recommended
heading down to a certain supermarket for their 17p 2 litre bottles of water. Use the water as you wish (even pouring it
down the sink for goodness sake) then use the empty bottles for filling with the
potentially bubbly brew. Incidentally these
plastic bottles work well because they display the very tell tale evidence of
increasing gas build up (and potential explosiveness!) by their swelling
girths. Should this happen simply release a bit of the
pressure and feel excited about the changes going on inside. Leave for about
two weeks then taste. Can’t tell you if mine’s
good or bad because it’s not ready yet but it has got a bit of fizz going on
when I release the top (high excitement!).
I use:
7 or so large elderflower heads
One gallon of water
Two sliced lemons
Two tablespoons of white wine vinegar
Pound and a half of sugar.
Heat up the water, add sugar, dissolve then leave to cool
(heating is not essential but I think it makes for faster dissolving). Remove most of the green stalks from the elderflowers and place in a clean bucket then pour
over the water. Add vinegar and lemon
slices. Cover with a tea towel and leave
for 24 hours. After this time pour
carefully through a seive into the empty bottles leaving a little space at the
top. I’m told that the aim is to bottle
the liquid before all the fermenting has taken place. The natural yeasts on the elderflowers
continue to work with the sugary water to produce an alcohol producing reaction
(and thus fizz) in the bottle. Recipes
vary greatly (some adding yeast) but this is a very simple recipe with unpredictable
results! Ten days to a fortnight is long
enough to leave before drinking.
Pizza
I‘d forgotten what a lovely thing a homemade pizza
is. On the day I made this it was the
garlic I was initially craving. This is
another member of the 'dead easy’ group of recipes.
The best pizza I
ever ate was in a very dark Italian restaurant in Newcastle. It was a very basic Marguerita but made all
the more unctuous by the final drizzle of garlicky olive oil whilst it was
still piping hot. It was so cheap but so
delicious and would literally spill out over the edge of the plate it was so
huge and pleasingly non-uniform in shape.
1. Make
a batch of dough. Bread flour in bowl (round
about a kilo) add a sachet of yeast and enough water to make a pliable dough.
If it gets too wet add more flour. We’re not talking critical measures here
Robert Bertinet, don’t get your knickers in a twist; it’s pizza dough not a
fabulous loaf. Knead it around for a bit then cover with a tea towel and leave
to rise to roughly double the volume.
2. Depending
on size of pizza required, break off pieces and roll out to a thin depth to
form base. Place the base onto a large
enough baking tray.
3. Toppings
of choice. My current favourite is a
tomato sauce base topped, covered with grated cheddar, torn up oieces of mozzarella and chopped up feta cheese, rocket
leaves , torn up basil leaves and cherry tomato halves.
4. Drizzle
garlic infused oil over the lot. Don’t
bother buying it just warm some oil in a pan with a crushed clove of garlic. It’s ready when it smells nice.
5. Bake
in a hot oven (I turn mine up as hot as it will go). Bake for about ten minutes then check regularly. You’re aiming for a puffed crust edge, nicely,
but only slightly, browned. Toppings should be nicely melted and looked cooked
(ie, the very edge of browning, any longer and they’d look like they’d burn).
6. Eat,
eat, eat! Share with any Italians you know; wax lyrical about your mamma and
offer to share the recipe if they’d like it.
Key Lime Pie so ridiculously simple you’ll know there’s
a God.
I don’t know why I got an urge for Key Lime Pie recently
but, as with so many ideas, it came totally out of the blue. Maybe it was because my home menus had been so haphazard. I’ve had little time to think
about meals in a considered way and had become a frequent follower of the
school of last minute panic cooking; ie, where are you oven chips, fish or
pasta? Actually making a proper dessert
was a major achievement and perhaps a reflection of the fact that I was slowly
getting back on top of life. It
satisfyingly ticks the right boxes as far as my dessert criteria is concerned,
ie, it’s creamy and citrusy. The lack of chocolate is, for now, a welcome
antidote to baking my own body weight in brownies most days. What better way to make use of FIVE
ingredients? Fabulous recipe is below.
One large pot of cream
One small tin of condensed
milk (397g)
Eight limes
Packet of digestive biscuits
About a third of a pack of
butter
Take a loose bottom cake tin
about 23cm wide or thereabouts. It
doesn’t matter too much but don’t make it much smaller as you’ll have too much
mixture to fill it (this would be no great trauma as all you’d have to do is
sit in front of the telly and lick out the bowl).
Pulverise three quarters of
the packet of biscuits in a food processor. Eat the rest at your leisure.
Melt butter in a pan and mix
with biscuits.
Smear some butter on base of
cake tin then press the biscuit mixture to a depth of about half a centimeter.
Using the fine side of a
cheese grater grate the zest off the limes.
This does take a bit of time but really is the most arduous part of the
recipe so don’t moan. Pour the cream and condensed milk into a large mixing
bowl then add the zest. Get your
electric mixer and beat for a few minutes until the mixture gets good and very
thick.
Squeeze the juice from the
limes and mix into the cream mixture using a spatula.
Spoon it all on top of the
biscuit base and chill for an hour or so.
Add any chefy touches are
required (ie, top with fruit) or eat just as it is. Absolutely creamy citrus gorgeousness.
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