Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Chive flower vinegar

An easy frugal gourmet treat to make for yourself or to give as a gift and seen on a few blogs lately. Lovely as a fat free dressing on salad leaves.  Here's my version.
 

Pick some chive flowers when they are fully open.  Check for wee beasties!


Give them a wash in some clean water and gently pat dry or spin in a salad spinner


Now add the flowers to a jar of white vinegar.  Just plain distilled vinegar will do but you could use white wine vinegar if want to be even fancier.  My jar is half filled but I'm going to pick more today and add them.

Leave in a cool cupboard for a few weeks to let the flavour develop.  It will turn purple!!

Strain and bottle.

I checked mine this morning and it's already a lovely pale lilac colour :-)

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Hello again!

Hello, long time no posts but rest assured I have been cooking and creating.  Big changes are afoot here in the soup kitchen but it's all good.  To kickstart my food blogging here's a fab veggie burger recipe I've adapted. 
 
Aduki and sweet potato burgers
 


100g dried aduki beans, soaked overnight and cooked according to the packet instructions
OR
1 can ready cooked aduki beans, drained
1 large baked sweet potato
50g oats
3 tbsp of chopped parsley
2 tsp smoked paprika
1/2 tsp each of cayenne pepper, ground coriander and ground cumin
1/4 tsp chili flakes
1/4 tsp salt

Sesame rolls, salad, mayo and relish to serve

Take half of the beans and mash them in a bowl. Add rest of beans
Scoop out the flesh of the sweet potato and mash it.  Add to bowl



Add all other ingredients to the bowl and mix well.
Take a small handful of mixture at a time and form into burger shapes.
Fry in a heated frying pan with a little oil until both sides are starting to crisp.
Finish cooking by popping burgers in a hot oven for 10 mins until heated through


Meanwhile split the sesame rolls and toast the insides (I did this on the Aga plate)


Serve the cooked burgers on the roll with salad, mayo and relish.

I've made these twice and discovered that they work better if they're really crispy on the outside but not burnt hence finishing them off in an oven.

Be brave with the seasoning as they need quite a lot.  The secret is the smoked paprika but any combination of your favourite spices will work with it.

And I've realised they are vegan friendly if you watch the rolls and mayo ingredients :-)

Enjoy!

Monday, 30 July 2012

Chicken and kale broth

It's summer and I have a stinking rotten cold.  When I'm poorly I like my chicken and rice soup.  But I didn't have any rice or leeks today so improvised a chicken broth with what I had available.  I had pearl barley in the store cupboard, carrots in the fridge, chicken in the freezer and kale growing in the garden.  This can also be a veggie soup, just add beans of some sort instead of chicken.

Chicken and kale broth


50g pearl barley
2 carrots, grated
colander full of kale leaves, shredded
1 litre veg stock (or chicken stock if you have it)
100g cooked chicken


Put barley in a large pan and cover with cold water.  Bring to the boil then drain and rinse.
Put back in pan with veg stock and bring to the boil.
Simmer for about 20 mins


Add grated carrot and shredded kale to the pan and continue to simmer for 10 mins
Add chicken (or beans) to warm through.


Serve with crusty bread

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Wild salmon

I'm lucky enough to get some wild river caught salmon through a family friend.  It comes to me already gutted and frozen but still whole.  It takes ages to defrost so I need to be organised when I want to cook it.  But even though I took it out on Friday morning and defrosted it overnight in the fridge, it still wasn't defrosted in time for cooking on Saturday night.  So it was Plan B for that night's evening meal!

So on Sunday I had 2 whole salmon each weighing about 1lb to cook.  I wrapped each one in foil and poached them in a roasting tin half filled with boiling water.  15 mins in a hot oven, switch off oven and then left in there to cool. Remove skin and bones.


So, what to do with all that lovely fish?


Mashed up on hot buttered toast for breakfast


Stirred through some risotto


Or how about some salmon pate? 

Mix 250g of flaked salmon with 2 tbsp of half fat creme fraiche, 1 tbsp of mayo, a good squeeze of lemon juice and season well.  Serve with melba toast.  Yummy!

Monday, 21 May 2012

Chicken Korma

Quickest korma I've ever made from scratch!  Recipe is for 1 portion

Chicken Korma


1 chicken breast, cut into cubes
1tsp oil
1 portion curry paste (straight from freezer)
about 100 ml water
2 tbsp coconut milk powder (or creamed coconut)
150ml natural yoghurt (or cream)


Fry chicken until browned and add curry paste and water.
Bring to the boil and simmer gently for 10 mins until chicken is cooked.
Stir in yoghurt and heat gently for 2 mins.


Serve with rice or naan.

Curry paste

This is the all purpose curry paste recipe I found.  All I know is that a lady called Geetha from London shared the recipe with a friend and it's been passed on and on.  I've included her original recipe but with my own tweaks.

Curry Paste

1kg onions, finely chopped
25ml oil (I used a large tablespoon of ghee)
6 cloves of garlic, crushed
4cm piece of ginger, finely chopped (I grated mine)
3-4 chillis (I used 2 tsp of dried crushed chillis)
1 tin chopped tomatoes
4 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp tumeric
1/2 tsp garam masala
1 tsp salt
250ml water
1/2 cup chopped fresh coriander (I used all the leaves on a growing pot)


Brown the onions in the oil/ghee until really brown (even bordering on burnt) It took about 20 mins to get to the above colour but could have been browner.


Add the garlic and ginger and fry for 2 mins.  (The fresh chillis should be added at this stage)


Add the dry spices and salt and carefully fry for 2 mins.  DO NOT BURN THE SPICES.


Add the tomatoes and water and bring to the boil.  Then simmer until you have a thick pulp.


Add the fresh coriander for the final minute of cooking.


The original recipe says now divide into portions and freeze.  The first time I made this I did that.  But I decided to get out my trusty stick blender and blitz it into a smooth paste.


Then divide into 12 portions and freeze.  I used a muffin tin.

Use 1 portion per person for each recipe straight from the freezer, no defrosting required.

Friday, 18 May 2012

Prawn bhuna

I recently discovered a recipe to make a basic curry paste that could be used to create many different types of curry.  It was developed by a busy working Indian mum so is pretty authentic.  You make a big batch and freeze it in small portions.  Perfect for me as I'm the only curry eater in the family.

Unfortunately I didn't take any pics while I was preparing it so I'll make a new batch over the weekend and post it.  Meanwhile here is the prawn bhuna recipe.

Prawn bhuna with home made naan

1 onion, finely sliced
4 tbsp of curry paste (home made or jar)
1 tsp crushed cardamon seeds
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp crushed fennel seeds
200g chopped tomatoes (half a tin)
about a cup of water

Gently fry onion in a little oil until soft. 
Add dry spices and fry for 2 mins without burning
Add curry paste then tomatoes and water.  If paste is from a jar check if it needs to be fried before adding tomatoes.
Simmer for 10 mins keeping an eye on the consistency.  It should be like a thick tomato gravy.

Add cooked prawns and stir through until warm.

Serve with naan, yoghurt, pineapples and mango chutney.

This could easily be made with chicken.  Add cubes of raw chicken to brown before the dry spices then continue.

Home made naan

I use a breadmaker but to make by hand just add wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and knead for 10 mins until smooth and elastic. Then leave to rest for 10 mins.

280 g  strong bread flour
100 ml warm water
4 tbsp natural yogurt
1 clove of garlic – crushed
1 tsp black onion / nigella / cumin seeds
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp salt
2 tsp honey
1 tsp melted butter
1 tsp yeast

Put wet ingredients in breadmaker and add the dry ingredients.  Use dough setting.

When done, remove and leave to rest for 10 mins.  Heat oven and put a baking tray in to heat up.

Divide in 4 and shape into teardrop shape.


Put on hot baking tray and bake for 10 mins until puffy and starting to colour.
Brush with melted ghee if you're not watching calories!
Serve with curry.