Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Cumquats and Limes

Harvested the Cumquats and a few limes from our trees, and decided to have a go at preserving one of the limes.
No jar with a wide enough neck to take a whole lime so I quartered it and packed it with salt, then,following the advice on preserving lemons in Stephanie Alexanders book, I topped the jar with added lime juice. This is going to be a resounding success, and I will be serving lovely preserved limes with my Tagines. Or it will be a disaster and no one will ever hear about that poor little lime again.
An experiment in making Cumquat Syrup, these quarters will sit in the sugar and brandy for a day and then be popped into a pan of heavy syrup, simmered for a few minutes and be ready for use immediately to drizzle over a citrus cake.
Recipe for Cumquat Syrup
Weigh cumquats and measure out equal weight in sugar.
quarter cumquats, removing all seeds and mix with 1/3rd of the sugar, place in a jar to with a good slosh of brandy, about 1 - 2 Tablespoons. Cover and let stand for a day.
Place the 2/3 rd measure of sugar into a sauce pan (not aluminium) and with a very little water,
melt the sugar and bring to a simmer, add the cumquat quarters and syrup and simmer for approx 10 mins.
This will be the first time I have tried that old favourite, Brandied Cumquats, but I have enjoyed them in the past, it will be interesting to see if they are as good as I remember.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Pork Cutlet with Apple Slaw

After a day of mending, house cleaning, playing in the cubby with the youngest Grandie and getting over the sticker shock of taking the Shitzu to the vet, I really was looking for something simple for dinner, trouble was, no lunch also meant I wanted something to sink the fangs into.

Went for a straight copy of the Donna Hay 'Peppered Pork with Apple Slaw' from her latest book 'no time to cook' and another of her ideas of herbs in olive oil over slices of steamed potatoes.

What can I tell you, it was fast, it was easy, and beat the nickers off take-away on all fronts.

Peppered Pork with Apple Slaw on page 36, in the chapter aptly named fast flavour, go spoil yourself.

Beef Tagine with Honey, Prunes and Apricots

Another wonderful pressie I was lucky enough to get for my Birthday was a Tagine, now I have hankered over one of these for such a long time, gee, could it be at least a couple of years now??

Anyway, I was given this wonderful tagine, a gorgeous splash of red for my kitchen, and it goes rather well with that other showy splash of gorgeous red in the kitchen, my lovely new Kitchen Aid mixer.......ahh red, the new pink....., sorry, got a bit carried away there....

Today I found a recipe for a beef tagine, whew, the list of spices almost took my breath away, but they were all in the spice drawer so just got to work and assembled the most glorious flavour sensation.

While the tagine was cooking the kitchen smelt like you could just package it up with a ribbon and be happy forever, wonderful aromas.
As couscous isn't a fave in this neck of the woods, we decided on rice as the accompaniment.

There will be more tagines in our lives.

The recipe I loosely based our tagine on was 'Fragrant Moroccan Beef, Date, Honey and Prune Tagine' from Recipe Zaar. The recipe called for ras el hanout spice mix or their substitution, well on a whim I Googled 'ras el hanout', and while Recipe Zarr called for 4 spices this little lovely called for no fewer than 12, well.........ya gotta give that a go now don't you!


So here is the list of ingredients I used.
For the Ras el Hanout spice mix
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
1 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon ground white pepper
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander seed
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves

For the Tagine
500grams cubed beef, - I used round steak
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
1 large clove garlic, minced
1 carrot, peeled and cut into chunks
1 400 gram can diced tomatoes
6 pitted prunes
6 dried apricots - the recipe called for dates, but -... well you know the story
1 scant tablespoon honey
1 cup beef stock
2 rounded teaspoons of the ras el hanout spice mix
Assemble the ras el hanout spices, they will keep for a month in an airtight jar.
Heat the tagine base over a medium heat, add the olive oil and when heated add the beef cubes and turn to brown all over.
Add the onion and garlic, followed by the carrot chunks, stirring through the meat to pick up the lovely juices.
Add the spice mix, stirring all the while so that all those lovely spices coat everything and don't catch on the bottom of the tagine.
Pour stock into tagine, stirring again
Add the tomatoes, prunes, apricots and honey, stir well and cover with tagine lid
Lower heat and cook slowly for about 1 - 1 1/2 hours, If the beef was tougher the cooking time would have to be longer
The dish was lovely but the pics were not.
Mmm, yummy

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Parmesan Topped Chicken Patties with Lemon and Potato Wedges

Did a clean out and tidy up of the freezer yesterday morning, and a few things need to be used up, I will not be doing a lot of cooking over the next few weeks so time to move that stuff out of there, and of course the added bonus, saving on the butchers bill.

But what to do with a great lump of Chicken Mince....and why did I buy it anyway??, its not like it's a cheap alternative, oh well o.k., its not as expensive as steak, but it certainly isn't cheap.

With a little thought and a lot of Donna Hay inspiration this is what I came up with, Chicken Patties with a lovey buttery crisp Parmesan topping and baked lemon and potato wedges.

The inspiration for this dish can be found on P. 137 of the new Donna Hay book 'no time to cook', another winner and added to my collection for my birthday.

for 6 patties (or 3 servings) this is what I used

for the Lemony Wedges
3 potatoes, scrubbed and cut into large wedges
1 lemon, quartered
thyme leaves stripped from 2 stalks of thyme
salt and pepper
1 tablespoons olive oil

for the Chicken Patties
350 grams good quality chicken mince
1 small onion, finely minced
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley
1/4 cup fresh breadcrumbs
1/4 cup dried breadcrumbs
salt and pepper
1 teaspoon olive oil
3 - 4 tablespoons dry white wine or chicken stock
1 small clove garlic, roughly crushed with the flat of a knife and skin removed

for the Crunchy Topping
1/2 cup fresh breadcrumbs
1/4 cup finely grated parmesan
30 grams butter, melted
2 stalks of thyme leaves, stripped from stalk and finely chopped
cracked black pepper

This is how I did it
1 hour before mealtime Pre-heat oven to 180 deg Celsius
Cut potatoes and lemon into wedges and place in large bowl.
Pour over the olive oil, turning wedges well with a spoon or spatula to make sure they are completely covered.
Turn into a baking dish
Sprinkle over the thyme leaves, salt and pepper and roast in oven for 45 mins, turning once, until potatoes are soft and starting to brown
While potatoes are roasting, organise the topping and the patties.

In a small bowl, combine the fresh breadcrumbs, parmesan, thyme leaves, salt and pepper.
Place the 30 grams butter in a small saucepan and melt over low heat, turn off heat and leave to cool a little
Place chicken mince with the onion, garlic, parsley and both breadcrumbs with salt and pepper into a bowl, mix together thoroughly and form into 6 evenly sized patties, I used an egg ring to get even sizing

Dredge both sides of the patties with a little sifted plain flour
Add the cheesy crumb mixture to the melted butter and mix together making sure all crumbs are coated with butter When the wedges have been baking approx 40 mins, increase oven heat to 200 degrees Celsius.
Heat the teaspoon of olive oil in a heavy based fry pan over medium heat and quickly brown both sides of the chicken patties
Remove pan from heat
Place browned patties in the baking dish and layer cheesy crumb mix on top of patties
Return baking tray to oven to bake for a further 10 - 15 mins, or until the chicken is cooked through and the crumbs are golden and crispy. Do not over cook or the patties will be dry.
De-glaze the pan you used to fry the patties with the wine or stock, add the crushed garlic clove and simmer for a few minutes, making sure to scrape up the browning's, strain onto serving plates, top with patties and serve lemon and potatoe wedges on either side of the patties.
Serve with a Green Salad
The lemon wedges go a lovely soft caramelised pulp, and really boosts the flavours of the potatoes and chicken.

Friday, August 7, 2009

A Gordon Ramsay delicious dish

So why would I try another recipe from the net so soon after the zucchini cake? (more on that later, by the way). Just wanted to live dangerously I guess, oh, and I had these veal escalopes and was not fussed on doing the same ol' same ol', and this recipe certainly isn't that, lovely fresh ingredients, fab pic of the finished dish, and Gordon Ramsay isn't exactly known to be a slacker in the kitchen, just had to be a winning combo, and it was.

The original recipe and photo can be found on Lifestyle Food.com.au as 'Veal escalope with Caponata and parsley and lemon linguine'.
For the life of me I cannot get the link to copy/paste.

It's a bit of a 3 step procedure but is simply done, just needs a little time, and as this was only to serve 2 the ingredient amounts have been altered and as usual, I cut the amount of fats used.

I started off with the Lemon Linguine.
Serves 2

130 grams fresh linguine
150 mils chicken stock
2 teaspoons butter, chilled - recipe called for 125grams for 4 servings
grated zest and juice of 1/2 lemon
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
chopped Parsley............oops, just realised I forgot this.

Cook the linguine in a large saucepan of salted boiling water until just al-dente.

Drain and refresh under cold running water. Drain well and set aside in a covered dish.

Pour the stock into a small saucepan and heat until almost boiling.
Add the lemon zest, then whisk in the butter one teaspoon at a time, whisking vigorously, until the butter is well incorporated. Add lemon juice and season to taste. Put pan to one side until ready to serve.

Next, I crumbed the Veal, this could be done quite a bit before time if you were entertaining.
50grams natural breadcrumbs
25grams finely grated Parmesan
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 veal escalopes
25 grams seasoned plain flour
1 egg, beaten
1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil
basil leaves, shredded or torn
20grams toasted pine nutsGrate the Parmesan cheese, I use a Microplane zester which creates a light and airy pile of cheese that goes a long way.

Beat egg in shallow bowl, place seasoned flour on flat plate and on another plate mix half the breadcrumbs with half the cheese.

The recipe called for 'real' breadcrumbs, that threw me, in this day and age of the bizarre I couldn't stop wondering what unreal breadcrumbs might be..........rainbow coloured? but really, probably some fluffy thing made from a food process waste product, the recipe didn't say fresh so I used toasted crumbs that you buy at a Grocers.

Even weighing out half the breadcrumbs and Parmesan, it still looked to be quite a bit so I mixed them as needed on a plate, and that was a good thing as there was still quite a bit of each left over, perhaps 'British rose Veal escalopes are a lot larger'.
As the escalops were finished I laid them on the lid of a storage container, then covered them using the base as a lid, just love these plastics that come from the 'Cheapie Charlie' stores, some have been used in our house for almost 20years, they stack well in the fridge or in the pantry, the contents are readily seen and they are easily marked with a sharpie pen.

All set to pop into the fridge to rest while the Caponata is assembled. Ingredients needed for the Caponata,now the Darling isn't a fan of Aubergine, nor capers and although he loves olives, generally not in a cooked dish. Am I headed for trouble here?.........well there has to be an adventure in life every now and again and this is it for today.

2 baby aubergine, cut into chunks
1/2 onion, chopped
1 stalk celery, sliced
1/2 red capsicum, chopped
sea salt and ground pepper
2 large tomatoes, deseeded and chopped
1 clove garlic, peeled and minced
1 teaspoon caster sugar
3/4 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
50 grams green olives, pitted and sliced
20 grams capers, rinsed and drained

The recipe also called for quite a bit of olive oil which I found I didn't need/use. This did affect the look of the recipe, there was none of the yellow sauce that you see in the original recipe photo, but did it seriously affect the flavour?, I don't think so and I like to use less oil.


Using a fry pan that is large enough to take the escalopes in a single layer, toast the pine nuts in the dry pan over medium heat, there are enough oils in the pine nuts so that they do not need extra, watch carefully and as soon as browned, remove to a bowl and place to one side until ready to plate the meal.



Place the 1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil in the frying pan and heat over a medium heat until a cube of bread dropped into the oil immediately begins to sizzle and brown.


Lay escalopes into pan and brown well. Turn and brown the other side.
The secret to a nice crisp coating that doesn't pull away is not to disturb the escalopes until the Parmesan has had a chance to melt and become crisp, if you try to turn the escalopes too early the crumb mix will pull away and you will just have a mess.Remove escalopes to paper towel and drain, keep warm in very low oven.

To make the Caponata, increase heat under the pan that you have just used for the escalopes, in the oily pan, saute the aubergine, onion, celery and red capsicum with a little salt and pepper for approx. 3 - 5 minutes.
Add the tomato chunks, with the garlic, sugar, vinegar, olives and capers. Cook quickly for another 5 - 8 minutes, stirring occasionally until the aubergine is tender. Adjust seasoning to taste and keep to one side.

While the aubergine mixture is cooking, place the lemon, stock and butter mixture into a large pan and bring to the boil, lower heat and do not allow to boil away.
When Caponata is almost done, add the linguine to the buttery lemon stock and heat through, approx 1 minute, drain, reserving stock, and using either a fork or tongs, wind pasta onto a warm serving plate to form a nest.
If Caponata has become a little dry, add a tablespoon of the buttery stock that heated the pasta and stir through, spoon Caponata over the pasta, top with a veal escalope. Sprinkle with the toasted pine nuts and either tear or finely shred the basil leaves over the top and serve immediately.
These Basil leaves were very large, from an old plant, so shredding them just resulted in limp un-interesting shreds, and tearing them wasn't much better. This is just not a good time for Basil at the moment.
Oh and that Zucchini and Pineapple Cake, turned out a real treat, everyone loved it. Just goes to show.............don't be too quick to judge the green..

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Zucchini and Pineapple Slice

Decided to try a recipe that I found the other day, a very simple mix and pour cake using, strangely enough, grated zucchini and crushed pineapple.

It was to be a project for the youngest Grandie and I, but we ran out of time because he found that really, he does like shopping, just so long as it's in a kitchen supply store. Buying the cake pan was a done deal in 30 seconds, and the rest of the time?............well, suffice to say, he went home with a little bag full of goodies.

Before we go too much further, I have to say that I was pretty flat about this cake, and the story will unfold as you go along, but the end result is a nicely flavoured, moist cake, and the Darling, who saw it on the kitchen bench, uniced, scoffed a piece and pronounced it yummy, and then he saw the green..............oops, but he still put his hand up for a piece for dessert so it can't be all bad
The full recipe is at the end of the post.
Firstly, put the flour, sugar, coconut, salt and spices into a large mixing bowl, and using your whisk, give them a bit of a stir up to blend, forming a well in the centre.
Grate 300grams zucchini, unpeeled, about 4 medium zucchini, and this is where I started to get a bit concerned, unpeeled zucchini has lots of skin, yep, green flecks all through the pile, I wasn't sure that this was going to turn out well.
Checked the recipe, very definitely unpeeled, there was even a footnote, and the pic of the finished cake looked rather dark, sort of chocolate colour, so I progressed, maybe all that cinnamon would make the cake dark?

In another bowl mix the oil, eggs and vanilla together, - sorry forgot to get a pic of that step, still worrying about the zucchini.....green? in a cake?......

Then pour the oil/egg mixture into the well in the flour, add the grated zucchini, which was looking greener by the minute, and the drained can of crushed pineapple.
Stir to blend, do not over stir. That green is not disappearing!Pour into a lined 9" x 13" (23 cm x 33cm) Pan. As a quilter I'm still way back there in the feet and inches world, but I checked these measurements against my handy dandy ruler.
The mixture ready to go into the oven, lots of green showing here folks.
This is the finished cake, straight from the oven, errk, look at all that green, with closed eyes the kitchen smells delicious and I can't wait for the cake to cool enough to have a little, but really, I don't think the Darling is going to be a happy camper...........what to do....confess before I send him off with it for lunch or just stick lots of cream cheese frosting on it and hope he doesn't notice?

It's pretty hard not to notice green in your cake.
See all those grrr green bits?
But as you see at the beginning of the post, it all turned out o.k. in the end, if you don't look too closely that is...

Recipe: Zucchini and Pineapple Slice
1 1/2 cups self raising flour
1 cup castor sugar
3/4 cup shredded coconut
pinch of salt
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
freshly grated nutmeg to taste, I used about 1/2 teaspoon
1 teaspoon ground ginger
3 tablespoons Grapeseed or other oil
2 large eggs - (minimum 59gram eggs)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 440 gram can crushed pineapple, drained, reserving some of the syrup for the frosting.
2 cups grated zucchini - well, let me tell you, no more with the unpeeled - next time, definitely peeled!

Cream Cheese Frosting
250 gram softened cream cheese
1 teaspoon butter
1 cup icing sugar
1 1/2 tablespoons reserved pineapple juice

Beat cream cheese and butter until light and fluffy, lower mixer speed and stir in icing sugar, adding a little pineapple juice as needed, when sugar has been incorporated, increase speed and whip until fluffy again.
Spread on top of slice, thickly to hide the green, maybe even sprinkle with a little extra coconut.
I'm a tad disappointed.