Super Easy Soda Bread Recipe

April 4th, 2008

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I made this bread to go with an amazing fish stew that my friend Kat and I made. We made it out of desperation really, as it was late on a Sunday and there was nowhere decent to buy bread. Anyway, the point of the story is that this took less than a hour from start to the picture below and its delicious! I don’t normally go in for bread making, I can leave it to the experts, but this is easy peasy, try it!

Also, I love the fact that it doesn’t contain yeast, for health reasons and the fact that we made this out of ingredients we already had!

Wholemeal Soda Bread

  • 400ml buttermilk (or 400ml milk with a squeeze of lemon juice left to sour for 5mins)
  • 350g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
  • 175g wholemeal flour,
  • 50g butter , straight from the fridge, diced
  • 1 tsp caster sugar
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 2 tsp bicarbonate of soda

Rub the cubes of butter into the flour until it looks like breadcrumbs. Add the rest of the dry ingredients and mix. Add the nearly all the milk and mix carefully until you form a slightly sticky dough. Add the rest of the liquid or more flour if you need to. Flour a surface, tip the dough out and shape into a rough round. Cut a cross into the top of the dough, brush with oil, sprinkle with sea salt and bake at 180°C for 25-30mins until golden. To test if its done, tap the bottom and it should sound hollow. Serve with plenty of butter dipped into homemade soup.

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Leeky Chessy Pasta

April 3rd, 2008

Yes, this is the title, I can think of none better. This is based very loosely on a recipe from Cranks Bible, my favourite vegetarian cook book ever. Although, really, it is borne out of my desire to eat cheese and pasta most days…


Start by finely slicing some leeks and cooking really gently in butter and a little oil until soft and sweet. Meanwhile cook your pasta until al dente. Add some finely chopped garlic to the leeks a sprinkling of bouillon powder and a handful of frozen peas with enough water to just cover the peas, simmer for a few minutes until the water has reduced and the peas are soft. Then, depending on how decadent you’re feeling, stir in either a pot of creme fraiche or mascarpone, mascarpone being the richer, (much) fattier version of the two. Finish with a squeeze of lemon juice, ½tsp dijon mustard and seasoning to taste. Stir in the pasta with some grated cheese and enjoy sans guilt, think of all those vegetables!

Whilst making the version pictured and enjoying a mid-week bottle of pinot, I thought it would be nice to add some to the peas. I’m still undecided, it was nice, but I’m not sure whether I add added too much wine, didn’t boil off enough alcohol or it just didn’t work. Hmmm…

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Heart Shaped Cakes

March 30th, 2008

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I thought it would be worth mentioning the virtues of Silicone bakeware. They’re completely non-stick so you don’t need to faff with lining cake tins, although I do grease mine with a little sunflower oil to make sure the cakes come out really cleanly. The flexible nature also means you can bake cakes in lots of different shapes (my current favourite being hearts, see below) and they last for ages!

Note: the cakes are actually the yoghurt cake in another guise…

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Macaroni Cheese

March 28th, 2008

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Macaroni Cheese is without doubt, my all time favourite food. By macaroni cheese, I only mean my mum’s version, unadulterated with anything but unhealthy amounts of cheese. What could be better? Its like a hug in a bowl. As with all the best food, its steeped in memory for me, we always have macaroni cheese as part of a roast dinner (its a West Indian thing), believe me, it works! Try it with roast chicken and gravy – mmm….

Since leaving home, I’ve tried many times to recreate this myself, and whilst they were good, they were never the same. But I think I finally cracked it last night. Basically, you need to use more cheese than I feel comfortable using, and there needs to be a lot of thick cheesy sauce to macaroni. If you’re going to do it, you need to do it properly I say!

My mum always makes her white sauce in the microwave and I can testify it does work really well, I do however, usually do it in a pan. Recently, I’ve got particularly lazy and even use cold milk when making a white sauce, as long as you whisk it in slowly, its fine!

In an attempt to feel more virtuous (and not end up feeling sick) I had mine with a mustardy pea, rocket and tomato salad(trying this mustard dressing), although I eat plenty more out of the dish afterwards, but still had enough for my lunch the next day.

What follows is (a version of) my mum’s recipe…

Macaroni Cheese
serves 2

30g butter
30g flour
300ml (½ pint) milk
175g mature cheddar
½ tsp english mustard
200g macaroni

Cook the macaroni in plenty of boiling salted water until al dente. Melt the butter in a pan, whisk in the flour and cook for a few minutes more. Take off the heat, whisk the milk in the slowly to avoid lumps. Return to the heat and cook slowly until the sauce thickens (it will coat the back of a spoon). I usually wait until it just starts to bubble. Take off the heat, season well and add the mustard and cheese, wait a few minutes for the cheese to melt and mix with the macaroni. Bake at 200°C for about 30mins or until bubbling and golden.

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Piece of Plenty – Brown Rice Salad

March 27th, 2008

I got this recipe whilst working as a cook at Piece of Plenty, a small artisan food business selling at Barnes Farmers’ market and Alexandra Farmers’ Market. This is one of the most popular salads on the stall and its easy to see why, its delicious! The dressing is what really makes it, thick soy sauce and olive oil coat the rice in a syrupy dressing, with lemon juice and ginger to lift it. Plus, what with the brown rice, veggies, cashew nuts, ginger and lemon juice, this is positively virtuous eating, I often took a box of this home whilst I was working there…

I am a bit of a garlic fiend, but I made a version of this with 1 clove of chopped garlic and 1 chopped red chilli, which I think were welcome additions, especially the extra heat of the chilli.

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Serves 2-3
For the salad

  • 2 cups of brown rice cooked until soft
  • 4 or 5 peppers, diced finely
  • 1 small bunch spring onions, sliced finely
  • <100g cashews nuts, toasted

For the dressing

  • 100ml extra virgin olive oil
  • juice 1 lemon (approx 50ml)
  • 50ml dark soy sauce
  • 1tsp grated ginger

Place all the dressing ingredients in a clean jam jar and mix well. You can make up large quantities of this and it will keep happily for a few weeks
Mix together the salad ingredients, pour over enough dressing to coat and enjoy!Note: when cooking drown rice, I like to use twice as much water as rice, bring it to the boil, cover and leave to simmer until the water is absorbed and the rice is soft, top up if necessary. I find brown rice does actually take at least 30mins to cook, being the impatient cook that I am, I often undercook it, which is fine, you get a nuttier grain, but its a bit heavy on the old digestion…

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Yoghurt Cake

March 26th, 2008

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This is possibly the easiest recipe for a cake ever, and perhaps my favourite cake. The idea is you use a small carton of yoghurt to flavour the cake and then use the empty carton to measure the rest of the ingredients. Genius! no scales, no cups. Using oil and yoghurt also means that the cake in wonderfully moist and lasts for days, although what cake ever last for days?

Endlessly adaptable, you can experiment with different yoghurt flavours or maybe add a handful of chopped nuts or fruit. Also, as this recipe is so easy to make, its perfect to make with children.

Ingredients
1 x 150g pot black cherry yoghurt
1 pot (about 150ml) sunflower oil
1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
2 pots (about 200g) caster sugar
2 pots (about 150g) self-raising flour
1 pot (about 100g) ground almnods
3 free-range eggs

  • Preheat the oven to 180C/Gas 4. Grease and line a loaf tin.
  • Whisk the yogurt, oil, vanilla, and sugar together in a bowl until smooth.
  • Whisk in the eggs one at a time.
  • Fold in the flour and ground almonds, then spoon the mixture into the loaf tin.
  • Bake in the oven for 25 to 30 minutes, or until the cake rises and feels springy in the centre.
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The Perfect Boiled Egg

March 10th, 2008

Soft boiled eggs and soldiers are one of those things that you rediscover every so often and wonder why you don’t eat them more often. For me, they evoke memories of childhood, I used to have one every day for breakfast, a tradition now continued by my mum with my nephew, who only ever eats Grandma’s ‘chucky eggs’.

With something this simple, quality of ingredients is best, with the egg being the obvious star, try to use the best quality you can (don’t even bother with battery eggs). Use good quality bread, real butter, and as much salt as you dare.

This isn’t actually my breakfast, it my best friend Rose’s, the Queen of boiled eggs. She uses the Delia recipe. Delia can always be relied upon for these kind of recipes, there are about 2 pages dedicated to boiling an egg in ‘How to Cook’. This gist is to use fresh eggs, preferably not cold from the fridge as they’re more likely to crack and to carefully place the egg in the pan using a spoon.

For perfect soft boiled eggs (thanks to Delia) : Carefully place your eggs into a small pan of simmering water using a tablespoon, allow to simmer for 1minute. Now remove from the heat and cover for 6min 30s to give a perfect soft boiled egg. Toast your bread whilst the eggs are sitting. Having tried, it doesn’t really work trying to do this without an accurate time keeping device…

Ps: notice the perfectly topped boiled egg in the picture? No boiled egg enthusiast should be without an egg topper.

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