Saturday, February 10, 2007
Spaghetti and Meatballs Jamie-style
Once you have the required sausages then its just a case of squeezing out the filling and shaping into meatballs - oh so easy! I probably got about 3 meatballs per sausage and these were then fried in a little olive oil and the put aside while I made the sauce.
The tomato sauce recipe came from Jamie's Dinners which I had got as a birthday present a couple of years ago but for a variety of reasons I never really looked through this book. I had seen the TV series and had every intention of using the book but as usual, life got in the way. Anyway I pulled the book out yesterday and used the Simple Tomato Sauce recipe, which is part of a chapter called Family Tree because as Jamie says, "once you've perfected one really good 'parent' recipe, you can make lots of 'offspring' recipes".
It really is a very simple recipe involving several garlic cloves which are sliced and lightly fried in some olive oil, and a whole red chili which is pierced - it gives a subtle heat to the sauce, some chopped basil stalks, and then several tins of Italian tomatoes. The tomatoes are left whole until the sauce has simmered for about 30mins and then they can be broken up. Apparently tomato seeds can be bitter, and that's the reason for not breaking them up earlier in the process.
I added the meatballs back into the sauce part way through the simmering process and while I was cooking the spaghetti - plenty of salt in the water but no oil. The reason being that salt adds or brings out the flavour whereas if oil was added the sauce would not cling to the pasta at all.
The chilli was removed and a handful of basil leaves (from the garden) were stirred through. Grated Parmigiano Reggiano was the only other accompaniment (mainly because of the dessert that was to follow!)
Verdict - the flavour of the Italian sausages was too mild so we will look elsewhere for more flavoursome sausages. Otherwise, it was an easy, tasty meal.
French-toasted chocolate and banana sandwiches
I bought the latest issue of Gourmet Traveller during the week and this particular recipe caught my eye - probbaly because of the chocolate component! Its in the section called Fare Exchange - recipes you're requested from Australia's leading chefs. This recipe comes from chef Geoff Lindsay from Pearl Restaurant, in Richmond, Vic. It may have been a brunch recipe but it makes for a good dessert too.
The original recipe is for 4 but there were only 2 of us eating last night so I reduced the quantities - not difficult in nay case. Also the recipe calls for 2cm-thick slices of white bread which you then make a deep incision in each slice along one side of the crusts, leaving 15mm around the other edges, to form a pocket. I used 2 thin slices of bread for each serve!
Recipe (adapted from Gourmet Traveller, Feb 2007 issue)
Serves 2
4 slices of white bread
100g dark chocolate buttons
1 banana, thinly sliced
1 Tbs butter
maple syrup, to serve
pouring cream, to serve
French toast batter:
2 eggs
125ml milk
1/4 cup caster sugar
40ml pouring cream
1 tsp vanilla extract
ground cinnamon
pinch nutmeg
1. For French toast batter: combine all ingredients in a large bowl and whisk to combine, set aside.
2. On 2 slices of bread, layer sliced banana and chocolate buttons, leaving about 15mm clear around each side. Top with other slice of bread and press down firmly. Soak sandwiches in batter for 2mins each side.
3. Preheat oven to 180*c. heat half the butter in a frying pan over medium heat and cook each sandwich for 2mins each side or until golden, then place on an oven tray. Repeat with remaining sandwich. Transfer to oven and bake for 8-10mins or until puffed and golden. To serve, cut sandwiches in half diagonally, arrange on plates, drizzle with maple syrup and serve with cream.
Verdict - great! It was a little rich so maybe milk chocolate buttons may be better but otherwise, it was great comfort food!
Saturday, February 3, 2007
Banana and Blueberry Stuffed French Toast
Recipe adapted for 1 serve:
2 egg whites
30ml skim or low-fat milk
1 tsp natural vanilla extract
2 slices good quality wholegrain sourdough fruit bread (ok I didn't have this so I used Burgen soy-lin bread instead)
1 Tbs low-fat cottage or ricotta cheese
1 small banana
ground cinnamon
60g blueberries
Combine the egg whites, milk and vanilla in a bowl. Dip both sides of the bread in the egg mixture for a few seconds. Transfer the bread to a hot non-stick frying pan sprayed with a little vegetable oil. Cook over medium heat until golden and crisp on both sides.
Place one slice of the French toast on a plate and top with cottage (or ricotta) cheese, banana, cinnamon and blueberries. I actually combined everything before topping the toast. Sandwich with the other slice, and eat, and enjoy. If I'd had thought of it at the time I would've drizzled over some sugar-free maple syrup.
The 80/20 diet - works for me!
The marinated roast pork with bok choy comes from the 80/20 Diet recipe book by Teresa Cutter. The book might promise a better body in 12 weeks but it doesn't mean that you will be surviving on rabbit food or cardboard for that time. Teresa Cutter, "the healthy chef" is one of Australia's leading authorities on healthy cooking. She is a qualified chef and fitness trainer, and has combined her knowledge of food, diet and exercise to specialise in developing healthy recipes for fat loss and total wellbeing.
The philosophy of the 80/20 diet is simple. Eat well 80% of the time, and 20% of the time you can enjoy a little indulgence. The book contains more than 130 recipes for simple, nutritious dishes that have been designed for people who love food, who love to eat and who have made a conscious decision to maximise their health and wellbeing.
I made the marinade for the lean pork tenderloin last night - a mixture of sweet soy sauce (kecap manis), crushed garlic cloves, grated fresh ginger, mirin and brown sugar. The pork was then marinaded overnight and for most of today. The pork was then put in a baking tray in a 200*c oven and roasted for about half an hour, occasionally basting it with the remaining marinade.
In the meantime I prepared the bok choy and then decided to also add snowpeas and mushrooms because DH is not a green vegie fan. I thought if I added some other vegies it might hold a bit more appeal! Also, I decided to prepare a salad of mesclun, sliced peach and yellow grape tomatoes....just in case. Once the pork was cooked, I left it to rest and quickly stirfried the vegies in a mixture of chicken stock, crushed garlic and a teensy drop of sesame oil.
It was all very simple and tasted great. DH did have some of the stirfried greens and salad so that was a bonus. We also had some woodfired Italian bread with it that we had bought at the markets this morning.
Now for the 20% part of the diet - the indulgence!
The recipe for Molten Chocolate Cakes comes from Donna Hay's latest book, Instant Entertaining. According to the blurb, entertaining doesn't have to be stressful. Which is why Donna Hay has put together this collection of simple menus for truly instant entertaining. So no matter what the occasion, entertaining has just become a whole lot easier.
I love chocolate - especially dark chocolate. In fact I like the 85% dark chocolate which not too many people seem to like, which is great because it means I don't have to share! When we were up on the Gold Coast in January I discovered a chocolate shop, Choclicious, which sold many, many different types of chocolates. I bought a block of Valrhona Guanaja dark bitter chocolate 70% cocoa with the intention of using it in a recipe, though at the time I had no idea what recipe. The chocolate is described as having floral notes, intense flavour and an exceptionally long finish, all typical of the cocoa beans of South America.
When I was flicking through the Donna Hay book the other day I came across this recipe and being the chocolate lover that I am, I had to try it. Its a fairly easy recipe - mixing together plain flour, icing sugar, almond meal, beaten eggwhites, melted butter and melted dark chocolate. I wasn't quite sure what she meant by beaten egg whites though - was I supposed to use electric beaters and beat until soft peaks form, or just use a fork and beat together? I decided to use the beaters and the cakes turned out so....?
The mixture, mixed well to combine, was to be spooned into 4 x 1/2 cup lightly greased ovenproof dishes. I don't have these so decided to use a muffin tray. So half the mixture was spooned into 4 muffin holes then 10g of dark chocolate was placed on this mixture, before topping with the remaining mixture. They were cooked in a 150*c oven for about 20mins and then served with fresh raspberries and thick cream - mmmmm!
The verdict? They are very rich. DH couldn't eat all of his but then he doesn't have a really sweet tooth or he's not obsessive about chocolate the way I am! However I have to admit that one cake was plenty. Also the fresh raspberries go really well with chocolate and the cream just topped it off perfectly.
Sunday, January 28, 2007
Australia Day
The lamb racks (6 x 3-cutlet Frenched lamb racks) had to be marinaded overnight in a mixture of char siu sauce, honey and lime juice. The following day the lamb was cooked for 1-2mins each side to brown before putting in a roasting pan, pouring over the rest of the marinade and roast for about 20mins (15mins for medium-rare; I prefer my meat cooked a little more inside). After resting the meat for 5mins, you then slice into cutlets and serve with the caramel rice and pan juices (not that I had a lot of pan juices left - it tended to caramelise).
For the Caramel rice, I boiled the jasmine rice the night before. However, after reading Kitchen basics by Matthew Evans (restaurant reviewer for the Sydney Morning Herald and one-time chef, trainer and recipe writer), I shouldn't be using the 'bodgie' method of boiling rice in loads of water, but instead I should be steaming it. In fact he recommends owning a rice cooker.
The following day, and while the lamb cutlets were roasting, I fried a mixture of 2 beaten eggs in a hot wok, then removed and chopped roughly and set aside. I added some more oil, ginger, garlic and brown sugar and stir fried for 1 minute until it had caramelised. 200g of sliced shitake mushrooms were added and stir fried for another minute before adding the rice and soy sauce. Finally I added back the chopped egg and some sliced spring onions (these were sliced on the diagonal).
It was finger licking good, literally, as it was easier to pick up the cutlets with your fingers rather than battle with a knife and fork.
Pavlova with Yoghurt Cream and Berries (Bill Granger - Every day)
Was I asking for trouble by attempting a pavlova? I decided to risk it anyway! Pavlovas are actually pretty straightforward to make - its the beating together of the egg whites and sugar that posed the biggest problem for me. I only possess handheld beaters and by the time I was incorporating the last of the castor sugar (a tablespoon at a time exhorts Bill) the mixture had grown immensely. In fact I had to transfer the mixture from the original bowl to a larger one and i still had problems. I knew that the sugar hadn't been entirely beaten in to the mixture and this shows in the final results with some crystallisation and 'bleeding'.
It cooked 80mins in a fairly cool oven and then left for another hour or so in the oven with the door left ajar. It looked like a pavlova! However it was coming apart in places. The cream was whipped and then 1/2 cup of natural yoghurt was folded through - this gives the cream some 'tang'. I wasn't sure how this would go and if anyone would pick it up (no-one else in the house professes to like yoghurt) but it worked and no, no-one noticed! I think it works well with the sweetness of the pavlova. Bill only uses strawberries in his recipe but i decided to diversify and added strawberries, blackberries and blueberries. It was delicious!
Monday, January 22, 2007
Cooking with Bill.....
When I decided on the recipes the other day we were going through a spell of hot weather so I was looking for light meals, suitable for hot days. So nothing heavy or stodgy. These spicy chicken thighs with cucumber and cashew salad seemed to fit the bill perfectly (pardon the pun!). (However, by Sunday afternoon the the cool change had come through and so was quite cool by diner time!) Only problem was that DH does not like cucumbers. No worries, I would cut back on the cucumbers, and add some red capsicum and carrot. Hopefully that would meet with approval. I also used my mandolin slicer for the first time to slice the cucumber and carrot thinly - it worked a treat once I figured out what piece slotted where.
As for dessert, I decided something quick and simple was the go (after last week's marathon effort). I love the range of fruit available through Summer and so decided on Fresh Fruit Salad with Lemon Grass Syrup. It was perfect!
So no major cooking dramas - it was all straightforward. I took leftovers to work for lunch the next day and it tasted just as great.
The next thing to accomplish is to take photos of the meals after I've cooked them! I keep forgetting! I look at other food blogs and see their amazing photos and it really does make a difference. Personally I like to see photos of the food because that is what inspires me to try a particular recipe. Next time.......
Spicy Chicken Thighs with Cucumber and Cashew Salad
Serves 4
3 Tbs fish sauce
freshly ground black pepper
3 garlic cloves, crushed
2 lge red chillies, finely minced
2 tsp sugar
8 boneless skinless chicken thighs
2 Tbs vegetable oil (I only used 1 Tbs)
Cucumber and Cashew Salad
3 Tbs lime juice (I used 2 limes)
3 Tbs castor sugar
200g vermicelli noodles (I think I used a 125g packet)
2 cucumbers, halved and thinly sliced (I used 1 Lebanese cucumber)
small handful fresh mint leaves (only mint I have is chocolate mint and didn't feel that would be suitable so skipped this)
4 spring onions, thinly sliced
2 Tbs cashew nuts, crushed
Whisk the fish sauce, pepper, garlic, chillies and sugar in a bowl. Put the chicken in a separate bowl and pour over half the marinade. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 20mins (keep the rest of the marinade to one side).
Heat the oil in a large frying pan over medium-highheat. Add the chicken, in two batches, and cook for 3mins on each side, or until it is cooked through. (Bill says - Sometimes I put another frying pan on top of the chicken and weigh it down with a couple of tins to make the chicken really crisp. [I tried this - it works!])
While the chicken is cooking, add the lime juice and sugar to the marinade that you set aside. Stir until the sugar has dissolved to make a dressing.
Pour boiling water over the vermicelli and leave for a minute or so until soft. Drainunder cold water, placein a large bowl and add the cucumber, mint, spring onions and cashews (or in my case, cucumber, capsicum, carrot and cashews). Add the dressing, toss well and serve with sliced chicken.
This was followed by:
Fresh Fruit Plate with Lemon Grass Syrup
Serves 4
Juice of 1 orange, strained
Juice of 1 lemon, strained
Juice of 1 lime, strained
160g castor sugar
2lemon grass stems, lightly crushed and cutinto 5cmm (2inch) lengths
Selection of seasonal fruit (I used mango, rockmelon, watermelon, honeydew melon, lychees, kiwi fruit and nectarine)
Put the fruit juices, sugar and lemon grass in a saucepan over medium heat and stir to dissolve the sugar. Increase the heat to high and bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and leave to simmer for 10mins, or until slightly reduced and syrupy. Strain and leave to cool.
Choose a selection of fruit that is in season and at its best. Cut it up, arrange on a serving platter and drizzle with the lemon grass syrup.
And finally.......We bought some peaches the other day and the following recipe from the latest issue of delicious caught my eye:
Grilled Brown Sugar Peaches with Orange Blosson Yoghurt (Bill Granger recipe)
Serves 6
1/4 firmly packed cup (50g) brown sugar
1tsp ground cinnamon
6 peaches, halved, stones removed
1 cup (280g) thick Greek-style yoghurt
2 Tbs icing sugar, sifted
1-2tsp orange blossom water* (to taste)
small basil leaves, to garnish
Preheat a lightly greased barbecue chargrill plate or chargrill pan on medium-high heat. Mix brown sugar and cinnamon and sprinkle the cut side of each peach with 1 tsp of the mixture.
Combine yoghurt, icing sugar and orange blossom water. Set aside.
Grill peaches, cut-side down for 1-2mins until golden and caramelised. Serve peaches with yoghurt and garnish with basil.
*From gourmet food shops and selected supermarkets.
Sunday, January 21, 2007
White Chocolate-Espresso Parfait Sandwiches
Now this is not a recipe for when you are feeling spontaneous and feel like knocking up something for dinner that night. Oh noooooo.....this recipes requires you to start 2 days ahead. The white chocolate-espresso filling is made first and then refrigerated before being whipped the following day. The next day requires making the hazelnut meringue and also the espresso caramel. Then the dessert is constructed before freezing overnight.
A couple of things didn't go to plan, as usual, when making this recipe. The major hitch was the meringue - I didn't cook it for long enough. While it looked crisp on the top, when I removed it from the baking tray it was still soft underneath and collapsed. So rather the meringue forming 2 neat sandwiches enclosing the filling, mine was a patchwork affair of broken meringue!
The other hitch was the caramel. The recipe said to heat the mixture until it became a dark caramel. I'm sorry but I could've cooked it the entire day and it still wasn't going to change colour for me. The best I could do was a pale golden colour; certainly not the dark caramel that was expected. However, it still tasted ok and nobody noticed!
This is a fiddly recipe and I was sceptical of how it would turn out and taste, but in the end everyone enjoyed it. I would probably make it again for a special occasion.
White Chocolate-Espresso Parfait Sandwiches (from Australian Gourmet, Jan 07 issue)
*You'll need to begin this recipe 2 days ahead
Serves 8
600ml pouring cream
25ml espresso coffee
3 pieces lemon peel
330g white chocolate, coarsely chopped
Hazelnut meringue
4 eggwhites
110g (1/2cup) castor sugar
110g (2/3cup) icing sugar, sieved
50g ground hazelnuts
20g Dutch-process cocoa, sieved
Espresso Caramel
150g castor sugar
75g liquid glucose
1Tbs espresso coffee
40g butter, coarsely chopped
1. Combine cream, coffee and peel in a saucepan, bring just to the boil over medium-high heat, strain over chocolate in a bowl and whisk until smooth. Cool, whisking occasionally so chocolate doesn't separate from cream, to room temperature, then refrigerate overnight. The next day, whisk chocolate mixture until soft peaks form.
2. For meringues, preheat oven to 100*c. Using an electric mixer, whisk eggwhites and a pinch of salt until soft peaks form. With motor running, gradually add castor sugar; whisk until glossy. Using a metal spoon, fold in icing sugar, hazelnut and cocoa. Trace 2 rectangles using a 20cm x 30cm cake pan as a template onto baking paper-lined oven trays. Spread meringue evenly onto rectangles, bake for 40mins or until crisp. Cool on trays.
3. For caramel, combine sugar, glucose and 1/4cup water in a small saucepan and stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Increase heat to medium-high and cook for 5-7mins or until dark caramel. Remove from heat, add 1/4cup water and espresso, swirl to combine. Add butter, swirl to incorporate, then cool.
4. Place a meringue rectangle, trimming edges to fit, into a 20cm x 30cm baking paper-lined cake pan. Drizzle with half the espresso caramel, top with chocolate mixture and drizzle with remaining espresso caramel. Top with remaining meringue and freeze overnight. Remove, cut into squares using a wet sharp knife and serve immediately.
Monday, January 1, 2007
Ham on the menu again
My first cooking attempt for 2007 and I'm still not sure about this one - I didn't have enough of some ingredients and kept adding other ingredients. No-one complained and everyone ate it, even son #3 who had his later because he was asleep at dinner time (after-effects of new year's eve celebrations). But I'm still not sure about it.....
The original recipe:
Ham, carrot and snake bean stir-fry (Donna Hay, Dec 06 magazine)
Serves 4
2 Tbs vegetable oil
2 cloves garlic, crushed (I used minced garlic)
2 tsp finely grated ginger (I used minced garlic)
300g snake beans, trimmed and blanched (Have you seen the price of snake beans?! I used baby beans but didn't have enough)
16 baby carrots, peeled and blanched (the baby carrots were rather large so I cut them into thirds)
400g sliced leg ham, chopped
1 cup basil leaves
1/2 cup roasted cashews
1/4 cup oyster sauce
2/3 cup chicken stock
sea salt and cracked black pepper
4 spring onions, sliced
I also added:
a handful of sliced mushrooms
handful snow peas
Heat a large wok over high heat. Add the oil, garlic and ginger and cook for 30secs or until the garlic is fragrant. Add the beans, carrots and ham (and mushrooms, snowpeas) and cook for a further 3-4mins. Add the basil, cashews, oyster sauce, stock, salt and pepper and cook for another 2-3mins. Top with the spring onion.
This is a photo of my favourite salad and it is soooo easy to make.
1/3pkt Woolworths 4 seasons coleslaw mix
100g marinaded cooked chicken (I use Honey, soy and garlic marinade)
25 macadamias
20g crispy noodles
1 Tbs Free Honey soy salad dressing
1 Tbs Free coleslaw dressing
Mix it all together and eat! I love it.