Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 January 2017

Roast partridge & barley broth

 

Introduction 
To use more of the game we got over Christmas, I found another recipe in my Jamie Oliver book. Again I have modified it based on the ingredients we had in and what we like. I think this was a delicious alternative to a standard Sunday roast and would work just as well with a whole chicken or a few thighs and legs. 

Ingredients 
100g pearl barley 
 
1 onion
2 stalks of celery
1 clove garlic
 
1 carrot
1 parsnip
4 rashers streaky bacon
1 tin sweetcorn 
Handful mangetout 
2 partridges 
 
Chicken stock
I had some home made frozen but a stock cube & water would be fine
1 lemon
1 tbsp mixed herbs

Method
  • Add the barley to boiling salted water and simmer for 50 mins 
  • Meanwhile, prepare the veg. Finely chop the onion, celery & garlic into a bowl
  • In another dice the parsnip & carrot. 
  • Chop the bacon & add half to the bowl with the carrot & parsnip.
  • When the barley is soft, drain and put to one side. 
  • Add some oil to a pan and gently fry the onion, celery and garlic for a good 8 mins or until soft. 
  • Next mix in the carrot, parsnip & bacon. Stir fry until the bacon is cooked.  
  • Mix in the barley & add the stock. There should be enough liquid so you have a fairly thick soup. Turn the heat down & simmer. You can add a touch more water if it gets too thick.  
  • For the partridges I have never butchered one before. If you can separate the wings and breasts, do it. I kind of roughly did an ok job.  
  • Place in a roasting dish, cover with the mixed herbs and season. 
  • Quarter the lemon and give a little squeeze. Leave the lemon segments in the roasting dish 
  • Add the rest of the chopped bacon and a splash of water or stock. 
  • Roast at 150 degrees C for about an hour
  • Just as the birds are done, mix the sweetcorn & mangetout into the barley. 
  • Serve with some nice crusty bread
Enjoy 😉

Monday, 2 January 2017

Game Ragù

 

Introduction 

For Christmas, we got a selection of game including a 300g pack of diced mixed game. Looking for something to use this I came across an interesting ragù recipe in one of my Jamie Oliver books. We love Spaghetti Bolognese and I have already done a rich pasta sauce here. With some slight modifications, this is what I made:

Ingredients 
1 onion
3 cloves garlic
1 stick celery
1 large carrot
1 large parsnip 
All the above should be chopped as finely as you can. 
1 tsp thyme
1 tsp basil
1 tsp oregano 
1 tbsp tomato purée
1 tin chopped tomatoes 
1 glass of wine
Jamie's recipe suggests white wine makes a lighter sauce, I used red since we had no white
About half a pint of Chicken stock
300g mixed game
I also reckon that lamb or beef would also work
2 tsp balsamic vinegar 
Fresh chopped parsley 
Orange zest
Salt, pepper, Parmesan to taste
Pasta of your choosing 

Method
  • Heat some oil in an oven proof pan
  • Add the onion, garlic, celery, carrot & parsnip. Fry gently for 8-10 mins
  • Stir in the dried herbs and tomato purée and cook for a further 5-8 mins. 
  • Add the wine, tinned tomatoes, stock, salt, pepper & vinegar and bring to a gentle boil. 
  • Now add the game meat and simmer for at least 2 hrs with the lid off. The meat should be falling apart. If the sauce gets too dry, add a touch more water but keep the sauce thick
  • Cook your fave pasta as per instructions. 
  • Just before serving, mix in a handful each of fresh chopped parsley and Parmesan. Grate zest from about half an orange in. This adds a fantastic, unexpected flavour. 
  • Garnish with more parsley, Parmesan & black pepper. 
Enjoy 😉

Sunday, 15 February 2015

Scouse



Introduction
Scouse.

Staple of Liverpool and surrounding areas. Great way of cooking cheap cuts of meat and using leftover vegetables. Great for tricking children into eating hidden veg. Filling and warming in winter, yet make it thinner and it can be a delightful summer dish too.

Every place has their own version of Scouse. The Welsh have Cawl, there's Irish Stew, Lancashire Hotpot all made to similar (yet different) recipes. Within Merseyside, everyone claims their scouse is the best. Every family will have their own recipe with slight differences
This is mine...


Ingredients (serves 4 for two days)
200g or so of lamb neck
200g or so of a cheap cut of beef such as shin
half a bury black pudding
1 large onion
1 stick celery
2 or 3 carrots
200g or so of spuds. Whatever your fancy
Whatever other leftover veg you have. I had:
half a celeriac
4 or 5 runner beans
1 tbsp plain flour
1 tbsp paprika
2 tsp thyme
3 bay leaves
1 tbsp worcester sauce
2 tbsp of tomato puree
1 tsp marmite
1 tsp cranberry jelly


Method

For this, I've used my slow cooker where you just bung everything in, mix up and let sit for 5 to 6 hours, however you can easily do this in the oven or on the hob by putting the ingredients in the order shown and cooking for a few mins before moving on to the next

  • Chop the onion, celery and carrot and put in the pan

  • Mix the flour, paprika, thyme, some salt and pepper with the chopped meat. Add to the pan

  • Add chopped leftover veg until the cooker/oven pan is almost full

  • Finish the top with sliced taters. I like mine to go soft and mushy but still retain shape so about half centimetre slices will do this.  Here I used baby new potatoes but use which ever you prefer

  • Add the bay leaves and the liquid ingredients. Now mix well.
  • If you have some, a good slug of red wine or dark beer will only make this nicer

  • Slow cook for about 5 hours. In the oven you should cook at no higher than 140º for at least 4 hours. On the hob, a low heat for at least 2 hours will probably do
  • Serve with some nice crust bread and pickled cabbage (never NEVER beetroot – it's just wrong)

Enjoy :-)


Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Lamb Tagine



Introduction

Looking at the veg we got in the last delivery, there were a few interesting things we thought we'd like to do. I've always wanted a proper tagine, but there was no reason why we still couldn't make one. A recent addition to the cookerybookshelf was the Hairy Dieters which contained an interesting and easy looking Moroccan tagine. Adapting it slightly based on our ingredients gives us the following, delicious recipe.

Ingredients

500g or so of lamb
1 medium onion
1 stick celery
1 chilli
3 cloves garlic
1 aubergine
1 carrot
5 mini peppers (1 normal pepper would also work)
500g tin of tomatoes
about 10 sundried tomatoes – the recipe calls for dried apricots but the kids are not a fan so I've substituted toms instead
1 tin chickpeas
1 tsp cumin
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp coriander




Method

  • Mix the the cumin, coriander and cinnamon together and rub into the chopped lamb pieces. Put aside

  • In an ovenproof pan, heat some olive oil and stir in the chopped onion, celery, garlic and chilli. Cook on a medium heat until it all softens slightly
  • Now stir in the meat an cook until browned

  • Stir in the chopped aubergine and carrot and fry for a minute or two
  • Mix in the tin of tomatoes and fill the tin with water twice and add to the mix.
  • Stir in the chickpeas and bring to a simmer
  • Put in a preheated oven. I used about 160 degrees and cooked for about two hours – you know me, long and slow ;-)
  • About 10 mins before serving, add the chopped sundried toms and the chopped peppers
  • Garnish with fresh coriander

Enjoy :-)



Saturday, 8 November 2014

Bacon Risotto




Introduction
Risotto is a lovely way to use up leftover veg in a healthy, filling meal. I love the combination of bacon chilli and garlic thrown in with a nice pile of whatever veg we have. More importantly, the kids also love this. Mrs Thinchef dose a very different but equally delicious risotto which I'll post one day but here is mine

Ingredients


half a large butternut squash – carrot, pumpkin or other root veg work just as well
1 courgette
1 stick celery
1 leek
2 cloves garlic
Good bunch of a strong green leaves – I used perpetual spinach

3 espresso cups of shortgrain rice
Veg stock – I used a cube with hot water, can also put a good slug of white wine
About 8 slices of streaky bacon

1 chilli if you are feeling frisky
2 tsp oregano



Method

  • Heat some olive oil and a good spoonful of butter in a wide flat bottomed pan
  • Mix in chopped leek, celery, & garlic. Keep stirring until it softens, try not to let the garlic burn. Keep the heat low if you need to

  • When the mix is translucent, add the chopped bacon. Continue to stir until the bacon is cooked.
  • Add the chopped squash and courgette. Stir for a few mins while you boil the kettle (or heat your stock)

  • Now add the rice and mix well
  • Add the stock cube and about half a cupful of boiling water. Stir well.
  • As the water is absorbed, keep adding more slowly and mixing well

  • When the rice is cooked just right, the risotto will be nice and creamy. Add the chopped greens and stir in.
  • If you want it a bit more creamy, as a touch of cream or natural yoghurt

  • Serve with a nice bit of garlic bread and balsamic vinegar

Enjoy :-)



Friday, 24 October 2014

Green Lentil Curry



Introduction
One of the reasons I haven't posted a new recipe for a while, is that I've been using the blog as intended. I've been making the stuff I've already written about. So when I made a new lentil curry, I wondered if it was worth adding.

I think it is different in that this is a fairly quick recipe, not one of my usual slow cooked meals. As for the ingredients, they were pretty much what we had leftover the day before a new veg delivery.

Ingredients
1 pound or so of meat. I used diced pork but chicken would work well.
Green lentils – about 4 espresso cups worth

Veg
1 turnip
2 courgettes
2 onions
1 large carrot
1 stick celery


Spices
About 2” fresh ginger
4 cloves garlic
1tsp mustard seeds
½ tsp fennel seeds
2 crushed Allspice cloves
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tbps coriander seeeds
1 tbsp curry leaves
1 tsp tumeric
1 tsp fenugreek
Good bunch of fresh coriander


Method

Curry

  • Get the pan hot and add a good glug of nut oil. Add all the seeds and the curry leaves. Stir fry until the seeds darken and start to pop



  • Throw in the finely chopped onion, garlic, ginger, celery & chopped stalks from the fresh coriander. Turn the heat down a notch so the garlic doesn't burn and go bitter. Keep stirring until the mix goes translucent


  • Add the other chopped veg, the carrot, the courgette and the turnip. Mix well and cook for about 7 mins, until they begin to soften.

  • Add the meat to the mixture and stir in until browned

  • Mix in the green lentils and then pour in enough stock to cover. I just used a chicken stock cube and boiling water.
  • Simmer until the lentils are tender and the sauce is as thick as you want it.
  • Finish with chopped coriander leaves and a splash of lemon juice. If you're feeling frisky, stir in a splash of natural yoghurt just before serving. I served this with half a caulie that I'd blitzed in a food processor and fried off with garlic and coriander. Delicious!

Enjoy :-)



Wednesday, 15 October 2014

Cheesebake (Updated)


Introduction
When I first set up this blog, for the purpose of simply recording recipes when I could access them, one of the first I wrote was a Cheesebake. It was very simple, no pictures. More of a reminder to be honest.

Recently, we had a massive pile of spuds and a lot of cheese. This usually means a cheesebake. I also saw it as a good opportunity to put a full recipe with pictures on.

Just as a bit of background, I'm sure I've been told somewhere along the line that this is an old family recipe. I bet there are loads of similar variations but what is true is that I have had this for tea for as long as I can remember. It definitely feels like an old family recipe, one I hope my cheese and potato hating daughter will learn to love...


Ingredients
Potatoes – Enough to fill the tin you are using. I always use too many but as a good rule I would use 3 to 4 spuds per person. This gave us two meals for two adults and a greedy little boy

Grated Cheese – whatever type you like. I was lazy and used a whole 250g bag of ready grated mature chedder

Bacon – about 2 pieces per person

1 Onion

2 tins chopped tomatoes

Method

  1. Peel and wash the taters. Slice into about 1cm thick slices. Cover with salty water and bring to the boil.
  2. Meanwhile, slice and dice the onion and bacon. Fry gently in a little olive oil and a spoonful of butter until the onion is clear and the bacon is cooked.

  1. The potatoes should be cooked until they are soft; about mashing consistency but not quite ready to disintegrate. Drain and allow to cool slightly so you can handle the pieces
  2. Mix the tomatoes in the bacon/onion mix. There is no need to keep the heat on
  3. Preheat your oven to about 200°C and oil up an oven dish.
  4. Now, layer the bottom with potatoes. Use the different sizes to fill as many gaps as possible. You should use about half of the spuds.

  5. Put about half of the bacony-tomato mix as the next layer. Try to spread it evenly
  6. The third layer should be grated cheese
  7. Repeat with another layer of spuds, tomato and cheese
  8. Bake in the oven for about 20 mins or until the top cheese layer goes crispy
  9. Serve with lashings of Brown Sauce
Enjoy :-)