August 27, 2024
SPINACH, SMOKED CHICKEN AND ROAST TOMATO PASTA
June 2, 2024
SAUSAGE PATTIES or an almost free lunch.
I recently made some mini sausage rolls for a picnic and there was a bit of sausagemeat left over, probably about 75g or two tablespoonfuls. A couple of days later, with that, the remains of the beaten egg from brushing the pastry and a portion of leftover mashed potatoes an idea sprang to mind. I added some breadcrumbs made from one slice of "wonderloaf" blitzed in my mini processor.
I first thought of making rissoles or meatballs so mixed everything together in a bowl and divided it into four large balls. I then decided that the mixture probably wouldn’t hold its shape in a frying pan so patted each one lightly into the well buttered holes of a muffin tin.
After ten minutes at 180° fan they were coming along nicely and I sprinkled a bit of grated cheddar on top. They were then baked for another fifteen minutes. They were absolutely yummy, plenty for two people, and we had ours with some baked beans. In fact they were so yummy that I would even buy more sausagemeat to make them again!
May 4, 2024
SMOKED HADDOCK GRATINS
In France there is a chain of frozen food shops called Picard. Their range of foods goes from basic stuff, like peas and green beans, through to luxury items. Our favourite purchases include their croissants, which cook from frozen in eighteen minutes, their salmon fillets, which are not cheap but occasionally on special offer, and twin packs of scallops in chardonnay sauce which are a bit pricey but utterly divine as a starter. These little gratins also come in reusable ceramic dishes, always a bonus in my book. We have frequently seen little piles of them for sale at village brocantes - the French rarely throw anything away that they might get a few euros for! I have hung on to mine and by now have collected enough of the little blue dishes to feed quite a crowd!
After treating ourselves to another scallop gratin starter I thought I really ought to look for a recipe for something similar that would make a tasty starter without the hefty price tag.
I spotted a recipe for a smoked haddock gratin on a lovely blog which you can see here and which gave me the idea for my starter. I used frozen spinach which comes chopped and mixed with a little crème fraîche - a combination that I’m not sure if it’s available in the UK but any fresh or frozen spinach would do the job. I left the quantity I wanted in the fridge to thaw overnight which made it easy to drain off excess liquid.
The rest of the recipe is really just an assembly job.
They were perfect little starters, quite rich with all the cream and cheese but very tasty and not too filling! Definitely good for a dinner party. Next time, instead of smoked haddock, I might try a mixture of prawns and smoked salmon - the little packs of diced smoked salmon or trimmings that you can buy would be ideal.
You can find more recipes for the smoked haddock that I used, and other smoked fish, on the manufacturer’s website here. There are English and French versions.
UPDATE: I made the gratins using smoked salmon trimmings and prawns, which were delicious. I also made a couple using chicken and chorizo for someone who was allergic to most fish and they were pronounced delicious too.
Ingredients
5 blocks of frozen spinach in crème fraîche, thawed, or equivalent, or a 200g bag of fresh spinach
1 x 140g smoked haddock fillet, skin removed
6 small knobs of butter
6 dessert spoons half fat crème fraîche
3-4 tblsp grated gruyère cheese
3-4 tblsp grated parmesan
6 slices of a large tomato
2 tblsp fresh breadcrumbs made from 1 slice of white bread
Method
Preheat the oven to 220°C / 200° fan / gas mk 7. Put six small gratin dishes or ramekins on a baking sheet.
First make the breadcrumbs. Tear a slice of white bread into pieces and drop into a food processor. Process until you have fine crumbs.
If using fresh spinach wash and cook it for a few minutes until just cooked then chop it. If using frozen spinach make sure it's completely thawed. Press out any excess liquid and share between the gratin dishes or ramekins.
Cut the fish into small pieces and sit them on top of the spinach.
Dot the fish with a small knob of butter and spoon some crème fraîche on top. Sprinkle with the two grated cheeses and place a slice of tomato on top.
Sprinkle with breadcrumbs and bake for 15-20 minutes until golden and bubbling. Serve immediately.
(As the dishes are straight from the oven you may want to serve them sitting on a heatproof plate or dish so as not to damage your table, placemats or tablecloth. I served mine on a small glass plate protected from the heat by a pad of folded paper serviette.)
Serves 6.
May 3, 2024
NOUGAT DE TOURS
There are plenty of recipes on the internet but in the end I adapted one by my friend Susan which you can see here. I used strips of candied orange peel rather than marmalade and then went slightly off piste adding some chopped green and red glacé cherries as well. Then I went even more off piste and slightly wrong.
To begin with I had chosen entirely the wrong baking dish, a round Pyrex one, simply because it was to hand and easier than trying to wrestle my loose based tart tin from the back of the cupboard. Then, as I was spreading the almond topping over the tart there seemed to be barely enough to cover it and it wasn’t until the tart was in the oven and I started stacking the dishwasher that I spotted the third egg white in its little pot on the kitchen worktop!
(When cracking the eggs for a meringue I usually drop the white into a small pot or cup and add them individually to the bowl. I've done this ever since the time that the fourth egg white for a pavlova contained a blob of unwanted yolk as I dropped it into the mixing bowl with the others!)
It was also the devil's own job to get slices of the tart out of the dish in one piece. Definitely not the best looking tart I have ever made but tasted delicious so I made a second one a couple of weeks later using the right tin and all three egg whites!
That one turned out much better and will teach me not to be so lazy and to pay more attention to what I’m doing in future! Mind you, both tarts were equally delicious!
It also occurred to me that mini versions, along the lines of the old Be-Ro tartlets, might work very well. I shall have to try that when the opportunities presents itself.
This is the tart we had at Le George and the topping was, I think, more like a Bakewell almond sponge than macaroon, but it set us on a little culinary adventure and Nougat de Tours will be on the menu regularly from now on.
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Susan's post is worth reading because she explains the history of the tart including the use of local jams. My jam was an apricot made from local trees by a friend that lives two miles away! The jar of apricot is now all used up and the next one in line is her peach jam. Tah-dah!
Ingredients
1 pack of sweet pastry
A layer of apricot jam, around 150g
A layer of chopped candied peel and a few chopped glacé cherries, around 150g
75g ground almonds
75g caster sugar
3 egg whites
2 tblsp icing sugar
Method
Remove the pastry from the fridge 20-30 minutes before you want to use it, otherwise it might crack when you unroll it.
Preheat the oven to 200°C / 180° fan / gas mk 6. Butter the base and sides of a 20cm loose bottomed tart tin.
Unroll the pastry and use it to line the tart tin, leaving the edges untrimmed and draped over the edge of the tin.
Spread a generous layer of jam over the pastry then scatter a generous layer of chopped peel over the top.
To make the topping, put the egg whites into a large bowl and whisk until stiff. In another bowl mix together the ground almonds and caster sugar then fold them carefully into the egg whites.
Spread the topping evenly over the fruit, making sure not to leave any gaps at the edges. Sprinkle with icing sugar, leave for a few minutes then sprinkle again.
Stand the tart on a baking sheet (this removes the risk of accidentally pushing the loose bottom up on removing the tart from the oven) and bake for 30 minutes. Cover with foil if it looks too brown after 20 minutes. Remove from the oven, remove the foil and cool in the tin.
When cool, carefully snap off the overhanging pastry and lift the tart onto a large can of food or small upturned bowl and ease the outer ring so that it drops down. You can then serve the tart from its metal base or transfer it to a flat serving plate by using a large cake lifter.
Cuts into 8-10 slices.
March 22, 2024
CARAMEL BANANA CAKE
I've been back in the UK for a short spell.
When I got home, the car we leave in the UK, (officially an old banger) wouldn't start. The new battery that was fitted only a few weeks ago had failed. How odd. The old battery lasted nine years but the new one only eleven weeks. Very annoying. However, Halfords came out and changed it two days after I arrived. My brother drove me everywhere I needed to go whilst the car was out of action, bless him.
February 28, 2024
SUNDAY DINNER SOUP (soup maker recipe)
We are very much fans of Sunday Dinner Pie in this house. It's very similar to Christmas Dinner Pie which I wrote about here.
Last weekend we roasted a small joint of loin of pork in our usual way, which is in a covered roasting tin, sitting on a layer of sliced onions and covered with a herb crust (breadcrumbs with a few added mixed herbs). We are not fans of pork crackling on account of it being "rather bad for you"!
Afterwards there were two small slices of pork, two potatoes and a few florets of broccoli and cauliflower left over, but no gravy. Gravy is an essential element of Sunday Dinner Pie so I decided to turn the leftovers into soup instead.
It was delicious and quite thick because of the quantity of leftover potatoes but none the worse for that. If I didn't own a soup maker I probably would have persevered with the pie option, making some extra gravy and using ready made pastry, or maybe turned it into some kind of gratin, or had a roast pork salad with the potatoes and discarded the rather tired looking veg. Or, perish the thought, maybe even a roast pork sandwich and discarded everything else. This was probably the easiest and quickest option that made use of all the leftovers.
It would probably work with any leftover roast meat.
Ingredients
2 slices of roast pork (with any attached herb crumb) chopped
1 onion (use the one that had been roasted with the meat if you have it)
leftover potatoes and veg
1 large carrot
1 small potato
1 leek
1 garlic and thyme stock pot (or a veg stock cube)
a splash of dry sherry (optional)
Method
Peel and roughly chop the carrot and put it in a layer in the bottom of the soup maker. Put the Sunday dinner leftovers on top and then add enough prepared leek and potato to fill to the bottom line.
Add the stock pot or cube and enough water to fill to the top line.
Cook on smooth. Stir the sherry into the finished soup.
Makes 4 generous servings.
February 20, 2024
DATE AND BANANA MINI MUFFINS
They were well risen, nicely spiced and not too sweet. I think that a bananaphobe would have not been too challenged - they were very moreish and even Nick liked them!
There had been an unfortunate mishap with my brand new jar of English mixed spice the week before. Hard tiled floors are not very forgiving, spice and broken glass went everywhere. On the advice of a friend I replaced it with a French equivalent called "quatre épices". The spices are ginger, cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg. I looked up the ingredients of British mixed spice and they have a very similar composition although also include coriander, which I usually associate with savoury dishes. Curious! The French version worked perfectly.
The quantity of mixture in the recipe made 48 mini muffins with some still some left over, so I made a few buns as well, which took a few minutes longer to bake. Definitely a recipe worth remembering if you're short of time but want no shortage of flavour!
The very pretty little cake stand came from a brocante shop in a nearby village. This place is actually an old barn stuffed with antique furniture, textiles, crockery and every imaginable kind of old or vintage household goods. Prices are not as cheap as at the average village flea market but affordable. This little cake stand was one of several that belonged to a huge set of matching crockery, a whole dinner service with numerous serving dishes, tureens and everything else that a large household might have. The only item of it that I wanted (although all of it was gorgeous) was one of these with the pretty bird and flowers. I think that had there only been one in the set the shopkeeper might have refused, but there were several so she was happy to sell me one.
Ingredients
3 very ripe bananas, about 225g peeled weight
3 large eggs
100g light soft brown sugar
150ml vegetable oil (I used groundnut oil)
275g self raising flour
1 tsp mixed spice
1 tsp baking powder
a handful of chopped dates
Method
Put the dates into a small bowl and just cover with boiling water. Set aside to cool.
Preheat the oven to 180°C / 160°fan / gas mk 4. Grease the holes of two mini muffin tins.
Put the peeled bananas into a large bowl and mash roughly with a fork. Add the eggs, sugar and oil and whisk with an electric hand held whisk until well combined.
Add the flour, spice and baking powder and whisk again until just combined. Stir through the soaked dates including the liquid.
Spoon the mixture into the prepared tins. I used a mini ice cream scoop so that they were roughly even. Bake for 12-15 minutes until done. (The larger buns took 20 minutes). Cool in the tins for a few minutes then transfer to a wire rack.
Makes more than 48 mini muffins.