A SLICE OF CAKE
cakes and more from both sides of the English Channel
May 15, 2026
QUICHE OF THE DAY - LEEK, BACON AND ASPARAGUS
May 3, 2026
FRIDGE BOTTOM FRITTATA
As time goes by we have become more adept at using up what we have in stock rather than shop for more food. There are several reasons for this.
The first is probably because we have more time to cook.
The second is that we are much further from any shops. There is a village shop which sells a limited range of basics about 3km away but a supermarket selling everything is at least a twenty minute drive away. We therefore shop less frequently and make sure we use everything up.
The third is that out here in rural France fresh produce does not seem to keep as long as stuff that we used to get from say Tesco or Sainsbury's. I don't know why that is but we find ways to use up leftovers and veg before they become too tired.
The fourth is thrift. Now that we are retired we have to be a bit more careful. We enjoy eating out and balance the cost of that with sensible shopping.
The fifth is to avoid waste, for all the reasons above.
There are several ways to use up random leftovers of cooked or raw food. You can make them into soup, into a quiche, in a salad, a gratin, or one of our favourites, a frittata.
This one had in it leeks, broccoli (stalks and florets) cherry tomatoes, courgettes and cooked brussels sprouts plus leftover bbq bits and pieces including smoked sausage and baby potatoes. You could add any herbs or spices, fresh or dried, or chilli flakes.
As a friend of mine used to say, if you have eggs, you have dinner!
Ingredients
1 leek, trimmed and sliced thinly
a few cherry tomatoes, halved
a handful of broccoli florets and the stalk, trimmed and sliced
a piece of cooked sausage
1 courgette, washed and sliced
a few cooked leftover sprouts, halved
4 eggs beaten
1 tblsp crème fraîche or cream
Herbs, fresh or dried
Method
Preheat the oven to 200C / 180 fan.
Cook the broccoli in boiling water for a few minutes until tender.
Heat a little oil in a frying pan with an ovenproof handle. Cook the leeks and courgette until tender.
Add the tomatoes, potatoes, sprouts and sausage and stir into the pan.
Beat the eggs with the crème fraîche. Season with salt and pepper and add a few chopped herbs, fresh or dried if you like.
Pour the egg mixture over the veg mixture and heat gently until the bottom is cooked but the top still liquid.
Transfer the pan to the oven and cook for 20-25 minutes or until the eggs are set. If you don't have a frying pan with a metal/ovenproof handle, you can cook the whole thing in the oven, just tip the veg etc into a baking dish or tray, pour the egg mixture over and cook in the oven for a little longer.
Serve hot with salad or other veg. Also good cold.
Serves 2-3, depending on what you serve with it.
April 21, 2026
BANANA AND CARAMEL MUFFINS
With some bananas going past their best in the fruit bowl I looked for something different from my usual cake recipes to make use of them.
I settled on a recipe in one of my favourite books, a W.I. publication called "cakes" by Liz Herbert where they are called "Banana Banoffee Muffins".
I would normally have used some Bonne Maman caramel but have recently had trouble getting hold of it. The French supermarkets I usually frequent no longer seem to stock it.
I mostly use it for baking - for example see here.
April 16, 2026
STRAWBERRY UPSIDE DOWN CAKE
April 8, 2026
EGGS BENEDICT
There is a salon de thé called the "Pink and Cosy" in La Roche-Posay where they serve excellent salads, cakes and light meals. We usually go for the eggs Benedict as the eggs are always perfect and the Hollandaise sauce delicious.
English muffins are readily available in French supermarkets so I bought a pack and decided to have a go at making eggs Benedict myself. I used a Jamie Oliver recipe here for the Hollandaise sauce. (This was my first time at making my own as previously I have used a packet mix.)
It took two of us to make the whole dish. Getting the muffins toasted in the toaster, the bacon cooked in the air fryer and the eggs poached at the same time as making the sauce seemed to be a two person job. The sauce requires the full attention of one person and the rest is a juggling act that requires a bit more practice. Either that or two pairs of hands and eyes in the back of your head!! However, they were utterly delicious and well worth the effort.
You can poach the eggs in advance, plunging them into cold water when just done, then reheating in simmering water for a couple of minutes. You can even do them the day before and keep them in the fridge overnight.
Jamie Oliver says that the way to keep your Hollandaise sauce warm is to pour it into a vacuum flask, warming it first by rinsing out with boiling water. Or you can try keeping it warm in your bowl over simmering water by stirring every so often until you need to serve it.
Ingredients for the sauce
150g unsalted butter
2 large egg yolks
1 dessertspoon white wine vinegar
a splash of lemon juice (I used Jif lemon)
Method
Put the butter into a small saucepan and melt over gentle heat. Set aside.
Put the egg yolks into a heatproof bowl over a saucepan containing just simmering water. Choose a bowl that sits firmly on the rim of the pan without rocking about and make sure that it doesn’t touch the surface of the water. Break the egg yolks with a whisk and begin whisking. Whisk in the vinegar.
Dribble the melted butter into the eggs and continue whisking until you have a thick, glossy sauce. Season lightly with salt and pepper.
Serve immediately or keep warm.
For the eggs Benedict
2 English muffins
4 eggs
4 rashers of bacon.
Method
Split the muffins and lightly toast both sides.
Grill or fry the bacon until as cooked or crisp as you like it. (I did mine in the air fryer.)
Poach the eggs to your liking (see method here).
Place a split, toasted muffin on each plate. Top each half with a rasher of bacon then a poached egg and spoon over the Hollandaise sauce.
Serves 2.
March 30, 2026
A CHICKEN STIR FRY TRAY BAKE
We had ours with plain boiled rice.
It was very tasty, filling, quick and easy. A perfect weekday dinner.
Ingredients
1 large skinless chicken breast
1/2 a red pepper, seeds removed
1 small red onion
1/2 a head of broccoli
1 200g can beansprouts, drained
1 tblsp runny honey
1 tblsp olive oil or a few squirts low cal spray
1 - 2 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp smoked paprika
Method
Preheat the oven to 200°C / 180° fan.
Slice the chicken and all the veg into bite sized pieces.
Tip into an ovenproof dish and drizzle over the soy sauce and honey. Spray with oil spray or drizzle with the olive oil.
Sprinkle over the paprika and season with salt and pepper.
Toss everything around to coat with the flavourings and bake for 20 minutes, stirring half way through, or until the chicken is cooked and the veg tender.
(I suppose that if your air fryer basket is big enough, or if cooking for one and you halve the ingredients, you could cook this in your air fryer.)
Serves 2
March 20, 2026
AIR FRYER HERBY POTATOES and home made one-cal spray oil
When it was a really nice day recently we decided to abandon all plans for chores, gardening and DIY and have a late lunch bbq.
It being still only March we didn't quite feel like wheeling the gas bbq out of the barn and setting it all up which would have taken quite a while. However, last year we bought a small electric bbq at a brocante for 8€ which has been a huge success so we used that instead.
We did some of our chicken, lemon and thyme kebabs (see here), a carrot and red cabbage coleslaw (see here) and some air fryer herby mini potatoes. When the gas barbecue comes out for the year we will do our potatoes on that instead as the process is just the same (cooking the potatoes in a foil tray on the bbq) but on this occasion the air fryer came into its own and lunch was on the table (outdoors in the early spring sunshine) within half an hour.
Another thing I have started using recently is home made one-cal oil spray. This is a tip from Nancy Birtwhistle and it works really well, makes spray oil without any additives cheaply and easily. I bought a glass spray bottle from Amazon that has liquid measurements on the side and which makes the job of making the oil so easy.
We have found our tiny Instant Pot air fryer very useful for lots of things but wouldn't claim that we can cook everything in it. We still use our main oven a lot. I don't subscribe to the theory that if you have an air fryer you can do away with the oven any more than you could manage with just a microwave, or slow cooker. I have found that different kitchen gadgets are ideal for different things but I certainly don't regret getting the air fryer. I'm not sure I would attempt to bake a cake in it. If there are two items that need cooking in the oven we would use that instead of the air fryer. Horses for courses.
Do you have one and what do you use it for?
Some of the things we find it ideal for are:
Chicken fillets
Salmon fillets
Fish fillets
Sausages, bacon and black pudding
Croutons
Frozen oven chips or sauté potatoes
Baked potatoes
Baked apples
Frozen croissants
Fish fingers
Roasted vegetables
Refreshing yesterday's baguette
Ingredients for the herby potatoes
2 handfuls of baby potatoes or any small, firm potato, washed and cut evenly to size.
spray oil
salt and pepper
dried herbs of your choice
Method
Parboil the potatoes for 5 minutes. Drain and tip into the air fryer basket.
Spray with a few squirts of oil (or drizzle with sunflower or olive oil)
Season with salt and pepper and sprinkle over a teaspoon or so of herbs to taste.
Shake the pan a few times then cook at 180C for 8-10 minutes until knife-tip tender. Shake the pan a few times during the cooking time.
Serves 2.
To make the spray oil
50ml sunflower oil (or other oil of your choice)
15ml cooled boiled water from the kettle
5ml vodka
Measure the ingredients into your oil sprayer and give it a good shake before each use as the oil and water will separate. Keep in a cool cupboard, not the fridge.
