"chocolate" brownie. I made it for our nephew Devan's birthday at the weekend. The brownie was made with milk and dark chocolate with milk chocolate chips and slithers of caramac chocolate (remember that? It used to be one of my favourites and I was so pleased when I found some). The brownie was topped with white chocolate and decorated with slices of twix, kitkat, crunchie, toblerone, ripple, oreos, snickers, double decker, bounty plus minstrals and maltesters and a little chocolate buttercream. So quick and easy to prepare but I dread to think of the calorific content. Worse still - we ate it with ice cream!
Welcome
Monday, 14 June 2010
"chocolate" brownie. I made it for our nephew Devan's birthday at the weekend. The brownie was made with milk and dark chocolate with milk chocolate chips and slithers of caramac chocolate (remember that? It used to be one of my favourites and I was so pleased when I found some). The brownie was topped with white chocolate and decorated with slices of twix, kitkat, crunchie, toblerone, ripple, oreos, snickers, double decker, bounty plus minstrals and maltesters and a little chocolate buttercream. So quick and easy to prepare but I dread to think of the calorific content. Worse still - we ate it with ice cream!
Thursday, 10 June 2010
Wednesday, 9 June 2010
Champagne Poached Salmon with Summer Herb Aioli
Serves 2, Preparation time 20 minutes Cooking time 5 minutes plus overnight cooling
2 salmon fillets, skins removed
400ml champagne or sparkling wine
2 large fresh plum tomato
1 tbsp smooth mango chutney
juice of 1 lime
2 egg yolks
½ clove garlic
½ tsp salt
250 – 300ml mild olive oil (not extra virgin as this gives a bitter taste)
1 tbsp chopped fresh summer herbs (chives, chervil, mint, parsley)
Juice of 1 lemon
parsley to decorate
Place the salmon fillets in a small saucepan so that they both lay flat on the bottom, cover with the champagne and add a little extra water to ensure that the fillets are completely covered (the amount of water needed will depend on the size of saucepan you have used). Place the pan on a medium heat and bring the poaching liquid to the boil, then immediately remove from the heat and allow to cool. When cool, transfer the fish to the fridge until ready to serve. Using a sharp serrated knife, gently peel the skin of the tomatoes into several long strips, ensuring that you take as little tomato flesh as possible (as if you were peeling an apple). To make the roses, start at one end of a strip, roll it up between your fingers to create a tomato rose as shown in the picture. Repeat with the remaining tomato strips. The roses can be stored in the fridge for a few hours before serving. Heat the mango chutney and lime juice in a small saucepan and then brush onto the salmon fillets using a pastry brush. Decorate the salmon fillets with the tomato roses and parsley leaves. For the aioli, crush the garlic clove and salt to a smooth purée, then whisk into the egg yolks using an electric hand mixer or food processor. Add the olive oil a little at a time, whisking continuously until you have a thick mayonnaise. Fold in the herbs and season with a little lemon juice and salt and pepper to season.
Tuesday, 8 June 2010
Monday, 7 June 2010
Tuesday, 1 June 2010
Wednesday, 26 May 2010
You need a cocktail shaker and glass and muddler (apparently this is what the pounding stick for making mohitos is called) or a rolling pin for making this refreshing summer drink.
Serves 1
1/2 green apple, chopped into small pieces
1/2 lemon, chopped into small pieces
1 tbsp fresh mint
1 tsp sugar
500ml mango juice
ice cubes
Pound the apple, lemon, mint and sugar in a glass with the muddler or the end of a rolling pin. Add the mango juice, top up with ice and shake well in a cocktail shaker. Serve with a straw!
Tuesday, 25 May 2010
Tom Yam Ghoong
Serves 2
750ml chicken stock
5 kaffir lime leaves (deveined and shredded)
1 cm piece of galangal, finely sliced
60ml fish sauce
1 stalk lemongrass, top and bottom removed, finely sliced
1 shallot, peeled and finely sliced
1 green and 1 red chilli, whole but sliced through lengthwise
10 mushrooms, halved
12 shelled prawns, deveined
1 tsp chilli paste
1 tsp sugar
1 tbsp lime juice
125ml evapourated milk
2 tbsp chopped corriander leaves
Place the stock in a sauepan, add the lime leaves, galangal, fishsauce, lemongrass, chopped shallot, chillies and mushrooms and simmer for 5 minutes to allow the flavours to infuse. Add the prawns, chilli paste, sugar, lime juice and evapourated milk and simmer for 5 minutes until the rawns are cooked through. Taste for balance of flavours and add a little more fishsauce, lime juice or sugar if needed. Add the coriander to serve.
Thursday, 20 May 2010
Thai Papaya Salad
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
Monday, 17 May 2010
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Pistachio Cookies
Monday, 10 May 2010
Last week was one of those weeks where everything electronic I touched seemed to go wrong. My camera broke, I lost the battery for my spare camera (even though I had it in my hand at the beginning of the week - I put it somewhere safe and now can't find it!!!), my computer didn't work for the cookery demonstration I gave on Wednesday (thanks so much to the lovely Kathy Brown for rescuing me at the last minute and lending me (and setting up) her laptop about 15 mins before I was due to start). Yesterday the trains weren't working and the website just said "no unplanned engineering work" not very helpful - so I had to drive Sacha all the way to Kings Cross to catch the Eurostar - not quite the afternoon I had been planning but luckily we just made it in time. All in all a little bit rubbish! My camera is now at the menders and, as they said it was going to take a month to repair, I have treated myself to a new cheap camera as a standby so that I can actually take some photos for the blog and for my holiday on Friday. I feel as if life has resumed to normal this week - lets hope so. My good news is that yesterday I finished the final edit of the manuscript for my book Whoopie Pies. It is just being proof read by my friend Jess and will then go to the publishers in the next few days. My favourite recipes in the book are the lime jelly pies which literally wobbly, the croquembouche tower (48 whoopies high in beautiful rainbow colours and ribbons - how I wish I could show you a picture but can't just yet) and Oyster shell pies with sugar pearls. So in lieu of the whoopie photos - here are a few inspirational cupcakes from a wonderful tea room in Bath - such vibrant colours and I loved the little sugar bows made from ready rolled icing - so simple to make and yet they look very 1950 vintage.
Is it wrong to want one of these spiral staircases for displaying my cakes on!!!
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
Peach Melba Cake
At the weekend I watched James and the Giant Peach. I was in bed with a bad back and it came on to a channel I had been watching. I ended up watching the film to the end! Roald Dahl is one of my favourite author's, even as an adult. I grew up on his books! Watching the film left me with an overwhelming desire for peaches (not quite in season but the supermarket had some anyway!) So here is my recipe for Peach Melba cake - I am sure Dame Nellie Melba would have approved (her being the inspiration for the famous peach melba dessert). The amaretti biscuits give the cake a lovely almondy crunch.Sunday, 2 May 2010
Friday, 30 April 2010
Thursday, 29 April 2010
I am not doing particularly well at keeping this blog up to date at the moment! I had a busy, but lovely weekend, with my friend Maren who was over visiting from Germany and have also been trying to finish writing my book (almost there now - just a big push this weekend I should hopefully be done - I have written up a third of the recipes already which is a good way through). Today I am flying to Munich for a meeting tomorrow - what a jet set life eh (although sadly I don't think visiting a compost plant will ever class as being jet set!)Monday, 26 April 2010
My brother has sent me the link to this cake pan from the USA. Is this not the coolest cake pan you have ever seen! It is right up there with the Baker's Edge Brownie pan which revolutionized my brownie making a few years ago. I just love the idea of a "cakewich" - you could make the largest peanut butter and jelly sandwich ever! Imagine taking a giant sandwich out of your hamper on a picnic - I am sure it would make your friends smile!
Wednesday, 21 April 2010
By the looks of the large scale potato planting operation that my Mum and Mike did on Monday at their allotment, we are going to have a LOT of potatoes this year! They planted 84 rows with 60 potato plants in each row - enough potatoes to probably feed the w
hole village. I am not knocking it - I love free home grown food and everything that comes from their allotment is delicious - but I do think when you are using a tractor this size you can't really call it an allotment any more, more a small farm!!