Archive for the ‘Food’ Category
Mediterranean fish pie
For no apparent reason, I made the full quantity of this recipe, so this week I will mostly be eating fish pie. Luckily, this version is light and summery and it’s freezable in portions. Full credit for this recipe goes to Tastes Divine, I only tinkered with the mix of fish and the topping. Adding pesto and sun dried tomatoes might sound odd but I thought it worked together wonderfully, making it taste very fresh and light instead of the usual cloying creaminess.
I hadn’t met sunblush tomatoes before, but they were going half price from the supermarket’s deli counter. They’re half dried so have a nice concentrated sweet flavour whilst being soft enough to eat. The oil-soaked jars of sundried tomatoes would also work, but you’d need to rehydrate fully dried ones.
Ingredients
Serves 5 – 6
900g of mixed fish. I used about 300g trout, 300g coley and 300g undyed smoked haddock
100g grated hard mature italian cheese. I used Parmigiano-Reggiano
Olive oil
2 hard boiled eggs, shelled and cut into wedges
75g peas
1 bunch of spring onions
250ml creme fraiche
200ml double cream
6 tablespoons of pesto. either basil or rocket is fine.
100g sun blushed or oil soaked sundried tomatoes
600g potatoes
400g celeriac
2 tablespoons yellow mustard seeds
Method
Roughly chop and boil the potatoes and celeriac until they slide off a knife. Drain nearly all of the water, keep a tablespoon or so in the bottom of the pan. Mash it thoroughly, stir in a couple of tablespoons of olive oil, 75g of the grated cheese and season well.
Skin and bone the fish if necessary and slice into bite sized chunks, going across the grain if you can so that it flakes on the fork, not on the chopping board.
Put the fish into the bottom of your baking dish or dishes
Chop the spring onions on the diagonal and cut the tomatoes into quarters and evenly scatter them amongst the fish, and do the same with the wedges of egg. Add the peas.
Mix together the creme fraiche, cream and pesto and evenly spoon it over the top of the fish mixture.
If you did a good job with your mashing, you can try piping the potato mix over the top so it looks fun when baked. I didn’t and nearly exploded the piping bag so made do with dolloping it instead.
Sprinkle over the rest of the grated cheese and either freeze it or give it half an hour in a 200C oven until the top is golden and crusty.
Tropical panacotta
A friend and I have just started a cooking evening course, mostly because it’s quite fun and we might just learn something along the way. These two recipes are from that, with a couple of Dav style twists of course.
Vanilla pods can be hard to find and they’re certainly expensive. I’m lucky enough to have a couple of delis in town that sell pods that aren’t as dried and tired as the supermarket ones from the major brands of spice merchants. A fresh pod is one that flexes when you bend it in half, it shouldn’t snap. Some places are now starting to sell small jars of vanilla paste, which is better than vanilla extract because you still get the nice flecks of the seeds. A small jar is 4-5 pounds and one teaspoon is equivalent to 1 pod.
Gelatine is something that varies over time. Apparently, 1 sheet of gelatine used be enough to set 125ml, or 1/4 pint, or liquid, but some brands are more effective than others. I used 6 of Supercook’s sheets because that’s all the supermarket sells and it came out far too rubbery and my spoon nearly bounced off my forehead. Let them set slowly in the fridge over several hours. Whilst you can set them in an hour using the freezer, that makes them even more rubbery.
Ingredients
Serves 5, depending upon the size of your ramekins
200ml coconut milk, light or full fat is fine.
300ml double cream
5 gelatine leaves
75g palm sugar
1 vanilla pod
2 tbsp sugar cane rum
2 1/2 passion fruits
1 ripe mango
1 lime
2 tsp fresh mint
2 tbsp ginger syrup (think stem ginger jars)
Method
Soak the gelatine leaves in cold water for at least 5 minutes, until they’re soft.
Whilst they’re soaking, put the coconut milk, cream, sugar, the vanilla seeds and the pod itself into a pan and heat through until the sugar’s dissolved. Let it cool, discard the vanilla pod and mix in the rum.
Put the gelatine into the cream mix and stir until it’s dissolved.
Pour into your individual moulds and let it cool to room temperature before leaving it to set in the fridge.
To make up the mango salsa, finely dice the mango, halve and scoop out the passion fruit seeds and mix it together with the lime zest, a very small squeeze of the juice, the ginger syrup and the finely chopped mint. Give the salsa half an hour for the flavours to infuse.
To get the panacottas out of their ramekins, I put them in the steam from a boiling kettle for 20 seconds before turning them out. You might make a bit of a creamy mess from melting the outside layer, but you can wipe that up for presentation.
To serve, spoon the salsa back into the passion fruit halves and put a small sprig of mint in the top of each panacotta.
Light Easter Fruit Cake
I fancied my hand at making a lighter fruitcake for the easter weekend, one that wouldn’t be as wintery as a traditional christmas cake. I couldn’t find a single recipe that I liked the look of, so this is one I made up. It’s another slow baker but it can come out a bit dry, next time I’d definately soak the dried fruit overnight in brandy. I found the results to be most satisfying, especially over a cup of tea in the afternoon.
Ingredients
175g unsalted butter
175g sugar
3 eggs
250g self raising flour
25g oats
25g ground almonds
1 lemon
300g mixed dried fruit (better quality raisins are noticably better)
2 teaspoons mixed spice
2 tablespoons apricot jam or elderflower jelly to glaze
1 block of marzipan to cover and decorate
Method
Preheat your oven to 160C if it’s a fan, 180 if not.
Prepare your cake tin with a double layer of parchment
Cream together the butter and sugar with an electric whisk for a couple of minutes until they’re pale and light. Whisk in the lemon juice and zest along with the rest of the dry ingredients just until they’re all mixed through. Fold in the dried fruit.
Pour the batter into the tin and bake it for 20 minutes at 160C, before turning it down to 140C for another 60 minutes. Keep checking it every 10 minutes after that to see if it’s cooked. It’s done when the centre springs back when you touch it, or when a skewer comes out clean from the centre.
The edges of the cake will also just start to pull away from the edges of the tin. If it’s shrunk more than a mm or so, then it’s over cooked and you should have done it slower
Leave it to cool for 20 minutes before turning it out to cool completely
Once it’s cool, roll out the marzipan so that it’s just wide enough to cover the cake. I didn’t quite have enough so mine was too thin. Aim for a good 3 or 4 mm thickness on top.
To stick the marzipan to the cake, take a small saucepan and melt two tablespoons of apricot jam or something similar. I used some of my 2008 vintage elderflower and ginger jelly which worked really well. Once it’s fluid, use a pastry brush to thinly glaze the entire cake.
Then roll over the marzipan, trim the bottom to fit the cake and use any remaining to decorate the top with little balls. I won’t enter into the discussion for how many balls one should have, theologically speaking.











