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Notes from a bemused canuck

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Tag: christmas

Swissmas dinner

Posted on December 25, 2018January 1, 2019 By admin

Boar fillet medallions, romanesco, carrots, roasted potatoes, braised cabbage, Yorkshire puddings, with Argentinian malbec.

Properly sharpened knives (and yesterday prep) made short work of it :)

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Merry Christmas to all

Posted on December 25, 2018January 1, 2019 By admin

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The child is happy with Santa’s visit

Posted on December 25, 2018 By admin

For as much as he can drive us up the wall, we’re glad the child is happy with his presents. He got some lego, some books, a Desigual jumper, a Nintendo labo kit, some tickets to Totem (!), some money and his weight in refined sugar. 

Katy got some books, some dvds, some chocolate and Champagne (from one of her clients), some money and tickets to go see Dylan Moran. Her mom bought her an impromptu Dyson vacuum cleaner, but that’s not really a Christmas present.

I got a Damascus nakiri knife, a pair of whetstones, a book on the complete portfolio of Sidney Paget, some money and a framed poster.

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Twas the night before Christmas

Posted on December 24, 2018December 24, 2018 By admin

The stocking is hung. Santa has his magic key ready to get into the flat. Food prep is over for today. The child is (mostly) in bed. Now, movie then bed.

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Jay Rayner on Christmas

Posted on December 23, 2018December 23, 2018 By admin

How do you beat the Christmas blues? Take charge in the kitchen

Originally posted on The Guardian

Like your first hangover and your first speeding ticket, cooking Christmas lunch for the first time is a rite of passage. It is a passing of the flame from one generation to the next, with added gravy. I remember mine as if it was 25 years ago. Two things stay with me. One was my late mother’s nod of approval at the sweet and sour red cabbage. It wasn’t her red cabbage. It could never be hers. But it did deserve to be eaten. That was praise enough.

The other memory was the admin. Blimey, it was complicated. I had to write timetables, like I was revising for A-levels all over again, only with a greater risk of humiliation through failure. Pinned up by the fridge magnets were documents that had taken on the significance of holy scripture: “12 noon – potatoes in; 1.30pm, bird out”. And so on. When it was all done and the kitchen was festooned in edible wreckage, I took the applause and muttered quietly about not making a habit of it.

And yet, come year two I was in the kitchen again, right up to my wrist in the turkey. It was the same the next year and the year after that. For, somewhere along the way, I had made a quiet but astonishing discovery, one most Christmas Day cooks will recognise but never acknowledge.

Courtesy of natural justice, you also get let off the washing up. It is a big, hearty bundle of wins
They don’t want to be found out, because intriguingly it goes against the spirit of Christmas itself. It is this: cooking Christmas lunch is a glorious way to absent yourself from the nightmare of Christmas; from the weird, twisted dynamic of one long day crammed together with your family.

It’s perfect. There has to be a Christmas lunch. Whoever cooks it is seen as performing a selfless service. Look at them toiling over the sprouts and the parsnips and the roasties and the pigs in blankets and no really, I’m fine, you go back in there and relax. I’ve got this. If you are up to the job, spending the first few hours of the day locked in the kitchen, can be much more pleasurable than tolerating your racist auntie. Plus, courtesy of natural justice, you get let off the washing up. It is a big, hearty bundle of wins.

It took me a while to clock that my mother had pulled this trick throughout my childhood. She hated her own in-laws but also knew they had to be there. She had a two-pronged approach to the problem. The first was to invite an enormous number of people. Christmas Day in our house could have up to 30 people at the table, mostly gay men, Jews and actors: gay men, because in the 70s, sadly, many of them had mislaid their families; Jews because they weren’t really meant to be marking the pagan feast at all so were always free, and actors because they were caught between performances of panto on Christmas Eve and Boxing Day and couldn’t get back to their own families. Many of them were gay Jewish actors.

Having hidden my paternal grandparents in this relentlessly jazz-hands crowd, she disappeared into the kitchen, guaranteeing she was as far away from them as possible. Now I’ve described this, of course, the game is up. So, here’s what you do. This year, come the big day, don’t let them get away with it. Everybody should set up camp in the kitchen telling the self-absenting cook that you don’t want them to feel left out. It will drive them completely nuts. Merry Christmas.

My 10 Christmas food commandments

Originally posted on The Guardian

Having last year formulated 10 general food commandments, I feel uniquely placed to have a crack at 10 for Christmas. You can ignore them if you like, but on your own head be it.

One Thou shalt not mistake Nigella, Mary and Jamie for the Lord, thy God. Those Christmas specials are only TV programmes. They’re entertainment, not a blueprint for how your Christmas is meant to be. Yours won’t be anything like that because you don’t have battalions of home economists to knock up the food and set designers to decorate the house. Even Nigella’s won’t be like that.

Two Thou shalt not always make your own. There is no shame in buying ready-made bread sauce or mince pies. That’s why supermarket new product development units were invented.

Three If you’re the cook on Christmas Day thou shalt have first crack at the sausages and bacon as they come out of the oven.

Four Thou shalt not feel compelled to make every side dish ever invented. Roast potatoes, and one other vegetable, two at a push. No more. What are you trying to prove? That you’re a whizz at Oven Tetris? No one will judge you. As long as there’s gravy everything will be fine. (This last rule applies all year round.)

Five Thou shalt not wear a stupid hat during lunch if thou doesn’t want to. Even if the children whine at you for being a spoilsport. Children need to learn that one of the pleasures of adulthood is not having to do stupid things.

Six Thou shalt not serve Christmas pudding, at least not on Christmas Day. Nobody likes it. And even if they do, by the time you get to dessert at Christmas lunch nobody has any space. All they want is jelly. Make jelly and if anyone complains, tell them Moses made you. If you must serve Christmas pudding, wait until the week between Christmas and New Year, buy it up cheap, steam it, then fry it in bacon fat. You’ll thank me. I’m a biblical prophet; I know what I’m talking about.

Seven Thou shalt eat trifle for breakfast on Boxing Day. It’s Christmas. The usual rules do not apply.

Eight Thou shalt not be embarrassed about making exactly the same things from leftovers as you always do. Yes, your turkey curry is awful. It’s always been awful. But tradition is important and your awful turkey curry is one of them. Stop trying to re-invent the wheel. Though don’t make that turkey risotto thing with the frozen peas again. That really is a crime against food.

Nine Thou shalt drink Bailey’s, though only at this time of year. Drinking it at any other time of year marks you out as having the palate of a seven-year-old. Drinking it at Christmas defines you as sweet and sentimental.

And finally, ten Thou shalt have a meltdown if thou wants to. In theory Christmas is a delightful festival, a time to draw near to your loved ones. In practice it’s a bloody nightmare, a breeding ground for recrimination and, eventually, divorce. Far better to get it all out there. Other than that, it’s peace and goodwill all the way. Merry Christmas everyone. And you’re welcome.

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Montreux Christmas market

Posted on December 23, 2018December 23, 2018 By admin

I wait for one year for this sandwich.

The poutine shack has found a local producer of squeaky cheese, but they’re not sharing where!

But as always, there is the lake.

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Lodgers over Christmas 

Posted on December 21, 2018January 1, 2019 By admin

We’re rabbit-sitting for Roko and Jelena. The cats are highly disturbed by the new arrivals and are meowing at the patio door. The rabbits don’t give a toss. 

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Digital Nutrition & Health, 2018

Posted on December 20, 2018December 21, 2018 By admin

Cheeky sneaky team Christmas lunch. Clockwise from top left: Fabio, Suttipong Daniela, Florent, me, Damian, Ivan, Frédéric, Roko, Dominik, Vera.

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Pavel is getting ready for Christmas 

Posted on December 15, 2018December 17, 2018 By admin

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[recipe] Christmas Ham

Posted on December 14, 2018 By admin

Whole ham 1, about 4kg
Mirepoix, a selection of roughly chopped carrots, onions, celery and leek
Faggot of herbs, containing celery, bay leaf and strips of orange peel, bound with strips of leek
Spice bag, containing a few each of fresh ginger pieces, whole cloves and mace blades, and 1 cinnamon stick
Brown bread 300g
Clear honey 150ml
Water 300ml
Butter 50g
Salt
Dijon mustard 50g
Christmas spice mixture 5g (see below)

For the Christmas spice mix
ground nutmeg
ground cinnamon
ground ginger
ground clove

If using a proper dry-cured English ham, soak it for 2 hours before poaching gently in a large, snug pot for 20 minutes per kilo with the mirepoix, the herbs and the spice bag. When the time’s up, remove from the heat and allow to cool for half an hour in the cooking liquor – this will allow the flavours to really penetrate the meat.

Preheat your oven to 160C. Carefully remove the ham to a board and remove the skin. Depending on the breed and quality of the pig, you should have a nice layer of fat. Remove some of this fat, leaving about 1cm.

Meanwhile, for the Christmas spice mix, combine the ingredients to taste. Score the fat left on the meat in a criss-cross fashion and, while it’s moist, season generously with the Christmas spice mix.

Cut the crusts off the brown bread and rip into small pieces. Melt the butter over a medium heat until it begins to brown, add the clear honey and the bread and season with a little salt. Lightly toast until golden and let cool before blending to a fine crumb.

Place the hot ham into a roasting tray with 300ml of water and brush with the mustard, dust with spice mix and coat generously with the honey breadcrumbs before placing in the oven.

Roast for 20 minutes per kilo. When the time is up, remove from the oven and transfer the ham to a clean dish to rest for 30 minutes before thinly slicing with a razor-sharp ham knife. Serve with classic roast garnishes and reserve any leftovers for cold cuts on Boxing Day.

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