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Tag: recipes

[Recipe] Mediterranean Chicken

Posted on January 16, 2008 By admin

Ingredients

* 4 skinless, boneless chicken breast cut in half
* 1 large onion
* 1 red pepper
* 6-8 large mushrooms
* 2 sticks of celery
* 2 tins chopped tomatoes
* 1/2 cup white wine
* 2 tsp mixed italian herbs (oregano, thyme, bay, basil, parsley)
* As many chopped olives as you want (about a dozen is good)
* salt and pepper to taste

Directions

– Cut onion in half and slice into half rings.
– De-seed pepper and chop pepper into large chunks.
– Prepare mushrooms and cut in half.
– Slice celery into large chunks.
– Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add chicken and saute about 4 to 6 minutes each side, until golden. Remove chicken from skillet and set aside.
– Saute onion in pan drippings for 3 minutes. Add all other vegetables except the olives and toss. Add tomatoes and bring to a boil. Lower heat, add 1/2 cup white wine and herbs. Simmer for 15 minutes.
– Return chicken to skillet and cover. Cook over low heat until the chicken is cooked through and no longer pink inside. Add olives to the skillet and cook for 1 minute.
– Season with salt and pepper to taste and serve.
– Serve with basmati and wild rice.

YUMMAY!

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[Recipe] Steak & Ale Pie

Posted on November 20, 2007 By admin

The Laws of the Pie

An authentic steak and ale pie must have a shortcrust pastry lid and come in an oven-proof porcelain or ceramic dish. To truly impress, it must contain the largest amount of actual meat ever seen in a pie. It must always be piping hot when received and stay that way, thanks to the heat-conservation properties of the dish. A truly authentic pie must also arrive accompanied by a selection of potatoes and seasonal vegetables to give balance to the whole meal.

Pie Facts

There are several factors that influence the outcome of an outstanding steak and ale pie:

  • The Dish – You need one that holds heat well, so use a shallow ceramic crockpot or traditional pie dish.
  • The Meat – You need a good cut of beef, well-trimmed and suitable for long, slow cooking. A quality stewing or braising beef works best.
  • The Ale – For the sake of authenticity, this must be a traditional ale, even a stout will work, but if it is too bitter, you will need to tone it down with a dash of sugar. Some have been known to use cider or porter, and these are acceptable as variations on a theme. The ale provides a marinade base, into which you need to place your prepared, trimmed and cubed beef for at least two hours prior to cooking.
  • The Pastry – A truly traditional pie will be lovingly topped with a homemade shortcrust pastry. However, there are not many who will go down the route of preparing the pastry from scratch for a single pie. Enter the supermarket knight on its trusty steed carrying the ready-made packet of pastry. Buy it. Making it is a pain.

Seasoning

Salt and ground black pepper are the king and queen of seasoning and nutmeg is the prince. You massage the nutmeg and pepper into the meat before cooking and can add them to the marinade as well. However, keep the salt well away until the meat is cooked! Salt will pull the moisture out of the meat, making it tougher.

This dish needs a little more than just salt and pepper though; it needs a kick. You may think chilli would do it but you would be wrong. Think British, think authentic. That leaves you a choice of two items: mustard or horseradish. You pick, but don't overdo it this is comfort food after all.

Making the Pie

Ingredients:

  • a ceramic or porcelain dish
  • a packet of ready-made shortcrust pastry
  • 1kg lean braising or stewing steak, trimmed and cubed
  • 2 large white onion, peeled then chopped finely
  • 250g white mushrooms, cut in large chunks
  • 250g frozen peas
  • 1 tbsp plain flour
  • 500ml local ale
  • salt, pepper and nutmeg to taste
  • 1 tsp thyme
  • 2 bay leaves
  • a dash of English mustard or grated horseradish
  • 1 tspn vegetable oil for frying
  • an egg

I used Strong Suffolk Vintage Ale, make by Greene King. It has a very dark colour and almost-burnt caramel-y taste without being overpowering. I strongly recommend it.

Method

1. Place the beef in a non-metallic dish, having rubbed the meat with nutmeg and pepper, then cover with the ale of your choice and set aside for a couple of hours. You could do this the night before and place the dish, covered, in the bottom of your fridge.

2. When you are ready to begin the cooking process, bring out your dish of marinaded beef and set it aside. Place a pan on medium heat, drizzle some oil into it, chop the onion finely and drop it in to sautée gently. When the onion is a pale golden brown, take out your beef, piece by piece, dust with flour and drop into the pan to brown gently. Whisk the rest of the flour, the salt, the thyme and mustard or horseradish into the marinade mixture left in the dish. Once you have browned the beef sufficiently, slowly add the marinade mixture, the bay leaves and the mushrooms then leave to simmer and reduce.

3. While waiting for the liquid to reduce, roll out your pastry on a floured board. The stew needs to be moist but not wet when cooked, bearing in mind that some evaporation will take place in the oven. When it is ready, add the frozen peas and mix well. Ladle the stew into your dish (remove the bay leaves) and drape the pastry over it. Using a knife, trim the edges and make a hole in the top. Fold in the edges of the hole and use your knife to press into the pastry around all the edges and make a scalloped pattern – for a really professional look, you may decide to cut out little patterns and add them around the edges of the hole. Brush the top of the pastry with a little whisked egg yolk to glaze.

4. Place in a pre-heated medium oven at about 200for about 30 minutes, or until the pastry is golden brown and crisp. You should expect some variation in cooking from different ovens. Some hold moisture in, some allow it out, some distribute the heat with a fan, others insist on charring the top or bottom of your creation. The time and temperature offered here are in the way of a generalised pointer. If you are uncertain how your oven will perform, keep your eye on proceedings and use the colour of the pastry as a guide. Golden brown and crisp is your aim.

 
 

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[Recipe] Gordon Ramsay's F-Word Coq Au Vin

Posted on September 3, 2007 By admin

Ingredients:

* 1 x large chicken, cut into 8 joints
* 1 large plateful seasoned flour (plain flour mixed with salt and pepper)

* 225g lardons, chopped
* 16 button onions
* 2 sprigs fresh thyme
* 2 bay leaves
* 725 ml red wine (1 bottle – use wine you'd drink!)
* 225g small mushrooms
* salt and pepper

* Olive oil
* Freshly ground black pepper
* Salt

Method:

Lightly dust the chicken pieces in the seasoned flour. Heat the oil in a pan and fry the chicken until coloured all over. Remove the chicken and place them in the cooking pot – the dish will have to be deep and wide enough to arrange the chicken in one layer and completely cover them with liquid later.

Using fresh oil in the pan, saute the lardons until browned and add them to the chicken, then finally brown the onions a little and add them too. Next place the sprigs of thyme among the chicken pieces, season with freshly milled pepper and just a little salt, and pop in a couple of bay leaves. Pour in the wine, put a lid on the pot and simmer gently for 45-60 minutes or until the chicken is tender. During the last 15 minutes of the cooking, add the mushrooms and stir them into the liquid.

Remove the chicken, bacon, onions and mushrooms and place them on a warmed serving dish and keep warm. (Discard the bay leaves and thyme at this stage.) Now bring the liquid to a fast boil and reduce it by about one third, whisking all the time until the sauce has thickened. Then serve the chicken with the sauce poured over.

Mashed potato makes a perfect accompaniment!

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[Recipe] Caesar Salad

Posted on August 13, 2007 By admin

Ingredients
6 bacon rashers
2 large free-range egg
juice of half a lemon
3 anchovy fillets
6 tbsp olive oil, plus a little extra for frying
1 tsp dijon mustard
freshly ground black pepper
25g/1oz Parmesan cheese, coarsely grated
1 large romaine lettuce, washed and torn into pieces
2 thick slices of white bread, crusts removed, cubed

Method
1. Place the eggs in a pan of cold water and bring to the boil. Boil for 1 minute and then plunge into cold water to stop the cooking process.
2. Once the eggs are cool enough to handle, crack them into a food processor and add lemon juice, anchovies, mustard and oil. Process well and add pepper to taste.
3. Place the romaine lettuce in a bowl.
4. Fry the bacon until crisp. Drain on kitchen paper and chop roughly into bits.
5. Fry the bread cubes in a little olive oil until crispy, then drain on kitchen paper.
6. To serve, toss the bacon into the lettuce, pour the dressing over the leaves and add the croutons and Parmesan. Toss well and serve at once.

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[Recipe] Tandoori Chicken

Posted on June 18, 2007 By admin

I've been looking for a good tandoori chicken recipe for ages, and finally Madhur Jaffrey has provided one, which I modified a bit to personal taste. It's not difficult to make, just a bit time consuming.

Ingredients:

1kg chicken pieces (thighs, legs), skinned
150g plain yoghurt
salt
2 lemons (or limes)
2 green chillies, seedless
1 large knob of ginger, peeled.
2 tbsp tandoori spice mix (see below)

Preparation:

The chicken needs to be marinated twice. For the first marinade:

1. pat chicken dry and cut slits in the chicken pieces right to the bone. This will help the marinade soak as deep into the meat as possible.
2. season with salt on both sides and add the juice of the two lemons (or limes).
3. rub salt/juice in the chicken pieces thoroughly. Let stand for 20-30 minutes.

While that's marinating, prepare the second marinade:

1. in a food processor, combine a few tbsp of the yoghurt with the chillies, ginger and spice mix. Blitz until smooth.
2. combine with remainder of the yoghurt.
3. once the first marinating period is done, add lemon/lime juice to the mix
4. coat liberally the chicken portions with the yoghurt marinade and run well into the chicken. Cover and let stand in the fridge overnight if possible (but at least 6 hours!)

I'm assuming that you don't have a charcoal-fuelled clay tandoor, so we'll have to fake the cooking part. When the second marinade is done, place chicken portions on a grill pan and turn oven on to its highest setting. Put chicken on the highest rack in the oven and broil for 18-20 minutes until chicken is cooked (juices run clear when pricked with a fork) and is just starting to char. Note that the chicken isn't as red as you'll get in a restaurant. That's because they use food colouring.

Splash some fresh lime juice on the chicken before serving.

FYI, the tandoori spice mix contains the following:
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp hot chilli powder
1 tsp garam masala
1/2 tsp tumeric
2 tbsp paprika

To make garam masala from scratch, add the following to a clean coffee grinder and blitz until smooth:

1 tsp black peppercorns
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp whole cloves
1/3 of a whole nutmeg (you can break a whole nutmeg by placing it on a cloth and bashing it with a meat mallet or rolling pin)
a medium stick of cinnamon, 2-3 inches, broken up into 3-4 pieces

Store in a tightly lidded jar, away from heat and sunlight and use as needed.

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[Recipe] Hungarian Goulash

Posted on April 23, 2007 By admin

Ingredients

* 2 lb. stewing beef
* 4 onions, white or yellow
* 3 Tbsp. sweet paprika
* 2 bay leaves
* 1 L. water
* 4 peeled and diced potatoes
salt & pepper

Cut beef into 1 inch squares, add 1/2 tsp. salt. Chop onions and brown in olive oil, add beef and paprika. Let beef simmer in its own juice along with salt, paprika, bay leaf and 1/2 liter of water for 2 hr. on low heat. Add more water as required during simmering period. Add diced potatoes and remaining salt. Cover and simmer until potatoes are done and meat is tender.

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[Recipe] Gooey chocolate pudding

Posted on April 23, 2007 By admin

Preparation time less than 30 mins

Ingredients

125g unsalted butter, plus extra for greasing
150g chocolate (70 per cent cocoa solids)
4 free-range eggs
75g caster sugar
50g self-raising flour, plus extra for dusting
1 tbsp cocoa powder, plus extra for dusting
mascarpone, to serve

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 180C/365F/Gas 4.
2. Place the butter and chocolate into a heatproof bowl. Place the bowl over a pan of barely simmering water, and allow the chocolate and butter to melt.
3. Once the chocolate and butter have melted, stir to combine, then set aside and allow to cool.
4. Place the eggs and sugar into a clean bowl and whisk for 4-5 minutes, or until pale and light (more than doubled vlume and holds soft peaks).
5. Add the egg mixture to the chocolate mixture and gently fold together, taking care to maintain volume in the eggs.
6. Add the flour and cocoa powder and fold in.
7. Grease and flour four ramekins or dariole moulds.
8. Divide the chocolate mixture among the ramekins. Place onto a baking tray and transfer to the oven to bake for 10-12 minutes, or until set, but still with some wobble in the centre.
9. Loosen the puddings and very carefully turn each out onto plates.
10. Dust the puddings with cocoa powder and serve with a dollop of mascarpone on top.

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Because the whole world should know

Posted on March 8, 2007 By admin 2 Comments on Because the whole world should know

I was reading my friend list this morning when I came across two food blog entries that are kismetically destined to be tailor made for [info]eniran:

Marmite Guiness and Bacon Popcorn

Yes. Scary, I know.

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[Recipe] Stuffed Mushrooms

Posted on March 6, 2007 By admin

Ingredients:

3 bacon rashers, chopped
55g/2oz white breadcrumbs
grated cheese (parmesan or mature cheddar)
salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 large flat mushrooms, stalks removed and chopped
1/2 tsp thyme
olive oil

1. Preheat the oven to 220C/425F/Gas 7.
2. Gently melt the butter in a pan and saute the bacon and mushroom stalks until almost cooked. Add breadcrumbs, thyme and seasoning for a few minutes and saute until golden.
3. Place the mushrooms onto a non-stick baking tray and drizzle with oil. Spoon the breadcrumb mixture into the mushrooms and sprinkle cheese onto each until covered.
4. Bake in the oven for 8-10 minutes, or until golden and the cheese has melted.

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[Recipe] Chicken wings

Posted on March 6, 2007 By admin

Wings:

1 cup all-purpose flour
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. chili powder
1/4 tsp. black pepper
20 chicken wing segments

– Prepare the chicken wings by boning wings into 3 segments. Get rid of the wing tip or use it for chicken stock. I try and trim as much fat/skin from the wings as I can (but seriously, there's no way in hell this any part of this meal can be considered healthy, so you can skip this step if you want)

– In a shallow dish, combine flour, salt, paprika, chili powder, and pepper.

– Coat chicken entirely in the flour mixture

– Deep-fry chicken, 8 – 10 pieces at a time, in 375F/190C degree oil for 10-12 minutes.

– Drain chicken on a wire cooling rack for 30 seconds, then immediately toss fried chicken in buffalo sauce mixture and remove with a slotted spoon.

– Repeat with remaining chicken.

Sauce:

4 Tbsp margarine
5 Tbsp Tabasco sauce
1 Tbsp white wine vinegar

– Melt the margarine over medium heat in a heavy saucepan, add the hot sauce and the 1 tablespoon of vinegar. Stir well and remove from the flame immediately.

Blue Cheese dip:

1/2 cup sour cream
1/2 cup crumbled blue cheese (I used Cornish Blue)
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 Tbsp white wine vinegar or white vinegar

Mix everything together in a food processor. Add salt/pepper to taste.

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