Showing posts with label main courses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label main courses. Show all posts

Tuesday

Lasagne Primavera

I've baked this style of lasagne for a good few years after eating something similar in Italy, but I'd forgotten about it until lo and behold I was watching a digital food channel that shows Rachel Ray and she was baking it on air!! I felt cheated but then delighted, a family favorite reinstated, and ours is a little different from Rachels so its all good!

Lasagne PrimaveraYou'll need
A pk of ready to bake (is there any other kind?) lasagne sheets
4 tins of tomatoes
3 courgettes, grated
500gms ricotta, mixed with 1 egg and 80gms grated parmesan
400gms lamb mince
1 mozarella ball
2 cloves of garlic
Handful each of basil, mint and parsley.

Method
Cook the lamb mince with the chopped onion until browned. Stir in 1 tin of tomatoes and leave to simmer until thickened. Add the fresh basil. Chop the mint and parsley and stir into the ricotta cheese.  In a separate pan, chop two cloves of garlic and stir fry in olive oil, adding the courgette, with salt and pepper after a few moments.  Stir in the hot oil until coated and remove from the heat.Pour some tomatoes from a tin to coat the bottom of the dish, then layer the lasagne, pasta, courgette, ricotta, pasta, meat, courgette, pasta and so on as you wish.
Top with a full tin of tomatoes and slices of mozarella.
Bake at 200c for a 40 minutes or until the cheese is golden and the dish is bubbling.
Wait ten to fifteen minutes before slicing.

Wednesday

Happy (Day After) St Patricks Day from DUBLIN!

Oh the frustration of internet glitches! Yesterday was St Patricks Day, I'm here in the horses mouth, and I couldn't get blogger to post for me! It kept saying error blah blah blah!


Anyway HAPPY ST PATRICKS DAY! Or as we say in Irish LA FHEILE PHADRAIG!!


We all donned green, pinned our shamrock to our lapels and enjoyed a day where the whole world joins us in the celebration of our lovely little island!!


I could have chosen a very traditional Irish dish for todays post, but considering most of the very Irish meals (Irish stew, coddle etc) were born from necessity due to half the country starving to death, I didn't feel it was exactly the spirit I was after! So after a him and a haw I decided to get into the spirit with a good old Beef and Guinness Pie! We've got cows, we've got stout, we've got appetites to sooth - as Irish a dish as you can get!


Must be eaten with a diddly eye diddly dee diddly dum!


Beef and Guinness Pie


You'll need
500gms Stewing beef
2 Carrots
1 Large onion
1 Sprig of rosemary
500mls beef stock
A Pint of Irish Stout (Guinness!)
Salt and Pepper
Enough Puff pastry to cover your pie dish!

Method
Saute the onions and the carrots with the rosemary (wonderful aromas here) and then add the seasoned meat. Stir about a bit and then add the stock and the stout! Add a couple of tablespoons of flour. Simmer for 2 hours with a lid on until the sauce has thickened! Pop into a pie dish, cover with pastry, glaze with beaten egg and bake until golden brown in a hot oven, about 180c.

Serve with mashed potatoes and a large glass of milk!

'Ave a butchers..?

There must be something wrong with me.  No matter how many times I have told myself, warned myself, to buy my meat in the butcher, I keep coming home from the supermarket bags full of it and having a homer moment - Doh! Its ridiculous because the butcher, Nyhan Bros, is right there, beside the supermarket, no extra journey or stop involved! What is my problem?

I am trying though, and last week, as if to make up, I took a solo expedition across the road and bought 2lbs of mince.  A huge quantity, but it freezes so why not! I had a nose round to see what else they had, Venison steaks! Poussin! Rabbit! 

Oooo and corn fed outdoor reared chickens!! The little angel on my shoulders' tutting is becoming unbearable when I go to Tesco for a sunday bird, so thats good to know! I don't mind paying extra for an animal that has at least had a bit of craic before it walked the green mile.

I think I will have to tie a knot in my hanky, or laces at least, so I stop my zombie like march to the supermarket in time to remember the butchers! 

As for my mince? It was put to good use!

Lisas Saturday Burgers
You'll need
(for 4 quarter pounders)
1lb of lean minced beef
2 tsps worcestor sauce
2 tbsp of your favorite relish (we use onion or ballymaloe!)
15mls natural yoghurt or creme fraiche
2 tsps cayenne pepper (optional)
Salt and pepper

Method
Mix all ingredients together, I use a fork as well as my hands as it seems to break the meat up even more.  Divide into portions and make into patties with your hands.  Pop onto a hot oiled griddle or pan and fry.  Give them about two minutes each side.  Let them stand while you prepare the buns with everything you like and EAT EM UP!!

Friday

A Muse or two...

Those of you who follow this blog will know that we spend most of our summers in Italy, down south in the middle of the most glorious teal green mountains, and beside a meandering river known as the Melfa.  

The first time I ever ate a bean, barring baked beans from a tin, was in this valley, and I could not believe how delicious beans could be! Since then I have been a bean addict, not a week goes by when I don't cook the famous Beloveds or some other concotion!  This evening with all the ingredients for my favorite dish, I set about making some... to go with some inspired chicken!

With Christmas over and done, I am starting to look to the summer and those glorious mornings, with the sound of geese as they pass in a gaggle, the afternoons with the low hum of worker bees and the smell of honey in the air, and those warm evenings with the crickets chirrupping in the trees and the smells of what we're cooking wafting across as we sit in the dimming sun...

Melfa Chicken...
You'll need
1 Large chicken
50gms butter
1 tsp maldon salt
3 tbs honey
3 tbs milk
2 cloves of garlic, crushed
1 onion
Parsley to garnish

Method
Preheat your oven to 190c.

To prepare the chicken, pop it into the roasting tin and,using a spoon, seperate the skin on the breast from the flesh.  Slice the butter and place the slices under the skin.  Pop the onion into the cavity.  In a cup mix the milk, honey, and garlic together and brush onto the bird.  Sprinkle with the salt and pop into the oven.  Its usually 1 hour 10 minutes per kilo.  

When cooked, the juices will run clear when you skewer between the thigh and the leg.  Leave to rest for ten minutes before serving.

Serve with Beloveds... (I put fresh coriander in these tonight, not strictly italian but delicious all the same!)

Thursday

A big ole bowl...

...of steamin' hot chilli...please...

Thats the order as I got it down the telephone wire two evenings ago.  A very tired and fluey man arrived home, with an inability to say the letter 'M' and a desperate need for some TLC.  So I set about making him some chilli, with enough pep to clear his head and fill his belly!

Here is my own recipe for Chilli con carne, enjoy!

You'll need
400gms mince beef
100gms mince pork (optional)
2 chilli peppers (chopped finely)
1 onion, chopped
3 celery stalks, chopped
2 cloves of garlic, crushed
1 tbs cumin
1 tin of chopped tomatoes
2/3 tbsp tomato puree
1 tin of baked beans
1 tin of chilli beans
1 tin of sweetcorn
3-4 drops of worcestor sauce
1 tbsp of flour (dissolved in about 50mls water)


Method
Fry the onion, celery, peppers and garlic in oil for about two minutes, stir in the cumin and then add the mince.  Brown through.  Add the tomato puree and tomatoes.  Stir. Add the rest of the ingredients and stir over a low heat until thick. Serve with rice, guacamole and corn chips or celery sticks!

Friday

Curry... The Return...

Remember my No Worry Curry that I posted a good while ago, well it has come full circle and I would consider it now to be the perfect "cook for a crowd" meal that you can whip up at a moments notice, and be certain to please everyone! 

No Worry Curry
The New and Improved Version
You'll need
100gms of fresh coriander
2 red chillies
2 cloves of garlic
1 tbsp thai fish sauce
2 tbsp of olive oil
2 Pink Curry Onions
300gms Cooked Prawns
1 Tin of white crab meat (M&S is the best I found)
2 tins of chopped tomatoes
1 tin of coconut milk

Method
Pop the coriander, chilli and garlic into the processor and blitz to a rough paste.  Add the oil and fish sauce and blitz again.  Heat a heavy bottom pan and add a dash of oil. Chop and saute the onions until soft and then add the paste.  Stir for a couple of minutes to allow the aromas to fuse, then add the tomatoes and the coconut milk.  Reduce by half.

Remove from the heat and stir through the fish.

Serve with thai sticky rice.

Monday

Stuff that!

I've been following Rosemary Shragers School for Cooks over the last few weeks, and it is a treasure trove of inspiration, she really is a fantastic chef, with great ideas. After one particular show, where the teams were asked to stuff breast of chicken with chicken mousse, I was dying to try something similar. Then another show 'Saturday Kitchen' stuffed a whole chicken with chorizo sausage and lemon. That clinched it - I immediately set about stuffing some chicken, and put together a Spanish inspired meal that was so simple yet had everyone stuffed to the gills but hoping for even one spoon more.
It was slightly restauranty and so I will describe it to you in restaurant fashion...

Spanish Chicken Roulade
Organic breast of chicken, stuffed with feta cheese, lemon and chorizo. Served with warm chorizo and potato salad and wilted spinach.
You'll need
4 large chicken breasts
200gms feta cheese
zest of 1 lemon
1 tbs chopped parsley
75gms cooked chorizo sausage
Salt and pepper
For the salad
250gms new potatoes
1 cooked chorizo sausage
Juice of 1 lemon
1 red onion, chopped

Method
Mash the feta. Skin the chorizo and chop into tiny pieces. Add to the feta with the parsley and season.
For each chicken roulade, lie the chicken breast between two sheets of cling film and bash with a rolling pin until about 3mm thick. Spread one fourth of the cheese mix onto the breast and roll up. Wrap with cling film and chill.
After about ten minutes, remove from fridge. Heat olive oil in a pan and carefully place the roulades in to brown on top.

Then remove them to an oven dish and pour the oil over. Bake for about 12 minutes or until cooked through.

For the salad, boil the potatoes, skins on, until tender. Add to the pan that browned the chicken and fry lightly. Add the chorizo and allow the oils to profuse. Add the parsley, the lemon juice, season and serve.

Wilt some spinach in olive oil over the heat.
Eat!

Friday

32 years ago...

I was born! Yes this week I have celebrated my birthday and what a great week I've had! Bill brought me to my favorite Fernhouse Cafe for breakfast and my best friend treated me to a slap up late lunch in town...! It was a day of spoiling for me! 

I got some lovely presents, including some interesting new cookbooks! My brother gave me two, one entitled "Irish Recipes Yer Ma Used Ta Make" which is lovely and a fantastic huge almanac of desserts, some I've never even heard of (Chess Pie anyone?), which I'm sure I will make full use of! I also was lucky enough to get Gordon Ramsays latest, and last night I set about making something from it, to welcome in the last year of my early thirties! 

Gordon Ramsays Pork Stroganoff 
(He uses fillet, I used chops!)
You'll need
2 lge pork chops
200gms mixed mushrooms
1 onion, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, finely sliced
50mls brandy
150mls sour cream
squeeze of fresh lemon juice
1 tsp paprika

Method
Trip and chop the pork into small pieces. Heat your pan, oil it and fry the onions, garlic and mushrooms until soft.  Tip the contents of the pan into a bowl and put aside.  Add the pork pieces to the pan with some oil and fry until golden brown.  Return the onions, garlic and mushrooms.  Add the brandy and bring to the boil, then add the cream and the tsp of paprika. Season.  Serve with plenty of Rice and sprinkled with more paprika and parsely!



Sunday

Colcannon

Colcannon is a traditional Irish meal, served at Halloween. The local supermarkets and Greengrocers become stocked to the hilt with the beloved Curly Kale, which rarely makes an appearance at any other time of year!

You'll need
500gms Floury potatoes, peeled and boiled
200gms Curly Kale, washed and chopped
125mls Creme Fraiche
1 Clove of Garlic, crushed
100gms Butter
50mls Milk
Salt and Pepper

4 large coins wrapped in foil, I use 50 cent.

Method
Mash the potatoes well and add half the butter, stirring until mixed through. Stir in the creme fraiche and the milk. Season. In a frying pan heat some olive oil and add the garlic. Fry the Kale in the oil until bright green. Stir through the potato. Drop the wrapped money into the mix and stir.
Melt the rest of the butter in a pan. Place a large dollop of Colcannon in a bowl and make a small well in the centre. Pour some melted butter into the well and serve.
Dip your spoonfuls of Colcannon into the melted butter as you eat. Watch for that money!!

Wednesday

Chicken of Aragon...

"I believe that if ever I had to practice cannibalism, I might manage if there were enough tarragon around." 
James Beard
Picture courtesy of Google Images
Tarragon is a main component of eastern European cooking, or so I discovered when I typed it into wikipedia today.  I did not want to start another post with how much I like something, so I went in search of some facts that may take this post far away from my usual "look what I did" and in doing so I found some interesting recipes, and some interesting facts to share with you!

The first thing that I did not know, and am absolutley delighted about, is that it is known by many as "Dragons Wort". I am completely obsessed with the recent tv series The Tudors and as a result all things medieval.  Not for the first time, as a teenager and young adult I was swept away by all things Elizabethan... read everything I could on Mary Queen of Scots... and even my debs dress was an Elizabethan style gown, corset and all.  Anyway the words Dragons Wort appeals to my medieval passions, sounding much better on my shopping list than Tarragon, although I did like rhyming of Tarragon with Aragon!

Some other facts I discovered about it was that Tarragon came to France from the plains of Siberia in the 15th century by the Arabs, and was swiftly delivered to the Royal court of England... and that it was taken as medication for scurvy in the 1800s...It is a natural stomach soother, and was once thought to counteract snakebite...

This whole obsession was brought about by my eating of a very nice pie while at the Electric Picnic this year, there was chicken and a couple of vegetables in a thick gravy inside, but something else... something pungent, that I tasted with my nose, that made this pie so delicious I couldn't stop thinking about it for weeks!

Then while buying my herbs this week I spotted some Tarragon lurking at the back the basket, and I twigged it - Thats it! 

So I put it to use immediately by making a good old chicken pie, using leftovers I had in the fridge, but with a potato crust instead of pastry, the creamy chicken needing something to soak it up! It was absolutely delicious, and my love affair with Tarragon (sounds like a line from Lord of the Rings) has begun... 

Chicken of Aragon Pie
You'll need
Some leftover chicken, the equivalent of or 3 cooked breasts.
A good handful of Tarragon (try and get the french stuff!)
Two large carrots, chopped and cooked
A bunch of Scallions, chopped
A bunch of Asparagus, chopped
150mls fresh cream, use double if you like
1 Tbsp flour
About 800gms mashed potato
A beaten egg.

Method
In a small bit of olive oil, Fry the scallions and asparagus until tender.  Add the chopped Tarragon, and stir until the scent hits your nose. Start singing with Joy. Add the cream. Stir in the flour and the carrots.  Stir over a good heat until the cream begins to thicken.  You want yoghurt consistency.  Pour into a pie dish and top with the potato.  Brush the top of the potato with beaten egg, as you would for pastry.  Bung into a hot oven (180/200c) and leave until the top is golden and crisp.

For a Vegetarian option, double the amounts of carrots and asparagus, and add chopped celery and cannelini beans.

Monday

Licken Chicken...

I've always had a vague hankering for what the Americans call 'Cobbler', I'd never eaten it before, but yet I knew, maybe from my previous life as an American pioneer (or are those memories of watching Little house?) that it would be hearty home food... to warm the cockles!

So when I saw a 'How to...' in my favorite food mag, I went for it...

My American readers may be falling around at this point, but remember in Europe things like Twinkies, Oreos and Cherry Coke are the exotic, the unknown... We don't have drive in movies, grits, diners, Cadillac cars, waitresses on roller skates, route 66, and all those lovely things that build America in my mind!  We have themed American restaurants like you may have Irish ones, but those menus are usually burgers and buffalo wings so the Cobbler, be it fruit or fowl, is a lovely idea of what an American mother may place on the table for her hungry crowd... It is foreign, it is different and I wanted to make it!

It was delicious, but I definitely went overboard on the peas, and it needed more cream...

But I got the idea, and will definately be perfecting this recipe...

I am writing this recipe from memory as I accidently gave the mag away without taking the recipe down so here is what I did, but my dear American friends might like to tell me how they might do it, so I can try again and hopefully come up with a more authentic cobbler!

Chicken Cobbler 

You'll need

4 large chicken thighs
100gms peas
2 leeks, chopped
1 onion, chopped
2 sprigs of thyme
Handful of parsley, chopped
200gms fresh cream
Half a stock cube

Method
Fry the chicken, with the onions and leeks, in plenty of olive oil until brown all over.
Add the peas, and the cream and then crumble in the stock cube.  

Make the cobbler by mixing approximately 150gms of plain flour, 1 tsp of bicarbonate of soda and 80/100mls of buttermilk.  

Place the creamy chicken mix into an ovendish and plop handfuls of the cobbler mix on to the top.  Brush the cobblers with beaten egg.  Bake in a preheated oven until the chicken is cooked and cobbler nice and brown!

Wednesday

I love a recommendation....

and so let me share with you a great tip I tested which you will love! My aunt Marian and I were chatting recently about 'good food' and how similar our definitions of that are, and she told me her favorite thing to do with pasta is to grate a raw courgette (zucchini!) into pasta, mix with a little parmesan, olive oil and a crushed clove of garlic.  Since I am a huge fan of the worthy courgette, I've been waiting for a good time to try it out.  Last night was the time, and we made up a batch of penne pasta, grated in two courgettes, a bit of parmesan, olive oil, crushed garlic, and then added pine nuts and some chicken and bacon bits we had in the fridge (veggies add nothing else, its just as good)...

A perfect combination, fresh tasting and screaming "I'm good for you"! 

Nobody said one word, plates were filled a second time, then a third and it was reluctantly we ate the last spoons before Mary spoke and said "that is just too nice", before we lifted ourselves off the chairs to waddle in to lie on the couches, stomachs filled to absolute capacity but still running our finger along the bottom of the pan in hope for just one more taste...

Thanks Marian - its a winner here! 

Sunday

I heart...








...cooking for a crowd!

I really like cooking with a crowd in mind, all queueing, plates in hand, eyes eating the goodies before they've even picked up a paper plate.  Ciara and Jays annual solstice is a great opportunity to cook for a crowd, and I have a stack of easy quick big bowl salads or cold dishes to set down beside the rows and rows of colourful global cuisine that inevitably ends up there!

But this year I decided to be a bit more thoughtful, and make a pie, a main to be surrounded by salads, a staple.

The party has been put off to next week, so unfortunately we had to eat the pie between just a few of us... it was a dirty job but somebody had to do it!

I made my mothers applause inducing cheese pie, but with Ciara and Jay being vegetarians replaced the usual ham with spinach.  This made the pie a little wetter than usual but it was still absolutely scrummy!

Italian Cheese Pie
You'll need

400g ricotta
400g grated cheddar cheese
400g parmesan
400g cottage cheese
4 sheets shortcrust pastry (buy it!)
1 egg, beaten
1 sachet/2 tsp dried italian herb mix
handful of ham or spinach
handful pine nuts.

Method
Grease and line a large springform tin (about 23cms).  Measure and cut out a pastry bottom and place in the tin, brush with milk and place cut out rectangles around the sides of the tin, overlapping onto the bottom. The pastry should be left coming over the sides of the tin and brushed with milk, then set to one side.  In a bowl mix the cheeses together with the egg and the herbs, season.  

Place half the mix into the pie and top with spinach leaves or ham and the pine nuts. 

 Place the rest of the mix on top.  

Place a double layer of pastry on the top of the pie and with a fork or fingers press down to stick to the sides which have been brushed with milk. Prick the top and decorate. Bake for about 45 minutes at 190c until golden brown. Allow cool before slicing.


Thursday

Risotto Rosa...

I have had a small tin of salmon in my press for ages... I bought it by accident in a big weekly shop and never realised that it was a tin of wild canadian red salmon, retailing at... wait for it...€14!!! For a little tin, when I twigged that I nearly died! I could have had a full fresh Irish salmon for that! Anyway I had been buying salmon in tins for Joe but this one was not going to suffer the fate of 50 percent being flung around the room! So I held onto it, waiting for an opportunity to use it, with its value in mind!

But last night, with our cupboards spacious and minimalist, I decided to use it in
 the dinner, and just as I was reaching for the trusty bag of penne I spied a half pack of arborio lurking in the shadows.  Risotto!

So I made a pink risotto, with salmon, and red onion.  Just follow my basic risotto recipe here, and add a tin of salmon (or fresh of course) and use red onion instead of white.

It was really good but next time I'll just pick up a couple of fresh wild darnes, at half the price!!

Monday

Man Food!

As a pre-fathers day treat I decided to cook Bill a special dinner on Saturday night and so set about making burgers.  Home made burgers are so superior to shop bought and only take a few minutes to make, I can never fully understand why I ever buy them! I think its one of those things, like meatballs, that seems to take longer and more effort in my memory than in truth. 
Anyway the burgers went down very well, although his second one knocked him for six and I spent the evening listening to him snoring on the sofa! Oh well...

Mediterranean Lamb burgers
Makes four quarter pounder size and a small one for the dog!

You'll need
500gms Minced Lamb
200gms sausage meat from Tesco tomato and rosemary sausages
1 onion
1 mild green chili pepper
6/7 sunblush tomatoes
2 cloves garlic
handful parsley

Method
After squeezing the meat out of the sausages, throw everything in your food processor and pulse until its all chopped and combined.  Take handfuls of the mix and form burgers, whatever way you prefer.  Fry in olive oil for about 8 minutes each side on a hot pan.

Serve in a rustic wholegrain bap with sliced cheese, tomato ketchup and some mint mayonnaise.

Sit back and enjoy the in-between-bites compliments that rain down from appreciative menfolk! 

Sunday

Son of a gun...

...we'll have big fun on the bayou!

"Jambalaya, Crawfish pie, FilĂ© gumbo...  For tonight, Im a-gonna see my my-my cher a mi-o Pick guitar, fill fruit far and be gay-o Son of a gun, well have big fun on the bayou..."

 As a kid I used to listen to the Carpenters singing Jambalaya and think "what on earth are they talking about?" My mother told me that Jambalaya was a big mix of rice, meat and fish and that a bayou was a creek... She told me that the song was about a place called Louisianna, and it all sounded very exotic to me.

It is the one food I had never eaten in my life, Jambalaya or Gumbo.  

And for some reason yesterday I spent the morning trying to say "New Orleans" in that slow way that people from New Orleans do... Nu Ow..lenes... Nuw Oh-weh-leens... Nuh Owl-eens... 
And that reminded me of Gumbo, and I got curious.  A bit of googling and I found out that really in its essence any stew of a roux base that contains onion, bell pepper and celery is a gumbo.  I looked around for recipes and you know the pictures just didn't grab me, and I am a picture recipe kinda girl - I don't trust recipes without the heres one I made earlier shot! 
So I reread the information about what makes a gumbo and just made one myself.  

I'm sure gumbocentric people will cry out 'That ain't no gumbo' but I'm happy and I followed the rules... so here it is... my hot and tasty... 

'Wish it was Shrimp' Gumbo
You'll need
1 cup of small prawns (or shrimp if you can get good ones)
4 sticks of celery
1 green bell pepper
1 onion
150mls milk
1 tablespoon flour
2 ounces butter
1 tsp cayenne pepper
salt and pepper
250gms cooked rice

Method
Fry the onion, celery and pepper together until translucent.  Make a space in the middle of the pan and make the roux by melting the butter and adding the flour and some of the milk to make a thick paste, then bit by bit add all the milk until you have a sauce.  

Add the prawns and stir until they are opaque.  Add the cayenne pepper and seasoning. Pour over cooked rice and tuck in.  

I should have cooked this roux for longer to get the dark brown roux which Gumbo is made from but there were hungry men in the other room watching football, so they got a half gumbo...a mbo. I will go the full hog next time and let you know how it tastes!

Thursday

Beef and Balsamic

The rain that poured down yesterday was gone today, and the sun was belting down from a clear blue sky.  It was a day where the sunroof is open, along with all the windows and you still wish you had a fan - as they say in the U.K. "Belter!"

It made us hungry for our 6 week holiday which is coming up in July... we can't wait much longer for Italian skies, and the mediterranean sea lapping at our feet.  We cannot wait much longer for the flavours and colours of the gelateria, the tiny little pastry shops and the local restaurants welcoming us in "come let us feed you all" they say!

Bills favorite meal ever was in a restaurant about five minutes from our families home in Italy, where they served him over eight courses of fresh local simple food, the penultimate dish being steak.  Nothing else but a steak, in typical Italian form, not even with a garnish, just on its own with a light cheesy balsamicy dressing. 

We really try to eat only organic meat, and it means we don't eat meat every day, but it also means the meat we do eat is always tasty as hell and without conscience.  Most beef is free range, but the chemicals and additives in the cattle food plus the high level of antibiotics... well it just makes me uneasy... 

So today, with a few shillings in my pocket, I went to buy some beef.  

Spurned on by pictures of Nicole of Art and Aioli's steak and salad, I filled my basket with fresh greens and blood reds.

I tried to recapture the italian dressing tonight, but I used 2 tbsp white balsamic vinegar to the same of olive oil and added a crushed clove of garlic, a good handful of fine ground parmesan cheese and a tsp of mayo.  It tasted great!

Eating beef with such a light dressing allows the meat to take centre stage, and served with a fresh salad its perfect for evenings in the sunshine.  After the last few days of miserable grey skies and dousing rain, it was a welcome sun that greeted us this morning, and a meal recommended all the way from California fit right on in..

Tuesday

Coddle, v. (1) to pamper, to treat indulgently, to baby. (2)to cook in water just below boiling point

The weather shifted today, although its been brewing for the last few days, we woke up to rain. It was cold, windy and raining, and everyone around had gloomy faces.

I appreciate the rain, God made me waterproof and fair enough no-one likes to be soaked through but is there much nicer than a hot shower and clean pyjamas after being out in the heavy rain? I especially love the rain at this time of year (but preferably not every day) as the glistening leafy green reflections in the road can be quite magical!

So it was along these stunning mirror pictures I drove today, to pick up my daughter and her pal from school. Only I couldn't find her, only two bedraggled kittens sat where they would normally be. So I took them home instead, to blankets and a roaring fire, some daytime tv, hot cups of tea.
Somedays everyone needs a bit of coddling... its funny how comfort is sometimes defined with food we know really well, things that are simple... jam sandwiches, chocolate cake, mashed potato... The things that comfort people are homely, warm, known... The foods that comfort aren't the delicate, intricate and unusual, they are the normal everyday foods, where the ingredients speak for themselves, cheap and easy to make, made with love and more welcome than anything else to those in need of some TLC! We've a saying here in Ireland "to warm the very bones of you" and its usually used when handing a nice bowl of stew or soup to someone just in from the cold.  I mean who would want to come in from the cold, wind and rain, after a hard day and be handed a salad?? 

Bill rang me at four, he'd be late, he was starving - hadn't managed to grab lunch in the end of month mayhem. He'd be home at 6 and by the sound of him, he too needed some coddling...


Dublin Coddle
for four

You'll need

8 large potatoes, peeled and cubed
3 medium sized leeks, chopped
1 large onion, chopped
6 thick cut rashers
12 Irish sausages
Handful parsley
750mls Chicken stock
1 can of Campbells Golden Vegetable Soup
Some butter.

Method

Place the potatoes, leeks, onion and parsley into a pan with the knob of butter. Fry gently until the leeks and onions become translucent and then transfer to a large pot. In the pan fry the rashers and sausages until lightly browned. Transfer to the pot. Cover with the stock and stir in the soup (I pour mine through a sieve to leave behind the little veg pieces) and allow to sit, just under the boil for about thirty minutes, or until the vegetables are cooked. Just under the boil is where there is a fizz, not bubbles in the water. However some cooker heat is harder to control so if it does boil, don't worry about it a jot! It'll turn out fine.

Serve how you like, we plop big spoons of it onto cooked spinach leaves and eat with brown soda bread covered in butter...

Some people add various vegatables and pulses to coddle, I'm a purist so I don't! There is also a brown coddle which uses oxtail soup instead of golden vegetable, although some people would say you shouldn't add soup, and just use stock but I picked up the tip from a friend of mine who is a real Dub, born and reared in the inner city, so I think its authentic enough!

Saturday

Texan rice


I love the smokiness of Texan style food, and since I first started cooking for myself it has been a regular occurance on the family menu.  Its spicy but not the "nose-running, tear inducing, I cant feel my tongue" of Asian food, or the searing belly hotness of true mexican cuisine.  There is a spice mix I use for fajitas, enchiladas, and rubs for meat.  It has 1 teaspoon each of Cayenne pepper, crushed garlic, crushed onion, smoked paprika, cajun style mustard and tomato paste.  A good glug of olive oil and stir it all together.  

Rub this on meat before grilling or frying, add to a tin of chopped tomatoes for enchiladas or stir on to the fajits mix while cooking.

Another thing I do with it is stir it through rice,  chicken and veg for what we refer to as "Texan Rice"...

Y'all try it now, y'hear!

Monday

Lemony Snickett...

I'm sharing this with you because I love you, I must do in order to divulge simply the easiest but most scumptious of all sauces... It goes on pasta of course (what doesn't?) but is amazing poured over skewered prawns, or as a dip for raw vegetables... You can smother cauliflower in it, broccoli, anything and its immediately transformed into a dinner party dish...

I know I'm terribly boring, yet another pasta sauce, yet another lemon dish... but if something is this good you just gotta eat! We always eat this in Italy, during our summers there, and this is the first time we'd made it at home... It was delicious but is even more so eaten outside on a terrazza, with a small breeze playing with your toes, the strong sunshine on your neck and an afternoon by the river to look forward to...

We call it Lemony Snickett, thought up by our darling Mary who loves anything lemony.

Here is her top five lemon favorites, this sauce is at number three so let that be your guide...
1)Lemon fondants
2) Fanta Lemon
3) Lemony Snickett sauce
4)Iced tea with Lemon
5) Bandi Brooks Lemon Sorbet


Lemony Snickett
or
Creamy Lemon Sauce
 
You'll need
Half an Onion
3 cloves garlic
125mls double cream
3 tbs parmesan cheese
2 tbs goats/cream cheese
Zest of 1 lemon
Juice of 1 lemon
Olive oil
S+P

Method
Put a good handsome glug of oil into a saucepan and add the onions and garlic, stir until soft and translucent.  Add the parmesan and the goats cheese, then the lemon zest and juice.  Stir in the hot oil until the zest breaks easily with the back of a fork.  Take off the heat.  Stir in the cream and add salt and pepper. Perfect...