Showing posts with label oven meals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oven meals. Show all posts
There is nothing the Toddster enjoys more than a good British banger. They are not something we eat really often, but when we do we tend to opt for a quality banger . . . something which is meaty and well flavoured . . . without a lot of fillers and ingredients that are questionable, and if they are wheat, gluten and dairy free, so much the better! I like knowing exactly what is in my sausage!
I love food this time of year . . . I know I say that all year round, but this is the time of year that we really start to get stuck into comfort foods . . . winter warmers . . . rich soups, stews, casseroles and bakes.
Food that, with the exception of a few small prep details, pretty much cooks itself. Simple and wholesome ingredients, but let me tell you . . . more often than not there it nothing simple at all about the flavours! Most pack a very delicious punch!
I've always been the kind of person that has been able to put things together and come up with something satisfyingly delicious . . . things like this Chicken, Bacon and Leek Casserole I am showing you here today.
It's simple. It uses stuff you most likely have in your fridge, larder and freezer right now. It tastes fabulously delicious, and it basically cooks itself. I like to serve it with some fluffy mash.
The Toddster is a real mash lover. I like to cook some greens on the side as well, just for some colour and vitamins. Today it was sprout tops. I do hope you will give it a try., and when you do that you'll come back and tell me how much you loved it! It may not look very exciting, but dull this isn't!
*Chicken, Bacon & Leek Casserole*
Serves 4
2 stalks of celery
1 large carrot, peeled and slicedsalt and pepper to taste
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.
Add the wine and chicken stock. Bring to the boil. Reduce to a simmer and stir in the flour/water mixture. Cook stirring until the mixture begins to thicken. Cover tightly and then transfer the casserole to the oven. Bake, covered, for about 45 minutes. Uncover and bake for 15 minutes longer, until the chicken and vegetables are very tender.
Serve hot with some mashed potatoes and crusty rolls.
We are off to Liverpool tomorrow to meet up with our good friends Jo and Colin. We haven't been to Liverpool since my lads were over here in 2001, pre 9/11. We took them up there for the day and did the whole docks thing. A lot of walking.
We saw the Beatles Yellow Submarine, ate some GREAT chips and just had a nice day together. This time we are traveling up on the train and I am hoping to visit the Cavern where the Fab Four started out and a few other things, eat some great food, but most important of all . . . do it all with Jo and Colin.
I saw this recipe I am sharing today on Pinterest and it caught my eye. It was called Creamy Chicken Picasso. You can see the original on Kayotic Kitchen. She shows step by step photos for her version and you may want to try her take on it instead of mine.
Like everything I had to change things a bit to suit what I wanted and to use up what I had. I didn't add the water to the sauce, and I am glad I didn't because the sauce would have been far too watery if I had. (I wouldn't add any water to it, just saying is all.)
I also added oregano, basil and parsley instead of mixed Italian herbs. I like to control that sort of thing and I added a couple of tablespoons of black pepper boursin cheese, for some added creaminess and flavour.
I also add balsamic vinegar to the sauce, and a bit of sugar to cut back on the acidity of the tomatoes. Plus I cut the peppers and onions into half moons. I didn't want whole circles. I think half moons serve nicer. But that's just me. I also added some Parmesan to the cheese.
I also pounded my chicken breasts to an even thickness so they'd cook evenly. All in all we quite enjoyed this, and I think you will too. I'm bringing my camera with me to Liverpool today so expect some pics! Enjoy your Mondays! (This isn't a dish that photographs well.)
*Creamy Chicken and Peppers*
Serves 4an even thickness
1 TBS olive oil
1 TBS butter
salt and black pepper to taste
3 sweet bell peppers
(Trim, seed, cut in half and then thinly slice into half moons)
2 fat cloves of garlic peeled and crushed.Heat the oil and butter in a large skillet until the butter begins to foam. Season the chicken breasts on both sides with some salt and black pepper. Brown the chicken lightly on both sides and then place it into the prepared baking dish. Add the onions and peppers to the skillet. Cook, stirring until they begin to wilt. Scoop out and layer them in the casserole with the chicken, placing half beneath the chicken breasts and half over top. Add the garlic to the skillet and cook for about 30 seconds. Dump in the tin of tomatoes. Add the herbs, stock cube, balsamic vinegar, sugar, nutmeg and cream. Heat to the boil, then whisk in the boursin cheese. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cook for about 5 minutes on low heat and then pour this mixture over the chicken and peppers.
Cover tightly with foil and then bake in the oven for 30 minutes. At the end of the 30 minutes, mix together the mozzarella and Parmesan cheeses. Sprinkle this over top of the casserole and return to the oven, baking for an additional 15 minutes. Serve hot with rice or pasta, and crusty bread for mopping up the sauce.
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I have to confess . . . I didn't eat a lot of lamb before I moved over here to the UK. My sole experience of eating lamb had been when I was a teen. My mother purchased some lamb chops at the local IGA and cooked them for us. Sadly, they smelled like she was burning a woolen mitten when they were cooking, and none of us would eat them.
Since my arrival over here though, I have come to realize that good lamb doesn't smell like burning mittens, and that it tastes luxiously rich and delicious when cooked properly. I love it so much so that Todd and I had lamb for our wedding celebration dinner, and I cook it fairly often.
Most often I cook my lamb cutlets only slightly, so that they are still meltingly pink and succulent on the insides . . . a brief searing heat on both sides of no more than 2 minutes, simply seasoned with some sea salt and cracked black pepper. Not everyone's choice I know, but I do so love it that way myself . . . with a bit of mint sauce on the side . . . and some lightly steamed baby new potatoes and fresh veg. My idea of heaven . . .
Once in a while though, it's nice to break free from the norm and try something completely new and different. When I received these lovely lamb cutlets last week from the nice folks at Abel & Cole I knew just the recipe I wanted to use for them . . . my adaption of one from Sophie Grigson's cookery book, "Country Kitchen." Abel & Cole organic lamb is very special, raised from slow growing traditional breeds, and grazed on lush green grass and wild herbs. Special lamb deserves top treatment, and I knew any recipe of Sophie's would be pretty wonderful.
If you like roasted root vegetables, roasted so that they are sweetly caramelized on the outsides and meltingly tender on the insides . . . combined with eastern spice . . . and topped off with lucious lamb cutlets, then this recipe is for you.
It's fabulous. So fabulous that, although it was supposed to serve four . . . in this house, it only served two . . . *smack*
*Spiced Lamb Chops with Roasted Roots*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
This is a very tasty, and mildly spiced dish of lamb and vegetables, all cooked together in one roasting pan. It looks like a lot of ingredients, but they go together very simply and with everything being banged together into one roasting tin, there's not a lot to clean up afterwards!
2 heaped TBS of tamarind paste
7 fluid ounces of boiling water
4 TBS sunflower oil
12 small new potatoes
6 carrots
3 large parsnips
3 red onions, peeled and quartered
6 cloves of garlic, whole and unpeeled
1/2 tsp ground tumeric
2 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp black onion seeds (called kalonji or nigella seeds as well)
4 meaty lamb cutlets or chops
coarse sea salt, freshly ground black pepper
Pre-heat the oven to 220*C/425*F. Place the tamarind paste in a bowl along with the hot water and sunflower oil, whisking it together well. Whisk in the tumeric, cumin seeds and Kalongi. Mix together well. Peel the carrots in cut them half lengthwise. Peel the parsnips and quarter them. Remove the tough inner core. Peel the new potatoes if desired. Place all the vegetables in a large roasting tin along with the onion quarters and garlic cloves. Pour the tamarind mixture over top and disperse amongst the vegetables using your hands. Cover tightly with tinfoil and then bang the pan into the oven and roast them, covered, for half an hour. Remove from the oven and discard the foil. Give the vegetables a good stir and then bury the lamb cutlets down into them, making sure they are coated in the juices. Return to the oven and roast, uncovered, for an additional 40 to 50 minutes, until the chops are cooked and the vegetables are all very tender and gorgeously caramelized on the edges. (Check once in a while and add a bit more water if need be.) When done, serve immediately with some crusty bread.
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