Showing posts sorted by date for query sandwich. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query sandwich. Sort by relevance Show all posts
I think the British love sandwiches more than anyone else in the world. Walk into any shop, and I do mean any . . . and you are sure to find a variety of them, ready made, wrapped and for sale to anyone who feels in the need for some potable and portable sustenance of the this kind. AND, they come in varities which are suitable for any meal of the day . . . breakfast, lunch, dinner or snack!
I recently treated myself to Nigel Slater's latest cookbook, eat. You all know how I love Nigel and his way of cooking and eating. That man could make anything look and sound tasty and he is the master as creating delicious and fast food out of just about anything you can get your hands on. He has one whole chapter in this book devoted to sandwiches and the like. My kind of guy. My kind of cooking.
One in particular intrigued me and set my tastebuds to tingling. This was a sandwich he created using crusty bread, beef drippings and leftover roast from the sunday dinner. Reading about it . . . made me want one, and reading about it . . . inspired me to create my own version. I got to thinking hash . . . roast beef hash . . . in a bun.
And so that is what I did. I made some hash using chopped potatoes, chopped onions, chopped cabbage and some of the leftover roast from yesterday's pot roast. I seasoned it lightly with some salt and cracked black pepper . . .
Added a touch of herb . . . in the way of summer savoury, and a hint of snap by using some Worcestershire Sauce and a dash of brown sauce. (steak sauce to you North Americans) I cooked that all together until the potatoes and onions and cabbage were gilded with little caramelized edges, all golden brown and sweet . . . and the meat was falling apart once more . . .
And then I stogged it between two halves of a crisp warm ciabatta roll . . . the bottom spread with just a touch of creamed horseradish sauce . . . a slice of Leerdammer Toastie cheese layed on top of the hot hash, so it melted down into all those gilded crevices, and topped by that crisp roll-top . . . all that goodness tucked into a tasty and lightly crisped ciabatta suitcase and just waiting for me to tuck in . . .
Good things happen when Nigel inspires me. Tasty things. Things I want to indluge in again, and again . . . and again. I am never disappointed.
*Roast Beef Hash Buns*
Serves 4a handful of chopped cabbage
1 small clove of garlic, peeled and minced
2 TBS hot beef stock or water
an amount of leftover cooked roast, cubes (an equal to the amount of potatoes)
1 TBS vegetable oilTo serve, slice each ciabatta roll in half. Spread the bottoms with some horseradish sauce (if desired) and then pile an equal amount of the hot hash on top. Top each with a slice of toastie cheese and then the top of the rolls. Serve immediately. Pass the brown sauce or ketchup if desired.
I do get sent the neatest things. I was recently sent a variety of really nice appetizer pastries to use for the holidays.
Pidy UK have recently launched a selection of their deliciously famous canapés for the retail market, the range contains a combination of their most unique and interesting shaped pastry vol-au-vents. All the products are made with their award winning pastry recipe that the Pidy family initially created in their little patisserie shop in Ypres, Belgium back in 1952.
Pidy is an innovative Belgian family food business established in the world of ready to fill pastry products. Pidy are a world leader in dry puff pastry and also competitive in short crust, fonçage dough, choux pastry and sponge cakes. With three production units in Belgium, France and the USA, Pidy are able to offer the perfect day to day service and market support to their customers in more than 50 countries world wide. Pidy supply a range of products to the foodservice and retail industry which includes chefs, restaurants, cafes, bakery, patisserie, catering, retail and cash and carry.
First up are these delightful little spoon shaped pastries. They came 12 in the pack and were just the right size for one tasty little bite. I created a Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato filling for them, which turned out really nice. The cups were crisp and just the perfect texture to go with the filling with no apparent outstanding flavors that would detract from whatever you put into them. They worked out very well.
*Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato Spread*
16 servings
16 crisp appetizer cups

They also have a line of veggie pastry cups. These ones were shaped like little flower baskets and were a lovely pink/red colour. Again there was no real jarring flavour from the cups. They went very well with the pizza type filling I created for them.
Pidy’s newest retail range the Veggie cups are available in four flavours beetroot, carrot, spinach and celeriac and come in packs of 12. The four flavours capture the true nature, colour and essence of the vegetables as they are made with 30% real vegetable juice extract and no E numbers or artificial colours. The canapés are also made with Pâté à Foncer dough which is lighter and contains 50% less fat than standard pastry.
Again, they were very crisp and the shape and color made for a very pretty little presentation.
*Pizza Cups*
Makes 16Finally I was sent these Vol-au-Vents Pastries. Crisp puff pastry shells, perfectly baked and waiting for me to fill them with my chosen filling. These were the perfect size for a first course and so I created a tasty spinach, cranberry, red onion and blue cheese filling to serve in them.
*Cranberry, Spinach and Blue Cheese Puffs*
Serves 8 as a first course
salt and coarsely ground black pepper

Place the baked vol aux vents on a baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6.
Melt
the butter in a large skillet. Add the red onions and cook, stirring
over medium heat until softened. Begin adding the spinach a handful at a
time, cooking just to wilt. Stir in the dried cranberries and heat
through. Season to taste with salt and coarsely ground black pepper.
Divide the mixture equally amongst the pastry cups. Top each with an
equal portion of the blue cheese crumbles. Pop into the oven to heat
through and melt the cheese. Serve immediately.Place the baked vol aux vents on a baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6.
Pidy manufacture a huge variety of products, including savoury pastries for main course, sweet pastry cases, dessert products, canapés and ready to fill pastries. For further details go to their website or follow them on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.
You can buy these fab products on Amazon.uk as well as in select farm and garden shops throughout the UK.
Many thanks to food PR agency CLIP Creative and PR for the samples.
I have always been a fan of Leerdammer cheese. Sweet and nutty it's long been a choice of mine for in salads and sandwiches . . . and yes, I confess, I have even been known to just snack on it neat . . . without anything else. It just has a nice mellow flavour which I enjoy. That's why when I was recently asked would I like to participate in the Leerdammer Toastie Challenge, I jumped at the chance!
I was sent several packs of the new Leerdammer Toastie cheese and challenged to come up with a new toastie sandwich. This new Toastie cheese is creamier than the original and comes in a new square shape, the perfect size for fitting into a toastie. The original sweet and nutty flavours remain!
First I played with it a bit, creating a panini pressed sandwich, which had several slices of the leerdammer toastie slices, along with some sliced Italian ham, some grainy mustard and a pickled red onion relish, and whilst it was good . . . I felt it was lacking in some way. It wasn't quite pushing all of my taste buttons and so I went back to the drawing board.
I decided to stick with the panini bun because I like their texture . . . crisp and yet chewy. I love a toasted panini, don't you?
Something smokey goes really well with the sweet and nutty flavour of Leerdammer cheese, but the ham wasn't quite doing it so I scrapped that as well and decided to go with something a bit smokier and a tad sweet . . . rich dry cured smoked streaky bacon. Cooked until crisp . . . 4 rashers because I am greedy that way.
I liked the idea of the pickled onions, but they were too sharp I thought and so I decided to replace them with a really good red onion marmalade. I had a jar of this particular brand in my larder just waiting to be opened and this is what I chose, but you could use another brand if you wanted to, or even make your own from scratch. There is a lovely recipe on the BBC Good Food page.
The red onion marmalade added just the right touch. It is sweet, but not cloyingly so . . . there is just a small hint of sour and a smack of spiciness that goes so well with the bacon and that creamy sweet nutty cheese . . .
So . . . with each bite you get the crisp chewy panini bread . . . buttery (or if you really feel hedonistic, you can pan grill it in the bacon fat from cooking the bacon. mmmm . . . I was and I did.), the sharp sweetness from that lovely red onion marmalade, the crisp smoky saltiness of that lovely bacon . . . all intermingled with that oozingly rich sweet and nutty Leerdammer!
In short, this was a toastie that rang all my bells and tooted all my whistles! This was a winner/winner toastie dinner! I just adored it, and I think you will too! To me, this is the perfect Toastie! Oh so incredibly scrumdiddlyumptiously good. The perfectly tasty toastie!
*Bacon, Onion Marmalade & Leerdammer Toastie*
Makes 1
softened butter
Don't be surprised if you are addicted at first bite! Many thanks to the Leerdammer people for sending me this wonderful toastie cheese and inspiring me to stretch my creative toastie wings!
Leerdammer Toastie is the latest addition to the Leerdammer range, which also included the original and light slices, as well as the original block. Leerdammer Toastie is now available nationwide in Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Waitrose and Asda, prices at a RRP of £1.75 for a pack of six slices.
We have a couple of Missionary Elders coming for tea tonight and one of them doesn't like Vegetables. I know! I cannot imagine not like vegetables! Anyways, I made a nice Macaroni and Cheese for supper, which I will serve with some Gammon and carrots (the only vegetable he will eat) and a salad.(which he won't eat, but I have to have salad!)
I had too much macaroni and cheese for the baking dish and so I decided to lend my hand to doing something tasty with the bit that didn't fit. I know . . . I can't help it, the wheels in my culinary head are always turning.
I can't claim to have invented this . . . but it's new to me. If you've already done this, I haven't stolen your recipe. We are just great minds that think alike! (What a fab idea to think that the world is filled with great minds thinking alike!) They say there is nothing new under the sun, only new ways of doing things. I expect that is true.
I decided to create a Grilled Macaroni and Cheese Sandwich, and then I decided as I was gathering my goodies that it would taste even better with crisp pancetta between the layers.
Each bite brings the taste of buttery toasted bread |(Garlicky if you have used garlic mayo instead of butter), salty crisp pancetta and creamy peppery macaroni and cheese! WOWSA! This was FABULOUS!
I was too afraid to eat the whole thing. My arteries were constricting just thinking about it so I tortured the Toddster with half of it. He seemed to enjoy it as well. Now I am pondering what else I can do to this to take it even further over the top. Any ideas??? (I think some rocket/arugula would be a nice addition. Next time!!)
*Grilled Pancetta, Mac & Cheese Sarnies*
Makes onea small handful of grated cheddar cheese
Butter
the outsides of the bread with some softened butter or garlic
mayonnaise. Place the grated cheese on the un-buttered side of one
slice of bread and spread the macaroni and cheese on the un-buttered
side of the other slice. Grind a goodly amount of black pepper on the
macaroni and cheese. Lay the slices of cooked pancetta on top of the
cheese on the other slice. Carefully press the two sides together,
taking care that the plain buttered sides are on the outside. Heat a
small nonstick skillet. Carefully add the sandwich and brown first on
one side, then flip over and brown on the other side. Wait a few
minutes and then slice into halves or quarters and enjoy!
You can find a really good Mac & Cheese recipe here.
A totally Delectable White Chocolate and Ginger Cheesecake and Cocoa Meringues
Thursday, 17 October 2013
It’s
our favourite themed week of the year, Chocolate Week has arrived and
The English Provender Co. has put together a selection of delectable
chocolate recipes for all you
chocoholics!
This
year why not try making some tasty desserts using The English Provender
Co. Luxury Ginger Curd to make a luxurious White Chocolate and Ginger
Curd Cheesecake or chocolately
Cocoa Meringues. These simple yet exquisite recipes will be sure to
keep your chocolate cravings satisfied!
*White Chocolate and Ginger Curd Cheesecake*
Serves: 8
Printable Recipe
If you like ginger you will love this!
75 g butter (1/3 cup)
150 g plain chocolate digestive biscuits, crushed (1 2/3 cup)
200 g good quality white chocolate (7 ounces)
500 g mascarpone cheese (2 cups)
315 g jar The English Provender Co. Luxury Ginger Curd (about a cup and a half)
Grated white chocolate or chocolate curls, to decorate
*Cocoa Meringues with Luxury Ginger Curd*
Makes about 15
Printable Recipe
Crisp chocolate flavoured meringues filled with a ginger cream. Delicious!
2 large free range egg whites
100 g caster sugar(1/2 cup)
2 teaspoons cocoa powder, plus extra for dusting
150 ml double cream (2/3 cup)
3 tablespoons The English Provender Co. Luxury Ginger Curd
Place the egg whites into a large spotlessly clean mixing bowl and using an electric whisk, beat until they form stiff peaks. Add the sugar a tablespoon at a time, whisking well after each addition, until the mixture is smooth, thick and glossy
Sift the cocoa powder over the top and using a metal spoon fold it over a few times until the mixture is streaked
Using a teaspoon, place heaped teaspoons of the mixture, spaced a little apart onto the prepared baking sheets, until you have 30 meringues. Flatten slightly
Bake in a preheated oven for 1½ hours, or until the meringues peel easily away from the baking paper without resistance. Leave to cool.
Whisk the cream with the ginger curd until thick. Spread a little cream on the flat side of a meringue, then sandwich together with another meringue. Repeat with remaining meringues
Place on a serving plate, dust with a little cocoa powder. Serve immediately.
Uniquely indulgent The English Provender Co Luxury Ginger Curd is completely free from artificial flavour and colours, and is available in a 325g bottle for £2.49. It has a wonderful flavour. If you like Ginger you will love this. It's wonderful on pancakes or drizzled over ice cream, but be sure to check out their page for some other delectable recipes to use it in such as a St Clements Cake and a Chocolate Roulade with a Ginger Curd Mousse Filling!
new,
totally unique & indulgently delicious Luxury Ginger Curd. It's
perfect drizzled over lemon sponge cake or swirled through ice cream. -
See more at:
http://www.englishprovender.com/product/53/luxury-ginger-curd#sthash.CNBbueK8.dpuf
(A Simple Butter Cake)
From time to time readers ask me why their cake sank in the middle when baking. They always say something along the lines of: "I followed the recipe perfectly, but it still sank. What did I do?!" While it's impossible for me to know exactly what happened in any specific occasion without my actually being there, and I can't pretend to be an expert baker myself, these are the top 5 things you should look out for which may help to keep your cake from sinking the next time you bake:
1. Old Baking Powder: Baking powder may only account for a tiny percentage of your entire cake ingredients, but it can ruin the whole thing if you're not careful! Remember that baking powder only stays fresh for about 6 months to a year, so date them when you buy them, and toss and replace any containers that have been hanging around too long.
Not sure if yours is still good? Take 5 seconds to test it before you start baking by placing a teaspoon of baking powder in about a 1/2 cup of hot water. If still good, it should start to bubble rapidly. If nothing (or barely nothing) happens, it's time to head to the store.
2. Too Much Leavening: As counter-intuitive as it might sound, adding too much baking powder, baking soda, or yeast to a cake will cause it to sink as the amount of air that is created within the cake will be more than the structure can support and the whole thing will come crashing down.
Never add additional baking powder or other leaveners to self-raising flour or cake mixes (they already have it mixed in), and always be sure to read a recipe clearly and measure carefully.
When in doubt, remember that the average ratio for baking powder to flour is 1 to 1.5 teaspoons per cup of AP flour; so if you read a recipe that calls for something way above that, it's probably an error.
3. Overbeating: this is probably one of the most common reasons why cakes sink. I'm not sure what it is, but we all seem to have a natural tendency towards overbeating cake batter until it is smooth and creamy. This is even easier to do when we rely on the trusty old Kitchen Aid or food processor to do our mixing for us. But beating in too much air into the batter once the dry and wet ingredients are combined will only cause the batter sink.
Go ahead and work the air in when creaming the butter, sugar, and eggs, but as soon as you add the flour mixture, remember that it's ALL about the light hand. Fold the dry ingredients through the wet only until they are just combined, then delicately divide and pour into your cake pans. If adding anything at the end (food coloring, chocolate chips, nuts, etc.), continue to work the addition through the batter as gently as possible in a flowing folding motion.
4. Oven Temperature: an oven that isn't properly calibrated and runs either too hot or too cold, could easily make for a falling cake. If possible, spring for an external oven thermometer (you can find them in the $15-$30 range at stores like Bed, Bath, and Beyond) to make sure that when it says 350 on the dial, it's really 350 inside the oven.
Also, don't be tempted to peek inside that oven for at least the first 80% of the suggested baking time. Remember that each time you open the oven door, the temperature inside can drop as many as 10 degrees. These tiny fluctuations in temperature can affect the even rising of the cake.
5. Timing: Unless a recipe specifically calls for it, don't let a finished batter sit for very long before baking. 20-25 minutes while the first batch bakes is fine; a few hours while you run out to pick up the kids and finish some errands is not. I always strive to have my cakes in the oven as soon as I have finished mixing them, unless of course I have been otherwise instructed in a recipe.
Remember that the minute the wet and dry ingredients meet, a chemical reaction starts to take place (like those baking soda volcanoes we all made in 7th grade science class). To get a light, fluffy, and beautifully raised cake, you want that chemical reaction to take place inside the oven as the cake bakes so that the air that is created gets sealed into the baking cake. If your batter is sitting on the counter or on the fridge, the air created inside will just escape into the room, and come time for baking, there will be less to lift the cake up.
(Irish Apple Cake)
And... a few bonus tips!
Preheating IS important. Depending on your oven, it can take as long as 30 minutes for it to reach the optimal baking temperature. Always be sure to do that first before getting on with your recipe or you'll end up with an uneven, lumpy cake.
Baking Powder and Baking Soda are NOT interchangeable. Though baking powder contains baking soda, it also has other components that act as a catalyst for all that good air-creating cake-rising action, and is used in recipes that don't have acidic elements. Baking soda usually works along with an acid (lemon juice, buttermilk, yogurt, chocolate, etc.). Some recipes call for both, but that doesn't mean that you can skip one or the other; if it calls for both, be sure to use both.
(A Lemon and Pistachio Cake)
Center your oven rack. Unless otherwise told, position your oven rack in the center and place the cake pans right in the middle of the rack. If baking two cake layers at once, place them on the same rack side-by-side; don't put one on top of the other; they won't bake evenly that way.
As much as possible have all your ingredients at room temperature. I know it is very tempting to want to be in a rush and to think that it can't possibly hurt if all of your ingredients are at different temps. When it comes to the science of baking however, this variance in temperature between ingredients can make a really big difference when it comes to the end result. Bake a cake with frigid butter and eggs and you may end up with something resembling a pancake. That’s why some recipes call for “room temperature” ingredients, a frustratingly general concept, especially from a scientific point of view. Baking with room temperature butter helps to create "fluffiness." Too warm or too cold butter can result in either too few air bubbles, or air bubbles with don't hold their shape and flatten quickly.
Eggs are also crucial in giving loft to baked goods. The white of the egg is 90 percent water and 10 percent protein; when you beat an egg, it’s the protein that traps the air bubbles, and when incorporated into baked goods, these bubbles expand in the heat of the oven. Egg whites can be whipped up to eight times their volume, but this maximum air-trapping happens only when the eggs are warm; in warm eggs, the whites and yolks are looser, so it’s easier to incorporate air into them (which is the whole point).
Warmer eggs are also better when you’re mixing batter for cakes and cookies, because if you introduce cold eggs to a warmer butter-sugar mixture, the fat in the butter could harden. That would impede integration of the butter and eggs, which is why you’re creaming them to begin with.
But you do want your eggs to be cold if you need to separate the whites and yolks. Cold eggs are easier to separate, so if your recipe calls for the yolks and whites to be separated, do it before warming the eggs.
So now that I have told you all that I can about the science of baking and shared all of my wisdom in great cake bakery, I think it's only fair that I share my absolute favourite cake recipe with you.
It's a deliciously buttery sponge, filled with fresh raspberries and baked into two moist layers. Sandwiched together with a lovely vanilla butter cream icing and some seedless raspberry jam, and then drizzled with more sweetness. This is one very moreishly scrummy cake.
*Raspberry Celebration Cake*
Cuts into 12 scrummy slices
Printable Recipe
This is the cake I always bake for summer birthdays. A light moist sponge, filled with lovely raspberries, butter cream icing and seedless raspberry preserves. Top with a sweet glaze and serve with more raspberries.
For the Cake:
175g of caster sugar (3/4 plus 1/8 cup)
175g of butter, softened (13 TBS)
4 large free range eggs, separated
100g self raising flour (a scant 3/4 cup)
1 tsp baking powder
100g ground almonds (1 scan't cup)
a few drops of almond extract
125g of fresh raspberries (a heaped cup)
For the buttercream:
75g of butter, softened (1/4 cup approx.)
125g icing sugar, sifted (about 3/4 cup)
few drops vanilla
For the glaze:
100ml icing sugar sifted (1/3 cup approx.)
water to thin
Also about 4 heaped dessertspoons of seedless raspberry jam
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/Gas mark 4. Butter two 8 inch sandwich cake tins. Line the bottoms with parchment paper. Set aside.
Cream together the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Beat in the egg yolks. Sift the flour and baking powder over the creamed mixture and then fold in using a metal spoon. Fold in the ground almonds and exract. Fold only until all traces of the flour have disappeared.
Beat the egg whites until they just hold their shape. Fold them in gently, by thirds, being careful not to overmix and lose the lightness of the whites. Lightly fold in the berries. Divide between the two prepared cake tins and level off carefully.
Bake in the heated oven for 30 to 35 minutes, just until they test done. A toothpick inserted in the centre should come out clean and they should spring back when lightly touched on top.
Remove from the oven. Let cool in the tins for five minutes, then tip out onto wire racks, peel off the baking paper and allow to cool completely.
Make the buttercream by beating together all the ingredients until smooth and creamy.
Place one cake, bottom side up on a cake plate. Spread completely with all the buttercream. Spread the raspberry jam over top of the buttercream and then top with the other cake layer, placing it right side up. Whisk together the icing sugar for the glaze and enough water to make a smooth drizzable mixture. Drizzle decoratively over the top of the cake. Allow to set, then dust with more icing sugar if desired.
Have a great weekend!
I can remember being taught many years ago, I believe in Home Economics at school . . . how to make a good sandwich. Or maybe I read it in a book, in any case I was just a young girl when I learned the following rules about sandwich making.
One - always seal your bread, to the edge with butter, or marg, or something which is going to keep your bread from getting soggy from the filling. Nobody wants a soggy sandwich, which is especially important when we are talking about fillings which are wet . . . like tomatoes or cucumbers . . . or in a sandwich which is going to have to sit overnight or longer.
Two - Don't be stingy with your fillings. There should be more filling than bread. There is nothing worse than a sandwich that tastes like bread, but nothing else. And spread it to the edges folks! I have purchased far too many store sandwiches that have a pile of filling stuck in the middle and nothing on the outer edges, rendering the edges dry and inedible . . . tasteless.
Three - Air is your enemy. If you aren't serving them right away, keep them well covered and chilled. What I do is I dampen a white cloth with cold water and wring it almost dry and then I place it over the sandwiches and then cover with cling film making sure it's well sealed. Or I place them back (uncut) into the empty breadbags and seal and put them in the fridge.
Four - Don't store different kinds of sandwiches together. Nobody wants to eat an egg and cress sandwich which tastes like tuna or salmon, or vice versa. It just makes sense to me, but may not be something someone else has thought of. I am a bit pedantic about this.
Five - Use the freshest, finest ingredients you can afford to use. That can mean the difference between a sandwich and a . . . SANDWICH!
Having said all that I have one heck of a sandwich to share with you here today. I think the BLT (Bacon Lettuce and Tomato) Sandwich has to be just about everyone's favourite sandwich. That's pure diner food, and a popular choice when having lunch out.
This version here today is the absolute BEST BLT you will ever eat. Seriously. With a Basil Pesto Mayonnaise, crisp bacon, fresh ripe tomatoes, house dressing and lots of lively fresh rocket leaves . . . and a sturdy baguette (I used an Olive Flute today) . . . this is a simple sandwich that is anything but simple. This is bound to become a firm favourite and much requested sandwich.
Trust me on this one. Would I lie to YOU? Never!
*Two Hander BLT*
Serves 2 - 4
(Depending on appetites)
freshly ground black pepper
a couple of handfuls of fresh rocket (baby arugula)
Whisk together the basil pesto and the mayonnaise. Set aside.
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