Rainbow Wraps
ingredients:
- 4 Deli Kitchen Skinni Wraps
- 2 handfuls of fresh baby rocket (baby arugula)
- 1 Avocado, pitted, peeled and mashed with the juice of 1/2 lime
- 1/2 each red and yellow peppers, trimmed and sliced
- 1 medium carrot, peeled and cut into matchstick pieces
- 1/2 of a small courgette (zucchini) washed and cut into matchstick pieces
- 1 small piece of a red cabbage shredded (about 1/2 cup)
- 8 TBS your favourite hummus (I used lemon, pepper & coriander)
- salt and black pepper to taste
instructions:
How to cook Rainbow Wraps
- Lay your wraps out flat. Spread each with 2 TBS of the hummus, covering them totally. Lay out the veggies in a rainbow order. I like to put the avocado in the centre. Season to taste with salt and black pepper. Roll up tightly. Cut as desired.

(Yes, this IS my kitchen.)
I posted a question on my Facebook Page a few days ago asking people what they wanted to see here on the blog. I was really pleased with the answers I got and happily I had already cooked some of the things you wanted to see so I have created a bit of a round up of those ones here today. The rest I will have to cook one at a time as my budget and time fits!
Also if you didn't particpate in that survey on my Facebook Page, feel free to post your requests in the comments section at the bottom of this post. I will endeavor to fulfil them at some point!
Someone asked for a good risotto recipe. This is a recipe for a really delicious oven baked Chicken and Broccoli Risotto. Not traditional, but very good. The recipe for that is HERE.
Then there is my recipe for a dessert type of risotto . . . Vanilla Risotto with Oven Roasted Pears. You can find that recipe HERE. It's really good. You will want to have small firm pears for this.
This is my recipe for a Traditional Victorian Sponge or Victorian Sandwich cake as it is sometimes called. You can choose to use all butter in it if you wish, or half butter and half margarine. All butter will yield a slightly heavier cake. Both versions are good. It all depends on whether you are a purist or not. The cake you see here was made with half and half. You can find my recipe HERE.
Rice Pudding comes in several different kinds. This one is one which is cooked on top of the stove and is simply rice and a bit of sweetener and milk. You can find that recipe HERE. It is quite simple to make and is really very good, if I don't say so myself.
Then there is this version, which is a Danish recipe which I clipped out of a newspaper yonks ago and is my absolute favourite rice pudding. It, too, is cooked on top of the stove, but includes a delicious cherry sauce and is flavoured with almond, cinnamon and cardamon. You can find that recipe HERE.
Then there is this absolutely delicious version of rice pudding which is baked in the oven. This is Todd's favourite one. It too is simple and very creamy. You can find that recipe HERE.
Someone asked for a good recipe for Yorkshire Puddings. Over here you can buy them ready made and compared to homemade they are not quite as good. Homemade ones are infinitely better. This is my FIL's recipe. He was a career cook in the Canadian Military and these are THE best. Seriously. But you have to follow the directions exactly.
*Yorkshire Puddings*
Makes 12
Printable Recipe
I wonder who it was that discovered that with just a little flour, milk and eggs you could create something that is so crispy, light and delicious! Sunday lunch just wouldn't be Sunday lunch without a couple of these on the plate. These turn out perfect every time, as long as you follow the directions to a "T." Not hard to do really as they are very simple.
2 large free range eggs, at room temperature
1 tsp salt
1 1/3 cups milk, at room temperature (315ml)
1 cup flour (140g)
a little oil or dripping
Make sure all your ingredients are at room temperature before beginning. Beat your eggs together in a large measuring jug until very light. Whisk in the milk. Sift the flour into a bowl along with the salt. Make a well in the middle and add the wet ingredients all at once, pouring them into the well, and then whisk them in, slowly incorporating the dry mixture from the sides until you have a smooth batter. Now, this is the important bit . . . COVER IT AND LET IT SIT ON THE SIDEBOARD FOR ONE HOUR.
Preheat your oven to 230*C/450*F. . Place a small amount of oil or dripping into each cup of a 12 cup muffin tin. Place the tin into the hot oven to heat up until the fat is hot and sizzling. remove from the oven and quickly divide the batter amongst each muffin cup, filling them about 2/3 full. Return to the oven and bake for 20 minutes, until well risen, browned and crispy, reducing the oven temperature by 10 degrees every five minutes. Serve hot with plenty of gravy!!
Toad in the Hole was a recipe which I posted in the very early days of this blog, hence the picture which is not so good. I've learned a LOT since then, but that doesn't mean that this recipe isn't delicious. You can find my recipe for it HERE. You can't beat a tasty Toad in the Hole with Mash for a super supper, with plenty of bisto gravy. Stodgy, delicious and comforting!
Then there was Sausage and Bacon Toad in the Hole. A delicious version made in individual casserole dishes, with sausages wrapped in bacon, wedges of onion and of course that crispy batter pudding base. Fabulous with mash and gravy. You can find the recipe HERE.
A delicious invention of mine called Pundit Pudding, which is a mixed grill served in a plate sized Yorkshire pudding. There is a piece of tasty rump steak, a grilled sausage, some gammon and a small chop served in each yorkshire pudding, along with grilled mushrooms and tomatoes, with plenty of gravy, greens and potatoes on the side. Not for the faint of heart. Find that recipe HERE.
Beer Battered Fish. You can't beat a tasty Friday night supper of fish and chips. This is a lovely batter for on fish. Light and crisp with beautifully flakey and moist fish inside. Find that recipe HERE.
And to go with it the tastiest Tartar Sauce you could ever want to eat. Right HERE. Rich and creamy and filled with herbs, capers, gerkins and just a touch of horseradish sauce for a bit of a spark! We love this. Once you have tried it, nothing else will do!
a frying thermometer
That's it for this time, but stay tuned as I will be cooking up all of your other requests soon!
After you have done that you can sprinkle on the cheese. Today I used a cheddar blend, but to be honest I prefer it with a much stronger cheddar. Pile on as little or as much cheese as you wish.
I, myself, am a bit of a glutton and I like to add a fair amount of cheese.
Did your mother make you bacon and cheese on toast when you were growing up?? Mind did and what a treat that was. She would use process cheese slices and cooked bacon. My how delicious it was.
Today I remembered that I had some already cooked bacon in my freezer and I added some to half of my cheese on toast slices! Cheese and bacon are also perfect partners!
I really hope that you will be inspired to bake this loaf of bread. It is truly a lovely loaf. You can let it bake totally in your bread machine, or use the dough cycle and finish the bread in a traditional oven, baking it in a traditional bread pan.
That way you don't have the paddle hole in the center of the loaf. This never bothers me actually, but I do know some people are put off by it! In any case, if bread be the staff of life, bake on! You won't be sorry!!
Milk Bread
Ingredients
- 1 1/8 cups (9 fluid ounces) whole full fat milk
- 1 TBS butter, cut into bits
- 3 cups (420g) bread flour
- 1 TBS sugar
- 1 TBS vital wheat gluten
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 1/2 tsp bread machine yeast
Instructions
- Add all of the ingredients to your bread machine according to the manufacturer's instructions for your particular model. (In mine you start with the yeast, then flour, butter, then wet, then salt.)
- Choose basic/white program setting, based on the options of your particular machine. Select the loaf size, color, and press start.
- When loaf is done, remove it from the baking pan and transfer to a wire rack to cool for at least half an hour prior to slicing it. (I know its hard to wait!!)
Did you make this recipe?
I was sent some lovely recipes this week for Christmas Baking for the holidays from Dr Oetker. They all look so fabulous I don't know which one I want to try first. I think the Stollen Loaf Cake is looking pretty good from where I am sitting. I have everything I need in the house to make it and I adore Stollen anyways. I love anything which smacks of almonds and dried fruit! The Spiced Lemon Cookie Wreath also looks like a strong possibility. In any case I am sharing all the recipes with you today. Christmas Jumper Cookies, Stollen Loaf Cake, Spiced Lemon Cookie Wreath, Mini Chocolate Gingerbread Loaves and a Winter Forest Chocolate Cake! There's a Merry Christmas in the "Baking!" You know if the recipes are from Dr. Oetker, that the recipes must be great. They are the creme de la creme of bakedom!
Peanut Butter Bread
ingredients:
- 280g plain flour (2 cups)
- 1 TBS Baking Powder
- 1/2 tsp fine sea salt
- 65g butter softened (1/4 cup)
- 95g granulated sugar (1/2 cup)
- 50g soft dark brown sugar (1/4 cup, firmly packed)
- 180g smooth peanut butter (1 cup)
- 1 large free range egg
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 240ml milk (1 cup milk)
instructions:
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a 9 X 5 X 3 inch loaf tin. Set aside.
- Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt together in a bowl. Set aside.
- Cream the butter and both sugars together until combined. Add the peanut butter and mix well together. Beat in the egg and vanilla. Add the flour mixture, alternately with the milk, making three dry and two wet additions. Spoon into the prepared loaf tin.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 50 to 60 minutes, until well risen and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. The top should spring back when lightly touched.
- Cool in the tin for 10 minutes prior to tipping out onto a wire rack to finish cooling completely. Store in an airtight container.
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!
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