There are a lot of people that would like to try making their own sausages, but they get put off because of their fear of having to stuff casings and go through all that faff.
The manufacture of sausage began some two thousand years ago, and whilst some of it's traditions are going strong as they ever were, there are also a lot of new ideas creeping into the industry and new flavours. There are probably as many sausages in the world as there are countries and counties . . . with each area having adapted their own peculiarities and flavours.
I do love a good banger . . . nice and fat (in size) . . . with a great casing that almost snaps when you bite into it. You can really tell a good Butcher by the quality of his sausages, and our local Butcher is very good indeed. His sausages, all varieties, are beautifully meaty with delicious flavours . . . and you know they are not filled with anything that you wouldn't want to eat or nasty fillers.
But tis also nice to know that I can make my own at home, without casings, or stuffing anything . . . I guess technically you can't really call them sausages . . . they are more like sausage shaped rissoles . . . but then again . . . a rose by any other name and all that!
These "sausages" are not only easy to make, but they are delicious to boot! What I like about them is I can knock them up in very short time and then freeze them, ready to grab out of the freezer at a moments notice.
They always cook up crisp and delicious on the outside, while nice and moist on the insides, and full of flavour . . . with the suet making sure that the meat doesn't dry out and every mouthful bringing you lovely hints of lemon, sage, marjoram and nutmeg . . . a most delicious combination with pork.
Sure . . . traditional they certainly are not . . . but anyone who has ever eaten them has very quickly forgiven me from straying from the beaten path.
Something which I am very good at doing. Todd loves these. Yes . . . that is ketchup on my plate . . . a old North American habit that I just haven't been able to quite give up. ☺
*Oxford Sausages*
Serves 6 to 8
Printable Recipe
So easy to make and so much tastier than shop bought, plus you have the added advantage of knowing what's in them!
1 pound of lean ground pork shoulder
3/4 pound ground beef suet
8 ounces fine dry bread crumbs (2 cups)
the finely grated zest of one unwaxed lemon
1/4 tsp freshly ground nutmeg
1 tsp ground pepper
1 tsp dried sage leaves, rubbed between your hands
1 tsp dried marjoram leaves, rubbed between your hands
1 tsp fine sea salt
more crumbs and paprika for rolling
Place the pork into the food processor and blitz until very fine, about 4o seconds or so. Remove and do the same for the beef suet. (Or you can ask your butcher to put both (together) through his grinder twice).
Place into a bowl and add the bread crumbs, lemon zest, nutmeg, pepper, sage, marjoram and salt. Mix in well with your hands. Turn onto the counter and knead with your hands until very smooth. Shape into sausages. I usually grab a half handful and roll it into a tube shape between my palms and then flatten the ends on the counter top by tapping them down on either end.
Place some more dry bread crumbs onto a plate along with some ground paprika. Roll the tubes into this to coat. Place in a plastic box in a single layer and chill for several hours before using. They will keep about 4 to 5 days in the refrigerator or you can freeze them for 2 to 3 months.
To cook, panfry or grill as you would regular sausages.
For a long time in Ireland the only bread readily available, except for in the cities, was Soda Bread. Easy to bake on a hearth stone or in an oven, it was quick to make and as likely to be served with the main meal of the day to soak up gravy as it was to appear with breakfast in the morning.
The one I have here today is the cake type. Simply mixed, kneaded lightly and then shaped into a round and baked on a baking sheet or baking stone. There is also a flat type, or farl. which is more like a heavy pancake, rolled out and cut into triangles, and then baked on a griddle or in a heavy skillet rather than in an oven.
Both are equally as easy to make and delicious . . . as long as you follow a few rules, main one being to handle the dough as little as possible . . . kinda like scones or American style biscuits. I like to make sure all my ingredients, including the buttermilk are at room temperature as well.
Sift the dry ingredients together a few times to aerate the flour, and evenly distribute the soda throughout. Put the sifted dry ingredients in a good big bowl (you want stirring room) and make a well in the center. Pour about three-quarters of the buttermilk in, and start mixing in with your fingers, the two best tools ever invented. You are trying to achieve a dough that is raggy and very soft, but the lumps and rags of it should look dryish and "floury", while still being extremely squishy if you poke them. Add more liquid sparingly if you think you need it.
Blend quickly and lightly until the whole mass of dough has become this raggy consistency. Then turn the contents of the bowl out immediately onto a lightly floured board or work surface, and start to knead. Don't knead it for any longer than about 15 seconds. Any longer than that and you risk a tough bread. Lightly shape it into a rough round about 6-8 inches in diameter, and put it on the baking sheet (which should be dusted lightly with flour first). Then use a very sharp knife to cut a cross right across the round. The cuts should go about halfway down through the sides of the circle of dough, so that the loaf will "flower" properly.
Bake for a good 45 minutes, without disturbing, and then tap the bottom. If it sounds hollowish it is done! For a crunchy crust, put on a rack to cool. For a softer crust, as above, wrap the cake in a clean dishcloth as soon as it comes out of the oven. I Like mine warm and spread with butter and sweet red jam.
I think it's the child in me. I just can't help myself.
*Irish Soda Bread*
Makes 1 loaf
Printable Recipe
Quick, easy and tasty. Those Irish sure know what they are doing!
450g of plain flour (about 3 1/2 cups)
1 tsp salt
1 tsp sugar (optional)
1 tsp baking powder
14 fluid ounces of buttermilk (1 3/4 cups)
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Lightly butter a baking tray. Set aside.
Sift the flour, salt, and baking powder into a bowl. Whisk in sugar if using. Make a well in the centre. Pour in most of the butter milk, holding a little back. Use your fingers and get stuck in mixing it all well together to make a soft, but not sticky dough. If necessary add the remaining buttermilk.
Tip out onto a lightly floured surface and knead lightly. It's important not to overknead the dough. 15 to 20 seconds is enough time. . Shape into an 8 inch round. Place onto the prepared baking tray.
Bake for 25 to 30 minutes. Test that the loaf is cooked by turning it over and tapping it on the bottom with yout knuckles. It should sound hollow. Place on a wire rack to cool. Serve cut into slices. Goes well with soup and stews.
Do you like cheese like I like cheese?? I am betting you do!
Funny thing is . . . when I was a child I did not like cheese at all . . . not unless it was bright orange and came wrapped in flat celophane squares . . .
Or was bright orange and came in a rectangular box (read Velveeta here). As an adult I have come to question the value of a cheese product that doesn't need refrigeration . . . and that colour, well . . . 'nuff said.
Seriously though, I really did not like cheese very much unless it was artifical cheese. I have come to love and appreciate all sorts of cheeses though, which is a very good thing . . .
Unless of course you are trying to keep your weight down, which I'm not really very good at it seems . . .
I love all kinds of cheese now . . . stinky cheese, sharp cheese, creamy cheese, cheese full of blue bacteria . . . you name it, I love it.
These fabulous quesadillas are a perfect way to get rid of some of the cheese you have hanging around in your fridge after Christmas. You don't have to use the three cheeses I have suggested of course . . . but these three do work incredibly well together. Crisp, buttery and nicely browned on the outside, and scrummy yummy and gooey on the inside. . .
It goes without saying that the garlic butter on the outside may not go with everything. Use your discretion, and enjoy!
*Three Cheese Quesadillas With Cranberry Chutney*
Serves 8 to 12 as an appetizer or 3 to 4 as a light lunch, along with some salad
Printable Recipe
s small cloves of garlic, unpeeled
2 TBS butter at room temperature
8 ounced medium cheddar cheese, grated coarsely (2 cups)
1 1/4 ounces Gran Padano Cheese, finely grated (1/2 cup)
4 ounces fresh Goat's Cheese, crumbled (3/4 cup)
4 (9 to 10 inches in diameter) flour tortillas
Cranberry Chutney to serve (see recipe below)
Bring a small pot of water to the boil. Drop in the garlic and cook until soft, about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat, drain and allow to cool. Once cool, peel and mash in a bowl, along with the butter, mixing in well. Set aside.
Combine all the cheeses in a bowl. Spread one side of each tortilla with some of the garlic butter. Set on a work surface, buttered side down. Sprinkle one half of each with some of the cheese mixture, dividing it equally amongst the four. Fold the other half over the cheese, creating half moons, and lightly press down.
Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add half of the tortillas and cook on one side until nicely crisp and lightly browned. Flip over and crisp and brown the other side. Place into a warm oven to keep warm while you cook the other two. You can keep them warm in the oven for about half an hour if need be.
When ready to serve, cut into wedges and place on a heated tray along with a bowl of cranberry chutney. Delicious!
*Cranberry Chutney*
Makes 4 cups
Printable Recipe
This lovely chutney makes a wonderful gift and is such a lovely change from the usual cranberry sauce. It goes beautifully with turkey, ham or chicken. We just love it.
3 cups fresh cranberries
1 cup sultanas
1/2 cup chopped candied peel
1/2 cup chopped peeled onion
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed
1 cup white vinegar
1 cup water
1 cup white sugar
1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup lemon juice
2 tsp salt
2 whole cloves
2 tsp celery seed
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp dried chilies
Place the vinegar, water, both sugars, lemon juice and salt into a heavy non-reactive saucepan. Bring to the boil, stirring to help dissolve the sugar. Once the sugar has dissolved add the cranberries, sultanas, candied peel, onions, garlic, cloves, celery seed, ginger and chilies. Simmer gently, stirring often, uncovered for 45 minutes. Pour into hot sterilized jars and seal. Process in a hot water bath for 15 minutes. This will keep for up to a year. You can, of course, just put it into jars for giving away and immediate use, but if you do want to keep it longer, you really must process it in the water bath. Enjoy!
You can play with chutney flavours as well. A good mango chutney would go wonderfully with a mixture of cheddar and blue cheeses! (just a suggestion!) Let your imagination go wild! I do!
When I am not torturing my husband with foreign food (read pasta here) and chocolate (men!!), I am indulging his meat and potatoes heart. He grew up during the war and is never happier than when I set a stodgy meal in front of him . . . he is actually one of those rare birds that has fond memories of old school dinners. Give him a plate of boiled cabbage and stewed beef, with some carrots and potatoes for dinner, along with a big bowl of spotted dick and custard for dessert, and he is over the moon!
Difference being that I don't cook my vegetables to death like they used to in the olden days. I have a very old cook book and they actually recommend cooking most vegetables for 25 to 30 minutes, if you can believe it! Blah!!
One of his favourite things is pork chops. He just loves pork chops. We don't have them very often but when we do, I like to prepare them in a delicious way. Delicious doesn't have to be complicated or hard. This is a quick and easy way to make them seem really special.
Tender pork, all crisp on the edges and moist in the middle, served with a deliciously tangy mustard and cornichon sauce. Of course it is the butter that you whisk into the sauce at the end which gives it that fabulous flavour and smooth and glossy finish . . .
But we won't think about that will we. We shall just enjoy them for the rare treat that they are.
*Mustard Chops*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A quick and easy way to make pork chops extra special.
6 bone in pork chops, about 3/4 inch thick
(I like the rib ones)
fine sea salt
100g of butter ( a scant 1/2 cup [.44 cup])
3 onions, peeled and finely chopped
100ml of white wine (1/3 cup)
2 TBS Dijon mustard
100g of small cornichons, sliced (about 1/2 cup)
Trim the chops so that there is not too much fat on them and then season them well with some fine seasalt. Melt about 1/3 of the butter in a large skillet until it begins to foam. Add the chops and cook for about 12 minutes per side, until golden brown all over and the juices run clear. Remove to a heated plate and keep warm.
Add the onion to the pan drippings and saute over gentle heat, being careful not to brown them. Pour in the white wine and increase the heat. Reduce the sauce by half. Whisk in the mustard. Reduce the heat and then whisk in the remaining butter, bit by bit to form a smooth glossy sauce. Stir in the cornichons. Spoon over the hot chops and serve immediately.
Sharon, I have that recipe for Madame Benoit's Maple Beans with Apples that you asked about. E-mail me and I will be glad to send it to you! mariealicejoan at aol dot com
I make no secret of the fact that the humble potato is my favourite vegetable. Actually I love all vegetables (except canned peas), and could quite happily become a vegetarian . . .
well . . . except for my love of a good steak, which I would really have a hard time turning my back on . . . but, I digress.
The potato . . . my favourite vegetable. Yes.
I'm not picky either about how they are prepared. I'll take em boiled, fried, baked . . . you name it!
Mashed, whole, fried until crisp, stuffed, hot cold . . .
Skins, or no skins . . . new, or old. Big or small . . . light and fluffy or waxy and solid . . .
I just love potatoes! This way of preparing them is fabulously easy and really tasty!
No need to make a cream sauce of any kind . . . just peel 'em and slice 'em (really thin, use a mandoline or your food processor) and layer them in a pan with some sliced onion, salt, pepper and thyme, and then cover with hot stock . . . oh and . . . ahem . . . BUTTER! Not lashings of it, mind, but just enough to perfectly gild the lily.
The secret to their melting tenderness is the long slow cooking they get . . . an hour covered . . . so that they melt down soft and absorb all of that lovely stock . . . and then half an hour uncovered . . . just long enough for all that buttery goodness to create a crunchy golden crust on top.
This may well be my favourite way of eating potatoes . . . but then again . . . put any potato in front of me . . . cooked in any way, and I am in . . .
HEAVEN . . . sigh . . .
The potato . . . it may look humble, but then again . . . looks are often quite deceiving are they not?
*Boulangere Potatoes*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
Meltingly tender potato slices with a crunchy, golden crust, kinda like a good French Baguette!
1 kg floury potatoes (2.5 pounds) such as Maris Piper, Desiree, King Edwards or Idaho
2 medium onions
4 TBS butter, softened, plus extra to butter the dish
300ml of hot chicken or vegetable stock (a generous cupful)
fine sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
a few springs of fresh thyme
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/gas mark 4. Butter a large shallow ovenproof dish. Set aside.
Peel the onions and potatoes and then slice them very thinly using a mandoline or a food processor. Layer them in the prepared baking dish, seasoning each layer with some salt and pepper and a few leaves stripped from the thyme and finishing with a layer of potato. Place the last layer on decoratively and press them down with the flat of your hand firmly. Pour the hot stock over top. Dot with the butter. Cover tightly with foil and then bake in the heated oven for 1 hour.
Remove the foil and bake for a further 30 minutes. The potatoes should be meltingly tender down through with a golden crunchy crust on top!
It is rumoured that there are over 900,000 poppy seeds contained in a pound of poppy seeds . . . I've never actually counted them, nor am I likely to, so I'll just have to take the rumour monger's word for it.
What I do know for sure is that I love poppy seeds in baked goods. Always have done, probably always will. (although to be sure they aren't necessarily ideal to serve in dinner party foods . . . a poppy seed caught in the tooth can be quite disconcerting to your dinner time partners!)
When I was a much younger (ahem) woman I was lucky enough to live in the foothills of the Canadian Rocky Mountains of Alberta for a time . . . while there I used to ubdulge myself in these lovely sweet pastries that were sold in most of the bakeshops . . . filled with a sweet and scrummy poppy seed filling . . . no doubt a tasty treat come down from the traditions of Eastern European settlers that filled the Canadian West . . .
Oh my . . . but they were soooo delicious . . . I could never quite get enough of them . . . the pastry all buttery and the filling so sweet and yet crunchy at the same time, with a distinct almond flavour and a lucious glaze gilding all of that goodness.
They were so good that some 30 years later I am still thinking about them . . . or is that just the power of a rose coloured food memory clouding my culinary vision . . . I am not sure.
I only know for sure, that I do have a special fondness for Poppy Seeds that goes way back.
They make quite a lovely showing in these delicious breakfast or teatime muffins . . . the muffins all buttery and sweetly moist . . . and at the same time tangy with lemon, both in flavour and the scent . . and then with those pretty blue seeds scattered throughout . . . a feast for all the senses . . . and lets not forget that lemon sugar crunch topping!
These go down a right treat with your morning cuppa!
*Lemon and Poppy Seed Muffins*
Makes one dozen
Printable Recipe
Light and sweetly tangy and filled with lots of poppyseed crunch, and a scrummy lemon sugar topping!!
3 tsp finely grated lemon zest
220g caster sugar (1 cup)
335g of self raising flour (2 1/4 cup)
2 TBS poppy seeds
80ml of fresh lemon juice (1/3 cup)
250ml of milk (1 cup)
60g of butter, melted (1/3 cup)
2 large free range eggs, beaten
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Butter a 12 cup muffin cup pan really well. Set aside.
Place the sugar and lemon zest into a large bowl. Rub the two together with your fingertips really well. (This smells great!) Remove 3 TBS of the mixture and set aside. Sift the flour into the remainder. Stir in the poppy seeds. Whisk together the lemon juice, milk, beaten eggs and melted butter. Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients and add the liquid all at once. Stir together only to combine. Spoon into the prepared muffin cups, dividing it equally.
Sprinkle the tops of each with the reserved lemon sugar.
Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until well risen and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Allow to cool in the pan for ten minutes before removing to a wire rack to finish cooling. Serve warm or at room temperature.
One thing that I love about food blogging is that it's not about me. It's not even about you . . . it's about the recipes and the food!
It's about being able to cook and taste some of the best and most indulgent foods ever . . . and exploring the culinary delights my adopted country has to offer me.
It's about stretching my skills . . . both in the kitchen and . . . behind the camera . . . and about making food that not only tastes delicious, but food that looks good.
It's about waking up every morning and making YOU believe that what I am presenting to you on this page is the absolute best thing ever . . .
and about making you want to go into your own kitchen and cook it for yourselves, because you have just got to taste it for real, and because I have inspired you to do it, and given you the confidence to believe that you can!
Your comments are like me winning the "X Factor of food" every day of my life, and I thank you for that. Here's to 2011. Let's begin as we mean to go on.
Cream Palmiers . . . tasty little bites of fluffy crisp buttery pastry, filled with a soft cloud of sweetened whipped cream and sticky sweet strawberry jam. Kind of like a de-constructed jam tart . . . with puff pastry . . . and CREAM. A delicious teatime treat.
The only down side is they all have to be eaten on the day they are filled . . . so NOT a problem!
*Cream Palmiers*
Makes 8
Printable Recipe
Absolutely delightful on the tea tray!
225g (1/2 pound) of all butter puff pastry
1 1/2 ounces granulated sugar (a scant 1/4 cup)
1 TBS icing sugar, sifted
400ml of double cream (1 3/4 cups)
a few drops of vanilla
2 TBS strawberry jam
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Slightly dampen a baking tray. Set aside.
Dust the work surface with half of the sugar. Roll the pastry out on the sugared surface to a rectangle 10 by 12 inches in size. Sprinkle evenly with the remaining half of the sugar. Gently press the sugar in with a rolling pin. Starting at the short sides, roll the pastry towards the middle from both edges into the centre until they meet. Press together gently. Cut across the rolls into 16 slices. Place onto the baking tray. Press down to flatten slightly.
Bake in the preheated oven for 15 to 18 minutes until crisp and golden, turning them over halfway through the baking time so that they caramelize equally on both sides. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.
Whip the cream along with the icing sugar and vanilla until soft peaks form. Sandwich together pairs of the palmiers with some of the whipped cream and some of the jam. Serve immediately.
I've just spend several hours going through my archives trying to pick out some of my best recipes that I've cooked and presented to you over these past 12 months. It was a really hard job! I never put anything on here unless it is wonderfully scrumptiously tasty! It was really tough narrowing it down to just a dozen or so! There are ever so many more tasty recipes than just these ones I am showing you at the moment . . . you'll just have to dig around and hunt for them.
I think I just gained ten pounds just looking at these! Happy New Year to you all and all the best to you in the months to come! I'm looking forward to an even tastier 2011, and I hope you are too!!
Strawberry and Mint Scones - I am fairly certain that when you bite into one of these you will be in scone heaven. The dough is buttery and short, with just the faintest hint of mint throughout. The strawberry jam is like a sweet surprise in the centre and that lemon drizzle, well . . . it's just the perfect capper! Printable Recipe
Gingerbread Cupcakes with Lemon Icing - Now these dear friends . . . are totally moreish. I think it's the lemon glaze . . . that is, well . . . the icing on the cake! (Of course the preserved ginger in syrup on the top doesn't hurt either!!) Printable Recipe
Creamy Parsnip Soup with Ginger and Cardamom - I think the hazelnut/dried cranberry garnish on this soup makes it something really special. I really hope that you will try it. I just know you will love it as much as we do. And that, my friends, is quite an awful lot!!! Printable Recipe
Sticky Toffee Cake - This cake moreishly filled with dates with a scrummy toffee icing gilding the top is just to die for. You'll find yourself getting up in the middle of the night and raiding the larder for . . . just . . . one . . . more . . . piece. Printable Recipe.
Creamy Courgette Lasagna - A tasty vegetarian Lasagna filled with lovely courgettes, lots of cheese and a spicy sauce! Printable Recipe.
Lemon and Pistachio Cake - A lovely moist and buttery cake, filled with crunchy pistachios and lemon, and topped with lucious candied lemon and lime slices and of course, some more crunchily addictive pistachio nuts. (I love, LOVE pistachio nuts!) Printable Recipe.
Creamy Mustard, Sausage and Pasta Hot Dish - Imagine little meaty bites of a well flavoured sausage, in a creamy sauce filled with not one . . . but two tasty mustards, caramelized onions and cabbage, and a rustic homestyle pasta . . . perfectly shaped to hug and soak in all those lovely juices. Printable Recipe.
Bakewell Whoopie Pies - My attempt to create a truly "British" Whoopie Pie. What could shout out England more than the good old Bakewell Tart! These tasty little cakes have all the characteristics of a traditional Bakewell tart . . . an delicious cake batter, containing ground almonds . . . raspberry jam, the almond icing on top and the glace cherry. The only thing that is not traditional is that gorgeous whipped marshmallow filling. Printable Recipe.
Fudge Brownie Pie - A fudgy mouthful of rich moist chocolate brownie . . . stuffed with toasted pecans and then topped with oooey, goooey, sweet marshmallow . . . all smoothed over with a rich chocolate fudge frosting. Printable Recipe.
Tasty Tuna Baguettes - A fantastically delicious tuna baguette! Filled with lots of lovely flavours . . . lemon, onion, celery, mayo, sweet pickle, Dijon mustard . . . Perfect Picnic Food. Printable Recipe.
Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip and Oat Bars - Deliciously oaty bars with a creamy peanut butter filling, and stogged full of rich chocolate chips and crunchy toasted walnuts. Printable Recipe.
Rice Pudding - Perfectly baked rice pudding . . . with creamy, milky, sweet rice beneath a scrummy golden buttery crust . . . a feast for the eyes, stomach and soul . . . Printable Recipe.
Beef Stew with Herbed Dumplings - The meat . . . fork tender and the gravy thick and rich and filled with deliciously simmered root vegetables . . . the dumplings . . . rich and meltingly tender on the insides . . . herbily soaking up that lucious gravy. Comfort food at it's very best. Printable Recipe.
Bakewell Scones - Yummy sweet seedless raspberry preserves, sandwiched between two scone layers made all buttery and flakey with marzipan and butter having been rubbed in . . . with a touch of flaked coconut (not traditional I know) for some added texture, and then topped with an egg wash and flaked almonds. Baked until scrummily flakey and crisp on the bottom and top and then drizzled with an almond glaze and topped with a glace cherry half. Printable Recipe.
Sticky Ginger and Orange Chops with a Parsnip, Potato and Mustard Mash - Deliciously sticky chops with a hint of warmth, atop a bed of luscious parsnip and potato mash. Scrumptious! A feast for the eyes and the stomach! Printable Recipe.
Christmas Pudding Trifle - Without a doubt, hands down . . . this has to be the most delicious Trifle ever! There is just enough Christmas Pudding in it to give you a gentle hint of spicy flavour, without it going over the top. I don't think any die hard Christmas Pudding hater would be assaulted by it in the least . . . don't even tell them it's there. They probably won't even notice what it is, and even if they do, they will forgive you because it is that delicious that they will wonder how they ever got by in life without it thus far! Printable Recipe.
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