I have another recipe to share with you this morning from Hugh Fernley-Whittingstall, of the River Cottage Fame.
I love his recipes almost as much as I love Nigel Slater's. With him, the food is also the star and that is the kind of food and cookery I like to practice and eat!
Unpretentious and unassuming, simple and wholesome, and so, so delicious. When I saw this recipe I thought to myself what a delicious take on the French favourite Tartiflette.
Unpretentious and unassuming, simple and wholesome, and so, so delicious. When I saw this recipe I thought to myself what a delicious take on the French favourite Tartiflette.
Tartiflette is a traditional dish from the savoy region of the French Alps.
Oh, I so love a good toastie. Who doesn't???
Its a dish I quite like, with potatoes, bacon, cheese . . . cream. Rich and comforting. When I saw Hugh's recipe for a Tartiflette Toastie, I knew it was something I wanted to try.
Why not combine one of my favourite potato dishes with the concept of a toastie!
Oh, I so love a good toastie. Who doesn't???
Toasted bread topped with your favourite indulgences and cheese and then toasted under the grill until everything melds deliciously together. Yum!! How much better can you get???
I used reblochon cheese on mine, because that is what I had and it has great melting properties. It is the cheese we usually use when we do raclette, which comes from the same region of France if I am not mistaken, and please forgive me if I am.
I used reblochon cheese on mine, because that is what I had and it has great melting properties. It is the cheese we usually use when we do raclette, which comes from the same region of France if I am not mistaken, and please forgive me if I am.
Oh I do so love a good raclette supper. A wonderful way to enjoy some simple foods.
You don't have to use that kind of cheese. Hugh says you can even use cheddar which I am thinking would be pretty scrumdiddlyumptious as well!
You don't have to use that kind of cheese. Hugh says you can even use cheddar which I am thinking would be pretty scrumdiddlyumptious as well!
Just so long as it is a cheese with lots of flavour and with great melting properties!
This is a toastie you will find yourself cooking extra potatoes for, I guarantee. What a novel use of a few bits of leftovers and odds and sodds . . .
Hearty
lunch fare inspired by a recipe from Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall. Have
been eyeing this recipe up for years. It combines several of my
favourite things. Potatoes, bacon, cheese and crusty bread!
1 TBS rapeseed oil
2 TBS bacon lardons
1 large cold cooked potato, peeled and thickly sliced
(Boiled, roasted, baked, any work)
1 -2 TBS double cream or creme fraiche
1 large thick slice of bread
3 to 4 thick slices of a semi soft or semi hard cheese with
good melting properties (I used reblochon)
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
salad to serve, if desired
Heat
the oil in a medium non-stick skillet. Add the bacon to the pan and
brown all over. Add the potato slices and fry until they begin to crisp
on the edges and turn golden grown.. Stir in the creme fraiche or
cream, and heat through. Remove from the heat and season to taste with
salt and black pepper.
Toast the bread. Pile the potato
mixture on top and then lay the cheese over top of the potatoes. Pop
under a hot grill until the cheese has melted and is bubbling. Serve
immediately and enjoy!
The recipe is geared to one person, but is very easily adapted to feed more people. Just multiply the ingredients according to however many you want to feed or indulge. Bon Appetit!
This is a toastie you will find yourself cooking extra potatoes for, I guarantee. What a novel use of a few bits of leftovers and odds and sodds . . .
*Tartiflette Toastie*
Serves 12 TBS bacon lardons
The recipe is geared to one person, but is very easily adapted to feed more people. Just multiply the ingredients according to however many you want to feed or indulge. Bon Appetit!
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.
My husband is a very simple man with very simple tastes. There is nothing he loves more than a fruit tea loaf, and this is one of the best.
The recipe has been adapted from one I found in the cookery book, Supper For a Song by Tamasin Day-Lewis.
Its a really simple loaf to make but does need some prior planning, as you need to soak the fruit overnight in an amount of Earl Grey Tea, which really helps to plump up the fruit nicely.
I love the flavours of Earl Grey, with the Bergamot . . .
I like to use a really nice fruit when I make a fruit loaf. I use a quality dried fruit mix, with plenty of sultanas, currants, raisins and cherries.
I also added some dried cranberries to the mix, but dried blueberries would also be nice.
Its also very low in fat, in that there is no fat added.
Just the soaked fruit, some dark brown sugar, a beaten egg and some self rising flour. It goes together lickety split!
You can easily make your own self rising flour by adding 1 1/2 tsp of baking powder and 1/4 tsp salt to each cup of flour.
This is delicious cut into thin slices.
You can toast it or not . . . but a tiny bit of softened butter is also a great addition when you come down to eating it.
Oh boy . . . a lightly buttered slice of this goes down really well with a nice drink at breakfast, or for coffee time, tea time, or just because, just because . . .
just because you fancy something a little bit like this. Oh we are so naughty sometimes!
*Earl Grey Fruited Tea Loaf*
Makes one 2 pound loaf
This
is a moist and fruity loaf that is delicious sliced thinly and
buttered, toasted or not as you please. Plan ahead as you must soak the
fruit overnight prior to baking. I use a luxury mix of fruit, which has
dried currants, sultanas, raisins, dried cranberries and cherries. This
loaf keeps beutifully and freezes well. You can keep it for about a
week wrapped in greaseproof paper, foil or in an airtight tin.
Place the fruit into a bowl along with the sugar. Pour the hot tea over it. Cover with a tea towel and leave to set overnight.
Simple and old fashioned. You can't get much better than this! Bon Appetit!
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.
Do you love Nutella? I love Nutella. Its not something that I indulge in very often, but I always have a jar in the cupboard. I quite like it spread on plain biscuits like Malted Milk Biscuits or Social Teas. Don't judge me, lol
Here today I am using it in a fabulous slice/bar that would be a great addition to picnic baskets or lunch buckets . . .
These have a lovely fudgy consistency . . . almost being a cross between a brownie and a cookie . . .
The batter is really simple to make and goes together very quickly. It also bakes in quick time. You do have to work super fast when you take them out of the oven to get those chocolate jazzies popped on top while the slice is still hot and they can melt and adhere together.
What is a Chocolate Jazzie? Well, it's a milk chocolate button, topped with multi coloured non-pareil cake decorations. You could use anything you want really . . . just so long as you pop it on while the squares are still hot from the oven.
Thinly sliced Mars Bars or Snickers Bars would be scrumptious. As would pieces of a chocolate orange, or even just milk chocolate chips or buttons. Whatever you fancy really, in the chocolate line, would work great!
These would also be a great addition to your Elevensies cuppa, or for an afterschool treat. Oh heck, I can't think of any time these wouldn't be welcomed!
Moreishly scrumptiously chewy and rich . . . with a hint of whatever floats your boat, and nutella on top . . . these spell winner, winner, winner!
*Chocolate Jazzie Slices*
Makes 16 slicesI hope you will take the opportunity to bake these this weekend and that when you do you will pop back to let me know how very much you enjoyed them! Bon Appetit!
Note - the recipe was adapted from one I found in the June Issue of Food to Love.
Sausage Pie. I can hear you saying, now that sounds a bit unsual! I hope it also sounds tasty!
Because it is, very tasty. A delicious crisp and buttery crust filled with a fabulous sausage stuffing mix . . .
Made with two slices of crumbed stale bread, some chopped onion and celery . . . sage . . . a small leek I had languishing in the bottom of the vegetable drawer that needed using up . . .
A pound of really flavourful breakfast sausages, skins removed and meat crumbled. I like the Heck 97% myself, or Debbie and Andrew's, but you pick your own favourite breakfast sausage . . . you don't want to go too crazy with unsual flavours here. Breakfast sausage will do the trick . . .
Just don't go cheap and nasty. NO. NO. NO. Blecch.
There is some dried sage in there, and some salt and pepper, just a smidge . . . and then the addition of chopped prunes and apricots which go soooooo well with pork. Mix it all together and pop it into that crisp buttery crust and voila! You have a pie fit for a King! And . . . it was so easy to make!
*Sausage Pie*
Serves 6
175g plain flour (1 1/4 cups)
pinch fine sea salt
85g butter cut into cubes and chilled (6 TBS)
1 - 2 TBS cold water
9 soft dried apricots, chopped
1 finely grated zest of one large orange
2 thick slices stale bread made into crumbs
1 large free range egg, beaten
Make the pastry case first. Sift the flour and salt into the bowl
of a food processor. Drop in the butter cubes and pulse until the
mixture resembles fine crumbs. Add 1 TBS of the cold water through the
feeder tube while you have the motor running until the mixture forms a
ball, only adding additional water as needed. Shape into a flat disc,
wrap in cling film and chill in the refrigerator for half an hour to
rest.
Make the stuffing while the pastry is chilling.
Melt the butter with the oil in a skillet. Add the onion, leek and
celery. Cook, stirring occasionally, over medium heat to soften without
browning. Toss in the bread crumbs, dried fruit and orange zest.
Season lightly, remembering that the sausage meat will be seasoned.
Crumble in the sausage meat and mix to combine. Stir in the beaten egg
until it is absorbed.
Preheat the oven to
190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Roll the pastry out on a lightly floured
surface to a 11 inch round. Fit into a 9 inch tart tin. Line the pastry
case with a sheet of baking paper and fill with baking beans or rice.
Bake in the heated oven and bake blind for 15 minutes. Remove from the
oven and remove the paper and beans/rice. Prick with a fork and return
to the oven for 5 minutes longer.
Pile the stuffing
mixture into the pastry case. Smooth it down slightly. Bake for 30
minutes in the heated oven until the top is browned and the filling is
cooked through. Let stand for 10 to 15 minutes before serving.
I had never had a bacon chop until I moved over here to the UK. They used to carry them at the butchers down at the Parade of Shops on the other side of our community, but that butchers ended up going out of business. Sadly, he could not compete with the multitude of large chain grocery shops in our area. I think its really sad when that happens. I really do. My heart longs for the days when you bought everything you ate locally and in season, produced with old fashioned love and integrity and by people you know and love.
I love bacon. There used to be a Butcher shop back where I lived in Canada that sold his own home smoked bacon. Oh boy but it was some good. I often think about it and how delicious it was. I found a recipe in River Cottage Every Day, by Hugh Fernley-Whittingstall for home cured bacon chops and I was really keen to try them. He's a great cook and largely unknown in North America. You North American's are missing out on a real gem!
You begin by creating a rub using fine sea salt, brown sugar, black pepper, shredded bayleaf and crushed juniper berries. This gets rubbed into four thick boneless pork loin chops and then placed in the refrigerator to cure for 12 hours at the very least, but no longer than 24 (for extra thick chops.)
My chops were of a medium thickness and this is what they looked like after they had been sitting for about 14 hours. You can see that quite a lot of liquid has been released. You need to rinse them really well under cold running water and then dry them off with some kitchen paper towelling.
After that you can keep them in the refrigerator, covered, for up to five or six days. They are not the bright pink of store bought bacon because they are no nitrates involved, which I think is a good thing, don't you?
These are completely natural, using only natural ingredients, nothing artificial here. And they pan grilled for about six minutes per side, they turned out beautiful. A bit salty, but I think the extra two hours was to blame for that. I will do this again the next time we want bacon chops because they were truly delicious and I loved that it was something I could do myself. Who knows if I get more adept at it, I might even experiment with some other flavours!
*Home Cured Bacon Chops*
Makes 4
4 large boneless pork loin chops
I really hope that you will give this a go. It was so easy to do and the results are impeccable. In this day when most of the things we eat are so highly processed, it is nice to have something which can take you back to the basic values and integrity of food preparation that our forefathers practiced. I felt quite mother earth. Bon Appetit!
Hmmm . . . I wonder if I could interest Todd in a smoker . . .
In the warmer months, I don't like to spend a lot of time in the kitchen, so quick easy and things which don't heat up the whole kitchen are what I cook most of the time. I like to spend more time outdoors in the garden, and eat things which are lighter and simpler.
This is a super simple dish and is quite, quite delicious. It also makes use of things which most people have around most of the time.
Things like pasta . . . and pesto. I always have a jar of pesto in the cupboard, but in the summer I like to make my own. It's really VERY easy to make. I have a recipe to make your own here.
That is when the basil in my garden is going mad and I have tons of it. You can freeze it in Ice Cube trays and then pop the cubes out into zip lock baggies for use all year round if you wanted to. Easy Peasy.
Cherry tomatoes. I always have them in the house as well. We eat a lot of them and in the summer, I grow my own also. Ours are not ready yet, of course, but this is the perfect recipe for when they are, and in the meantime a good vine grown cherry tomato from the shops will work very well.
I use whole wheat pasta because I am a diabetic and it is better for diabetics to use whole wheat pasta. But you can use ordinary pasta if you wish. Just make sure it has lots of crevices and curves to hug all that lovely sauce.
Double cream. Something else I always have in the refrigerator, but here is a little secret I am going to let you in on . . . low fat evaporated milk. You can use that instead of double cream and cut down on the calories and fat no problem. Works fine and with the pesto in the sauce you wouldn't be able to tell that you have used it by taste. Seriously.
White wine. We don't drink alcohol in our home, but I always keep small bottles of white and red wine in my larder. I think they contain what would be construed as a single serving for someone who drinks wine. They are perfect for me because I know they will get used up quickly and won't go off. They are not all that expensive either, a couple of pounds is all.
Mushrooms, and here is another true confession here. I have discovered bags of frozen mushrooms. They work perfectly in dishes where you are going to cook your mushrooms. You can pick up a bag of them at the grocery store in the frozen department. In ASDA you can get a 600g bag for £1. They are a great store cupboard ingredient for something like this. They are loose frozen so you can just dump out as much as you need, and they come in very handy.
*One Pan Pesto Fusilli*
Serves 6Another true confession. I have even used tinned cherry tomatoes when I don't have fresh ones in the house (very rare, but it does happen from time to time) and this pasta dish still rocks! A bit of cheese to garnish each serving and Bob's Your Uncle! Dinner is served! Bon Appetit!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Social Icons