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Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

Saturday, 24 June 2017

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

One of the things I love most about this time of year is Strawberry Shortcake.  Of course my mom made the best strawberry shortcake.  She used biscuits and filled with them crushed berries and whipped cream, or ice cream, depending on what she had ready to hand. You can find that recipe here.  Its not low fat or low sugar, but it is high on deliciousness!

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake 

As a diabetic, I am always looking for ways to lighten things up and hopefully still keep them delicious.   I got a book from Gooseberry Patch a number of months back called Comfort Food, Lightened Up.  It's filled with 330 recipes of your favourite foods, made healthier and lighter.

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

We grow our own strawberries and they are coming fast and furious at the moment.  It is a race to see who will get to them first, us, or the birds  . . .  or the slugs.  Meh!  Everyone's got to eat I guess!

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

When I saw this recipe for a lightened up version for Strawberry Shortcake, I really wanted to try it out. It didn't use the biscuits my mother always used, but it did include a delicious low fat and sugar sponge.  It sounded quite promising!

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

I had some sour milk in the refrigerator left from when we were on our holiday and so I used that instead of regular milk, adapting the recipe to do so.  The cake worked out beautifully and is light and moist . . .  not very sweet, but you can't have it all.

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

If I could choose to do anything differently it would be to crush the berries lightly instead of just slicing them.  I think crushed berries would be even nicer.

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

No, it did not compare to my mothers . . .  not in the least, but it was still very good.  And I won't complain about that!

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

So, if you are looking for a cake that you can have and eat too, then this might be the one.  The cake on its own would be lovely split and filled with whipped cream and lemon curd . . .  just saying.  It's a great basic cake.

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

I am sitting here imagining it split and filled with all sorts . . .  crushed raspberries, peaches . . . rhubarb compote!  Mmmm . . .


Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

*Lighter Strawberry Shortcake*
Makes 12 servings
Printable Recipe 
A lighter version of an old favourite with less fat and sugar in the cake than a regular recipe.  I developed it to use up some sour milk, but if you don't have sour milk, you can use regular milk. Just leave out the baking soda.  With light whipped topping, one serving of this will only be about 157 calories.  And it's delicious. You can't complain about that! 

60g butter, softened (1/4 cup)
95g white sugar (1/2 cup)
1 large free range egg, beaten
280g of plain flour
4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda, leave out if using regular milk)
225ml sour milk (can use regular milk, 1 cup)
2 tsp vanilla extract
605g of fresh strawberries (4 cups) 

to serve:
light whipped topping
icing sugar to dust 

Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Spray a 13 X 9 inch baking tin with some low fat non-stick baking spray. Set aside. 

Cream together the sugar and butter until combined and fluffy.  Beat in the egg and vanilla.  Sift together the plain flour, baking powder, soda and salt.  Add to the creamed mixture alternately with the sour milk, beginning and ending with the flour mixture.  Spread the batter into the prepared pan.  Bake for 25 to 30 minutes until golden brown, risen and the top springs back when lightly touched.
Hull and slice the berries. 


Cool completely before serving.  To serve cut into squares and split.  Place the bottom halves on serving plates. Top each with some of the prepared berries and 1 TBS of light topping.  Place the top of the cake squares on top.  Garnish with another TBS of lilght topping and some more sliced berries.  Dust with icing sugar and serve immediately.

Lighter Strawberry Shortcake

Do I miss the old version . . .  my mum's . . .  yes, I probably always will, but its nice to know that there is a lighter lower fat version I could indulge in every now and then.  I suppose you could also use a sweetener in this that measures like for like the same as sugar in the place of the sugar and that would work too.  This did satisfy a craving of sorts . . . sigh  . . .  Bon Appetit!


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Grilled Sweet Potato Packets

Friday, 23 June 2017



Its been lovely and warm this week.  Time to crack open the BBQ and do whatever you can to keep the kitchen cooler.  We love these Grilled Sweet Potato Packets in the Summer.  Not only can you cook them on the BBQ, but they are also quite, quite delicious and simple to do.


Everything simply gets piled onto a sheet of buttered aluminium foil.   Peeled and sliced sweet potatoes . . . chopped onion . . .


A drizzle of melted butter and Worcestershire sauce, some parsley, salt and black pepper.  You could also add some garlic if you wanted to . . . 


The foil then gets closed up around the mixture and the packets placed onto a heated outdoor grill (or into a heated oven if you wish) and grilled for about 20 minutes . . .  


Until the potatoes and onions are sweet and tender . . .  so good . . . 


The packets are opened and then sprinkled with some cheese and chopped toasted pecans and briefly returned to the grill to melt . . . 


Voila!!  You have a scrumptious side dish that everyone will love.  This goes wonderfully with grilled chicken or fish.   


Instructions are given for one serving, but this means that you can increase to feed as many people as you want to feed.  You can also make up the packets ahead of time and bring them with you to the camp ground or picnic spot.  Let's face it, these are delicious no matter what is on the menu or where you choose to cook and eat them.  


*Grilled Sweet Potato Pouches*
Serves 1
Printable Recipe 
 
 
Instructions are given for one serving.  Just multiply to serve more.  Simple. Delicious. A real favourite. 

For each serving:
1 9 inch square of heavy duty aluminum foil, lightly buttered
2 TBS chopped onion
1 sweet potato, peeled and cut into 1/4 inch slices
1 TBS melted butter
1/2 tsp worcestershire sauce
1 tsp dried parsley flakes
salt and black pepper to taste
4 or 5 pecans toasted
2 TBS grated cheese 

Heat the outdoor grill.  Place the potato and onion in the middle of the square of buttered foil. Sprinkle the onion on top.  Whisk together the melted butter, sorcestershire sauce, parsley flakes and salt and black pepper to taste.  Drizzle over top of the potato and onions. Fold the foil up around the potatoes, sealing them in completely.  What I do is make a fold down the centre and then crimp the ends.  Place on the hot grill for 20 to 25 minutes until tender.  Open the top of the foil.  Sprinkle with the cheese and pecans.  Grill for about 5 minutes longer to melt the cheese and lightly toast.  Serve hot. 

Note: Alternately these can be baked in a hot oven (200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6) for the same amount of time.  At the end, sprinkle with the cheese and pecans and pop under a heated grill/broiler for a few minutes to melt the cheese.


Nothing could be simpler, easier or tastier with the added bonus being that there is NO washing up!  I can really go for that on a hot summer's day!  Bon Appetit!
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Lamb Tagine

Thursday, 22 June 2017


In the summer months when we want something that little bit heartier for our dinner, the slow cooker becomes my best friend.  If I don't want to be heating up the kitchen, the slow cooker is the way to go!  I have three slow cookers.  One in a large size for making dishes large enough to feed over 4 people, and two smaller ones which are perfectly sized for two people, a round one and an oval one, because a small round one doesn't always cut the mustard when it comes to slow cooking.  A small oval one is perfect for small roasts, hams, etc.


Slow cooking lends itself perfectly to creating delicious dishes like this Lamb Tagine I am showing you here today.  A Tagine is traditionally a Moroccan dish. I love the flavours of Moroccan food. 


Moroccan cuisine is a delicious mix of Arabic, Andalusian, Mediterranean and Berber cuisine with a dash of European and Subsaharian influence thrown in for good measure.  Think what we traditionally see as warm baking spices . . .  cinnamon, ginger, mace, nutmeg and cloves  . . .  with some heat through in from cayenne and black pepper  . . .  and lemon.  They love to use preserved lemons . . . leafy things like coriander . . .  rose petals.  And this is by no means a complete list, but merely a hint of the deliciousness involved.



They also love using tomatoes, dried apricots, dates, prunes  . . . I love savoury dishes with dried fruit involved, and this one is just wonderful using both  apricots and prunes  . . . and zest of oranges . . .



The sauce is fragrant and delicious . . .  sweet and savoury at the same time, with a tiny bit of heat, but not overpoweringly so . . .



The sauce/gravy is thickened with ground almonds or what you might know in American as almond meal, which lends a slight nuttiness into the mix . . .  and then there is the sweetness of that oh so tender lamb  . . .

 

Lamb was not something I had ever eaten a lot of before I moved over here to the UK. My only experience with it had been my mother cooking lamb chops once for us when I was a teenager. They smelled like burning wool when she was cooking them, and none of us would eat them.  The thought of eating burning wool was not very appealing.



I can only think now that they were not very good lamb chops  . . .  because I have never had lamb over here that smelled like burning wool, or tasted like it for that matter.  I truly love the taste . . . young tender lamb has a delicate almost sweet taste.  Older lamb can taste a bit gamey, but its not bad either.

 

*Lamb Tagine*
Serves 2
Printable Recipe
A delicious Moroccan Lamb Stew, sized just for two.  Nicely spiced and rich. You can double the amounts to serve more if you wish. Easy to make and cooked in a slow cooker.

1 TBS olive oil
225g cubed lamb (1/2 pound)
1 small onion, peeled and chopped
1 clove garlic, peeled and minced
225ml hot lamb or chicken stock (1 cup)
the finely grated zest and juice of one small orange
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp ground sweet paprika
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp runny clear honey
85g chopped dried apricots (2/3 cup)
1 heaped TBS chopped fresh mint
15g ground almonds (3 TBS almond meal)
15g flaked toasted almonds (3 TBS)
salt and black pepper to taste

Heat the oil in a  skillet.  Add the lamb and cook over medium high heat until golden all over.  Scoop out and put into a small slow cooker. Add the onion and garlic to the pan, and cook gently to soften.  Add to the slow cooker and stir into the lamb. Add the stock, zest and orange juice, honey, apricots, ground spices, mint and ground almonds.  Stir well to combine.  Cover and cook on low for 4 to 5 hours.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.  Garnish with the flaked almonds to serve.

I hope you will take advantage of your slow cooker this summer and make this delicious Moroccan stew!  I think you will love it!  Bon Appetit, or as they say in Morocco, بالصحة و العافية!  Now that's what I would call a tongue twister, lol Serving it with peas and rice is so, so  . . .  well, English.  In Morocco you would probably have it with couscous!


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Summer Berry Gratin

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

 
Oh, I do so love fresh berry season, don't you?  We grow our own Strawberries, Blueberries and Raspberries, and the Strawberries are coming fast and furious at the moment!  Oh, there is nothing more delicious on earth than a freshly picked strawberry with the warmth of the sun still burnishing its sweet flesh!


This is a beautiful way of using them during berry season.  Its a simple recipe which I adapted for use from the cookbook entitled Supper For a Song, by Tamasin Day-Lewis.  I love her recipes.  They are always well written and they always turn out.  I know she is largely unknown in North America, but she is a great cook and writer.

 

You are probably more familiar with her brother, Daniel Day-Lewis.  Ah-ha! See, I knew.  Anyways, this recipe is a real gem.  It is perhaps a bit faffy in a way in that you make a sabayon sauce to cover the berries with before glazing them under the grill.

 
A Sabayon is not difficult to make, just time consuming.  You do have to stand whipping it over simmering water for quite a time, but its so delicious when done.  I had to bring in the extension cord from the shed that Todd uses to plug our mower into because I don't have an outlet near my stove that I can plug into.

 
 Not a problem.  Eggs yolks, sugar and lemon juice get whipped in the top of a double boiler until they are creamy, thick and rich, and then you continue to whip them until the mixture cools, upon which you fold in very softly whipped double cream.  Take care not to over-whip the cream or it won't fold together properly.  Softly, softly is the best.  You can do this the night before if you want, and refrigerate it until you want to grill the berries.  This makes it a great last minute dessert for entertaining.

 
A mix of berries is macerated in some sugar and liqueur and then popped into a gratin dish, napped with the sabayon and then gilded beneath the grill/broiler until golden.

 
This does not take very long . . .  only a minute or so.  If you do it for any longer you risk the mixture separating . . .

 

Just long enough to burnish the cream mixture, but not long enough to cook the berries, maintaining the shape and integrity of their deliciousness.

 
 Altogether this is quite, quite lovely and so very delicious.  Mmmm . . .  I could eat that sabayon on its own by the spoonful!

 

*A Gratin of Summer Berries*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe 
 
This is delicious.  Making the sabayon is a bit faffy, but well worth any effort taken.  The berries are not cooked through, so they keep a lot of their fresh flavour and texture.  The gratin mixture is unctously delicious. I could make a meal of that alone. You can make that part a day ahead if you wish, which makes it actually quite a great last minute dessert when the berries are ripe and the bees are a buzzing. 

For the Sabayon:
4 large free range egg yolks
120g golden caster sugar (10 TBS)
few drops vanilla extract
the juice of one lemon
100ml double cream (7 TBS, scant 1/2 cup) 

For the Fruit:
300g fresh strawberries, washed and hulled (3 cups, halved if large)
300g fresh raspberries, picked over and cleaned (3 cups)
100g fresh blueberries, picked over and cleaned (1 cup)
1 TBS caster sugar, or to taste
2 TBS framboise of Grand Marnier


 

Put all of the berries into a large bowl.  Gently stir in the sugar and the liqueur.  Leave on the countertop to macerate for about 25 minutes, gently turning after 15 minutes. 


To make the sabayon, put the egg yolks, sugar, vanilla and lemon juice in the top of a double boiler and set over a pan of simmering water.  Make sure the bottom of the double boiler isn't touching the water. (Alternately you can use a large heat proof bowl that will fit over top of your saucepan of simmering water without falling in.)  Using an electric whisk, whisk on medium high speed until th mixture has doubled in volume and thickened so that the mixture leaves a trail over top when you lift the beaters out of the pan.  Remove to the countertop and place onto a kitchen towel to keep the pan from moving about.  Continue to whisk with the electric whisk until the mixture is completely cold.   


Using clean beaters, whisk the cream just to the point where it forms very soft folds.  You want it slack, and not beaten stiff. It won't fold into the other mixture properly if you over beat it.  Gently fold the cream into the cold cooked mixture.  At this point you can continue on to finish the recipe or put it in a covered dish in the refrigerator overnight. (If you are doing it overnight, then don't macerate the berries until about half an hour or so before you want to make the dessert.) 


When you are ready to serve the dish, heat the grill/broiler to the highest it will go.  Put the berries into a shallow gratin dish.  Spoon the sabayon over top evenly.  Place under the heated grill for about a minute until the surface is just golden brown.  Serve immediately!


 
I really hope that you will take the opportunity to make this with your summer berries this year.  I think you will really enjoy it!  Bon Appetit!

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Spicy Chicken Wings & Blue Cheese Dressing

Tuesday, 20 June 2017


I love chicken wings and I know I am not alone in this.  They are always the first thing to disappear on buffet tables, and I know that at the Chinese All You Can Eat Buffet back home, they are really hard to get your hands on.  People just inhale them!


Chicken wings are a relatively inexpensive cut of chicken to buy. You can usually but big packs of them for not a lot in comparison to other cuts.  Mind you they are mostly bone, but that's okay.  The meat on them is succulent and delicious. 


I used to buy lots of large packs of chicken wings when my children were growing up.  It was one way of feeding my hungry lot for not a lot of dosh!  I used to just season them all over and bake them long and slow and they were delectable.

 

This recipe here today is a simple one, and so tasty.  It makes a great starter for those summer get togethers with your friends and family.  The chicken has a lovely zippy flavour that goes wonderfully with that creamy blue cheese dressing.

 
You do need to start them the wings marinating the night before you make them to impregnate them with the most flavour that you can.  They are spicy but not overly so.  I would say they are just right. 


 

 I am not a fan of food that bites back.  Your food should never be so hot or spicy that you can't tastte what you are actually eating.

 

These are just right. You get a nice amount of heat and spice without it being over the top. Of course if you want yours even hotter, you can add more spice if you like.

 

*Spicy Chicken Wings with Blue Cheese Dressing*
A starter for 4
Printable Recipe 

These lovely little bites are spicy and the dressing sumptuous. Pass plenty of napkins.  You will want to marinate the chicken the night before you want to serve them. 

For the Chicken:
12 to 16 chicken wings
2 tsp toasted sesame oil
1 heaped TBS black treacle or blackstrap molasses
1 heaped TBS golden syrup
(Alternately you can use 2 heaped TBS molasses, which will replace both the treacle and golden syrups)
2 TBs ketchup
the juice of 1 lime
1 thumb freshy grated ginger root
2 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
1 tsp cayenne pepper or to taste 

For the dressing:
3 TBS sour cream
6 TBS good quality mayonnaise
2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
1/4 tsp crushed garlic
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
85g good quality blue cheese, crumbled (3 ounces)


 
Put the chicken into a large zip lock bag.  Combine the marinade ingredients and pour over the chicken in the bag.  Zip the bag closed and squelch the chicken around in the bag to coat.  Place on a plate and leave in the refrigerator to marinate overnight, giving them a squelch around every now and then. 


Whick all of the ingredients together for the dressing.  Be judicious with the salt as the cheese is salty.  Taste and adjust as required. Place into a covered dish and chill until needed. 


When you are ready to cook, bring the chicken to room temperature.  Preheat the oven to 140*C/300*F/ gas mark 1. LIne a large baking tray with a double layer of foil.  Tip the wings out onto the tray in a single layer and poru over the marinade.  Cook for 2 hours, turning them every now and again to make sure they don't stick and dry out. 


Serve heaped on a platter with the bowl of dressing so everyone can help themselves.


 

You can also use minced a minced fresh red chili pepper if you want, just discard the ribs and seeds, prior to mincing (and wear gloves!), or you can use crushed chili pepper flakes.  All work well.   Bon Appetit!


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Welcome, I'm Marie

Welcome, I'm Marie
Canadian lover of all things British. I cook every day and like to share it with you!
A third of my life was spent living in the UK. I learned to love the people, the country and the cuisine. I have always been an Anglophile. You will find plenty of traditional British recipes here in my English Kitchen. There are lots of North American recipes also, but then again, I am a Canadian by birth. I like to think of my page as a happy mix of both. If you are looking for something and cannot find it, don't be afraid to ask! I am always happy to help and point you in the right direction, even if it exists on another page, or in one of my many cookbooks.

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