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Apricot, Oat & Walnut Cookies

Sunday, 14 January 2018

 

Some days you just want a cookie . . . or biscuit as they are called over here.  That inner child in you just crys out for something sweet . . . something which feels like a reward.
A tasty treat that is equally at home with a glass of cold milk . . . or with a cup of something hot, for dunking . . .

 

Something comfortable and comforting.  It doesn't even have to be chocolate . . . in fact there are days when chocolate just doesn't cut it . . . you want something more . . . something homey . . . with just a touch of sophistication . . .

 

Something which wraps you up in a nice warm hug like a loving Grandmother's cuddles and kisses always did . . .

 

Something which  feels indulgent and yet at the same time wholesome . . . we don't always want to feel totally naughty . . . sometimes we just want to be a tiny bit naughty . . .

 


 These lovely oaty moreishly wholesome biscuits fit the bill on all counts . . . they are the type of old fashioned treats that your Nana might have baked . . . and maybe she did.

 

Chock full of rolled oats, toasted walnuts, chunks of apricot and gently sweetened with creamy honey . . . these are biscuits to come home to . . . biscuits you want to sink your teeth into and then just float away on a sea of remembrance of honey comforts and a gentler . . . kinder time.

 

*Honeyed Apricot, Oat & Walnut Cookies*
Makes 4 dozen
Printable Recipe 
 

Soft and golden, and studded with toasted walnuts and bits of dried apricot. 


180g of butter, softened (3/4 cup)
95g of granulated sugar (1/2 cup)
2 tsp finely grated orange zest (optional)
170g of creamed honey (1/2 cup)
1 large free range egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp orange extract
160g of old fashioned rolled oats (2 cups)
175g of plain flour (1 1/4 cups)
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1/2 tsp salt
60g of toasted chopped walnuts (1/2 cup)
75g of chopped dried apricots (1/2 cup)

For the optional glaze:
125g of icing sugar, sifted (1 cup)
whole milk
1/2 tsp orange extract 


Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Line several baking sheets with baking paper.  Butter the baking paper, or spritz with low fat cooking spray. 


Rub the sugar and orange zest together if using, until you can smell the orange.  Cream the sugar, honey and the butter together until light and fluffy.  Beat in the extracts and the egg.  Stir together the flour, baking soda and salt.   Add this to the creamed mixture along with the oats.  Mix together well.  Stir in the nuts and the apricots.  Mix well. 


Drop by the tablespoon onto the prepared baking sheets, at least one inch apart.   Bake for 12 to 15 minutes.  Scoop off the cookie sheet onto wire racks to cool.  Once cool, whisk the drizzle ingredients together until smooth and dribble the resulting glaze in a decorative manner over the tops.  Store in an airtight container. 


 

I really dislike these cold dark days.  The light has been really poor no matter the time of day and its hard to get a decent photo of anything.  If it wasn't so cold out or raining, I could go outside but brrr . . .  not doing that.  Don't let the dark photos put you off from these tasty cookies.  They are really delicious!  Perfect with a hot drink for elevenses! Bon appetit! 

 


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Buttermilk Banana Bread

Saturday, 13 January 2018

 

I always try to buy enough bananas so that the Toddster can get his fill of them, and I will have some leftover blackened ones to bake with.  I confess I am not overly fond of eating fresh bananas, but bake them into a muffin, cookie or a bread and I am all over them!

 

The exception for the eating fresh rule is eating them on top of my rice crispies.  And I always need a sprinkle of brown sugar on top. Not sure why that is . . .  its probably something that goes back to my childhood.  Rice crispies, banana and brown sugar just makes me feel all yum yum.  I love them.

 

Is there such a thing as too many banana bread recipes???   I think not!

 

And this is one of my absolute favourites.  It smells all heavenly when it is baking  . . .

 

Its moreishly moist from the amount of banana and then the buttermilk  . . .

 

Its stogged full of lovely toasted pecans.  I always like to toast my nuts before using them. It just makes them taste . . .  well . . .  nuttier, for some reason.

 

This is beautiful on its own  . . .  with no embellishment, just the bread . . . sweet, moist and banana-ee.

 

Its lovely cut into thin slices and spread with softened butter too  . . .  and it is gorgeous toasted under a grill until its edges start to caramelize, flipped over and caramelized on the other side  . . .  and then, yes  . . . . spread  with butter or honey butter . . . wowsa. I am such a glutton!

 

*Buttermilk Banana Bread*
Makes 1 large loaf
Printable Recipe 
 
 
When your bananas are black on the outside and looking like they are destined for the compost heap, they are perfect for banana bread.  Be sure to use a metal pan for this (not cast iron or glass).  To do otherwise will result in a heavy, overdone on the outside, soggy inside bread. 

450g to 525g mashed overly ripe banana (1 1/2 to 1 3/4 cups,
or 3 small to medium bananas or 2 large)
2 large free range eggs
95g granulated sugar (1/2 cup)
100g soft dark brown sugar (1/2 cup packed)
1 1/2 tsp pure vanilla
120ml buttermilk (1/2 cup)
280g plain flour (2 cups)
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
125g butter, melted (1/2 cup)
60g coarsely chopped toasted pecans (1/2 cup) 


 Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F. gas mark 6.  Butter a 9 by 5 inch loaf tin and dust it lightly with flour, shaking out any excess.


Combine the mashed banana with the eggs, both sugars ad vanilla in a bowl.  Beat in the buttermilk and butter.  Sift the flour, soda, baking powder and salt together in a large bowl.  Add the banana mixture and beat until well blended.  Stir in the chopped nuts.  Spoon into the prepared baking tin, smoothing the top.


Place the tin into the preheated oven and immediately REDUCE the oven temperature to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Bake for one hour and fifteen minutes, or until the top is risen and nicely browned, the loaf is beginning to pull away from the sides of the tin, and a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean.  Let cool in the tin for 10 minutes, then invert onto a wire rack to unmold. Carefully turn over and cool completely before cutting into slices to serve.  As with any teabread like this, letting it stand overnight improves the flavour and helps it to cut neater.


Note - this is really lovely toasted and buttered. Just saying  . . .




A slice of this with a hot cuppa is a real treat on a cold winter's day.  Perfect for chasing away the winter blues  . . .  Bon Appetit!



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Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins

Friday, 12 January 2018

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

I am not a person who feels blue very often, but today I had kind of a blue day. It came at me from out of nowhere.  I felt teary-eyed and down-hearted for most of the day, for no real reason.  I find that when one of those moods hits, it is best to just get my head down and get stuck into something simple and mindless.  I decided to bake muffins. 


 I didn't feel inspired enough to make any from off my own back, so I turned to one of my favourite sources of tasty muffin recipes, entitled Mad about Muffins by Diana Bonaparte.  Its a book I got when I was living down South, on the say-so of my Bishop's wife.  All of the recipes are very sound and delicious!

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins  

These sounded lovely . . . . and somewhat healthy, aside from the sugar and golden syrup . . . with plenty of oats, sunflower seeds and chopped apple.

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

If you don't have light muscovado sugar, you can use soft light brown sugar, and in the place of golden syrup you can use light corn syrup, or even honey would work well.

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

Actually I think I might even try them with date syrup sometime.  I think that would be fabulous . . .  with some chopped dates instead of apple and maybe toasted walnuts instead of sunflower seeds.

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

Watch this space.  In the meantime we are sitting here enjoying these just as they are.  Delicious little cakes that are completely at home with a hot cuppa or a hot chocolate, or even a glass of milk.

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 


They would also make very lovely additions to the kids' lunch boxes I dare say.  A delicious way of getting something good into them.

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

*Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins*
Makes 12
Printable Recipe 
In one word, MOREISH.  From the book Mad About Muffins by Diana Bonaparte.  

285g plain flour (2 cups plus 1 TBS)
150g soft light muscovado sugar (3/4 cup, packed)
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
50g porridge oats (2/3/ cup)
170ml milk (6 fluid ounces)
2 large free range eggs
100g butter (1/2 cup minus 2 TBS)
50g golden syrup (2 1/2 TBS)
1 large sweet eating apple, unpeeled, cored and chopped finely
20g hulled sunflower seeds (3 TBS)
To top:
2 TBS jumbo oats
1 TBS hulled sunflower seeds
1 TBS demerara sugar


Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins  

Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6.  Line a 12 cup medium muffin tin with paper liners, or butter and dust well with flour, shaking out any excess.  Set aside.

Sift the flour, baking powder and salt into a bowl.  Push the muscovado sugar through a fine sieve and stir it into the flour. (If you cannot get muscavado sugar, use light brown sugar).  Stir in the porridge oats.  Whisk together the milk and eggs in a measuring beaker, beating together with a fork.  Heat the syrup and butter together until the butter melts.  Make a well in the dry ingredients and add the milk/egg mixture and the syrup/butter mixture all at once.  Stir together just to moisten.  Stir in the chopped apple and sunflower seeds.  Spoon into the prepared muffin cups.

Sprinkle the jumbo oats on top of the batter, then the sunflower seeds and finally the demerara sugar.

Bake for 20 to 22 minutes, until well risen and godlen brown and the top springs back when lightly touched.  Scoop out to a wire rack to cool for a bit prior to eating.  Lovely warm, and pretty good cold as well!

Oat, Apple & Sunflower Seed Muffins 

Hopefully I will be able to shake off this feeling soon.  I hate feeling blue, especially when I have nothing to feel blue about.  I guess they call it the January Blues and I know I am not alone.  We all get them from time to time!  In any case I did enjoy these muffins, and I had a good old clear out of the cupboard at the same time!  Bon Appetit!



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Steak with Whiskey Peppercorn Sauce

Thursday, 11 January 2018

 

Sometimes I think about becoming a vegetarian, but then I think about the things I really enjoy . . .  like steak and I realise I could never really do it.  Become a vegetarian.  I enjoy a good steak once in a while far too much to ever give it up.  No offense to vegetarians, I know they have their reasons, but I am a meat lover, albeit free range and organic if possible.  I try to only eat happy meat.

 

This recipe today is the perfect recipe for when you are wanting to indulge in a good steak with your partner.  I like meat that has hung a bit longer and which is organic and free range.  You can tell good meat by its colour.  It won't be overly bright red  . . .  and it will be moist, but not overly moist, and not overly dry either.

 

It should be a dark red, not bright red . . .  without a lot of liquid in the package, and the fat on the edge should be creamy white, almost waxy looking in appearance.  Nicely marbled, without any obvious bits of tough sinew.  (I hate sinew.) 

 

There are many thoughts of school on salting prior to cooking or not.  I, personally, salt prior to cooking. If you let your steak rest properly before serving, any juices that might escape will be reabsorbed by the meat when it relaxes . . . salt just enhances the flavour of good meat.

 

Personally we like our steaks medium rare. They are tender and delicious.  Not bleeding, but nice and pink in the centre, with a good sear on the outside. 

 

Mmmm . . . now that's a good looking steak . . . . perfectly done to my taste.

 

The sauce is beautiful also . . .  with lovely rich flavours that help to bring out the best of the meat and not overpower it. I am a real pepper lover . . .  that heat and bite really goes well with a good piece of beef, and the richness of the cream and butter and whiskey, well . . .  what can I say?  Perfectly sized for just two.  This could be your new romantic dinner option.

 

*Steak with a Whiskey Peppercorn Sauce*
Serves 2
Printable Recipe 

Tender juicy steak, perfectly cooked and accompanied with a delicious peppercorn sauce. 

2 (200g) sirloin steaks (2 7-oz.)
oil to brush the steaks
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 TBS olive oil
1 banana shallot, peeled and finely diced
2 cloves garlic, peeled and minced (remove and discard any green shoots prior to mincing)
500ml rich beef stock (2 1/4 cups)
2 TBS butter
2 TBS mixed peppercorns
2 TBS cream
2 TBS whiskey


  


Make the sauce first and keep warm.  Heat the 1 TBS olive oil in a saucepan. Add the shallots and garlic.  Sweat, stirring occasionally, over low heat and uncovered, until they are softened.  Season to taste with salt and black pepper.  Add the stock to the pan.  Bring to a boil and cook on high for 15 minutes until reduced by half.  Strain into a clean saucepan.  Whisk in the butter, cream, and peppercorns. Cook for a few minutes longer, then set aside and keep warm. 


Brush the steaks on both sides with a bit of oil and season with salt and black pepper.  Heat a grill pan until very hot.  Cook for 3 minutes on one side, then flip and cook for a further 3  minutes for medium rare.  Let rest  for a few minutes before serving on warm plates with the sauce spooned over top. 


 


I served with chips and onions rings and a crisp wedge of iceberg lettuce with my Creamy Cheddar Salad Dressing. We were both very happy campers.  Bon Appetit!

 




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Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli

Wednesday, 10 January 2018

Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 





Cheesy Rigatoni.  Just those two words are enough to set your taste buds to tingling. Add some tuna and some broccoli and you have a dish made in heaven! This is easily absolutely the best Tuna Casserole I have ever eaten.
 


This casserole I am sharing today is adapted from a recipe by James McNair that I found in a cookbook entitled "From Our House to Yours: Comfort Food to Give and Share", by Joyce Goldstein.  It is rich and delicious.

Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 




I used the basic recipe for the pasta and sauce and then I added my own twist to it.  I also cut the recipe perfectly in half for just us, and it worked well.  
 


In fact I would say that half of the recipe would easily feed four people just right.



Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 



I made half the recipe, which should have fed two to three people. We only managed to finish half the dish.
 


So definitely make it when you have a table full of hearty hungry eaters in the house to feed.



Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli  



Its really a very simple make.  You just cook the pasta and then layer it in a baking dish.  
 


Next you make a rich bechamel sauce, using both regular and evaporated milks.  You can use the skimmed evaporated milk which will cut down on the fat somewhat  . . .  but really  . . .



Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 




With all the cheese involved why bother!  There are four kinds of cheese.  Emmenthaler (a Swiss type of cheese) and Gruyere (another type of Swiss-ish cheese) . . . both of which have great melting properties.

 
 
 The Emmenthaler is a bit nuttier and sweeter I think  . . . then there is a sharp Cheddar (I used a vintage one) and Parmigiano Reggiano.  All cheeses I had leftover from Christmas.  


 
I also had leftover cooked broccoli I wanted to use up, which is why I just threw it on top, added a tin of good quality tuna drained.  


 
Those were layered over the pasta and the sauce gets spooned over top.  All the cheese is layered on top of the sauce, creating a ooey gooey blanket of yumminess!



Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 



*Baked Rigatoni with Four Cheeses*
Serves 4 to 6
Printable Recipe 
 
Rich and indulgent.  The original recipe is one by James McNair. I added tuna and cooked broccoli. 

1 pound dried pasta, such as rusilli, penne, rigatoni or ziti
6 TBS butter
70g plain flour (1/2 cup)
960ml milk (4 cups)
480ml evaporated milk (2 cups)
freshly ground black pepper to taste
freshly grated nutmeg to taste
180g each grated Gruyere, Emmenthaler and strong Cheddar cheese (1 1/2 cups each)
180g grated Parmigiano Reggiano (1 cup)
1 tin of albacore tuna in water, drained (7 ounces) broken into chunks
2 cups cooked broccoli florets 


Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 



Heat a large saucepan of generously salted water to the boil. Add the pasta and cook, stirring frequently, until done to al dente, according to the package directions.  Drain well, rinse in cold water and drain again.  Set aside. 




Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Butter a 9 by 13 inch baking dish.  Spread the pasta out in the dish.  Top with the flaked tuna and broccoli. 




Melt the butter in a large saucepan.  Add the flour and whisk together, cooking over low heat for about five minutes.  Remove and set aside.  Combine the milk and evaporated milk in a large saucepan and heat just to the boil.  Pour all at once into the pan with the flour/butter mixture and whisk together until smooth.  Season with some salt, ppper and nutmeg.  Place over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly, until the mixture begins to bubble and thicken.  Pour this evenly over top of the tuna, pasta and broccoli in the casserole dish.  Mix together all of the cheeses and sprinkle them evenly over top of all.   




Bake in the preheated oven for about half an hour.   Place under a heated grill to gild the cheese if desired. 


Note - you can leave out the tuna and broccoli if you wish. 


Cheesy Rigatoni with Tuna & Broccoli 



Even my so called pasta-hating other half gobbled this up.  In his words, it wasn't so bad.  Now, knowing him and his taste for pasta, that was a high compliment indeed.  

This is incredibly delicious. Rich.  Creamy. Probably the best Tuna Casserole I have ever eaten!

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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Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips & Cabbage

Monday, 8 January 2018

Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




One thing I love most about Winter is that we get to enjoy lovely homemade soups with abandon.  There is no time like the present to be enjoying these beautiful forms of sustenance!




Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




Everything I know about making soup, I learned from my mother.  She made beautiful soups.  As a family we loved her soups and one of the first things we always looked forward after we grew up and went home for a visit, was a hot bowl of one of her homemade soups. 


Mum never skimmed the fat from her soups.  She always told us those little beads of fat floating on top were the vitamins.  I do skim the fat, but I always smile while I am doing it, thinking of all the vitamins  . . . .



Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




One of my favourite memories is from when I was living on my own after my divorce.  I had a rented room in someone else's house. It was January and I had come down with the "man" flu . . .  horrible, soul wrenching, energy draining flu. 


 I was in bed for several days, not caring if I was dead or alive.  There came a knock on the door one day and there stood my mother with a lovely container of her homemade chicken soup.  Nectar of the Gods.  And filled with vitamins, no doubt! 😉  But when you're sick . . .  who cares.




Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




A good homemade soup is one of the most beautiful examples of love you can share with someone you care about . . .it is indeed soup for the soul.



Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




This version I am showing you today starts with a delicious homemade stock which is made from the carcass of a roasted chicken.  I always freeze my roast chicken carcasses specifically for the purpose of making soups.  


You don't always feel like making the soup right away, so freezing them makes good sense.  I just pop them into an empty bread bag, tie it shut and pop it into the freezer.



Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 





I also cut up my own chickens to use in dishes and save the backs and necks, also for the purpose of making flavourful stocks.  All get frozen for future use. 


Breasts in one container, legs in another, wings in another, and backs & necks.  Its a cheaper way of having chicken portions to hand, and just makes economic sense to me.


Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 





For this delicious soup I combined my own homemade stock, pearl barley, grated parsnips, and cabbage with perfectly delicious results.  You can use ready made stock as well if you want. 


You will still end up with a fabulously tasty soup. Perfect for these cold winter days and for whatever ails you.

Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 






*Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe 
 
 
You will want to use one of the greener varieties of cabbage for this.  Savoy works well, as does Cavolo Nero or even Kale. 


8 cups of chicken stock (preferably homemade if possible)
a generous sprig of thyme
2 TBS chopped fresh parsley
140g pearl barley (3/4 cup)
2 medium parsnips, peeled and grated
(if you cannot get parsnips, you may use carrots)
1/2 pound dark green cabbage, shredded and chopped
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
1 cup roast chicken coarsely shredded
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/4 medium sized lemon  

Put the chicken stock into a large saucepan and bring to the boil. Add the spring of thyme, parsley and pearl barley and reduce to a simmer.  Cover and cook for about forty five minutes.  Add the vegetables,bring to the boil again and then reduce to a simmer.  Cook for a further 15 to 20 minutes, until all of the vegetables and the barley are very soft. Add the chicken and heat through.   Season to taste with salt and black pepper, squeeze the lemon juice over top and serve.  

You can make your own chicken broth quite easily with the carcass of your leftover roast chicken. Homemade is always better than ready made in my opinion.  




Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage





 
*Roast Chicken Broth*
Makes  3 to 4 litres (2 to 3 quarts)
(Good for freezing) 
Printable Recipe 
 
 
There is no equal in flavour to homemade chicken broth or stock as it is also called.  Perfect for making soups, risottos, stews and gravies. 

1 to 2 roast chicken carcasses, you can also add a few necks and backs
if you have them. (I buy my chickens whole, and cut the up to use
in recipes. I always have chicken necks and backs in the freezer. This is the
perfect way to use them up)
4 unpeeled cloves of garlic, gently bruised
1 large brown onion, washed, unpeeled and quartered
2 medium carrots, washed, unpeeled and quartered
2 large stocks of celery, washed, with leaves attached, quartered
1 tsp whole black pepper corns, bruised
1 tsp sea salt
a handful of fresh parsley sprigs, and other soft herbs such at thyme,
oregano, savoury, sage or marjoram 

Place the chicken carcasses and any backs or necks you are using into a large saucepan. Add water to cover by several inches.  Add the cut up vegetables and aromatics.  Bring to the boil, then reduce to a simmer. Cook at a very slow simmer for anywhere from between 3 hours to six hours. (The longer you cook it, the more flavourful it will be.)  Line a colander with some cheese cloth and strain the contents of the pot into a large clean bowl.  Discard any solids left behind.  Chill.  Discard any solid fat which forms on top.  The broth is now ready to use as you desire, or you can break it down into smaller quantities and freeze for future use.



Roast Chicken Soup with Barley, Parsnips and Cabbage 




Any leftovers can also be frozen, ready to haul out at the first sign of a sniffle.  Almost as good as a mother's hug when you are feeling a bit under the weather.  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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