This week we had a rather unusual tagine - chicken with grapes and artichokes. For four, marinade 4 chicken breasts, cut into strips, in a mix of 2 crushed garlic cloves, 1 tsp turmeric, juice of a lemon, 1 tbsp olive oil. Leave 1-2 hours. Heat 2 tbsp olive oil in the tagine, and stir in 2 onions halved length ways & sliced with the grain. This is what I did with the onions last week as well and I did it in the rice later in the week because I like the way it turns out. Add 1/2 a thinly sliced preserved lemon with 1 tsp sugar. Saute until slightly caramelised. Toss in the marinated chicken slices, then add 1-2 tsp harissa paste, depending on how hot you want it, and 2 tsp tomato paste. Pour over 300ml chicken stock & bring to the boil. Cover & simmer 15 minutes. Toss in a jar of artichoke hearts, cover & cook a further 5 minutes. Add about a dozen green grapes halved length ways and flat leaf parsley, season & serve with couscous & a salad. This was nice but not my favourite. Worth a try.
We bought some beautiful snapper at the market on Sunday and served it with a fresh salsa verde type sauce. For two, finely chop 1 clove garlic then add a small bunch parsley, a dozen or so basil leaves, 2 tsp capers & zest of a lemon. Chop them all together as finely as you can, tip into a bowl, add the lemon juice & season well. Add enough olive oil to make a thick puree. Set aside.
Pan fry the fish using your usual method & when it is nearly done, add a knob of butter & the herb mix. As the butter melts, stir it with the herbs & spoon them over the fish. This should take about 1/2 a minute. Pour the herby sauce over the fish on the plates. I served it with baby carrots, asparagus & crushed baby potatoes.
This week I made a spring risotto with our own peas & broad beans. They were a bit weeny - but still delicious, and a plate full of bright green with creamy rice is a beautiful thing to look upon.
For two, blanch 1/2 cup each of peas and broad beans with a bunch of thin asparagus sliced into about 3 pieces, in 1 1/2 cups chicken stock. In a risotto pan soften 3 baby leeks & 3 spring onions finely sliced. Add 1/2 cup of rice & prepare your risotto in the usual way. At the end add the blanched vegetables with a tbsp each of finely chopped mint & flat leaf parsley. At this stage I usually stir through a knob of butter, cover & let stand a couple of minutes then stir through Parmesan, season & serve.
On the same theme later in the week I did a saffron rice with peas. In a large saucepan heat a tbsp sunflower oil & soften 1/2 an onion with 1/2 tsp garam masala. I sliced the onion lengthways as noted above. Try this - it's quite good. Soak a few threads of saffron in a tbsp hot water & add to the onions along with 3-4 pitted prunes, sliced lengthways, 1/2 cup brown basmati rice and 1 cup chicken stock. Bring to the boil, cover & cook until the water has evaporated & the rice is fluffy. Add 1/2 cup blanched peas at the end. If you are using frozen just pour boiling water through them in a sieve. Stir in the parsley.
While the rice is cooking combine 2-3 lamb fillets with 1 tbsp lime juice, 1/4 tsp cinnamon, 1/2 tsp cumin & 2 tsp sunflower oil. Just before the rice is ready pan fry the lamb about 4- 5 minutes, then cover & rest 5 minutes. Slice & serve with the rice.
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