Saturday, March 24, 2012

Rollover meals

I am now flipping through the tagine book picking up the ones I missed, mainly because they were unseasonal when I did the first round.  This week we had a creamy shellfish tagine with prawns & mussels.  For 2 steam a dozen mussels in your usual way.  We use a little wine. Reserve the liquor for later.  Shell the mussels & chop them up a little if you like, but leave a few on the half shell to be decorative.
Heat some olive oil in a pan or tagine. Stir in 3 finely chopped shallots & 1/2 a fennel bulb.  Stir in 1 tsp harissa paste - we were lucky enough to be given a jar of homemade harissa at Christmas & this is just the right warmth.  Pour in 150 mls of the reserved liquor & bring to the boil.  Stir in 75 mls cream, the juice of 1/2 a lemon & a dozen prawns.  Simmer gently until the prawns are cooked.  Season with salt & lost of black pepper & return the mussels to the pan to warm through.  Sprinkle with parsley to serve.
As so often happens one small thought leads to an entire meal.  The thought was  - I need to use up those little gem lettuces before they go to seed.  What about peas & lettuce - otherwise known as petit pois a la Francaise?  That goes nicely with roast chicken.  And we do have some carrots that are ready to pick.  Enter baked chicken with lemon, potato & green olives served with petit pois & steamed baby carrots.
I didn't want to roast a whole chicken so we did Maryland pieces.  Cut some roasting potatoes into smallish chunks & lay in the roasting dish.  Scatter over quartered red onion, a handful of green olives, some slices of lemon, a few chunks of pancetta & a couple of bay leaves.  Stir 1 tbsp each tomato paste & balsamic vinegar into 75 mls chicken stock & pour over potatoes.  Lay the chicken pieces on top, skin up & drizzle with olive oil, then sprinkle with salt & pepper.  Roast for 50 minutes then test the chicken to ensure the juices run clear.  Transfer the chicken to a plate to keep warm & whack the oven up to 220.  Return the veg to the oven until the potatoes are cooked through & beginning to colour. 
And you'll see we make good use of leftovers.  The potatoes go in the weekday salads & the peas & carrots are reserved for Monday's soup.
Chop the fennel left over from Saturday, a stick of celery, 2 spring onions, & a couple of courgettes into small dice.  Heat a pan & add a little olive oil &  knob of butter.  Add the veg except for the courgettes & cook 10 minutes or so until soft.  Add 500g vegetable or chicken stock & when it has come to the boil add the courgettes.  Cook for a minute & add 100g peas & broad beans - I would use fresh in spring but frozen is good.  Cook for another couple of minutes & add Sunday's leftover peas & lettuce plus the chopped carrots. Add a little more shredded lettuce if you like.  Simmer another minute, add chopped herbs then season.  Serve with grilled sourdough.
We planted a few buttercrunch lettuces & one of them grew into the biggest lettuce I have ever seen.  We have been having it for lunches.
The winter veg have arrived and it is hard to know which to choose.  Put together about 400g of vegetables - shallots, carrots, parsnip, pumpkin, beetroot, potato.  Chop them into chunks or thick slices with the slower cooking items in smaller pieces.  Put them into an ovenproof dish.  Add 1 finely chopped clove of garlic, olive oil, salt & papper.  Roast the veg at 190 until all are cooked through & beginning to caramelise. 
Beat 6 eggs with chopped herbs & season.  Pour over the vegetables & scatter over grated cheese.  Return to the oven for 10-15 minutes until the egg is set & the cheese is golden. Serve with a salad to try & get through some of the giant lettuce & use the leftovers in lunch salads.  It slices nicely & is good warm or cold.
Thursday we had that pinto chilli.  There was part of the tin of pintos and part of the tin of tomatoes left over so I heated those through with the left over lunch lentils & a splash of balsamic then served on sourdough toast topped with a poached egg for Saturday brunch.
During the week I had such a treat.  One of you kind readers, having read last week's entry, turned up on my doorstep with 2 kilos of green tomatoes.  I have made the chutney and will be delivering some to the tomato donor in the morning.  Phoebe will also be delighted because a jar or 2 will be wending its way to her this week.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Salad and pasta

I had bought a piece of rump steak in case it was a good evening for a barbecue.  It wasn't.  The steak went beautifully with a Greek salad and crushed rosemary potatoes, which tend to go with most things.  The Greek salad was a lovely way to use some of our late cos lettuces and the few tomatoes we have produced this year - will there be enough even for a batch of green tomato chutney?  It is good, if you have time to prepare in advance, steeping the red onions with oil & vinegar &  dried oregano, & sprinkling the tomatoes with a little salt & sugar before you throw everything together.
Monday was Peter's regular birthday dinner, smoked salmon pasta.  This is so quick & easy that it hardly seems like a luxury meal.  Heat plenty of cream in a pan, add lemon juice & zest, smoked salmon, grated Parmesan, parsley.  Season & toss through your best egg pasta.  Serve with a salad.    I used to do a vegetarian version but with cream, cheese, egg pasta there's not much here for a vegan.  This is where the Tasty Pot comes in.  Birthday meals can be difficult because the birthday recipient gets their meal of choice but the whole family with their varying eating habits need to be provided for.  It is getting easier to buy good, almost fresh, pre-prepared choices.
We had a variation on a Nicoise salad with avocado & cannellini beans.  I have been moaning a bit about the avocados this year but this was the perfect avocado.  Make a vinaigrette with olive oil, lemon juice, Dijon mustard, garlic & salt & pepper.  Put a tin of tuna, a tin of cannellini beans, some shredded cos lettuce, halved cherry tomatoes, thinly sliced spring onions & flat leaf parsley in a bowl & toss through the dressing.  Add hard boiled egg & slices of avocado.
For the perfect autumn salad try pumpkin (in this case butternut) and rocket with mushrooms & blue cheese.  Roast the pumpkin, peeled & cut into pieces, with some olive oil, bruised sage leaves & bashed garlic, about 40 minutes.  You want it soft & just colouring around the edges.  Fry some thickly sliced mushrooms (a friend told me she was given some field mushrooms this week & they would be perfect here), in a little olive oil & a knob of butter until they are cooked through and any liquid has evaporated. Combine the pumpkin, mushrooms, some rocket & crumbled blue cheese - I used Roquefort - in a bowl & toss with olive oil & balsamic vinegar.   This is quite a substantial meal but make more than you think you will need otherwise you'll wish you had.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

At home

For Harriet's birthday I did the usual vegan Mediterranean style medley.  This year I added Patatas Bravas to the menu.  This is a classic Spanish tapa that I had had at a Spanish restaurant in Auckland & have been keen to try.  First make the sauce.  Sweat a finely chopped onion in a little olive oil with some finely chopped thyme, until the onion is very soft & translucent.  Add 3 cloves of finely chopped garlic & a finely chopped, fairly hot red chilli.  Cook a minute or 2.  Add a tin of chopped tomatoes, 2 tsp smoked paprika, a pinch of sugar, salt & pepper.  Simmer about 10 minutes & keep warm. 
Cook a pan of waxy potatoes cut into 3cm cubes, 10-12 minutes (make lots because these will be popular).  Drain & dry then saute in olive oil 10-15 minutes until they are crisp & golden.  Drain & tip into a dish then pour over the warmed sauce.  Scatter with parsley & watch these disappear from the table. Especially if they are served in this new casserole purchased at Alan Rhodes pottery in Whenuakite, Coromandel.
We had friends over & I wanted to spend the evening talking not cooking.  This pork dish was the answer.  For 4, take 600g pork fillets & tie with kitchen string, tying the thin end under for even cooking.  Combine 2 tbsp olive oil, 2 cloves of crushed garlic, finely chopped rosemary, zest of a lemon in a bowl & season, then rub over the pork & set aside.
In a roasting dish combine 4 parsnips, peeled & sliced on the diagonal, 2 red onions, quartered, 3 carrots peeled & cut on the diagonal, 8 wholes cloves of garlic, skin on.  Toss with a little olive oil & roast 40 minutes intil tender.  Turn occasionally to ensure even cooking.  Make a dressing of 2 tbsp lemon juice, 1/4 cup good olive oil, 1 clove crushed garlic, 1 tsp grainy mustard, 2 tbsp chopped chives, salt & pepper.  Add a couple of handfuls baby spinach to the veg then toss through the dressing.  Brown the pork on all sides in a pan then roast in a hot oven 12 minutes.  Rest 10 minutes.  Toss through the vegetables. I made the mistake of sharing the recipe, so my friends know I hadn't gone to any trouble.
On Monday - yes it's soup Monday time - we had roasted pumpkin with chorizo.  Dice enough pumpkin for 2 & combine with a little olive oil & butter,  1/2 tsp each ground ginger & allspice, 1/4 tsp chilli flakes, 1 tbsp brown sugar, 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar, in a roasting dish.  Roast at 180 until tender & a little caramelised - about 30 mins.  Meanwhile heat a little olive oil in a soup pan & fry 1 dried  sliced chorizo, 1/2 sliced onion, 1/2 diced carrot, 1 stalk sliced celery, 1 clove crushed garlic, 1/4 tsp cinnamon, until onion is soft.  Stir in 1 tbsp tomato paste, 3 cups beef or chicken stock, the roasted pumpkin & 1/2 tin kidney beans.  Simmer 30 minutes.  Puree a small quantity of the soup so you have a mix of pureed & chunky.  Serve with a dollop of sour cream & a sprinkle of smoked paprika.
We found a great recipe for a smoked mackerel salad that made a very simple work day meal.  Finely slice 1/2 an onion & soak in water or white wine vinegar to soften.  Boil a handful of waxy potatoes until tender & set aside.  Grill a couple of rashers of streaky bacon.  Make a vinaigrette with olive oil, white wine vinegar, dijon mustard, capers & a sprig of dill. Add the onions to the dressing & toss with the halved potatoes while they are still warm.  Mix through a fillet of smoked flaked mackerel & crumble the bacon over the top.  You could consider adding a hard-boiled egg.  I didn't this time but might next.
We had a frightful storm last Saturday & we did an emergency dash in pjs to rescue some roses that I feared would be battered.  They looked so wonderful in a vase that I thought I would share with you.  This is the 2nd flowering and these little babies seem to flourish more each year.  I'm pleased to report that there are still plently of blooms left on the bushes.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

A Holiday by the Sea

We've just returned from 7 nights in the Coromandel.  We stayed at Kuaotunu and aside from the joys of walking on the beach & swimming, (yes! your eyes do not deceive - bathing in the sea did occur), we enjoyed the local produce which mostly comprised "fruits de mer".
On our way from Auckland we stopped at Coromandel Town which is a really delightful town that I heartily recommend.  Coromandel offered many delights.  Our first stop was the Coromandel Oyster Company which is essentially a roadside stall selling primarily oysters but also other shellfish products.  We bought Coromandel oysters on the half shell which we enjoyed with a slice of delicious bread we bought at the Chai Tea House (scroll to the bottom of the page).
We also bought a tub of Mussel Chowder which we enjoyed for lunch the following day again with the delicious Tea House bread.  It was a dense seedy sourdough loaf. 
Next stop was the Coromandel Smoking Company where we bought some smoked scallops & prawns along with a fillet of smoked kingfish which we prepared in a salad comprising potatoes, eggs & spring onions mixed with mayonnaise and served on a bed of lettuce.  This was a variation of a smoked fish salad we regularly have at home.  Unfortunately you can no longer buy Coromandel Smoking Company fish in Wellington as far as I know.  If you know something I don't please let me know.
We were staying in a bach at the back of a house & I had noticed some mint in the garden which gave me the idea of cooking a lamb steak served with roasted potatoes & yoghurt mixed with mint.  Lamb steaks are something I often cook on holiday because you don't need the resources of the pantry.  We always travel with coffee & our trusty espresso pot, along with a bottle of olive oil, grainy mustard, white wine vinegar, the pepper grinder & a jar of cumin.   We are well prepared for whatever culinary treat presents itself.
To our delight our host went out fishing one morning & presented us with a plate of freshly caught snapper fillets.  We served these simply pan fried with a squeeze of lemon, more roasted potatoes & a salad.  This was the most delicious snapper I have ever eaten so we were delighted when another few fillets came our way the next day.  We had plans for dinner so we used them in a salad for our lunch.
We also visited the local eating establishments.  One of the highlights for me was a visit to Colenso Country Cafe where I enjoyed a slice of plum cake so delicious I had to return a few days later & have another slice.  Speaking of plums, which did put in multiple appearances on this holiday, we visited The Artists' House at Whenuakite and on our arrival the artist (Julie) offered us a plum straight from the tree.  This was a magical plum experience - a Luisa plum which was egg shaped with firm yellow flesh.  I find most yellow fleshed plums floury & tasteless but this was firm fleshed & truly delicious.  Unfortunately I suspect they would not do well in Karori.  The artist was planning to make plum brandy with her surplus.
One evening we treated ourselves to a meal at Salt Restaurant in Whitianga.  I had the Coromandel mussels followed by the market fish.  Both were superbly cooked & presented.  On a return visit to Coromandel Town via the 309 Road (check out Stuart's pigs), we bought a tub of Oyster Bisque from the Oyster Company for our dinner.  We lunched at Umu Cafe (third down the page) and Peter & I shared a mussel platter.  If you are a fan of mussels you will love this.  There were smoked mussels, crumbed mussels, chowder, pate.  This was mussel heaven.
We will certainly be returning to those sandy beaches and enjoying more delights of the sea.  On the return journey we spent a couple of nights with relatives who were suffering, like the artist above, from a surplus of plums.  We are now enjoying Aunty Lorraine's plum jam on our morning toast.  They also had tired of apple cucumbers and we returned home with a large box.  I have since produced 16 jars of my grandma's cucumber pickle.  This is really simple.  You need
1 doz apple cucumbers or 6 long green (peeled)
3 lb onions
2 lb white sugar
2 pints vinegar
Chop cucumbers & onions.  Sprinkle with salt & leave 2-3 hrs.  Drain & add vinegar, leaving out 1 cup to mix with thickening.  Add sugar, boil till soft (1-2 hours).


Thicken with:
1 c flour
1 dsp curry powder
1 dsp turmeric
1 tbsp mustard powder
mixed with remaining cup vinegar
Boil till thick – 5-10 mins
Makes 8-9 jars (my 16 jars were probably smaller than Grandma's)
Give me a shout if you would like a jar.