Archive for the ‘cuisine’ Category


Looks are not everything in the vegetable department!

judge ss julienne peelerceleriacI know I have friends who even in adulthood will touch eat anything green, ‘Yes you know who you are!’, well things are about to change with children arriving on the scene he cannot no longer be seen not to eat his greens when he’s telling the little one too, now can he?

One vegetable that people always seem to shy away from and yet has a enormous following in europe especially in french cuisine is well, ’round, knobbly, crusty and looks like it has been hanging around in the vegetable box far to long is…’, the answer is Celeriac.

Celeriac is making abit of a comeback and is regularly seen upon bistro menu’s in the form of mash served with red meats or game. This vegetable has a delicate sweet celery flavour with a aniseed twist to it and even works well grated raw into salads, made into chips or even crisps (if you make your own vegetable crisps). Can be mashed with potato and made into soups too being a very versatile vegetable.

You can find these both in supermarkets and farmers markets and green grocers looking very ugly in the corner, you should try some you will be surprised. 

For a great recipe for egg & lemon sauce celeriac you will need:

3 celeriacs, trimmed and peeled, (For a great peeler this judge ss julienne peeler is brilliant, can be used by left and right handed cooks, makes easy work out of peeling espically for people whose hands have athritus for example and makes light work out of julienne the hardest or vegetables and fruits. So a real aid in todays kitchen) 120 ml dry white wine, 3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, 2 large egg yolks, 2 tbsp lemon juice, 1 tbsp finely chopped chives and sea salt.
Cut your celeriac into julienne strips and place in a large saucepan. Reserving 3 tblsp of the wine pour the rest of the wine and oil into the saucepan with the celeriac. Now add salt to taste, cover and cook over a low heat for 20 minutes until the celeriac is soft. Beat the egg yolks with the remaining wine and lemon juice, add the chives and pour on to the celeriac.
Toss gently, arrange on a plate or dish to serve. Great with red meats and game of your choice.

Have you tried Celeriac? Does a vegetables look put you off trying it? What vegetable do not like for its looks?

See my previous blog Salad in a hurry for julienne salad ideas and gadget, my previous blog on the side also show another brilliant julienne slicer gadget with a recipe for you to try and there are many more blogs packed with ideas, kitchen gadgets and recipes for you to look through.

Posted on Saturday, September 5th, 2009 Looks are not everything in the vegetable department! by jacqui


Fantastic summer seasonal flan to delight

blueberriesBlueberries are sold fresh or processed as individually quick frozen (IQF) fruit, purée, juice, or dried or infused berries which in turn may be used in a variety of consumer goods such as jellies, jams, pies, muffins, snack foods, and cereals. With notably high levels of the essential dietary mineral manganese, vitamin B6, vitamin C, vitamin K and dietary fiber. You will also hear the blueberry being called a so called superfood because of its nutritional value. Blueberry production in North America typically starts in mid-May (in Florida) and ends in September.

Why not try this family seasonal favourite of our, a superb blueberry frangipane flan made with a tangy lemon pastry case filled with nutty sweet slmond filling filled with ripe delicious blueberries.

blueberry frangipane flanYou will need: 2 tbsp coffee, 3 tbsp milk, 50g butter, 50g caster sugar, 1 egg, 115g ground almonds, 15ml plain shifted flour, 225g blueberries, 2 tblsp jam, 15ml brandy and creme fraiche. For your pastry - 175g plain flour, 115g butter, 25g sugar, finely grated rind of 1/2 lemon and 1 tbsp chilled water.

First preheat your oven to 190 c/375 f/ gas 5. to make your pastry sift your flour into a bowl and rub in the butter, then stir in the sugar and lemon rind than add the water and mix to a firm dough. Wrap in cling film and chill in the refridgerator for at least 20 minutes. Roll out your pastry on a lightly floured surface and use this to line a 23cm flan tin. Line the pastry with greasedproof paper and baking beans and bake for 10 minutes. then remove the paper and beans and bake for a further 10 minutes. (Check out my previous blogs on baking blind pastry cases and freezing for your convenience).

Remove from the oven and make your filling by putting the coffee in a bowl, bring the milk to the boil then pour over the coffee and leave to infuse for 5 minutes. Then cream the butter and sugar until pale with a hand mixer or wooden spoon, then beat in the egg and add the almonds and flour. Strain in the coffee flavoured milk and fold in. Spoon the coffee mixture into the pastry case and spread out evenly. Scatter the blueberries over the top and push them down in to the mixture. Bake for 30 minutes until firm, cover with foil to prevent burning on the top after about 20 minutes of baking. Remove your tart and allow to cool slightly, meanwhile heat your jam and brandy in a saucepan until melted and brush over your flan. Remove from the tin and serve warm with creme fraiche. Delightful!!

If you enjoy baking make sure you try the great strawberry muffin recipe in my previous blog real family favourite muffin and why not make baking easy with my previous blog silicone bakeware makes baking oh so easy.

Have you got a summer favourite dessert? why not tell us about it and what makes it your favourite, this is definitly one of mine the flavours together with the delicate almond filling and tangy pastry make this a dessert you come back for another peice of!

Posted on Thursday, August 13th, 2009 Fantastic summer seasonal flan to delight by jacqui


Marmalade Appeal!

marmalade duckMy friend Tracy was astonished to see me using marmalade in recipes. I use marmalade in marinades and various sauces for meats aswell as adding to various cake and dessert recipes, it really brings out a great tangy flavour I love. So for Tracy it was a lesson that marmalade is more than just for the toast in the morning!

One of my favourites is Marmalade Duck, I remember like yesterday the very first time I tried this when my grandmother cooked it for me. I was at that age where I fed the ducks but didn’t want to think I was eatting them too. But being brought up on a farm meant it didn’t take long before I appreciated everymeal laid before me, and that everything on the farm from the land be it, crop or meat, eventually would be taken to market or eatten. This dish was divine and I in turn have made it many times for my family and today I was cooking for my dear friend Tracy.

For this scrumptious of dishes your are going to need: a duck cut into 6 or 4 large duck legs (so talk to your local butcher), 1/2 tsp sea salt, 2 tblsp groundnut oil, 3 medium onions, 100g fresh ginger, 2 cloves of garlic, 1 heaped tablsp flour, 1.5ltr stock, 3 tblsp rice wine (dry sherry or even vermouth), 4 star anise, 100g dried apricots, juice of 1 lemon and 4 tblsp quality marmalade (homemade if possible).

Start by preheating youroven to gas 4 or 180 c. Rub the pieces of duck all over with the sea salt. Warm the oil in a deep heavy pan or cast iron pan and lower the duck legs or pieces in to brown (be careful they will spit at you!). Turn them using tongues and brown the other side too. Lift them out and set aside on a plate. Peel the onions and slice, then stir into your casserole dish and leave to soften stirring occasionally. Peel the ginger and cut into matchsticks and stir in with the onion. Flatten the garlic cloves, remove the skin and put the flesh in to the casserole dish with the onions and ginger. When the onion is soft sprinkle with the flour then pour in the stock and stir throughly while bringing to the boil. Return the duck to the casserole dish and pour in the rice wine (sherry or vermouth), the star anise and dried apricots and leave to bubble for 15 minutes then cover with a lid and place in the oven. After 35 minutes remove and stir in 3 tblsp of marmalade and return to the oven without the lid. After a further 30 minutes of cooking lift the duck out and cover again with the lid. Leave this to cool a little as any fat will come to the surface so you can ladle this off. Check your sauce for seasoning and add the remaining marmalade and juice of a lemon. Now bring the sauce back to the boil and simmer for 5 minutes then return your duck peices to the sauce bringing it back to the boil before serving with a rich mash of potato and sweet potato.

Look at my previous blog confit away other duck recipes can be found in my previous blog walking recipe encore

vogue cast iron 2.5 litre round casserole dishFor a cast iron casserole dish which is versatile for your cookery try this  Vogue cast iron 2.5 litre cast iron casserole dish.  This casserole is Black. 2.25 litre dish with lid. Being Cast iron ensures even heat distribution. When properly seasoned, provides long life non-stick and rust free pan. This casserole works with all heat sources; gas, electric, induction and ceramic top ranges. Also, attributes of cast iron means food stays hot for longer, providing greater energy efficiency. The recipes which use such a dish are endless, so make sure you buy a good one, such as this to add to your kitchen equipment for many years of great cookery.

Posted on Monday, June 29th, 2009 Marmalade Appeal! by jacqui


Cake or Dessert a great raspberry roulade recipe for summer dinning

raspberry rouladeIts indulgent with a great nutty texture that your guest will adore! Whether you use it as a cake, dessert or pudding is entirely up to you but make sure you give it pride of place at the dining table. Its a Fabulous dessert in my eyes to impress your guest with but without taking you hours of preparation and cooking time.

Check out my previous blog Traditional Soda Bread Recipe for some great silicone baking sheets which you can use for this recipe rather than tin baking sheets.

So here we go for my fantastic Raspberry Roulade you are going to need:

350g raspberries, 1/2 tsp mixed spice, 50g ground toasted hazelnuts, 2 tblsp chestnut puree ( you can use the remaining puree in soups, breads or even in stuffings with your Sunday Roast), 4 large free range eggs, 225g caster sugar, 150g pot of greek yogurt (or homemade see my previous blog yogurt recipe depends on milk used), and 2 tsp icing sugard to dust with.

Firstly preheat the oven to 180 c/ gas 4 and line a baking sheet with greaseproof paper. Whisk your egg whites for 4 minutes until it forms firm peaks. Add the sugar and whisk again until stiff. Mix the chestnut puree with the ground hazelnuts and mixed spice to form a paste and fold this into your meringue mixture. Spread your meringue mixture on to the baking sheet to form a large rectangle and cook for 25 minutes. Leave this to cool. Meanwhile puree 150g of your raspberries in a blender and ass sweetner to taste and pour into a serving jug. Then crush the remaining raspberries into the yogurt. Dust a clean surface with icing sugar and place meringue topside down on to the dusted icing sugar and spread your meringue with your raspberry cream before rolling up. Placing your meringue roulade on a serving plate scatter with remaining raspberries and serve with your raspberry coulis you prepared earlier in a jug.

Have you got a favourite dessert recipe you would like to share with us?

Posted on Wednesday, June 24th, 2009 Cake or Dessert a great raspberry roulade recipe for summer dinning by jacqui


Seasonal Strawberry June Food Events

Strawberry Fudge CheesecakeWell to cheer us all up and take our minds off the ever increasing petrol pump prices again, June is the season to eat like the Gods! The first of the British Fruits is reaching our shops. Lucious Strawberries with that unbeatable British flavour, Asparagus as in my previous blog  quick and easy Asparagus recipes can still be found. With the first crop of new potatoes, peas and broad beans and of course salad crops too. I have started picking mine straight from out the garden you cannot beat that fresh from the garden taste & of course, the great cost - as its FREE. 

Its best to eat in season, as seasonal produce is fresher and higher in nutrients, with less food miles and its kinder on your purse strings too. So just take a look at whats about as great seasonal foods for June to enjoy are:

Fruit: blackberries (early), cherries, elderflowers, gooseberries, raspberries, redcurrants, rhubarb (outdoor), strawberries, tayberries. Imported figs.Vegetables: asparagus, baby carrots, broad beans, broccoli, chervil, chives, courgettes and flowers, cucumbers, fennel, globe artichokes, green beans, horseradish, lettuce, mangetout, new potatoes, peas, peppers, radishes, rocket and other salad leaves, samphire, spinach, sorrel, spring onions, tomatoes, watercress. Imported aubergines.Fish & shellfish: black bream, brown and rainbow trout, brown shrimp, cuttlefish, first fresh kippers (run until Oct), grey mullet, haddock, hake, john dory, lobster, pollack, prawns, sardines, sea bass, sea trout, signal crayfish, spider crab, whitebait, wild salmon. Don’t bother with oysters, mackerel, mussels, scallops and flatfish - they’re all spawning. Meat: hogget lamb, Welsh lamb.

So with the start of wimbledon days away now and great racing at Ascot lets find you a tantalising dish to serve made with the one and only strawberry. Strawberries are low in fat and calories and strawberries are naturally high in fiber, vitamin C, folate, potassium and antioxidants.

With fathers day upon us here is one of my dads own favourites, a yummy Strawberry Fudge Cheesecake:

You will need:75g butter, melted, plus extra for greasing, 250g HobNobs biscuits (or homemade oat biscuits), 250g strawberry or vanilla fudge, 300g mascarpone, 400ml double cream, softly whipped, 250g British Local strawberries, quartered and 2 tsp icing sugar to decorate.

Start by lightly buttering a 23cm springform cake tin. Pulse the biscuits to crumbs in your food processor. Add the melted butter and pulse until combined and clumped together. Tip into the base of the tin and press down evenly, then chill. Put 200g of the fudge in a large bowl and melt in a microwave for 1 minute on High, until it forms a soft paste (or alternatively you could melt in a pan over a very low heat). Cool slightly, then beat in the mascarpone in a bowl with a wooden spoon, until soft, add to the melted fudge and mix until all combined and then gently fold in the whipped cream. Chop the remaining fudge into small chunks and stir into the filling. Spoon this over the chilled biscuit base, smoothing the top. Cover and chill for at least 6 hours or overnight – the fudge will set the cheesecake. Put your strawberries in a bowl and toss with the icing sugar. Set aside to macerate for 20 minutes. Once the cheesecake is set, run a knife all around to loosen and remove the springform collar. Slide onto a serving plate and spoon over the strawberries to serve. If your feeling really indulgant serve with champagne or a good chilled sparkling wine for something just that bit special.

This is a great recipe to do and take with you to one of these great outdoor concert events up and down the country, no matter what the weather we British can always enjoy good food and a party!!!

Why not tell me about your favourite strawberry recipe? Also check out other food processor recipes like on my previous blog chocolate profiteroles with chantilly cream made with your mixer.

Posted on Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 Seasonal Strawberry June Food Events by jacqui


bbq grills for the sunshine

b&q kansas 4 burner gas bbqWell the sun has been shining again, and looking at the group of friends in my back garden this evening a little too much sun has been had from all the red sunburn patches I can see. ‘Oh that is definitely going to hurt later!’.

I have prepared some tasty delights which will suit all of my guests, as some are vegetarian. The bbq has been on for hours now and sizzling away on top now are some homemade lamb & mint burgers I have made. lamb and mint burgerThe jacket pototoes which were wrapped in foil in the coals have come out now and are keeping warm while my mexican delight is finishing in the oven.

While the weathers hot and the wine is flowing, my friends love their spicy flavours to come across in their food. With a large salad freshly prepared I have some homebaked baps, which I have to say are a little on the large side. But I am not going to hear the fella’s complaining and has it happens they have turned out to be the perfect size for my homemade lamb & mint burgers. In these baps I have chopped cucumber, sweet baby plum tomatoes, watercress and cubed feta, on top of which I shall place the lamb & mint burgers which I am serving with a mint & yogurt dip I made earlier.

And for my dear veggy friends mexican potatoes, with a crop of new potatoes fresh out of my garden. I have taken these around a pound in weight and sliced them, added around 5 floz of homemade chicken stock, 1 tin 14oz of kidney beans, 1 tsp of marjoram, 1 - 7oz tin of red pimientos (these make the dish), 1/2 - 1lb of rich smoked bacon from my local butcher & parsley to garnish. Place all this in a casserole dish & cover place in the oven at gas 3/ 160 c / 325 f for about an hour and this is delicious served with salad and a chunk of homemade bread.  (For your homemade bread try my blog loafing around in the morning, about bread machines with recipes for making your own bread as this will go down a storm at your bbq’s)

Although the tequilla should be served after you have eatten, but someone forgot to tell Aidy that one!!

Check out  my previous blog bar-b-q funtime for a great bbq with every practical part to make bbq safe and easy, so if your looking for a bbq to add to your household cooking appliances make sure you read this first, as everyone voted this BBQ a Winner!!. With fathers day just around the corner why not check out my apron blog for a great idea for that special man in your life.  Another blog you may want to visit from a while ago is my man size burger blog your fella will love you for it!

Why not send in your bbq ideas and what your friends and family enjoy at your bbq’s??

Posted on Sunday, June 14th, 2009 bbq grills for the sunshine by jacqui


Quick Easy Asparagus Recipe

asparagus and mushroom fusilli Asparagus will soon be disappearing from our shelves (well the British Variety will anyway!) The asparagus season goes from April to mid June, but you can still enjoy this marvellous vegetable, if your quick.

When choosing your asparagus make sure you go for the firm asparagus with good colour, not wilted tops etc. You can simply cut off the woody ends and scrap this end with a knive, before you simply saute in a little butter and black pepper, delicious or why not try my Asparagus & Mushroom Fusilli, again simple to make and one of my sons favourites, so it has to be easy to prepare and cook!

You will need 300g Fusilli Pasta ( or use your homemade pasta as shown in my blog homemade pasta ), 25g Butter, 2 cm piece root ginger - grated, 125g mushrooms -sliced, 2 100g bunches of asparagus, 250ml tub half fat creme fraiche, 1 tbsp freshly chopped flat leaf parsley & salt and pepper to season.

First you will need to cook your pasta in a large pan of boiling slated water for about 10 minutes, (less time if fresh), while this is cooking melt your butter in a large pan and fry the ginger. mushrooms and asparagus (which you have prepared and cut on the diagonal into pieces) for about 5 minutes until cooked. Now add the creme fraiche, parsley and then seasoning to your taste. Drain your now cooked pasta

pasta spaghetti vegetable boiler colander drainer basketI found this great gadget for making draining pasta easy after I watched my mother in despair try to drain pasta using a saucpan lid only to feed the sink with some of this delicious homemade pasta as it slipped her clutches so to avoid this try using this great pasta spaghetti vegetable boiler colander drainer basket it  is made of  wireware, this stainless steel spaghetti, pasta vegetable basket is ideal for boiling and easily draining pasta or vegetables, for either domestic or commercial use.

Now mix into your sauce before serving immediately with either a salad or crusty homemade bread and a glass of cool white wine.

Also check out my other blog Tantalising spanish sunshine for another great alfresco asparagus recipe for you to enjoy in the sunshine with friends and family.

Posted on Friday, June 12th, 2009 Quick Easy Asparagus Recipe by jacqui