Blog

  • Shrimp Chow Fun

    Shrimp Chow Fun

    Category: Seafood

    Area: Chinese

    Ingredients:

    • 1/2 bag Rice Stick Noodles
    • 8 oz Prawns
    • 1/2 Egg
    • pinch Pepper
    • 2 tsp Sesame Seed Oil
    • 2 tbs Cornstarch
    • 4 tbs Oil
    • 1 tsp Minced Garlic
    • 1 tsp Ginger
    • 1/2 cup Onion
    • 1 cup Bean Sprouts
    • 1/2 cup Spring Onions
    • 1 tbs Cooking wine
    • 1 tbs Oyster Sauce
    • 1/2 tbs Sugar
    • 1/2 tbs Vinegar
    • 1 tbs Soy Sauce

    Instructions:

    STEP 1 – SOAK THE RICE NOODLES
    Soak the rice noodles overnight untill they are soft
    STEP 2 – BOIL THE RICE NOODLES
    Boil the noodles for 10-15 minutes and then rinse with cold water to stop the cooking process of the noodles.
    STEP 3 -MARINATING THE SHRIMP
    In a bowl add the shrimp, egg, 1 pinch of white pepper, 1 Teaspoon of sesame seed oil, 1 Tablespoon corn starch and 1 tablespoon of oil
    Mix together well
    STEP 4 – STIR FRY
    In a wok add 2 Tablespoons of oil, shrimp and stir fry them until it is golden brown
    Set the shrimp aside
    Add 1 Tablespoon of oil to the work and then add minced garlic, ginger and all of the vegetables.
    Add the noodles to the wok
    Next add sherry cooking wine, oyster sauce, sugar, vinegar, sesame seed oil, 1 pinch white pepper, and soy sauce
    Add back in the shrimp
    To thicken the sauce, whisk together 1 Tablespoon of corn starch and 2 Tablespoon of water in a bowl and slowly add to your stir-fry until it's the right thickness.

  • Tamiya

    Tamiya

    Category: Vegetarian

    Area: Egyptian

    Ingredients:

    • 3 cups Broad Beans
    • 6 Spring Onions
    • 4 Garlic Clove
    • 1/4 cup Parsley
    • 2 tsp Cumin
    • 1 tsp Baking Powder
    • 1/2 tsp Cayenne Pepper
    • Spinkling Flour
    • As required Vegetable Oil

    Instructions:

    oak the beans in water to cover overnight.Drain. If skinless beans are unavailable, rub to loosen the skins, then discard the skins. Pat the beans dry with a towel.
    Grind the beans in a food mill or meat grinder.If neither appliance is available, process them in a food processor but only until the beans form a paste. (If blended too smoothly, the batter tends to fall apart during cooking.) Add the scallions, garlic, cilantro, cumin, baking powder, cayenne, salt, pepper, and coriander, if using. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.
    Shape the bean mixture into 1-inch balls.Flatten slightly and coat with flour.
    Heat at least 1½-inches of oil over medium heat to 365 degrees.
    Fry the patties in batches, turning once, until golden brown on all sides, about 5 minutes.Remove with a wire mesh skimmer or slotted spoon. Serve as part of a meze or in pita bread with tomato-cucumber salad and tahina sauce.

  • Spotted Dick

    Spotted Dick

    Category: Dessert

    Area: British

    Ingredients:

    • 250g Self-raising Flour
    • pinch Salt
    • 125g Suet
    • 175g Currants
    • 80g Caster Sugar
    • Zest of 1 Lemon
    • Zest of 1 Orange
    • 150ml Milk
    • to serve Custard

    Instructions:

    Put the flour and salt in a bowl. Add the suet, currants, sugar, lemon and orange zest.
    Pour in 150ml milk and mix to a firm but moist dough, adding the extra milk if necessary.
    Shape into a fat roll about 20cm long. Place on a large rectangle of baking parchment. Wrap loosely to allow for the pudding to rise and tie the ends with string like a Christmas cracker.
    Place a steamer over a large pan of boiling water, add the pudding to the steamer, cover and steam for 1 1/2 hours. Top up the pan with water from time to time.
    Remove from the steamer and allow to cool slightly before unwrapping. Serve sliced with custard.

  • Spicy North African Potato Salad

    Spicy North African Potato Salad

    Category: Vegetarian

    Area: Moroccan

    Ingredients:

    • 650g/1lb 8 oz Small Potatoes
    • 1 tsp Harissa Spice
    • 2 tsp olive oil
    • juice of half Lemon
    • 4 Spring onions
    • 150g/6oz Rocket
    • 80g/3oz Feta
    • 20 chopped Mint
    • 2 tablespoons Pine nuts
    • Pinch Salt
    • Pinch Pepper

    Instructions:

    Cook potatoes – place potatoes in a pot of cold water, and bring to the boil. Boil 20 minutes, or until potatoes are tender. You know they are cooked when you can stick a knife in them and the knife goes straight through.
    Combine harissa spice, olive oil, salt and pepper and lemon juice in a small bowl and whisk until combined.
    Once potatoes are cooked, drain water and roughly chop potatoes in half.
    Add harissa mix and spring onions/green onions to potatoes and stir.
    In a large salad bowl, lay out arugula/rocket.
    Top with potato mix and toss.
    Add fetta, mint and sprinkle over pine nuts.
    Adjust salt and pepper to taste.

  • Osso Buco alla Milanese

    Osso Buco alla Milanese

    Category: Miscellaneous

    Area: Italian

    Ingredients:

    • 4 meaty shanks Veal
    • ½ cup Flour
    • 2 tablespoons Olive Oil
    • 3 tablespoons Butter
    • 1 medium chopped into ½-inch pieces Onion
    • 1 chopped into ½-inch pieces Carrot
    • 1 chopped into ½-inch pieces Celery
    • 1 bulb chopped into ½-inch pieces Fennel
    • 3 cloves Garlic
    • 2 strips Orange Zest
    • 1 ½ teaspoons Marjoram
    • 1 Bay Leaf
    • 1 cup Dry White Wine
    • ½ cup Chicken Stock
    • 1 cup chopped with juice Tomatoes
    • 2 tablespoons chopped Parsley
    • 1 teaspoon minced Garlic
    • 1 teaspoon grated Lemon Zest

    Instructions:

    Heat the oven to 300 degrees.
    Dredging the shanks: pour the flour into a shallow dish (a pie plate works nicely). Season the veal shanks on all sides with salt and pepper. One at a time, roll the shanks around in the flour coat, and shake and pat the shank to remove any excuses flour. Discard the remaining flour.
    Browning the shanks: put the oil and 1 tablespoon of the butter in a wide Dutch oven or heavy braising pot (6 to 7 quart) and heat over medium-high heat. When the butter has melted and the oil is shimmering, lower the shanks into the pot, flat side down; if the shanks won’t fit without touching one another, do this in batches. Brown the shanks, turning once with tongs, until both flat sides are well caramelized, about 5 minutes per side. If the butter-oil mixture starts to burn, lower the heat just a bit. Transfer the shanks to a large platter or tray and set aside.
    The aromatics: pour off and discard the fat from the pot. Wipe out any burnt bits with a damp paper towel, being careful not to remove any delicious little caramelized bits. Ad the remaining 2 tablespoons butter to the pot and melt it over medium heat. When the butter has stopped foaming, add the onion, carrot, celery, and fennel. Season with salt and pepper, stir, and cook the vegetables until they begin to soften but do not brown, about 6 minutes. Stir in the garlic, orange zest, marjoram, and bay leaf, and stew for another minute or two.
    The braising liquid: add the wine, increase the heat to high, and bring to a boil. Boil, stirring occasionally, to reduce the wine by about half, 5 minutes. Add the stock and tomatoes, with their juice, and boil again to reduce the liquid to about 1 cup total, about 10 minutes.
    The braise: Place the shanks in the pot so that they are sitting with the exposed bone facing up, and pour over any juices that accumulated as they sat. Cover with parchment paper, pressing down so the parchment nearly touches the veal and the edges hang over the sides of the pot by about an inch. Cover tightly with the lid, and slide into the lower part of the oven to braise at a gentle simmer. Check the pot after the first 15 minutes, and if the liquid is simmering too aggressively, lower the oven heat by 10 or 15 degrees. Continue braising, turning the shanks and spooning some pan juices over the top after the first 40 minutes, until the meat is completely tender and pulling away from the bone, about 2 hours.
    The gremolata: While the shanks are braising, stir together the garlic, parsley, and lemon zest in a small bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and set aside in a cool place (or the refrigerator, if your kitchen is very warm.)
    The finish: When the veal is fork-tender and falling away from the bone, remove the lid and sprinkle over half of the gremolata. Return the veal to the oven, uncovered, for another 15 minutes to caramelize it some.
    Using a slotted spatula or spoon, carefully lift the shanks from the braising liquid, doing your best to keep them intact. The shanks will be very tender and threatening to fall into pieces, and the marrow will be wobbly inside the bones, so this can be a bit tricky. But if they do break apart, don’t worry, the flavor won’t suffer at all. Arrange the shanks on a serving platter or other large plate, without stacking, and cover with foil to keep warm.
    Finishing the sauce: Set the braising pot on top of the stove and evaluate the sauce: if there is a visible layer of fat floating on the surface, use a large spoon to skim it off and discard it. Taste the sauce for concentration of flavor. If it tastes a bit weak or flat, bring it to a boil over high heat, and boil to reduce the volume and intensify the flavor for 5 to 10 minutes. Taste again for salt and pepper. If the sauce wants more zip, stir in a teaspoon or two of the remaining gremolata.
    Portioning the veal shanks: if the shanks are reasonably sized, serve one per person. If the shanks are gargantuan or you’re dealing with modest appetites, pull apart the larger shanks, separating them at their natural seams, and serve smaller amounts. Be sure to give the marrow bones to whomever prizes them most.
    Serving: Arrange the veal shanks on warm dinner plates accompanied by the risotto, if serving. Just before carrying the plates to the table, sprinkle on the remaining gremolata and then spoon over a generous amount of sauce – the contact with the hot liquid will aromatize the gremolata and perk up everyone’s appetite with the whiff of garlic and lemon.

  • Corba

    Corba

    Category: Side

    Area: Turkish

    Ingredients:

    • 1 cup Lentils
    • 1 large Onion
    • 1 large Carrots
    • 1 tbs Tomato Puree
    • 2 tsp Cumin
    • 1 tsp Paprika
    • 1/2 tsp Mint
    • 1/2 tsp Thyme
    • 1/4 tsp Black Pepper
    • 1/4 tsp Red Pepper Flakes
    • 4 cups Vegetable Stock
    • 1 cup Water
    • Pinch Sea Salt

    Instructions:

    Pick through your lentils for any foreign debris, rinse them 2 or 3 times, drain, and set aside. Fair warning, this will probably turn your lentils into a solid block that you’ll have to break up later
    In a large pot over medium-high heat, sauté the olive oil and the onion with a pinch of salt for about 3 minutes, then add the carrots and cook for another 3 minutes.
    Add the tomato paste and stir it around for around 1 minute. Now add the cumin, paprika, mint, thyme, black pepper, and red pepper as quickly as you can and stir for 10 seconds to bloom the spices. Congratulate yourself on how amazing your house now smells.
    Immediately add the lentils, water, broth, and salt. Bring the soup to a (gentle) boil.
    After it has come to a boil, reduce heat to medium-low, cover the pot halfway, and cook for 15-20 minutes or until the lentils have fallen apart and the carrots are completely cooked.
    After the soup has cooked and the lentils are tender, blend the soup either in a blender or simply use a hand blender to reach the consistency you desire. Taste for seasoning and add more salt if necessary.
    Serve with crushed-up crackers, torn up bread, or something else to add some extra thickness. You could also use a traditional thickener (like cornstarch or flour), but I prefer to add crackers for some texture and saltiness. Makes great leftovers, stays good in the fridge for about a week.

  • Fish Stew with Rouille

    Fish Stew with Rouille

    Category: Seafood

    Area: French

    Ingredients:

    • 6 large Prawns
    • 3 tbs Olive Oil
    • 150ml Dry White Wine
    • 200ml Fish Stock
    • 1 small finely diced Fennel
    • 1 small finely diced Onion
    • 3 cloves Chopped Garlic
    • 1 large Potatoes
    • 1 Orange
    • 1 Star Anise
    • 1 Bay Leaf
    • 1 1/2 tsp Harissa Spice
    • 2 tbs Tomato Puree
    • 400g Chopped Tomatoes
    • Handful Mussels
    • 200g White Fish
    • 2 Thyme
    • to serve Bread

    Instructions:

    Twist the heads from the prawns, then peel away the legs and shells, but leave the tails intact. Devein each prawn. Fry the shells in 1 tbsp oil for 5 mins, until dark pink and golden in patches. Add the wine, boil down by two thirds, then pour in the stock. Strain into a jug, discarding the shells.
    Heat the rest of the oil in a deep frying pan or casserole. Add the fennel, onion and garlic, season, then cover and gently cook for 10 mins until softened. Meanwhile, peel the potato and cut into 2cm-ish chunks. Put into a pan of cold water, bring to the boil and cook for 5 mins until almost tender. Drain in a colander.
    Peel a strip of zest from the orange. Put the zest, star anise, bay and ½ tsp harissa into the pan. Fry gently, uncovered, for 5-10 mins, until the vegetables are soft, sweet and golden.
    Stir in the tomato purée, cook for 2 mins, then add the tomatoes and stock. Simmer for 10 mins until the sauce thickens slightly. Season to taste. The sauce can be made ahead, then reheated later in the day. Meantime, scrub the mussels or clams and pull away any stringy beards. Any that are open should be tapped sharply on the worktop – if they don’t close after a few seconds, discard them.
    Reheat the sauce if necessary, then stir the potato, chunks of fish and prawns very gently into the stew. Bring back to the boil, then cover and gently simmer for 3 mins. Scatter the mussels or clams over the stew, then cover and cook for 2 mins more or until the shells have opened wide. Discard any that remain closed. The chunks of fish should flake easily and the prawns should be pink through. Scatter with the thyme leaves.
    To make the quick rouille, stir the rest of the harissa through the mayonnaise. Serve the stew in bowls, topped with spoonfuls of rouille, which will melt into the sauce and enrich it. Have some good bread ready, as you’ll definitely want to mop up the juices.

  • Kidney Bean Curry

    Kidney Bean Curry

    Category: Vegetarian

    Area: Indian

    Ingredients:

    • 1 tbls Vegetable Oil
    • 1 finely chopped Onion
    • 2 cloves chopped Garlic
    • 1 part Ginger
    • 1 Packet Coriander
    • 1 tsp Cumin
    • 1 tsp Paprika
    • 2 tsp Garam Masala
    • 400g Chopped Tomatoes
    • 400g Kidney Beans
    • to serve Basmati Rice

    Instructions:

    Heat the oil in a large frying pan over a low-medium heat. Add the onion and a pinch of salt and cook slowly, stirring occasionally, until softened and just starting to colour. Add the garlic, ginger and coriander stalks and cook for a further 2 mins, until fragrant.

    Add the spices to the pan and cook for another 1 min, by which point everything should smell aromatic. Tip in the chopped tomatoes and kidney beans in their water, then bring to the boil.

    Turn down the heat and simmer for 15 mins until the curry is nice and thick. Season to taste, then serve with the basmati rice and the coriander leaves.

  • Flamiche

    Flamiche

    Category: Vegetarian

    Area: French

    Ingredients:

    • 75g Butter
    • 1kg Leek
    • ½ tsp Salt
    • 300ml Creme Fraiche
    • 1 Egg
    • 3 Egg Yolks
    • ¼ teaspoon Nutmeg
    • 225g Plain Flour
    • ½ tsp Salt
    • 60g Butter
    • 60g Lard
    • 50g Cheddar Cheese
    • 2 tbs Water

    Instructions:

    For the pastry, sift the flour and salt into the bowl of a food processor, add the butter and lard, then whizz together briefly until the mixture looks like fine breadcrumbs. Tip the mixture into a bowl, then stir in the cheese and enough of the water for the mixture to come together. Tip out onto a lightly floured surface and knead briefly until smooth. Roll out thinly and line a 23cm x 4cm loose-?bottomed fluted flan tin. Prick the base with a fork. Chill for 20 minutes.
    02.Melt the 75g butter in a saucepan over a low heat, then add the leeks and the salt. Cover and cook for ?10 minutes until soft. Uncover the pan, increase the heat and cook ?for 2 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the liquid has evaporated. Spoon onto a plate and leave to cool.
    03.Preheat the oven to 200°C/fan180°C/gas 6. Line the pastry case with baking paper and baking beans or rice and blind bake for 15-20 minutes until the edges are biscuit-coloured. Remove the paper and beans/rice and return the case to the oven for 7-10 minutes until the base is crisp and lightly golden. Remove and set aside. Reduce the oven temperature to 190°C/fan170°C/gas 5.
    04.Put the crème fraîche into a bowl with the whole egg, egg yolks and nutmeg. Lightly beat together, then season. Stir in the leeks. Spoon ?the mixture into the tart case and bake for 35-40 minutes until set ?and lightly golden. Remove from ?the oven and leave for 10 minutes. Take out of the tin and serve.

  • Laksa King Prawn Noodles

    Laksa King Prawn Noodles

    Category: Seafood

    Area: Malaysian

    Ingredients:

    • 1 tbsp Olive Oil
    • 1 finely sliced Red Chilli
    • 2 ½ tbsp Thai red curry paste
    • 1 vegetable stock cube
    • 400ml can coconut milk
    • 2 tsp fish sauce
    • 100g rice noodles
    • 2 juice of 1, the other halved lime
    • 150g king prawns
    • ½ small pack coriander

    Instructions:

    Heat the oil in a medium saucepan and add the chilli. Cook for 1 min, then add the curry paste, stir and cook for 1 min more. Dissolve the stock cube in a large jug in 700ml boiling water, then pour into the pan and stir to combine. Tip in the coconut milk and bring to the boil.
    Add the fish sauce and a little seasoning. Toss in the noodles and cook for a further 3-4 mins until softening. Squeeze in the lime juice, add the prawns and cook through until warm, about 2-3 mins. Scatter over some of the coriander.
    Serve in bowls with the remaining coriander and lime wedges on top for squeezing over.