Category: Uncategorized

  • Walnut Roll Gužvara

    Walnut Roll Gužvara

    Category: Dessert

    Area: Croatian

    Ingredients:

    • 450g Flour
    • 55g Caster Sugar
    • 2 parts Yeast
    • 1/2 tsp Salt
    • 6 oz Milk
    • 2 Beaten Eggs
    • 30g Butter
    • 140g Walnuts
    • 85g Butter
    • 85g Brown Sugar
    • 1 tsp Cinnamon
    • To Glaze Milk
    • To Glaze Icing Sugar

    Instructions:

    Mix all the ingredients for the dough together and knead well. Cover the dough and put to rise until doubled in size which should take about 2 hours. Knock back the dough and knead lightly.

    Divide the dough into two equal pieces; roll each piece into an oblong about 12 inches by 8 inches. Mix the filling ingredients together and divide between the dough, spreading over each piece. Roll up the oblongs as tightly as possible to give two 12 inch sausages. Place these side by side, touching each other, on a greased baking sheet. Cover and leave to rise for about 40 minutes. Heat oven to 200ºC (425ºF). Bake for 30-35 minutes until well risen and golden brown. Bread should sound hollow when the base is tapped.

    Remove from oven and brush the hot bread top with milk. Sift with a generous covering of icing sugar.

  • Pad See Ew

    Pad See Ew

    Category: Chicken

    Area: Thai

    Ingredients:

    • 6oz/180g rice stick noodles
    • 2 tbsp dark soy sauce
    • 2 tbsp oyster sauce
    • 2 tsp soy sauce
    • 2 tsp white vinegar
    • 2 tsp sugar
    • 2 tbsp water
    • 2 tbsp peanut oil
    • 2 cloves garlic
    • 1 cup Chicken
    • 1 Egg
    • 4 cups Chinese broccoli

    Instructions:

    Mix Sauce in small bowl.
    Mince garlic into wok with oil. Place over high heat, when hot, add chicken and Chinese broccoli stems, cook until chicken is light golden.
    Push to the side of the wok, crack egg in and scramble. Don't worry if it sticks to the bottom of the wok – it will char and which adds authentic flavour.
    Add noodles, Chinese broccoli leaves and sauce. Gently mix together until the noodles are stained dark and leaves are wilted. Serve immediately!

  • Eccles Cakes

    Eccles Cakes

    Category: Dessert

    Area: British

    Ingredients:

    • 250g Butter
    • 350g Plain Flour
    • Juice of 1/2 Lemon
    • 25g Butter
    • 200g Currants
    • 50g Mixed Peel
    • 100g Muscovado Sugar
    • 1 tsp Cinnamon
    • 1 tsp Ginger
    • 1 tsp Allspice
    • Zest of 1 Lemon
    • 1 beaten Eggs
    • spinkling Sugar

    Instructions:

    To make the pastry, dice the butter and put it in the freezer to go really hard. Tip flour into the bowl of a food processor with half the butter and pulse to the texture of breadcrumbs. Pour in the lemon juice and 100ml iced water, and pulse to a dough. Tip in the rest of the butter and pulse a few times until the dough is heavily flecked with butter. It is important that you don’t overdo this as the flecks of butter are what makes the pastry flaky.
    On a floured surface roll the pastry out to a neat rectangle about 20 x 30cm. Fold the two ends of the pastry into the middle (See picture 1), then fold in half (pic 2). Roll the pastry out again and refold the same way 3 more times resting the pastry for at least 15 mins each time between roll and fold, then leave to rest in the fridge for at least 30 mins before using.
    To make the filling, melt the butter in a large saucepan. Take it off the heat and stir in all the other ingredients until completely mixed, then set aside.
    To make the cakes, roll the pastry out until it’s just a little thicker than a £1 coin and cut out 8 rounds about 12cm across. Re-roll the trimming if needed. Place a good heaped tablespoon of mixture in the middle of each round, brush the edges of the rounds with water, then gather the pastry around the filling and squeeze it together (pic 3). Flip them over so the smooth top is upwards and pat them into a smooth round. Flatten each round with a rolling pin to an oval until the fruit just starts to poke through, then place on a baking tray. Cut 2 little slits in each Eccles cakes, brush generously with egg white and sprinkle with the sugar (pic 4).
    Heat the oven to 220C/200C fan/gas 8. Bake the Eccles cakes for 15-20 mins until just past golden brown and sticky. Leave to cool on a rack and enjoy while still warm or cold with a cup of tea. If you prefer, Eccles cakes also go really well served with a wedge of hard, tangy British cheese such as Lancashire or cheddar.

  • Honey Yogurt Cheesecake

    Honey Yogurt Cheesecake

    Category: Dessert

    Area: Greek

    Ingredients:

    • 100g Digestive Biscuits
    • 85g Almonds
    • 85g Butter
    • 250ml Greek Yogurt
    • 750g Mascarpone
    • 2 Eggs
    • Zest of 1 Lemon
    • Zest of 1 Orange
    • 250ml Honey
    • To serve Fruit Mix

    Instructions:

    Heat oven to 160C/140C fan/gas 3. Crush the biscuits and most of the almonds inside a plastic food bag using a rolling pin. Mix with the butter, then press into the bottom of a deep, oval, 23cm dish (or something similar in size – a roasting tin, baking dish or cake tin will work). Bake for 10 mins until crisp.

    Stir or mash together the yogurt and mascarpone, then whisk in the eggs, one at a time. Stir in the lemon and orange zests, then stir in most of the honey, reserving about 3 tbsp. Spread over the biscuit base, cover loosely with foil and cook for 1 hr. Remove the foil and cook for 15 mins more until lightly golden and the top is firm with just the slightest wobble in the middle. Leave to cool. Can be kept in the fridge for up to 2 days.

    To serve, scatter with almonds, drizzle over the remaining honey, and hand around fresh fruit to go with it.

  • Chinon Apple Tarts

    Chinon Apple Tarts

    Category: Dessert

    Area: French

    Ingredients:

    • 320g Puff Pastry
    • 4 tbs Dark Brown Soft Sugar
    • 3 Braeburn Apples
    • 4 tbs Red Wine Jelly
    • 100ml Creme Fraiche
    • 1 tbs Icing Sugar
    • 3 Cardamom

    Instructions:

    To make the red wine jelly, put the red wine, jam sugar, star anise, clove, cinnamon stick, allspice, split vanilla pod and seeds in a medium saucepan. Stir together, then heat gently to dissolve the sugar. Turn up the heat and boil for 20 mins until reduced and syrupy. Strain into a small, sterilised jam jar and leave to cool completely. Will keep in the fridge for up to 1 month.

    Take the pastry out of the fridge and leave at room temperature for 10 mins, then unroll. Heat the grill to high and heat the oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Cut out 2 x 13cm circles of pastry, using a plate as a guide, and place on a non-stick baking sheet. Sprinkle each circle with 1 tbsp sugar and grill for 5 mins to caramelise, watching carefully so that the sugar doesn’t burn. Remove from the grill. Can be done a few hours ahead, and left, covered, out of the fridge.

    Peel, quarter and core the apples, cut into 2mm-thin slices and arrange on top of the pastry. Sprinkle over the remaining sugar and pop in the oven for 20-25 mins until the pastry is cooked through and golden, and the apples are softened. Remove and allow to cool slightly. Warm 3 tbsp of the red wine jelly in a small pan over a low heat with 1 tsp water to make it a little more runny, then brush over the top of the tarts.

    Tip the crème fraîche into a bowl, sift over the icing sugar and cardamom, and mix together. Carefully lift the warm tarts onto serving plates and serve with the cardamom crème fraîche.

  • Sticky Toffee Pudding Ultimate

    Sticky Toffee Pudding Ultimate

    Category: Dessert

    Area: British

    Ingredients:

    • 225g Medjool dates
    • 175ml Boiling water
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract
    • 175g self-raising flour
    • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
    • 2 eggs
    • 85g butter
    • 140g demerara sugar
    • 2 tbsp black treacle
    • 100ml milk
    • 1 scoop ice cream
    • 175g muscovado sugar
    • 50g butter
    • 225ml double cream
    • 1 tbsp black treacle

    Instructions:

    Stone and chop the dates quite small, put them in a bowl, then pour the boiling water over. Leave for about 30 mins until cool and well-soaked, then mash a bit with a fork. Stir in the vanilla extract. Butter and flour seven mini pudding tins (each about 200ml/7fl oz) and sit them on a baking sheet. Heat oven to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4.
    While the dates are soaking, make the puddings. Mix the flour and bicarbonate of soda together and beat the eggs in a separate bowl. Beat the butter and sugar together in a large bowl for a few mins until slightly creamy (the mixture will be grainy from the sugar). Add the eggs a little at a time, beating well between additions. Beat in the black treacle then, using a large metal spoon, gently fold in one-third of the flour, then half the milk, being careful not to overbeat. Repeat until all the flour and milk is used. Stir the soaked dates into the pudding batter. The mix may look a little curdled at this point and will be like a soft, thick batter. Spoon it evenly between the tins and bake for 20-25 mins, until risen and firm.
    Meanwhile, put the sugar and butter for the sauce in a medium saucepan with half the cream. Bring to the boil over a medium heat, stirring all the time, until the sugar has completely dissolved. Stir in the black treacle, turn up the heat slightly and let the mixture bubble away for 2-3 mins until it is a rich toffee colour, stirring occasionally to make sure it doesn’t burn. Take the pan off the heat and beat in the rest of the cream.
    Remove the puddings from the oven. Leave in the tins for a few mins, then loosen them well from the sides of the tins with a small palette knife before turning them out. You can serve them now with the sauce drizzled over, but they’ll be even stickier if left for a day or two coated in the sauce. To do this, pour about half the sauce into one or two ovenproof serving dishes. Sit the upturned puddings on the sauce, then pour the rest of the sauce over them. Cover with a loose tent of foil so that the sauce doesn’t smudge (no need to chill).
    When ready to serve, heat oven to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4. Warm the puddings through, still covered, for 15-20 mins or until the sauce is bubbling. Serve them on their own, or with cream or custard.

  • McSinghs Scotch pie

    McSinghs Scotch pie

    Category: Lamb

    Area: British

    Ingredients:

    • 2 tsp Cumin
    • 1 tbs Rapeseed Oil
    • 2 finely chopped Red Onions
    • 6 Garlic Clove
    • 3 finely chopped Green Chilli
    • 1 finely chopped Red Pepper
    • 1 tsp Nutmeg
    • 2 tsp Coriander
    • 1kg Lamb Mince
    • 1 tsp Pepper
    • 3 tbs Coriander
    • 340g Plain Flour
    • ½ tsp Salt
    • 90 ml Milk
    • 150g Lard
    • Beaten Egg Yolks

    Instructions:

    Heat a large frying pan and toast the cumin seeds for a few minutes, then set aside. Heat the oil in the same pan and fry the onion, garlic, chilli, pepper and a good pinch of salt for around eight minutes, until there is no moisture left. Remove from the heat, stir in the toasted cumin seeds, ground mace (or nutmeg) and ground coriander. Leave to cool.
    In a large bowl mix together the minced lamb, white pepper, fresh coriander, and the cooled spiced onion mixture until combined. Set aside, covered, in the fridge.
    Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6 and generously grease a 20cm/8in diameter loose-bottomed or springform round cake tin with lard.
    To make the pastry, sift the flour and salt in a large bowl and make a well in the centre.
    Put the milk, lard and 90ml/3fl oz of water in a saucepan and heat gently. When the lard has melted, increase the heat and bring to the boil.
    Pour the boiling liquid into the flour, and use a wooden spoon to combine until cool enough to handle. Bring together into a ball.
    Dust a work surface with flour and, working quickly, knead the dough briefly – it will be soft and moist. Set aside a third of the pastry and roll the rest out on a well-floured surface. Line the pie dish with the pastry, pressing it right up the sides until it pokes just over the top of the tin.
    Add the filling into the pastry-lined tin bit by bit. As you reach the top, form a slight peak. Roll out the reserved pastry and top the pie with it. Pinch the edges to seal and trim the excess. Poke a hole in the top of the pie and insert a small tube made from aluminium foil to allow steam to escape.
    Brush the top of the pie with a little beaten egg yolk, and bake in the preheated oven for 30 minutes (put a tray on the shelf below to catch any drips). Then reduce the temperature to 160C/325F/Gas 3 and cook for a further 1¼ hours until golden-brown. Leave to cool completely before refrigerating for two hours, or overnight.
    Run a knife around the edge of the pie, remove from the tin and serve with chutneys, salads or pickles.

  • Boxty Breakfast

    Boxty Breakfast

    Category: Pork

    Area: Irish

    Ingredients:

    • 4 large Potatoes
    • 1 bunch Spring Onions
    • 100g Plain Flour
    • 1 Egg White
    • 150ml Milk
    • 1 tsp Bicarbonate Of Soda
    • 3 tbs Butter
    • 2 tbs Vegetable Oil
    • 6 Cherry Tomatoes
    • 12 Bacon
    • 6 Egg

    Instructions:

    STEP 1
    Before you start, put your oven on its lowest setting, ready to keep things warm. Peel the potatoes, grate 2 of them, then set aside. Cut the other 2 into large chunks, then boil for 10-15 mins or until tender. Meanwhile, squeeze as much of the liquid from the grated potatoes as you can using a clean tea towel. Mash the boiled potatoes, then mix with the grated potato, spring onions and flour.

    STEP 2
    Whisk the egg white in a large bowl until it holds soft peaks. Fold in the buttermilk, then add the bicarbonate of soda. Fold into the potato mix.

    STEP 3
    Heat a large non-stick frying pan over a medium heat, then add 1 tbsp butter and some of the oil. Drop 3-4 spoonfuls of the potato mixture into the pan, then gently cook for 3-5 mins on each side until golden and crusty. Keep warm on a plate in the oven while you cook the next batch, adding more butter and oil to the pan before you do so. You will get 16 crumpet-size boxty from the mix. Can be made the day ahead, drained on kitchen paper, then reheated in a low oven for 20 mins.

    STEP 4
    Heat the grill to medium and put the tomatoes in a heavy-based pan. Add a good knob of butter and a little oil, then fry for about 5 mins until softened. Grill the bacon, then pile onto a plate and keep warm. Stack up the boxty, bacon and egg, and serve the tomatoes on the side.

  • Jamaican Beef Patties

    Jamaican Beef Patties

    Category: Beef

    Area: Jamaican

    Ingredients:

    • 4 cups Plain Flour
    • 1 tsp Salt
    • 1 tsp Curry Powder
    • 250g Butter
    • 1 cup Water
    • 900g Minced Beef
    • 1 tsp Allspice
    • 1/2 tsp Black Pepper
    • 2 tbs Vegetable Oil
    • 1 cup Onions
    • Ground Red Pepper
    • 2 tsp ground Garlic
    • 1 tbs Thyme
    • 1/4 tsp Salt
    • 2 tbs Tomato Ketchup
    • 2 cups Water
    • 1/2 cup Onions
    • 1 beaten Egg
    • 1 tbs Water
    • 1/4 cup Water

    Instructions:

    Make the Pastry Dough

    To a large bowl, add flour, 1 teaspoon salt, and turmeric and mix thoroughly.
    Rub shortening into flour until there are small pieces of shortening completely covered with flour.
    Pour in 1/2 cup of the ice water and mix with your hands to bring the dough together. Keep adding ice water 2 to 3 tablespoons at a time until the mixture forms a dough.
    At this stage, you can cut the dough into 2 large pieces, wrap in plastic and refrigerate for 30 minutes before using it.
    Alternatively, cut the dough into 10 to 12 equal pieces, place on a platter or baking sheet, cover securely with plastic wrap and let chill for 30 minutes while you make the filling.
    Make the Filling

    Add ground beef to a large bowl. Sprinkle in allspice and black pepper. Mix together and set aside.
    Heat oil in a skillet until hot.
    Add onions and sauté until translucent. Add hot pepper, garlic and thyme and continue to sauté for another minute. Add 1/4 teaspoon salt.
    Add seasoned ground beef and toss to mix, breaking up any clumps, and let cook until the meat is no longer pink.
    Add ketchup and more salt to taste.
    Pour in 2 cups of water and stir. Bring the mixture to a boil then reduce heat and let simmer until most of the liquid has evaporated and whatever is remaining has reduced to a thick sauce.
    Fold in green onions. Remove from heat and let cool completely.
    Assemble the Patties

    Beat the egg and water together to make an egg wash. Set aside.
    Now you can prepare the dough in two ways.
    First Method: Flour the work surface and rolling pin. If you had cut it into 2 large pieces, then take one of the large pieces and roll it out into a very large circle. Take a bowl with a wide rim (about 5 inches) and cut out three circles.

    Place about 3 heaping tablespoons of the filling onto 1/2 of each circle. Dip a finger into the water and moisten the edges of the pastry. Fold over the other half and press to seal.

    Take a fork and crimp the edges. Cut off any extra to make it look neat and uniform. Place on a parchment-lined baking sheet and continue to work until you have rolled all the dough and filled the patties.
    Second Method: If you had pre-cut the dough into individual pieces, work with one piece of dough at a time. Roll it out on a floured surface into a 5-inch circle or a little larger. Don’t worry if the edges are not perfect.

    Place 3 heaping tablespoons of the filling on one side of the circle. Dip a finger into the water and moisten the edges of the pastry. Fold over the other half and press to seal.

    Take a fork and crimp the edges. Cut off any extra to make it look neat and uniform. Place on a parchment-lined baking sheet and continue work until you have rolled all the dough and filled the patties.

    Frying and Serving the Patties

    After forming the patties, place the pans in the refrigerator while you heat the oven to 350 F.
    Just before adding the pans with the patties to the oven, brush the patties with egg wash.
    Bake patties for 30 minutes or until golden brown.
    Cool on wire racks.
    Serve warm.

  • Summer Pudding

    Summer Pudding

    Category: Dessert

    Area: British

    Ingredients:

    • 300g Strawberries
    • 250g Blackberries
    • 100g Redcurrants
    • 500g Raspberries
    • 175g Caster Sugar
    • 7 Slices Bread

    Instructions:

    Bring out the juices: Wash fruit and gently dry on kitchen paper – keep strawberries separate. Put sugar and 3 tbsp water into a large pan. Gently heat until sugar dissolves – stir a few times. Bring to a boil for 1 min, then tip in the fruit (not strawberries). Cook for 3 mins over a low heat, stirring 2-3 times. The fruit will be softened, mostly intact and surrounded by dark red juice. Put a sieve over a bowl and tip in the fruit and juice.
    Line the bowl with cling film and prepare the bread: Line the 1.25-litre basin with cling film as this will help you to turn out the pudding. Overlap two pieces of cling film in the middle of the bowl as it’s easier than trying to get one sheet to stick to all of the curves. Let the edges overhang by about 15cm. Cut the crusts off the bread. Cut 4 pieces of bread in half, a little on an angle, to give 2 lopsided rectangles per piece. Cut 2 slices into 4 triangles each and leave the final piece whole.
    Build the pud: Dip the whole piece of bread into the juice for a few secs just to coat. Push this into the bottom of the basin. Now dip the wonky rectangular pieces one at a time and press around the basin’s sides so that they fit together neatly, alternately placing wide and narrow ends up. If you can’t quite fit the last piece of bread in it doesn’t matter, just trim into a triangle, dip in juice and slot in. Now spoon in the softened fruit, adding the strawberries here and there as you go.
    Let flavours mingle then serve: Dip the bread triangles in juice and place on top – trim off overhang with scissors. Keep leftover juice for later. Bring cling film up and loosely seal. Put a side plate on top and weight down with cans. Chill for 6 hrs or overnight. To serve, open out cling film then put a serving plate upside-down on top and flip over. serve with leftover juice, any extra berries and cream.