Showing posts with label red cabbage and apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label red cabbage and apple. Show all posts

9 November 2010

Pirozhki, Sweet Potato Wedges with Red Cabbage & Apple


I had been looking forward to this dinner ever since we'd decided to include it on the Menu list.  Hubby - who was cooking it - was losing faith in it the closer he got to the day.

However, for me, it turned out to be a complete triumph and I would be very happy to see any one of the three recipes he used, trotted out for another go.  I think Hubby would agree that, for him, the Pirozhki's were a bit disappointing as he'd expected the pastry to be lighter and more flaky than it was, plus the filling was a tad on the bland side for him.  Mind you - I had the leftover filling on toast for breakfast this morning after we'd been shopping.  With a teensy bit of Ancona Chilli Sauce, it was gorgeous!  Son loved the Pirozhki's, liked the Sweet Potato Wedges and hated the Cabbage.  That's not altogether surprising though, as son has a marked sensitivity to anything (that's not a pickled onion) that involves vinegar.

I don't think hubby would be too keen on reproducing the three recipes all in one go again - as he needed a lie down in a darkened room by the end of it.  However, he'd be keen enough to make the Pirozhki's again for a buffet supper, the Cabbage dish would be divine with sausages or gammon ham and the Sweet Potato wedges would go with just about anything and were decreed to be streets ahead of a normal potato wedge.  All in all, pretty darned successful.

If you don't find the recipe you're looking for straight away, keep on scrolling down, as all three are in this post.



PIROZHKI (could make from 15-30, depending on how big you make them)

This is an adaptation of one of Silvena Rowe's recipes, taken from her book "Feasts".

Ingredients for sour-cream pastry
225g plain flour
half a tsp salt
half a tsp baking powder
100g butter, chilled and cubed
2 large egg yolks, beaten
125ml sour cream

Ingredients for filling
200g minced cooked chicken (we used the other half of a roast chicken)
your choice of vegetables like onion, celery, swede - whatever you want, but diced finely
or - and this is what we used - some leftover Spicy Red Lentils.
Salt & Pepper.

To make up the filling, saute your vegetables until soft and add any herbs or spices you might want.  Chop the chicken until it is in fine dice, but not a paste, to retain some texture.  Combine the chicken with your vegetables, season to taste and leave to cool.

To make the pastry, place the flour, salt and baking powder in a large mixing bowl.  Add the butter cubes and, using your fingers, mix it all together rubbing the butter into the flour until it resembles breadcrumbs.

Add the beaten egg yolks and sour cream to the pastry a little at a time, working it all together to achieve a smooth and elastic pastry.  Knead for 2-3 minutes then wrap in clingfilm and refrigerate for an hour.

Preheat the oven to 190deg C/375deg F/gas mark 5.

When ready to make the pirozhki, roll out half the dough to abut 3-4mm thick.  Using a pastry cutter or a glass about 8cm (3 inches) in diameter, stamp out as many rounds as you can.

Brush the edges of the pastry rounds with beaten egg yolk, and place a spoonful of filling in the middle of each.  Press the edges gently together to make a half-moon shape.  Repeat with the rest of the dough and filling.

Place the pirozhki on a baking sheet, brush the tops with egg yolk and bake for 25 minutes.

SWEET POTATO WEDGES

Ingredients :

Sweet potato, enough for your purposes
Olive oil
Salt & pepper
Seasonings of your choice, such as garlic & herb, cajun spices or cumin & coriander.

Method :

Peel the sweet potato and cut into wedge shapes of around 1 cm at their widest part.  Place into a bowl.

Add 2 tbsp or so of oil, sufficient to coat each wedge.

Add your seasonings of choice and thoroughly mix to ensure every wedge has a good coating.

Tip onto a roasting tray and roast at min. 190degC, max 200deg C, for 25-30 mins or until the potato feels tender to the knife tip and the edges appear caramelised.

BRAISED RED CABBAGE WITH APPLES & CARAWAY SEEDS

Recipe is adapted from Orangette blog.

Ingredients :

2 tbs olive oil
3 tbs finely chopped red onion
1 small head red cabbage (about two pounds), quartered, cored, and very thinly sliced
1 large Granny Smith apple, peeled, cored, and diced

3 tbs apple cider vinegar
2 tbs honey
1 tsp salt
1/8 to ¼ tsp caraway seeds

Method :


Heat oil in a large, nonreactive saucepan over a medium-low heat.

Add onions and cook until translucent and slightly golden.

Add cabbage, apple, vinegar, honey, salt, and caraway seeds; then cover pan and cook over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until the cabbage is very soft but not falling apart, about an hour.

Serves roughly 4. Delicious warm, at room temperature, or cold, straight from the fridge.
Oh - and I can verify the "cold, straight from the fridge" thing, as I had the leftovers for my lunch today.  Delicious!

2 November 2010

From Carbonara to Pirozhki

That's our menu list for this week!
Spaghetti Carbonara
Same recipe, different pasta
We start out with Tagliatelle Carbonara and garlic bread, which is down on the list for tonight.  I don't know about you people, but I always get a bit nervous when it comes to the adding of the egg/cheese/cream bit, as pictures of scrambled egg float past threateningly.  However, some kind of magic always happens and I've never (yet) resulted in scrambled egg, fingers crossed.  I love this recipe, but we don't have it often as it is just too calorific - but versions without the cream just aren't the same.  So, we go for "little and not very often" with this one.

Wednesday's recipe is for Smoked Haddock Risotto.  I'll have to catch a photograph of this one, as it would appear we have always been too keen to eat it, to take photographs of it, in the past.  Risotto is one of Chillibob's specialities and he does a tremendous job with them, the Smoked Haddock version being one of our favourites.  Asda have a special offer on Smoked Haddock at the moment, which made this Risotto change from a Smoked Haddock and Black Pudding experimental risotto, to our old favourite.


Thursday, in honour of National Sausage Week, Chillibob is making us Sausages in Onion Jam glaze with Clapshot and peas.  We pondered on buying the onion jam/chutney, but as we'd just bought an enormous bag of onions for £1, it seemed particularly unadventurous.  Hence, Chillibob will have his first go at onion jam/chutney, which will be fun and I'm sure delicious.

I can't remember ever having Clapshot, although I suspect I probably have made it before - just not with the proper name attached to it.  Still, it'll be interesting and I'm sure I'll like it - Swede and Potato, what's not to like?

Photograph c/o BBC Good Food website
Friday and I'm back in the cooking saddle.  We're down on the list to have "Chilli Chicken curry with rice".  We love our curries and it's been a while since I made one.  This recipe doesn't deal with curry paste, but instead builds the curry flavour by degrees as you add the various spices.  I've done this one before and it was very successful, so fingers crossed!  Maybe I can ask Chillibob to make some of his Naan bread to go with it.

Saturday is an interesting one - Stuffed Peppers and Fennel & Tomato Gratin.  This one is completely new to us so once again we don't have a photograph and the stuffed pepper recipe is one I'm adapting from Foodista.  It was intended, originally, for stuffing Squash but I see no reason why it can't be used in a sweet pepper instead.  Watch this space for the final verdict!

As for the Fennel & Tomato Gratin, well that's an Ottolenghi recipe from "The Cookbook".  It sounds completely delicious and has a sweet crumble topping which is interesting.  Hopefully the creaminess of the Gratin will go wth the spiciness of the stuffed Peppers.

Next comes Sunday, where we've decided to have a standard Roast Chicken, with a very non-standard "Spicy Lentil" dish from Ottolenghi's "Plenty".  I am in two minds as to whether to serve some green vegetable or not, I guess it depends on how filling I think the lentils are going to be.

Monday means that Chillibob is back in the kitchen and he's going all out with a wonderfully adventurous meal of Pirozhki (meat filled dumplings) from Silvena Rowe's book "Feasts", except with a filling made from the leftover roast chicken.  To accompany them, we'll be having Baked Red Cabbage and Apple - which I adore - and Spicy Sweet Potato wedges.  I can't wait!

It's good to be able to afford to be a bit more adventurous again!
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