You may not be altogether surprised to hear that the name of this meatloaf is one of my own devising. Of course, it's because the herbs involved are parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme. LOL
You see, I was after a midweek, no frills, relatively plain, good and savoury, tasty meatloaf that could be served with some denomination of potato dish and a selection of vegetables. A meat & three veg. meatloaf, if you like!
I used beef and pork mince in a two thirds/one third combination because the pork mince just serves to lighten the texture of the beef. Adding loads of extra flavours - mustard, herbs, onion & garlic granules - helped pep up the savouriness and my now indispensable method of draining off the cooking juices halfway through the cooking time as ever, resulted in a good firm loaf. I do so hate meatloaf that you could serve with a spoon. Gak!
Now you might be wondering why I used the onion & garlic granules instead of adding fresh onion and fresh garlic. Good question! I find that fresh onion has to be almost grated or minced, so as not to leave small pieces of quite firm, almost crunchy, onion behind in the mix. Some people might like that, but I'm not a fan. Grating or mincing the onion just serves to increase the liquid in the mix, which I pour off at half time anyway so its not a good method.
It's a similar thing with garlic. I'm allergic to raw garlic, so it has to be incredibly finely chopped to wind up cooked sufficiently for me. Hitting on a piece of semi raw garlic is so overpowering to the other flavours, that again, it's just not a good method for me. However, if I add onion and garlic granules - which are simply dehydrated and finely minced - I get all the benefit of the flavour and none of the drawbacks. It's a personal taste thing. If you like to find onion or garlic in your meatloaf, or have the time and energy to pre-cook and caramelise them, then by all means go ahead and use fresh!
Oh and I'm also assured that this meatloaf is fairly epic when used, cold, as part of a sandwich. Happy days!
SCARBOROUGH FAIRLY MEATLOAF (Serves 5)
Ingredients :
1 bread crust, blitzed into breadcrumbs
500g reduced fat beef mince
250g pork mince
1 large egg
1 heaped tsp wholegrain mustard
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
pinch of sea salt
pinch of ground black pepper
1 tsp onion granules
half a tsp garlic granules
1 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped fine (dried parsley would work too - use 1 tsp)
1 tsp dried sage
1 tsp dried rosemary
half a tsp dried thyme
1 tsp beef stock powder or 1 tsp Bovril.
Method :
Pre-heat your oven to 180degC/350degF/Gas 4.
Place all the ingredients into a large bowl and mix together well, using your hands. Try not to over-mix or the meatloaf will become tough, but ensure all the ingredients are distributed well across the mix.
Line a 1lb loaf tin with silver foil and pack the meatloaf mix in well. I find it best to put half in and press into the corners, pushing it well down and ensuring all air bubbles are out, before adding the second half and repeating the process.
Using your fingertips, create a small space along the edge of the mix between the loaf tin and the ingredients - a gutter, effectively! This will help when it comes to draining off the excess liquid, later.
Place onto the middle oven shelf and bake for 30 minutes.
Remove the meatloaf from the oven and carefully drain off any accumulated liquid. Take care not to let the loaf slip from within the tin, into the sink!
Place back into the oven for another 30 minutes.
Remove from the oven and, using the silver foil, pull the meatloaf from inside the loaf tin. Place onto a chopping board and carefully unwrap. Cut the meatloaf into slices and serve with mashed potato and seasonal vegetables of your choice.
Printable version
Showing posts with label rosemary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rosemary. Show all posts
25 October 2017
18 December 2015
Sweet Potato & Chorizo soup - a smooth and exotic spoonful
A few weeks ago, I spotted a recipe for sweet potato and chorizo soup and I liked the idea of that combination. However, the recipe I saw didn't seem to have enough depth of flavour for a really tasty and satisfying soup.
I spent the next couple of weeks - on and off - thinking about the soup and how I could add more flavour to it, without detracting from the main two components. Ultimately, I didn't adjust the recipe radically - just added carrot, celery, rosemary and thyme, all of which served to round it out and add a few extra layers of flavour.
By the way, for those who are baffled by the mention of a "donkey" carrot, think of the kind of carrot that a donkey would like to receive. A great, big, chunky fat carrot not less than six inches long and preferably longer. Now THAT is a donkey carrot.
The original method underwent a bit of a re-think as well and the roasting of the sweet potato and carrot was a great idea. The original recipe had them cooked in the stock, however the roasting added an intensity to the flavour that you couldn't hope to gain any other way.
The use of olive oil instead of the original vegetable oil helped the flavours along, too. In fact, between the sweet potato, herbs and olive oil, if it wasn't for the Chorizo, it would have been a disgracefully healthy soup! *Phew* Thank goodness for Chorizo, eh?
I served this as a dinner soup and it was easily enough for the three of us. As a starter, it would definitely make sufficient for four.
As ever, if you are not using low salt stock, be careful about how much salt you include when seasoning. Far easier to add later, you certainly can't take it away!
Hubby pointed out that this soup would make a wonderful November soup for supping around a bonfire, or for warming cold hands around a hearty mugful. It certainly has got all the hallmarks for that! However or whenever you decide to sample it, I'm sure you'll love it as much as we did.
SWEET POTATO & CHORIZO SOUP (serves 3-4)
Ingredients :
1kg sweet potato, peeled and cut into large chunks
1 large donkey carrot, peeled and cut into large chunks
1-2 tbsp olive oil
sea salt & black pepper
200g cooking Chorizo sausage - 100g cut into quarters, 100g cut in half
1 red onion, diced finely
2 cloves garlic, chopped finely
1 stick of celery, diced finely
1 tsp dried rosemary
half tsp dried thyme
750ml hot water
2 tsp chicken stock powder (low salt) or 2 chicken stock cubes (low salt).
Method :
Place the sweet potato and carrot chunks onto a baking tray and drizzle with 1 tbsp olive oil. Season with sea salt & pepper and put into a pre-heated oven at 200degC/400degF/Gas 6 for 30 mins or until softened and just beginning to caramelise.
Remove from the oven and set aside.
Heat the remaining olive oil in a frying pan and fry the quartered Chorizo until crispy. Remove from the pan onto a plate and reserve to keep warm. This Chorizo will form your garnish.
Add the halved Chorizo to the pan next and fry until lightly coloured. Remove from the pan onto a plate and set aside.
Decrease the heat under the pan and remove some of the oil to a small dish. Reserve the oil in case you need to replace any - and you can use a little of the remainder to garnish once the soup is served.
Add the onion, garlic and celery to the pan, along with a pinch of salt and a good helping of black pepper. Fry until softened but not coloured. Part way through, add the rosemary and thyme.
Once softened, decant the contents of the pan into a large saucepan, add the sweet potato, carrot, hot water and chicken stock powder. Heat through and taste for seasoning but before simmering point blitz with a hand-held blender until smooth. Add the halved Chorizo and stir through. Simmer, without boiling, to heat the soup through. Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary - I found my soup needed more black pepper at this stage.
Serve in warmed bowls and add a spoonful of the quartered Chorizo and a swirl of Chorizo oil as garnish and warm crusty bread (or fresh baked American biscuits) for dipping.
Printable version
I spent the next couple of weeks - on and off - thinking about the soup and how I could add more flavour to it, without detracting from the main two components. Ultimately, I didn't adjust the recipe radically - just added carrot, celery, rosemary and thyme, all of which served to round it out and add a few extra layers of flavour.
By the way, for those who are baffled by the mention of a "donkey" carrot, think of the kind of carrot that a donkey would like to receive. A great, big, chunky fat carrot not less than six inches long and preferably longer. Now THAT is a donkey carrot.
The original method underwent a bit of a re-think as well and the roasting of the sweet potato and carrot was a great idea. The original recipe had them cooked in the stock, however the roasting added an intensity to the flavour that you couldn't hope to gain any other way.
The use of olive oil instead of the original vegetable oil helped the flavours along, too. In fact, between the sweet potato, herbs and olive oil, if it wasn't for the Chorizo, it would have been a disgracefully healthy soup! *Phew* Thank goodness for Chorizo, eh?
I served this as a dinner soup and it was easily enough for the three of us. As a starter, it would definitely make sufficient for four.
As ever, if you are not using low salt stock, be careful about how much salt you include when seasoning. Far easier to add later, you certainly can't take it away!
Hubby pointed out that this soup would make a wonderful November soup for supping around a bonfire, or for warming cold hands around a hearty mugful. It certainly has got all the hallmarks for that! However or whenever you decide to sample it, I'm sure you'll love it as much as we did.
SWEET POTATO & CHORIZO SOUP (serves 3-4)
Ingredients :
1kg sweet potato, peeled and cut into large chunks
1 large donkey carrot, peeled and cut into large chunks
1-2 tbsp olive oil
sea salt & black pepper
200g cooking Chorizo sausage - 100g cut into quarters, 100g cut in half
1 red onion, diced finely
2 cloves garlic, chopped finely
1 stick of celery, diced finely
1 tsp dried rosemary
half tsp dried thyme
750ml hot water
2 tsp chicken stock powder (low salt) or 2 chicken stock cubes (low salt).
Method :
Place the sweet potato and carrot chunks onto a baking tray and drizzle with 1 tbsp olive oil. Season with sea salt & pepper and put into a pre-heated oven at 200degC/400degF/Gas 6 for 30 mins or until softened and just beginning to caramelise.
Remove from the oven and set aside.
Heat the remaining olive oil in a frying pan and fry the quartered Chorizo until crispy. Remove from the pan onto a plate and reserve to keep warm. This Chorizo will form your garnish.
Add the halved Chorizo to the pan next and fry until lightly coloured. Remove from the pan onto a plate and set aside.
Decrease the heat under the pan and remove some of the oil to a small dish. Reserve the oil in case you need to replace any - and you can use a little of the remainder to garnish once the soup is served.
Add the onion, garlic and celery to the pan, along with a pinch of salt and a good helping of black pepper. Fry until softened but not coloured. Part way through, add the rosemary and thyme.
Once softened, decant the contents of the pan into a large saucepan, add the sweet potato, carrot, hot water and chicken stock powder. Heat through and taste for seasoning but before simmering point blitz with a hand-held blender until smooth. Add the halved Chorizo and stir through. Simmer, without boiling, to heat the soup through. Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary - I found my soup needed more black pepper at this stage.
Serve in warmed bowls and add a spoonful of the quartered Chorizo and a swirl of Chorizo oil as garnish and warm crusty bread (or fresh baked American biscuits) for dipping.
![]() |
Canadian apple & cheddar biscuits - yum! |
4 December 2015
Midweek beef mince with black garlic - not scary at all!
How do you elevate a midweek minced beef recipe? Why, add black garlic of course!
Black garlic is exactly that - it's garlic and it's very black, having been aged in balsamic vinegar. Balsajo is the black garlic I used today and we love it. The cloves are stickily dark like soft liquorice, but they don't taste of liquorice! If you're expecting it to taste of raw garlic, it doesn't do that either. It has a taste all of its own, being sweet but slightly tangy and incredibly delicious. I haven't yet eaten an entire clove like a sweetie, but the thought is there!
So today we were due to have just plain common or garden beef mince in gravy, which I always try to make as flavoursome as possible. Just because it's a midweek dish, doesn't mean it should be lacking in flavour or interest.
Having received the Balsajo as a competition prize a few days ago, I was keen to try it out in as many different incarnations as possible - so I backed off on a few ingredients that I would normally include in a midweek beef mince and added a nice whack of black garlic. The challenge to it was clear - see what you can do with this!
Because the black garlic has a quiet, sweet flavour, it's effect on the savouriness of the mince dish wasn't a big slap in the face sort of effect but very much one of infusing that mellow richness throughout the meat and gravy. Just gorgeous. Every so often you picked up a little chunk of black garlic on the fork, enabling a more intense flavour to come through.
I was astounded at the price for our Balsajo black garlic. Being so keen on it we were eager to replace our bulb once it was finished and so looked online to find out more. The Balsajo website has a handy "Where To Buy" section, from which we discovered that if we turned up at our local Sainsbury's with the princely sum of £1.50 (December 2015 price) clutched in our hot little hand, all would be well. Now how often does that happen? Not very often, not with "artisan" products that are unusual and slightly off the wall, I've found. Colour me seriously impressed.
So all that has made me very happy. After all, it's one thing being given an item to review (although, as I say, I won it in this instance), but quite something else if once you've decided you love it and cannot be without it, to find out that you need to re-mortgage the house in order to do so. As long as Balsajo keep making this delicious product, I'll keep on buying it and I recommend that you do, too.
MINCED BEEF WITH BLACK GARLIC (serves 3-4)
Ingredients :
1 tbsp olive oil
500g reduced fat minced beef
smoked sea salt (normal is fine)
ground black pepper
1 onion, chopped finely
1 clove garlic, chopped finely
1 bay leaf
2 tomatoes, chopped
4 cloves black garlic, sliced
quarter of a tsp ground cinnamon
half a tsp dried rosemary
1 Knorr Rich Beef stock pot
1 tsp Bovril
1 heaped tsp French mustard
2 tbsp Bisto Best beef gravy granules.
To serve : mashed potato and seasonal vegetables (I used carrot, broccoli, runner beans and peas)
Method :
Heat the olive oil until really quite hot in a large, deep frying pan. Add the beef and break up the block into small pieces as it cooks. Add a small pinch of smoked sea salt and a good helping of black pepper. Fry until the beef has all browned, the moisture has evaporated and there is just oil left under the beef. Leave the beef to caramelise for at least two turns, then remove it with a slotted spoon into a bowl.
Remove all but 1 tbsp of the fat from the pan and reserve in case you need more as you cook the vegetables.
Add the onion, garlic and bay leaf and fry until the onion is transparent and soft. Do not let the garlic burn.
Add the tomatoes and black garlic and stir to combine. Fry until the tomatoes are starting to break down.
Add the cinnamon and rosemary and stir to combine.
Add the stock pot and sufficient water to just under the level of the mince.
Add the Bovril and mustard and stir to combine. Bring to a lively simmer, then cover the pan and leave to cook for some 10-15 minutes.
Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary - the dish can cope with lots of black pepper but remember that the gravy granules are high in salt!
Pull the mince to one side of the pan and remove from the heat. Sprinkle in the gravy granules and stir immediately. Return the pan back to the heat and stir gently. Once the gravy has thickened, you are ready to serve.
Serve with mashed potatoes and seasonal vegetables.
Printable version
Black garlic is exactly that - it's garlic and it's very black, having been aged in balsamic vinegar. Balsajo is the black garlic I used today and we love it. The cloves are stickily dark like soft liquorice, but they don't taste of liquorice! If you're expecting it to taste of raw garlic, it doesn't do that either. It has a taste all of its own, being sweet but slightly tangy and incredibly delicious. I haven't yet eaten an entire clove like a sweetie, but the thought is there!
So today we were due to have just plain common or garden beef mince in gravy, which I always try to make as flavoursome as possible. Just because it's a midweek dish, doesn't mean it should be lacking in flavour or interest.
Having received the Balsajo as a competition prize a few days ago, I was keen to try it out in as many different incarnations as possible - so I backed off on a few ingredients that I would normally include in a midweek beef mince and added a nice whack of black garlic. The challenge to it was clear - see what you can do with this!
Because the black garlic has a quiet, sweet flavour, it's effect on the savouriness of the mince dish wasn't a big slap in the face sort of effect but very much one of infusing that mellow richness throughout the meat and gravy. Just gorgeous. Every so often you picked up a little chunk of black garlic on the fork, enabling a more intense flavour to come through.
I was astounded at the price for our Balsajo black garlic. Being so keen on it we were eager to replace our bulb once it was finished and so looked online to find out more. The Balsajo website has a handy "Where To Buy" section, from which we discovered that if we turned up at our local Sainsbury's with the princely sum of £1.50 (December 2015 price) clutched in our hot little hand, all would be well. Now how often does that happen? Not very often, not with "artisan" products that are unusual and slightly off the wall, I've found. Colour me seriously impressed.
So all that has made me very happy. After all, it's one thing being given an item to review (although, as I say, I won it in this instance), but quite something else if once you've decided you love it and cannot be without it, to find out that you need to re-mortgage the house in order to do so. As long as Balsajo keep making this delicious product, I'll keep on buying it and I recommend that you do, too.
MINCED BEEF WITH BLACK GARLIC (serves 3-4)
Ingredients :
1 tbsp olive oil
500g reduced fat minced beef
smoked sea salt (normal is fine)
ground black pepper
1 onion, chopped finely
1 clove garlic, chopped finely
1 bay leaf
2 tomatoes, chopped
4 cloves black garlic, sliced
quarter of a tsp ground cinnamon
half a tsp dried rosemary
1 Knorr Rich Beef stock pot
1 tsp Bovril
1 heaped tsp French mustard
2 tbsp Bisto Best beef gravy granules.
To serve : mashed potato and seasonal vegetables (I used carrot, broccoli, runner beans and peas)
Method :
Heat the olive oil until really quite hot in a large, deep frying pan. Add the beef and break up the block into small pieces as it cooks. Add a small pinch of smoked sea salt and a good helping of black pepper. Fry until the beef has all browned, the moisture has evaporated and there is just oil left under the beef. Leave the beef to caramelise for at least two turns, then remove it with a slotted spoon into a bowl.
Remove all but 1 tbsp of the fat from the pan and reserve in case you need more as you cook the vegetables.
Add the onion, garlic and bay leaf and fry until the onion is transparent and soft. Do not let the garlic burn.
Add the tomatoes and black garlic and stir to combine. Fry until the tomatoes are starting to break down.
Add the cinnamon and rosemary and stir to combine.
Add the stock pot and sufficient water to just under the level of the mince.
Add the Bovril and mustard and stir to combine. Bring to a lively simmer, then cover the pan and leave to cook for some 10-15 minutes.
Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary - the dish can cope with lots of black pepper but remember that the gravy granules are high in salt!
Pull the mince to one side of the pan and remove from the heat. Sprinkle in the gravy granules and stir immediately. Return the pan back to the heat and stir gently. Once the gravy has thickened, you are ready to serve.
Serve with mashed potatoes and seasonal vegetables.
Printable version
Labels:
beef mince,
black garlic,
Bovril,
cinnamon,
comfort food,
easy cooking,
foodporn,
French mustard,
ground beef,
Knorr,
main course recipe,
meat and two veg,
midweek recipe,
minced beef,
rosemary
12 September 2015
Herby lamb and pea pie
I love this pie. Now I know I sound like I love every recipe I make - which I do - but I just love this pie a little bit more.
I've had my issues with pies over the years and yes, granted, this one is just a top-only pie and not a top-and-bottom version so that's easier. However, it hasn't always been the pastry that has been a problem, but the filling too.
Mostly, to be honest, it has been the gravy or sauce where I've failed.
However, in the Game Pie and with this lovely example here, I got the gravy right. None of the "gravy like water", where it has been diluted in the cooking. Equally, none of the "gravy like glue". No, just a perfectly thick, covering, tasty, unctuous pie gravy that means every forkful will be as delicious as the last and with no resorting to gravy granules.
So I'm pleased.
The pie itself had been simmering on a low heat in my head for a couple of weeks, while I worked out what "interesting" departure from a usual lamb pie I would use.
I was convinced that it would be the juniper berries that I bought for the game pie, right up until - with a stroke of inspiration - I remembered the pomegranate molasses. Even when I was cooking the filling, I had the juniper berries sat there beside the pomegranate molasses, as I really wasn't sure which one to choose. Ultimately, I had a little taste of the way the sauce was going, then a little taste of some of the molasses on a teaspoon. The combination of the two was just so good, I didn't consider the juniper any further.
Lamb often needs something a little bit sweetly acidic to complement its own earthy sweetness and this is why redcurrant jelly does the job so well. So, if you don't want to invest in a bottle of pomegranate molasses just for this pie (although why not try it drizzled lightly over strawberries and Greek yoghurt - it's otherworldly), add a teaspoon or more of redcurrant jelly instead. The difference the pomegranate made to the sauce was just incredible, bring it alive in a subtle but definite kind of a way.
Another departure from the norm, is cooking the lamb in pale ale. So often, you will find lamb cooked in wine - usually red, but I wanted to use something different. I also wanted to keep to a "country kitchen" kind of a theme, which ale suited so much better than wine. My plans for the pie didn't suit a very strong, hoppy kind of ale, but a lighter, milder flavour - so a pale ale was fine and the English Pale Ale (from Marstons brewery) that I chose was perfect for the cause. If you're in a place where Pale Ale doesn't come easily, choose as light a beer as you can find without venturing into lager territory.
Now one other very important thing regarding this pie is that it takes a fair old while from beginning to end, if you want to do it properly. So it's definitely something that you don't want to attempt when you've only got a couple of hours to spare.
Having said that, however, you can devoted two days to it and cook the filling the day before, so stretching out the effort and making it a little easier to cope with. Plus, it means you'll be ahead of the game on the day.
Now, as for Cook's Tips, as ever I have a few for you :
Ordinary frozen peas will do if you don't have petit pois. Nobody's going to quibble over the size of a pea.
You might be surprised that I don't recommend dusting the meat with seasoned flour, rather than adding the flour later. Well, what I'm avoiding is the burned flour on the base of your pan. Maybe it's just me, but it so often happens that way - and I didn't want any acrid burned flavours in my softly flavoured lamb.
Now, when you add the ale/flour mixture, if lumps do form (and it often happens), don't panic over it - just break them down into pieces that are as small as possible with the whisk and think no more of it, as they will finally dissolve during the baking.
Even if you've never made pastry before, do give this pastry a go. It really is so easy to make! There's no fiddling about with it, no kneading, very little mixing and so long as you add the water in one go to begin with (the 50ml), mix it lightly, add a little more, mix it lightly (just two or three passes of the knife) and keep the water to as little as possible - just enough to keep it together, you can't go wrong. It really is SO good and suits this pie perfectly.
My last advice to you is to read the recipe a couple of times before you embark upon the bake. It is always good to have a good idea of what you're doing, before you do it!
I do so hope you enjoy the process of making this pie and that the end result is as successful for you, as mine was. I shall be crossing my fingers for you! (Which makes it very difficult to type, but I'll persevere - as it's you).
HERBY LAMB AND PEA PIE (serves 4)
Ingredients :
1 tbsp olive oil
450g diced lamb or lamb neck fillet, diced
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 onion, chopped finely
2 garlic cloves, chopped finely
1 medium carrot, diced finely
2 leeks, halved and sliced
500ml pale ale (I used Marston's English Pale Ale)
200ml water
1 heaped tsp tomato puree
1 lamb stock cube (low salt, preferably)
1 tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped
1 tbsp fresh mint, chopped
1 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
1 tsp pomegranate molasses
2 tbsp plain flour
3 tbsp petit pois.
For the pastry :
150g plain flour
50g Atora vegetable suet
50g salted butter
a pinch of sea salt
50 ml cold water as a minimum.
Method :
In a deep frying pan, heat the olive oil until smoking hot. Gently add the lamb and spread it out into one layer. Season with a light pinch of salt and a good pinch of black pepper. Leave it to cook, only moving it once the pan side has begun to caramelise, then turn it. Leave until the lamb has browned, then remove the meat to a bowl using a slotted spoon to retain the oils in the pan.
Add the onion, garlic and carrot to the pan and fry until the onion is transparent. Do not allow it to caramelise or burn.
Add the leeks and reduce the heat slightly. Return the lamb to the pan and stir through. Fry the leeks until softened, then decant the pan contents into a casserole dish.
Add all but 150ml of the pale ale to the pan and bring to a boil.
Reduce the heat to moderate and add the water, tomato puree, lamb stock cube, rosemary, mint, parsley and pomegranate molasses. Stir through and allow to simmer whilst you mix the remaining ale with the plain flour.
Remove the pan from the heat and add the ale/flour mix. Whisk through as you are adding, to prevent lumps forming. Place back onto the heat and stir well as the gravy thickens.
Pour the gravy into the casserole dish and stir through. Cover the casserole and place into a pre-heated oven at 170degC/325degF/gas3 for 90 minutes.
Once the time is up, remove the casserole from the oven and set aside to cool.
(It is at this stage, if you are making the pie in two instalments, that it would be possible to refrigerate the filling until the following day. Just remember to bring the filling back up to room temperature before you bake the pie).
Make the pastry for the pie, by placing the plain flour, vegetable suet, salted butter and sea salt into a large bowl. Rub the butter into the mixture until you have a cross between breadcrumbs and cornflake shapes.
Make sure to stir the pastry with a knife and under no circumstances knead the pastry dough. Add just enough water to bring the pastry together - just stir a few times with your knife, then pat and push the remainder of the flour into the ball. Wrap the ball in cling film and leave in a fridge to rest for a minimum of 30 minutes.
Once the meat filling is cool, add the petit pois and decant into the pie dish.
Paint the edge of the pie dish with egg yolk.
Roll out the pastry until it is just slightly larger than the pie dish, then lay it on top of the dish, making sure it meets the edge all the way around.
Press down lightly on the edge, to seal the pastry. Trim off any excess.
Cut several holes in the centre of the pastry to let out any steam (otherwise the pastry will detach in places) and egg wash with the remainder of the egg yolk.
Place into a pre-heated oven at 180degF/350degC/gas4 for 35 minutes, until the pastry is golden and crisp.
Serve with roasted parsnips, Savoy cabbage and baby corn - or vegetables of your choice.
Printable version
I've had my issues with pies over the years and yes, granted, this one is just a top-only pie and not a top-and-bottom version so that's easier. However, it hasn't always been the pastry that has been a problem, but the filling too.
Mostly, to be honest, it has been the gravy or sauce where I've failed.
However, in the Game Pie and with this lovely example here, I got the gravy right. None of the "gravy like water", where it has been diluted in the cooking. Equally, none of the "gravy like glue". No, just a perfectly thick, covering, tasty, unctuous pie gravy that means every forkful will be as delicious as the last and with no resorting to gravy granules.
So I'm pleased.
The pie itself had been simmering on a low heat in my head for a couple of weeks, while I worked out what "interesting" departure from a usual lamb pie I would use.
![]() |
Mint and Rosemary - home grown, don'cha know! |
Lamb often needs something a little bit sweetly acidic to complement its own earthy sweetness and this is why redcurrant jelly does the job so well. So, if you don't want to invest in a bottle of pomegranate molasses just for this pie (although why not try it drizzled lightly over strawberries and Greek yoghurt - it's otherworldly), add a teaspoon or more of redcurrant jelly instead. The difference the pomegranate made to the sauce was just incredible, bring it alive in a subtle but definite kind of a way.
Another departure from the norm, is cooking the lamb in pale ale. So often, you will find lamb cooked in wine - usually red, but I wanted to use something different. I also wanted to keep to a "country kitchen" kind of a theme, which ale suited so much better than wine. My plans for the pie didn't suit a very strong, hoppy kind of ale, but a lighter, milder flavour - so a pale ale was fine and the English Pale Ale (from Marstons brewery) that I chose was perfect for the cause. If you're in a place where Pale Ale doesn't come easily, choose as light a beer as you can find without venturing into lager territory.
Now one other very important thing regarding this pie is that it takes a fair old while from beginning to end, if you want to do it properly. So it's definitely something that you don't want to attempt when you've only got a couple of hours to spare.
Having said that, however, you can devoted two days to it and cook the filling the day before, so stretching out the effort and making it a little easier to cope with. Plus, it means you'll be ahead of the game on the day.
Now, as for Cook's Tips, as ever I have a few for you :
Ordinary frozen peas will do if you don't have petit pois. Nobody's going to quibble over the size of a pea.
You might be surprised that I don't recommend dusting the meat with seasoned flour, rather than adding the flour later. Well, what I'm avoiding is the burned flour on the base of your pan. Maybe it's just me, but it so often happens that way - and I didn't want any acrid burned flavours in my softly flavoured lamb.
Now, when you add the ale/flour mixture, if lumps do form (and it often happens), don't panic over it - just break them down into pieces that are as small as possible with the whisk and think no more of it, as they will finally dissolve during the baking.
Even if you've never made pastry before, do give this pastry a go. It really is so easy to make! There's no fiddling about with it, no kneading, very little mixing and so long as you add the water in one go to begin with (the 50ml), mix it lightly, add a little more, mix it lightly (just two or three passes of the knife) and keep the water to as little as possible - just enough to keep it together, you can't go wrong. It really is SO good and suits this pie perfectly.
My last advice to you is to read the recipe a couple of times before you embark upon the bake. It is always good to have a good idea of what you're doing, before you do it!
I do so hope you enjoy the process of making this pie and that the end result is as successful for you, as mine was. I shall be crossing my fingers for you! (Which makes it very difficult to type, but I'll persevere - as it's you).
HERBY LAMB AND PEA PIE (serves 4)
Ingredients :
1 tbsp olive oil
450g diced lamb or lamb neck fillet, diced
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 onion, chopped finely
2 garlic cloves, chopped finely
1 medium carrot, diced finely
2 leeks, halved and sliced
500ml pale ale (I used Marston's English Pale Ale)
200ml water
1 heaped tsp tomato puree
1 lamb stock cube (low salt, preferably)
1 tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped
1 tbsp fresh mint, chopped
1 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
1 tsp pomegranate molasses
2 tbsp plain flour
3 tbsp petit pois.
For the pastry :
150g plain flour
50g Atora vegetable suet
50g salted butter
a pinch of sea salt
50 ml cold water as a minimum.
Method :
In a deep frying pan, heat the olive oil until smoking hot. Gently add the lamb and spread it out into one layer. Season with a light pinch of salt and a good pinch of black pepper. Leave it to cook, only moving it once the pan side has begun to caramelise, then turn it. Leave until the lamb has browned, then remove the meat to a bowl using a slotted spoon to retain the oils in the pan.
Add the onion, garlic and carrot to the pan and fry until the onion is transparent. Do not allow it to caramelise or burn.
Add the leeks and reduce the heat slightly. Return the lamb to the pan and stir through. Fry the leeks until softened, then decant the pan contents into a casserole dish.
Add all but 150ml of the pale ale to the pan and bring to a boil.
Reduce the heat to moderate and add the water, tomato puree, lamb stock cube, rosemary, mint, parsley and pomegranate molasses. Stir through and allow to simmer whilst you mix the remaining ale with the plain flour.
Remove the pan from the heat and add the ale/flour mix. Whisk through as you are adding, to prevent lumps forming. Place back onto the heat and stir well as the gravy thickens.
Pour the gravy into the casserole dish and stir through. Cover the casserole and place into a pre-heated oven at 170degC/325degF/gas3 for 90 minutes.
Once the time is up, remove the casserole from the oven and set aside to cool.
(It is at this stage, if you are making the pie in two instalments, that it would be possible to refrigerate the filling until the following day. Just remember to bring the filling back up to room temperature before you bake the pie).
Make the pastry for the pie, by placing the plain flour, vegetable suet, salted butter and sea salt into a large bowl. Rub the butter into the mixture until you have a cross between breadcrumbs and cornflake shapes.
Make sure to stir the pastry with a knife and under no circumstances knead the pastry dough. Add just enough water to bring the pastry together - just stir a few times with your knife, then pat and push the remainder of the flour into the ball. Wrap the ball in cling film and leave in a fridge to rest for a minimum of 30 minutes.
Once the meat filling is cool, add the petit pois and decant into the pie dish.
Paint the edge of the pie dish with egg yolk.
Roll out the pastry until it is just slightly larger than the pie dish, then lay it on top of the dish, making sure it meets the edge all the way around.
Press down lightly on the edge, to seal the pastry. Trim off any excess.
Cut several holes in the centre of the pastry to let out any steam (otherwise the pastry will detach in places) and egg wash with the remainder of the egg yolk.
Place into a pre-heated oven at 180degF/350degC/gas4 for 35 minutes, until the pastry is golden and crisp.
Serve with roasted parsnips, Savoy cabbage and baby corn - or vegetables of your choice.
Printable version
30 June 2014
Rose Veal topside roast - super gorgeousness!
A quite disgracefully long time ago now (I've been SO remiss in not blogging stuff that needs to be blogged), I was contacted by the lovely Julie at Barcut Rose Veal in Wales, about taking some of their produce to try - and blog about.
Now those of you who have been reading along for a while will know about my own particular keenness for that jewel in the butcher's crown that is British Rose Veal. Not only that, but the knock on effect that is finding a job for the many millions of bull calves to do, rather than be shot at just 2 days old (or less, in some cases). These bull calves are a by-product (what a horrid thing to call a calf) of the already beleaguered dairy industry. You see, the mother cows don't produce milk willy nilly for the whole of their lives. No, they need to keep on having calves to stimulate the milk supply. Now a heifer calf (they're the female ones) are easy to find a job for as they can go straight back into the dairy business and have their own babies and supply their own milk. But what happens to the boys?
In far too many cases, they are either shot at or very near to birth, or alternatively are sold on to be produced for beef (which they're not very good at, being of a breed that makes milk well and doesn't make beef well). As a result, they - not in every case, it's true, but in most cases - aren't worth very much and aren't really valued as a "crop" as such. In lots of particularly awful instances, the bull calves are sold at market where they're picked up by European (or further distant) purchasers who will then ship the animals huge distances to the kind of future that nobody in their right mind would wish for.
So how much better is it, for a calf to be bought by a local producer who takes care of them in an ethical manner - with large strawed pens, where they can play with their mates, eat to their hearts' content and be happy (most even spend time out at grass, in the field, in the sunshine) - before being taken to a local abattoir (the important bit about that being both local and British) at 8 months of age where they are killed humanely and their meat is valued by home cooks and chefs alike. It's just a no-brainer, so far as I can see.
Barcut Rose Veal is just one of those ethical producers. A quick look at their website's "Why our Rose Veal" page gives you all the assurances you could require. So I was very excited to be the recipient of an enormous box of their beautiful, lean, Rose Veal.
As always, the quandary is what to do with the sudden rainfall of choice cuts of meat. We had a gorgeous lean topside roasting joint, some braising steaks and some cubed topside. Now we generally use 500g of meat per meal for the three of us - so we had at least five or six meals to think of!
The meat arrived exceptionally well packaged in vacuum sealed bags with freezer blocks to keep it cool - and looked as fresh as a daisy. It felt almost sacrilegious to put it in the freezer, but as it is fresh and not previously frozen, in the freezer it went. With the best will in the world, even my family can't eat five or six meals in one go. Well, everything except the topside roasting joint. That one's destination was marked out for our Sunday dinner almost as soon as I clapped eyes upon it.
Now I won't lie and say that I knew exactly what I was going to do with it, because when you've got the one go at an ingredient (who knows when I would find another piece of roasting Rose Veal as good as this one), you have to give your next move some serious consideration. Or I do, at any rate.
Eventually - after much thought, a significant amount of changes of mind and some considerable research, I came to a conclusion. I would prepare a rub, then roast the joint (hopefully) to a state where it remains just pink in the middle.
Now the rub I devised was one of my own concoction which I hoped would bring out the delicate flavour of the Rose Veal, without stamping all over its own characteristics. It would be a terrible shame to lose the gentle flavour by heavy handedness in the dressing of it. So, I put together some dried rosemary, fennel seeds, lemon zest, sea salt and ground white pepper into my pestle and mortar and gave everything a good crush, then brought it together with some lovely fruity rapeseed oil. It smelled divine.
Rubbed all over the Rose Veal joint - into every nook and cranny - it looked suitably dressed and ready for the party. I made a trivet in the roasting pan of whole carrots that had been sliced in half and added a sliced onion, on top of which balanced the Veal.
Into the oven at 200degC it went, for just 10 minutes. Then the oven was turned right down to 160degC and I left it to chuckle along slowly (with the occasional pause for some basting) for around an hour and a half. I tested the joint with a meat thermometer and waited until the internal temperature was up to a minimum of 65degC before removing from the oven and covering it in tin foil (still in the roasting tin), to rest in a warm place for around 30 minutes.
It looked incredible and smelled even better.
When it came time to carve, the Rose Veal just accepted the carving knife without complaint. You know how sometimes when you're carving a joint, your arm feels a bit like chewed string by the end of it all? Not with this one. The meat, although not as pink in the centre as I had hoped, was just so tender and so juicy it was making my mouth water. My Dad introduced me (years ago) to the concept of "cutter's tasters" thanks to which I was able to tell that the herby, fruity rub had done its work well. The flavour of the Veal was still there, just accentuated with layers of rosemary, fennel and lemon. Naturally, I had saved the pan juices along with a little of the veal stock from the celeriac fondant, which together with some Sherry, made a completely fantastic gravy.
Oh my gosh but what a meal that was. I served the Rose Veal with Duchesse potatoes, Chantenay carrots, broccoli, celeriac fondant (braised in veal stock with butter) and Yorkshire puddings, along with the glossy rich gravy that just brought everything together.
I look at these photographs of that meal and can remember every nuance of every flavour involved with that veal. It fed the four of us (we had a visitor that day) with enough left over for a terrine of Rose Veal with Antipasti vegetables and asparagus the following day, served with salad. So gorgeous!
Barcut Rose Veal are based near Abergele in Wales, so if you are in the area it is worthwhile visiting any of the shops on their website and enquiring. They also sell wholesale, so if you and a few friends can get an order together and share the cost, it is also well worth doing - after all, the Rose Veal freezes perfectly. Who knows, as the business progresses, they might even consider selling retail to the world at large. Well, we can but hope! For those of you on Facebook, you can support Barcut Rose Veal by visiting their page at https://www.facebook.com/barcutveal
ROSE VEAL TOPSIDE ROAST (serves 6-7)
Ingredients :
1kg topside Rose Veal
1 tsp dried rosemary (chopped fine)
1 tsp fennel seeds
1 tsp fresh lemon zest
a pinch of sea salt
a large pinch of ground white pepper
1-2 tbsp rapeseed oil
2 chunky carrots, halved lengthwise
1 onion, sliced.
Method :
1. Pre-heat your oven to 200degC/400degF/Gas 6.
2. Prepare a roasting tin by placing the carrots, cut side down to form a trivet, in the bottom of the roasting tin. Scatter the onion rings on and around the carrots.
3. Prepare the rub by placing the rosemary, fennel, lemon, salt and pepper into a pestle and mortar (or use a spice grinder) and give everything a good bash to release the oils. Add the rapeseed oil and stir to combine.
4. Rub the Rose Veal all over with the mixture, making sure to get it into all the nooks and crannies.
5. Place the Veal onto the carrots and onions, making sure to keep the fat uppermost. This will allow the fat, as it melts, to slowly baste the meat and keep it moist.
6. Put the roasting tin and contents into the oven for 10 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 160degC/325degF/Gas 3 for another hour and a half - or until the inside temperature of the meat reaches a minimum of 65degC/149degF on a meat thermometer.
7. Once the correct temperature is reached, remove from the oven and cover the meat and roasting tin with silver foil. Keep in a warm place to rest for approximately 30 minutes, then carve.
Serve with roasted potatoes and vegetables of your choice, making sure to use the pan juices in your gravy (which is made extra delicious by the addition of a little Medium Sherry).
Printable version
Now those of you who have been reading along for a while will know about my own particular keenness for that jewel in the butcher's crown that is British Rose Veal. Not only that, but the knock on effect that is finding a job for the many millions of bull calves to do, rather than be shot at just 2 days old (or less, in some cases). These bull calves are a by-product (what a horrid thing to call a calf) of the already beleaguered dairy industry. You see, the mother cows don't produce milk willy nilly for the whole of their lives. No, they need to keep on having calves to stimulate the milk supply. Now a heifer calf (they're the female ones) are easy to find a job for as they can go straight back into the dairy business and have their own babies and supply their own milk. But what happens to the boys?
![]() |
Some of Barcut's happy calves |
So how much better is it, for a calf to be bought by a local producer who takes care of them in an ethical manner - with large strawed pens, where they can play with their mates, eat to their hearts' content and be happy (most even spend time out at grass, in the field, in the sunshine) - before being taken to a local abattoir (the important bit about that being both local and British) at 8 months of age where they are killed humanely and their meat is valued by home cooks and chefs alike. It's just a no-brainer, so far as I can see.
Barcut Rose Veal is just one of those ethical producers. A quick look at their website's "Why our Rose Veal" page gives you all the assurances you could require. So I was very excited to be the recipient of an enormous box of their beautiful, lean, Rose Veal.
As always, the quandary is what to do with the sudden rainfall of choice cuts of meat. We had a gorgeous lean topside roasting joint, some braising steaks and some cubed topside. Now we generally use 500g of meat per meal for the three of us - so we had at least five or six meals to think of!
The meat arrived exceptionally well packaged in vacuum sealed bags with freezer blocks to keep it cool - and looked as fresh as a daisy. It felt almost sacrilegious to put it in the freezer, but as it is fresh and not previously frozen, in the freezer it went. With the best will in the world, even my family can't eat five or six meals in one go. Well, everything except the topside roasting joint. That one's destination was marked out for our Sunday dinner almost as soon as I clapped eyes upon it.
Now I won't lie and say that I knew exactly what I was going to do with it, because when you've got the one go at an ingredient (who knows when I would find another piece of roasting Rose Veal as good as this one), you have to give your next move some serious consideration. Or I do, at any rate.
Eventually - after much thought, a significant amount of changes of mind and some considerable research, I came to a conclusion. I would prepare a rub, then roast the joint (hopefully) to a state where it remains just pink in the middle.
Now the rub I devised was one of my own concoction which I hoped would bring out the delicate flavour of the Rose Veal, without stamping all over its own characteristics. It would be a terrible shame to lose the gentle flavour by heavy handedness in the dressing of it. So, I put together some dried rosemary, fennel seeds, lemon zest, sea salt and ground white pepper into my pestle and mortar and gave everything a good crush, then brought it together with some lovely fruity rapeseed oil. It smelled divine.
Rubbed all over the Rose Veal joint - into every nook and cranny - it looked suitably dressed and ready for the party. I made a trivet in the roasting pan of whole carrots that had been sliced in half and added a sliced onion, on top of which balanced the Veal.
Into the oven at 200degC it went, for just 10 minutes. Then the oven was turned right down to 160degC and I left it to chuckle along slowly (with the occasional pause for some basting) for around an hour and a half. I tested the joint with a meat thermometer and waited until the internal temperature was up to a minimum of 65degC before removing from the oven and covering it in tin foil (still in the roasting tin), to rest in a warm place for around 30 minutes.
It looked incredible and smelled even better.
When it came time to carve, the Rose Veal just accepted the carving knife without complaint. You know how sometimes when you're carving a joint, your arm feels a bit like chewed string by the end of it all? Not with this one. The meat, although not as pink in the centre as I had hoped, was just so tender and so juicy it was making my mouth water. My Dad introduced me (years ago) to the concept of "cutter's tasters" thanks to which I was able to tell that the herby, fruity rub had done its work well. The flavour of the Veal was still there, just accentuated with layers of rosemary, fennel and lemon. Naturally, I had saved the pan juices along with a little of the veal stock from the celeriac fondant, which together with some Sherry, made a completely fantastic gravy.
Oh my gosh but what a meal that was. I served the Rose Veal with Duchesse potatoes, Chantenay carrots, broccoli, celeriac fondant (braised in veal stock with butter) and Yorkshire puddings, along with the glossy rich gravy that just brought everything together.
I look at these photographs of that meal and can remember every nuance of every flavour involved with that veal. It fed the four of us (we had a visitor that day) with enough left over for a terrine of Rose Veal with Antipasti vegetables and asparagus the following day, served with salad. So gorgeous!
Barcut Rose Veal are based near Abergele in Wales, so if you are in the area it is worthwhile visiting any of the shops on their website and enquiring. They also sell wholesale, so if you and a few friends can get an order together and share the cost, it is also well worth doing - after all, the Rose Veal freezes perfectly. Who knows, as the business progresses, they might even consider selling retail to the world at large. Well, we can but hope! For those of you on Facebook, you can support Barcut Rose Veal by visiting their page at https://www.facebook.com/barcutveal
ROSE VEAL TOPSIDE ROAST (serves 6-7)
Ingredients :
1kg topside Rose Veal
1 tsp dried rosemary (chopped fine)
1 tsp fennel seeds
1 tsp fresh lemon zest
a pinch of sea salt
a large pinch of ground white pepper
1-2 tbsp rapeseed oil
2 chunky carrots, halved lengthwise
1 onion, sliced.
Method :
1. Pre-heat your oven to 200degC/400degF/Gas 6.
2. Prepare a roasting tin by placing the carrots, cut side down to form a trivet, in the bottom of the roasting tin. Scatter the onion rings on and around the carrots.
3. Prepare the rub by placing the rosemary, fennel, lemon, salt and pepper into a pestle and mortar (or use a spice grinder) and give everything a good bash to release the oils. Add the rapeseed oil and stir to combine.
4. Rub the Rose Veal all over with the mixture, making sure to get it into all the nooks and crannies.
5. Place the Veal onto the carrots and onions, making sure to keep the fat uppermost. This will allow the fat, as it melts, to slowly baste the meat and keep it moist.
6. Put the roasting tin and contents into the oven for 10 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 160degC/325degF/Gas 3 for another hour and a half - or until the inside temperature of the meat reaches a minimum of 65degC/149degF on a meat thermometer.
7. Once the correct temperature is reached, remove from the oven and cover the meat and roasting tin with silver foil. Keep in a warm place to rest for approximately 30 minutes, then carve.
Serve with roasted potatoes and vegetables of your choice, making sure to use the pan juices in your gravy (which is made extra delicious by the addition of a little Medium Sherry).
Printable version
24 March 2014
Knock your socks off Bacon & Herb Stuffing
Why - on earth - haven't I made my own stuffing before now?
I reckon it's a combination of stuffing being one of those things that just floats around as an "also", an "add on" to a roast dinner and also my own bad experience with it as a youngster. You see, my Mum would often stuff (good old Paxo, the stuffing of choice for the millions) our Sunday chicken, which I remember vividly because I would be vaguely revolted by the colour of the stuffing that had sat in the (apologies) blood while the chicken was roasting. As a consequence, when the recommendation came out that you didn't stuff your chicken any longer owing to E-coli scares - and my Mum stopped - I wasn't unhappy about it.
So we got out of the habit of eating stuffing. It became something that we had at Christmas with the turkey - and only in the shape of stuffing balls that were baked in the oven.
When it came to making my own roast dinners, to include stuffing on the menu was just one step too many for a long time. Well, making a roast dinner is quite an undertaking one way and another. There's the timings, the vegetables, the roast potatoes, the gravy - everything has to be ready on time and it's a whole lot more complicated than making a spaghetti bolognese!
In fact, I didn't really bother with stuffing (the associations between sage & onion stuffing and hideous discoloured soggy breadcrumbs being too much to bear) until hubby came along and professed an undying love for the dish. By then, I'd managed to get a small grip on the mechanics of making a roast dinner - particularly a roast chicken - and it wasn't too difficult to mix up a packet of stuffing and bung it in the oven to cook alongside the rest. I didn't waste any love or attention on it though - and didn't particularly enjoy it on my dinner, either. Well - sage and onion again, you see.
It wasn't until I joined a couple of Facebook groups and saw other people were making home made stuffings, that I began to foster an interest in doing it myself.
This was a slow burning interest though, I have to admit. I'm fairly sure that those early days of sage and onion were still colouring the picture of "stuffing" that I had in my memory. I still hadn't put the idea that I could venture away from sage & onion, together with the concept of "stuffing". Now everyone knows that home made is very often better than shop bought packet mixes, but I was particularly slow on the uptake where this was concerned.
However, once it had dawned on me - and I noticed that I had half a packet of bacon sitting doing nothing one Sunday morning - the old grey matter got to work.
It was the perfect moment - I had a gorgeously huge, fat chicken to be roasted. I had my lovely oven dish to use. I had bacon. I had a good quantity of Polish Bakery bread to use for breadcrumbs and I had a profusion of both fresh and dried herbs in the house. Never had a moment been so propitious!
I didn't use a recipe - after all, people have been stuffing things for years by using whatever they had to hand. Yes, dear reader, I winged it. In a BIG way - and (pretty much) got away with it.
Even having put the stuffing together and knowing a) what was in it, plus b) how they went together, I still wasn't particularly keen on the idea. Oh I was interested in how it would come out and concerned that everyone would like it, but I wasn't anticipating liking it much myself. Oh, how wrong I was. I not only liked it, I loved it. I could have eaten the stuffing and dropped the chicken from my dinner - which is truly remarkable.
However, the stuffing came into its own the following day when I put together a cold roast chicken, stuffing and sweetcorn relish sandwich. Oh .. my .. word. Shoot me now, I'm all over happy.
I have one cook's tip for you with regard to this stuffing, which is not to use salt unless you are absolutely convinced that the bacon does not carry any of its own. Because the bacon becomes considerably reduced by the double cooking process, the saltiness of it is intensified. Additional salt just isn't necessary - particularly if you are using smoked bacon.
So, on the reckoning that where I came from others might follow and if you're one of those who was put off stuffing by - well, let's not go into it again, eh? - then find some lost bacon and give this a go with your next roast chicken. Then tell me you don't like stuffing. *grin*
KNOCK YOUR SOCKS OFF BACON & HERB STUFFING (serves 5-6)
Ingredients :
1-2 tbsp rapeseed or olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
freshly ground black pepper
4-5 rashers of lean back smoked bacon, finely diced
3 slices crusty bread, slightly stale, chopped into chunky breadcrumbs
2 tbsp fresh parsley, finely chopped
1 tbsp fresh chives, finely chopped
1 tsp dried oregano
half a tsp dried thyme
half a tsp dried rosemary
1 large egg.
Method :
1. Heat the oil in a frying pan and cook the bacon and onion together until the onion is softened and beginning to turn golden. Add a pinch of black pepper, stir to combine then leave to cool slightly.
2. Once cooled, stir the breadcrumbs into the bacon & onion pan making sure to absorb the bacon fat.
3. Decant the contents of the bacon pan into a large bowl and add the remainder of the ingredients, including the egg.
4. Stir well to combine - until the egg cannot be traced.
5. Decant into an oven proof dish, level the surface and place into a pre-heated 180degC/350degF/Gas 4 oven for 25-30 minutes or until the surface is baked crispy.
Serve with your favourite roasted meats and vegetables, or cold the following day in a sandwich.
Printable version
I reckon it's a combination of stuffing being one of those things that just floats around as an "also", an "add on" to a roast dinner and also my own bad experience with it as a youngster. You see, my Mum would often stuff (good old Paxo, the stuffing of choice for the millions) our Sunday chicken, which I remember vividly because I would be vaguely revolted by the colour of the stuffing that had sat in the (apologies) blood while the chicken was roasting. As a consequence, when the recommendation came out that you didn't stuff your chicken any longer owing to E-coli scares - and my Mum stopped - I wasn't unhappy about it.
So we got out of the habit of eating stuffing. It became something that we had at Christmas with the turkey - and only in the shape of stuffing balls that were baked in the oven.
When it came to making my own roast dinners, to include stuffing on the menu was just one step too many for a long time. Well, making a roast dinner is quite an undertaking one way and another. There's the timings, the vegetables, the roast potatoes, the gravy - everything has to be ready on time and it's a whole lot more complicated than making a spaghetti bolognese!
In fact, I didn't really bother with stuffing (the associations between sage & onion stuffing and hideous discoloured soggy breadcrumbs being too much to bear) until hubby came along and professed an undying love for the dish. By then, I'd managed to get a small grip on the mechanics of making a roast dinner - particularly a roast chicken - and it wasn't too difficult to mix up a packet of stuffing and bung it in the oven to cook alongside the rest. I didn't waste any love or attention on it though - and didn't particularly enjoy it on my dinner, either. Well - sage and onion again, you see.
It wasn't until I joined a couple of Facebook groups and saw other people were making home made stuffings, that I began to foster an interest in doing it myself.
This was a slow burning interest though, I have to admit. I'm fairly sure that those early days of sage and onion were still colouring the picture of "stuffing" that I had in my memory. I still hadn't put the idea that I could venture away from sage & onion, together with the concept of "stuffing". Now everyone knows that home made is very often better than shop bought packet mixes, but I was particularly slow on the uptake where this was concerned.
However, once it had dawned on me - and I noticed that I had half a packet of bacon sitting doing nothing one Sunday morning - the old grey matter got to work.
It was the perfect moment - I had a gorgeously huge, fat chicken to be roasted. I had my lovely oven dish to use. I had bacon. I had a good quantity of Polish Bakery bread to use for breadcrumbs and I had a profusion of both fresh and dried herbs in the house. Never had a moment been so propitious!
I didn't use a recipe - after all, people have been stuffing things for years by using whatever they had to hand. Yes, dear reader, I winged it. In a BIG way - and (pretty much) got away with it.
Even having put the stuffing together and knowing a) what was in it, plus b) how they went together, I still wasn't particularly keen on the idea. Oh I was interested in how it would come out and concerned that everyone would like it, but I wasn't anticipating liking it much myself. Oh, how wrong I was. I not only liked it, I loved it. I could have eaten the stuffing and dropped the chicken from my dinner - which is truly remarkable.
However, the stuffing came into its own the following day when I put together a cold roast chicken, stuffing and sweetcorn relish sandwich. Oh .. my .. word. Shoot me now, I'm all over happy.
I have one cook's tip for you with regard to this stuffing, which is not to use salt unless you are absolutely convinced that the bacon does not carry any of its own. Because the bacon becomes considerably reduced by the double cooking process, the saltiness of it is intensified. Additional salt just isn't necessary - particularly if you are using smoked bacon.
So, on the reckoning that where I came from others might follow and if you're one of those who was put off stuffing by - well, let's not go into it again, eh? - then find some lost bacon and give this a go with your next roast chicken. Then tell me you don't like stuffing. *grin*
KNOCK YOUR SOCKS OFF BACON & HERB STUFFING (serves 5-6)
Ingredients :
1-2 tbsp rapeseed or olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
freshly ground black pepper
4-5 rashers of lean back smoked bacon, finely diced
3 slices crusty bread, slightly stale, chopped into chunky breadcrumbs
2 tbsp fresh parsley, finely chopped
1 tbsp fresh chives, finely chopped
1 tsp dried oregano
half a tsp dried thyme
half a tsp dried rosemary
1 large egg.
Method :
1. Heat the oil in a frying pan and cook the bacon and onion together until the onion is softened and beginning to turn golden. Add a pinch of black pepper, stir to combine then leave to cool slightly.
2. Once cooled, stir the breadcrumbs into the bacon & onion pan making sure to absorb the bacon fat.
3. Decant the contents of the bacon pan into a large bowl and add the remainder of the ingredients, including the egg.
4. Stir well to combine - until the egg cannot be traced.
5. Decant into an oven proof dish, level the surface and place into a pre-heated 180degC/350degF/Gas 4 oven for 25-30 minutes or until the surface is baked crispy.
Serve with your favourite roasted meats and vegetables, or cold the following day in a sandwich.
Printable version
6 March 2013
Lamb & carrot meatballs with butterbeans - quite a surprise!
For really quite a long time - ever since seeing them on the t.v. - I have wanted to reproduce those gorgeous Spanish style tapas meatballs that you see being served in small terracotta dishes. They look so yummy with their thick tomato sauce that just the sight of them is enough to set my saliva glands tingling.
Well - and purely by accident - I think I've just achieved it.
I didn't set out to make a tapas-style meatball at all. I'd found a recipe on goodfoodchannel.co.uk probably around a year or more ago, which I'd filed away in my folder of "good ideas" with a view to making some time in the future. It was a Peter Gordon recipe, so immediately I had confidence in it as Peter Gordon always appears to me to be something of a "serious" chef, as opposed to those who are more keen on the t.v. appearances than making good food.
What made me decide to make the recipe now, though, was entirely down to the fact that I had a tin of Sainsbury's butter beans burning a hole in my tin cupboard. I'd had a discussion with a friend on Facebook about how much we liked butter beans and she'd recommended Sainsbury's as being good ones of their type. (Thanks Marj!) I really dislike soggy butter beans that just fall apart when they're cooked - and these ones definitely don't do that. They're tender, but still firm enough to cope with being stirred regularly. Now I really - no, really - like butter beans, so the knowledge that I had a tin of good ones in the cupboard was more than enough enticement.
There was something else about the recipe that tickled my curiosity. In the meatball method, it said to include four tablespoonfuls of cold water into the meatball mixture. I so nearly didn't do this, as it seemed as though - with the grated carrot there too - it stood the chance of making the meatball terribly soggy. However, I decided to place my trust in Peter Gordon's capable hands and complied with the recipe. What a revelation!
Now anyone who has ever made meatballs from scratch, will know that the blasted meatball mix will stick to your fingers and steadfastly refuse to be moulded into a ball. I'd read a little tip which said to run your fingers under cold water whilst rolling the ball, which very definitely helped - in fact, it made the task do-able. However, if you add the water to the meatball mix, you don't need to keep running them under the tap (with accompanying water wasteage and cross-contamination hygiene issues). The meatball mix just rolls up without a squeak of complaint and - what's even better - is the meatball stays moist and delicious throughout the browning process, right the way to being served! As I say - a revelation!
The grated carrot was another departure from the norm - and one which worked brilliantly. The flavours of lamb and mint are traditional and the addition of the grated carrot really brought out the sweetness of the lamb, along with helping to ensure the meatballs stayed moist.
As ever, well you wouldn't expect anything else now, would you? I made a few changes to the original recipe - which I have reflected in the recipe below - both to suit what ingredients I had in the house and to suit our palates. Amongst a few other things, for instance, the original recipe called for 8 cloves of garlic. Now we do like garlic - but 8? Between three of us? I don't think so - especially as all eight go into the sauce! Hence, I trimmed it down to a much more acceptable 2.
The quantity of mince is 800g on the recipe, whereas a supermarket pack of mince is generally 600g. From the 600g, I made 21 meatballs which were a good size - with a bowl of sauce and butterbeans for lunch the following day. (Which coupled with a fresh baked baguette was just such a stellar lunch!). So feel free to increase the size to 800g if you've extra mouths to feed. I found the 600g fed the three of us perfectly.
The recipe also called for 200g of bacon lardons. Well, I have to admit that I've no time for lardons - not when my local butcher is still selling their wonderful smoked back bacon for a fraction of the price of 100g of lardons! It's all bacon, after all. So I swapped those lardons for three large (and I'm talking large) rashers of smoked back bacon, cut into small pieces. It worked. It worked very nicely thank you.
Owing to hubby's sensitivity to tomatoes - the acidity tends to give him rampant indigestion if not cooked out very well indeed - I habitually add a little tomato ketchup. Now you could add a little sugar to do the same job - but tomato ketchup has all those intriguing spices along with the sugar, that add that little je ne sais quoi to a tomato sauce and helps to kill the acidity.
Quite apart from anything else, this recipe is a complete doddle to make. Apart from forming the meatballs (which really doesn't take very long at all), it's a simple matter of chucking everything in order into a deep pan, stirring occasionally and cooking something to help mop up the sauce.
Speaking of which, I decided to cook some Orzo. Now I'd only ever used Orzo once before, in my Greek Lamb & Orzo Bake - which we all really liked. So I knew that I was onto a fairly safe bet there. Son and heir was momentarily befuddled by it, asking what sort of rice it was, but was satisfied when we revealed that it was a tiny pasta instead. He commented that it was "odd" and didn't finish his portion - but for the first go in a very long time, plus the first time of having it as a side dish, I think he did pretty well. He's a conservative ole thing, don'cha know. I added a few frozen peas to the Orzo more with a view to their colour than flavour, but they added a nice sweetness that the Orzo alone couldn't have delivered.
All in all, I was very pleased indeed with this meal. Everyone loved the meatballs and to have found a tapas style meatball in tomato sauce is a very definite bonus, as I have a yen to make a tapas style dinner one night. So, my first dish is tucked firmly behind my ear for later!
LAMB & CARROT MEATBALLS WITH BUTTERBEANS (serves 3)
Ingredients :
600g lean minced lamb
1 tbsp fresh mint, shredded
1 carrot, peeled and grated
100g plain flour
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp rapeseed or olive oil
1 large onion, sliced thinly
2 cloves garlic, sliced
2 tsp dried rosemary
200g bacon lardons
750ml tomato passata
1 tbsp tomato ketchup
1 tsp lamb stock powder (or half a lamb stock cube)
400g tin butter beans
fresh parsley, finely chopped.
Method :
1. Make sure that all the vegetables are prepped and ready to go, before you make up the meatball mix, or the meatballs will stick to their plate as they wait to be browned.
2. In a large bowl, mix the lamb, mint and carrot together with some seasoning and 4 tbsp cold water. Form the mixture into balls the size of a walnut.
3. Take a large freezer bag and mix the flour together with some seasoning. Roll each meatball in the flour until coated.
4. Heat the oil in a deep frying pan or wok. Once hot enough to sizzle the meatballs, add them gently and without crowding. You may need to brown them in two batches. Brown them all over and remove with a slotted spoon onto a warm plate.
5. Once all the meatballs are browned, drain the majority of the fat from the pan and add the onion. Cook over a moderate heat until softened and turning golden.
6. Add the garlic and rosemary, cooking until the onion is beginning to caramelise and the garlic is softened.
7. Add the bacon and continue to cook, stirring frequently, until all the water has cooked out of the bacon and it is beginning to turn golden.
8. Add the passata, tomato ketchup and the lamb stock powder - (I used Essential Cuisine's superb lamb stock powder) - along with 200ml of water. Stir well, then add the butter beans and bring to a boil, stirring as it heats through.
9. Once up to temperature, return the meatballs to the pan and coat with the tomato sauce. Place a lid on the pan and simmer for 35-45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
10. Serve sprinkled with the chopped parsley.
Printable version
Well - and purely by accident - I think I've just achieved it.
I didn't set out to make a tapas-style meatball at all. I'd found a recipe on goodfoodchannel.co.uk probably around a year or more ago, which I'd filed away in my folder of "good ideas" with a view to making some time in the future. It was a Peter Gordon recipe, so immediately I had confidence in it as Peter Gordon always appears to me to be something of a "serious" chef, as opposed to those who are more keen on the t.v. appearances than making good food.
What made me decide to make the recipe now, though, was entirely down to the fact that I had a tin of Sainsbury's butter beans burning a hole in my tin cupboard. I'd had a discussion with a friend on Facebook about how much we liked butter beans and she'd recommended Sainsbury's as being good ones of their type. (Thanks Marj!) I really dislike soggy butter beans that just fall apart when they're cooked - and these ones definitely don't do that. They're tender, but still firm enough to cope with being stirred regularly. Now I really - no, really - like butter beans, so the knowledge that I had a tin of good ones in the cupboard was more than enough enticement.

Now anyone who has ever made meatballs from scratch, will know that the blasted meatball mix will stick to your fingers and steadfastly refuse to be moulded into a ball. I'd read a little tip which said to run your fingers under cold water whilst rolling the ball, which very definitely helped - in fact, it made the task do-able. However, if you add the water to the meatball mix, you don't need to keep running them under the tap (with accompanying water wasteage and cross-contamination hygiene issues). The meatball mix just rolls up without a squeak of complaint and - what's even better - is the meatball stays moist and delicious throughout the browning process, right the way to being served! As I say - a revelation!
The grated carrot was another departure from the norm - and one which worked brilliantly. The flavours of lamb and mint are traditional and the addition of the grated carrot really brought out the sweetness of the lamb, along with helping to ensure the meatballs stayed moist.
As ever, well you wouldn't expect anything else now, would you? I made a few changes to the original recipe - which I have reflected in the recipe below - both to suit what ingredients I had in the house and to suit our palates. Amongst a few other things, for instance, the original recipe called for 8 cloves of garlic. Now we do like garlic - but 8? Between three of us? I don't think so - especially as all eight go into the sauce! Hence, I trimmed it down to a much more acceptable 2.
The quantity of mince is 800g on the recipe, whereas a supermarket pack of mince is generally 600g. From the 600g, I made 21 meatballs which were a good size - with a bowl of sauce and butterbeans for lunch the following day. (Which coupled with a fresh baked baguette was just such a stellar lunch!). So feel free to increase the size to 800g if you've extra mouths to feed. I found the 600g fed the three of us perfectly.
The recipe also called for 200g of bacon lardons. Well, I have to admit that I've no time for lardons - not when my local butcher is still selling their wonderful smoked back bacon for a fraction of the price of 100g of lardons! It's all bacon, after all. So I swapped those lardons for three large (and I'm talking large) rashers of smoked back bacon, cut into small pieces. It worked. It worked very nicely thank you.
Owing to hubby's sensitivity to tomatoes - the acidity tends to give him rampant indigestion if not cooked out very well indeed - I habitually add a little tomato ketchup. Now you could add a little sugar to do the same job - but tomato ketchup has all those intriguing spices along with the sugar, that add that little je ne sais quoi to a tomato sauce and helps to kill the acidity.
Quite apart from anything else, this recipe is a complete doddle to make. Apart from forming the meatballs (which really doesn't take very long at all), it's a simple matter of chucking everything in order into a deep pan, stirring occasionally and cooking something to help mop up the sauce.
Speaking of which, I decided to cook some Orzo. Now I'd only ever used Orzo once before, in my Greek Lamb & Orzo Bake - which we all really liked. So I knew that I was onto a fairly safe bet there. Son and heir was momentarily befuddled by it, asking what sort of rice it was, but was satisfied when we revealed that it was a tiny pasta instead. He commented that it was "odd" and didn't finish his portion - but for the first go in a very long time, plus the first time of having it as a side dish, I think he did pretty well. He's a conservative ole thing, don'cha know. I added a few frozen peas to the Orzo more with a view to their colour than flavour, but they added a nice sweetness that the Orzo alone couldn't have delivered.
All in all, I was very pleased indeed with this meal. Everyone loved the meatballs and to have found a tapas style meatball in tomato sauce is a very definite bonus, as I have a yen to make a tapas style dinner one night. So, my first dish is tucked firmly behind my ear for later!
LAMB & CARROT MEATBALLS WITH BUTTERBEANS (serves 3)
Ingredients :
600g lean minced lamb
1 tbsp fresh mint, shredded
1 carrot, peeled and grated
100g plain flour
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp rapeseed or olive oil
1 large onion, sliced thinly
2 cloves garlic, sliced
2 tsp dried rosemary
200g bacon lardons
750ml tomato passata
1 tbsp tomato ketchup
1 tsp lamb stock powder (or half a lamb stock cube)
400g tin butter beans
fresh parsley, finely chopped.
Method :
1. Make sure that all the vegetables are prepped and ready to go, before you make up the meatball mix, or the meatballs will stick to their plate as they wait to be browned.
2. In a large bowl, mix the lamb, mint and carrot together with some seasoning and 4 tbsp cold water. Form the mixture into balls the size of a walnut.
3. Take a large freezer bag and mix the flour together with some seasoning. Roll each meatball in the flour until coated.
4. Heat the oil in a deep frying pan or wok. Once hot enough to sizzle the meatballs, add them gently and without crowding. You may need to brown them in two batches. Brown them all over and remove with a slotted spoon onto a warm plate.
5. Once all the meatballs are browned, drain the majority of the fat from the pan and add the onion. Cook over a moderate heat until softened and turning golden.
6. Add the garlic and rosemary, cooking until the onion is beginning to caramelise and the garlic is softened.
7. Add the bacon and continue to cook, stirring frequently, until all the water has cooked out of the bacon and it is beginning to turn golden.
8. Add the passata, tomato ketchup and the lamb stock powder - (I used Essential Cuisine's superb lamb stock powder) - along with 200ml of water. Stir well, then add the butter beans and bring to a boil, stirring as it heats through.
9. Once up to temperature, return the meatballs to the pan and coat with the tomato sauce. Place a lid on the pan and simmer for 35-45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
10. Serve sprinkled with the chopped parsley.
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