We're currently going through something of a heatwave here in the U.K. - June 2017 - and salads are definitely in. However, because I wanted to try and make salad eating something good as opposed to something yawn-inducing (oh come on, you know it can be!), I've been experimenting with some rather out of the box kinds of salads and this one is by far the best we've tried (so far!).
The original inspiration came from the good old BBC Good Food website, as very often happens. Their version of the salad can be found here and from that you'll be able to see that I've added a little and taken away a little from the original, but it is still very close.
Yes, it requires a little bit of work before time with marinating the chicken but I also recommend that you wash your lettuce and put it in an inflated freezer bag in the fridge to crisp up. Doing this makes all the difference to a crisp, crunchy salad.
When you get down to preparing dinner, it really is just a matter of chopping and building the salad, then spending a moment or two grilling the chicken, slicing, garnishing and hey presto - dinner is on the plate. It really is as easy as that.
I've divided the recipe up into three sections, to make it easier to see what should be used for what. I hope that proves helpful.
As for Cook's Tips, the only recommendation I have for you is that you chop up the salad before cooking the chicken. You can always put the salad back into the fridge while the chicken is cooking, so as to keep everything fresh and crunchy. Then, once the chicken is done it can rest and cool a little while you quickly plate up the salad items.
I can see that this is going to be a regular fall-back salad for blisteringly hot days. My menfolk thought it was delicious and professed themselves keen to see it again very soon!
CHICKEN SATAY SALAD (serves 3)
Ingredients :
For the chicken
3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
2 tbsp light soy sauce
2 tsp curry powder of your choice (I used a medium)
half a tsp of ground cumin
2 garlic cloves, chopped finely
2 tsp runny honey.
For the sauce
1.5 tbsp peanut butter (crunchy or smooth, it's up to you, but a sugar free version is good)
2 tbsp sweet chilli sauce
juice of 1 lime
cold water, as required.
For the salad
a selection of salad leaves (I used Romaine and Iceberg lettuces)
a large vine tomato, halved and sliced
cucumber, sliced thickly and halved (two slices/four halves per person)
small seedless green grapes (5-6 per person)
half a red onion, sliced finely
cooked beetroot wedges (four per person)
mustard & cress
fresh parsley, chopped
3 tbsp dry roasted peanuts.
Method :
At least one hour before you are due to begin cooking, marinate the chicken.
Place the soy sauce, curry powder, cumin, garlic and honey into a large bowl and mix well.
Taking each chicken breast, run your knife horizontally through from the thickest end to the thinnest, creating two thin fillets. Plate the fillets into the marinade and stir well, to ensure every little bit is coated. Cover with cling film and refrigerate until required.
When it is time to cook, begin by mixing up the satay sauce. In a medium sized bowl, add the peanut butter, sweet chilli sauce and lime juice and stir together. Continue to stir, adding small amounts of cold water, until you have a dropping consistency. Set aside.
Next, build each salad onto the plate starting with the salad leaves. Create a small mound of these in the centre of the plate.
Divide the slices of tomato between the three plates, placing the tomato around the outside of the leaves.
Dot the salad leaves with cucumber half slices, then the grapes, then sprinkle the red onion over.
Add the beetroot wedges to the side of the plate.
Sprinkle everything with the mustard & cress.
Next, lay each fillet of chicken onto a foil lined baking sheet and cook under a hot grill (or broiler, if you're in the USA) until just cooked. Turn the chicken over and cook the other side the same way. This should only take 6-7 minutes each side. Check the chicken is cooked through, by cutting into the thickest part and if you can see any sign of pinkness in the juices, put it back under the grill until the pinkness is gone.
Slice the chicken and lay it on top of the salad, while the chicken is still warm.
Drizzle spoonfuls of the satay sauce over the chicken and into the salad - be generous, as the sauce is divine.
Garnish with a sprinkle of fresh parsley and the dry roasted peanuts.
Settle down somewhere cool - and tuck in!
Printable version
Showing posts with label salad recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salad recipe. Show all posts
21 June 2017
Chicken Satay Salad - a long way from ordinary!
27 December 2015
Christmas Quinoa Salad - little bits of leftovers become lunchtime bounty
Christmas has come and gone and of course, we're left with a bit of this and a bit of that left over. The question, therefore, is how to make best use of all these lovely bits.
Now my family are singularly useless at eating up leftovers, so it very often is left to me to finish up ingredients by making them into new dishes, to be served as my lunch. A favourite for this, is the humble salad. Salads are so convenient because they're relatively quick, very often only require the minimum of cooking (maybe a boiled egg, or some quinoa - as with this salad), are remarkably satisfying to eat and are full of nutrition. Even more nutritious when you're using quinoa, of course.
The individual seeds of quinoa might be small, but they contain a good amount of dietary fibre and are packed with nutrients, including iron, B-vitamins, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and vitamin E. Goodness only knows where they put all those good things - they must have big pockets. However, the good report doesn't stop there. Quinoa is also a complete provider of protein – it contains all the amino acids we need, unlike rice and wheat. It will lower cholesterol, is gluten free and as far as I know, does not cause allergies. So provided you aren't like me and are put off (in a big way, it's taken me - literally - years to give it another go) by how the grains develop little tails (which is only the germ of the grain loosening from the main body as it softens) in the cooking, you have no reason to skip past it in the supermarket.
As a pre-Christmas surprise from my favourite people at Red Communications, I was sent three little jars of Quinoa from Peru - black, red and the standard white quinoa to sample and do something delicious with. Now I can't say I was overjoyed at the prospect (I refer you back to my being put off by the little tails), however, I am nothing if not a game girl and decided to give it another chance.
So, I present to you my oh-so-tasty (and it really is!) Christmas Quinoa Salad which single-handedly takes care of your nutrition, whilst using up an inordinate amount of leftover salad or roasted veggies and those little pieces of cold roast meat that you look at and think "not enough for a soup, too much for a sandwich".
The recipe is pretty free-form, you can use whatever salad vegetables you have on hand, or even cold roasted vegetables or cooked frozen peas. In my case we had duck for our Christmas dinner, so it is duck that I've used as the meat component. Any meat would work just perfectly, from cold roast turkey to leftover smoked salmon (I know, it's unlikely, but someone somewhere might have some!).
I didn't feel the need for a salad dressing, as the tomato juice coupled with the cranberry sauce did the job. However, feel free to add a dressing of your choice, if that's what you fancy. Oh, and a note regarding the sauce component - if you use a bird for your meat then cranberry is perfect. Cold roast pork would demand apple sauce, roast beef would need horseradish, lamb could have mint or redcurrant jelly. Pair them up according to what is traditional, or what you prefer.
As for quantity, the recipe as described will be sufficient for two as a light lunch with a soup or a small dessert or alternatively one hungry person i.e. me.
CHRISTMAS QUINOA SALAD
Ingredients :
a quarter of a cup of quinoa
a half a cup of water
half a tsp of reduced salt chicken stock powder (or just under half a reduced salt stock cube)
half a celery stick, halved lengthways and sliced
four slices of cucumber, quartered
a ripe, tasty tomato, cut into small chunks
a tiny carrot (I used a Chantenay carrot), sliced finely
three Little Gem lettuce leaves, sliced
1 tbsp cooked chestnuts, halved
1 green spring onion, sliced finely
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
100-150g cold roast meat of your choice (I used duck)
1 tsp of a tangy sauce to complement the meat (I used cranberry).
Method :
Pour the water into a small saucepan and add the stock powder. Stir to combine whilst heating until almost boiling. Add the quinoa and stir. Bring the mixture to a simmer and cook for around 15 minutes, stirring regularly, until the quinoa is soft and the water has almost evaporated.
Remove from the heat and decant into a large flattish bowl. Fluff the quinoa up with a fork, spread it out evenly and leave to cool.
In the meanwhile, prepare your vegetables, after which the quinoa should be cold.
Add the vegetables to the bowl (keeping a few green onion slices back for garnish), season with a tiny pinch of sea salt and the black pepper and lightly toss with the quinoa.
Add half of the meat and toss again, to combine.
Spread the remainder of the meat attractively across the surface of the salad and add small amounts of the sauce at strategic intervals.
Sprinkle the reserved green onion on top for garnish, take a photograph for posterity and tuck in!
(Taking the photograph is optional, of course, but if you should - do come to the Rhubarb & Ginger facebook page here and upload it. I'd love to see your salad).
Printable version
Now my family are singularly useless at eating up leftovers, so it very often is left to me to finish up ingredients by making them into new dishes, to be served as my lunch. A favourite for this, is the humble salad. Salads are so convenient because they're relatively quick, very often only require the minimum of cooking (maybe a boiled egg, or some quinoa - as with this salad), are remarkably satisfying to eat and are full of nutrition. Even more nutritious when you're using quinoa, of course.

As a pre-Christmas surprise from my favourite people at Red Communications, I was sent three little jars of Quinoa from Peru - black, red and the standard white quinoa to sample and do something delicious with. Now I can't say I was overjoyed at the prospect (I refer you back to my being put off by the little tails), however, I am nothing if not a game girl and decided to give it another chance.
So, I present to you my oh-so-tasty (and it really is!) Christmas Quinoa Salad which single-handedly takes care of your nutrition, whilst using up an inordinate amount of leftover salad or roasted veggies and those little pieces of cold roast meat that you look at and think "not enough for a soup, too much for a sandwich".
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Roast duck with sumac & tangerine |
I didn't feel the need for a salad dressing, as the tomato juice coupled with the cranberry sauce did the job. However, feel free to add a dressing of your choice, if that's what you fancy. Oh, and a note regarding the sauce component - if you use a bird for your meat then cranberry is perfect. Cold roast pork would demand apple sauce, roast beef would need horseradish, lamb could have mint or redcurrant jelly. Pair them up according to what is traditional, or what you prefer.
As for quantity, the recipe as described will be sufficient for two as a light lunch with a soup or a small dessert or alternatively one hungry person i.e. me.
CHRISTMAS QUINOA SALAD
Ingredients :
a quarter of a cup of quinoa
a half a cup of water
half a tsp of reduced salt chicken stock powder (or just under half a reduced salt stock cube)
half a celery stick, halved lengthways and sliced
four slices of cucumber, quartered
a ripe, tasty tomato, cut into small chunks
a tiny carrot (I used a Chantenay carrot), sliced finely
three Little Gem lettuce leaves, sliced
1 tbsp cooked chestnuts, halved
1 green spring onion, sliced finely
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
100-150g cold roast meat of your choice (I used duck)
1 tsp of a tangy sauce to complement the meat (I used cranberry).
Method :
Pour the water into a small saucepan and add the stock powder. Stir to combine whilst heating until almost boiling. Add the quinoa and stir. Bring the mixture to a simmer and cook for around 15 minutes, stirring regularly, until the quinoa is soft and the water has almost evaporated.
Remove from the heat and decant into a large flattish bowl. Fluff the quinoa up with a fork, spread it out evenly and leave to cool.
In the meanwhile, prepare your vegetables, after which the quinoa should be cold.
Add the vegetables to the bowl (keeping a few green onion slices back for garnish), season with a tiny pinch of sea salt and the black pepper and lightly toss with the quinoa.
Add half of the meat and toss again, to combine.
Spread the remainder of the meat attractively across the surface of the salad and add small amounts of the sauce at strategic intervals.
Sprinkle the reserved green onion on top for garnish, take a photograph for posterity and tuck in!
(Taking the photograph is optional, of course, but if you should - do come to the Rhubarb & Ginger facebook page here and upload it. I'd love to see your salad).
Printable version
30 April 2014
Sumac & Thyme Schnitzel. Bless you!
Believe it or not, this was the first time I'd ever tried to make anything remotely resembling a schnitzel. I know! Weird that it had managed to escape me for this long.
I think the main reason for it having escaped me, was that Hubby has always done the "egg and breadcrumb" dishes in the past - and I was happy to leave it that way, as his results have always been pretty spectacular. However, it occurred to me that for all that it was great to have a successful egg and breadcrumber on hand, it would also be good if I were to master the art!
Instrumental in this decision was our new Ceracraft pan. It's one of those ones with the white ceramic insides - and it is absolutely wonderful. Absolutely nothing sticks to it (or nothing so far!) and it cleans with the wipe of a cloth, no matter how much devastation you leave in it.
Not worrying about how the pan is going to behave when frying, is quite a comfort if you're a bit leery about frying, as I am. I think I might have taken the Fire Brigade's dire warnings about frying pans bursting into flames a bit too much to heart when I was younger and ultimately became too scared to break out a frying pan.
Frying was something else that Hubby used to do for me, as I was too scared to try it out (much the same as grilling things - which I've also conquered since). So it is any wonder I hadn't tried making something like Schnitzel? No, I don't think so!
Now, with my trusty Ceracraft pan with its fantastic well fitting lid (which I can clap on top, if ever it does decide to burst into flames), I feel confident enough to get on with the serious frying.
Neither Hubby nor son & heir are particularly enthusiastic about pork (when it's not in a sausage or rasher of bacon), so I bought just the one piece of pork for me - and a couple of chicken breasts for the menfolk. In fact, the butcher didn't have pork steaks that day (what's up with that then? No pork steaks? Tut!), so we bought a pork chop and I simply removed the bone before cooking. I don't recommend you try to hammer a pork chop bone flat - at least, not with a wooden meat mallet, anyway. *wink*
The chicken was simply trimmed of fat and gristle, then halved through the middle to form a "butterfly" and hammered flat. I did the same with the pork, in that I butterflied it and smacked it one with the meat mallet so that it was roughly the same thickness. Doing this is essential for this type of cooking, as you want the meat to cook at the same time. It'd be no good having to wait for the thick end to cook, while the thin end is busy going dry or getting burned. If ever I manage to lay my hands upon some British Rose Veal escalopes, you can be absolutely sure they're going to be turned into Wiener Schnitzels, quick-sharp!
So having got the meat how I wanted it to be, it was a simple matter of whipping up some eggs, seasoning some flour and working out what flavours I wanted to appear in the breadcrumbs. I made the breadcrumbs myself, from a few slices of my lovely Polish Bakery sourdough bread that is just perfect for breadcrumbing as it is really substantial and so totally not cotton wool-ish. A few minutes in the mini food processor and you're sorted, with perfect breadcrumbs. I decided to season the breadcrumbs with a combination of black pepper, celery salt, dried thyme (just a tiny pinch as I really don't like it at all - but I know that my menfolk do), dried parsley and made the majority flavour that of Sumac, for its gorgeous zestiness.
The process of dipping into flour, egg then breadcrumbs was easy enough - I was forsighted enough to do this beside the sink so had good access to hand washing facilities - and Dustbin No. 1 (Jonty dog) was there to take care of the excess egg. I was pleased to see that I'd made sufficient breadcrumbs, as it's always a bit of a lottery as to whether the breadcrumbs will make it to the end of the things you're trying to cover with them!
Following a half an hour in the fridge to firm up, they went into the pan with a mixture of goat butter and rapeseed oil on a moderate heat for around 10 minutes each side. Make sure to not fiddle about with them - just leave them to cook and let the crumb set, then become crisp. If you fiddle about with them, keep turning them or lifting them up, they will find it very hard to become crisp. You can see from the very edge how they're doing - and once that edge starts to become golden, you know you're onto a winner.
I sneaked one of the smaller chicken schnitzels onto my plate, just so that I could compare and contrast. I made these smaller ones from the chicken tenders - or inner fillets - and they were a perfect little size for a smaller appetite. The pork version was a lot more robust and required a little bit longer in the cooking to become tender, however the flavour was a touch above the chicken versions. The chicken ones were super-tender and very tasty - the seasoning in the breadcrumbs was more obvious with the chicken, so bear that in mind when you are choosing whether to use pork or chicken.
The flavour of both was really good - and the meat in both cases retained its moistness, largely due to the speed at which they cook and the flour/egg mixture sealing the juices in. I can't wait to make some more, but this time I might have a go at the Southern Fried style of flavour combination.
I served the schnitzels with buttered new potatoes, a mixed salad and a very nice minty mixed bean salad that I found in Asda. However, for a speedier supper, I should imagine they'd be great with just chips, too!
So come on, put your big girl/boy pants on and have a crack at egg and breadcrumbing, followed by a bit of shallow frying. You know you want to!
SUMAC & THYME SCHNITZEL (serves 3)
Ingredients :
3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts or 3 boneless pork steaks
2-3 tbsp plain flour
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
1 large egg (have another handy, just in case you need it)
4-5 slices of tasty bread, slightly stale, breadcrumbed
1 tsp celery salt
1 tsp dried parsley
half a tsp dried thyme
1 heaped tsp ground sumac
3 tsp rapeseed oil (required separately)
3 tsp butter (required separately).
Method :
1. Well before you require the meat for cooking, prepare it for coating with the seasoned flour, egg and breadcrumbs. Take each steak or breast and cut through it down a long side, opening it out and effectively butterflying it.
2. Place onto a piece of cling film - opened out in the butterfly shape - and sprinkle with a couple of drops of water. This helps the cling film not to stick. Using a blunt instrument - or a meat hammer on the blunt side - gently but firmly hammer the meat until just a quarter of an inch thick, or less.
3. Place onto a plate and cover with cling film. Continue to the next breast or steak and repeat, placing it on top of the cling film and covering with another piece of film. Continue until all pieces are butterflied, hammered to an even thickness and stacked, then cover the lot with film and refrigerate.
4. About an hour and a half before you are due to cook, remove the meat from the fridge and prepare the three coating bowls - which should be a decent size so as to fit each schnitzel in without overlapping the side.
5. Into one bowl, place the flour and season well with salt and pepper. Mix the seasoning in.
6. Crack an egg into the second bowl and whisk with a fork.
7. Add the breadcrumbs, a good amount of black pepper, the celery salt, parsley, thyme and sumac to the last bowl and mix well.
8. Take the first breast or steak and gently lay it on top of the flour, then turn so that both sides are well coated. You may need to press down a little, to ensure every inch gets a coating.
9. Move on to the egg and lay the meat into the beaten egg, again turn to achieve an even coating, but don't wash the flour off!
10. Straight away, lay the meat onto the seasoned breadcrumbs and lightly press down to convince the crumbs to stick. Once again, turn and repeat to achieve an even coating of crumbs.
11. Place each schnitzel onto a plate or baking tray (I covered a tray with cling film and used that) and refrigerate for an hour.
12. Once it comes to cooking, take a large frying pan - non-stick are best - and heat 1 teaspoonful of the oil on a moderate heat, adding 1 teaspoonful of the butter just before you add the schnitzel.
13. Once the butter is frothy, add the schnitzel to the pan and leave it alone! Don't be tempted to shuffle it around the pan, or to turn it too soon. You want the coating to achieve a crispy shell before you turn the schnitzel and cook the other side.
14. Cooking usually takes around 7-8 minutes each side, but to check simply cut through the thickest part of each schnitzel and pull the edges of the cut aside so that you can see a) what colour the meat is, and b) what colour the juices are. If there is any sign of any pinkness, turn the schnitzel and continue cooking until all traces of pink have gone.
15. Place onto some kitchen paper and keep warm whilst you cook the remainder of the schnitzels. It is best not to stack the schnitzels or the ones at the bottom of the stack will go soggy whilst they are waiting. Keep them separate to retain the crispiness of the coating.
Serve with new potatoes, or potato salad and a garden salad.
Printable version
I think the main reason for it having escaped me, was that Hubby has always done the "egg and breadcrumb" dishes in the past - and I was happy to leave it that way, as his results have always been pretty spectacular. However, it occurred to me that for all that it was great to have a successful egg and breadcrumber on hand, it would also be good if I were to master the art!
Instrumental in this decision was our new Ceracraft pan. It's one of those ones with the white ceramic insides - and it is absolutely wonderful. Absolutely nothing sticks to it (or nothing so far!) and it cleans with the wipe of a cloth, no matter how much devastation you leave in it.
Not worrying about how the pan is going to behave when frying, is quite a comfort if you're a bit leery about frying, as I am. I think I might have taken the Fire Brigade's dire warnings about frying pans bursting into flames a bit too much to heart when I was younger and ultimately became too scared to break out a frying pan.
Frying was something else that Hubby used to do for me, as I was too scared to try it out (much the same as grilling things - which I've also conquered since). So it is any wonder I hadn't tried making something like Schnitzel? No, I don't think so!
Now, with my trusty Ceracraft pan with its fantastic well fitting lid (which I can clap on top, if ever it does decide to burst into flames), I feel confident enough to get on with the serious frying.
Neither Hubby nor son & heir are particularly enthusiastic about pork (when it's not in a sausage or rasher of bacon), so I bought just the one piece of pork for me - and a couple of chicken breasts for the menfolk. In fact, the butcher didn't have pork steaks that day (what's up with that then? No pork steaks? Tut!), so we bought a pork chop and I simply removed the bone before cooking. I don't recommend you try to hammer a pork chop bone flat - at least, not with a wooden meat mallet, anyway. *wink*
The chicken was simply trimmed of fat and gristle, then halved through the middle to form a "butterfly" and hammered flat. I did the same with the pork, in that I butterflied it and smacked it one with the meat mallet so that it was roughly the same thickness. Doing this is essential for this type of cooking, as you want the meat to cook at the same time. It'd be no good having to wait for the thick end to cook, while the thin end is busy going dry or getting burned. If ever I manage to lay my hands upon some British Rose Veal escalopes, you can be absolutely sure they're going to be turned into Wiener Schnitzels, quick-sharp!
So having got the meat how I wanted it to be, it was a simple matter of whipping up some eggs, seasoning some flour and working out what flavours I wanted to appear in the breadcrumbs. I made the breadcrumbs myself, from a few slices of my lovely Polish Bakery sourdough bread that is just perfect for breadcrumbing as it is really substantial and so totally not cotton wool-ish. A few minutes in the mini food processor and you're sorted, with perfect breadcrumbs. I decided to season the breadcrumbs with a combination of black pepper, celery salt, dried thyme (just a tiny pinch as I really don't like it at all - but I know that my menfolk do), dried parsley and made the majority flavour that of Sumac, for its gorgeous zestiness.
The process of dipping into flour, egg then breadcrumbs was easy enough - I was forsighted enough to do this beside the sink so had good access to hand washing facilities - and Dustbin No. 1 (Jonty dog) was there to take care of the excess egg. I was pleased to see that I'd made sufficient breadcrumbs, as it's always a bit of a lottery as to whether the breadcrumbs will make it to the end of the things you're trying to cover with them!
Following a half an hour in the fridge to firm up, they went into the pan with a mixture of goat butter and rapeseed oil on a moderate heat for around 10 minutes each side. Make sure to not fiddle about with them - just leave them to cook and let the crumb set, then become crisp. If you fiddle about with them, keep turning them or lifting them up, they will find it very hard to become crisp. You can see from the very edge how they're doing - and once that edge starts to become golden, you know you're onto a winner.
I sneaked one of the smaller chicken schnitzels onto my plate, just so that I could compare and contrast. I made these smaller ones from the chicken tenders - or inner fillets - and they were a perfect little size for a smaller appetite. The pork version was a lot more robust and required a little bit longer in the cooking to become tender, however the flavour was a touch above the chicken versions. The chicken ones were super-tender and very tasty - the seasoning in the breadcrumbs was more obvious with the chicken, so bear that in mind when you are choosing whether to use pork or chicken.

I served the schnitzels with buttered new potatoes, a mixed salad and a very nice minty mixed bean salad that I found in Asda. However, for a speedier supper, I should imagine they'd be great with just chips, too!
So come on, put your big girl/boy pants on and have a crack at egg and breadcrumbing, followed by a bit of shallow frying. You know you want to!
SUMAC & THYME SCHNITZEL (serves 3)
Ingredients :
3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts or 3 boneless pork steaks
2-3 tbsp plain flour
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
1 large egg (have another handy, just in case you need it)
4-5 slices of tasty bread, slightly stale, breadcrumbed
1 tsp celery salt
1 tsp dried parsley
half a tsp dried thyme
1 heaped tsp ground sumac
3 tsp rapeseed oil (required separately)
3 tsp butter (required separately).
Method :
1. Well before you require the meat for cooking, prepare it for coating with the seasoned flour, egg and breadcrumbs. Take each steak or breast and cut through it down a long side, opening it out and effectively butterflying it.
2. Place onto a piece of cling film - opened out in the butterfly shape - and sprinkle with a couple of drops of water. This helps the cling film not to stick. Using a blunt instrument - or a meat hammer on the blunt side - gently but firmly hammer the meat until just a quarter of an inch thick, or less.
3. Place onto a plate and cover with cling film. Continue to the next breast or steak and repeat, placing it on top of the cling film and covering with another piece of film. Continue until all pieces are butterflied, hammered to an even thickness and stacked, then cover the lot with film and refrigerate.
4. About an hour and a half before you are due to cook, remove the meat from the fridge and prepare the three coating bowls - which should be a decent size so as to fit each schnitzel in without overlapping the side.
5. Into one bowl, place the flour and season well with salt and pepper. Mix the seasoning in.
6. Crack an egg into the second bowl and whisk with a fork.
7. Add the breadcrumbs, a good amount of black pepper, the celery salt, parsley, thyme and sumac to the last bowl and mix well.
8. Take the first breast or steak and gently lay it on top of the flour, then turn so that both sides are well coated. You may need to press down a little, to ensure every inch gets a coating.
9. Move on to the egg and lay the meat into the beaten egg, again turn to achieve an even coating, but don't wash the flour off!
10. Straight away, lay the meat onto the seasoned breadcrumbs and lightly press down to convince the crumbs to stick. Once again, turn and repeat to achieve an even coating of crumbs.
11. Place each schnitzel onto a plate or baking tray (I covered a tray with cling film and used that) and refrigerate for an hour.
12. Once it comes to cooking, take a large frying pan - non-stick are best - and heat 1 teaspoonful of the oil on a moderate heat, adding 1 teaspoonful of the butter just before you add the schnitzel.
13. Once the butter is frothy, add the schnitzel to the pan and leave it alone! Don't be tempted to shuffle it around the pan, or to turn it too soon. You want the coating to achieve a crispy shell before you turn the schnitzel and cook the other side.
14. Cooking usually takes around 7-8 minutes each side, but to check simply cut through the thickest part of each schnitzel and pull the edges of the cut aside so that you can see a) what colour the meat is, and b) what colour the juices are. If there is any sign of any pinkness, turn the schnitzel and continue cooking until all traces of pink have gone.
15. Place onto some kitchen paper and keep warm whilst you cook the remainder of the schnitzels. It is best not to stack the schnitzels or the ones at the bottom of the stack will go soggy whilst they are waiting. Keep them separate to retain the crispiness of the coating.
Serve with new potatoes, or potato salad and a garden salad.
Printable version
10 December 2013
Kievs, devilment, soup and salads ... meal planning in reverse!
I thought, because I haven't posted much in the way of anything just lately, that I'd give a quick rundown on what has come out of my kitchen recently. With both successes and failures - sometimes both at once, depending on everyone's preferences - it makes an interesting mix!
So let's start with one which everyone liked at least one part of - my devilled sausages. I served these little lovelies (see recipe here) with some home made coleslaw (white cabbage, carrot & onion all sliced finely, mixed with some raisins, Greek yoghurt & mayonnaise), beetroot and a really tasty rice salad. The rice salad was made with a simple mix of cooked cooled white basmati rice, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, sweetcorn, chopped rocket and small cubes of cheddar cheese. Once a lovely dressing had been added, along with seasoning to taste (I used a Suzanne's fat free dressing of blackberry, cardamom & chilli), the whole thing came together beautifully. You can guarantee that even with a rice salad disliking teenager at the table, the sausages and coleslaw will go - and some rice salad went along with it, so I call that a success.
Travelling back on the school run one morning, hubby and I both were overcome with a mushroom lust. Fortunately Sainsbury's is en route, so a quick stop for supplies meant we could have mushrooms on toast for brunch upon our return. Yum.
Cooked until softened in a little butter, then seasoned with salt and pepper and given a quick splosh with a little mushroom ketchup, these little lovelies were gorgeous on some sourdough bread we had left over. Toasted and buttered, it was simple and delicious.
Many moons ago, we made the mistake of introducing our son to chicken Kiev. Not home made chicken Kiev, but the supermarkets' own version of chicken Kiev - one which is made of munched up and stuck back together again chicken, made into a dome with a tiny teaspoonful of garlic butter inside the cavernous waste that is each Kiev's centre. He loved them then and every so often he requests them again.
Now for all that I have described them with an element of disdain, it is fond disdain as I really quite enjoy a Kiev myself. It takes me back to when I had the horses and would come in at 9pm starving hungry. I'd throw a couple of Kiev's in the oven and a packet of savoury rice into the microwave and 20-30 minutes later, sit down to a hot dinner. I thoroughly enjoyed the Kiev dinner that hubby rustled together, as pictured above. I know - I should be ashamed of myself and somewhere under the "Mmmmnnn...", I am. Honest.
Surely everyone likes a jacket potato, don't they? Even my hubby likes a twice baked Jacket Potato (more on those, in another post!). In this instance, however, I was suddenly overcome with the desire for mackerel and as I had some salad left over, it made sense to combine the lot for lunch. The mackerel came out of one of these little tins of mackerel fillets, but I'm fairly sure it still qualifies as being good for you! In fact, if you totted up the inflammatory -v- non-inflammatory points, just putting the mackerel on the plate cancelled out any non-inflammatory points the remainder might have had! A scrummy lunch.
So, how do you like the look of my thick chicken and vegetable soup? It was intended to be chicken and dumpling soup, however like Topsy it kind of grew in the making and it seemed to us that dumplings would be overkill.
I basically emptied the vegetable drawer of the fridge onto the tray upon which I carry ingredients about the kitchen - and only put back things like cucumber and beetroot. Following a quick rummage in the freezer, which gleaned the sweetcorn and peas, I was good to go.
The chicken was pan fried to a light golden colour, then shredded and finished its cooking in the soup stock. Done this way, you gain flavour from the caramelisation on the chicken, but retain the softness that is inherent with chicken breast.
I included such lovely winter warmers as pearl barley and red lentils for thickeners and of course used the lovely Essential Cuisine Chicken Stock as the stock base. Making the soup was a simple matter of chopping the vegetables to a suitably small size and putting them into the pot in the right order, depending on how long each took to cook! I started off with the classic onion and garlic, followed by the celery, carrot and potato, then the stock, barley and lentils - finishing up with the softer vegetables and herbs. With some crusty sourdough bread, the soup made a lovely hearty meal and it truly is the kind of soup that you can throw just about anything at.
Lastly - for this instalment, anyway - we have the sad case of the Merguez sausage. Oh dear, what a tale of uncertainties, changes of mind and mistaken identities. You see, hubby had a risotto in mind. It involved lamb and possibly preserved lemon. At this stage, it was just "in mind", you know - evolving. I suggested to him that Merguez sausage might be good as the lamb component. I knew that Asda do 4 or 5 Merguez sausages within the right price range and also knew that they were, to a large part, lamb. However, what I didn't realise then was that Asda's Merguez sausages were, to a large part, beef. ~rolls eyes~ I suppose they have to keep the price down somehow and there are cuts of beef that are a lot more economical to use than lamb. However, being this charitable is with the benefit of hindsight. That wasn't what I was saying once they were in my fridge and I'd read the ingredients list.
Being such a large part beef, made them useless for hubby's risotto. So there they were, sitting in the fridge with no job to do. Not only that, but because we'd never had them before and the ingredients list was unexpected, we had no idea how they tasted to be able to include them in a recipe somewhere. There was only one thing to be done - cook them and eat them for lunch with a salad.
As it turned out, they were entirely wrong for the risotto hubby had evolving in his head - but would be great for another kind of risotto some other day. They leach a gorgeous spicily flavoured, coloured oil once heated up - in the same way that chorizo does - and have a hint of lambiness in their flavour, but to be honest, I'd have been hard pressed to have told you what meat they tasted of. They are certainly spicy - but not in a chilli sort of way. More of a paprika and cumin sort of way that would make them ideal for all sorts of dishes. So now we know - and I'm sure one day they'll appear in a more creative concept than beside some salad!
So just to whet your appetite, for my next instalment of meal planning in reverse, we've got some BBQ, more mackerel, that risotto and an awesome roast pork dinner amongst other things. Can't wait!
So let's start with one which everyone liked at least one part of - my devilled sausages. I served these little lovelies (see recipe here) with some home made coleslaw (white cabbage, carrot & onion all sliced finely, mixed with some raisins, Greek yoghurt & mayonnaise), beetroot and a really tasty rice salad. The rice salad was made with a simple mix of cooked cooled white basmati rice, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, sweetcorn, chopped rocket and small cubes of cheddar cheese. Once a lovely dressing had been added, along with seasoning to taste (I used a Suzanne's fat free dressing of blackberry, cardamom & chilli), the whole thing came together beautifully. You can guarantee that even with a rice salad disliking teenager at the table, the sausages and coleslaw will go - and some rice salad went along with it, so I call that a success.
Travelling back on the school run one morning, hubby and I both were overcome with a mushroom lust. Fortunately Sainsbury's is en route, so a quick stop for supplies meant we could have mushrooms on toast for brunch upon our return. Yum.
Cooked until softened in a little butter, then seasoned with salt and pepper and given a quick splosh with a little mushroom ketchup, these little lovelies were gorgeous on some sourdough bread we had left over. Toasted and buttered, it was simple and delicious.

Now for all that I have described them with an element of disdain, it is fond disdain as I really quite enjoy a Kiev myself. It takes me back to when I had the horses and would come in at 9pm starving hungry. I'd throw a couple of Kiev's in the oven and a packet of savoury rice into the microwave and 20-30 minutes later, sit down to a hot dinner. I thoroughly enjoyed the Kiev dinner that hubby rustled together, as pictured above. I know - I should be ashamed of myself and somewhere under the "Mmmmnnn...", I am. Honest.
Surely everyone likes a jacket potato, don't they? Even my hubby likes a twice baked Jacket Potato (more on those, in another post!). In this instance, however, I was suddenly overcome with the desire for mackerel and as I had some salad left over, it made sense to combine the lot for lunch. The mackerel came out of one of these little tins of mackerel fillets, but I'm fairly sure it still qualifies as being good for you! In fact, if you totted up the inflammatory -v- non-inflammatory points, just putting the mackerel on the plate cancelled out any non-inflammatory points the remainder might have had! A scrummy lunch.
So, how do you like the look of my thick chicken and vegetable soup? It was intended to be chicken and dumpling soup, however like Topsy it kind of grew in the making and it seemed to us that dumplings would be overkill.
I basically emptied the vegetable drawer of the fridge onto the tray upon which I carry ingredients about the kitchen - and only put back things like cucumber and beetroot. Following a quick rummage in the freezer, which gleaned the sweetcorn and peas, I was good to go.
The chicken was pan fried to a light golden colour, then shredded and finished its cooking in the soup stock. Done this way, you gain flavour from the caramelisation on the chicken, but retain the softness that is inherent with chicken breast.
I included such lovely winter warmers as pearl barley and red lentils for thickeners and of course used the lovely Essential Cuisine Chicken Stock as the stock base. Making the soup was a simple matter of chopping the vegetables to a suitably small size and putting them into the pot in the right order, depending on how long each took to cook! I started off with the classic onion and garlic, followed by the celery, carrot and potato, then the stock, barley and lentils - finishing up with the softer vegetables and herbs. With some crusty sourdough bread, the soup made a lovely hearty meal and it truly is the kind of soup that you can throw just about anything at.
Lastly - for this instalment, anyway - we have the sad case of the Merguez sausage. Oh dear, what a tale of uncertainties, changes of mind and mistaken identities. You see, hubby had a risotto in mind. It involved lamb and possibly preserved lemon. At this stage, it was just "in mind", you know - evolving. I suggested to him that Merguez sausage might be good as the lamb component. I knew that Asda do 4 or 5 Merguez sausages within the right price range and also knew that they were, to a large part, lamb. However, what I didn't realise then was that Asda's Merguez sausages were, to a large part, beef. ~rolls eyes~ I suppose they have to keep the price down somehow and there are cuts of beef that are a lot more economical to use than lamb. However, being this charitable is with the benefit of hindsight. That wasn't what I was saying once they were in my fridge and I'd read the ingredients list.
Being such a large part beef, made them useless for hubby's risotto. So there they were, sitting in the fridge with no job to do. Not only that, but because we'd never had them before and the ingredients list was unexpected, we had no idea how they tasted to be able to include them in a recipe somewhere. There was only one thing to be done - cook them and eat them for lunch with a salad.
As it turned out, they were entirely wrong for the risotto hubby had evolving in his head - but would be great for another kind of risotto some other day. They leach a gorgeous spicily flavoured, coloured oil once heated up - in the same way that chorizo does - and have a hint of lambiness in their flavour, but to be honest, I'd have been hard pressed to have told you what meat they tasted of. They are certainly spicy - but not in a chilli sort of way. More of a paprika and cumin sort of way that would make them ideal for all sorts of dishes. So now we know - and I'm sure one day they'll appear in a more creative concept than beside some salad!
So just to whet your appetite, for my next instalment of meal planning in reverse, we've got some BBQ, more mackerel, that risotto and an awesome roast pork dinner amongst other things. Can't wait!
19 October 2013
Turkey & Bacon Meatloaf Open Sandwich with cheese!
Think "open sandwich" - and you'll be in the right area.
Hubby and I were pondering over what we had in the fridge that needed using and what we could do with these various things. Having been blogging for the last three or four years - yes, it's been THAT long - we've got quite good at doing this kind of thing. When hubby first suggested an open sandwich affair with the bacon, I pricked up my ears. I've not done too many open sandwiches - and certainly not dinner varieties.
We'd been discussing meatloaves, as I recently made some Forfar Bridies (similar to a Cornish Pasty, except with no vegetables) that failed miserably - but the filling of them would have stood up against a fair amount of competition, as a meatloaf. However, bacon meatloaf? Bacon and what, though? Not sausagemeat - too potentially salty and greasy. Pork mince was mooted first, but then I remembered some meatballs I'd made with turkey mince and how successful they were. Turkey mince has an inherent sweetness that would go nicely with the smoked bacon and it also has the ability to stick together, without encouragement such as egg.
I decided to do a little bit of research on what other people have put into their turkey meatloaves and decide from there what alternative ingredients to use.
So when hubby suggested we use the meatloaf on an open sandwich type affair, it sounded very interesting indeed. We discussed whether to use a cut loaf like soda bread for the bread part, but decided the open texture of a ciabatta would be better suited to the close texture of a meatloaf - and even better, had a sudden brainwave to use a Leerdammer cheese melted on top which would serve to bring the whole sandwich together. With something tasty under the meatloaf, it sounded like we were onto a winner.
Well, I made it this evening (actually, I started at about 3 o'clock this afternoon) and it was really good. No, really, really good.
The meatloaf ingredients were turkey mince, bacon (half minced finely, half chopped roughly), a small amount of breadcrumbs, a small amount of parmesan cheese, a red onion, a clove of garlic, some fresh parsley, some dried thyme, white pepper and four mushrooms. I didn't use any salt at all, as with the bacon and parmesan cheese, I reckoned (and I was right) that there was already enough salt in the mix.
I used the food processor to finely chop (almost down to a paste), the onion, garlic, parsley, tail end of the smoked bacon rashers, thyme, white pepper and mushrooms. This then got mixed with the breadcrumbs, roughly chopped bacon (for texture), turkey mince and parmesan cheese. Packed into a silver foil lined one pound loaf tin and cooked for an hour in a hot oven, it was smelling wonderful. I then drained the juice from the loaf tin and turned the loaf out into a roasting tin - upside down - and gave it another 20 minutes in the hot oven, just to give the outside edge some colour and dry the loaf out a little.
Hubby had some red onion marmalade on his toasted ciabatta, but son & heir and myself erred on the side of caution and went for a zig zag of tomato ketchup. With the meatloaf slices laid on top and the cheese melted over, it really was so good.
Hence, the next time you're thinking "meatloaf" and decide against it because it's boring. Think again and put it on some ciabatta toast with melted cheese. Awesome.
I served ours with some home made coleslaw and watercress salad. Beautiful.
The very best bit is that we've just under half the meatloaf left, for lunch tomorrow. Yum. The following recipe feeds three people, so remember to grill more ciabatta rolls and provide more Leerdammer cheese if you're making for more, or extra hungry people. The meatloaf itself would happily make eight open sandwiches.
TURKEY & BACON MEATLOAF OPEN CIABATTA SANDWICH
Ingredients :
1 red onion, cut into chunky pieces
1 clove garlic, chopped finely
1 small bunch fresh parsley (to make 2 tbsp)
400g smoked bacon rashers
1 tsp dried thyme
4 chestnut mushrooms, cut into quarters
half a tsp white pepper
2 large handfuls white breadcrumbs
20g finely grated parmesan cheese
500g minced turkey
2 ciabatta rolls, each cut into two equal halves
1 tsp red onion marmalade or tomato ketchup
4 slices of Leerdammer cheese.
Method :
1. Take the bacon and trim away the majority of the fat, which should be discarded. Separate the tail (streaky) end from the eye (lean) part and finely chop the tail end. Cut the eye part into three long slices, then chop into decent size squares so that they will provide some texture to the meatloaf.
2. Into a food processor, place the red onion pieces, chopped garlic, parsley (broken into a manageable size), thyme, the finely chopped tail end of the bacon rashers, mushroom pieces and pepper. Chop until the mixture begins to resemble a paste, but stop just as that happens.
3. Tip the paste into a bowl and add the breadcrumbs, parmesan cheese and turkey mince. Scrunch the ingredients together with your hands, until thoroughly mixed.
4. Decant into a one pound loaf tin, previously lined with tin foil to make removing the meatloaf much easier.
5. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 200degC/400degF/Gas 6 for one hour.
6. Once the time is up, gently tip the meatloaf tin and pour off the liquid. Then gently remove the loaf from the tin - using the silver foil to lift it into a roasting tin. Flip the meatloaf onto its head and replace into the oven for a further 20 minutes, to brown the outside and dry the loaf out a little.
7. While the meatloaf is finishing cooking, grill the four halves of ciabatta roll and coat with your choice of either red onion marmalade or tomato ketchup.
8. Once the meatloaf is baked, slice and lay a slice (or more) onto each half of roll.
9. Cover the meatloaf with a slice of Leerdammer cheese, then place under the hot grill for 2-3 minutes, just enough to melt the cheese.
Serve with a watercress salad and coleslaw.
Printable version
Hubby and I were pondering over what we had in the fridge that needed using and what we could do with these various things. Having been blogging for the last three or four years - yes, it's been THAT long - we've got quite good at doing this kind of thing. When hubby first suggested an open sandwich affair with the bacon, I pricked up my ears. I've not done too many open sandwiches - and certainly not dinner varieties.
We'd been discussing meatloaves, as I recently made some Forfar Bridies (similar to a Cornish Pasty, except with no vegetables) that failed miserably - but the filling of them would have stood up against a fair amount of competition, as a meatloaf. However, bacon meatloaf? Bacon and what, though? Not sausagemeat - too potentially salty and greasy. Pork mince was mooted first, but then I remembered some meatballs I'd made with turkey mince and how successful they were. Turkey mince has an inherent sweetness that would go nicely with the smoked bacon and it also has the ability to stick together, without encouragement such as egg.

So when hubby suggested we use the meatloaf on an open sandwich type affair, it sounded very interesting indeed. We discussed whether to use a cut loaf like soda bread for the bread part, but decided the open texture of a ciabatta would be better suited to the close texture of a meatloaf - and even better, had a sudden brainwave to use a Leerdammer cheese melted on top which would serve to bring the whole sandwich together. With something tasty under the meatloaf, it sounded like we were onto a winner.
Well, I made it this evening (actually, I started at about 3 o'clock this afternoon) and it was really good. No, really, really good.
The meatloaf ingredients were turkey mince, bacon (half minced finely, half chopped roughly), a small amount of breadcrumbs, a small amount of parmesan cheese, a red onion, a clove of garlic, some fresh parsley, some dried thyme, white pepper and four mushrooms. I didn't use any salt at all, as with the bacon and parmesan cheese, I reckoned (and I was right) that there was already enough salt in the mix.
I used the food processor to finely chop (almost down to a paste), the onion, garlic, parsley, tail end of the smoked bacon rashers, thyme, white pepper and mushrooms. This then got mixed with the breadcrumbs, roughly chopped bacon (for texture), turkey mince and parmesan cheese. Packed into a silver foil lined one pound loaf tin and cooked for an hour in a hot oven, it was smelling wonderful. I then drained the juice from the loaf tin and turned the loaf out into a roasting tin - upside down - and gave it another 20 minutes in the hot oven, just to give the outside edge some colour and dry the loaf out a little.
Hubby had some red onion marmalade on his toasted ciabatta, but son & heir and myself erred on the side of caution and went for a zig zag of tomato ketchup. With the meatloaf slices laid on top and the cheese melted over, it really was so good.
Hence, the next time you're thinking "meatloaf" and decide against it because it's boring. Think again and put it on some ciabatta toast with melted cheese. Awesome.
I served ours with some home made coleslaw and watercress salad. Beautiful.
The very best bit is that we've just under half the meatloaf left, for lunch tomorrow. Yum. The following recipe feeds three people, so remember to grill more ciabatta rolls and provide more Leerdammer cheese if you're making for more, or extra hungry people. The meatloaf itself would happily make eight open sandwiches.
TURKEY & BACON MEATLOAF OPEN CIABATTA SANDWICH
Ingredients :
1 red onion, cut into chunky pieces
1 clove garlic, chopped finely
1 small bunch fresh parsley (to make 2 tbsp)
400g smoked bacon rashers
1 tsp dried thyme
4 chestnut mushrooms, cut into quarters
half a tsp white pepper
2 large handfuls white breadcrumbs
20g finely grated parmesan cheese
500g minced turkey
2 ciabatta rolls, each cut into two equal halves
1 tsp red onion marmalade or tomato ketchup
4 slices of Leerdammer cheese.
Method :
1. Take the bacon and trim away the majority of the fat, which should be discarded. Separate the tail (streaky) end from the eye (lean) part and finely chop the tail end. Cut the eye part into three long slices, then chop into decent size squares so that they will provide some texture to the meatloaf.
2. Into a food processor, place the red onion pieces, chopped garlic, parsley (broken into a manageable size), thyme, the finely chopped tail end of the bacon rashers, mushroom pieces and pepper. Chop until the mixture begins to resemble a paste, but stop just as that happens.
3. Tip the paste into a bowl and add the breadcrumbs, parmesan cheese and turkey mince. Scrunch the ingredients together with your hands, until thoroughly mixed.
4. Decant into a one pound loaf tin, previously lined with tin foil to make removing the meatloaf much easier.
5. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 200degC/400degF/Gas 6 for one hour.
6. Once the time is up, gently tip the meatloaf tin and pour off the liquid. Then gently remove the loaf from the tin - using the silver foil to lift it into a roasting tin. Flip the meatloaf onto its head and replace into the oven for a further 20 minutes, to brown the outside and dry the loaf out a little.
7. While the meatloaf is finishing cooking, grill the four halves of ciabatta roll and coat with your choice of either red onion marmalade or tomato ketchup.
8. Once the meatloaf is baked, slice and lay a slice (or more) onto each half of roll.
9. Cover the meatloaf with a slice of Leerdammer cheese, then place under the hot grill for 2-3 minutes, just enough to melt the cheese.
Serve with a watercress salad and coleslaw.
Printable version
13 March 2013
Lime Pork Chops with Fattoush - pushing the comfort zones
I knew this recipe would push our respective comfort zones in many different ways. However, because we respect Yotam Ottolenghi so much and love his food, it just had to be done.
I hear you asking "why?". Good question. Well, you see, Yotam Ottolenghi seems to have the capacity to put combinations of flavours together that go from the unusual to the outrageous - yet of his recipes that we've tried, they always work. Bearing that in mind, his latest t.v. offering - where he travels the mediterranean cooking locally sourced food - had our jaws hanging in disbelief at the, frankly, gorgeous dishes he seemed to be creating out of what amounted to very little.
So if you put together the magic of Ottolenghi, with the mediterranean (one of our favourite styles of food) and economy - you can probably see how he's talking our language.
Now before I say anything else, let me say that I would have infinitely preferred to have had some fat pilchards (or any other type of fish) instead of the pork. However, because fish seems to have become more expensive than saffron just lately, we had to go for something cheaper - and wound up with the pork steaks.
As for why it would push our comfort zones, well, hubby isn't good with meat that is likely to be either fatty, or tough. So pork steaks cooked on the griddle pan aren't his first choice. I trimmed the majority of the fat from his, but the firmness of the texture turned out not to be to his liking. He loved the flavour, but not the texture. As for son and heir, well, I know that he generally dislikes having dressing on his salads. As the whole point of Fattoush is to present it with dressing, I reckoned this would be a challenge for him - and indeed I was right. However, he soldiered on and as the whole lot disappeared, I was hopeful. He commented that it was "okay, but I could have done without the dressing", so we have to be grateful for small mercies.
For me, my big challenge was going to be wet bread. If there's one thing that makes me want to heave - it's wet bread. I have some vague memory of a calamitous accident between a loaf of bread left too close to defrosting meat and an ensuing sandwich - but it's probably best we don't look too closely at that one. With this salad, you grill the pitta bread and break it into pieces, then scatter it through the salad (together with the juicy salad vegetables - alarm!) and cover the lot in a yoghurt/buttermilk dressing (double alarm!). So I was seriously crossing my fingers that I could get over the wet bread thing. Much to my surprise - and because the Fattoush has to be made and served immediately with no waiting - the pitta pieces remained largely crispy and robust, with no sogginess and there was absolutely nothing offputting about this salad whatsoever.
In fact, the Fattoush was what is commonly known as a screaming success with both myself and with hubby. As with a lot of Ottolenghi recipes - although this one is from Sami Tamimi's mother - it's the juxtaposition of the fresh herbs with the remainder of the ingredients that absolutely makes the dish. The sweetness of the cherry tomatoes, the acidity of the vine ripened larger tomatoes, the pepperiness and crunch of the radish along with the intensity of the spring onion, all soothed and made cosy by the creaminess of the yoghurt/buttermilk dressing and the robustness of the pitta. Flipping gorgeous.
Both son & heir and I really enjoyed the lime pork chops and I have to say that cooking them on the griddle pan made such a difference to the flavour. I can imagine they'd be nice cooked just plain "under the grill" (or broiler, if you're in the States), but the charring provided by the griddle pan was just the proverbial business.
Mind you, I still think that a lovely piece of fish would have been better.
LIME PORK CHOPS WITH FATTOUSH (serves 3)
Ingredients :
3 pork chops, trimmed of the majority of their fat
3 limes, zested and juiced
olive or rapeseed oil
200g Greek yoghurt
100ml full fat milk
1 tsp lemon juice, plus 3 tbsp lemon juice
3 pitta bread
250g cherry tomatoes, quartered
1 large vine ripened tomato, cut into small cubes
100g radishes, sliced finely
200g cucumber (small ones, ideally), seeds removed, cut into small cubes
2 spring onions,thinly sliced
15g fresh mint, roughly chopped
20g parsley, roughly chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped and crushed
1 little gem lettuce, cut into strips (or a section of iceberg lettuce)
60ml olive or rapeseed oil
2 tbsp cider vinegar
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
Method :
1. Some hours before you'll be wanting them (in the morning is good) place the pork chops into the zest and juice of the limes, a dash of oil and season well. Leave them to marinade, covered, in the fridge.
2. When you are ready to make the meal, cook the pork chops on a griddle pan or barbecue for some 5-10 minutes on each side (depending on how thick they are) until cooked through. Place on a warmed plate, covered, to rest.
3. Into a small bowl, pour the milk and add the teaspoonful of lemon juice. Stir well and leave for 5-10 minutes. Then add the Greek yoghurt and mix well.
4. Grill the pitta bread on the griddle pan, so that you get the lovely charred markings. Leave to cool and break into rough pieces.
5. Into a huge bowl, add the tomatoes, radishes, cucumber, onions, mint, parsley, garlic and lettuce. Toss to combine.
6. Sprinkle in the pieces of toasted pitta bread and toss again.
7. Add the oil and vinegar to the yoghurt mix, season well and stir to combine. Then pour half onto the salad and toss, then add the remainder and toss again. The salad should be very well covered.
8. Serve the pork chops with the salad alongside.
Printable version
I hear you asking "why?". Good question. Well, you see, Yotam Ottolenghi seems to have the capacity to put combinations of flavours together that go from the unusual to the outrageous - yet of his recipes that we've tried, they always work. Bearing that in mind, his latest t.v. offering - where he travels the mediterranean cooking locally sourced food - had our jaws hanging in disbelief at the, frankly, gorgeous dishes he seemed to be creating out of what amounted to very little.
So if you put together the magic of Ottolenghi, with the mediterranean (one of our favourite styles of food) and economy - you can probably see how he's talking our language.
Now before I say anything else, let me say that I would have infinitely preferred to have had some fat pilchards (or any other type of fish) instead of the pork. However, because fish seems to have become more expensive than saffron just lately, we had to go for something cheaper - and wound up with the pork steaks.
As for why it would push our comfort zones, well, hubby isn't good with meat that is likely to be either fatty, or tough. So pork steaks cooked on the griddle pan aren't his first choice. I trimmed the majority of the fat from his, but the firmness of the texture turned out not to be to his liking. He loved the flavour, but not the texture. As for son and heir, well, I know that he generally dislikes having dressing on his salads. As the whole point of Fattoush is to present it with dressing, I reckoned this would be a challenge for him - and indeed I was right. However, he soldiered on and as the whole lot disappeared, I was hopeful. He commented that it was "okay, but I could have done without the dressing", so we have to be grateful for small mercies.
For me, my big challenge was going to be wet bread. If there's one thing that makes me want to heave - it's wet bread. I have some vague memory of a calamitous accident between a loaf of bread left too close to defrosting meat and an ensuing sandwich - but it's probably best we don't look too closely at that one. With this salad, you grill the pitta bread and break it into pieces, then scatter it through the salad (together with the juicy salad vegetables - alarm!) and cover the lot in a yoghurt/buttermilk dressing (double alarm!). So I was seriously crossing my fingers that I could get over the wet bread thing. Much to my surprise - and because the Fattoush has to be made and served immediately with no waiting - the pitta pieces remained largely crispy and robust, with no sogginess and there was absolutely nothing offputting about this salad whatsoever.
In fact, the Fattoush was what is commonly known as a screaming success with both myself and with hubby. As with a lot of Ottolenghi recipes - although this one is from Sami Tamimi's mother - it's the juxtaposition of the fresh herbs with the remainder of the ingredients that absolutely makes the dish. The sweetness of the cherry tomatoes, the acidity of the vine ripened larger tomatoes, the pepperiness and crunch of the radish along with the intensity of the spring onion, all soothed and made cosy by the creaminess of the yoghurt/buttermilk dressing and the robustness of the pitta. Flipping gorgeous.
Both son & heir and I really enjoyed the lime pork chops and I have to say that cooking them on the griddle pan made such a difference to the flavour. I can imagine they'd be nice cooked just plain "under the grill" (or broiler, if you're in the States), but the charring provided by the griddle pan was just the proverbial business.
Mind you, I still think that a lovely piece of fish would have been better.
LIME PORK CHOPS WITH FATTOUSH (serves 3)
Ingredients :
3 pork chops, trimmed of the majority of their fat
3 limes, zested and juiced
olive or rapeseed oil
200g Greek yoghurt
100ml full fat milk
1 tsp lemon juice, plus 3 tbsp lemon juice
3 pitta bread
250g cherry tomatoes, quartered
1 large vine ripened tomato, cut into small cubes
100g radishes, sliced finely
200g cucumber (small ones, ideally), seeds removed, cut into small cubes
2 spring onions,thinly sliced
15g fresh mint, roughly chopped
20g parsley, roughly chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped and crushed
1 little gem lettuce, cut into strips (or a section of iceberg lettuce)
60ml olive or rapeseed oil
2 tbsp cider vinegar
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
Method :
1. Some hours before you'll be wanting them (in the morning is good) place the pork chops into the zest and juice of the limes, a dash of oil and season well. Leave them to marinade, covered, in the fridge.
2. When you are ready to make the meal, cook the pork chops on a griddle pan or barbecue for some 5-10 minutes on each side (depending on how thick they are) until cooked through. Place on a warmed plate, covered, to rest.
3. Into a small bowl, pour the milk and add the teaspoonful of lemon juice. Stir well and leave for 5-10 minutes. Then add the Greek yoghurt and mix well.
4. Grill the pitta bread on the griddle pan, so that you get the lovely charred markings. Leave to cool and break into rough pieces.
5. Into a huge bowl, add the tomatoes, radishes, cucumber, onions, mint, parsley, garlic and lettuce. Toss to combine.
6. Sprinkle in the pieces of toasted pitta bread and toss again.
7. Add the oil and vinegar to the yoghurt mix, season well and stir to combine. Then pour half onto the salad and toss, then add the remainder and toss again. The salad should be very well covered.
8. Serve the pork chops with the salad alongside.
Printable version
21 November 2012
Goat's cheese, leek & hazelnut super-smart tart!
Now there are some tarts that are nice but dull - and some tarts that are surprisingly delicious. This is one of the latter.
I liked the idea of this tart for more than one reason.
First of all, I really like leeks - they're the only one of the onion family that I can eat without experiencing some severe regret in the tummy department, later on. I particularly like the way they are so adaptable and can be used in so many different ways. My favourite leek recipe is the Tave Me Presh or Baked Mince with Leeks. If you haven't tried this recipe yet, do give it a go. Trust me, it's fabulous.
Goat's cheese always gets a thumbs up from me. There was a time when I found goat's cheese to be entirely too "goaty" for comfort. It always tasted wonderful, but I just couldn't get past the smell. It always brought back memories of Harvey - a goat-I-once-knew - and his stinky beard. ~shudder~ Why boy goats think it's sexy to pee on their own faces (which could be defined as a talent, I suppose), God only knows.
These days, I seem to have been able to get past the Eau de Harvey and into the lovely creamy texture and fresh flavour of goat's cheese. So I could imagine how the creamy goat's cheese would go so well with buttery leeks.
Now the addition of hazelnuts to the equation is a new one - and jolly interesting, I thought. I have to be careful over the use of nuts in my cooking, as hubby has some tooth issues and we don't want him to lose one of them on a surprise nut. The problem was easily dealt with, as the nuts are sprinkled on top of the tart filling as opposed to being mixed in. I simply sprinkled hazelnuts over three quarters of the tart - and sprinkled a little red chilli on hubby's portion. Where there's a will, there's a way!
It may seem ridiculous to be concerning one's self over the fat involved in pastry, when the filling of the tart includes full fat creme fraiche and full fat goat's cheese. However, as the old lady said as she wee'd in the sea - every little helps. Because this tart uses filo pastry sheets to build up its pie crust, you can at least consider that a certain amount of fat has been reduced. Aha, yes, I hear you thinking "but, surely you need to brush the filo pastry with melted butter?". No - you don't. I know, it goes against all previously received wisdom, but you just lay the pastry sheets down - and fill them up with filling, then bake. Don't ask me why or how, but it works.
I gave the egg mixture a jolly good whisking before pouring into the pastry and I think it was worth doing so, as the filling rose beautifully. It was light and fluffy - almost souffle-like, although I hadn't taken the eggs that far. All in all, it made for a lovely light, fluffy forkful of deliciousness.
I served the tart with a simple salad made with a watercress/lambs lettuce/rocket combination of salad leaves and a diced avocado. Just think of all the lovely nutrients we gained from that combination. I always feel healthier just thinking about eating watercress and avocado, never mind actually doing it!
I also made some mini Paprika Roast Potatoes, which went extremely well with the whole combination. They aren't so bad as you might think, either, as you simply dice the potato then toss it in a tablespoonful of rapeseed oil (which has health benefits all on its own), a pinch of salt and pepper and 1 tsp of sweet smoked paprika. Roast in a hot oven (I put them on the rack above the tart, which was cooking at 180degF) for some 45 minutes, remembering to give them a toss around half way through and you're done.
Obviously, hubby knew that the tart was vegetarian - but I seriously doubt that son & heir even gave it a moment's thought that he had no meat on his plate. Now that's the kind of meat-free meal that makes you want to serve another!
GOAT'S CHEESE, LEEK & HAZELNUT TART (feeds 3-5)
Ingredients :
4 large filo pastry sheets, halved
a knob of butter
1 leek, trimmed, quartered lengthways and sliced finely
1 tsp Dijon mustard
250g creme fraiche d'isigny (or low fat creme fraiche if you must)
2 medium eggs
140g soft goat's cheese
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
25g toasted hazelnuts, chopped.
Method :
1. Pre-heat your oven to 180degC/350degF/Gas 4.
2. Taking one half sheet of filo pastry at a time, lay it into the bottom of a 23cm quiche dish or loose bottomed tart tin. Without brushing with oil, lay the next one at an angle to the first - and so on - until the sheets have covered the tin and formed a base for the tart, with no gaps for leaks and with the edges draped over the sides of the tin.
3. Heat the knob of butter in a frying pan and once melted, add the leek pieces. Cook on a gentle heat until softened but not browned at all. Set aside to cool slightly.
4. In a large bowl, whisk together the mustard, creme fraiche, eggs and a third of the goat's cheese.
5. Add the leeks and stir through, including some seasoning.
6. Pour the egg mixture into the flan case and add pieces of the remainder of the goat's cheese, distributing them evenly.
7. Sprinkle over the hazelnuts and fold in the overhanging pieces of filo pastry. Brush these with a little oil.
8. Bake the tart for some 25-30 minutes, until the filling is risen and golden, with just a little jiggle left in the centre.
9. Allow to cool in the tin for some 10 minutes or so, then remove and cool until just warm.
Serve with some mini paprika roast potatoes and a salad of watercress, rocket & spinach with avocado.
Printable version
I liked the idea of this tart for more than one reason.
First of all, I really like leeks - they're the only one of the onion family that I can eat without experiencing some severe regret in the tummy department, later on. I particularly like the way they are so adaptable and can be used in so many different ways. My favourite leek recipe is the Tave Me Presh or Baked Mince with Leeks. If you haven't tried this recipe yet, do give it a go. Trust me, it's fabulous.
Goat's cheese always gets a thumbs up from me. There was a time when I found goat's cheese to be entirely too "goaty" for comfort. It always tasted wonderful, but I just couldn't get past the smell. It always brought back memories of Harvey - a goat-I-once-knew - and his stinky beard. ~shudder~ Why boy goats think it's sexy to pee on their own faces (which could be defined as a talent, I suppose), God only knows.
These days, I seem to have been able to get past the Eau de Harvey and into the lovely creamy texture and fresh flavour of goat's cheese. So I could imagine how the creamy goat's cheese would go so well with buttery leeks.
![]() |
The tips of the goat's cheese caught a tiny bit - but it certainly didn't mar the flavour! |
Now the addition of hazelnuts to the equation is a new one - and jolly interesting, I thought. I have to be careful over the use of nuts in my cooking, as hubby has some tooth issues and we don't want him to lose one of them on a surprise nut. The problem was easily dealt with, as the nuts are sprinkled on top of the tart filling as opposed to being mixed in. I simply sprinkled hazelnuts over three quarters of the tart - and sprinkled a little red chilli on hubby's portion. Where there's a will, there's a way!
It may seem ridiculous to be concerning one's self over the fat involved in pastry, when the filling of the tart includes full fat creme fraiche and full fat goat's cheese. However, as the old lady said as she wee'd in the sea - every little helps. Because this tart uses filo pastry sheets to build up its pie crust, you can at least consider that a certain amount of fat has been reduced. Aha, yes, I hear you thinking "but, surely you need to brush the filo pastry with melted butter?". No - you don't. I know, it goes against all previously received wisdom, but you just lay the pastry sheets down - and fill them up with filling, then bake. Don't ask me why or how, but it works.
I gave the egg mixture a jolly good whisking before pouring into the pastry and I think it was worth doing so, as the filling rose beautifully. It was light and fluffy - almost souffle-like, although I hadn't taken the eggs that far. All in all, it made for a lovely light, fluffy forkful of deliciousness.
I served the tart with a simple salad made with a watercress/lambs lettuce/rocket combination of salad leaves and a diced avocado. Just think of all the lovely nutrients we gained from that combination. I always feel healthier just thinking about eating watercress and avocado, never mind actually doing it!
I also made some mini Paprika Roast Potatoes, which went extremely well with the whole combination. They aren't so bad as you might think, either, as you simply dice the potato then toss it in a tablespoonful of rapeseed oil (which has health benefits all on its own), a pinch of salt and pepper and 1 tsp of sweet smoked paprika. Roast in a hot oven (I put them on the rack above the tart, which was cooking at 180degF) for some 45 minutes, remembering to give them a toss around half way through and you're done.
Obviously, hubby knew that the tart was vegetarian - but I seriously doubt that son & heir even gave it a moment's thought that he had no meat on his plate. Now that's the kind of meat-free meal that makes you want to serve another!
![]() |
With the salad and the roast paprika potatoes, it made for a satisfying meal |
GOAT'S CHEESE, LEEK & HAZELNUT TART (feeds 3-5)
Ingredients :
4 large filo pastry sheets, halved
a knob of butter
1 leek, trimmed, quartered lengthways and sliced finely
1 tsp Dijon mustard
250g creme fraiche d'isigny (or low fat creme fraiche if you must)
2 medium eggs
140g soft goat's cheese
sea salt & freshly ground black pepper
25g toasted hazelnuts, chopped.
Method :
1. Pre-heat your oven to 180degC/350degF/Gas 4.
2. Taking one half sheet of filo pastry at a time, lay it into the bottom of a 23cm quiche dish or loose bottomed tart tin. Without brushing with oil, lay the next one at an angle to the first - and so on - until the sheets have covered the tin and formed a base for the tart, with no gaps for leaks and with the edges draped over the sides of the tin.
3. Heat the knob of butter in a frying pan and once melted, add the leek pieces. Cook on a gentle heat until softened but not browned at all. Set aside to cool slightly.
4. In a large bowl, whisk together the mustard, creme fraiche, eggs and a third of the goat's cheese.
5. Add the leeks and stir through, including some seasoning.
6. Pour the egg mixture into the flan case and add pieces of the remainder of the goat's cheese, distributing them evenly.
7. Sprinkle over the hazelnuts and fold in the overhanging pieces of filo pastry. Brush these with a little oil.
8. Bake the tart for some 25-30 minutes, until the filling is risen and golden, with just a little jiggle left in the centre.
9. Allow to cool in the tin for some 10 minutes or so, then remove and cool until just warm.
Serve with some mini paprika roast potatoes and a salad of watercress, rocket & spinach with avocado.
Printable version
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