norfolkian: (Default)
[personal profile] norfolkian
So glad I've been able to join in with the challenge this week - I kept planning to every time a new challenge was posted, but things have been busy and I've not got round to it. But, yes, it's December, the theme is PIES, so obviously I made mince pies.

I've been making these every year for about 8 or 9 years. I make both the mince meat and the pastry myself and both recipes are pretty simple. Boozy mincemeat recipe is here, and unbelievably easy mince pies (pastry) recipe is here. I can recommend being liberal with the booze in the mincemeat recipe. For the pastry recipe, I pretty much make it as per the recipe - lots of people in the comments seem to add some water/an egg/some milk to the pastry so they can roll it out. Yes, it is a little bit faffy to press the pastry into the tins, but I would venture no more faffy than rolling out and cutting pastry, then lining each hole of the tin. Plus it is worth it for very buttery, short pastry. The thing that I do slightly differently is that I use a muffin tin and make 12 large deep-filled mince pies, rather than 18 smaller ones. I also don't weigh out the mincemeat, I just fill each pie up with as much filling as possible.

Icing sugar is also optional. I've found that friends and family actually like the 'rustic' look of these mince pies. They're not going to win any awards for presentation, but they taste damn good.

A big bowl of mincemeat
12 homemade mince pies

norfolkian: (Default)
[personal profile] norfolkian
Ford Prefect said: ‘I bought some peanuts.’
Arthur Dent moved, and groaned again, muttering incoherently. 
'Here, have some,’ urged Ford, shaking the packet again, ‘if you’ve never been through a matter transference beam before you’ve probably lost some salt and protein. The beer you had should have cushioned your system a bit.’
 
For this challenge (which I LOVE, by the way), I took inspiration from the bit quoted above from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I largely followed this recipe from Jack Monroe for Beery Berry Crumble, but I did 50g oats and 50g crushed salted peanuts in the crumble (I roughly crushed the peanuts using a pestle and mortar). The texture and slight saltiness of the peanuts worked really well with the beery fruit. :)

I used dark muscavado sugar in the fruit mixture and white caster sugar in the crumble (as that's what I had in), but in my experience with crumbles golden caster sugar works really well in crumbles too.

A crumble fit for eating after going through a matter transference beam. :)



el_staplador: A yellow bird is depicted eating grapes in a stained-glass window (food)
[personal profile] el_staplador
This is a really quick, easy, adaptable recipe for date and nut balls. I used this recipe, varied according to what happened to be in the cupboard. (There's a whole lot of Iftar recipes here if anyone else is looking for ideas.)

Ingredients
20 large dates (the ones sold in a block for baking are fine)
1/4 cup nuts (I used walnuts)
1 tbsp sultanas

Equipment
Sharp knife (not so vital if you have a blender)
Microwave (or you can use the hob, in which case you also need a pan)
Microwaveable plate
Microwaveable bowl (I used a pudding basin)
Spoon

1. If you don't have a blender, chop the dates fairly thoroughly. Chop the nuts too, separately.

2. Toast the nuts for a couple of minutes on a plate in the microwave. Keep an eye on them and shake them around half way through.

3. Put the chopped dates in the pudding basin and microwave for about 30 seconds - this is just enough to warm them through and make them sticky.

4. Add the toasted nuts and the sultanas, mix well, and, when it all comes together into a glorious sticky lump, roll it into little balls.

If you don't have a microwave, then you can toast the nuts and warm the dates in a pan on the stove. It looks like you can throw all sorts of things in to vary the nuts, and I can see myself making these a lot - take them hiking, for snacks at work, etc, etc.
el_staplador: A yellow bird is depicted eating grapes in a stained-glass window (food)
[personal profile] el_staplador
So, after discovering that the sandwich toaster needs its plug replacing, the cookbook that came with the halo fryer mostly contains things that I could cook much more easily in the slow cooker, the slow cooker instruction booklet contains no recipes, and I couldn't face getting the food processor out of the cupboard, never mind washing it up, I went for the breadmaker.

Ingredients (NB cups are American cups - 8 fl oz):

3/4 cup water
1 egg, beaten
1/2 tbsp skimmed milk powder
1/2 tbsp sunflower oil
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/8 cup chopped walnuts
2 cups strong white bread flower
1/4 cup cocoa powder
1/4 tsp fast action yeast

Add to the pan as advised in your breadmaker's instructions. Use the setting for sweet breads.

I'm having a slice of this now, buttered.

Hello everyone :-D!

Saturday, July 1st, 2017 12:46 pm
cosmochemistry: (Default)
[personal profile] cosmochemistry

I'm new to Dreamwidth and this community seems really cool! I probably won't try to fully catch up, but I'll share a few of my recipes that fit with past themes. Just a warning, though, I don't really keep track of measurements.

  • [#1 - Apples] Apple chutney
  • [#8 - Citrus fruit] Orange-pepper chicken
  • [#15 - Oats] Cereal bars
Read more... )

S V F X

Thursday, June 28th, 2012 10:48 am
innerbrat: (vegetarian)
[personal profile] innerbrat
Challenge #5: Eggs: Egg Fried Rice

Ingredients
Some rice
Some vegetables (chopped)
Some nuts
Some eggs (beaten)
Peanut oil, soy sauce, coriander.

Directions
  1. If the rice is already cooked (e.g. because it is from Last Night's Chinese Takeway) go to step 2. Otherwise, cook the rice
  2. Heat a large dollop of peanut oil in the largest frying pan you have. Add the cooked rice and stir-fry it
  3. Add the vegetables and nuts, and stir through the rice until cooked.
  4. Make a well in the middle of the rice, right through to the frying pan bottom. Pour in the beaten eggs and scramble them until scrambled. Then stir into the rest of the rice.
  5. Add soy sauce and coriander.
  6. Eat.
gominokouhai: (Default)
[personal profile] gominokouhai

IMG_0202
I bought these at the market this weekend. They are, I'm told, red onion squash. Peeled and chopped them and roasted them with a maple syrup glaze. It didn't work particularly well, mostly because I burned them. [personal profile] stormsearch was ecstatic however. Maybe I'm just not keen on squash. The smell was amazing though; candied orange peel and toasted walnuts. Between peeling and fishing out a metric shitton of seeds and cthuloid stringy pulp stuff, they took a billion years to prepare and I'm not convinced I'm going to bother doing them again. Were I to do so, the squash itself is fairly sweet and the maple glaze wasn't such a brilliant idea; something smokier, maybe involving paprika, would be a better idea.

I am rather more keen on the lime-and-coriander turkey burgers I made to go with them. They were fantastic, but alas this isn't turkey burger challenge week.

IMG_0222
Had a massive bowlful of seeds left over. Toasted them for fifteen minutes on a low heat (135°C). The first batch just with salt and pepper, the second lot with garlic and paprika. These were fantastic. They're also low-carb and low-GI (or is it high? whichever means good), if that's your thang.

Getting the pulp and stringy crap off the seeds was longwinded but actually quite relaxing, once I'd developed an algorithm for it:

  1. Spread everything on a piece of kitchen roll, and put another piece of kitchen roll on top. Press down to absorb some of the juice.
  2. DO UNTIL bored
    1. Turn everything upside down
    2. Slowly peel back the top piece of kitchen roll. Pick off any seeds that have separated themselves from the morass and stuck to the paper.
    3. Pick out any other seeds that have obviously come loose.
    4. Put another piece of kitchen roll on top, press down.
    END DO
  3. Throw remaining pulp into the stockpot. In doing so, you'll find a handful of extra seeds you missed.

I've had half a pig in the freezer for the better part of a year now. We named him Boris because of the resemblance. Last night, it was finally time to make some space in the freezer, so it was time to roast a rolled shoulder of Boris bigger than your head.

IMG_0224
Tried something a bit different this time. Rubbed the skin with oil, salted and peppered the fuck out of it, and dumped the whole thing in the oven on low (160°C). After an hour, dropped in the squash wedges and sat the joint back on top of them. Everything was nicely done, with Boris just medium rare in the middle and utterly fantastic crackling on the outside, after another hour and a half. Then I had plenty of pig-squash juices left in the tin with which to make gravy.

An odd thing happened when I went back for seconds. I microwaved everything, just for a minute, to warm it back up, and afterwards the squash had completely changed taste. I can't put my finger on what was wrong with it—wasn't quite bitter, wasn't quite sour, but something along those lines. In any case I was definitely less keen the second time around.

IMG_0253 IMG_0247 IMG_0259

Lo, am I like unto a culinary god.

And that concludes Squash Week. Frankly, I wasn't too keen on the squash itself, but the things that went with it were incredible.

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