Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Nigella's Salad dressing

I saw this on Nigella the other week. This is very yummy, I tried it out and we both liked it. I used Tasmanian Leatherwood honey which has a strong flavour, I would suggest a milder one though.

2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon honey
2 1/2 tablespoons lemon juice
salt
125 ml oil
Shake up in a bottle to emulsify, spoon onto salad.

Would like to try this with pure maple syrup too, let me know if you do!

Chicken and Corn Noodle Soup

1 onion, chopped
1 tbs oil
few drops sesame oil
4 cloves garlic, crushed
4 cups chicken stock (home made best)
2 tsp Massel Chicken Stock powder
1 440g tin creamed corn
1 slab 2 minute noodles
chicken meat, cooked leftovers, maybe 2 cups worth, 1/2 BBQ chicken or 4 drumsticks etc

Fry onion and garlic in oils for 5 minutes or so, add stock, bring to boil and simmer 5 minutes. Add corn and chicken and noodles, simmer 5 minutes.
This is very hearty and will feed 4 generously.

If you like you can use the 2 minute noodle flavourings instead of the Massell stock powder. I have unflavoured noodles on hand usually. If you don't have much chicken, drizzle a couple of beaten eggs into the hot soup will stirring, to boost the protein.

Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Mongolian Lamb

This one is for KISA's sister. I am sending her a few packet mixes of this stuff as she likes it. But they won't last long and this recipe is the one we use now and tastes just as good.

So D, hope you like it. Get your resident chef to make it for you.

500g lamb strips
2 onions, sliced
1 red pepper, sliced

Marinade:
1 egg, beaten
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons sugar
2 teaspoons cornflour
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 tablespoon crushed garlic

Sauce:
2 tablespoons water
1 tablesoon chilli sauce
1 tablespoon hoisin sauce
1/2 teaspoon Chinese 5 spice
1/2 teaspoon chopped or crushed ginger

Combine the marinade ingredients, add lamb, mix, and allow to sit in the fridge for a few hours.
Like any stir fry, prepare all your ingredients and have them ready to go on the bench before you start.
Heat a wok or fry pan, add a couple tablespoons of oil, and fry the onions and red pepper.
Add meat and stir fry till just done.
Add sauce ingredients and warm through.
Serve over rice or noodles.

Monday, 13 September 2010

LLandrindod Chicken

So called because I made this up here in Llandrindod Wells.

2 small onions, chopped
4 rashers bacon, chopped
1 red pepper, chopped
6 or 7 mushrooms, sliced
1 tbs oil
6 chicken thigh fillets, diced
1/2 cup white wine Caroline left on the bench
2 cups chicken stock (OXO)
2 tbs flour
150 ml single cream
Fry onions, bacon, mushrooms and pepper in oil till soft and tender. Add the chicken and brown with the veges and bacon. Add the wine and the chicken stock and simmer for 5 minutes or so. Mix the flour with some water to make a smooth paste and add to the chicken stirring in quickly till it thickends the sauce. Add cream and keep warm. Serve with mashed potato, or mix with cooked pasta, sprinkle with grated cheese and bake in the oven. I would use maybe 3 cups raw pasta boiled and a good cup of grated cheese.

Cauliflower and Bacon Soup

1 tbs oil

2 small onions, chopped

4 rashers bacon, chopped

1 head cauliflower, chopped

1 cup white wine

4 cups chicken stock (OXO)

300ml of single cream



Fry the onions and bacon in the oil till soft and bacon is cooked. Add the cauliflower and the wine, stir a little then add the stock, cover and cook till cauliflower is soft.Blend soup using a stick blender or a food processor, add cream and season with salt and pepper to taste. If you leave out the bacon it has a lovely creamy texture. You could add fried bacon after blending.

Sunday, 23 May 2010

Sara Douglass's Lamb Shanks

I used to hang out on a forum online a few years ago and one of the other posters was Sara Douglass, famous Australian author. She is into domesticity and cooking too. Anyway we were all exchanging crock pot recipes and she posted this one. I have made it a couple of times and adapted it a bit to reduce the grease factor. There is a very similar one at Taste.com.au so not sure which one came first. But since I originally got it from Sara I am sticking to the above title. I have tweaked it a bit and this is the final version.

Start the day before you want to eat this, unless your arteries need clogging up.

1 tablespoon olive oil
4 or 5 or 6 lamb shanks, frenched (this means they have cut off the knobby end bone and it helps them fit in the dish better. Coles sell them frenched. Some lamb shanks look like they came off a dinosaur, so choose smallish ones. One per person is plenty usually, depends on how many you are feeding)
about 1 1/2 to 2 cups chicken stock, home made is best but bought ok, low salt though.
1 cup of red wine, drinkable stuff
1 jar of cranberry sauce, whole berry
3 or 4 rosemary sprigs, leave whole so you can fish them out later
1 to 2 tablespoons garlic butter, I use the bought stuff, you could just use regular butter and crushed garlic
2 to 3 tablespoons flour or more depending on how much juice you end up with

Heat a frypan, add the oil, and brown off the shanks about 3 to 4 minutes each side, turning till brown all round. Place in a big casserole dish. Mix together the stock, red wine and cranberry sauce and pour over shanks. Bake, covered in oven at 180 C for an hour and a half.

Remove from oven, remove shanks to a plate and cover with cling film and put in the fridge. Pour sauce into another container and refrigerate, preferably overnight.

Next day, peel off the layer of fat from the sauce. It should look like white chocolate. Discard this, because that's where the resemblance ends, and fish out the rosemary stalks. Microwave the bowl till the jelly like sauce has warmed up and it is liquidy again. Measure the sauce, it should be around 3 cups or so. (I have a big pryrex measuring jug which I use instead of the bowl, they are worth every cent)

In a saucepan, melt the garlic butter and add flour and cook for about a minute. I allow about a level tablespoon of flour per cup of sauce maximum for a thick sauce, maybe err a little on the less side, since it will be cooked for another hour yet. Pour in the warmed sauce and whisk till it comes to a boil and thickens.

Put the shanks back in the (now clean of course) casserole dish aand pour over the thickened sauce. Put in a 150C oven for an hour maybe an hour and a half but watch for over browning. The meat should be just about falling off the bone and fork tender.

Serve over mashed potato with a green veg. This is just yummy.
You could also do this in a slow cooker. I have also done the first stage in a pressure cooker.

Thursday, 18 March 2010

Soo -Uunn

This little tutorial is in honour of my brother in law P and his 50th birthday. Happy Birthday for yesterday!! In honour of his birthday, I made him a favourite from the past, that my former mother in law taught me over 30 years ago to make even though I never made it quite the same as her. Now she doesn't cook any more, I recently relearnt how to make it the last time I visited her in Brisbane. So yesterday, I cooked it for P and I hope he likes it. This recipe is Dedicated to Lorna.


First up, the list of ingredients.
2 onions, chopped
2 tablespoons fresh ginger, grated
2 tablespoons crushed garlic. At least 8 cloves I would say.
slice belecan about 2'' x 1" x 1/4"
100 ml of oil
2 kg lovely legs (you can use any pieces you like or a cut up chicken, I prefer the no skin ones to reduce fat, but the fat does add to the flavour. Tough choice, flavour versus heart..hmmmm. I want P to stick around, so no fat here)
About 5 cups chicken stock
about 1 to 2 tablespoons sugar. taste test.
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1/2 packed dried soy bean curd (sounds yummy doesn't it?)
1/2 packet dried black fungus(sounds even yummier!)
50g packet dried rice vermicilli
A close up of the stuff you get from the asian grocery. This is belecan, this is essential. It comes in a block like cheese. There the similarity ends. Warning: This stuff stinks so you need to keep it in a jar in the fridge a screw top glass one at the back of the fridge. It never goes off and if it did it would be impossible to tell. Don't be put off, it imparts a wonderful flavour when fried up.
Before you do anything, boil the jug and set the dried stuff to soak. Here is from left to right, the bean curd, fungus, and noodles.

This is the dried bean curd as it comes from the shop. It seems like some sort of dried tofu and takes on the flavour it is cooked with. I love it.
This is the rice vermicilli. You can get this in woolies.
This is the dried black fungus. In love this stuff too, doesn't taste good till it is in this dish. It also takes flavour as well as adds. The dish is not the same without it.
Ok now for the method. It is pretty easy really once you have the ingredients and you will need a big pot.
Heat the oil and fry up the onion, garlic ginger and belacan till the onion is soft and the belacan is evenly distributed and the whole lot should be a yukky grey colour. Then dump in the chicken pieces.
Stir around till the chicken pieces have browned.
Then add the stock, sugar, soy sauce and simmer for about an hour till the chicken is tender.
Then drain the soy bean curd, fungus and noodles and add to the pot. Simmer for another few minutes. Test for sugar and salt. Add more soy sauce for salt. Not too much as you don't want to too dark.
Serve with rice. It makes a great soup. as well...