Tuesday, June 07, 2011
Cooking Essential - Lemon Squeezer
I use lemons like a condiment. They are always in my fridge. I add the juice to all sorts of dishes that need oomph or use them in marinades and salads. This lovely and stylish tool juices lemons better than anything else. It is the perfect shape for getting every last drop of juice out and you can squeeze the lemon directly onto whatever it is you are cooking rather than collect it all in a dish first. Be warned, seeds do go astray with it so I advise squeezing over a tea strainer or small sieve. Feeling inspired? These squeezers are available all over the place, I bought mine locally. Go out, get yourself one, then try my spinach and lemon pasta dish below.
This is a green recipe
Serves 1 greedy person.
- Spaghetti, lasagne or linguine (so hard to measure and depends on your appetite, maybe a 1/4 of pound?)
- 1/2 bunch of spinach
- 1 large egg, lightly beaten
- 1/2 small lemon
- 2 tablespoons of parmesan, pecorino or a mixture of both plus a couple of teaspoons for sprinkling
- pinch of nutmeg
Cook the spaghetti in well salted (please!) boiling water.
While it's boiling, blanch the spinach if it is young (just pour boiling water over it in a colander) or cook in a little water for a few minutes if it is coarse.
Drain spinach, squeeze dry and chop.
Once the pasta is al dente, drain and transfer back to the still warm pot.
Add the egg, lemon juice and cheese, mix well and then cover for a few minutes - OFF the heat, otherwise the egg will scramble.
Once the sauce has cooked and thickened, add the spinach.
Transfer to a warm plate or bowl, sprinkle with a little nutmeg and remaining cheese.
*Make sure the spinach is as dry as possible otherwise it will make the pasta watery. I don't add salt here because the pecorino is pretty salty, especially if it is Romano.*
Saturday, July 24, 2010
What’s Your Guilty Pleasure
Regardless of our refined our tastes may be, we all have a few guilty pleasures. Foods that we just love even though we know we shouldn't. I am very much against processed food, but there are some to which I just can't seem to shake my addiction! I have to admit that a lot of these were introduced to me on my trips to the US, like Twinkies, peppermint patties and potato bread. Even now back in Zambia I crave potato bread hot dogs. I also love canned pasta, especially Heinz Macaroni Cheese. When I was in Italy I fell in love with Kinder Brioche, a type of oblong cake that Italians like to eat for breakfast. Again I still pine after these tasty sponge cakes that are just wonderful dipped in coffee and I wonder why they have never been for sale in the UK. Then of course the ultimate sin – pork fat (crispy) and roast chicken skin. Most of my guilty pleasures are comfort foods or foods that remind me of a particular time in my life. Sometimes it's just reverting back to my childhood, who doesn't want to do that every now and then?
So, share with me, what's your list of guilty pleasures?
Friday, May 21, 2010
Pear and goats cheese salad
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
Aubergine/Eggplant Baked Pasta
Serves 3-4
- One 500 gram packet of short pasta (rigatoni, macaroni, gomiti, penne etc)
- 1 tablespoon of light olive oil
- 800 gram tin of plum tomatoes
- ½ pint of yoghurt
- Tablespoon of pesto (the best you can get or homemade is ideal)
- 1 large aubergine (eggplant) finely sliced into rounds
- Salt and pepper
- 1 cup of hard Italian cheese – a mixture of pecorino and parmesan would be great
- Heat the oil and add the tomatoes
- Cook down to make a thick sauce (this takes quite while, about 40 minutes) , add salt to taste
- At the same time cook the pasta in well salted water
- Add the pesto and mix well – remove from heat
- Add yoghurt and mix well
- Put the cooked pasta in a baking dish
- Pour over the sauce
- Top with aubergine and cheese
- Cover and bake for 30 minutes
- Cook uncovered for another 10 minutes until cheese is bubbling and the aubergine is cooked through
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
Pasta Al Forno
Pasta al forno is baked pasta. Probably the most famous is lasagne, this recipe is kind of a deconstructed lasagne inspired by the Greek baked pasta dish pasticcio. It is less time consuming than lasagne, and would be great for a dinner party with a green salad.
Serves 4
375 grams of short pasta – macaroni, elbows, rigatoni
Meat Sauce
1 bottle of passata (about 690gram or 720 ml)
1 large onion finely chopped
500 grams of minced beef
A large bunch of fresh oregano roughly chopped or a couple of teaspoons of dried
White sauce:
1 large dessertspoon of butter
1 large dessertspoon of white flour
2 bay leaves
300 - 500 mls of milk
1 large egg beaten
½ teaspoon of fresh grated nutmeg
2 ½ cups of strong cheese
Salt and pepper
First make the meat sauce:
Fry the onion until soft and transparent
Add the beef and brown
Add the passata and oregano and simmer for about 2 hours
Test for salt and pepper
The sauce should be thick and with very little extra liquid.
When this sauce is ready, preheat the oven to 150 c and start on the white sauce and pasta.
Melt the butter with the flour and cook the paste for a couple of minutes.
Add the bay leaves
Dribble in the milk a little at a time, don't rush as you will get lumps
When the sauce is the consistency of single cream, cook until thick, stirring all the time.
While your sauce is thickening, cook the pasta until a little soft but still quite hard in the middle – about 4 or 5 minutes.
When the white sauce has thickened, remove from heat and leave to cool a little, add the beaten egg and nutmeg
In a large bakind dish or pan add the pasta and sprinkle half the cheese over the pasta, then add a layer of meat sauce – you may need to use all, you want to cove the pasta but not drown it.
Spread over the white sauce and the rest of the cheese,
Bake for 30 minutes until sizzling and cheese is melted.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
My Xmas Breakfast
On Christmas morning I usually have the ubiquitous smoked salmon on a bagel or maybe in scrambled eggs. But how about something a little different that is equally as yummy and luxurious?
This really is a posh Welsh Rarebit and it is absolutely delicious!
2 slices of granary bread
1 egg
About ½ a cup of finely grated cheese – gruyere, strong cheddar or a combination. I added a little parmesan for an extra strong cheese taste
A dash of cream, about 1 dessertspoon
¼ cup Finely chopped wild mushrooms
¼ cup wilted spinach finely chopped
A pinch of mustard powder
Salt and pepper
Toast the bread on one side.
Mix all the ingredients together, the mixture should be stiff and not at all runny
Season
Spread onto the untoasted side of the bread, cover as much of the bread as you can so none of the bread singes
Put under a low to moderate grill – if the heat is too high it will cook on the outside and be raw and liquid inside
It's done when it's lightly brown on top and when you press it, no liquid comes out
*make sure there is something under the toast to catch drips*