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off on holiday

July 11th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

So you won’t see anything about me using stuff up for a week or so - someone *else* is going to cook for us, for a change.

Last night’s supper, which I forgot to photograph, was thus (really scraping the back ofr the fridge):

1 red onion chopped, added to the frying pan with a packet of cubed pancetta, and sautéed with some garlic.  Added some fresh oregano from the garden.

Boiled some fusilli pasta, and when cooked, added it to the pan with a mozzarella.

It was very nice.  We finished it with some Maltesers - well, you don’t want them to go to waste either, do you?

My breakfast for the past two mornings has been 2 hard boiled eggs.  I’m really quite looking forward to some gourmet food.

Be good while we’re gone.

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carrot muffins

July 8th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

carrot muffins

Using up: some extremely tired carrots.

This recipe is from Nigella Lawson’s How to be a Domestic Goddess, and I will type it up for you when I get a moment (ho ho).  She adds a frosting made of Phildelphia cream cheese, icing sugar and lime juice, but we never bother - far too sweet for us.

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in praise of spinach

July 4th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

spinach

Spinach is wonderful stuff - I don’t know why more people don’t like it.

This post is a bit of a cheat really, as I wasn’t using anything up per se; it’s more that I fell upon the spinach with cries of glee, and immediately got a tub of bolognese sauce (home made, of course) from the freezer.

This is because we have discovered that, if you put a layer of spinach inside the lasagne, between the bechamel and the pasta, the whole dish is raised from the “isn’t that nice” to the “gorgeous” level.  So that’s what we do.

I’ll be using up the rest of the spinach tonight.

peaches and grapesWe followed it up with a small fruit salad-ish affair, just chopped up peaches and grapes.  I do wish we were better at fruit …

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broad bean wrap

June 25th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general
broad bean filling for a lunch time wrap

Using up: broad beans, cashews in salt and black pepper, salad leaves, roast chicken

Riverford brought us broad beans last week (I think these are fava beans in the US).  They’re not something we get excited about, and so they languished in the bottom of the fridge.  Last night I fetched them out and podded them; they took me instantly back to my childhood - the pods are filled with a sort of woolly stuff, and I spent hours podding broad beans with my grandmother, ready for her to salt down into kilner jars (no freezers in domestic houses in those days).  She did the same with runner beans.

So today, we had them for lunch.

In a bowl went the beans (I should mention that I steamed them for about five minutes first), a finely chopped shallot, some chopped herbs from the garden (mint, lemon balm, chives and flat parsley), some shredded chicken, some cashews, diced cucumber.

Also in went a dessert spoon of mayo, a teaspoon of Dijon mustard, a good sloosh of lime juice, and a grating of black pepper.  Mix ‘em all up, and place into wheat tortila wraps, with some salad leaves on the top.

You can see the finished wraps here.

Made a very nice change from our usual cheese and crispbread!

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sunday breakfast

June 22nd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

Sunday breakfast

We often have a cooked breakfast on a winter Sunday - although we usually do so much food that we lie groaning on the sofa for the afternoon, and just have some scones or something for supper.

We fancied something more substantial than usual today, but we were more restrained - four eggs scrambled with a little cream and some chopped chives from the garden, four rashers of locally “grown” bacon, and three bagels between us.  I had HP Sauce too - obviously.  Just enough, and leaving room for roast chickie! tonight.

We ate it while watching Turn Left, this week’s Doctor Who episode, which I thought was exceeding good.  And now I’m working, which isn’t, given it’s Sunday afternoon.  Ho hum.

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Tesco being vindictive?

June 10th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall has tabled a resultion at Tesco’s forthcoming AGM; he duly obtained the statutory support of 100 shareholders and tabled the resolution before the final deadline on 16 May.

“[This resolution]. would force it to adopt RSPCA standards or renounce its claim to allow its birds a life free of pain. The motion was tabled before a final deadline.”

Tesco, a company not famed for taking such things lying down, has decided that HF-W must pay them £86,888 for the cost of sending this resolution out to its 235,000 shareholders. Interesting that this year they sent out the AGM papers out 2 weeks earlier than last year; *and* his resolution was in in time.

For what it’s worth, I think Tesco - much as I loathe them - are quite entitled to sell chickens that are raised in appalling, yet legal, conditions, to people who don’t want to spend money on better quality food. The fault here is not, I don’t think, with Tesco, but with DEFRA (gosh, really?) and consumers.

But this tactic of theirs with regard to a legitimate shareholder’s legitimate concerns is really not impressive.

More from the Independent.

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asparagus and badger risotto*

May 31st, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

Ah, asparagus - food of the gods. We eat loads of it when it’s around, but we won’t have imported asparagus, so it’s a short season for us.

This serves 2

Take half a bunch or so of English asparagus, trim off the woody bits, slice into 3cm-ish chunks, and blanch for about 5 minutes, or to taste. Drain the cooking water into a measuring jug, and set the asparagus to one side.

Finely chop some spring onions, and sauté them gently in an ovenproof pan in olive oil and butter, along with a packet of pancetta cubes. Add 5 oz risotto rice and turn it about in the pan.

In the measuring jug with the asparagus water, add the juice of a lemon and a couple of fl oz of white vermouth, then top it up to a pint with cold water. Add this to the pan, bring to the boil, and bung in a slow oven - gas 3 - for 20 minutes.

Remove, stir, and return to the oven for 15 minutes. Remove, stir in some shaved parmesan, dish into bowls. Utterly delicious.

Return to the kitchen afterwards to spot what you, dear readers, probably already had … the asparagus still in its pan. Sigh a lot, and eat it cold. Also delicious.

This is what is known in our house as a badger moment, since the day I looked in the mirror and saw the grey streaks in my hair, and shrieked to Pete that I was turning into a badger ..

* Yes, I know that strictly speaking it’s not a risotto, and I don’t care.

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unseasonal soup

May 28th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

It has rained here (near Bristol, UK) since Sunday, and the forecast says rain as far ahead as I can see (which is next Sunday). And so last night, I made some soup for our lunches. It seems ridiculous, given that it’s almost June, but we were actually sitting watching television last night with a rug over our knees - I utterly refuse to turn the heating on in the last week of May!

So - in the food processor, finely chop some tired carrots, a weary courgette, and most of a big onion (the rest went to something else). Sweat these over a low heat in some olive oil until they’ve softened a bit.

Add a carton of creamed tomatoes, a mug full of red lentils, and enough water till it seems about right - about 1 litre in our case, but there were a lot of carrots. Add salt and pepper, and some fennel seeds for good luck, bring to the boil, and simmer for about 90 minutes with a lid.

I’m just about to go eat mine now. Apologies for the lack of photo, either the camera is buggered or the operator is - I know where my money is …

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this week’s veg box

May 7th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general

veg boxLovely stuff - rhubarb, asparagus, melon, broccoli, bananas, orange, tomatoes, pointy cabbage, courgettes. From Riverford.

So:

  • asparagus and lemon risotto
  • rhubarb rumble
  • indian cabbage with rice
  • stir-fried broccoli
  • courgette and pasta bake

We can have the melon, bananas and oranges for breakfast.

Yum!

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the endless sausage

May 3rd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in general, tescowatch

the munched sausage

This is actually perlmonger’s lunch: I loathe raw tomatoes, don’t care for strong cheddar (that’s unpasteurised organic there), and I’m not that fond of kabanos.

But I do always bite the end off his sossidge [fnaar].

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