Friday, 30 December 2011

On a high


I had a fair bit of cranberry sauce left over from Christmas and decided to use it in something sweet. Seeing as this is my last recipe of 2011 it had to be something special. Cranberry apple crumble! The cranberry is slightly sharp so it contrasts nicely with the sweet crumble topping and soft apples. The ginger in the crumble topping gives a hint of spice. I've used small ramekins for the crumble since theres nothing nicer than receiving your own individual dessert, touches me everytime. 




Ingredients
Crumble
The key to a good crumble is to use cold butter and to squeeze the mixture to get different sized crumble lumps which will have different textures. Light brown demerara will give the crumble a slight caramel note.


120g cold unsalted butter
160g plain flour
60g light brown demerara
¼ tsp ground ginger

Directions
Add the ingredients to a bowel and rub with your fingers until a breadcrumb consistency is reached. Refrigerate when finished to make it extra crunchy. Top the apple cranberry mix by squeezing handfuls of the crumble on to get large and small compacted hunks that will get crunchy.

Apple
I sauté my apple lightly in alcohol to prevent it being too dry or undercooked.

Ingredients
150mls cider
2 Bramley apples
2 eating apples
glug of apple juice
½ lemon
2 tbsp of agrave nectar (to taste)
5 cloves
1 cinnamon stick

Directions
Add the spices and liquids to a pan and bring to a simmer. Slice the apples into thicknesses of around 5 mm and add to the pan. Cook over a low heat for ten minutes. Add the apple to the crumble dishes with a little of the infusion syrup.

When ready top the apple with a layer of cranberry sauce and then a layer of crumble. Bake for around 14 mins at 175 degrees centigrade until the crumble turns light brown. Serve with ice cream or yogurt.






Tuesday, 27 December 2011

Sunday, 25 December 2011

Christmas Dinner

No one's going to cook Christmas dinner until next year, but i'll put my recipe up anyway. I don't like turkey stock so i made a chicken gravy to go with the roast turkey. Cranberry sauce with pomegranate molasses and orange juice has a great tang and offsets the richness of the roast. I roast the parsnips separately from the potato's as they take less time and you can add maple syrup!!

Cranberry Sauce
Ingredients
2 tbsp pomegranate molasses
300g cranberries
Orange juice - fill until halfway below the cranberries
Zest of 1/4 of lemon
Caster sugar - to taste - i like it tangy but not too sweet

Directions
Fill a pan with cranberries and pour orange juice in until halfway up. Add the pomegranate molasses and lemon zest, bring to the boil and simmer until the cranberries break up (you can crush them with the back of a wooden spoon too). Add sugar to taste and simmer until the sauce reaches a syrup consistency. It will start to have a lovely glossy sheen! If your really keen you could strain the sauce to remove the cranberry skins but i like their texture. You can cover and reheat for the roast.



Sherry gravy

Ingredients
3 shallots skinned and quartered
1 carrot sliced into 1/4's
6 chicken wings
4 large stalks of thyme
4 garlic cloves, crushed with their skin on
olive oil
Salt

1/2 cup Sherry
1 cup red wine
300mls chicken stock
2 dried porchini mushrooms (for Unami)
glug of Sherry Vinegar (vinegar cuts through the cloyingness  of the fat)
Hunk of butter creamed with some flour and salt (this prevents the gravy getting lumpy)

Directions
Roast the veg, herbs and chicken wings. Then pour into a pan and add the liquids. Bring to the boil to cook off the alcohol and add the mushroom and butter. Simmer for fifteen minutes then strain.

Roasted Vegetables

Parsnips
If the parsnips are large cut off the thick bases and par boil these with the potato's (keep the spears dry as they cook quickly). You can then return these to the rest of the parsnips. Coat the parsnips with some mayple syrup, sunflower oil and a little butter before roasting for 35 - 50 mins at 180 degrees.

Potato's
Peel and par-boil until a knife will pierce the potato but not enter the middle. Fluff up by shaking the potato's when they have cooled. Toss with olive oil and a little goose fat. Roast with 4 rosemary stalks and 3 crushed garlic cloves for 50 mins at 180 degrees.

Roasted Turkey
Wash the turkey and season inside and out with salt (add some pepper at the end as it will scorch in the oven). Mix a large hunk of butter with 5 thyme stalks (take the leaves off them) and a little salt. Push the butter mix under the turkey breast and leg skin and stuff a bay leaf under each breast. Pop an unwaxed lemon inside the turkey.

I like to roast the turkey upside-down cover with foil under a high heat (220 degrees centigrade) for half an hour before turning the turkey over, covering it with pancetta and roasting for half an hour on a lower heat (150 degrees). Baste the turkey when you turn it over. Then continue to roast the turkey until nearly done (firm and juices running clear). At this point turn the temperature up and take off the foil to brown the breast. Each bird will take a different amount of time so the last stage will vary in terms of timing. Turkey crowns (without the legs) cook quicker. Leave the turkey to rest for 20 mins (covered with foil) before serving and don't forget some stuffing!!





Mulled Cider

I made some Mulled cider the other day at the Russet. I'm all for anything hot and alcoholic so heres my recipe (i didn't measure anything so just glug it together).

Directions

6 bottles of good quality cider
1 apple studded with cloves (if you use a knife to score the apple first it's easier to stud the cloves)
1/2 cup ginger wine
Few glugs of dark rum
Brown Demerara sugar - to taste
Lemon zest peeled into strips
Zest and juice of an orange
3 cinnamon sticks
2 Star anise

Heat until boiling then turn down very low to preserve the alcohol and allow the flavours to infuse.


Christmas in the Fro

I'm pacing about the oven agin, protecting my babies. Some would say this is my default position in the kitchen Oven protector. So to distract myself from whatever is going to or not going to rise in the oven i shall post.

Traditionally the Johanknect  Tree is more decoration than tree.


Father Christmas is a little hairier too


Friday, 16 December 2011

Where's the rest?

So i was meant to fill a tree. The thing is i've met my match, paper stars eh. I've managed to finish one but it was a mission, i'l leave the origami for the masters i think.


Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Banana bread with rum infused sultanas and pomegranate walnuts

I haven't put many recipes up yet. Its not because i don't have them, i'm just trying to perfect the balance of flavours and ingredients. I've been working on this banana bread for neigh on a year. I found that the slightly nutty taste of rye flour goes well with bananas. I eat this so much i thought i'd try a healthier version with sunflower oil instead of butter and a little agrave syrup instead of sugar. Bananas are so sweet you don't really the sugar anyway.

The last time i made a banana bread i forgot to add the walnuts and sultanas, so just sprinkled them on top. The walnuts toasted and the sultanas caramelised. I've added to this by infusing the sultanas in rum and adding pomegranate molasses and maple syrup to the walnuts. This way you get a lovely variety of textures.

Its ready.

Sultanas

  • 30g sultanas, 1 cap of rum, 2tbsp water
  • Heat the sultanas gently with the rum and water until the liquid is absorbed and then set aside.

Walnuts
  • 60g walnuts, 1tsp maple syrup, 2 tsp of pomegranate molasses.
  • roast the walnuts for two minutes at 175 degrees centigrade. Then rub off the skins when cool as they are bitter. Add the syrups and coat well.

Banana Bread

Ingredients
  •   3 bananas mashed roughly with a fork
  •  ½ tsp vanilla essence
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon, pinch of nutmeg, 
  • 100ml sunflour oil, 
  • 3tbsp agrave syrup
  • 2 beaten eggs
  • 100g self raising flour
  • 40g sifted rye flour (don't keep the larger rye flakes left in the sift)
  • 20g ground almonds
  • 1 tsp baking powder
Directions
  • Mash the banana roughly before adding the vanilla and spices.
  • Add the sunflower oil and beat well.
  • Add the agrave followed by the beaten eggs and mix well.
  • Sift in the flours and baking powder and mix lightly (too much mixing at this point will make the cake tough).
  • Stir in the ground almonds and pour into a tin (14 by 24 cm) coated with greaseproof paper.
  • Top with the walnuts and sultanas.
  • Bake for 40 mins at 175 degrees until a knife comes out clean.




Thursday, 8 December 2011

Word play

Heres my companion to the 'Happy original series', thanks.

Again with a floral print.






Saturday, 3 December 2011

Fresh on the court

The superfro's have a new basketball kit. Thanks Dunkenstein, Clyde and Pearl for our inspiration. Fresh on the court.


Friday, 2 December 2011

For my beautiful supplier

I have a supplier. Currently my sustenance consists of pomegranate molasses, giant couscous and sumac. Quite possibly i am working on the best recipe i have made. A signature dish i hope. Roasted sweet potato, pomegranate molasses, chestnut, mushroom and ginger gyoza. Its been a while since i made gyoza but its coming back.

Sweet

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Stripping

I don't normally do requests, so i guess this is a favour. Its december decoration time and i'm looking at a classic. A star. I'm not going to lie stripping paper takes a while and small hands would be advantageous. Unfortunately my hands are not small.