Well it has been a very busy weekend, not least of all because I got a bit over excited at being able to invite people over on Saturday night, and invited the world, or at least 15 of them.
Which of course meant that Saturday was entirely taken up with cooking for everyone, luckily I had my handy sous chef at my side, namely Thea, and so we embarked on a mammoth cook-a-thon on one of the hottest days of the year with the Rayburn chugging away and the water in the pipes singing along at 60°C as a consequence.
In order to feed a large volume of people my first thought is always to find the easiest thing to cook and something that can be served with rice or potatoes as these are the least attention consuming accompaniment so you can concentrate on the main delights.
Therefore we made a chili, a Thai fish curry, a beef casserole and a Chicken Masala.
None of which required supermarket visits as these were all made from larder and freezer staples.
Now before you say anything about how a curry always tastes better with fresh ingredients, I would draw your attention to the statement above, all the recipes were made from items in my pantry, which means dried spices not fresh.
Cheats Chicken Masala
1 large onion
1/2 litre of chicken stock
400g tin tomatoes
vegetable oil for frying
2 courgettes - optional
1 yellow pepper - optional
4 small chicken or turkey breasts (or skinless thighs)
The spice mix is based on a volume comprising one 400g tin of tinned tomatoes and half a litre of chicken stock, if you are making more, then double up the spice volumes, otherwise your curry will be too mild.
In addition because I am a lazy cook and had so much on my plate on Saturday this is my straight to oven dish method.
Take one large oven dish with cover, I use a good old fashioned terracota dish that I found at a car boot for a pound some years ago and has now acquired that faintly yellow tinge of tumeric stain.
Into your dish chuck in the 400g of tinned tomatoes.
Take one large flat bottomed frying pan, add a little vegetable oil and use this pan for all subsequent fryings without rinsing or washing in between, not just because I am lazy but this way you preserve all the flavours you are carefully cultivating in your curry.
Start by frying one large onion cut into quarters, or eight depending on how large you like the pieces of onion in your curry, once the onion is slightly translucent, add a couple of tablespoons of chicken stock to continue cooking, let them simmer until just softening then throw them on top of the tomatoes in the oven dish.
Now for the next bit I used some of my peppers in oil, but you can just use a chopped pepper and some veg oil, fry those off with your chopped courgettes. - You don't have to use courgettes at all but I have a garden full of them and 15 people to feed so I needed to bulk out the curry sauce a bit. Once soft, - gone on, guess what you have to do now, that's right - throw them into the oven proof dish.
Your frying pan should now have a lovely flavoursome oil residue in it, and that should be enough to start frying the chicken.
But before that make up the spice mix as follows:
2 tablespoons lime or lemon juice
2 teaspoons dried flaked chillies
1 tablespoon powdered ginger
1 teaspoon powdered coriander seeds
1 teaspoon ground tumeric
1 tablespoon garam masala
Start frying the chicken and when all the oil in the pan has been absorbed add your curry paste and stir to coat the chicken well.
Leave that to cook for a couple of minutes until the spices have heated through and are releasing all their aromas, then chuck into the oven dish with the rest of the stock.
Cover and cook for as long as possible, I had mine sat in the botton of the Rayburn oven for 6 hours.
Showing posts with label larder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label larder. Show all posts
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Day 3 of the Larder Challenge - Carrot and Potato Thai Green Soup
It seems ridiculous that I am considering making a hot soup to eat in June, but with the constant rainfall, a winter warmer soup is just what I need.
And with the Rayburn lit for the hot water as the solar panel is 'resting' (posh actor's euphemism for not working - due to lack of solar input), I thought a hot soup bubbling away on the hot plate would raise our morale from the sodden depths.
Raiding the depths of the veg basket - I should have considered stocking up on fresh veg before starting this challenge, oh well too late now, I found a handful of sorry looking carrots and a couple of spuds.
Carrot and Potato Green Thai Chili Soup
Peel and chop into smallish chunks a handful of decidedly limp carrots and a couple of spuds about to sprout (you could use fresh ones but this is what was left in my larder)
Boil in a litre of chicken stock until they begin to disintegrate, then either blitz with a stick blender or use a potato masher to achieve a puree
At this point you may need to add some water, taste to see if you need just water or seasonings as well, a strong stock would be fine but if you are using a cube you may need the additional seasonings.
Now stir in a heaped teaspoon of green Thai chili paste
Leave to simmer away gently for half an hour until serving or cover and stick in the oven for later, then serve with some bread.
To make your own paste: Green Thai Chili Paste
And with the Rayburn lit for the hot water as the solar panel is 'resting' (posh actor's euphemism for not working - due to lack of solar input), I thought a hot soup bubbling away on the hot plate would raise our morale from the sodden depths.
Raiding the depths of the veg basket - I should have considered stocking up on fresh veg before starting this challenge, oh well too late now, I found a handful of sorry looking carrots and a couple of spuds.
Carrot and Potato Green Thai Chili Soup
Peel and chop into smallish chunks a handful of decidedly limp carrots and a couple of spuds about to sprout (you could use fresh ones but this is what was left in my larder)
Boil in a litre of chicken stock until they begin to disintegrate, then either blitz with a stick blender or use a potato masher to achieve a puree
At this point you may need to add some water, taste to see if you need just water or seasonings as well, a strong stock would be fine but if you are using a cube you may need the additional seasonings.
Now stir in a heaped teaspoon of green Thai chili paste
Leave to simmer away gently for half an hour until serving or cover and stick in the oven for later, then serve with some bread.
To make your own paste: Green Thai Chili Paste
Blend all the ingredients together to make a small
jar's worth that will keep in the fridge for a couple
of weeks, or can be frozen in teaspoon sized dollops
on a tray in the freezer to use another time.
jar's worth that will keep in the fridge for a couple
of weeks, or can be frozen in teaspoon sized dollops
on a tray in the freezer to use another time.
- 1 small onion or a shallot
- 4-5 cloves garlic
- 1 thumb-size piece of ginger
- 1 cup chopped fresh coriander leaves & stems
- 1/2 tsp. ground cumin
- 1/2 tsp. ground pepper
- 1/2 tsp. ground coriander
- 3 Tbsp. fish sauce
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- 2 Tbsp. lime juice
- 1 tsp. brown sugar
- 3-4 Tbsp. coconut milk or double cream
- 1 stalk lemongrass
- 1-3 green chilies depending on how hot you like your curry
Monday, June 14, 2010
The 10 Day Larder Challenge
With Bren away for a few days, I thought I would try the 10 day larder challenge.
This is where you challenge yourself to live solely from the current contents of your larder and fridge on a timescale to suit yourself. Hence 10 days for me, or should I say us because of course Thea will be taking part too, whether she likes it or not.
With a confusing morning gone by, and a fraught afternoon chasing rabbits now coming to a halt, I have time to update my blog properly and add some photos. (I am also still trying to learn the French keyboard lay out, but it is taking forever to remember the m and the w).
Chasing rabbits was my fault entirely, not shutting the hutch door to this morning I came home to find two in the garden and the rest gallivanting around with the chickens. So far I have managed to get the four babies in and one of the adults, the other is hiding behind the other hutches and so I have to wait for Thea tonight so we can get her in a pincer movement. If I can't catch her I may have to shoot her otherwise she will eat the veg garden overnight.
OK - Day 1 of the larder challenge, on the menu today : Sunflower seed bread
I set this off in the machine this morning when I left for work and it was delicious and hot at lunchtime ready and waiting for me when I got home.
This is where you challenge yourself to live solely from the current contents of your larder and fridge on a timescale to suit yourself. Hence 10 days for me, or should I say us because of course Thea will be taking part too, whether she likes it or not.
With a confusing morning gone by, and a fraught afternoon chasing rabbits now coming to a halt, I have time to update my blog properly and add some photos. (I am also still trying to learn the French keyboard lay out, but it is taking forever to remember the m and the w).
Chasing rabbits was my fault entirely, not shutting the hutch door to this morning I came home to find two in the garden and the rest gallivanting around with the chickens. So far I have managed to get the four babies in and one of the adults, the other is hiding behind the other hutches and so I have to wait for Thea tonight so we can get her in a pincer movement. If I can't catch her I may have to shoot her otherwise she will eat the veg garden overnight.
OK - Day 1 of the larder challenge, on the menu today : Sunflower seed bread
I set this off in the machine this morning when I left for work and it was delicious and hot at lunchtime ready and waiting for me when I got home.
350ml tepid water
500g white flour
1 tablespoon sunflower oil
4 teaspoons sugar
3 tablespoons dried milk powder
15g dried active yeast
1 generous handful of sunflower seeds
Combine the sugar with some of the tepid water, add the yeast and leave to activate for about 15 minutes
pour the water and the oil along with the yeast mix into the bread machine pan (always liquid ingredients first for best results)
add the milk powder and the flour
Normally if you have a machine that does it you would put the seeds into the 'add later' compartment or throw them in at the last rise or at the last bake, but because I was leaving my machine to get on with it, I threw mine in at the start with all the other ingredients.
A bit comfort food-ish, served with hot melted butter and some homemade course pâté.
Now I am sat inside waiting for a phone call, so making the best of my time, finally processing and uploading some of my scrapyard treasures photos onto flickr.
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