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Wednesday, 26 February 2014

Veg from the Garden....

As NO-SHOP February continues, last night (as part of the meal) I roasted some veg (all grown by us) - parsnip, pumpkin, celeriac, and garlic, served up with chopped fresh parlsey (also from the garden) and for an added zing, some ver jus, (made last autumn and stored in the freezer), some black pepper, and a few chilli flakes.

I have now used up all my carefully rationed onions, and completed all the meals through to the end of the month.  I will be pleased to go out and buy some carrots, some apples, and some brocoli (and more onions).  I look forward to some fresh, raw, crunch.... ..and menu planning that doesn't involve a cut of pork.  I managed to make our supply of beef mince, turkey meat, and prawns run to a meal or two a week, but my menus have been heavily influenced by left-over ham and cold roast pork, or meals based on dried peas and beans.

It has been a great exercise and I have to say I have not missed one bit the weekly scramble at the supermarket.  And much to my dismay, despite serious efforts, I don't appear to have made much inroad on the stored food.  Apart from the aforesaid shortage of fresh crunch in the diet, and the prospect of a pork based tedium we could potentially carry this on a good while longer.  I suspect I might have been taking far too seriously (and more deeply ingrained than I realized) the 'store cupboard' life-style of my youth; in which we 'went to town' about once a month for shopping,  spent days/weeks freezing or preserving excess, and lived off our own meat, eggs, and vegetables to a very great extent.

Perhaps I should feel more confident that I have secured our survival and change my shopping habits in future - buy less but buy better.

Tuesday, 25 February 2014

Gooseberry Semolina Souffle

 

Recipe from:  http://allrecipes.co.uk/recipe/15925/gooseberry-semolina-souffl-.aspx

Some of last seasons gooseberries are still in the freezer.  A quick internet search for some inspiration brought up this recipe for a gooseberry pudding.  Thank you 'nch'.

Gooseberry Semolina Souffle

400ml milk
50g butter
100g caster sugar
160g semolina
3 eggs
160g drained gooseberries (reserve juice) - Actually I used frozen ones; it worked.
 
Preheat the oven to 180 C / Gas 4. Grease a small casserole dish.

Boil the milk with butter. Stir in the semolina, beating all the time with a whisk until thickened and there is no more semolina on the bottom of the pan. Remove from the heat.  (I did this over a double boiler - takes longer but no risk of  burning the bottom.)
 
Separate the eggs. Beat the egg yolks with the sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer until foamy. Gradually add the semolina mixture and beat everything gently.
 
Beat the egg whites until stiff and fold into the semolina mixture. Drain the gooseberries but retain the juice. Gently stir in the drained gooseberries. Pour into the casserole dish and smooth over. Bake in the preheated oven for 50-60 minutes until the top is slightly browned.

 
It proved very popular, and would easily serve 8-10.

Monday, 17 February 2014

Rhubarb & Pumpkin Crumble

Tigger and I spent some time at the allotment this weekend.  It was mainly an exercise in turning compost heaps and clearing some drainage ditches, but we did notice that many of the rhubarb plants (and we have MANY) have multiple stems on them. 

It must be time to clear last season's rhubarb from the freezer. Fresh will be available a week or two from now.

I haven't sugared rhubarb for years now, prefering instead to cook it in pies and crumbles with a sliced banana, or some sweet cicely stems. 

Years ago I can remember someone who had worked in a jam factory telling me that cheap jams were often made using pumpkin pulp to bulk out the more expensive berry fruits.  So instead of sugar (and because the 'no shop' means I can't go out and buy bananas), I decided to cut the rhubarb pulp with mashed pumpkin. There are still plenty of last year's pumpkins stored on the dining room windowsill, and one or two had started to develop rot round the flower end so time to use them up - fast.

So there you have it - 50/50 stewed rhubarb and mashed cooked pumpkin, spiced up with some grated fresh (or frozen from fresh) ginger, and topped with a rolled oats crumble topping (see earlier post on crumble topping).
 
It works just fine, colour not as deep red as rhubarb on its own, but tastes excellent.

A Blackberry Pudding

Something to follow boiled ham - blackberries (also from the freezer).  Some ground almonds which have probably passed their 'best before' date were languishing in the cupboard so this seemed ideal.


I made these in individual portions in 1.5 cup ramekins - 8 of them.

Blackberry Puddings

Frozen blackberries - say 2-3 cups and no sugar. 

125 g butter
125 g caster sugar (I used about half that and we didn't miss it)
3 large eggs
50g ground almonds
100g self raising flour

Cream the butter and sugar.  Beat in the eggs one at a time (with a little flour if it starts to curdle).  Fold in the ground almonds and sift in the rest of the flour.

Put the blackberries in a prepared 22cm round tin (or 6 ramekins) and pour the batter over.  Sprinkle with flaked almonds.  Bake at 140 degrees C (fan oven ) for 15-20 minutes.

Boiled Ham - Ver Jus, Cloves, Whisky Mustard, and Lime Marmalade

I suppose I should have blogged a day by day record of the cooking from the larder.  The problem is that with this '2 days at home and 5 days living on the boat in London' lark I do a huge amount of cooking on Saturday and Sunday, and then live off buckets of soup and stew during the week.

We've no shortage of food really, and have freezers to thank for the abundance and variety that we are able to enjoy even without going to the supermarket for a month.  For instance this weekend I boiled a gammon joint that I had purchased very cheaply after Christmas (supermarket had a super cut price deal on them and I bought about 4 of 3-4kg each - made two into gammon steaks and froze the other two whole).

The gammon was simmered gently in ver jus (green grape juice - several gallons of which I was able to make when we had to cut the neighbour's grape vine back off the garage roof last September.  It had been a mast year and I had to think of something to do with about 40kg of unripe grapes.  Result?  Lots of frozen very sour grape juice.)

Anyway the gammon simmered in sour grape juice, a couple of tablespoons of grainy whisky mustard we'd made before Christmas  2012, half a dozen cloves, and half a cup or so of runny lime marmalade - a disaster from about 14 months ago which I am slowly working my way through (see earlier posts on lime marmalade....)

The result was just divine.  After it was cooked, I strained the liquid and thickened it up to make a zingy mustard sauce for the hot ham.

Of course we will be eating cold ham with everything for a week. 

Monday, 3 February 2014

The February NO-SHOP challenge - Eating from the Larder for a Month.

Can I feed us for a month from the food we have in the cupbards, freezer, and fridge?

I have set myself a February challenge.  The garden is still producing a generous quantity of winter vegetables – parsnips, celeriac, kale, cabbages, sprouting broccoli Swiss Chard, leeks, celery, turnips, and assorted mustard and oriental greens.  The garden had also stocked the cupboards with a few kilos of dried peas, beans, and tomatoes, and the freezer still has a supply of green beans, beetroot, ratatouille, blackberries, stewed apples, and plenty of assorted frozen meats.  I have half a dozen pumpkins still ‘sunning’ themselves on  the dining room doorsill, and garlic plaits hanging in the kitchen.

In addition to this bounty there is the usual assortment of baking items (flour, rolled oats, sugar, dried fruits, nuts), and a small supply of butter, cheese and eggs in the fridge.

Plenty of herbs, spices, and essences hang out in small shelves beside the boiler, and I cleared out the dry stores cupboard and found tins of fruit, tomatoes, corn, and tuna, and loads of rice, noodles cornmeal, pasta, couscous, and bulghar wheat. (Unfortunately – for my challenge - we are trying to reduce consumption of ‘beige’ processed carbs.  It just means that I will have to be more creative with everything else.)

My makeshift larder (on top of the cupboards) has jam, chutney, and jars and jars of pickled beetroot.  We still have about 10kg of unsold honey from our bees too.

“So,” I told myself, “I wonder if it is possible to make meals for a month without going food shopping.  February is a short month so it seemed a good candidate and on Saturday morning my project got under way.

Now to complicate this – I am only at home 2 days a week.  5 days a week I live a makeshift life-style on a small yacht (moored close to my work) so as to avoid the drag of commuting.  It does mean however that I really need to plan the meals ahead and make things that are transportable – and easily reheated in the microwave.

This week’s meals are 2 or more repeats and combinations of the following:

Breakfasts are porridge or porridge (and maybe some porridge for a change)….
Lunch and dinner could be:
- portions from the leftovers of a huge chilli con carne which we had for dinner on Saturday night, with roasted celeriac and steamed kale;
- parsnip, roasted garlic, and ginger soup, accompanied by polenta baked with Swiss chard, dried tomatoes and grated cheese
- Succotash, and a salad based on Chinese mustard greens,
- fresh turnips (which I love to eat raw, savouring their crisp winter sweetness)
- a supply of individual steamed puddings from my ‘Easy Steamed Pudding’ recipe.

Mr B has by now discovered the handwritten list of ‘contents’ stuck to the fridge door indicating what I have left behind.  He isn’t compelled to participate in my February challenge and can jolly well buy whatever he wants to feed himself on, but as February is a low point in his financial year (the off-season of his employment) he quite welcomes a fridge stocked with ‘heat and eat’ meals.  He likes eggs more than I do so he has also got some mini ham and veg quiches to add variety to his menus.

What am I going to miss?  Fresh carrots definitely.  I love fresh raw carrots at this time of year.  I cannot grow carrots to save myself so you will not have seen them in the garden list at the start of this spiel.

Onions will run out and that is a real concern.  I use them in everything savoury.  The ones I grew were used up weeks ago, so we have only one bin full (maybe 2 kg) of bought ones between us and very challenging (boring?)  meals…..

What else?  I don’t eat them but I suspect eggs will run out within a week or so, and that will put the cobblers on a few things that have an egg in them as binder – and Mr B’s mini quiches.

Cheese will have to be rationed, but I think I can make 1 kg of that last a month.

What will be left over? 
- Pork.  We put a whole pig in the freezer last Summer and still have several roasting joints left.  We could eat pork every weekend, and cold pork in every possible way during the weeks but the word ‘BORING’ comes quickly to mind.
- Pumpkins and garlic
- Jams, Chutneys, and mustards (there really is jam for England in the larder)
- Beige food (rice, noodles, pasta, in particular)
- Vinegar, olive oil, and honey
- Teabags (I hope.  If teabags run out the challenge is forfeit, we will just have to go to the shops then)..

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Weight Loss Season

Blogging has gone on hold because baking and puddings have gone on hold.  This seems to be the season when all weight loss resolves are played out and it seems unkind to introduce a regular supply of cake and biscuits into the lives of those struggling with the battle between determination and desire - and plagued by a sweet tooth.

Instead I have been making vegetable soups, and Morrocan chicken tajines, and trying to find interesting ways to eat salsify, celeriac and parsnips (with which my veg garden abounds this year).

Parsnip patties perhaps - parsnips peeled, steamed and pureed (or mashed it you prefer texture as I do) with some egg to bind it and some salt, pepper and curry powder (or fresh grated ginger), formed into patties and shallow fried in light oil.....

Personally I prefer my parsnips coated in oil then baked in the oven for a nice brown caramelized outer layer over sweet soft parsnipy centre.

Sunday, 15 December 2013

Apple Surprise Pudding

Possibly the simplest cooked pudding in my repertoire, the surprise in this pudding is that it starts at the bottom of a brew that looks like gravy and floats to the top while it is cooking.


Today's surprise was in fact that I used bananas instead of apple and it worked just as well.

Apple Surprise Pudding
1 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 tablespoon sugar
large cup chopped apple (or two sliced bananas for the banana version)
1/2 cup milk

Mix all that and put it in a generous sized greased oven dish.


Mix up sauce: 
1 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon lemon juice (or essence)
2 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 cups boiling water

Pour this over the dough, sprinkle some cinnamon on top, and bake in a moderate oven for 20-25 minutes.


BEFORE
 
AFTER

Monday, 25 November 2013

Easy Steamed Pudding


There are two things one needs to make steamed pudding - pudding basin, and pot large enough to boil it in.  (Three, if you count the TIME you need to steam the pudding.)

Devotees of steamed puddings might regard this as heresy, but I cut the process short by having a pudding basin which gets heat to the centre of the pudding straight away ...

and a pressure cooker....


...the combined effect of which is to cut steaming time to less than half the recipe time.

Whatever your choice of equipment, here is the easiest steamed pudding recipe I know.  This came from Mum and was possibly the ONLY steamed pudding recipe she used.  You can very easily make you own variations on it.  You make it in the basin you intend to steam the pudding in, and it doesn't seem to be a problem that the basin wasn't greased (because you were using it as a mixing bowl).

Hints on the recipe below:
- for tablespoon read "one of those large spoons that often accompany a cutlery set and are used for serving". 
- Heaped in this case means as much flour as you can get on the spoon. 
- Use any jam you like.  Mum always used raspberry.  Below I used Oregon Grape jam.  It is very black stuff and the uncooked pudding mix becomes a particularly unappetizing shade of grey - which is why there are no pictures of the uncooked pudding mix. (Photo of cooked pudding to follow.)

Easy Steamed Pudding.

Melt together 1 tablespoon each of butter, sugar, and jam
Add 3 heaped TB flour,

1/2 tsp soda dissolved in 1/2 cup milk, and
a handful of dried fruit



Cover and steam 1 and half hours (or 40 minutes in a pressure cooker)







Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Easy Christmas Cake

I have already posted this recipe along with a slightly more complicated one near the start of this blog.

I made my Christmas cake a bit late this year a couple of weeks ago so I went for the easy recipe. 

Now we are 'feeding' it - a shot glass of brandy every couple of weeks.  It doesn't need it. and never got this treatment when my Mum made it, but then we don't have any youngsters around our Christmas table.
 Easy Christmas Cake


Put 3 lb mixed dried fruit in a pot with

8 oz brown sugar,
8 oz butter,
1 Tb glycerine and
1 cup water.
Boil 10 minutes and leave to cool.

Separate 4 eggs and beat the white and yolk separately. Add the beaten egg components time about with

1 lb flour
1 tsp Baking Soda
2 tsp pMixed Spice

Bake in a lined 9" deep tin in a slow oven (about 130C) for 3.5 hours
 
Post on icing it coming soon.