One Hour Spaghetti Bolognese with Courgette, Lemon and Chilli Salad

Everyone has their own way of making a spaghetti bolognese don't they? Whether it's the Italian traditional method of making a slow cooked ragu from bones and marrow, a recipe passed down through the generations or out of a ready mix jar we all have our ways of making what has become almost a staple on the weekly menu's in many Irish and UK households.

As summer approaches, us Irish and Brits are faced with important food dilemmas like: is it too hot outside for a roast dinner or, how rainy does it have to be exactly before you have to abandon the BBQ?!

I was gutted that I didn't have the nerve to get up on the platform and tell everyone there about my first cookbook and how it probably was where my love of cooking first began. But then it occurred to me that I could just as easily tell everyone about my first cookbook from the comfort of my very own blog!

Mondays hey….who'd have 'em? Well it turns out no matter what, there's no avoiding them so we may as well just tackle them head on!

It's amazing what you'll come up with when you really want something sweet for after a mid-week dinner but you want it to be quick, tasty and naughty enough that you feel as though you really have had a treat! It was in this vein of thought that I started creating various different "Tumbler Deserts" and I come back to them time again.

I spent most of my childhood arguing with people that macaroni cheese wasn't in fact just macaroni pasta and cheese sauce. Vehemently did I protest that there was meat in it and something calle "rattatoo-ee", whatever the hell that was. It wasn't until I was well into my 20's that I had my first taste of what the rest of the world understands to be "Macaroni Cheese" and to be honest I didn't rate it much at all against my mum's version!

Soup is great, isn't it! It's the perfect way of getting rid of any left over bits in your fridge whilst at the same time give you a realy boost of vitamins and flavour. They can be as gourmet, comforting, zen, healthy (or not) as you choose them to be!

This is a lovely summery salad that accompanies BBQ meats and fish equally well. It's really quick and simple to put together but tastes aromatic from the fennel seed and zingy from the chilli. There is a very obvious nod to the greek and turkish food traditions here.

We've all been there…a great BBQ was had by all, but there was too much food bought/brought and nobody ate as much as they thought they could handle, and as a result you have been left with a load of cooked sausages. What to do with them? There's only so many sausage sandwiches one can eat after all! Well, I can help you out of your conundrun!

There are many lovely things about living in West Cork.  As a food-obsessed "blow-in" all my Christmases come at once living here, every day of the year! So imagine my utter delight to hear how Allison Roberts, founder and master chocolatier of Clonakilty Chocolate ( www.clonakiltychocolate.com ), was launching a crowd-funding initiative to open the first ever Irish Bean-to-Bar fully fairtrade and ethical chocolate factory right here in Clonakilty! If ever there was a band-wagon worth jumping on, this was it right here for me!

Last Sunday 15th June 2014 was national Street Feast day. Local communities and groups coming together for a couple of hours one Sunday afternoon as a way of reconnecting in a fun and relaxing way with their immediate neighbours.

One Hour Spaghetti Bolognese with Courgette, Lemon and Chilli Salad

Everyone has their own way of making a spaghetti bolognese don’t they? Whether it’s the Italian traditional method of making a slow cooked ragu from bones and marrow, a recipe passed down through the generations or out of a ready mix jar we all have our ways of making what has become almost a staple on the weekly menu’s in many Irish and UK households.

 

On a weekday evening, I dedicate up to an hour cooking the dinner. I figure that for most dishes, even for ones that are a traditional slow cook like a spaghetti bolognese, an hour gives you enough time to develop a decent bit of flavour without being a slave to the stove when there are so many other things on an evening to attend to besides dinner. Here below is my take. I am not afraid to make use of some shortcuts, but where it matters the bulk of the meal is always made from scratch; fresh and full of flavour!

The below recipe would feed two generously or four moderately when accompanied with the Courgette Salad and sides. Enjoy!

Before we start, a quick note on tomato sauces: Every tomato sauce needs a good base. I find that a really good base can be wizzed up in a couple of minutes using either sun-blushed or sun-dried tomatos. Sun-dried tomatoes will give a very deep, smoky, slightly tannic flavour whereas using sun-blushed provides a lighter and sweeter flavour which allows the other herby notes to carry through much more. Try to use deli-fresh product rather than jarred, but if that’s all that’s available then trust me, it’s still miles better than the jarred bolognese mixes. The longer you cook the ragu (bolognese) the more flavour you will get – just mind it from time to time, ensuring it doesn’t stick to the pan.

For the Sauce:
Put all of the following ingredients into a mini blender (or a pestle and morter if you don’t have a mini-blender – quantity is not enough to use a blender or a large processor for this) and wizz up for a few seconds until blended together.

About 50g of either sun-blushed or sun-dried tomatoes (you can add more for a stronger taste of course, just be careful on getting the balance right especially with the sun dried toms)
2 cloves of garlic
A small handful each of basil and oregano
A drizzle of extra virgin olive oil
A good pinch of Maldon sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper
A pinch of sugar ONLY if using sun-dried tomato’s to get a sweeter balance going on.
Next, heat a teaspoon of olive oil in a non-stick pan (preferably one you can cover with a lid later) and add in 250g of best quallity lean beef steak mince. I suggest making friends with your local butcher rather than using the watery pre-packed stuff from the supermarket. Brown off the meat for a few minutes. Place a couple of sheets of kitchen toweling on a plate and spoon out the browned mince onto it, leaving in the pan as many of the meat juices as possible – don’t throw this away!

Next, lower the heat on the hob, add in your wizzed up tomato paste to the pan with the meat juices and cook for a couple of minutes, adding a little water (rather than more oil) to the pan if it sticks. Add in one tin of plain chopped tomatos (400g), a handful of mixed chopped basil and oregano, a teaspoon of good quality balsamic vinegar and 1 jellied beef stock cube (nice cheat!). Let that all mix in together until the stock has melted in. Add in the beef and three finely chopped mushrooms. The mushrooms help to add non-meaty but yet meaty bulk to the dish which is healthier than just adding more meat! Give everything a good stir, turn the heat right down to a bare simmer, cover and leave to cook through and for the flavours to develop. Move on to preparing your sides.

Courgette, Chilli and Lemon Salad:
Set up your food processor with the grater blade. If you don’t have this, you can use a normal grater, just takes a little longer.

Clean 2 courgettes, top and tail them and then cut them lengthways so you have 4 halves.
Put the courgettes through the grater, transfer into a bowl for dressing and presentation.
Add the zest and juice of 1 lemon.
Slice 1 red chilli diagonally (the heat will depend on the chilli you use – I have used a jalapeno type chilli for this dish so that there is background heat but it doesn’t overpower). Saving a few slices for garnish, take the rest and chop finely. Add to the courgette and lemon mix.
Season with Maldon sea salt and plenty of freshly ground black pepper.
Add in 1/2 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil.
Toss the salad. Garnish with the remaining chilli slices.
Green Salad:
In a bowl add in a very small dash of extra virgin olive oil, lemon juice, sea salt and pepper.
Add a couple of good handfuls of organic peppery leaves (giving a different texture and flavour).
Set aside and when everything else is ready, toss the leaves in the dressing sitting underneath. Doing it this way means that the leaves will not wilt under the acid of the lemon.
Return to your bolognese give it a stir, replace the lid and further reduce the heat if necessary. It shouldn’t be drying out as yet so will still look a little wet – this is fine. If it is drying out you have cooked it on too high a heat too fast! Take it back!

Garlic Bread:
Making your own garlic bread is so easy and by substituting olive oil instead of butter really cuts down the calories:

In a pestle and morter, add 2 cloves of garlic, a pinch of sea salt flakes, freshly ground black pepper, and a small handful each of basil and flat leaf parsley.
Bash together in the pestle and morter and when it has been broken down sufficiently (should take but a few seconds), add in a small glug of extra virgin olive oil and mix well together.
Take a part baked ciabatta – either 1 small one per person or one large one. Make diagonal slices across the bread, but only half way through it.
Using either your fingers or for those adverse to this kind of texture, use a basting brush to put as much of the garlic and herb mixture in between the slices and all over the top of the bread.
Take a piece of parchment paper and rinse it under a tap and then squeeze it out completely. Lay it on a baking tray, wrap the ciabattas within and place in the oven at 200 deg C for the length of time advised on the pack.
Half way through cooking, open up the parchment paper, this will ensure the bread crisps up on top.
Slice the bread all the way through and present on a nice plate / board etc.
Back to the bolognese, uncover stir and add in 1/2 tablespoon of fresh chopped basil. Keep the cover off at this point to help reduce the sauce, but keep an eye on it so it doesn’t stick.

In a pan of boiling water, place enough spaghetti for the number of people dining, but remember there are plenty of sides so you can reduce the amount of carbs making it a little less calorific for you. The type of spaghetti you use is a matter of personal choice: fresh or dry, white, brown, gluten free etc you can tailor it to your preference. I personally only use organic wholewheat spaghetti – I like the nutty taste, the slightly rougher texture and the fact that it has a lower GI index than white pasta. Cook according to packet instructions. When ready, drain fully, return to the empty pan and add a small amount of extra virgin olive oil to keep it nice and lubricated. Add in the bolognese sauce and mix through, decant onto a nice warm serving platter and take to the table.

Dress the green salad and take to the table along with the courgette salad and the garlic bread.

Serve with a nice bottle of Valpolicella and enjoy!

Veg Accompaniments for a Summery Roast Dinner

As summer approaches, us Irish and Brits are faced with important food dilemmas like: is it too hot outside for a roast dinner or, how rainy does it have to be exactly before you have to abandon the BBQ?!

 

Well, in relation to the traditional Sunday roast I say to you: it is never too hot outside for a roast chicken dinner! Forget about trying to faff about with making the meat “different” – stick to its brilliant beautiful traditional self; instead take a sideways look at your veg and think about different ways to cook, prepare and serve up your veg sides to bring the roast back on the summery Sunday table.

The other day I roasted a chicken with lemon and tarragon. The sun was out, the dogs were toasting themselves nicely on the hot stones outside and I was most definitely not in the mood for roast veg and gravy. Instead I cooked panfried green beans with smoked salt, oregano and almonds; smashed new potatoes with chilli and garlic and a carrot slaw with cumin and coriander seeds, parsley, sultanas, lemon juice and rapeseed oil. Everything was a definite hit! See below the three very simple receipes and enjoy!

Smashed New Potatoes with Chilli and Garlic:
Steam as many baby new potatoes as you need or dare!
Once cooked through, take off the heat; put a frying pan onto a medium high heat and heat a good glug of olive oil (you’ll need more depending on how many spuds you have, but don’t make it very oily)
Whilst that is heating up, take a normal spoon and using the back of it gently push each of the potatoes to “smash them” – don’t be annihilating them now!
When the oil is hot enough, put the potatoes in the frying pan with half a finely chopped fresh jalapeno chili pepper and two small or one large finely chopped garlic clove.
Toss everything together, mind it until the potatoes start to colour and are warmed through again. Don’t let the chilli and garlic catch.
Place into a warmed serving bowl and set aside.
Fragrant Carrot Slaw
Peel two large carrots, top and tail.
Using a food processor, attached the grater blade. Put both carrots through the processor. Empty the grated carrot into a bowl.
Crush 1/2 teaspoon each of coriander and cumin seed, add that to the bowl along with a handful of sultanas for sweetness, the zest of one whole lemon and the juice of half; a handful of finely chipped parsley.
Season with freshly ground black pepper and a good sprinkly of Maldon sea salt flakes. Drizzle with rapeseed oil. Mix together well and set aside ready for serving.
Smokey Green Beans
Take a pack of fine green beans, top and tail the lot. Place in bowl and drizzle extra virgin olive oil over them along with a generous sprinkle of Maldon smoked sea salt and plenty of freshly ground black pepper.
Heat a pan. Don’t add any oil to the pan. When it is hot enough throw in the green beans complete with the oil and seasoning.
Toss the green beans ensuring they get some colour (don’t worry if they take a little). You want the beans quite al dente. Cook more if you don’t like them super crunchy.
A minute before they are ready, throw in a 1/2 tablespoon of finely chopped oregano and a good sprinkle of flaked almonds.
Toss everything together, finish with the lightest spritz of lemon oil and serve in a warmed bowl.
Bring to the table and serve up with your lovely juicy roast chicken. Serve outside in the sunshine with a well chilled bottle of Chablis; and Enjoy!

Probably where it all began…

I was gutted that I didn’t have the nerve to get up on the platform and tell everyone there about my first cookbook and how it probably was where my love of cooking first began. But then it occurred to me that I could just as easily tell everyone about my first cookbook from the comfort of my very own blog!

This is my first ever cookbook…just look at those…erm “graphics”!….

MYFUN

…well, I say mine but it actually belonged to my sister who was given it as a Christmas present in 1980 by a lady called Eileen. At some point ownership passed to me as I had scrawled inside the front cover that the book was now the property of Katy Giles, in all my backward-facing-letters handwriting. I’ve come a long way in the past six months!

I have some very distinct memories associated with cooking and spending time in the family kitchen, and none more so than the memory of my sister walking me through the recipe for making “Fruit Jelly” (buy jelly, add hot water and tinned fruit; leave by an open window to cool and set….woah, difficult or what?!) or disparing at my lack of knife skills which meant that I always made a complete hash of taking the tops off of the small sponge cakes that would be transformed into Fairy Cakes – my sister doing it perfectly every time, but then she is six years older than me! Or the feeling of utter accomplishment at making my first ever Spanish Omelette and it tasty pretty darn tootin’ – even though today I would make sure it had generous amounts of picante chorizo, lashings of fresh flat leaf parsley and topped off with manchego cheese – none of which were readily available in 1980’s south Bristol!

As soon I returned home from litfest, I took my lovely book from the book shelf and rummaged through the pages and as I did so I was struck by just how many distant memories came flooding back. All books have the power to evoke nostlagic memories but to me, no book genre is more evocative than a cookbook and the memories it can attach to food; a place or time. I also noticed that on re-reading the recipes most of them sound god awful now and I wouldn’t ever be making them again; but that doesn’t mean that I will ever be letting go of this book! Instead I shall place it proudly back on its shelf nestled in amongst the other really rather grown up and serious cookbooks. It made me think that my “My Fun to Cook Book” is quite a lot like me really: quite silly but nestled all in amongst the grown ups!

Before I leave you to ponder your own first / worst / favourite cookbooks and the memories that will come with, I will share with you the most used recipe of all (judging by the condition of the pages): Fruit Jelly….

jelly_small

Enjoy!

Super Quick & Tasty Chicken Goujons

Mondays hey….who’d have ’em? Well it turns out no matter what, there’s no avoiding them so we may as well just tackle them head on!

 

I am always looking for something tasty and quick to eat on a Monday, mainly because my tastebuds are still hungover from the weekend but I generally am lacking motivation to cook anything too taxing. So on Monday’s I raid my memory for a quick and tasty treat. On this particular Monday I went for good old Chicken Goujons! But not the cheap and nasty ones ready made from the chiller cabinet, but rather homemade from scratch with only a fraction of the calories of the shop bought ones by substituting oil thirsty breadcrumbs with a light dusting of semolina grain instead. Aside from the benefits of less fat and of course knowing exactly what you are putting on your dinner plate, there is also the added benefit of being able to change the flavours in the semolina mix to whatever you fancy or to go with whichever accompaniements you choose. The recipe below is for the classic combo of chicken with lemon and tarragon.

Please note: I am most definitely NOT talking about the wet semolina you get out of tin, but rather the grain form which can be found in the baking ailse!

Ingredients (serves 2 people):
Two skinless chicken breasts
A handful of semolina powder/grain
Freshly ground black pepper; sea salt flakes (to taste)
1 tsp of dried tarragon
Zest of one lemon
1 egg whisked (optional)
1 tblsp of olive oil.
Method:
Slice the back piece off of the chicken fillet, and then slice the rest of the fillet in three strips lengthways, and then slice each piece diagonally across. This should result is apx 7 goujon pieces per fillet.
Mix the semolina, tarragon, lemon zest, salt and pepper together in a bowl. Whisk the egg in another bowl on its own (optional, you can do this without the egg – the coating will be thinner but will still taste great – personally I switch between using the egg and not!)
Heat the olive oil in a frying pan over a medium high heat until very hot. Don’t put it on max high heat otherwise the chicken pieces will burn when you put them in the pan before cooking in the middle.
When the oil is hot enough, take the chicken and (if you are using the egg) dip the chicken in the egg mix and then coat in the semolina mix.
Place each piece in the pan – do this quickly in succession so that the chicken will all cook and be ready at the same time.
Do not move the chicken in the pan for the first 2 – 3 minutes or until when turning the semolina turns a nice golden colour. Turn and cook for the same amount of time on the other side.
After 6-7 minutes in total, give all chicken pieces a good shake in the pan to take up as much colour as possible.
Turn out onto some kitchen towel to take off any excess oil – although this will be minimal.
Serve up on a warmed plate with whichever accompaniements you wish, and Enjoy!

Tumbler Desert #1 – Peach & Strawberry, Amaretto & Cream

It’s amazing what you’ll come up with when you really want something sweet for after a mid-week dinner but you want it to be quick, tasty and naughty enough that you feel as though you really have had a treat! It was in this vein of thought that I started creating various different “Tumbler Deserts” and I come back to them time again.

 

They are so easy you can make them alongside your dinner, and the flavour combinations and possibilities are endless, not to mention a great way of using up leftover fruit from the fruit bowl! The only rule I have for making Tumbler Deserts is that they have a variety of textures and taste: a bit of crunch, a bit of sweetness and a bit of unctious loveliness usually supplied by cream or custard.

They are called Tumbler Deserts because they are served up in a standard tumbler glass – simple! Below is a recipe for a Tumbler Desert I made for after last nights’ dinner. It made me remember how lovely they are, and decided that now was a good time to introduce the world to them! Every time I make one, I’ll post it up with a number – I wonder how many I’ll get to?!

Ingredients (serves 2):
Two small handful of amaretti biscuits
Small slug of Amaretto liquer
A single square of Green & Blacks Maya Gold (spiced orange and dark chocolate)
Half a punnet of strawberries
4 very ripe peaches
1 tsp of Vanilla Bean paste
2 tblsp of brown demerara sugar
Some water
Single cream
Method:
Put the amaretti biscuits in the bottom of each tumbler (a small handful per glass) and using the bottom of a rolling pin, crush them to a fine crumb (very satisfying!)
Put a small slug of Amaretto onto of the biscuits – be careful, not too much; just enough so that when you stir the biscuit and liquer together with a spoon it gently comes together but does not melt away.
Grate the Maya Gold over the Amaretti biscuit and liquer mix – as much as you like really! Set aside.
De-stone the four peaches and place them in a small non-stick pan along with the vanilla bean paste and the brown sugar.
Cover the saucepan and put on a medium low heat. Cook gently for about 7 mins until the peaches start to break down, but still hold their shape a little.
Make sure that the caramel that will be produced from the peaches and the sugar doesn’t catch. After about 7 minutes, add in a little drop of water to the pan to deglaze the caramel and stop it from burning and add the hulled and halved strawberries.
Turn the heat down a little, and cook for another 3 minutes uncovered.
Once done, spoon the peach and strawberry mix over the amaretto biscuit mix along with the caramelised juices.
Pour over the top some single cream which should float on top of the fruit mixture, and finish off with a final flourish of grated Maya Gold.
Serve immediately, and Enjoy!

My Mum’s “Not Very Macaroni Cheese” Macaroni Cheese

I spent most of my childhood arguing with people that macaroni cheese wasn’t in fact just macaroni pasta and cheese sauce. Vehemently did I protest that there was meat in it and something calle “rattatoo-ee”, whatever the hell that was. It wasn’t until I was well into my 20’s that I had my first taste of what the rest of the world understands to be “Macaroni Cheese” and to be honest I didn’t rate it much at all against my mum’s version!

 

So over all these years I have stuck pretty darn close to my mum’s traditional recipe – wherever she got it from. The only change I have made is that I make my own cheese sauce to go on top rather than the packet Schwarz mix mum used, but to be honest for this particular dish, I would quite happilly use a three-cheese packet mix – just for the pure nostlagia of the dish.

Ingredients (serves 4 – 6 depending on appetite):
350g of organic lean minced beef
1tsp of olive oil
Half a red onion, diced
1 clove of garlic, diced
400g tin of chopped tomatoes
400g tin of ratatouile (I like the Epicure brand, or of course you could make your own if you have the time)
1 green pepper, 1cm diced pieces
10 cherry tomatoes, halved
1 bay leaf
Small bunch of fresh thyme
Freshly ground black pepper and a pinch of salt
Apx 200g of any kind of pasta – doesn’t have to be macaroni: Conchiglie or Fusilli work well as well.
For the cheese sauce make a basic roux and add plenty of strong cheese.
Method:
In a frying pan, brown off the beef without adding any extra oil. When browned, turn out onto some kitchen paper.
Put the pan back on the heat and add the olive oil, onion and garlic and fry until onion is soft.
Add into the pan the peppers and cherry tomatoes, bay leaf and thyme, cook for a minute or so.
Add the tin of ratatouille and the chopped tomatoes, stir and then add the beef back into the pan.
Season well with plenty of black pepper.
Bring to a boil and then turn the heat down to low and cook through, stirring occassionally for about 15 minutes.
Season with a small pinch of salt at the end. You don’t need much if you are using the tinned ratatoille as there will be plenty of salt in that.
Meanwhile, put the pasta on to cook remembering to season the boiling water well. Drain when the pasta is just a little over al dente.
Make the roux, add milk and cheese and stir until combined and thickly coats the back of the spoon.
Put the grill on to high.
Pour the pasta and the meat mix into a lasagne / casserole dish and mix through.
Pour the cheese sauce on top and grate a little more cheese over the top.
Place under the grill and cook until the cheese starts to brown – personally the more “burny bits” the better! Should take about 5-8 mins.
Dish out a portion on each plate and serve with a fresh salad of salad leaves with cracked black pepper and a spritz of lemon juice.
Delve in hungrilly and Enjoy!

Green & White Veg & Goats Cheese Soup

Soup is great, isn’t it! It’s the perfect way of getting rid of any left over bits in your fridge whilst at the same time give you a realy boost of vitamins and flavour. They can be as gourmet, comforting, zen, healthy (or not) as you choose them to be!

The recipe below came as an idea when I had friends over for a sunday roast and had, as usual, made way too much! I had quite a lot of left over broccoli, green cabbage, cauliflower and peas. As the thought of throwing away this pefectly usable vegetable mix was beyond comprehension, I set about having a think about what I could do with it to turn it into something even tastier!

There are always lots of options with left over veg; bubble and squeak being the most obvious of course. But I decided instead to go for a soup and add the twist of a mild goats’ cheese to go with it to excite the taste buds. If you have loads of leftover cooked veg, this recipe will take you all of about 10 minutes to make. Add on another 10 if you have to steam the veg from scratch – but even so, this is not a time extensive exercise at all and if you love veg and cheese you will thank me for this recipe!!

Ingredients:
Apx 1 kilo of steam cooked veg. (Quantities vary: less veg = less cheese and so on).
150g of mild goats cheese (choose something with a smooth texture and milky flavour; you don’t want too much sourness coming from the cheese)
1 gelly vegetable stock cube made up with 1 ltr of hot water
Freshly ground black pepper
Method:
If you haven’t some left over veg; prepare your veg and steam cook for 10-15 minutes until very tender. Don’t boil the veg otherwise you will lose flavour and it will taste watery.
Meanwhile, boil the kettle and make up the 1 ltr of vegetable stock from the gelly.
When the veg is cooked, place into a blender and give it a quick wizz just to break it down to make room for the other ingredients.
Add in the 1 litre of stock and crumble in the goats cheese.
Blitz under very smooth. If the consistency is too thick, add more water.
Add lots of freshly ground black pepper to your own personal taste.
No need to add extra salt as there will have been plenty during the cooking of the veg and the stock gelly.
If eating immediately, transfer into a pan and heat through til bubbling.
Serve with a garnish of crumbled goats cheese and a parsley leaf.
If freezing, portion off into bags or tubs and allow to cool completely before placing in the freezer. This soup will happily keep in a freezer for a couple of months.
When eating from frozen, take it out of the freezer and place in a fridge to defrost for max 24 hours. Place in a saucepan and heat until boiling. Simmer for a few minutes until piping hot and serve immediately.
…and Enjoy!

Beetroot and Feta Salad

This is a lovely summery salad that accompanies BBQ meats and fish equally well. It’s really quick and simple to put together but tastes aromatic from the fennel seed and zingy from the chilli. There is a very obvious nod to the greek and turkish food traditions here.

 

Ingredients (serves 4-6 as an accompaniement):
1 pack of pre-cooked beetroot, cut in 1cm cubes
200g of good quallity Feta cheese, cut into 1cm cubes
1tsp of fennel seeds, roasted and crushed
Half a red chilli (seeds taken out)
1 tblsp on sunflower seeds
A good handful of parsely
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Freshly ground black pepper
Malden smoked sea salt
Method:
Cut the Feta into 1cm cubes and place in a serving bowl.
Cut the beetroot into 1cm cubes and add to the feta.
Toast the fennel seeds lightly in a dry pan, crush them in a pestle and mortar and add to the dish.
Finely chop the chilli and add.
Sprinkle over the sunflower seeds.
Finely chop the parsely and add.
Grind fresh black pepper and add the smoked sea salt to taste.
Add a lug of extra virgin olive oil and mix thoroughly.
Taste and adjust seasoning as required.
Tip:

Toasting the fennel seeds before crushing helps to release the beautiful oils in the seed and therefore add to the depth of flavour in the dish.
Store in an airtight container and this salad will last max two days in a fridge.

What to do with Leftover BBQ Sausages?

We’ve all been there…a great BBQ was had by all, but there was too much food bought/brought and nobody ate as much as they thought they could handle, and as a result you have been left with a load of cooked sausages. What to do with them? There’s only so many sausage sandwiches one can eat after all! Well, I can help you out of your conundrun!

The recipe below is a variation of a “Pasta al Forno” dish that was published in Olive Magazine in 2013. I have included a note after this recipe on how to make the original which is also yummy and appears regularly in my repertoire for fast, tasty weekday food!

Ingredients (serves 2-4, depending on appetite!):

Cooked sausages (enough for two per adult) cut lengthways and quartered
1tsbp of fennel seeds
1 clove of garlic
2-4 dried chilli pods (depending on your need for heat!)
2 tblsp of tomato puree
1 400g tin of chopped tomatoes
1 large / 2 small red bell peppers
1 tblsp of fresh chopped rosemary (if you only have dried use 1/2 tblsp)
50g pasta per person
Some cheese for grating over: Pecorino / Parmesan / Gran Padano etc
Freshly cracked black pepper and sea salt to season
Method:

Place a pan of salted water on the heat for the pasta.

Dry roast the fennel seeds slightly for a few minutes, careful not to burn them.
Pop the fennel seeds, chilli pods and garlic in a pestle and mortar and bash together.
Heat a small lug of olive oil in a frying pan to a medium heat and pop in the fennel/chili/garlic mix. Cook off for a couple of minutes.
Add the tomato puree and mix in with the aromatics; cook out for a minute or two.
Add in the tinned tomatoes and cook for a couple of minutes.
Meanwhile prepare you red peppers by deseeding, taking out the pith and cutting into roughyl 2cm pieces. Add to the pan and stir.
Add in your chopped sausages, turn the heat down and cook through until bubbling.
If the sauce becomes a little dry, add some water a little at a time. I use the tomato tin to get any left over tomato juice as well.
Place the pasta in to the boiling water. In the picture below I have used wholewheat pasta, but any pasta you have will do as long as it’s not the miniature stuff!
Chop the rosemary and add to the sausage mix along with a decent grind of fresh black pepper and some sea salt to season. Stir and cook through.
Drain the pasta. Check the sausage mix for seasoning and adjust if necessary.
Pour the sausage mix into the pasta; mix together and serve immediately on warmed plates.
Grate over a generous amount of the cheese and serve with a simple leaf salad with lemon dressing to freshen the palate.
And Enjoy….!

NOTE:

The original recipe in Olive Magazine is for Rigatoni al Forno. Using pretty much the same ingredients but with fresh, high meat content sausages (I like to use Gubeen Italian Sausages to enhance the fennel seed and garlic flavours) and rigatoni pasta the following method would apply:

Deskin the sausages and place into a medium hot pan, cooking and breaking down the sausages as you go with the wooden spoon.
Then add the aromatic mix above with the rosemary; tinned tomatoes and puree, cook through. Add salt and pepper at the end.
Cook the rigatoni. Mix the pasta and meat mix together and place in a lasagne disj (or similar).
Grate 100g of Gran Padano over the top and then grill until the cheese melts and browns.
Al Forno literally means “from the fire” and this is where this dish is served straight from the grill / oven etc straight to the table still all hot and bubbling. People then help themselves!

Allison and the Chocolate Factory

There are many lovely things about living in West Cork.  As a food-obsessed “blow-in” all my Christmases come at once living here, every day of the year! So imagine my utter delight to hear how Allison Roberts, founder and master chocolatier of Clonakilty Chocolate ( www.clonakiltychocolate.com ), was launching a crowd-funding initiative to open the first ever Irish Bean-to-Bar fully fairtrade and ethical chocolate factory right here in Clonakilty! If ever there was a band-wagon worth jumping on, this was it right here for me!

 

So off I went to her IndieGoGo page and made my contribution/donation. A day later I received an invitation by e-mail to her official launch party to be held at one of my favourite spots in Clonakilty right now, The Winery, in Asna Square. An invitation that included no less, a free glass of prosecco and some of her wonderful hand made truffles. With the summer surprising everyone and finally arriving at full volume, the thought of imbibing some fizz and indulging in chocolate with friends as the sun went down after work was just the kind of vision of heaven I was willing to grab and run with.

“Hi Allison, I’m Kate” I said nervously – something I didn’t need to be as she herself was clearly bubbling with a mix of nervous excitement that made me look positively zen! “Hi Kate” she said, “drink some prosecco, have a read of this and enjoy”. Awesome.

Asking if she had a site in mind, she told me that the funding was for equipment mainly and that she was in the process of building a purpose built extension at the back of her house where she currently handmakes all her own chocolates. “After that, we will see how things go. I have lots of sites in mind – there are plenty of options which is great because one of my main things is that I want to be able to either walk or cycle to my place of work. I really want it to be in the heart of Clonakilty; it has to be authentically local. With Clonakilty Black Pudding announcing that they are also ‘coming home’ it seems like the time is right to finally begin putting Clonakilty on the map as a proper foodie town”.

I said that this was the most exciting prospect for Clonakilty I had heard for a while, and that she must be buzzing with excitement at the prospect. “It’s like Allison and the Chocolate Factory” I said.

At which point I hastely took a couple of snappy snaps and was handed a plate of truffles. The queue behind me for fizz, chocolate and donations was growing to I retreated outside to the sunshine and to eat some chocolate – it was, afterall, why I had come! Mmmmm, sea salted rich dark chocolate pieces…..MMMmmmmm cinnamon dusted dark chocolate truffles….MMMMMMMMmmmm dark chocolate dipped locally grown strawberries, beautiful in all their bumpy, juicy loveliness. The wine was good too…hic!

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What a success. What a continued success it should be. It has, literally, all the right ingredients including and most importantly, a vehemently passionate artisan food producer…and she’s right here on our doorstep.

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So go on, click on the link below and donate to her fund. You can even choose a perk to be delivered in 2015 when the factory is up and running. It is the quintessential win-win situation. Money for Chocolate – makes sense to me.

https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/clonakilty-chocolate-is-going-bean-ananas

Street Feast 2014 : Waking up a Sleepy Village

Last Sunday 15th June 2014 was national Street Feast day. Local communities and groups coming together for a couple of hours one Sunday afternoon as a way of reconnecting in a fun and relaxing way with their immediate neighbours.

We are all guilty of it I am sure. Too busy and caught up in the hurly burly of every day life to stop and chat with our neighbours for very long. It never used to be this way, if we are to believe the stories of the older generations; and if so, why and when did it all change and, more importantly, why did we let the change happen?

I am not a native to the village that I live in. The poetic Irish term for this is “blow-in”. I happen to like this description of my origins as this makes me sound like a wandering traveller from far distant lands. I’m not; I’m from Bristol, but I still like to hold onto this romantic vision. However, when you are not originally from a place it can be difficult to connect with the people around you, and as we get older it becomes more difficult to make new friends and connections that have some kind of permanency about them.

I heard about Street Feast three years ago but, despite my experience of organising events, I felt too daunted by the prospect of putting myself out there to talk to people I didn’t know about this event and get the interest up. I was shy. And I got stage fright. Fast forward three years later, and via a friend, Street Feast came into my consciousness again. My next door neighbour (a fellow “foreigner”) also said she would like to get involved. Afterall, seven years in the village and she knew just a very small handful of people.

We gave ourselves two months to organise the event, which in typical West Cork fashion, meant we got everything sorted in the last two weeks – nothing like an impending deadline to give you a kick up the backside!

We spent almost nothing. Everything was donated or loaned: tables, brighly coloured oil cloths; chairs, gazebo’s, first aid kits; hand sanitizer; plastic cups, cutlery and plates; traffic cones, bunting and balloons. The DJ lent us his time and his kit for free. Everyone brought their own BBQ for our BYOBBQ Zone. We had a kids play area. And, most importantly, everyone brought something to eat, drink and to share.

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Is it not a truth universally acknowledged that nothing brings people together more than food? Food and drink? Food, Drink and Fire (especially Fire if you are a man; with a beer in hand).

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The range of food on offer was exceptional. Everyone went to such effort bringing homemade cakes, pastries, pizza’s; beautifully marinaded chicken; sausages, burgers; fresh bread and zesty salads. It was a delight to see that there was such effort given to the preparation of the food to share. Care and attention; wanting to provide something tasty and enjoyable. The power of our sense of taste is undeniable – if our mouths are happy then so are we; and so we chat and we make friends and arrange play dates for the kids and schedule a night to pop round with a bottle of wine and a catch up.

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In the end, it wasn’t so difficult afterall. We made time for each other, and the rest followed naturally. Everyone wants the Street Feast to return next year; and more events during the year for the benefit of the people in the village too.

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“Why didn’t we do this sooner?” “This was a great idea!” “I didn’t know what to expect, but I love it!” “This is what the community needs.”

And that was how the sleepy village of Ballygurteen woke itself up again one sunny, happy Sunday afternoon.

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