Sunday, May 27, 2012
Lamb Pilaf
Yesterday I came home to a absolutely delicious Lamb Pilaf or Lucknowi Biryani.
What's unique about this dish is that the rice is cooked with the meat rather than separately, the latter I would assume is usually the case with rice-accompanying dishes.
Ingredients:
350g jasmine rice
650g lamb neck
6 cloves of garlic
12g fresh, crushed ginger
1 tsp salt
1 big onion, chopped
10 cardamon pods (green)
1 tbsp black pepper
4 bay leaves
4 pieces of cinnamon sticks
4 whole cloves
4 tsp canola oil
2 tsp cumin seeds
4 green thai chillies
Method:
Rinse the rice and soak it for 30 min.
Make a stock by putting the following ingredients into a large sauce-pan: 500ml water, the lamb, half the onion, garlic, ginger, salt, cardamom, black pepper, bay leaves, cinnamon and cloves. Simmer for 40 minutes or until the lamb is tender.
Take out the meat and place it in a separate bowl so that you can strain out the spices from the stock with a sieve. The stock shouldn't have any solids in now. Measure it and add enough water for it to reach 700ml.
Heat the oil in your saucepan and add the cumin. When the seeds start to make a sizzling sound, add the chillies and other half of the onion and cook until the onion is translucent. Add the lamb neck in again to brown (about 5 minutes). Your stock can now be added along with the drained rice that has been soaking.
Simmer with the lid on for 15 minutes. Turn the heat off and leave it to steam for a further 5 minutes.
Note: This version is slightly different to the one published in the book, just describes how we cooked it.
Saturday, March 3, 2012
My Tiramisu
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Naan Bread
Ingredients:
4 cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
2 cups of low fat yoghurt
Method:
I mixed together 4 cups of flour with 1 tsp salt and 1 tsp baking powder. I then kneaded in 2 cups of low fat yoghurt, but double cream might make it tastier.
Once you've kneaded it for about 5 minutes, oil another bowl lightly and put the ball of dough aside to rest for an hour. Thereafter, divide the dough into about 10 balls and roll them out.
Since you will probably be using a round frying pan, try to make them round rather than long. When ready, add the dough, once piece at a time to the pan on medium-high heat until the bread puffs up and gets brown marks on it.
Then transfer it to a hot oven (220 - 290'C). My oven started smoking at 290 so I turned it down. I think this part of the process just cooks the inside a bit more.
Serve hot with butter and garlic.Enjoy with a nice hot curry and a home-made chutney.
Note: I found that they weren't great the next day, so if you're going to make them, eat them all that day (which shouldn't be too difficult).
I used this recipe: http://low-cholesterol.food.com/recipe/naan-203261
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Easy Coconut Ice
Ingredients:
1 tin condensed milk
400g icing sugar
350g dried coconut
1/4 tsp salt
Method:
Mix all the ingredients together in a bowl and then pour out into a flat pan with at least 3cm high sides. Allow to set for a couple of hours and then cut into blocks and serve. Actually I would recommend cutting into blocks when half-set. If you cut it too soon, it'll merge again and too late will require too much muscle.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Roasted Tomatoes and Tomato-Jam Sauce
Roasted Tomatoes
Ingredients:
6 ripe tomatoes (cut in half with seeds and juice spooned out)
Salt
Pepper
Olive oil
Topping (such as Italian herbs, fresh basil, half a clove of garlic in each half etc)
Method:
Put the tomatoes in a baking try with the skin side down and drizzle with olive oil, pepper, salt and add your herbs or other seasoning.
Bake for an hour at 180'C.
The tomatoes may have become smaller and their taste will have concentrated. Their useful shape allows you to fill them with Chevre/Chevin or some Buffalo mozzarella (if you used Basil leaves). Because olive oil is so delicious you can always add a glug over the top and a small splash of balsamic vinegar as well. The tomatoes can be served hot or cold and can be eaten simply as they come out of the oven.
Tomato-Jam Sauce
Ingredients:
1 tsp salt
2tsp sugar
2 tsp chilli chutney
Pepper
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
Juice and seeds of 6 tomatoes (scooped out)
1 tsp cornstarch/ mazina
Method:
Add all the ingredients (except mazina) into a small saucepan and once it starts boiling add the mazina stirring constantly. Once mixed in you can leave the mixture to reduce until it's thick and almost jam-like. It will also thicken as it cools, so keep that in mind.
This can be used for finger foods such as bites of crusty bread with cheese, or simply eaten as a spicy jam.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Jam Tartlets with Roasted Peaches and Ice-cream
Ingredients:
Puff pastry squares
Jam (cranberry & apple), 1 tsp per square
Ripe peaches slices into 1 cm strips
Sugar
Vanilla ice cream or plain yoghurt
Honey for drizzling
Method:
You can cut your own pastry squares once rolled out, about 5cm for all sides. Make a little hollow in each square for the jam to sit in. The cranberry jam worked nicely, but as it heats up, the berries slide off and stick to the pan instead of the pastry, so try to avoid that from happening.
Lay your peach strips, gently sifted with sugar, next to the pastry in a roasting pan and cook for 15 - 20 min on 200 degrees until lightly browned. Serve with ice cream or yoghurt after drizzling with honey.
Roast Chicken & Mushroom Pie
Serves 6
Ingredients:
1,2kg free-range chicken
A lemon
3 cloves of chopped garlic
3 tbsp olive oil
Salt
Pepper
1 tbsp chicken stock powder
1 tsp chilli flakes
1 tbsp herbes de provence
400g brown mushrooms chopped into 2cm squares
2 tbsp butter
1 roll of puff pastry (defrosted)
2 tbsp cornstarch
1/2 c milk
1 egg
Method:
Squeeze the lemon into the olive oil, chicken stock powder, herbes, 2 cloves of chopped garlic, 3 tbsp olive oil, a sprinkle of salt, 1 tsp chilli flakes and stuff the chicken with the rest of the lemon. Mix the oil and rub into the chicken. Roast at 190 degrees celsius for an hour. When the juices run clear, it's cooked and the meat can be pulled from the bone and shredded.
In a saucepan, heat a tbspn butter and add in the cornstarch once dissolved into the cold milk and stir until thick. Add in some pepper and remove from the heat.

In a big frying pan sauté the mushrooms (wiped down with a damp cloth so that they aren't waterlogged!) in a tbsp butter with a clove of crushed garlic and some more chilli flakes, a pinch of salt an a little pepper. Once all the water has been released and evaporated from the mushrooms, pour the sauce over and stir in the chicken. The filling mutn't be too liquid, but more like a sloppy mud viscosity.

Roll out your pastry and lay it into a greased pie dish. Add the filling on top, and put your second layer of pastry over the top, squeezing the edges together with your thumb and forefinger. Decorate the pie with extra pieces of pastry and poke a few breathing holes in the top. Return to the oven, after brushing with a beaten egg, for 30 min at 180 degrees celsius until golden.


Teriyaki Chicken & Pineapple Burgers
Ingredients:
4 sesame seed burger breadrolls
4 free-range chicken breasts
1 pineapple (4 slices)
Lettuce leaves
1 tsp chopped garlic
1 tsp freshly chopped ginger (or 1/2 tsp dry)
1/4 c Tamari soy sauce
3 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp cornstarch/Mazina
1/4 c cold water
Method:
Prepare your burger roll by cutting it in half and lining it with lettuce (also stops the sauce making it soggy).
Cut up your pineapple into 1cm wide slices and fry these with your chicken breasts (or after) until the chicken is cooked through and browned (fry for about max 10min on medium heat). Remeber to put the bigger pieces of chicken in the middle of the pan and the smaller ones on the outside.
While that's frying, make the teriyaki sauce by heating the sugar and soy sauce with the garlic and ginger over the stove on a medium heat. Dissolve the cornstarch into the cold water and add it into the hot mixture on the stove, stirring continuously until thick. It'll go almost as thick as melted chocolate.
Layer the chicken, pineapple and sauce onto your burger and enjoy! :)
Friday, January 6, 2012
Smoked Turkey Pasta
Ingredients:
250g pasta (spaghetti)
50g Gruyere
200g baby tomatoes
1 tsp herbes de provence
1 tsp dried garlic
2 hot chillies
A glug of olive oil
Salt
Pepper
Method:
Cook the pasta through with a tsp of salt and drain. Add it back to the pot with the Gruyere (grated), mix in the olive oil and the turkey (cut into 2cm square chunks).
Remove from heat once cheese is melted.
In another pot, throw in your washed tomatoes and chopped chillies. Set the stove plate on a high heat and poke a few of the tomatoes so that the juices can run out and become sticky. Sometimes this happens on its own when the tomatoes get very hot.
Quickly add the herbes and the garlic and stir very few minutes until you are convinced that your tomatoes are soft and sweet inside.They should be soft to the touch and not firm.
Add the tomatoes to your spaghetti and serve.
Serves 3
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Joy's Fudge
Ingredients:
6c sugar
3 tbsp syrup
1 1/2 c warm milk
100g butter
1 can condensed milk
Method:
Add the sugar, syrup and milk into a very large saucepan (to prevent the hot sugar boiling over later). On a medium heat, dissolve the sugar for about an hour without letting the mixture boil at all.
Then pour in the condensed milk and stir it in. Leave this on a medium boil for about 20minutes at which point it should make a klink sound when a drop of the mixture is dropped onto a glass saucer with cold water in it. This is a quick set test.
The next step is to add the butter and continue boiling for 5 minutes. Remove the pot from the heat and let it cool for 10 minutes before beating it madly until the mixture thickens slightly and remains smooth and glossy.
It can now to added into pans, like a Swiss Roll pan and allowed to set for a couple or hours.
Don't forget to cut the fudge into blocks with a hot knife (clean regularly to make neat incisions) when it's half set so that once it is fully set, the blocks will be easy to remove having already been fashioned into bite-seize pieces.
Yum.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Butter Rum Sauce with Nectarines
Ingredients:
2 tsp rum
2 tsp butter
4 tsp brown sugar
4 ripe nectarines/ peaches
Method:
Melt the butter over a medium heat and then add the rum and sugar. Stir until dissolved and boil for five minutes (to thicken) before adding the fruit (roughly chopped) and the juices (that resulted from chopping).
Boil this on a medium heat until slightly thickened (5- 10 minutes). Note that the moisture in the fruit will change the consistency of the syrup.
Tasty served hot over ice-cream - reminiscent of a fruity Tin Roof. Yum.
Strawberry Sauce
Ingredients:
2 tsp brown sugar
2 tsp water
1 tot Kirsch
400g ripe strawberries
Method:
Melt 2 tsp brown sugar in a pan with a little bit of water. When it starts bubbling and thickening, add a tot of Kirsch and 400g chuckily chopped strawberries. Boil for 5 minutes and serve hot, or cold and slightly sticky.
If you would like it thicker, use some corn starch (1 tsp) and stir that in on the heat until it thickens.
Monday, October 10, 2011
Tomatoe-y Cottage Pie
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Hot Chocolate: Coconut; Cinnamon
Savoury Carrot Soup
1kg baby carrots - sliced/grated
1 onion - chopped
2 tsp freshly chopped garlic
A pinch of cloves
3 cups water
5 tbsp coconut milk
5 tbsp lemon juice
2 tsp curry powder or a chopped chilli
1/4 cup whipping cream
Fresh coriander - for garnish
Monday, September 19, 2011
Marrow and Cabanossi Pasta
Ginger Tomato Beef
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Quick Pea and Bacon Soup
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Bombay Chicken with Dahl
1 finely chopped onion
2 cloves of crushed garlic (lasan)
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1/4 tsp black pepper corns (kali mirch)
1/2 tsp grated, fresh ginger (adrak)
3 curry leaves (kari patta)
1/2 tblsp sugar (cheeni)
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Crêpes with Pomme-pote
Monday, May 9, 2011
Chicken and pea salad
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Pork with Savoury Corn, Buttery Sweet Potato and Sour Cabbage
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Cassoulet a la Sud Africain

It is made in Carcassonne, one of the medieval gems, which I will be visiting in June (yay!):

Bon Appetis! (This is Occitan, not French)
Friday, April 29, 2011
Broccoli and Cauliflour Soup
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Gnocchi with Bolognese Sauce
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Kerala Chicken Curry
I fried ½ tsp mustard seeds (a teaspoon is ok too) and when they started popping (if they don’t pop it’s ok, move on and try it again another time, but be careful not to get burnt) I added 1 piece of cinnamon, 1 or 2 bay leaves, 2 cloves, 3 tspn grated garlic(6 cloves) and about 3-4 curry leaves. Before it burns, add 2 chopped onions, 5cm piece of grated ginger (or 2tspns), 3 green chillies. When the onions look like they’re about half done, add the chicken (about 900g is fine, 1kg will do as well as less) and stir it around until it goes all yellow and coated. I got chicken pieces with the skin on. Remember that free-range has more protein than the non-descript “surprise” chicken option, and so you get more bang for your buck. You also don't get hormones, added chlorine flavouring... etc. (
Add about 4 big potatoes chopped up, 4 chopped carrots, a teaspoon of garam masala, about 2 handfuls of peas (frozen peas are far more affordable on this side of the world). Let that cook with the lid on for 5 minutes.
Add 1.5 cups of coconut milk. I added a can of reduced fat coconut milk (about 440g) and cook for about 40min to make sure its well done and thoroughly tasty throughout.
Serve with brown rice to be healthy, and put some plain yog(h)urt, chutney and atchar on the side for an added taste sensation.
Should serve 4 hungry people with a little bit of seconds.
Here is the weird website with the original recipe (I like to add more vegetables where possible):
http://www.indianfoodsco.com/Recipes/chicken_images/ChickenCurries.htm