Gazpacho.

Ken made it last Saturday, I liked it so much I had to make it.  The basic recipe is Delia’s, I have adjusted vinegar, following Ken’s advice.

I blanched 5 large tomatoes and peeled them, used only their flesh, discarded the seeds. Half a large red pepper, skin removed, a clove of garlic, about 10cm long piece of cucumber  and a few leaves of basil all went into a blender. With all this about 2 tbsps of olive oil, 1 tbsp and a bit( I kept on tasting and adding) of white wine vinegar, salt, pepper and also- my personal touch- a splash of chili oil, that gave the soup a bit of a kick.

Blended it all until nice and smooth, then chilled for 2 hours. Served with crusty bread, didn’t bother with croutons. Nice, light supper eaten in the garden after a hot, productive day.  Will be done again.

 

Gnocchi in a new, exciting way!

Roux Boy has made it on “Food and Drink” last week and made me excited. He made broccoli pesto, which I’ve never tried before. All the same like the traditional one, only basil replaced with cooked, cooled broccoli and a small chili added.  We both agreed with Florek that it tasted very healthy. 😉

I grilled some asparagus, only slightly moistened with olive oil, it was crunchy and  had lovely  charred taste.  The non veggie accent in this dish was some grilled parma ham on top, salty and delicious. But the best thing on the plate were the pan fried gnocchi. Roux Boy said the shop bought gnocchi were firmer than home made ones, I’d never have thought about pan frying them and they were delightful, like little roasties. All finished off with freshly grated parmesan, excellent. Not sure if I’ll be making broccoli pesto again, but gnocchi from the pan will be made again for sure.

 

Sole meuniere.

I should definitely cook more fish.  Bought 4 pieces of lemon sole fillets yesterday and before cooking them I checked what I could do.  Sole meuniere came out on google and as a devoted fan of Masterchef I decided that’s what will be cooked. The fillets had the skin on, so all I had to do was to toss them in seasoned flour and quickly pan fry them. Then I wiped the pan with the kitchen towel, threw a good spoonful of butter, melted it and  squeezed half a lemon in. And in went the fillets. I read the reviews and lost of people said the whole lemon was too much, I think I would have liked more lemon flavour though. And need to be more generous with seasoning. Served with boiled new potatoes and blanched asparagus.

Pleased. 🙂

In the mood for duck.

Hard to believe, but this was the first ever duck I cooked myself. I often order duck when eating out, whenever available, but I always thought it was difficult to get right. And not cheap, either.  Ocado had it on offer though, so I bought 2 breasts and decided to see, what I can make of it.  I’ve eaten by myself, as certain people get home around 9pm these days, so certain people will have his duck well rested.

I scored the breasts and seasoned them well with pepper and salt, then fried, skin side down for about 10 minutes, meat side down for about 5, then to the oven for another 10 in 170 degrees. I wanted it medium well and achieved it nicely. The duck rested under the foil for about 10 minutes. I served it on the bed of sauteed potatoes, white cabbage and crispy bacon and the dressing ripped off some duck recipe from GF; just some fat from under the duck, 2 tbsps of olive oil and a tbsp of balsamic vinegar.

I destroyed the lot with a glass of cab sav, will definitely be making duck again, but with some nice greens.

Mary Berry’s Apple & Cinnamon Loaf.

I saw it on tv last night, there was nothing in it that I don’t like- apples,cinnamon, had to try. Lovely recipe, easy and quick, made it and whacked it in the oven in no time, while Izzlett was napping.

I used about 40 g of soft butter which I whizzed with 100 g of self raising flour and 50 g of brown sugar. Added a generous tsp of cinnamon, then 1,5 chopped apples ( I had pink lady in the fruit bowl, worked nicely) and 2 eggs, lightly beaten. All this went into a loaf tin, topped with thinly sliced apples and some brown sugar sprinkled on them. Baked in 180 degrees for about 40 minutes.

Mary suggested warmed apricot jam glaze after it cooled a bit, I used maple syrup. Yum!

 

Tiramisu.

Four years plus of writing the blog and no traditional tiramisu, how is it even possible?

Jana sent me a photo of the meal she recently had in Spain and said she had tiramisu for dessert; I thought it’s been too long since I last made it.

I used vanilla flavoured instant coffee to soak the biscuits in and in terms of booze, my favourite Hazelnut Soplica.  So much of it, in fact, that driving after having this dessert would not be a good idea. 😉

I whisked 2 egg yolks with about 3 tbsp of sugar, then whisked in 250 g tub mascarpone and I guess around 2 tbsps of the hazelnut vodka.  One whipped egg white loosened it up a notch. I made 2 layers, sprinkled it with cocoa and topped with some fresh blueberries.

Lovely flavour, my only complaint- maybe a touch too wet, I must have soaked the biscuits too long.  Yum.

Buttermilk panna cotta.

John Torode mentioned another good use for buttermilk would be using it in panna cotta.  We happened to make the American pancakes on Sunday, the leftover buttermilk was sitting in the fridge, so it was time to see, if Torode knew what he was talking about. Panna cotta is delicious and takes no time at all to make, so I googled buttermilk panna cotta and went for Paul Hollywood’s recipe. I also googled how to lose baby fat from the stomach, but wasn’t as successful in executing some excercise, as I was in making the dessert.

For 2 dessert dishes and 2 small silicone ones I used 150 ml of both buttermilk and double cream, 35 g of sugar and 1, 1/4 leaf of gelatine, plus a touch of vanilla paste. Paul Hollywood suggested blueberries, I used strawberries, chopped inside the dessert.  Instead of a regular coulis I glazed it with maple syrup, worked a treat!

To be repeated. 😉

We found it lighter than the regular panna cotta, tasty and delicious.