Lemon chicken.

Marion’s, for a change. Not from the book, from her food channel.

I made it this evening and divided the crowd slightly. I expected Izzie to be more enthusiastic, as she is a big citrus fan, but I got a look and a comment- “mama, lemon, yessss, but lemon with chicken??”. We both liked it, although I must say that the dish is great immediately off the pan; as it cools, the sauce gets slimy and not so great in texture.

I started with marinating my chicken breast pieces in some soy sauce, shaoxing and an egg white and left it for about 20 minutes while getting on with the rest.

The sauce- chicken stock, sugar- which I adjusted in the pan, soy sauce and lemon juice plus some zest. That juice was to be added towards the end, to keep as much of its freshness as possible.

Nice idea for pieces of crispy chicken; the meat with the marinade went onto the plate with flour, lots of it, well tossed, well coated and then deep fried and dried off on the kitchen towel.

Wok was getting nice and hot, some oil, chopped garlic and ginger, sauce goes in and cooks down for a couple of minutes. Lemon juice and zest, cornflour with water. Once happy with taste – I added more sugar- chicken goes in to be tossed in the sauce nicely. Sesame seeds, spring onions, rice on the side. I think next time less lemon juice, I’d have it a bit more subtle.

Spicy garlic butter spaghetti.

Marion’s, from the book. The recipe which she said blew up her food channel and if one is to make only one recipe from this book, let it be that. So I made it for lunch today. I can’t honestly say that it is as mind blowing as the recent discovery of crispy pancetta drizzled with honey

(oh, yes!), but Florek finished his in minutes and said he would definitely have it again. It’s a bit like olio e aglio, one always has all those ingredients in the cupboard.

First thing done were garlic chips, a delightful addition to any dish, I think! Thinly sliced garlic cloves, mine were big, so I used 2, gently cooked in olive oil until golden brown, then off the heat.

Spaghetti was cooking, while a large chunk of butter went into the pan, when melted 2 further garlic cloves, chopped, a tsp of chili flakes, then 2.1/2 tbsp of soy sauce and oyster sauce went it, nicely combined, off the heat until the pasta was al dente. Once it was, in with it, a couple of minutes until the sauce gently coated the pasta, some pasta water in and a good handful of parmesan. Spring onions on top, those lovely garlic chips and we were sticking our forks in.

I’ve been doing yoga for the last 3 weeks, to get ready for summer, to keep fairly fit and not give up on attempting to have a fairly flat stomach ( congratulations to myself on the choice of words! :-). I’ve done my daily exercise this morning, this plate was fairly calorific, but very, very satisfying. A keeper. 🙂

Clementine cake.

One of those things that make me so grateful we get to live in this stunning country and enjoy its wonderful produce in abundance. Clementines from Calabria I buy in Esselunga for about 1.80 per kilo, lovely and juicy, sweet, today were…boiled and then put in a cake. With a great result. Mojewypieki.com flashed it at me, originally Nigella’s recipe. I made half a portion to see if really that good as the reviews say, I reckon it won’t be long before it’s made again. A flourless cake, rare thing for me, but for a small cake today 175 g of ground almonds did the job. First however 4 medium clementines were washed and cooked under the lid for about 1,5 hours, water needed to be topped up. once very soft and mushy they were double checked for pips and then blitzed into pulp, with skins and all. 3 whole eggs. 110 g sugar, some of it vanilla ( when in Poland I restocked!) and then 0,5 tsp of baking powder, plus a bit of more candied orange peel. All blitzed together, poured into a round tray and baked for about 40 mins in 170 degrees. Finished with icing sugar, though apparently creme fraiche also a good idea. Yum!

Placek po wegiersku.

I wanted something different today. Something non Italian, not pasta, not rice. I’ve been binge watching Robert Maklowicz’s youtube channel for the last couple of weeks and having watched him travelling and eating his way through Croatia and Balkans I developed a taste for goulash. The recipe I went with is from kwestiasmaku.pl. I enjoyed making it, enjoyed eating it even more, as did the other two Bankses.

I started with roughly 500 g of pork shoulder, chopped in small pieces, seasoned and browned off. In another pan I had some guanciale sizzling happily ( the recipe called for bacon or pancetta), to which chopped red onion went in, carrot and a red pepper too. A few fresh tomatoes. The pork went into the veggies when browned off, to this I added a glass of red wine and left to cook for a few minutes. Then 2 tsps of sweet, red paprika and 1 tsp of hot paprika. A tbsp of soy sauce, a good squeeze of tomato puree. A bay leaf. 0,5 litre of beef stock, covered and cooked for about an hour. When the meat was beautifully tender and the flat smelled like Dinner Tiiiiimeeee, I added some fried cup mushrooms and a bit of roux to thicken things up. Very nice indeed.

Placki ziemniaczane were the next thing. I started off traditionally- intending to grate 6-7 medium potatoes on the thin grater. Half way through the first potato I decided to f**k it and deployed my mini food processor, which did the amazing job of making a lovely mash of the raw spuds and 2 shallots. In about 3 minutes. After a minute or so the spuds gave out some water, I got rid of it, added roughly 2 tbsps of plain flour, an egg, seasoned generously with salt and pepper and I could fry them.

The whole thing was very much enjoyed, now a mug of peppermint tea, as not exactly light! 🙂