All posts by Ola

I love eating. Even more than I love cooking. My Mum got this thing into me, being a working woman with two kids and still managing to put a two course dinner on the table for us every day. My meals are a lot simpler, I cook for two, with Florian being my most devoted fan and audience. There is nothing more rewarding than a nicely turned out meal. There is nothing more enjoyable that a great plate of food in a decent restaurant with a glass of great red in a nice company. Hence this blog, to share ideas and joy of good food. Bon Appetit.

To carb or not to carb.

So, to continue our quest to eat less carbs, I have taken out my strong bread flour out today and decided to see if I can bake some baguettes. I can indeed, it turns out. 🙂

From 500g of flour, 20 g of fresh yeast and a splash of water I’ve made a starter, then added 10g of salt into the remaining flour and slowly added a bit less than 350 ml of cold water. Once all the ingredients were combined, kitchen aid did the great job of working the dough for about 7 minutes. It was quite sticky and runny, but was left to prove in a square tin lined with cling film and lightly oiled, covered and sat on the garden table till more than doubled in size. Then 4 small baguettes were formed. I watched a youtube video on how to handle baguette dough. The recipe I was using was Paul Hollywood’s, but I didn’t want to mess up all this lovely air in the dough and will be using a special French bread tin, that Maz has ordered for us.

Shaped baguettes were proving for another hour and a bit, then transferred onto the lined baking trays, slashed with a razor and dusted with flour. Baked in 220 degrees for 25 minutes with a tray of boiling water on the bottom of the oven for crust.

So, 4 small baguettes were done, 2 were eaten on the spot by the 3 of us, with butter. Third one accompanied the courgettini for dinner, 4th was given to Keava.

We loved them. And will be making them again, it wasn’t all that difficult.

Courgettini were also fantastic. And I was right- a rich, garlicky tomato sauce, spiked with chili and topped with parmesan is the way to go. This dish will also be made again and often, maybe not always alongside a tone of fresh bread!

Cholla loaf.

Giggling, when I think about it. As a VERY SERIOUS ATTEMPT to cut down on carbs we’re getting friendly with Tom Kerridge ” lose weight” kinda theme, today at lunch and dinner, but in the meantime it was Paul Hollywood’s cholla. 🙂 Another excellent loaf! I made a start on it, when Izzie said she didn’t have brioche in a while, I think brioche from this very book might be next.

This loaf, when made again will either be cut into 2 loaves or the ingredients will be halved, after the second proving I had a monster on my hands! 500 g of strong bread flour, 20 g fresh yeast, 25 g of sugar, 10 g of salt, 30 g unsalted, soft butter. 2 eggs, beaten. 50 ml warm milk, less than 150 ml of water- I stopped adding when I was happy with what I was looking at in the bowl of the kitchen aid. I’ve made a starter with some of that flour, all the yeast, some sugar and milk and then whacked all the ingredients into the bowl and let KA do the work. Proved for over an hour, knocked down, plaited, glazed with some egg and left to prove again. This one took less than 30 minutes and it more than doubled. It baked for about 25 minutes in 200 degrees. Tastes phenomenal with butter and good blueberry jam. I am already looking forward to breakfast and it’s not even 9pm. Those extra 3 kg are going friggin’ nowhere. :-/

We’ve tried our new spiralizer too. Great way to treat courgettes, especially when we have them growing in the garden in a couple of months, but the whole dish today did not make us excited. It tasted …healthy, light, that was the idea, but the mushroom sauce was lacking in just about everything. Hence no photo. But, I’m thinking if those courgettini were sitting in a rich tomato sauce, arrabbiata maybe, chilis, basil sort of thing, this might be a different thing. This weekend, I reckon.

Pea and mint soup.

It will be a very productive day in the kitchen. We just had this lovely soup for lunch, nothing was left, thoroughly enjoyable. The idea came from Tom Kerridge’s book, but I thickened it with 2 small potatoes, not split beans, as in the recipe. Also replaced the veggie stock with chicken stock and chucked in a small piece of chicken breast.

Started off with a large red onion, chopped and sauteed, 2 garlic cloves, minced, a carrot, for a bit of sweetness, 2 spuds. Stock, 20 minutes, till the veggies cooked, 400 g of frozen peas added, plus a handful of fresh mint from the garden. 5 minutes under the lid, then I blitzed it, added a bit of seasoning and a small piece of butter for silkiness, then just a garnish of parsley and single cream and it was ready to be enjoyed.

Cholla dough is proving, we’ll see what will come out of my first ever cholla, then in the evening we’ll be spiralizing courgettes for a new recipe. To be continued! 🙂

Lockdown sushi.

It’s been over 7 years since I left Dinings. Hard work it was, but satisfying and the food we served there was a Premier League. Never will I appreciate a supermarket sushi after what I was fortunate enough to taste and eat regularly back then.

Yesterday I sent a quick message to one of my former bosses, asking him how to make a proper fantastic sushi rice- in terms of flavouring. He was kind enough to send me a nice little formula for 250g of sushi rice, I used it as instructed and last night we had the best home made sushi to date. I flavoured the rice with 55g of rice vinegar, 35 g of caster sugar and 10g of salt, all dissolved and added to cooked and slightly cooled rice. When I tasted it I found it very sweet, but didn’t question Chief’s expertise and proceeded to roll my sushi. We had spicy tuna, as always, salmon avocado, salmon and asparagus, avo and cucumber for Izzie. That slightly sweet rice, when wrapped in nori and combined with the fish and extras was just something else. Both Florek and I were stunned. And we will be doing our rice like this from now onwards.

I also made a little starter with salmon sashimi and ponzu, ponzu however with yuzu juice, not lemon. Fresh, zingy, delicious!!!!

Panko shrimps.

Aussie Masterchef inspired. Really, not much of a recipe there. Good quality shrimps, defrosted, seasoned with salt only, tossed in egg and panko, deep fried in the wok till golden brown. Served on a red veggie rice, with a spectacular dipping sauce- sweet chili sauce, a splash of soy, of sesame oil, yuzu and a bit of fresh coriander. That simple. Crunchy panko, lovely, sweet shrimp inside. Yum.

Raspberry flavoured 6.

Izzie’s birthday cake. I saw a much more accomplished version on mojewypieki.com, decorated with flowers, berries, mini meringues, but went with my own, just copied the shape idea.

It is my usual simple sponge, cooled and cut into the shape of 6 and then halved and gently drizzled with yuzu juice. I’ve made use of some frozen raspberries by turning them into a coulis, added 1,5 soaked gelatine leaves and when it started to set I mixed it into some whipped cream. Some of it went inside, the rest on top. Finished off with fresh rasperries, strawberries and coulis. And raspberry macaroons. 6 year old Izzie approved, I got a hug, a kiss and I was told it was the best cake ever. That will do me. 🙂

Thai beef salad.

Last night in Aussie Masterchef someone made Thai beef salad. I thought about how appealing it sounded, looked it up and discovered I actually had everything I needed to make it, including a frozen piece of fillet. And lots of fresh herbs and even beansprouts! Simply had to make it. Best part of this dish for me was the sensational dressing, that I kept on licking while preparing dinner. I started with a juice of half a lime, a piece of fresh ginger, grated, a big clove of garlic, grated, 1 tbsp of brown sugar ( palm sugar in the recipe, don’t think I’ve ever seen it in my life), 1 tbsp of fish sauce, 2 tbsps of sesame oil, 1 tsp of soy sauce. Combined, let the sugar dissolve, then added a bit more lime juice, a bit more soy and fish sauce and a bit more sesame oil. And that did it for me.

Fillet was gently marinated in some fish sauce, soy, black pepper and sesame again, then quickly pan fried, rare, rested and then thinly sliced.

The salad itself was a lovely, crunchy, vibrant combination of beansprouts, cherry tomatoes, cucumber( seedless), shallot, a red chili, toasted peanuts and a good, generous amount of fresh coriander and mint. All this nicely tossed together, served with simple steamed rice. Glass of decent Burgundy. Yyyyyyuuuuuummmmm!!!!!

Banana and chocolate muffins.

Donna Hay’s. Super quick recipe, excellent use of overripe bananas, the smell in the kitchen made everyone smile and peek in the oven.

300 g of plain flour, 3 tsps of baking powder, 150 sugar( original recipe had 220 g, I think it’s a bit much maybe), 2 whole eggs, 60 ml of oil, 250 ml of buttermilk or kefir, vanilla paste, 130 g of chopped milk chocolate- I used Easter eggs. 2 mashed very soft bananas, 3 would be even better. Wet ingredients added to dry ingredients and quickly combined, put in the muffin cases and baked for 25 minutes in 170 degrees. Oh, I added a personal touch, a quarter of a strawberry in each muffin. Quick and yummy. 🙂

Chicken satay.

Finally. Finally I have the recipe I wanted for a while. Some time ago at Steve’s we had chicken skewers with satay sauce that blew me away, but it took forever to get the recipe out of him ( swapped for the blackcurrant cake recipe!). This was the second attempt. The first one, which I followed to the dot, with whole peanuts produced more of a satay paste than a sauce. It tasted good, but it wasn’t what I wanted. Having consulted Steve again and also youtube, I ditched the whole peanuts and went with smooth peanut butter. And I got what I wanted.

I started with the marinade for my chopped, skinless and boneless chicken thighs. Toasted and crushed coriander seeds, about 1 tbsp. 2 garlic cloves, 1/2 tsp of turmeric, which gave the chicken a lovely yellow colour, 2 tsps of sugar, 1/2 tsp of salt, 2 tbsps of soy sauce, 1 tbsp of sesame oil, juice of 1/2 a lime. There were also fennel seeds and some lemongrass which I left off due to not having any. 🙂

Chicken sat in this lovely marinade for most of the afternoon. The satay was a creative process of adding and tasting, thinking about it and trying to make it the way I liked. It took 2 small, chopped shallots, 1 clove of garlic, mashed, 1 green chili, chopped, but ended up adding more chili flakes later, as the heat was a bit too shy for my liking. 1 tsp of fish sauce, 2 tbsps of tamarind sauce, 100 ml of coconut milk- ended up adding more, twice, as the sauce was splitting slightly. 1 tsp of honey. Peanut butter, 3-4 tbsps, plus a little of the crunchy one for the texture.

Now, Steve’s chicken was far superior, as it was barbequed, so mine, from the oven really could not compete. But it was tasty, juicy and when dipped in that satay, delicious. Fresh coriander completed the picture. Once the lockdown is over and Mariusz comes over, I will be making more, I think it will wow him too.

White Cob Loaf.

While taking a sliced, frozen loaf from the fridge last night, so that we had toast in the morning I thought I needed to flip through Paul Hollywood’s book again. I have lots of excellent flour, I have fresh yeast, we are in lockdown, there is no excuse not to try and bake some bread.

I did. Cause I can!!!!

Rocky start though. I smashed kitchen aid’s glass bowl. Half of the dough went to the bin, I was worried there might have been pieces of glass in it. I was really upset, as the bowl was a Christmas present 2 years ago, but thanks to The Best Husband on The Planet, a new bowl has been ordered straight away and this apparently has an improved design, that will not come off while the machine is working hard.

So initially I used 500g of strong bread flour, 20 g of fresh yeast, with which I made a quick starter using all the yeast and about 2 tbsps from 500 g of flour. 10 g of salt. 30g of soft, unsalted butter. About 300 ml of cold water. The machine did all the work for me, until it smashed. :-/

It was left to prove for over an hour to more than double in size. Then lightly knocked down and shaped into a ball. I was so excited that I forgot to dust with flour and slash it on top before baking! But that ball still had to prove till doubled up and only then it was baked in the 230 degree oven for about 25 minutes. Recipe says 30 minutes, but mine was quite small, didn’t want it too dark.

Once cooled, it was met with a very enthusiastic reception;

And it was eaten there and then, for lunch. With butter and ham.

I think I might go back to the kitchen and make another one for breakfast, I do have a metal bowl for kitchen aid after all.

Best feeling ever, when things turn out that good!!!!