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.

Tartare sauce, debut.

Looking at this photo I’m thinking “what a pretty little bowl!!”. Yes, I bought it in CoinCasa in Lucca, last summer. With the current coronavirus madness going on it’s looking unlikely we’ll go to Italy this year. Everyone’s staying home, schools are about to close, restaurants are doing it one by one. I had some grand plans for Florek’s 40th birthday, officially scraped them today. Or postponed them rather, no idea for how long.

Last Sunday together with Ewa we went to Lacock, a small place in Wiltshire, didn’t get to see much of it, as they weather sucked, but we had lunch in The Bell Inn. I’ve never had a better tartare sauce than there, with fish and chips. Creamy, light, not too sour, it was delicious. And yet I’ve never tried to make one! Never even made mayonnaise ffs! Today I dealt with this situation. My cute little kitchen aid mini food processor did most of the work, but it paved a nice, creamy way forward. I used a recipe I found online, from The Guardian if I’m not mistaken. As I tasted it and tasted it some more I ended up not quite following the recipe. My end product, alongside fish and chips this evening was a decent, 8 out of 10 sauce. It tasted better with the fish than on its own, unlike the one in Lacock, that I kept on licking long after I finished my fish.

So I started with 2 egg yolks( Charlie brought 27 eggs last night, seems his chickens have been panic laying!), 1 tbsp of dijon mustard ( ended up adding 1 more), a generous pinch of salt and then whizzed it till well combined, before I started slowly adding a mixture of olive oil and sunflower oil. In the future the olive oil will not be used for tartare, I don’t think I want to taste it. And I could this evening. So the recipe said 125 ml of each, I added maybe 180, before I decided it was thick enough. To loosen it I used some pickling water from the cornichons, 3 of which were finely chopped and added in, some capers, not too much, as I don’t really love them, some parsley and some chives. This recipe did not use any vinegar, I found it necessary and added about 2 screw tops of white wine vinegar, also a bit of sugar.

And that was that. It was enjoyed, even Iz tried some, intrigued by our comparing notes. To be continued! 🙂

Rice pudding.

Mary Berry’s. I bought a packet or rice pudding in Coop ages ago and had it sat in the pantry until last weekend. Having made the spring rolls again for supper, it was a good idea to have the rice pudding 2 hours later, as supper was a light one; the rolls were made my way this time, no pork, but prawns were star of the dish, well spicy, as they sat in the marinade ( my usual chilli garlic paste, sesame oil and soy sauce) overnight. Apart from prawns there were quickly pan fried crunchy veggies- bean sprouts, carrots, courgettes, shallots, fresh coriander and mint, this time I got the real deal. They were great, will make them for Mariusz in 2 weeks time.

The rice pud- into a generously buttered dish went 75g of pudding rice, 1 tbsp of sugar and some vanilla sugar, vanilla bean paste, then 1,5 pint of very warm milk. All this went into the oven, uncovered, 140 degrees for about 2 hours, I kept checking, having to lift that brown looking “skin”.

Nice thing, rice pudding. Very creamy, very yummy. Served mine with a simple raspberry compote.

Moules mariniere.

Last night I came to the conclusion that I am hereby ready to cook it at home. I’ve had it eaten out lots and lots of times, managed to get Izzie to get to like it, now I thought, time to make it. Rick Stein was consulted, youtube was consulted, Waitrose was visited this morning- and will be visited again on a Friday as all fish is 20% off!

So the aim was to make a pot of moules the way I love them- with rich, creamy, herby and garlicky sauce to die for. My lovely enthusiastic child was helping me clean them before cooking, she was waiting impatiently for the lid to be lifted “have they opened yet mama?? have they??” and then my heart was just overflowed with love, when she was fishing up all the last orange bits in the sauce towards the end of the meal.

I took the advice of the French guy on youtube and started the whole process with a knob of butter. Then chopped shallots and 2 garlic cloves in. Bouquet garni in. After a few minutes a generous glass of Catena chardonnay in. Seasoned with salt and pepper. 3-4 minutes for the wine to lose the alcohol a bit. Moules in, lid on, 6 minutes. A good splash of double cream, lots of parsley, just the way I love it. Done. Waitrose baguette on the side, the remaining chardonnay in the glasses. Florek got salad Nicoise with some of fantastic tuna I got for him.

I absolutely loved my sauce. It delivered in every way, bay leaves stood out and the thyme, just perfect. It will be done again. Soon. 🙂

Vietnamese spring rolls.

It didn’t take me very long to have a go at making these. I had the rice paper ordered from Amazon the next day we came back from Steve’s, Sainsbury’s delivered on Tuesday morning and brought all the other stuff I needed. The pork shoulder pieces were seasoned with jerk and sesame oil and left to marinade till next day. And last night I made the rolls.

What Steve gave us was very fresh, clean flavours, healthy tasting almost, mine were a bit more…mine. First of all I wanted the pork to have a bit more punch, so in spite of 24 hours in the marinade I still seasoned them with shichimi and only then I was satisfied. Also, the mint in my garden turned out to be very disappointing after the winter, so I used only coriander, but lots of it. My wraps were filled with pork, shrimps, bean sprouts, green lettuce, some julienne carrots and courgette and coriander. We both had about 6 each, which made us a nice, light supper. I’m now thinking I’d try filling them with some shredded duck leg meat. Mmmmm. Watch this space! 🙂

Vietnamese feast in Chateau Jaye.

Steve and Christina invited us back to their lovely place in Surrey and treated us to a great evening, once again. We’ve eaten very well indeed, I’ve picked up a few things that I will be trying next week and already placed the order with Amazon for some spring roll wraps.

The wraps were Steve’s first course and they were my favourite thing last night. They were filled with some lovely fresh prawns, some thinly sliced, marinated pork, which was quickly pan fried on a dry pan- Steve reckoned all the fat he needed was in the pork and managed to make them taste almost charred, best pork in a long time. There were beansprouts in there, also pan fried on a dry pan, some crunchy greens and herbs- coriander, basil and mint. The wraps, soft, fresh and exciting, all served with sweet chili sauce, I can’t stop thinking about them!!

Then we had a green, vibrant, healthy kale salad from Christina, crunchy, delicious, loaded with fresh prawns, nutty dressing, delicious, but a bit too much, as the main event, Pad Thai that I was so looking forward- I could hardly fit in.

Very exciting main course, again- fresh, slightly sweet, but also spicy, if I ever had a better Pad Thai, I don’t remember.

There was an ocean of wine, a plate of cheeses, but also a wild card- some pork belly, that landed on the table at 11pm and we only managed a piece each.

Phenomenal evening, now I’m going to see if I can reproduce those wraps, or maybe make them more my own?

Pistachio pannacotta.

In Aussie Masterchef they were making pannacotta with tonka bean, which made me want to do something with 2 pots of double cream in the fridge. There was also a jar of lovely pistachio paste bought in Tuscany last summer, waiting patiently to be turned into something spectacular. I used my usual pannacotta recipe, 300 ml of double cream, 100 ml of whole milk, 1,5 soaked gelatine leaves and sugar, which I was adjusting as I went along- the pistachio paste is super sweet. I started by heating up the cream and milk, added about 1,5 tbsp of vanilla sugar and a touch of vanilla paste, then, when it was getting nice and hot I started adding the paste. I ended up using about 4 tbsps of it, which might seem like a lot, but I wanted a dessert with a character, not something that resembled pistachio. And I managed to do just that. What would be fantastic in terms of looks and texture would be a nice pistachio crumb on top, but annoyingly I had not a single nut in the pantry, so instead melted a little dark chocolate to drizzle on top. Beautiful dessert. Florek loved it, Iz loved it, I did and Dusty was licking the plate until there was nothing left to lick. 5 stars. 🙂

Salad Nicoise.

Florek has been a fan, since he discovered it in Cote last year. Last night I was making 3 different courses for 3 of us, but as it was Sunday, storm Ciara was going mental outside, I had time and I felt like being in the kitchen. So having defrosted 2 lovely tuna fillets I looked up the salad, trying to do it justice, which was fairly tricky, as I myself am not a big fan of it. Gordon Ramsay’s recipe appealed to me for a few reasons, I went with it and Florek announced the dish was excellent, all but the cooking of tuna on my crappy griddle pan let it down a bit.

Started with the dressing; pestle and mortar was used to mash a couple of fresh olives, 2 anchovy fillets, a garlic clove and olive oil together into a paste, then lemon juice and a splash of balsamic vinegar. This was a surprisingly nice outcome. I cooked a few potatoes and French beans, cooled them, same with 2 fresh eggs. Gordon’s suggestion that I particularly liked was browning off the spuds before serving and same with cherry tomatoes- just a few minutes on until they blistered. I skipped the capers, dressed the green salad, arranged the hard boiled eggs and spuds on the plate and finally the tuna. Florek’s enthusiastic and asking for more. 🙂

Tortellini with tomato sauce.

Having watched all the Aussie Masterchef I felt we needed to make some fresh pasta again, as we don’t use our pasta machine often enough. I started shortly after breakfast yesterday, by roasting off some chopped butternut squash, carrot, a piece of sweet potato, red onion, a couple of cloves of garlic. Seasoned, drizzled with olive oil, it burnt black, while I was busy giving Tesla a clean. 🙂

Chucked the first batch and roasted off the second one. Once roasted and cooled, I blitzed the veggies with some toasted pine nuts and parmesan, it needed just a touch of seasoning and that was that.

Florek made fresh pasta with the help of very eager Izzie, I stuffed it and made into tortellini. Once cooked for a couple of minutes, the pasta went straight into the simple tomato and basil sauce waiting on the stove. We enjoyed it with some garlic baguette and wine. You can’t beat home made pasta! 🙂

Mash to die for.

I binge watch the first edition of Australian Masterchef on Amazon Prime. Much fresher edition than the one on the BBC, nicer format, funnier, more interesting. No Gregg Wallace. Yesterday the contestants watched a masterclass on how to make a fabulous mashed potatoes. I had time, I had potatoes, I had dinner to make for my family, I thought- alwite, let’s see if it’s worth the effort. First of all, the potatoes were baked in the oven, not boiled, the way I do it. Once baked,still hot, they were mashed through a drum sieve, which is not a gadget I own at the moment, I do have a nice ricer though, which makes a great job too. Which doesn’t mean I won’t ever get myself a sieve like that. 🙂 Also, new to me, but very effective is the use of balloon whisk. So the baked spuds once squeezed through the ricer go into a sauce pan, some hot milk on the side added bit by bit, alongside salted butter. Lots of salted butter. And whisked!!! Hard work that, but boy, once well seasoned that mash was top dollar. For me, a good mash is the sort that makes me stand by the stove and munch on it, while everything else can wait. And I just have one more taste. And one more. And then just a lick.

I had some meatballs from Ikea, which I baked on a bed of mixed roasted veggies. Plus Aussie mash. The child raised both her thumbs up. 🙂

Scones. From Hollywood.

Santa brought me Paul Hollywood’s book “How to bake”. The chap might not be my favourite man on the tv, but he certainly knows his baking and the book is packed with useful information. The first recipe I tried from it were scones. Kitchen aid sat this one out, as I actually did as I was told and used my fingers to mix the flour and butter and then the rest of the ingredients and made sure I’m not overworking the dough. I ended up with a plate of scones much lighter than the shop bought ones, a few too many though, maybe 500 g of flour will not be needed next time, unless there will be more than 2 people eager to eat them.

450g of strong white bread flour was used, rubbed with 80 g of unsalted, soft butter ( I might use salted next time), 80 g of caster sugar, 2 beaten eggs, 5 tsps of baking powder and a bit less than 250 ml of milk. The remaining 50 g of flour was to be used for dusting and adjusting the runny batter as required, but I ended up putting most of it back into the bag and not using all of the milk. As above, it is important not to overwork the dough, which I was careful not to do, when ready, I cut out the scones with round cookie cutter, placed on the baking parchment, gently washed the tops with beaten egg and baked for about 12 minutes in 220 degrees.

Served warm with French butter and blackcurrant conserve.