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.

Kitchin pannacotta.

The current series of Masterchef The Professionals is an excellent watch, a couple of chaps deliver every single time. They did a shift at Tom Kitchin’s place in Edinburgh and served a pannacotta, that nearly made me wet myself. Even the Italian chef whose job it was to serve this dessert was impressed. It was layered with strawberry jelly, served with some fancy strawberry bits and a sorbet. I had to have a go at it!!!!

I had no strawberry jelly, the only one I had was orange one, so I mixed in some white chocolate to my pannacotta mix ( as always; 300 ml of double cream, 100 ml of milk, 5 tbsps of sugar, vanilla paste, 1,5 gelatine leaf). It was a bit tricky to get the layers all set and neat, but with the help of the freezer I managed. Must add, that I now have a nice, posh, metal pannacotta moulds that Florek got me, I love them.

So with jelly cooled and pannacotta in the room temperature, I put the first layer of pannacotta and put it in the freezer for about 20 minutes. On that a layer of jelly, gently, with a spoon, to keep it neat. Then again pannacotta and from there they were setting in the fridge. I ended up with 5 layers altogether.

The wobble was worthy of Masterchef, I’ll admit modestly. One thing I’ll work on is flavour, I think strawberry will be better, it needed some balls.  Good start though.

Hazelnut Creme Brulee.

I didn’t really intend to make the brulees, but having made the cookies with egg whites I had the yolks left and I don’t like saving them in the fridge, so decided to use them. And I ended up with one of the best brulles ever. Yeah. And I made them! For 4 regular ramekins I used 200 ml of double cream, 50 ml of milk, 2 tbsps of sugar- creamed with the yolks. At the straining stage I added 2 screwtops of Frangelico. And to the water bath for 35 minutes, 140 degrees. They’re freaking lovely. Luxurious. Velvety. Boozy. Yum!!!!!

An awesome hazelnut cake.

Aska brought one last weekend and I thought it was my favourite cake I’ve ever tasted that came out of her kitchen.  I immediately asked for the recipe, got it and got cracking.

It takes 150 g of butter, 100 g of blanched hazelnuts, 140 g of self raising flour, 100 g of sugar, 2 beaten eggs, 5 ripe conference pears and 50 g of chopped, dark chocolate.

While the oven warms up to 160 degrees, the tin is buttered and lined, the hazelnuts get ground till fairly fine. In goes the butter and the flour, till the mixture resembles crumbs. In goes sugar and eggs. 2 of the pears, peeled, cored and chopped- in, as well as chocolate. The mixture is unusually thick, needs to be worked with a fork. When in the tin and flattened, the remaining sliced pears go on top.  It bakes for about an hour, till firm.

Aska omitted the chocolate in her bake, I didn’t, I think it’s money, the whole cake reminds me of some decadent cocktail, maybe espresso martini with some Frangelico or hazelnut vodka.  Super nice.

Good pork’s never bad.

Neither is good butcher.  The lamb I get from him is always fabulous, yesterday I got a piece of pork shoulder. Made a nice, thick, Polish sauce on it, served it with shop bought gnocchi, we ate the lot, but I saved some for Izzie, very curious if she likes it.

My pork is cut into chunks, quickly browned with 2 shallots, then stewed slowly for 1,5-2 hours in chicken stock, liquid topped up every now and then. Some porcini mushrooms enhanced the flavour, chopped carrot a red pepper made it thicker and sweeter. Finished with some flour and more seasoning. Served with French beans. Yum.

Jam doughnuts, baby! :-)

For weeks I’ve been craving Krispy Kremes, those with custard and chocolate. Fortunately the nearest place we can get them is Tesco in Ch’ham, close to exactly nowhere, plus they’re quite expensive. So I thought maybe it is time for me to learn to make yeasty dough ( ciasto drozdzowe), as every respectable Polish cook/baker must have it in their repertoire. My Mum makes it well, but she makes it  in a traditional way, kneading by hand. I have a Kitchen Aid, so don’t have to, the hook does all the job.

The recipe I picked is again from the excellent mojewypieki.com, Dorota’s oldest and most trusted doughnuts recipe. Hers was for 40 pieces, I used a third and still managed to make 17. I gave a few to Keeva the neighbour, when passing on her parcels, we’d never manage to eat them all and her daughters like doughnuts, so- nothing wasted and good neighbourly relationship sustained.

I used 333 g of plain flour, 17 g of fresh yeast, 40 g of sugar, 170 ml of milk, 2 egg yolks, 33 g of melted butter, a splash of whisky ( that prevents the dough from taking in too much fat when frying), a zest from half a lemon and a pinch of salt. First I made zaczyn out of some of the flour, all the yeast, some warm milk and some sugar- all those from the ready weighed ingredients, nothing extra. Mixed it all and left covered for about 20 minutes until frothed up, yeasties have been busy. 🙂 Added that to the rest of the ingredients waiting in the bowl of KA, attached the hook and let it roll for about 12 minutes. Then covered and left in a warm place for 1,5 hour, until more than doubled in size. Then knocked it down, formed small doughnuts with a cookie cutter- I didn’t want the giant ones, was also worried if they’d cook. Then again left them to prove till doubled in size and proceeded to fry them in veg oil heated up to 175 degrees. It’s a quick process and very enjoyable, as the beauties were very light and nicely risen, I only used a little skewer to flip them.

The only jam I had was  a strawberry one, next time I’ll use either raspberry or maybe some lemon curd, I’m thinking, either way will be investing in a proper syringe to stuff them with. One day I’ll use custard and that will be tricky to pour into the doughnuts.

Final touch was a bit of maple glaze and they were ready. I was super happy when I cut through the first one, it was like a cloud. Dorota woman is a genius. Craving satisfied. 🙂

Pulled chicken fajitas.

I saw the recipe online in GF and immediately wanted to try. Pulled pork is nice, but takes long to make, plus it makes me feel a bit guilty- what’s the point in sweating on the floor with Chodakowska and then munching on a pig.

Chicken was fun to make and not too long. I had boneless thighs, which I seasoned and rubbed with chipotle paste.  Then made a marinade with more chipotle, some bbq sauce, small carton of passata, some chopped shallot and a splash of water.  My chicken was placed in a baking dish all nice and cosy,  covered with marinade and it wnet to the oven for an hour in 160 degrees, under alu foil.  After an hour the foil went and the temperature up to 200 for another 20 minutes.  The sauce reduced nicely, chicken fell apart under the forks, mixed with the sauce was excellent.

Served with coleslaw and an avocado salsa- by the recipe too, but I found it too strong, it nearly killed the chicken in that tortilla. Guacamole would have been better I think. But still very pleased with the whole thing.

Kotlety mielone with a twist.

A Polish classic.  Greasy, tasty, served with mash and some veg.  Every now and then I feel like having something from the times when I was growing up.  I saw a recipe recently in Interia. pl featuring those very kotlety, but slightly poshed up by addition of fresh mushrooms. Apparently that is the version from Kresy, the former Polish territories by our eastern border, snatched from us by Soviet scum in 1945.

Obviously I had no fresh, wild mushrooms, but I had chestnuts and some dried porcini, which  when soaked did an excellent job too. I fried them all up with a shallot and some crushed garlic and finished off with a splash of cream. When cooled, I added it to the regular mielone mix- fresh minced pork, an egg, some white bread soaked in milk, some fresh thyme, salt, pepper and the said mushrooms.  Very nice, I must say, even Pizia had half of a kotlecik for lunch, in spite of the mushrooms, but I’m sure a small amount will not cause her any stomach upset.  She is, after all, a foodie in the making. 🙂

Cream horns.

I saw them being made on GBBO, obviously from scratch, puff pastry and all. I ordered the cute, metal horns from Amazon to make them with and today did, to have something sweet when my man comes home after 2 long weeks in Canada. I bought my puff though.

They were fun to make, to roll onto the horns, painted with egg yolk and baked till golden. When cold I piped in some vanilla whipped cream with fresh strawberries. I intended to dip the front in chocolate too, but forgot to buy chocolate. Next time I won’t forget, there will be plenty of next times, the horns are sheer delight.

Scary macaroons.

Yup, they look like they’re ready for Halloween.  I admit, I didn’t do a great job mixing the food colourant with the rest of the ingredients, I wonder if kitchen aid would do a better job, only I wouldn’t be quite following the recipe. We’ll see. For now, we’re having tea and the scary macaroons stuffed with rhubarb filling. If I were to make improvements, I’d add more rhubarb, than the 280 g that I had. Experience now shows they taste best when the filling is sharp, lemon, yuzu kinda sharp, raspberries- the contrast with sweet almond cookie is then delightful. I made the filling with 280 g of chopped rhubarb, quickly cooked with 3 tbps of sugar till falling apart, then a packet of unsweetened budyn smietankowy mixed with 1/3 of a glass of water- in. All mixed together, nice, tasty, but a touch too sweet, this sharp contrast is missing today.

Still. Being eaten and quite quickly. 🙂