Category Archives: Good Food

Judy’s pork fajitas.

One more from Ms Joo.  I saw her making it on Food Network, took some notes as she cooked and as I had nearly everything I needed at home, I made it today.  Pat on the back for having the energy after another busy day doing up our new home.

Judy used pork tenderloin, I had pork steaks, thinly sliced and marinated for a few hours in some chilli garlic paste, soy sauce, sesame oil and seeds and mirin.

Her coleslaw was quite appealing; I used red cabbage, Judy used white, a shallot, some apple, mayo, lemon juice, a touch sesame oil, salt and quite a bit of sugar- that’s what I ended up doing to my taste.

The meat is quickly sauteed, onto the tortilla wraps, coleslaw, fresh sliced avo, some cherry tomato quarters and fresh coriander. Very good indeed.

(Pseudo) Korean steamed seabass.

If it looked better than it did, I’d have entitled it “Judy Joo’s steamed seabass”, but I doubt the good woman would like her name next to my plate of seabass.  I saw a couple of her tv shows, I quite like what she has to offer and how she offers it, not even that much bothered by her American accent.  Also, I rediscovered mirin today. I used to have it in the pantry, then chucked it, as it wasn’t used very much. Today I bought a fresh bottle and was very pleasantly surprised at what it did to a dressing or a courgette on the pan.

One thing I could have used was a bamboo steamer, but I haven’t got one, so I used a collander instead, lined it with baking paper, with slices of fresh ginger and garlic, like in the recipe and placed my seasoned and scored  bass fillets on top. Tightly covered with foil and steamed for about 20 minutes, while Florian was being late for dinner again.  I’m sure my fish would have looked much more presentable from a proper steamer, mine looked the way it looked.

It sat on a little salad of courgettes and carrots sliced with veg peeler to make them look nice; on some hot olive oil I threw a bit of garlic, then there should have been a couple of anchovies, if I had remembered to get them while buying mirin, then the veggies, mirin and off the heat after 3 minutes.

The dressing on the steamed fish was  particularly pleasant- some juliened ginger, 5 tbsps of soy sauce, 3 tbsps of mirin, a sprinkle of sugar, a touch of chilli garlic paste and some toasted sesame seeds. I added some sesame oil as well.

Served the bass with some white coriander rice. It was light, pleasant and sort of… too healthy.  Steaks tomorrow. 🙂

Sweetcorn and prawn fritters.

I came across the recipe for sweetcorn fritters in “The Telegraph”, it was one of the recipes to use avocado with.  I made it this evening, but I threw in some raw shrimps and that was a good idea, as on their own they’d not be in any way worth blogging. I’m not sure I’d even know if there was sweetcorn in them,  if I hadn’t made them myself- corn is blended in the batter,  next time I’ll add a bit more, after the blending,  for more texture.

So, 3 eggs, 100 g of plain flour, 100 ml of creme fraiche, 150 g of canned sweetcorn, 1 tsp of baking powder all blended, then 3 spring onions, fresh coriander added, some seasoning and the prawns, chopped in half.

The salsa; chopped avo, 4 chery tomatoes, half a red chilli, a shallot, a clove of garlic, 2 tbsps of olive oil, juice of 1 lime and seasoning. More fresh coriander, of course, cause we like our coriander.

The recipe is a keeper, texture will be improved next time.

 

Fish pie.

I had some lemon sole and some lovely prawns in the freezer and I thought it was time to see if I liked a fish pie.  I researched the recipes, might have gone traditional, like Mary’s, with white sauce and hard boiled egg, but I decided to go with Jamie Oliver’s.  He wrote he liked his with salmon and haddock, but one can use any fish one fancies and the recipe uses no ” hideous white sauce”. It appealed to me, after a day of running after Pizion, who now crawls really fast and must be watched all the time. Dinner had to be cooked, but I had no 3 hours to spare.

While the spuds + parsnip for extra sweetness were boiling away for the mash, I grated 2 carrots, a celery stick, some lemon zest, half a chilli and some of remaining gruyere( I had no cheddar), seasoned it well, scattered my chopped sole and prawns over it, mixed it all well and added some lemon juice too. Both the zest and the juice were lovely coming through later. I piped the mash onto it and baked in the oven for about 40 minutes.

I found it lovely, not too heavy, fish was soft and flavoursome. Could have done with some parsley, but I had no fresh herbs at home. Pleased.

Monkfish, best to date.

I’m very pleased with my monkfish today. It came from Ocado yesterday with no clear idea of what it will be cooked with, but after a little research I was pleased to discover I had everything I needed to do it justice, but not in a curry.

I blanched and took the skin off about 12 cherry tomatoes. Finely chopped 2 small shallots, 2 garlic cloves, a small piece of fresh ginger and most of a small red chilli, fried it on olive oil, added the chopped tomatoes, a splash of water ( the recipe for called for white wine, but I didn’t have a bottle opened and didn’t fancy opening any of my good chardonnay or pinot gris for a sauce, even a good sauce).  I reduced it a little, then added a bit of a chilli garlic paste, some butter, seasoning and finished with coriander.  The small chunks of monkfish were quickly pan fried, then coated in the sauce and served with some garlic bread.  We loved it. I think I’ll cook it in a week when Ken and Alice come over.  For Ken, obviously. 🙂

 

Venison married to porcini.

I’ve never cooked venison before. I’ve had it in places, liked it a lot, but only today decided it is time to broaden the horizons. Ocado brought me two venison steaks, I flipped through GF mags to see what I could do with them and opted for a porcini mushroom sauce and mash. First cooked the mushrooms, picked in the woods of southern Poland, let them cool and drained the stock. I fried a shallot, added chopped mushrooms, some of the stock and then finished with a mix of the remaining stock+ flour+ double cream+ seasoning, mainly pepper. And a touch of coriander, there was no parsley in the house.

I fried my steaks, like I would do with beef fillet, then coated them in the sauce and served with mash and tenderstem broccoli.  Very much enjoyed the gamey taste of the meat with the mushrooms and pepper, a glass of Argentinian Malbec  helped too. Yum.

Scallops on cauliflower puree.

This week we eat only scraps, hehe, fillet steaks on Wednesday,  lamb shank yesterday,this evening scallops, tomorrow tuna tartar again. 🙂

That’s my first cauliflower puree, so I researched it first and decided not to go with Hairy Bikers, who suggested cooking the cauli and then leaving it to dry and then blitzing with cream; I went with fucking Gordon- I cooked the florets in milk, then blitzed, but with gruyere cheese, seasoned well with salt, pepper and nutmeg. My panfried scallops sat on the puree, crispy bacon on top, a few rocket leaves.

That was also my little Pizia’s  first taste of cauli, she licked quite a bit off my finger. 🙂

 

 

Pyzole. :-)

The name for those dumplings I just made up, as pyzy n Polish would be similar, but stuffed with meat. The kind that nobody on earth makes better than a certain Bozena in a distant Stronie Slaskie.  I’m so fond of them, that when I affectionately call my daughter “Pizia”, it does have something to do with a lovely dumpling as well as her own name.

The dough is made with cooked and riced potatoes, cooled and mixed with plain flour and an egg. The amount of flour is difficult to get right, as the dough must be soft and springy, too much flour and one ends up with heavy, unpleasant thing in the stomach.  If I were to say roughly how much, I’d say a bit more than a quarter of the amount of potatoes, but carefully applied. More flour can always be added, can’t be taken off though.

The stuffing, super simple, a shallot, chopped cup mushrooms, a bit of pancetta, all seasoned, lots of pepper.

Ready dumplings are thrown into boiling, salty water and cooked for a few minutes, until floating and a bit longer, raw dough is not pleasant. Finished with crispy pancetta. Very enjoyable.

 

Parmesan crusted cod.

A very good idea for a quick dinner, that can be prepared ahead and then chucked in the oven.  My cod was simply seasoned and then covered with a cosy duvet of  breadcrumbs, parmesan, a clove of garlic and some coriander, plus a touch of seasoning. A drizzle of olive oil and in the oven it went, sitting on a bed of chopped cherry tomatoes.  What was in the oven already, sitting there  for a good 40 minutes, were dauphinoise potatoes, but sweet potatoes. That was the nicest thing that happened today, easily. Will be repeated this Saturday, Ewa and the chap are coming over.

🙂

Tuna Tartar.

Super food, tuna. I love and I miss it, although, when I worked in Dinings, I mainly had in a from of spicy tuna roll.  This recipe I’ve seen in “Food and Drink” a few months ago and I wanted to make it right away, but obtaining super fresh tuna was a bit of an issue.  I happened to be in Waitrose Cheltenham today and there were tuna steaks, beautifully red and fresh, I snapped one up immediately.

Tuna steak chopped roughly, as Monsieur Roux likes it, chopped spring onion, half a chilli, a small piece of ginger and some chopped coriander all mixed together. Dressing- toasted sesame seeds, soy sauce, sesame oil, a touch of honey and a squeeze of lime.

We’ve just finished it with Florek( I’d happily have twice the portion), sipping very decent Barolo with it and I’m thinking I’d make it next month, when Aska and Jedrek come over, but I’d double the chilli and ginger and instead of lime juice, I’d add yuzu.  And the toast will be ciabatta, not a granary roll from Norths Bakery. Yeah. 🙂