Category Archives: instafood

Supper-Club Round Up and Recipes

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On a beautiful evening in early August, we were delighted to welcome a select group of diners to our inaugural supper club held at the Bandstand Beds garden which has been mentioned in previous posts on this blog. Seventeen diners joined us for an evening of freshly cooked seasonal vegetarian dishes sourced from the garden itself and from the surrounding area of the common helping to raise funds for Bandstand Beds campaign to create better access to the fast growing plot aiming to further their skills sharing mission statement.

The evening was immensely enjoyable for all and sundry and managed to raise £425 for the project – a significant contribution to the £5,000 target. However, there is still a significant way to go before we have the full sum to get work under way so please don’t feel shy and donate to this very worthy cause that will allow more people to learn from this fantastic skills sharing project.

As ever, we have a little something to wet your appetite with two of our recipes from the evening: ‘Persian’ Ratatouille and Great Grandma’s Welsh Cakes (which were served with a delicious compote foraged from Clapham Common’s fruit trees). Both of these were a hit; so simple to do at home and make for an ideal weekend treat. Adapted recipes for your convenience and enjoyment.

Enjoy!

h&h

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‘Persian’ Ratatouille (serves 4 with rice)

Only ‘Persian’ in the loosest of terms with the addition of saffron and currants adding an extra dimension to a traditional staple of French home cooking. On the day we served this with Thadig, a method of cooking rice common to many areas in the Middle-East and beyond but it would also be equally well accompanied by boiled basmati.

Ingredients:

1 tbsp olive oil

2 cloves garlic, crushed

1 white onion, finely chopped

1 can chopped tomatoes

1 pinch saffron

1 handful of currants

Sliced vegetable, including: red onions; pattipans; courgettes; squash; tromboncini (so long as you have enough to create the circular layered pattern pictured, roughly one of each of these vegetable and 2 of the red onions)

Salt and pepper to season

To serve:

Chopped coriander

Toasted flaked almonds

Preheat your oven to 200C.

Take an ovenproof sauté pan, frying the crushed garlic and chopped white onion in some olive oil over a medium heat. Once they have become soft and appear glassy, add the tomatoes, saffron and currants and allow the sauce to simmer for 10 minutes, stirring to allow the saffron and the sweetness of the currants to infuse into the sauce. Take care that the sauce doesn’t burn, stirring at regular intervals to ensure that the base for your ratatouille doesn’t catch.

Season the sauce to taste and remove from the heat. Ensuring that the sauce is evenly distributed around the base of the pan, begin placing the sliced vegetable around the edges of the pan in a circular pattern so that they stand upright and create a stacked effect – this will allow the vegetable to cook and their exposed edges to crisp and caramelise for additional flavour once in the oven. When the pan is full, place in the oven for 30 minutes or until the vegetables are crisp on the top but cooked in the middle.

Serve with a handful of chopped coriander and toasted flaked almonds.

Great-Grandma’s Welsh Cakes (makes about 18)

A long time favourite, Welsh Cakes have been given a make-over in recents years, with recipes being circulated by renowned food writers and even being stocked on the shelves of Marks & Spencer. However, none are quite so good as this recipe passed down from my great-grandmother, born in lovely Rhondda Fach.

Ingredients:

450g self-raising flour
170g butter
155g granulated sugar
A pinch of nutmeg
A pinch of cinnamon
A handful of currants or sultanas
2 medium eggs
Caster sugar for sprinkling over once cooked
Take a large mixing bowl and the dry ingredients (minus the currants) and combine by hand. Once all the ingredients equally distributed, rub in the butter to create a fine bread crumb like texture to the mix. Add the currants and eggs and mix to a stiff dough. Once thoroughly combined, rap in clingfilm and place in the fridge for 30-45 minutes to allow to stiffen.
Once chilled, roll out the mixture on to a lightly floured surface to a thickness of 1cm (you may have to cut the dough in half to fit it onto you counter) and use cookie cutters to create perfectly round welsh cakes. Stack your Welsh Cakes on top of each other adding flour between each one to make sure they don’t stick together if necessary.
Take a heavy non-stick frying pan, or a traditional bake stone if you are lucky enough to own one, and place over a medium heat. Place a small amount of butter in the pan, ensuring a thorough coating before wiping away any excess with a paper towel to minimise the likelihood of ‘dodgy first batch’ syndrome.
Place the Welsh Cakes in the pan in batches of four or five at a time and griddle for approximately 4 minutes on each side or until golden brown. Once cooked they should still appear to have a thin line of moist dough still running through the middle but not be completely raw inside. Once out of the pan scatter with caster sugar and allow to cool while moving onto the next batch.
Repeat till all the dough has been used up and enjoy still warm with a well earned cup of Glengettie tea or save for later.

Mid-week special: Courgetti, chorizo and pine nuts

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We have been away for a while and have had a few things on the back burner, our write up of our Sicily trip being one of them. Valencia was wonderful; not speaking a word of Spanish made things slightly tricky, not helped by trying to talk Italian instead. God knows how we all found the mental capacity to cope.

We finally got back to gardening on Wednesday, walking up very sheepishly as we haven’t been for months. Luckily, we left with such a bounty of fresh food that we went home to cook one of the freshest recipes we have made in a while. Using a courgette the size of Paddy (washed) and the reddest tomatoes we have ever seen!

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Courgetti with fresh tomato, chorizo and pine nuts 

It’s nothing new Courgetti has been around for a while but the freshness of this dish was out of this world a solid 30 mins from ground to plate. And my was it delicious! Lloyd Grossman jar stand down.
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Ingredients

1 courgette per person

Handful of toms (plum. Cherry, anything fresh) per person

Half ring of chorizo

1 red onion

Clove of garlic

1 chilli pepper

2 tsp of hot paprika

Salt and pepper

On a high heat fry the chorizo and removed when cooked. Using the oil from the chorizo, fry the onion, chilli and garlic over a low heat. Once soften turn up the heat and add the paprika and halved toms. Simmer till soft and cooked through.

In a separate pan toast the pine nuts until they start to turn golden brown but be careful to not let them burn. Meanwhile, in a frying pan heat the Courgetti with olive oil, seasoning with salt and pepper when soft.

Serve the Courgetti with the sauce and scatter the toasted pine nuts – might not be from the allotment for everyone but it will be the tastiest courgette you’ll get!

 

h&h

Get a peas of this: Pea bruschetta

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Another light bite from us which we have been making for a while for dinners but also as a good option for a summery lunch.  We’ve also served this dish as a starter for dinner parties – perfect fresh start to an evening of wining and dining. As a protein and vitamin rich vegetable, peas are also an ideal addition to your spring salads for those amongst you who are thinking seriously about potential picnicking options! Enjoy!

*Other variations include replacing the parsley with mint or tarragon and add a generous helping of crispy chorizo.

Ingredients:

1 Echelon Shallot, finely diced

300g Frozen peas

A small handful of parsley

Olive oil

Juice of 1/2 lemon

Salt and pepper to season

Wholemeal sourdough bread

150g lardons

Method:

Mixed with a decent slug of cold olive oil, place the shallot into a cold frying pan. Give the oil and shallot a stir before placing on the heat. Cook until thoroughly browned and remove from the heat.

In the mean time boil a kettle of water. Place the peas in a saucepan and pour over boiling water and place on a medium to high heat. Once cooked drain the peas, return them to the pan, crush and then add the onions.

Squeeze the juice of half a lemon, season and add the chopped parsley.

Serve warm on a slice of toasted wholemeal sourdough with a hearty G&T.

h&h