Wednesday, May 29, 2013

No Butter Cookies

Not getting much done in the kitchen (or around the house!) this week as Mr B is working hard on getting the new bathroom finished.

Here's a great store cupboard recipe for spice cookies though - good for keeping hungry tradies happy at morning tea time AND dairy free.

1/2 cup oil (I use rice bran oil, but any vegetable oil is fine)
3/4 cup brown sugar
1 egg
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 cups plain flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
pinch salt

Preheat oven to 200 C and line a couple of baking trays.

Mix ingredients in the order listed.  Roll into walnut sized balls and press lightly with your thumb to flatten if you like.

Bake for 8 - 10 minutes.  Cool on tray for a few minutes before removing to a wire rack.

Makes around 30 cookies.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Penne al Salmone

I don't think I'll ever get this tasting quite as good as the version Mr B ordered in Tuscany.  But it's good enough to take us back to that wonderful day of shopping and eating!



Penne al Salmone

Serves 2

Approx 1 cup of dry penne pasta

1 tablespoon olive oil
1 clove garlic, peeled and sliced
100g smoked salmon slices

1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon flour
1/4 cup cream
1/4 cup milk

Cook pasta until al dente in a pot of salted, boiling water.  DO NOT add olive oil to the pasta water, unless you want your sauce to slide right off!

Meanwhile, heat the olive oil over a medium heat and add the garlic.  When the garlic is fragrant, add the salmon.  You can turn the heat off fairly quickly, leave the salmon in the pan to take on the garlic flavour.

Mix the milk and cream well.  Then, in another saucepan, melt the butter until frothy and then add the flour.  Slowly add the combined milk and cream, stirring constantly, to make a white sauce.  Once all the cream has been added, remove the garlic from the salmon pan and then tip the salmon into the cream sauce and mix together.

Drain the cooked pasta, reserving the water.  Add pasta to the sauce and mix well over a low heat.  Add 1/4 cup of pasta water if the sauce has thickened too much.  Your pasta should now be just coated with beautiful, creamy salmon sauce.

My boys LOVE this dish, if Mr B will actually let them share ;)


Kitchen Nightmares

We've all had them!  In fact, my Dad (and my sister AND my brother) just love telling the story of my "first" kitchen disaster: serving up cold scrambled eggs and beans on toast because I was too inexperienced to have everything ready at the same time.  Apparently that's one story that just never gets old.

We had an old friend visiting from out of town last night.  A good friend, but someone we hadn't seen in 5 years so I was looking forward to cooking something different.  An old stand by by from our Singapore "menu" but something I hadn't cooked in a while (or at all since we arrived back in New Zealand), thai red curry with prawns.

I spent most of Wednesday morning combing the shelves at Countdown and Yan's Supermarket and then of course had to make another "quick" visit to Countdown again on Thursday for a few more vital ingredients.  Another hour of chopping and prepping and then I got down to business, grinding up a thai red curry paste in my mortar and pestle.

Lesson #1: You will nearly always regret buying kitchen tools from the Warehouse.



My curry paste was *almost* ready and smelling amazing when disaster struck: the mortar splintered into a thousand pieces rendering my curry paste inedible.  Fortunately I managed to rustle up a quick salmon pasta instead, so poor old Mr B and our friend weren't going to be left to fade away.  But I am still disappointed that I didn't manage to make the curry.  Oh well, another day perhaps!

What are some of your kitchen disasters?  And where can I find a decent mortar and pestle around here?!?!

Monday, May 20, 2013

Happy Birthday Mr B!

Absolutely knackered today after cooking up a birthday storm for Mr B.  So I'll just post a few pics of all the party food!

Race car cake (requested by Callum)


Birthday lunch


Racing teddies


And a change of pace for dinner: gyoza followed by tonkatsu.  Yum yum yum!









Friday, May 17, 2013

Nana Rosie's Apple Pie

Whenever my family get together it's usually around a table full of food: Uncle Mark's curry, Aunty Dolly's desserts, Aunty Shirl's corned beef pie and mushy peas.. And Nana Rosie's apple pie.

A couple of weeks ago, John-the-Electrician came to do a few more jobs in the almost-finished kitchen.  He also brought round a bag full of apples from his garden!  So the first thing I did was call Nana Rosie for a quick lesson in making pie.

I've changed her measurements to grams, and used all butter rather than butter and lard (sorry, Nan!) but here it is for posterity :)  



4-5 cooking apples, peeled and roughly chopped
1 tin blackberries (optional)
2 household tablespoons caster sugar

240gm self raising flour
2 flat household tablespoons sugar
115gm cold butter, chopped 
(or 60gm butter and 60gm lard)
Approx 100ml cold water

Place apples and 1 tablespoon sugar in a microwave proof dish and heat, covered, on high for 3-4 mins.  Remove and allow to cool.  Drain blackberries and set aside.

Rub fat into flour till it resembles breadcrumbs.  Add cold water slowly and mix with a knife until dough just comes together.  You might not need the full measure of water, or you may need a little extra.  Turn pastry onto floured surface and knead a couple of times.  Divide roughly 2/3 for base and 1/3 for pie lid.

Roll out base and line a lightly greased pie dish.  Refrigerate while you prepare the lid and filling.

Combine apple, blackberries and remaining 2 T sugar.  Put apple and blackberries into lined dish, put lid on top and seal.  Brush lightly with milk and pierce top with sharp knife to allow steam to escape.  Sprinkle with a wee bit of caster sugar.

Bake for 40 - 45 minutes in a moderate (180 deg) oven or until pie is golden and pastry is cooked through.

You could add cinnamon and vanilla to the apple filling, but if you're lucky enough to have home grown apples, leave it out and enjoy the apples and berries as they are :)  Serve with cream or (my favourite) vanilla ice cream.




Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Caramel Date Pudding

One of the best things about coming home has been experiencing actual SEASONS again.  Tropical weather, and swimming every day, is fantastic but it does start to feel a bit like Groundhog Day after 5 years.  We were extremely lucky to come home to one of the best summers in years in Wellington, but now the cooler weather is here I am really enjoying making real "puddings" and eating them in comfort rather than 35 degree heat!

I made this pudding a couple of weeks ago, it is delicious with a big scoop of Tip Top vanilla!

Caramel & Date Pudding

60g butter
1/2 cup milk
3/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 1/2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 cup chopped pitted dried dates
1/2 cup chopped walnuts (optional)

For the sauce:
40g butter, melted
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1 1/4 cups hot water

Preheat oven to 160 deg fan-forced.  Grease an oven proof dish (around 8 cup capacity).

Combine first measure of butter and milk in a saucepan and stir over a medium heat until butter is melted.  Remove pan from heat and stir in first measure of sugar, flour and baking powder until well combined.  Add dates and walnuts, if using.  Spoon mixture into prepared oven dish and smooth the surface.

To make the sauce, combine remaining butter, milk and sugar with hot water in a heatproof jug (or a bowl if you don't have a jug big enough!)  Carefully pour the sauce over pudding by pouring it over the back of a spoon.

Bake for 35 minutes or until sauce is bubbling.  Serve immediately with ice cream.

If (!) you have left overs, it'll keep well in the fridge for a couple of days.  Just zap in the microwave, 30 seconds on high to reheat.  It won't be as saucy as the first time but it'll still taste amazing!

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Lemon Yoghurt Cake

A couple of people recently suggested I start a food blog ... so I thought I'd resurrect the one I started way back when...

To get back in the swing of things, here's my famous-in-Lower-Hutt Lemon Yoghurt Cake.

125gm butter, softened
2 t grated lemon rind
1 c sugar
3 eggs
1 c plain flour
1 1/2 t baking powder
1/2 c greek yoghurt
juice of half a (large) lemon

1/4 c lemon juice
1/4 c sugar

Beat butter, lemon rind, sugar and eggs together until light and fluffy.

Sift flour and baking powder together.  Mix yoghurt and lemon juice in another bowl.  Alternately fold flour and yoghurt into egg mixture, mixing until smooth.

Pour mixture into a greased, lined 20cm round cake tin.  I use a springform one as it makes things easier once it's out of the oven.

Bake at 160 C (fan forced) for 45 mins or until cake springs back when lightly touched.  Leave in tin for 5 - 10 minutes before turning out onto wire rack.

While cake is baking, combine lemon juice and sugar in a small saucepan.  Stir over medium heat until sugar is dissolved.  Pour syrup over warm cake (put it on a plate first else it'll end up all over your bench!!)