125ml olive oil 30ml red wine vinegar 125ml finely chopped parsley 125ml finely chopped roasted peppers (Search the recipe: How to prepare Smokey Sweet Peppers) 4 cloves of garlic, minced 10ml oregano/thyme leaves 5ml salt
Add all the ingredients to a small mixing bowl and stir together. Set aside for 30 minutes so that the flavours can develop. Serve with flame grilled rump steak.
8 eggs 62ml sour cream 200g roasted red peppers (store bought or home made) 45ml thyme leaves 140 potato crisps (chacalaka/tomato sauce/cheese and onion) 30ml butter 50-100g goats cheese
Preheat your oven to 180℃. Crack the eggs in a large mixing bowl and whisk together. Add the sour cream, season the mixture with salt and pepper and whisk again. Chop the roasted peppers into chunks and add to the egg mixture. Add the thyme leaves and all of the potato chips. Mix everything together with a spatula. Place an ovenproof frying pan on medium heat, add the butter and wait for it to melt. Add the frittata mixture to the pan and stir around for a few minutes, lightly scraping the bottom of the pan. Spread the ingredients evenly with the spatula and place the pan in the oven. Bake for about 10 minutes, or until the frittata is set. Dot the goats cheese on the frittata’s surface and serve warm with a side salad.
Kunafa is a Middle Eastern dessert made with spun pastry and drizzled with rosewater and sugar syrup. This is my adapted version of Kunafa, inspired by my favourite tennis “tweeter”! Thanks Nawal!!
250ml sugar 125ml water 5ml rose water 450g vermicelli noodles, cooked and cooled 140g butter, melted 300g mozzarella cheese, grated a handful of pistachio nuts icing sugar to dust
Preheat your oven to 200℃ and butter a 25cm loose bottom cake tin. Place the cake tin on a large baking sheet and set aside. Add the sugar and water to a small saucepan set over medium high heat. Stir the mixture until all the sugar granules are dissolved and then bring it to a simmer for 1 minute. Take the saucepan from the heat, add the rosewater and set aside. Place the cooked noodles in a large mixing bowl, drizzle with the melted butter and mix with your hands to spread the butter over the noodles. Place half of the noodles in the prepare cake tin, in an even layer. Spread the mozzarella over the noodles and top the cheese with the remaining noodles. Press the layers down into the tin and bake for 50-60 minutes, until golden. Remove the cake tin (still on the baking sheet) from the oven and immediately drizzle the kunafa with the rosewater syrup. Leave to stand for 10 minutes. Take off the ring of the tin and sprinkle the kunafa with pistachio nuts. Sieve over some icing sugar and serve warm or at room temperature.
1bunch asparagus, blanched and cooled 250ml frozen peas, blanched and cooled 1 punnet sugar snap peas, blanched and cooled
For the dressing: 1 egg yolk 5ml dijon mustard 250ml olive oil 50 grated parmesan cheese 15ml lemon juice
Add the yolk and mustard to a medium mixing bowl and whisk together. Add a few drops of the olive oil and whisk to incorporate – repeat, adding only a few drops of oil at a time, until you have about half of the oil left. Slowly drizzle the oil into the mixture while whisking continuously. Keep going until all the oil is incorporated. Add the parmesan and lemon juice and whisk to combine. Season will salt. Arrange the asparagus, peas and sugar snaps on a serving plate and add a few dollops of the dressing to serve.
Preheat your oven to 200℃ and spray a large sheet pan with cooking spray. Place the sausages on the tray, place in the oven and cook for 20 minutes. Add the bacon, mushrooms and tomato to a bowl and drizzle with some vegetable oil. Rub the oil over all the ingredients. Take the tray from the oven and add the bacon, mushroom and tomato. Cook for another 10 minutes. Take the tray from the oven, push the ingredients to the side and break the eggs in the centre of the baking sheet. Season with salt and pepper. Return the tray to the oven for another 4 minutes. Serve with a good sourdough bread.
This recipe is enough for one large aubergine – adjust according to how many people you need to feed.
1 egg 2,5ml salt 80ml cornstarch 1 aubergine, cut into 1cm thick slices 250ml panko breadcrumbs vegetable oil lemon wedges
Beat/whisk the egg and salt together in a small, shallow bowl and set aside. Measure the cornstarch into a shallow bowl and the breadcrumbs into another. Dredge each slice of aubergine in cornstarch, then in egg mixture and then in the breadcrumbs, pressing down onto the crumbed slices to help the breadcrumbs stick. Place the coated aubergine slices on a wire rack for 20 minutes so that the coating can dry out and set. Pour about 0,5cm of vegetable oil into a shallow saucepan set over medium-high heat. Fry the slices in batches for 2 minutes per side. Transfer to kitchen paper to drain and season with salt and pepper while warm. Serve the fried aubergine with a squeeze of lemon and a dipping sauce if you like.
One of the secrets to perfect fried rice is the temperature: cold rice fries brilliantly and thus this is the perfect dish for those leftovers in the refrigerator! The other secret? Butter!
45ml butter 2 onions, chopped 2 cloves of garlic, minced 3 carrots, cut into small cubes about 750ml of cooked, cold rice 250ml frozen peas 1 x 400g tin of corn kernels 15ml sesame oil 15ml soy sauce 15ml fish sauce (optional)
Add the butter to a large non-stick pan set over medium heat and allow to melt. Add the onion, garlic and carrot and stir-fry until the onion starts to catch a little. Add the rice, peas, corn, sesame oil, soy and fish sauce and turn the heat up to high. Fry the mixture and stir it around every now and then for 3-4 minutes. The high heat will crisp up and caramelise the rice. Take the pan from the heat and taste the fried rice. Drizzle with some more soy sauce if it needs it. Serve warm.
250ml wholewheat flour 250ml cake flour 250ml blueberries 125ml sugar 7,5ml baking powder 2,5ml bicarbonate of soda 2,5ml salt 250ml buttermilk zest of 1 lemon 1 egg 62ml vegetable oil 5ml vanilla
Preheat your oven to 180℃ and line a 23cm x 13cm loaf tin with baking paper. Add the two flours to a mixing bowl and stir to mix with a spatula. Place the blueberries in a separate bowl and sprinkle 4 tablespoons of the flour over the fruit. Mix through so that the blueberries are coated with flour. Set aside. Add the sugar, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and salt to the flours and stir through. Add the buttermilk, lemon zest, egg, oil and vanilla to a wide-mouthed jug and whisk together. Pour the liquids into the dry ingredients and stir together until all the flour has been incorporated and you are left with a shaggy, wet batter. Add the blueberries and stir through. Scrape the batter into the prepared loaf tin and pat it into the corners. Bake for 50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the bread, comes out clean. Allow the loaf to cool in the pan for 15 minutes. Remove the bread from the tin and allow to cool completely on a cooling rack. Slice to serve.
When it comes to a galette the success thereof is often determined by the pastry! But then again, if you do not have the time to make the pastry it can be equally successful if you replace the homemade pastry with a store bought short crust pastry. I include the recipe for a classic flaky pastry and would highly recommend that you try it when the time is right…..
Classic Flaky Pastry
65g bread flour 150g cake flour 3,5ml salt 105g butter, cubed 35g shortening, cubed (you may replace this with butter) 70ml ice cold water
Add the bread flour, cake flour and salt to the bowl of a food processor and pulse to mix. Add the cubed butter and shortening and pulse until the mixture forms tiny clumps, the size of lentils. Keep the engine running and slowly drizzle in half of the water. Now keep adding very small amounts of water until the pastry JUST comes together. Wrap the pastry in plastic and refrigerate for 1 hour.
For the galette:
1 batch Classic Flaky Pastry or short crust pastry 250g cream cheese 1 batch Caramelised Onions (search the recipe on this blog) 12 fresh figs 12 bocconcini balls or other soft cheese olive oil Balsamic vinegar thyme 1 egg yolk
Preheat your oven to 190℃ and line a large baking sheet with baking paper. Roll the pastry to a 30cm circle and mark a 5cm border on the outside edges. Place the pastry on the prepared baking sheet. Spread the cream cheese evenly on the pastry, keeping the border clear. Spoon the caramelised onion on the cream cheese and spread it evenly. Cut 2 slits down the centre of each fig (or half/quarter each) and arrange onto the caramelised onion. Now arrange the bocconcini on and between the figs, drizzle the galette with olive oil and balsamic vinegar and scatter over the thyme. Fold the clear border of the pastry up/over the figs. Whisk the egg yolk and 15ml water together and evenly brush a thin layer onto the pastry. Bake the galette in the oven for 40 minutes. Remove from the oven and drizzle with more balsamic vinegar before setting aside to cool down slightly. Serve the fig galette at room temperature.
When onion is caramelised to perfection it has a rich flavour and makes a great accompaniment to cold meats, patés, terrines and even a base for savoury tarts. This recipe yields about 500ml of caramelised onions that will keep for 2-3 days in the refrigerator.
30ml butter 15ml vegetable oil 5 large onions, sliced a pinch of salt 30ml brown sugar 45ml balsamic vinegar
Heat the butter and oil in a large frying pan over low heat. Add the sliced onions and a generous pinch of salt and cook for 20 minutes. Stir the onions once or twice to prevent them from catching but not too often as it will prevent the caramelisation process. Add the sugar and balsamic once the onions are soft and golden in colour. Cook over a low heat for another 10-15 minutes. Stir occasionally until the onions are sticky and caramelised.