Breadsticks

Breadsticks

Breadsticks are delicious and versatile: serve them as canapés, a dip like hummus or as a side to soup.

80g bread flour
5g instant yeast
2,5ml sugar
150ml tepid water

160g bread flour
15ml olive oil
2,5ml salt
1 egg
chopped herbs and/or grated parmesan cheese

Add the 80g flour, yeast, sugar and water to the bowl of a stand mixer.
Whisk the ingredients by hand until you have a smooth mixture.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and a clean tea towel.
Stand the bowl in a warm place for 30 minutes or until the mixture is foamy.

Add the 160g flour, oil and salt to the foamy-mixture.
Fit the mixer with the dough hook and turn it on to a low speed. Mix for 2 minutes.
Increase the speed to medium and knead the dough until smooth and elastic (about 8 minutes).
Cover the mixing bowl with a tea towel and allow to proof for 30 minutes.

Preheat your oven to 190℃ and line a baking sheet with baking paper.
Dust a work surface with flour and take the dough from the mixing bowl.
Knead it by hand for one minute.
Portion the dough by cutting it into equal sized pieces. About 16 portions would do but it depends on the length of breadstick you want. (Long is better as you may always cut them in half before baking).
Roll each piece of dough into a log.
To make twists: cut the log lengthwise into two and twist the one around the other.
To make braids: cut the log into three, keep the top end together, and braid as you would hair.
Place the breadsticks onto the prepared tray, brush with egg white and sprinkle with herbs and/or grated parmesan.
Bake the bread for 15 minutes.
Remove from the oven and cool completely on a cooling rack.
Serve with soup, hummus, a dip or as a canapé.

Smoky Croquettes

Smoky Croquettes

This is a less meaty take on traditional Dutch croquettes and makes a fabulous canapé when paired with a crisp glass of wine. The rolling/shaping of the croquettes are a bit finicky and you do have to be patient but trust me, you will be rewarded in taste!

200g mozzarella cheese
200g smoked bacon
80ml vegetable oil
1 onion, finely chopped
750ml milk
160ml flour
10ml salt
30ml chives, chopped

100ml flour
2 eggs, lightly beaten
250ml breadcrumbs
oil for deep frying

Grate the mozzarella into a mixing bowl and put aside.
Cut the bacon into chunks and add it to a saucepan with a dash of oil. Cook until done.
Spoon the bacon into the bowl with the grated mozzarella.
Place the same saucepan back onto medium heat and add the 80ml of vegetable oil and chopped onion. Simmer/fry the onion while stirring occasionally until it is soft and translucent.
In the meantime pour the milk into a jug and warm it slightly in your microwave oven.
Now add the 160ml flour to the onion and cook through for about a minute, stirring until it starts to bubble lightly.
Gradually pour in the warmed milk, stirring continuously.
Turn up the heat once all of the milk has been added. Keep stirring until the mixture comes to a boil.
Remove the mixture from the heat and add the salt, chives, bacon and mozzarella. Mix thoroughly.
Grease a large roasting tin and pour the croquette mixture into it. Cover with plastic wrap and place in the freezer until firm.

Line up three bowls: add the flour to the first; the eggs to the second and the breadcrumbs to the third bowl.
Scoop a spoonful of the mixture into your hands, roll it into a small cylinder and then proceed to roll it in the flour. Dip it in the egg and finally into the breadcrumbs to coat completely.
Place the shaped and breaded croquettes on a baking sheet lined with baking paper. Keep going in this way until all of the mixture has been utilised.
Heat some vegetable oil to 175℃ and fry a few croquettes at a time, until golden. Drain on kitchen paper and keep warm while cooking the rest.
Serve warm.

Bitter Chocolate Banana Bread

Bitter Chocolate Banana Bread

This banana bread is delicious and chocolatey without being sweet and has incredible depth of flavour. I have included the substitutes for ingredients in brackets, to make it vegan. Enjoy this tea-time bread with a spread of salted butter.

220g banana, mashed (about three bananas)
5ml apple cider vinegar
35g butter, melted (nut butter)
300ml milk (soy milk)
100g sugar (Erythritol/any other sweetener)
a pinch of salt
200g flour
2,5ml bicarbonate of soda
10ml baking powder
50g cacao powder
40g + 40g dark chocolate, chopped

Preheat your oven to 180℃ and line a small bread tin (22cm X 11cm) with baking paper.
Mash the banana with a fork in a mixing bowl.
Add the vinegar, melted butter and milk and mix through with a spatula.
Add the sugar to this mixture and stir through.
Sift the flour, bicarbonate of soda, baking powder and cacao powder into the bowl and mix well.
Stir in 40g of the chopped chocolate.
Spoon the batter into the prepared bread tin and sprinkle the other 40g of chopped chocolate on top.
Bake the bread for 1 hour 35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the middle of the bread, comes out clean.
Take the banana bread from the oven and lift the bread from the tin by holding the ends of the baking paper.
Cool the bread completely on a cooling rack before cutting.
Serve with a spreading of salted butter.


No-Knead Olive Bread

No-Knead Olive Bread

This bread involves absolutely no kneading or fussing and I guarantee you that it will be one of THE best olive breads you have ever tasted.

360g bread flour
1,2ml instant yeast
10ml salt
310ml tepid water
250ml olives, stoned and sliced in half

Add the flour, yeast and salt to a large mixing bowl.
Pour the water into the bowl and mix.
Add the olives to the dough mixture and make sure they are evenly distribute – squish them with your hands.
Cover the bowl with a tea towel and leave at room temperature to rest for about 18 hours.

Flour a working surface and scrape the dough onto it.
Form the dough into a ball shape and place it onto a square of baking paper. Cover with a tea towel and allow to rest for another hour.

Preheat your oven as well as a dutch oven to 230℃. (A dutch oven is simply a cast iron pot with a tight-fitting lid)
Once the oven temperature is reached, remove the dutch oven and lift the bread in the paper, into the dutch oven. Replace the lid of the dutch oven and immediately place the bread into the oven.
Bake for 30 minutes, remove the lid of the dutch oven and bake for another 25 minutes.
Take the bread from the oven an cool for about ten minutes before removing it from the dutch oven.
Cool the bread completely before slicing.

Beetroot Bread

Beetroot Bread

This bread has a moist texture and is absolutely perfect for a topping of tomato, salad, cucumber and avocado. Easy to make and it will prettify your table!

10ml instant yeast
350ml water, lukewarm
500g bread flour
10ml salt
250g beetroot, grated
30ml oil

Sprinkle the yeast onto the water and give it a good stir.
Add the flour, salt, beetroot and oil to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook and mix on low speed for one minute.
Add the yeast mixture and mix/knead for another 3 minutes.
At this stage you want a dough that comes loose from the sides of the bowl. If the dough is too soft to come together in a ball, add a handful of flour and allow your machine to incorporate it. Keep adding small amounts of bread flour until the dough just comes together in a kneadable dough.
Add a few drops of vegetable oil to a clean mixing bowl and cover the sides and bottom with a thin layer. Now add the dough to the bowl, cover with plastic wrap/a bag and put aside to rest for an hour.
Preheat your oven to 210℃.
Take the dough from the bowl, gently knock it back and shape it into a round. Place on a baking sheet lined with baking paper. Cover the bread with a clean tea towel and rest for another 20 minutes.
Bake the bread for 30 minutes.
Cool completely before cutting.

If you would like to “decorate” your bread as in the image below, follow the following guidelines:
Once you have knocked back the dough, cut about a third of the dough from the rest.
Shape the larger quantity dough into a ball and place it in a small, deep cake tin. Brush the surface with a small amount of water.
Roll the rest of the dough to a 1cm thickness and cut into strips about three centimetres wide.
Roll each strip into a coil and place onto the dough ball.
Stand for 20 minutes before baking.


Three-Cheese Potato Gratin

Three-Cheese Potato Gratin

This is a triple-cheese take on the classic Potato Gratin!

6 – 8 large potatoes
3 cloves of garlic, minced
15ml rosemary, finely chopped
250ml ricotta cheese
250ml mozzarella cheese, grated
250ml feta cheese, crumbed
250ml heavy cream
salt

Preheat your oven to 190℃.
Peel the potato and cut each into slices not thicker than 5mm. Keep aside.
Mince the garlic and keep in a small bowl.
Chop the rosemary and keep in another small bowl.
Add the ricotta, mozzarella and feta cheese to a bowl and mix it through with your hands.
Now, select a medium sized, ovenproof dish and start layering.
Lay a third of the potato slices onto the bottom of the dish, slightly overlapping.
Season with salt and then sprinkle with a third of the chopped rosemary and a third of the garlic.
Now spread a third of the cheese on top.
Repeat the layers until all the potato and cheese have been layered, ending with the last of the cheese.
Gently pour the cream onto the cheese layer and tightly cover the baking dish with aluminium foil.
Place the gratin into the oven and bake for 60 minutes.
Check whether the potato is cooked by inserting a sharp knife. If not, or if the cream isn’t absorbed, cover the dish once more and let it bake until fully cooked.
Remove the foil once the gratin is cooked and place it back into the oven for another 30 – 40 minutes, until golden brown.
Serve as a side dish or as a vegetarian dish with salad.

Spinach Lentil Dahl

Spinach Lentil Dahl

If you like Indian food you will love this nutritious Dahl! It is really easy to make and a superb dish to serve when you are having friends over.

45ml ghee/olive oil
1 onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
15ml ginger powder
1 chilli, chopped
5ml fennel seeds
5ml mustard seeds
10ml cumin seeds
15ml garam marsala
400g baby spinach
15ml sugar
16 mint leaves
125ml plain yoghurt
500ml lentils, uncooked
10ml salt
1 lemon

Cook the lentils according to the instructions on the packet. Set aside.
Add the ghee to a saucepan on medium heat and fry the onion for 2 – 3 minutes.
Add the garlic, ginger and chilli and fry on low heat until fragrant.
Add the fennel seeds, mustard seeds, cumin seeds, garam marsala and sugar. Stir the mixture for about one minute while cooking gently.
Add the spinach, mint and 45ml water to the saucepan and immediately cover with the lid. Cook for about 3 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Place the spinach and spices into a blender, add 320ml water and blend until smooth.
Pour the sauce back into the same saucepan, on low heat.
Add the yoghurt, salt and the juice of about half a lemon.
Serve with fragrant rice and tomato salad.

Sheet-pan Fish with Ladolemono Dressing

Sheet-pan Fish with Ladolemono Dressing

This recipe works well with any white fish, fresh or frozen, and is the perfect nutritious weeknight dinner. Ladolemono dressing is traditionally Greek and a basic olive oil and lemon dressing that is drizzled onto fish before and after baking. This version has garlic and origanum added and will have you longing for a Greek vacation!

6 – 8 portions of white fish fillet
Ladolemono Dressing:

90ml olive oil
30ml lemon juice
5ml salt
15ml fresh oregano
1 clove garlic, minced

Preheat your oven to 220℃.
Lay the white fish portions/fillets onto a baking sheet and put aside while making the dressing.
Add all the Ladolemono dressing ingredients to a small bowl and whisk until the mixture turns thick and is completely blended.
Spoon half of the dressing onto the fish and bake for 15 minutes.
Remove the fish from the oven and drizzle the rest of the dressing onto the cooked fish.
Serve with a salad or roasted vegetables.