Oven-baked Sweet-and-Sour Chicken

Oven-baked Sweet-and-Sour Chicken

This is a hands-off meal that can be served with fragrant steamed rice or noodles. Leftovers are even better the next day!

9 skinless chicken breasts
125ml cornstarch
2 eggs
vegetable oil for frying

Sweet-and-sour sauce:
250ml sugar
250ml apple cider vinegar
125ml tomato sauce (ketchup)
30ml soy sauce
5ml garlic powder

Preheat your oven to 190℃ and spray an oven-proof dish or casserole of about 18cm X 28cm. Set aside.
Add all the sauce ingredients to a mixing bowl and whisk together until the sugar has dissolved. Put aside.
Cut the chicken in to 2 – 3 cm chunks, season with salt and pepper and toss together in a mixing bowl.
Sprinkle the cornstarch over the chicken and mix to coat all the pieces.
Heat about 3cm of vegetable oil in a saucepan.
Whisk the eggs in a small bowl.
Dip the chicken pieces in the egg and fry the pieces in batches, in the oil, until golden.
Place the fried chicken into the prepared oven-proof dish. Keep going until all the chicken has been fried.
Pour the sauce over the chicken and cook in the oven for 40 minutes. Give it a stir once or twice during cooking time.
Serve the sweet-and-sour chicken on steamed rice or noodles, with a sprinkling of sesame seeds.

Potato-Rösti Vegetable Bake

Potato-Rösti Vegetable Bake

This is an easy vegetarian bake for weekday dinners and needs only a salad to accompany it. Serves 6 hungry adults.

Potato crust:
600g potato, unpeeled
5ml garlic salt
40ml flour
1 egg

Filling:
2 onions
250g mushrooms
250g zucchini
250g cheddar cheese
4 eggs
125ml cream
5ml salt
5ml mustard

For the potato crust:
Preheat your oven to 180℃ and grease a loose-bottomed cake tin.
Spread a clean tea towel onto a work surface and grate the potato directly onto it, with the skin on.
Fold the towel over the potato, gathering all ends together and twist and squeeze the potato over your kitchen sink until all the excess moisture has been removed. Put the potato into a mixing bowl.
Sprinkle the garlic salt and flour over the grated potato and mix through with your hands in order to distribute all ingredients as evenly as possible.
Now add the egg and mix in the same way.
Spoon the mixture into the prepared cake tin and press it tightly into the base and sides of the tin with the back of a spoon.
Place the cake tin on a flat baking sheet and bake in the oven for 30 minutes.
Remove from the oven and set aside.

For the filling:
Put a frying pan on to medium heat and add some oil to it.
Slice the onions and fry them until soft and translucent. Spoon the onion into a large mixing bowl.
Turn the heat up to high, slice the mushrooms and add them to the hot pan. Cook until caramelised. Spoon into the bowl with the onion.
Grate the zucchini and cheese directly into the mixing bowl with the onion and mushroom. Mix together.
Spoon the vegetable-cheese mixture in to the potato crust. Set aside.
Add the eggs, cream, salt and mustard to a mixing bowl and whisk together. Gently pour over the vegetable mixture.
Bake in the preheated oven for 40 minutes, until golden and set.
Remove from the oven and stand in the baking tin for 30 minutes.
Slice and serve warm.

Ricotta-filled Chocolate Ravioli

Ricotta-filled Chocolate Ravioli

This is a savoury dish that will get conversations (and your tastebuds) going….. Serves 6 people.

500ml bread flour
190ml cocoa powder
5 eggs
2,5ml salt

For the filling:
250ml ricotta cheese
80g dark/bitter chocolate, finely chopped
a pinch of salt

100g butter
20 sage leaves

Sift the flour, cocoa powder and salt together onto a clean work surface.
Make a well in the centre and put in the eggs.
Mix the eggs with your fingers and gradually draw in the flour and cocoa mixture to form a soft, but not sticky, dough.
Add more flour or egg, if needed, to get the right consistency.
Knead for 10 minutes until you have a smooth and elastic dough.
Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and leave in the fridge to chill for one hour.

Mix the ricotta, chopped chocolate and a pinch of salt with a wooden spoon until smooth.
Roll the pasta through a pasta machine.
Lay one sheet of pasta flat and form walnut-sized balls with the ricotta mixture. Place the ricotta balls onto the sheet of pasta.
Wet the area around the ricotta-balls with water and lay a second sheet of pasta on top.
Press down and around the ricotta balls so that the top sheet of pasta sticks.
Cut individual ravioli shapes with a round cutter and cook them for three minutes in simmering water.
Keep warm while making the sage-butter.

Add the butter to a small saucepan and place it on a high heat.
Allow the butter to melt and then to caramelise – regulate the heat: you want the butter to turn brown and become nutty without burning.
Add the sage leaves once the butter has browned and immediately turn off the heat. Be careful the butter will spatter as you add the sage.

Arrange the cooked ravioli on plates and spoon the butter and sage over.
Serve with a crusty bread.

Pumpkin-Pecan Pie

Pumpkin-Pecan Pie

This is one of the easiest and tastiest side dishes you will ever make and as a bonus, you will have one bowl and one jug to clean! You may prepare this dish the day before you want to serve it and simply heat it up when needed.

500ml pumpkin purée (cooked pumpkin, finely mashed)
375ml flour
250ml sugar
60ml butter, melted
250ml cream
3 eggs, lightly beaten
250ml pecan nuts, roughly chopped
45ml granulated sugar
5ml cinnamon

Preheat your oven to 180℃.
Add the pumpkin purée, flour and sugar to a mixing bowl and stir to combine.
Add the melted butter, cream and egg to a wide-mouthed jug and whisk together.
Pour the wet ingredients into the pumpkin mixture and mix to a batter.
Stir in the chopped nuts.
Grease a ceramic pie dish and pour the mixture into it.
Add the sugar and cinnamon to a small bowl and mix. Sprinkle onto the pie surface.
Bake the pie for 1 hour, until set.
Serve warm.

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.