This is the creamiest hummus you will ever taste and I love it for its versatility!! Keep it in the refrigerator and use as a spread on crackers on sandwiches, as a dip with veg or thin it down and use it as a salad dressing.
1 x 400g can butter beans 30ml tahini 2 cloves garlic, minced the juice of one lemon (30ml) 30ml olive oil 5ml salt
Add all the ingredients to a liquidiser and blitz together until completely smooth.
This is a delicious cold soup for warm summer days. Spice it up by adding a chilli or two or add a handful of freshly chopped basil leaves. Feeds 4-6 adults.
1 large English cucumber, diced 1 small onion, diced 3 cloves of garlic, minced 8 fresh tomatoes, diced 30ml olive oil 60ml grape vinegar salt and pepper fresh chilli or basil leaves, to serve
Dice the vegetables and add it to a large mixing bowl. Add the garlic, olive oil and vinegar and season with salt and pepper. Scoop half the mixture into a liquidiser and blitz. Pour the liquid back into the mixing bowl and mix through with the diced vegetables. Refrigerate the soup for at least 2 hours so that the flavours can develop. Serve the soup with a few ice cubes and chopped chilli or basil leaves.
Cook the quinoa according to the packet instructions and allow to cool completely. Dice the sweet peppers, feta and peaches and chop the basil leaves. Mix everything together. Drizzle the pickling liquid from the sweet pepper over the salad or make the Lemon Dressing (search on this blog)
We made this chocolate calzone one Saturday afternoon when we had leftover pizza dough and it has been a firm favourite from then on. Serve it warm with fresh strawberries and a few basil leaves on the side. This recipe yields 6 – 8 pizzas.
Pizza dough: 15g dry yeast 10ml sugar 800g bread flour 2,5ml salt 60ml olive oil 400ml tepid water
Dissolve the sugar and yeast in a jug with the lukewarm water and stir until the yeast has dissolved. Set aside. Add the flour and salt to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook. Add the oil to the flour. Turn the machine on to its lowest speed and add the yeast mixture. Knead for 2 minutes. Turn the machine to medium speed and knead for another 6 minutes. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl and cover it with plastic wrap. Leave to stand in a warm place for 90 minutes or until doubled in size.
If you are not baking your pizza in a pizza oven, preheat your oven to 220℃ and spray a baking sheet with cooking spray. Take the dough from the bowl and release the air from it by gently kneading it by hand for one minute. Cut the dough into 6 – 8 portions. Roll each dough ball to a thickness of 5mm and transfer it to the prepared baking sheet.
Assembly of one calzone: 2 x 80g slabs of De Villiers Coco Nut, Nut Butter Chocolate a handful of cashew nuts
Place the two slabs of chocolate, one atop of the other, on one half of the dough circle and sprinkle over the cashew nuts. Gently fold the other half of the dough circle over the chocolate and pinch the edges together with your fingers. Now fold the edge back by 1cm and pinch tightly together. Bake in the oven for 20 minutes or until done.
Serve the calzone with fresh strawberries and basil leaves.
(The calzone on the photographs was cooked in a pizza oven. )
This is without doubt one of the craziest ideas to READ about, but surprisingly satisfying and pleasing in a very old fashioned way. That statement in its own is somewhat out of the ordinary but please try this idea for a quick delicious side dish to smoked and salty meat dishes … you may just have a new favourite recipe!
1 large tin/can of peach halves 100g mature cheddar cheese, grated 60ml mayonnaise 60ml sour cream 125ml feta cheese, crumbed a handful of basil leaves, chopped a handful of pistachio or pine nuts fresh lettuce to serve
Drain the peaches from the syrup. Hold the peach in your hand with the rounded side facing upwards and make a shallow horizontal slice so that the peach can sit on it – cut away as little as possible. Arrange some fresh lettuce on a serving plate and place the peach halves randomly, with the hollow facing upwards. Fill each peach cavity loosely with grated cheddar cheese. Add the yoghurt, sour cream, finely crumbed feta and chopped basil to a small bowl and stir together. Spoon a generous dollop of the dressing onto the cheese in the peach cavity. Scatter the pistachios/pine nuts over the salad and serve with the extra dressing on the side.
This salad goes surprisingly well with any smoked, cured or salty meat dishes that need that boost of natural sweetness.
30ml butter, melted 15ml olive oil 83ml balsamic vinegar 30ml water 15ml sugar 1,2ml salt about 12 small/medium beetroot baby spinach 5 fresh peaches, stoned and quartered 100g goats cheese 30ml honey
Preheat your oven to 180℃. Add the melted butter, olive oil, balsamic vinegar, water, sugar and salt to a small bowl and whisk everything together. Set aside. Wash and scrub the beetroot and cut off the hairy parts at the root. Half or quarter each, depending on its size and place them in an oven tray. Pour the balsamic mixture over and cover the pan with aluminium foil. Bake the beetroot for 30 minutes, remove the foil, turn the beets and bake for a further 30 minutes or until fully cooked and beautifully glazed. Remove the tray from the oven and allow to cool. Reserve the pan juices. Arrange the baby spinach, cooled beetroot and peach quarters on a serving platter and break the goats cheese over it. Mix together 45ml of the reserved pan juices and the honey and drizzle over the salad. Serve as a side or with a fresh crusty bread as a lunch.
(Patates Fournou Lemonates) Unlike traditional roasted potatoes these lemon potatoes are soft, moist, tender and melting. The zing from the lemon cuts through the richness of lamb or meat dishes and is truly more-dish! This to me, is the essence of everything I love about Greece – do your tastebuds a favour…
12 potatoes, peeled 90ml olive oil finely grated zest of 2 lemons juice of 2 lemons 10ml salt a handful of thyme leaves
Preheat your oven to 180℃. Quarter each potato lengthwise and spread them in a large roasting tin. Drizzle with the olive oil, lemon zest, lemon juice and sprinkle over the salt and thyme leaves. Mix together with your hands so that the potato is covered with the mixture. Roast for 1 hour, turning once or twice during cooking. Add another sprinkle of salt and serve.
750g cooked and mashed sweet potato (about 4 medium sweet potatoes) 125ml self-raising flour 1 X 375ml can of Corn kernels, drained (you may substitute with cooked corn) 125ml pumpkin seeds 1 egg 2,5ml salt 2,5ml cinnamon 63ml brown sugar vegetable oil to fry
Add all the ingredients to a large mixing bowl and mix through. Place a heavy bottom pan onto medium-high heat and cover the bottom with vegetable oil to heat up. Scoop a tablespoonful of the mixture into the pan and fry for 2-3 minutes before flipping and frying the other side for another 2-3 minutes. Do not overfill your pan as you want the sweet potato to caramelise and fry to a golden, crisp outside. Keep going until all the mixture is used. Serve the cakes with a dollop of yoghurt and honey.
450g sweet peppers/bell peppers 30ml + 15ml olive oil 30ml white wine vinegar 1 clove of garlic, minced 12 basil leaves, chopped 2 sprigs of thyme 5ml sugar 2,5ml salt 45ml pine nuts, toasted 125ml crumbed feta cheese 125ml olives, pitted
Turn your oven on the grill setting and line a baking sheet with aluminium foil. Drizzle the 15ml olive oil on the peppers and spread evenly over each pepper with your hands. Place the peppers on the lined baking sheet and grill for about 15 minutes, until their skins are black. DO NOT take the peppers out too soon….they can not be too blackened! Immediately place the charred peppers in a mixing bowl and cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap. Set aside until the peppers are cool enough to handle. Break open the peppers, remove the core and seeds and pull the skin from each. It is easiest to use your hands to scrape the seeds out and it is quite all right for the peppers to tear into strips! Add the peppers, oil, vinegar, garlic, basil, thyme, sugar and salt to a mixing bowl and refrigerate for one hour. Arrange the marinated peppers on a serving plate and top with pine nuts, feta and olives.
Quinoa is an ancient grain that is a complete protein and has a deliciously nutty flavour. This salad offers all the nutrients you need for a meal on its own or as a side dish to whatever else you are cooking.
45ml olive oil 30ml lemon juice
375ml quinoa, cooked according to the packet instructions 250ml tightly packed sun-dried tomatoes, chopped half a red onion, finely chopped 125ml feta cheese, crumbed 1 apple, chopped into small cubes a small bunch of chives or any other soft, fresh herbs, chopped
Whisk the olive oil and lemon juice together and set aside. Add all the other ingredients to a bowl and mix through. Drizzle the olive oil mixture over the salad and serve.