Archive for March, 2011

Mar 25

flash back: preserved lemons

So tonight, we cracked open the preserved lemons that I made in the 2nd fortnight of the cookbook challenge. And they rock!  Just thought you’d like to know…

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Mar 21

earth hour 2011

I’ve signed up make a commitment to do it too! Visit earthhour.org. Switch it off!

 

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Mar 19

crushness

Goodness just flicking through these pretty spesh cards from able and game. And they are gorgeous! You can find their creations for sale in their etsy store.

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Mar 18

cookbook challenge 2011: 6th fortnight, american

I spent a fair amount of time looking for an American recipe for this challenge. i was trying to be careful not to pick up something mexican. As I’m not into meats this became quick a challenge in itself, as the yanks eat a LOT of meat. But eventually in the Food Safari book I found a section on the US and the decision was made easy. Crab Cakes! Chesapeake Bay Crab Cakes to be precise. Here’s the video recipe if you would like to check that out.

 

Chesapeake Bay Crab Cakes with Cajun Remalade as found in “Food Safari”

serves 6

Crab cakes
500g crab meat, picked over (Blue Swimmer preferably)
40g breadcrumbs
2 tbsp Dijon mustard
Pinch paprika
Pinch Cayenne pepper
2 tbsp Old Bay seasoning
1 egg
1 egg yolk
2 tbsp fresh tarragon leaves
2 tbsp flat-leaf parsley
Plain flour for dusting
Vegetable or peanut oil for frying
Salt to taste

Cajun remoulade
2 egg yolks
juice of one lemon
250 ml vegetable oil
50 grams cornichons, chopped (gherkins)
10 ml cornichon juice
1½g salted capers (rinsed and chopped)
¼ bunch chives (finely chopped)
¼ bunch chervil (finely chopped)
¼ bunch flat leaf parsley (finely chopped)
¼ bunch tarragon (finely chopped)
Salt to taste
Pinch Spanish paprika
Cayenne pepper to taste (supposed to be spicy)

 

Crab cakes
Combine all ingredients except flour and oil.
Form into six even cakes. Place in the refrigerator for 15 mins to help hold together.
Remove from the fridge and dust in plain flour.

Add oil to a frying pan on medium heat, (cast iron skillet is ideal) so that the oil sits about half centimetre deep. Place the crab cakes in the oil. Cook until both sides lightly browned and crispy on the outside (about 4 minutes each side)

Cajun remoulade

Beat egg yolks, add liquid from the cornichons, then lemon juice. Gradually add vegetable oil as you beat to emulsify the mix. It will thicken like a mayonnaise (but you don’t want it quite that thick). Add chives, chervil and tarragon along with chopped cornichons. Then add the cayenne pepper (amount depending on how hot you want it) and paprika. Add chopped capers and combine until all ingredients are even.

 

I called in some help on this one. Tim took care of the remoulade, whilst I did the crab cakes. I used panko breadcrumbs in the mix for a bit of extra crunch. I was incredibly lazy and used canned crab meat which I feel quiet ashamed about now. This recipe would totally rock with fresh picked blue swimmer crab in chunky pieces.I’ll have to get to the markets next time I give them a crack. I also couldn’t find old bay seasoning , so I used more paprika, caynne pepper and celery salt. The remoulade was a thick heavy mayonnaise with cajan flavouring, we needed to add a LOT more lemon juice and  herbs to give it a nice zing. The base recipe was a tad plain. The sauce worked really well with the crab cakes which fried up beautifully.

Sadly the card with the photos of the dressed up crab cake was erased by my beloved (I could kill him!). So I had to take this dodgy photo of one of the left overs! There was no remoulade left so its just the crab cake. Boo!

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Mar 06

cookbook challenge 2011: 5th fortnight, outdoors

The great outdoors hasn’t always been my friend. You see see I burn easy, mozzies seem to like my blood and I’m not the most athletic person going around. But when it comes to picnic who can resist! The weather, together my spunky little nieces birthday put together the perfect condition for fish and chips in the park. It has been requested of me to make gingerbread for the occasion. Gingerbread is a massive hit with my partners family. So first the finished product!

 

 

Gingerbread Biscuits as found in “Gran’s Kitchen”

Makes 60

100g butter
200g (1 cup, firmly packed) brown sugar
250ml (1 cup) treacle
2 eggs, lightly whisked
600g (4 cups) plain flour
150g (1 cup) self-raising flour
1 tbs ground ginger
1 tbs ground cinnamon
1 1/2 tsp ground cloves
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
2 egg whites
420g (2 2/3 cup) pure icing sugar
1 tsp fresh lemon juice

Place the butter, sugar and treacle in a small saucepan over low heat. Stir until the butter melts and the sugar dissolves. Set aside for 10 minutes to cool slightly.

Combine the butter mixture and egg in a large bowl. Sift the combined flour, ginger, cinnamon, cloves and bicarbonate of soda over the butter mixture. Stir until well combined. Turn onto a lightly floured surface and gently knead until smooth. Shape into a disc. Cover with plastic wrap and place in the fridge for 1 hour to rest.

Preheat oven to 180°C. Line 2 baking trays with non-stick baking paper. Divide the dough into 2 even portions. Roll out 1 portion on a lightly floured surface until 5mm thick. Use a 12.5cm-long Christmas tree-shaped cutter to cut trees from the dough. Place on the lined trays. Bake for 5 minutes or until golden. Set aside on the trays for 5 minutes to cool before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Repeat with remaining dough.

Place the egg whites in a bowl. Use a wooden spoon to lightly beat the egg whites until foamy. Sift icing sugar over the egg whites and stir until smooth. Add lemon juice and stir until well combined. Divide icing between a piping bag fitted with a 4mm plain nozzle and a piping bag fitted with a 4mm fluted nozzle, and pipe onto the biscuits to decorate. Set aside for 1 hour to set. Serve.

I’m a bit of a seasoned expert when it comes to this recipe. if you keep the dough to about 5mm when you roll it out you will get fabulously fat, chubby gingerbreads. This recipe does not go hard, it makes a soft, moreish biscuit. What you see photographed was about half of the dough, I kept the rest in the fridge for a few days and then baked it up later in the week for when we went camping. Nothing beats a home made biscuit at the end of a big walk or a day at the beach.

I brought the alphabet shaped cutters at Harris Scarf in the Christmas sales. They look a bit like this. I like to roll the dough out in smaller batches as I don’t have a lot of bench space.

To make the decoration, I no longer follow the recipe to make the icing, As it produces about 4 times what you need. I simply take one egg white, the juice of a lemon to taste and then add icing sugar until I get the right consistency. Once you get to this stage, I then split it into how ever many colours I am doing and then use food dye to colour them accordingly. There are some great colours available from Baking Pleasures, and they have gel’s which I find much easier to use that liquid ones (no slips!)

The birthday girl and her Mummy enjoying all of the lovely sweet things that were made for her on her 1st Birthday. The cake in the centre complete with chocolate butterflies was put together by Indy’s Mummy and Daddy and the cupcakes were made by her Nanna Pam and Aunty Anita.

So I guess the great outdoors aren’t so bad after all? Although at the end of this day we lost a soccer ball to a tree and I got got bitten by about a million mozzies. But it’s all in good fun!

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