Showing posts with label Recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recipes. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13

The Perfect Pear



One of my favourite pears to eat is the Beurre Bosc . It has a lovely tan brown skin, with a firm yet juicy flesh. It teams well with soft french style cheese. Sometimes I will slice it up, smoother it with honey and bake it, then it can be enjoyed with yogurt as a dessert or stirred through risotto.
But the best way I like to enjoy it is this recipe:

Pear and Parmesan salad.
What you need:
1-2 Beurre Bosc pears
Baby Rocket leaves-You decide how much!
Freshly shaved Parmesan-use lots if you love it.
White balsamic vinegar*- to your taste.

Make it:
Place the baby rocket leaves in a bowl. Slice up pears and toss through rocket.  Drizzle or spray with White balsamic vinegar and massage it into the pear and rocket really well.
Sprinkle some shaved Parmesan on top.
--It is a perfect side to a main meal.

* Select an Italian made White Balsamic Vinigar from a gaurmet shop if you can.

Thursday, January 5

Duck Curry with Lime and coconut rice

New years eve we made roast duck red curry. We borrowed Gordon Ramsey's red curry recipe from the book "Gordon Ramsay: Cooking for friends". Page 81 ( It is a recipe for fish curry we just made it with roast duck instead. ) It is really easy to make and has bold Thai flavours. Enjoy

 

Pre-heat oven to 180 degrees. Pat the duck dry with a tea towel or paper towel. Rub sea salt into the duck skin, turning it over to season all areas.



Cut an orange in half and place both halves inside the cavity.

Sprinkle the skin with Chinese five spice (available from the spice section at most supermarkets). Rub it into the skin. Roast the duck on a roasting rack in the pre-heated over for 2 hours. Turn the duck over after one hour. Roast the duck breast side up for the last two minutes.



Making the Curry Paste:


It is easy to grow your own lemon grass. Here we have grown ours in a half a wine barrel. Pull the lemon grass stalks up like picking a spring onion. You will need 1 lemon grass stalk, finely chopped.


Chop up 3 garlic cloves.

De seed and chop 6-7 large mild chillies.

Put the above ingredients in a food processor. Add a 5cm piece or ginger peeled and chopped, a small hand full of coriander stems, 2 finely chopped kaffir lime leaves, 1/2 tsp ground coriander, 1/2 tsp ground cumin, 1/4 tsp ground turmeric and 3-4 tbsp water.





Whiz it up to make a smooth paste.


Grow basil quick and easy from seedlings. We have grown ours in a cement planter box under a sunny veranda. Basil makes the perfect garnish to this dish adding pungent flavour.

 


...Time to turn the duck!

Lime and coconut rice:
300g Thai fragrant rice, washed and drained
200ml coconut milk, mixed with 200ml water
Juice of one lime
2 kaffir lime leaves
Pinch sea salt

How to: Put all of the ingredients into medium saucepan. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and cover the pan. Simmer for 8-10 minutes until the rice has absorbed most of the liquid. Without removing the lid, turn off the heat and leave the rice to steam for 5-10 minutes.

Yum.

Palm sugar, Fish sauce and coconut milk are great to have on hand when making Thai food.

We decided to add some cherry tomatoes from our garden and seedless grapes, because they are in season.


Perfectly cooked duck.

Heat a little oil in a pan or wok. Add the curry paste and stir-fry for about 2-3 minutes over low heat, just until the paste smells fragrant.



Pour in the coconut milk and water, then stir in the palm sugar and fish sauce. bring the liquid to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the suger.

The best part is chopping the duck.

Add the duck to the curry. Stir in a half a cup of cherry tomatoes and a half a cup of red seedliess grapes. Add the basil leaves on top of each bowl of curry.

This is magnificent. Do try!

Sunday, October 16

A day in the garden

I found some ruby red rhubarb growing in the veggie patch and had a sudden desire to bake with it. I always loved it when my Nan would stew up rhubarb and we would eat it with ice cream so this is what I did..

Picked the rhubarb and heading back to the kitchen

 Washed and chopped it up.

 Sprinkled with sugar and dobbed with butter

Made the crumble with brown sugar and oats

 Once its baked, serve with vanilla icecream, yum.


For the full recipe: Rhubarb Crumble





Friday, October 14

Basil is Back


The weather is warming, the BBQs have started and we are enjoying life out doors more. No more winter stews or soups we are now opting for fresh salads and fruit. and my Favourite Spring sensation is Basil.  Everyone who cooks should grow basil now. It is so versatile in so many dishes. It teams perfectly with tomatoes and here is a salad that I make all the time.
 It is so fresh and easy to make.

Basil and Tomato Salad

You Will Need:
Tomatoes
Basil leaves
Olive Oil
Balsamic Vinegar.
How to:
Slice tomatoes into rounds and spread over a decorative plate.
Tear basil leaves and scatter over tomatoes.
Drizzle with olive oil and a little Balsamic.
Season with Salt and Pepper.

Enjoy Krystal xx