Intro

Nigel Slater's Kitchen Diaries is both an entertaining read and a fabulous cookery book. Join me as I journey through the year cooking along with him...
Do buy the book from Amazon or your local book store. It's not just the recipes, its the gentle writing style and the importance of food provenance which strike a chord with me.

Wednesday 26 March 2014

Week 12 - Demerara Lemon Cake and Prawn & Coriander Rolls

This looks like a straightforward cooking session, you would think - a cake, and some chopping and frying.  Brill.  Unfortunately, there was a too-large glass of wine somewhere in the mix, which really did not make for a successful evening.

Starting with the cake (p91), I realised I had not got the same size loaf tin as Mr S, so some maths to cut down the ingredients to fit the tin size was in order.  All easy enough except when it comes to eggs, but I made what I thought was a reasonable guess, and weighed everything out.

Firstly cream demerara sugar and butter 'until light and fluffy - you can expect this to take a little longer than it would with caster sugar.' Too right!  I was there with the beaters for ages, and still don't think that either light or fluffy are adjectives that I would use.  Oh well - onwards and upwards.  Add beaten eggs a little at a time 'the mixture will probably curdle a bit but don't worry.'  Too right!

Then fold in flour, ground almonds and baking powder.  Again 'fold in' would not be an expression that I would use at this point, and by the time the mix was all together, it still looked a bit separated and not overly smooth.  Put in the tin.  Top off with a sliced lemon that you have heated with sugar and water form a thick syrup and left to cool.

So this was not looking great, and once cooked, the cake is - er - dense, and the candied lemon slices had sunk.  Tastes nice, mind.

The second of tonight's dishes looked pretty foolproof, though - prawn and coriander rolls on p94. Lightly blitz prawns, garlic, spring onions, lime leaves, coriander leaves, hot chilli and a bit of flour, then put the resulting mince into the fridge for the flavours to develop. So far, so good.

Whilst that's happening, make sauce by heating sugar, rice vinegar, dark soy sauce, a finely chopped chilli, finely chopped coriander leaves and some lime juice. Leave to cool and thicken.

At this point, do not, emboldened with a glass of white, decide that it should be a bit thicker than that, and 'I'll just give it a bubble up for a minute'.  Even more importantly, do not wander off, unless you want the syrup to undergo a chemical transformation and weld itself to the base of the pan, and leave a revolting all pervading and lingering niff.

Split the prawn mix into patties and shallow fry - I used sweet chilli dipping sauce to serve instead - it was probably much the same in any case.  Nice, bit bland if we're honest, and so much washing up, despite having a dishwasher.

Wednesday 19 March 2014

Week 11 - Chicken Salad and Smoked Mackerel on Toast

Well this week I have had great success with at least one of my dishes - a salad with not one ingredient that I would normally put in a 'salad' - extraordinary!

So start with Mr S on p85 - he calls this 'a refreshing chicken salad', and he's spot on.  Start off by dry frying some pumpkin seeds in a sprinkling of soy, put to one side, then dry fry some whole skinned almonds.  Make a dressing with virgin olive oil, whole grain mustard and red wine vinegar (I used balsamic as it was in the cupboard).

Peel carefully an orange, and slice, adding to the dressing, making sure that any juice is captured too.  Put a handful of watercress on a plate, add cooked chicken pieces, add dressing-with-orange and finally sprinkle over the almonds and pumpkin seeds.  Easy peasy and utterly delicious. In fact, so delicious that I ate in two days running, and both times scoffed the lot before I remembered to take a photo.


Next up is a simple supper dish of smoked mackerel on p87.  Skin then flake smoked mackerel into a bowl.  Add some chopped chives, cream and Parmesan cheese & mix.







Lightly toast some nice bread (he uses sourdough, I used a malted wholemeal), pile on the mixture, drizzle with extra cream and Parmesan and grill until golden and bubbly.  Yum.

Wednesday 12 March 2014

Week 10 - Pork Burgers and Lamb Marinade

I am noticing that Mr S does not have a particularly sweet tooth, and so there is only the odd cake or pudding recipe that has made it onto these pages.  Just an observation from one who finds the biscuit tin unexpectedly empty at this very moment.

Anyway, this week's recipes have been fine, so no complaints there and we join Mr S on p81 for pork burgers.   It's not often that I have to source something unusual for my cooking evenings - one of the things which makes these recipes an attractive proposition - but this week I needed lime leaves.  I've never heard of cooking with lime leaves, let along seen these in the supermarkets, so was very pleasantly surprised when the local Sainsbury's turned up trumps.

Chop spring onions, chillies, garlic and coriander, grated ginger and lime leaves then whizz them into a paste in a food processor.  Whizz pancetta (I used fatty bacon) in the processor & add to the spice paste. Mix well with minced pork.  Leave to rest in the fridge, then make into patties.  Fry in a shallow pan with a little oil.





Our second dish is a lamb steak marinaded in various spices.  Mr S raves about it on p84, but if we are being honest, it didn't do a lot for me - the faff outweighed the result in my view.






Make a marinade out of gently fried mustard seed, fennel seed, cumin and coriander, with added chopped shallots, a chilli, crushed garlic and grated ginger.  Add a couple of chopped tomatoes and simmer to reduce.  Take of the heat and squeeze in some lime juice and chopped coriander leaves.  Once cool, marinade the lamb steaks overnight.  Grill or fry.

Wednesday 5 March 2014

Week 9 - Taramasalata and Chicken and Bean Stew

Well a disaster had to happen sometime, and having got into March without having to actually chuck anything out is quite good going, I guess.

For a start, I have never eaten Taramasalata (p77), so I'm not sure (a) whether I like it or (b) what the heck it should taste like.  No matter, in for a penny, in for a pound and I scoured the borough for cod roe.  I eventually found a fish counter which had it on ice (although re-reading the recipe it called for smoked roe - no idea whether this is the same thing), and I bought the smallest piece I could so I could make a reduced portion of the recipe.  No point making tonnes of the stuff in case it turns out to be vile.

The roe looked like the result of a lobotomy operation, and languished in the fridge from Saturday until Wednesday.  So now I have something that looks like brains that I am going to eat raw that has been in the fridge for four days.  Bit concerned about giving myself food poisoning.

Come Wednesday, I got it out the fridge - can't tell if it's off or not - and scooped the roe out from the skin. Put in the processor with some bread that has been soaked in water & squeezed out, and a crushed garlic clove.  Run the processor drizzling in olive oil until it is the consistency of thick cream.  Stir in lemon juice.

I think I put in too much oil - it's all I could taste, having gingerly dipped a cracker into the result.  Hmm.  I have to confess that I didn't get too much further than that - but on the plus side, I didn't get food poisoning.

Next up is a hearty chicken stew.  I'd soaked some beans overnight, and marinaded chicken pieces in a mix of olive oil, balsamic vinegar, garlic, bay leaves, herbes de Provence and the pared rind on an orange.

The next day I browned the chicken, then put in a pot with the cooked beans.  I softened some chopped leeks in the pan, added the garlic from the marinade, then a litre of water.  Any extra marinade went in, and the orange rind.  Cover and cook for a couple of hours in a moderate oven.

Very tasty with mash - although the orange could have done with being fished out at the end of cooking.  No pic as I ate it before getting the camera out!