Wednesday, February 16, 2011

My Favourite Animal is Steak

This is a take on Jamie's Fillet Steak with Creamy Leeks and Butter Beans. If you fancy pepping up your steak, this is a brilliant recipe. The sauce created when the meat juices, leeks and beans are combined  is really something to behold. It would work well with rib-eye or sirloin...but is especially wonderful with a nice piece of tender fillet. I aslo served it with wedges and a green salad. I'm a bit of a salad enthusiast and deem it a necessary element of most meals. If you don't agree, don't have the salad, but I will never understand you.

The raw elements of the dish:




The ingredients, for two:

2 200gm fillet steaks (or as big you want)
About 4 maris piper/ king edward potatoes
Salad (optional but advised)
A good couple of glugs of Olive Oil (EV)
Salt
Pepper
1 Lemon

For the Leeks and Beans:

1 Garlic Clove
2 leeks
1 tin of Butter Beans (or dried)
Knob of Butter (about 10 gms)
Big pinch of Thyme (fresh would be best)
Small handful of Parsley finely chopped
About a glass of White Wine
1 Tbs Creme Fraiche




Right, so if you want to do the wedges, start by pre-heating your oven to about 190, and chop your potatoes into eighths of roughly the same size to ensure even cooking. Put a roasting tray of a size that means the potatoes can be spread in one layer into the oven with a good glug of olive oil in it. Preheating the tray and the oil really helps to get the potatoes cooking.

Potatoes in, now get on with washing and finely slicing your leeks. Keep any off cuts if you think there's a chance they'll be handy in a stock etc in the next couple of days. Whatever you do with them, please refrain from putting them in the bin! Get a suitable pan on the go with the knob of butter and a little olive oil. Finely chop the garlic and thyme and add to the pan with the leeks. Sweat gently on a low heat for about 20 minutes, until the leeks are really soft. Check your potatoes and give them a jiggle. If you have wisely opted for a salad, now is its time.




Increase the heat and slosh in the white wine, allow it to boil and once it does, toss in the drained beans and a splash of water so the beans are almost covered with liquid. I would recommend getting your griddle pan, or thick frying pan, or whatever best equipment you have for cooking your steak. I used a griddle on the hob, you want it super hot. Simmer for ten minutes to soften the beans and thicken the sauce slightly. Now you can add in the final bits; the parsley, creme fraiche, a glug of olive oil and season.


 


Time to cook your hunks of meat, season and brush with olive oil. I cooked mine, which were roughly an inch thick, for about 2 minutes on each side for rare, but it obviously depends on the thickness of your steak.




 When you're satisfied, pop them on a plate to rest for five minutes, drizzle with olive oil and lemon juice and slice thickly. Spoon the leeks and beans onto hot plates and lay the steak over the top. Pour over some of the resting juices and you're done!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Bill's Lunch...is it worth it?

Don't get me wrong, I really enjoy the food at Bill's in Lewes. The aesthetics of the cafe teamed with the constant hustle and bustle create a lovely atmosphere. Displays of beautiful artisan breads, oversized pumpkins and hanging chillis really draw you in, making every item on sale an absolute necessity.

 I went on Mum's Birthday this week for a quick lunch. We both chose the same dish on the menu, a feta and cous cous salad.

 


As you can see it is a visual feast...but really, it's rocket, cheese and cous cous for a tenner. But I knew that when I ordered it. And I didn't feel over charged (not that I picked up the bill (haha)). What you pay for at Bill's is the whole experience, the queuing and other negatives that are often cited are from people missing the point. Bill's has achieved the incredible in terms of marketing, it's a cafe charging twice what it should and that's why people go. They might not realise it but it is. Everyone wants a bit of Bill's. Including me. And the salad was good by the way, for what it was. I know this has probably been a misleading passage, but I do feel slightly misled (in a positive way) every time I find myself in the establishment. Delight and bewilderment sit side by side, time and time again.


Joss turned her back on me because I didn't save her any feta.


Thursday, February 10, 2011

Tuscan Noodles, Homemade Pesto and a Salad

My dog bought me a pasta machine for my Birthday this year.







 So I made ravioli a few weeks ago with some success, but tweaks will be made. My latest attempt doesn't need alterations though, it really was easy too. Granted it's more effort than opening a packet of pasta and a jar of pesto. But unlike the product of that combination, I would happily serve this dish to the foodiest of people. Without a pasta machine, a rolling pin and firm hands will do the job. There is something incredibly indulgent about the silky fresh pasta that is born.

For the pasta, (this serves 2/3 but can be easily multiplied):

150gm OO Flour (pasta/pizza flour)
2 Eggs
1/2 tsp Salt
 Semolina Flour for dusting

And that is it!

For the Pesto:

1 medium sized bunch of Basil
1 clove of Garlic
25gm Pine Nuts
30gm Parmesan
75-100ml Olive Oil (EV)

Ok, so start with making your pasta dough. Sieve the flour and salt into a bowl, lightly beat the eggs and add about 3/4 of them to the flour. Bring the mixture together, I find it easiest to initially use a fork, then your hands once the egg has been absorbed. Persevere, it will bind- try to refrain from adding more of the egg, this dough easily becomes too wet. The drier the better!

This is the hard work, knead the dough for about 10 minutes using a lot of weight on the base of your palms. The dough will be smooth and silky when it is ready. Now rest it on a plate with an upturned bowl on it for 30 mins.

In this interlude you can make the pesto and a salad. There are two options here- easy (if you have a processor) and slightly time consuming (if you have a decent pestle and mortar). So take your pick. The pestle and mortar give better results everytime, it's something in the way the flavours are blended without becoming an indeterminable mush.

Basically all of the ingredients must be blended, so in the quick method just chuck everything in the processor, but do grate the cheese and mix this in at the end. In the pestle and mortar do the garlic first, then add in the basil and pine nuts, the friction from the pine nuts will help break down the basil. Remember, it wont look like bought pesto, and that is a good thing. Use the olive oil to swill the deliciousness out of the mortar. And hey pesto! (Sorry)


Make yourself a leafy salad. Go crazy.

Now, time to get on with the pasta, either set up your pasta machine, or get your rolling pin and make sure you have a nice clean area to roll on. Dust a clean tea towel with semolina flour and keep the flour to hand.

Get rolling!

Once it is thin enough to see through it easily, you're there! Lie out the sheets on the tea towel and dust with more semolina flour. Allow the sheets to dry out for about 40 minutes.

During the drying time, get your biggest pan out and fill with water, add a good tablespoon of salt. That may seem excessive but it makes all the difference. When the time is up, loosely roll the pasta and cut with a very sharp knife about 1/2 an inch wide.


When the water is at a rolling boil, cook your pasta for about 2 minutes, be careful not to overcook- these really don't need long. Drain retaining a little of the cooking water and in a shallow pan toss in the pasta, the water, as much pesto as you fancy and a glug of olive oil, toss quickly over a high heat. Serve in hot bowls with your salad, with parmesan and black pepper and that's it. Making pasta is not so hard.





A Sort of Surprise Birthday Meal (Great Gammon Recipe)

I organised a semi-surprise Birthday dinner party for my Mother at the weekend. And, not to blow my own trumpet, it went pretty well. It's always more of an ordeal to try and impress those closest to you I think.
On the menu:


Potted Prawns (served in an array of shells),  Mackerel and Fennel Pate
with homemade Breadsticks


Gammon baked in Cider with Onion and Apple sauce,
with Mash, slow roast Jerusalem Artichokes
 and Spring greens

Seville Orange, gold splattered Meringue Pie


I made the bread dough the night before, when I also prepared the potted prawns. The prawns are really so easy to do. I ended up buying ready cooked in shell from waitrose (had run out of raw), but they worked really well. Make sure you buy prawns in their shells, it works out a lot cheaper, it just takes a bit of time.

I melted butter, and mixed in cayenne pepper and nutmeg, then popped in the peeled prawns. Then divided the mix into a selection of shells from my childhood collection. (Ramekins would obviously do the job). And they are done!

Now, it was the gammon that saved the evening from being stressful, and allowed me to leave the kitchen. This forgiving recipe really allows you to relax and has never failed to give me fantastic results. Also, it works out very cheaply per head, I bought a good quality gammon for £18- NOT BAD.

To serve 12 (ish), takes about 3 1/2 hours...or as long as you need

1 3kg Gammon (unsmoked)
2 Bramley Apples
3 White Onions
1 Bulb of Garlic (optional)
1 tbs French Mustard
500ml chicken stock
500ml good medium/dry cider

Firstly, if your gammon is salted soak it, most aren't thought. Pre-heat your oven to 170 degrees celsius. Next, pop the meat into a roasting dish/tin that has high sides. Cut the apples in half (don't peel), skin the onions and cut them in half also, if using the garlic cut the whole bulb in half. Arrange all of these in the tray around the gammon.

In a large bowl or jug, mix the hot stock (should be hot to get the gammon cooking immediately), the cider and the mustard. Pour the mixture all over the gammon, season with pepper (no salt) and in the oven it goes!

Baste every 30mins, and cook for roughly 3 hours, no harm will be done if it's 4. The beautiful liquid will keep the meat nice and moist.


Take the meat out of the pan and let it rest on a hot carving plate for about 20 minutes covered in foil. While it's resting, spoon the fat off the sauce in the pan, which should have thickened to a perfect pouring consistency. Keep on the heat on a hob, when ready to serve the meat strain into a warmed jug.


Enjoy- works really well with mash and cabbage- but go to town on veg. The leftover meat, if there is any, is fantastic! And I use my leftover mash for fish cakes- for which I will post a recipe soon.