Thursday 17 September 2015

Roast potatoes slices

The idea of making potatoes in the oven that come out all crispy on the outside and soft on the inside is probably something that most of us associate to our mums or grannies and probably with Sunday lunches.
Here is an alternative which is simple to make (a bit time-consuming) but looks really cool.
Peel a few potatoes (this will depend on the size of your oven dish) and then slice the potatoes as thinly as you can, always keeping the slices in order, thereby keeping the original potato shape. Now peel an onion and do the same thing. In a cup, melt a knob of butter in the microwave and add about two tablespoons of olive oil to it. Spread a little of this mixture to your oven-proof dish and then arrange your potatoes in the dish (standing up), adding some of the onion slices in between the potatoes. Fit as many potatoes into the dish as possible.
Next, add salt and black pepper to taste and finally, using the remaining oil and butter mix, baste the potatoes.
Bake in the oven for an hour and ten minutes. Remove and add a sprig of thyme or rosemary and return to the oven (grill if possible) so that everything browns and toasts and becomes nice and crispy. Serve with meat or chicken as an alternative to normal roast potatoes.


Saturday 1 August 2015

My daughter is an absolute fanatic for all sorts of cold meats (fiambres) and that fact has inspired me to look for a recipe that fits into the Simple Foodies philosophy of making wow things in a simple way. And I must confess that I was surprised to learn just how simple it is to make these stunning cold meats. Time consuming to be fair. But simple also ...
I've decided to make a cured pork on my first attempt. The meat cut is called pork loin (carre de cerdo) and it's a thick piece of meat devoid of too much fat and no bone.
In a Tupperware container, place a 2cm layer of course salt. Place the meat on top of this salt and then proceed to cover the meat with course salt, until you cannot actually see the meat any longer. Place the lid on the plastic container and leave in the fridge for anywhere between 12 to 18 hours (the longer you leave it the saltier the final product will be).
Once removed from the salt, rinse and pat dry with a paper towel. In a mortar and pestle, crush three cloves of garlic, add 1 to 2 tablespoons of oregano and two tablespoons of sweet paprika (spicier herbs will flavour your meat differently). Now add olive oil until you have a smooth paste.
Place the meat on a big piece of plastic film and, using your hand, cover the meat with all the paste. The next part isn't necessary but it can be included just to make the finished product look good: use butcher's twine or normal kitchen string, and tie the meat up in concentric circles. Once you've achieved this, wrap the meat up in the plastic wrap as tightly as you can. Add a second and a third layer of plastic if you like. Place this meat in the fridge for anywhere between 48 and 72 hours.
Remove from the fridge, remove the plastic and then hang the meat in a cold, dry place. For hygienic reasons, I hang the meat inside a muslin bag (to keep the bugs away). The meat should hang out until it reaches the texture you desire (to be determined by squeezing the meat with your hand - softer is moist and firmer is dryer - everyone will have their own preference).
Then simply cut the strings away and slice your bondiola as thinly as you can and enjoy.
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Sunday 19 July 2015

Banana loaf

This is one of those quick recipes that can get you out of a bind when you need to make something "wow" but you don't have the time or you're not in the mood for too much effort.
Take 2 to 3 very ripe (over ripe even better) bananas and mash them in a mixing bowl, using a fork. Next, add in a third of a cup of melted butter and mix through. Now add a teaspoon of baking soda, a pinch of salt, a teaspoon of vanilla extract, a beaten egg as well as a cup of sugar (reduce this if you want the cake to be less sweet). and mix through. You will now have a very runny mixture, to which you will need to add one and a half cups of flour, to give you a thick yet runny batter.
Pour the batter into a bread baking mold and bake in a pre-heated oven at 175°C for about an hour or until a toothpick stuck into the cake comes out clean.
You could easily add in crushed nuts to give the cake an alternate texture and once cooled, pour an icing sugar topping over the cake and allow to set before serving. Enjoy!
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Saturday 18 July 2015

Samoosas

When I was a child growing up in South Africa, every birthday party or other social gathering seemed to have these savory delights present. As I got older they became a popular snack while out and about, bought from any of the Muslim fast-food places in my neighbourhood.
In effect, a samoosa is a pie filled with spicy minced meat and onions, although the Indian versions are often vegetarian.
If you are lucky to live in a country where samoosas are popular, all of the processes below will seem a waste of time, as you will simply pop down to the supermarket where you can buy them frozen. For those of us who are not so lucky, here is a very simple way to make samoosas.
First of all, make the dough: take 270g of flour, salt and add 180ml of room temperature water. I like to add half a teaspoon of tumeric, just to give my dough some colour and flavour. Once your dough has been made, divide it into three equal parts and roll each one out as thin as you can. Next, baste each layer with oil and layer the next layer on top. Once all three layers are arranged, cut into strips about 8-9cm wide (narrower will produce smaller samoosas).
Arrange these strips on a baking tray and bake for a few minutes and remove from the oven, separating the leaves one from the other.
The filling: take a large onion and dice finely, add crushed chilis, curry powder, garlic and ginger paste and fry until the onions are soft. Now add minced meat (optional: add peas or cooked potatoes).
Once the filling has been cooked and has cooled, place a little on the one end of each strip and then fold diagonally one way and then diagonally the other way, making a triangle. Repeat this process for the length of the covering. The end piece will then be tucked under one of the folds, thereby sealing the samoosa.
Fry in hot oil until brown and crispy. Allow to drain on kitchen paper and enjoy.
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Monday 13 July 2015

Dips

I recently prepared a farewell brunch for a good friend and was totally undecided as to what I should make. So I decided to make a variety of dips, accompanied by easy-to-make flat bread. The total prep time was less than half an hour and the final product was amazing. Here are a few of the dip recipes:
Hummus: this is rapidly becoming a favourite both among my family as well as my friends and colleagues. Take a tin of cooked chickpeas and drain the liquid. Add the juice of half a lemon as well as a clove of garlic. Add two to three tablespoons of olive oil to start with and then blend with a hand-held blender. Keep adding olive oil until your hummus reaches the consistency you desire.
Tuna dip: drain the water from a can of shredded tuna and empty contents into a bowl. Dice half an onion as well as a quarter red and a quarter green pepper. Add paprika and black pepper as well as a big dollop of mayonnaise. Stir with a fork, adding more mayonnaise until you reach the consistency you desire.
Pea dip: drain the liquid from a can of peas and pour contents into a bowl. Add a tablespoon of lemon juice, salt and pepper to taste, three tablespoons of grated Parmesan cheese, 100g of cream cheese and a dollop of chopped parsley. Blend everything together and add some parsley for garnish.
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Butter cookies

There are few things that I would rather be doing on the first day of the school winter holidays than making cookies with my daughter. The camaraderie in the kitchen, the small talk, the planning and then the actual baking. Coupled to the fact that the kitchen has that homely smell of cookies baking. All in all a great experience. And the recipe is the simplest one of all:
Take 250g of soft (room temperature) butter and mix it with 150g of caster sugar until well blended. Now add the yolk of one large egg and beat until the mixture is smooth. Next add 300g of flour and a half a teaspoon of salt and mix until you have a dough ball. Wrap the ball in some plastic warp and leave to rest in the fridge for half an hour.
Once cooled, dust your work surface with flour and roll out to about half a centimeter and then cut with cookie cutters. I used two heart shapes (big and small). Bake until lightly brown. Allow to cool. Place some (red) jam, like strawberry in the middle of the solid heart (on the back side) and place the heart with the hole over it. Enjoy!
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Wednesday 8 July 2015

Carrot cake (muffins)

On one occasion, many years ago, when I first arrived in Argentina, I was invited to an asado on a farm in San Antonio de Areco. And, as is my custom, I baked a cake to take along. A carrot cake. Unknown to me at the time, carrot cakes were not that well known amongst my group of (new) friends and the amount of banter I had to put up with for making a "salad" cake was unreal. Thankfully, today, my friends are all in love with this simple and very tasty cake.
The cake is made in two separate bowls, one for the dry ingredients and the other for the wet ingredients. In the dry ingredients bowl: 2 cups of flour, 2 cups of sugar, 2 teaspoons of cinnamon, 2 teaspoons of baking powder, half a teaspoon of salt and half a teaspoon of ground nutmeg.
In the wet ingredients bowl, 4 eggs, half a cup of oil, 3 cups of grated carrots, half a cup of broken up walnuts.
Mix each bowl separately and then combine, mixing just enough to combine the ingredients. Pour the mixture into a loaf baking pan and bake for about 30 to 35 minutes on medium heat or until dry on the inside. Alternatively, as I did this time, bake in muffin tins.
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