Broccoli Cheddar Soup

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I honestly can’t remember when I stopped eating vegetables because they were ‘healthy’ and started eating them because they’re fricking delicious (well, most of them anyway.  Sprouts can do one frankly).  This soup is packed with broccoli, and I’m sure that it has loads of health benefits yadda yadda, but mostly its just totally yum.  Try it.

Ingredients:

Serves 2

  • Two ‘heads’ of broccoli (about 500g)
  • 1 small onion
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
  • 1 Tbsp butter
  • 2 stock cubes (vegetable or chicken)
  • 100g mature cheddar cheese (grated)
  • 4 Tbsp double cream (optional)
  • Salt and pepper

Method:

Heat the oil and butter in a large, deep saucepan until the butter starts to foam.  Dice the onion (don’t worry about being too neat, its going to get blended anyway) and add to the pan.  Cook the onion until translucent – 2 to 3 minutes.

Chop up the broccoli and dispose of the hard central stem.  Add to the pan and stir through with the butter and onion for a couple of minutes.  Add enough water to the pan so that it comes up to about half the level of the broccoli.  Turn the heat down low and cover the pan with a lid or foil.  Cook for about 10 minutes until the broccoli is streamed and tender.

Blend the contents of the pan (use a stick blender or transfer to a standing one) until smooth.  Return to the pan on a low heat.  Crumble in the stock cubes and add enough water until you’ve achieved your optimum soup consistency (I like mine thiiiiiiick).  Stir in the cheese and cook for a few minutes until it has melted in.  Add the cream and stir.  Do a quick taste test and season to your liking.  Serve immediately with shed-loads of crusty bread – see if you can eat an entire bowl without needing a spoon.

 

Mocha cheesecake

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I know, I know.  Another coffee flavoured sweet  bake.  Its a disease, I swear, but I just can’t resist this beautiful combination of flavours.  This delicious dessert is Anna Olsons New York cheesecake given a chocolate and coffee twist.

Ingredients:

INGREDIENTS

Crust

150g chocolate digestives (bashed or blitzed into crumbs)

2 Tbsp sugar

60g unsalted butter, melted, plus extra for greasing the tin

Cheesecake

3 x 250 gram packages of cream cheese, at room temperature

1 x 250 gram package of ricotta cheese, at room temperature

250g caster sugar

3 Tbsp cornflour

2 tsp vanilla extract

1 tsp instant coffee

1 Tbsp cocoa

3 large whole eggs

1 large egg yolk

250ml sour cream (not low-fat)

Ganache

250ml whipping cream

150g dark chocolate

1 Tbsp coffee liqueur (optional)


Method:

Crust

Preheat the oven to 180ºC.  In a bowl, stir the chocolate digestive crumbs, sugar and melted butter until evenly combined and press this into the bottom of an ungreased 8-inch springform pan.  Bake this for 10 minutes, then cool. Brush the sides of the pan with a little melted butter.

Cheesecake

In a small bowl, mix together the coffee, cocoa and sour cream.  Stir thoroughly and leave aside for the dry ingredients to dissolve.

Increase the oven temperature to 200ºC.  In a larger bowl, beat the cream cheese and ricotta until light and fluffy. Add the caster sugar a little at a time, and scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl often.  Beat in the cornflour.  Beat in the eggs one at a time, on a lower speed, and scraping after each addition, then beat in the yolk.  Still on low speed, beat in the sour cream, chocolate, coffee mixture. Pour this over the cooled crust.

Bake the cheesecake for 18 minutes at 200ºC and then reduce the oven temperature to 100ºC and bake for 25 more minutes. Turn off the oven, and leave the cheesecake in for an hour, cracking the oven door after 30 minutes.

Allow the cheesecake to cool completely to room temperature, then carefully run a spatula around the outside of the cheesecake to loosen it from the pan.  Place the cheesecake on a wire rack with a plate or baking tray underneath.  While the cheesecake is cooling  break the chocolate into a bowl.  Heat the whipping cream in a pan until just coming to a boil and then pour over the chocolate.  Stir thoroughly until the chocolate has melted and then add in a Tbsp of coffee liqueur (I used ARAKU) .  Leave the ganache aside for a while to cool, when it is thick but still pourable, pour it over the cheesecake and tease dribbles of it over the edges using a spoon or spatula.  Pop covered in the fridge for at least 6 hours to set up before slicing and serving. Enjoy with a strong cup of coffee.

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Creamy mushroom soup

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So, my favorite local foodery, drinkery, playhouse and provider of caffeinated beverages – The Old Market Assembly – has added bakery to its CV (yummy bread here)  And what better way to sample a delicious sourdough loaf than with a bowl of creamy mushroom soup topped with creme fraiche, crispy bacon and sage leaves.

Ingredients:

Serves 2

  • 10 or so fresh sage leaves
  • 4 rashers of streaky bacon
  • 1tbps olive oil
  • 1tbsp butter
  • 1 medium onion (peeled and finely diced)
  • 650g of mushrooms (I used chestnut mushrooms and baby portobello)
  • Chicken or vegetable stock
  • 4tbsp double cream
  • 2tbsp creme fraiche
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Thick slices of yummy bread for dippin’

Method:

 

Heat the oil in a large pan and cook the bacon until crisp before removing to a piece of kitchen paper.  Add the butter to the same pan and fry the sage leaves until crisp – put aside with the bacon.

Add the onion to the pan and cook until translucent.  Next in with the mushrooms along with a pinch of salt and pepper (it will look like a LOT of mushrooms, but worry not, they will reduce down significantly).  Heat the mushrooms, stirring regularly until they are reduced and dark and the pan fairly dry.

Pour a little stock into the pan and use a stick blender to whizz everything up into a smooth paste.  Add more stock as you go until you achieve your desired consistency  (I like mine thick enough to stand a spoon up in, or build an exterior wall).   Stir in the double cream and add pepper (and perhaps more salt) to your taste.

Spoon into bowls and top with and dollup of creme fraiche, some bacon (chopped or crumbled) and a few crispy sage leaves.  If your bread is as good as mine (and your soup as thick) you won’t need a spoon to polish this off!

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Chicken and Chorizo with Fried Gnocchi

 

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Oh Chorizo, how I love thee, let me count the ways!

An absolute stock cupboard essential, chorizo adds oodles of flavour (thats a technical term, feel free to look it up) to pretty much anything.  Chopped and fried to release the delicious oils and spices, this spicy Spanish sausage can be added to soups, stews and pasta sauces.  Its favourite bedfellows are – in my opinion – chicken, tomatoes and white beans.

Ingredients:

Serves 2

  • 2 chicken breasts (diced)
  • 1 large onion
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 100g dry cured chorizo (cut into small chunks)
  • 1 red bell pepper
  • 2 tins of butter beans
  • 1 tin chopped tomatoes
  • 1tbsp tomato puree
  • 1/2 teaspoon each of ground fennel, ground cumin, chilli flakes, thyme
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 500g gnocchi
  • Sour cream to serve

Method:

Add a tablespoon of olive oil to a large pan and (before turning on the heat) add the chorizo.  Heat on medium-high until the chorizo turns crisp at the edges and releases all of its delicious oil.  Remove the chorizo to a bowl (using a spatula or slotted spoon to keep all of the oils in the pan) and add the diced chicken breast to the same pan, frying until browned on all sides.  Remove the chicken to the same bowl with the chorizo.

Finely dice the onion, and garlic and cut the pepper into chunks before adding to the pan.  Once the onion has turned translucent add the paprika and other spices along with a little splash of water (or wine if you’ve got some lying around) and the tomato puree.  Stir for a minute or two and then add the tinned tomatoes, the beans and the chicken and chorizo from earlier.    Bring to a bubble (you may need to add a splash of water if things aren’t looking particularly ‘saucy’.  This will depend on how much water comes out of the tomatoes) and turn the heat down low.

In a large frying pan, heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil and 1 tablespoon of butter on a medium high heat.  Once the butter starts to bubble, add the gnocchi to the pan.  Cook until crispy on all sides, tossing the pan only occasionally.  Transfer the gnocchi to a tray or bowl lined with a couple of sheets of kitchen paper to remove any excess oil.  Bin the kitchen paper and season the gnocchi with fine salt.

Season the chicken, chorizo and beans mixture to taste with salt and pepper and serve alongside the crispy gnocchi.  Enjoy with a glass of Rioja.

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Mushroom Risotto

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Splash and stir, splash and stir, splash and stir.  Yes, risotto is an exercise in patience (or tedium), and yes, there comes a point about halfway through the cooking time when you wonder if its all worth it, but when you jam that first creamy, satisfying spoonful into your gob, you realise that your time has truly been well spent.  Also, this recipe has nuts, goats cheese and an ungodly amount of butter in it – how could you not??

Ingredients:

Serves 2

  • 150g risotto rice
  • 450ml light chicken or veg stock
  • 400g mushrooms (I used a mix of chestnut mushrooms and oyster mushrooms)
  • 1 generous pinch of dried porcini mushrooms (not essential, but adds a mega-burst of woodsy mushroom flavour)
  • 1 onions(peeled and very finely diced)
  • 1 clove garlic (peeled and finely chopped)
  • 75g walnut halves
  • 50g goats cheese
  • 50g parmesan cheese (finely grated)
  • A lot of butter (best to have a whole pack ready)

 


Method:

Put the stock in a saucepan on a medium heat to keep it warm.

Put the dried mushrooms into a small bowl and cover with boiling water from the kettle.

Toast the walnut halves in a hot dry pan until they start to darken and the room fills with the scent of toasted nuts.  Leave aside to cool.

Add a generous knob of butter (mushrooms love butter – I mean seriously, like Britney loved Justin) and a tablespoon of olive oil to the pan and quickly stir in the garlic.  Before the garlic starts to darken ‘crumble’ in the mushrooms (simply break them up using your fingers – much quicker than chopping and gives you risotto a nice rustic look) and stir frequently.  It will look like an awful lot of mushrooms, but they will reduce as they cook.  Add a pinch of salt and pepper and cook until the mushrooms release their liquid and the pan becomes dry again.  Transfer the mushrooms to a bowl and leave aside until later.

Remove the dried mushrooms (well actually, rehydrated mushrooms) from the liquid, finely dice and chuck in with the other mushrooms.  Don’t throw away the mushroom water, pop this in the pan with the rest of the stock.

Add another tablespoon of oil to the pan and fry the onion until translucent.  Stir in the rice until all of the grains are coated in oil.  Ladle a spoonful of stock into the pan (you can always start by adding a glass of white wine if you’ve got one knocking about) and stir constantly until the liquid is incorporated.  This is the boring bit – keep adding stock and stirring until it is absorbed by the rice.

Once you’ve used about 3 quarters of the stock try tasting a few grains of your rice.  There is a lot of debate about the ideal consistency of risotto, classically I think you’re meant to aim of a bit if ‘bite’ to the grains, however, I prefer mine a bit more on the soft and creamy side.  If you’re like me you won’t be able to tell by eye, so just try a few grains between each additional spoonful of stock until you get to a consistency that you like (you may not need all the stock, or you may need another splash of hot water from the kettle).  Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary – you probably won’t need any salt (the parmesan will add that) but you will probably like a few grinds of coarse black pepper.

Stir in the mushrooms until warmed through then add in the parmesan and another knob of butter.  Remove from the heat, cover  and leave for a minute or two to get all sexy and unctuous.  You can roughly chop your nuts while you wait – oo-er.

Give the risotto a final stir before heaping into big bowls.  Sprinkle with the toasted nuts and crumble over some goats cheese.  Serve immediately with a glass of wine or a nice bottle of lager.

mushroomrisottoblog

 

Nacho chicken bites

nachochickenblog

I was in two minds about even posting this recipe – I mean, its chicken pieces coated in crushed up nachos, but man its just so frickin’ delicious that you really must try it.

Ingredients:

  • 200g bag of nachos (I used ‘cheese’ flavoured, but go for whatever tickles your fancy)
  • 50g seasoned flour (add salt/pepper to your liking)
  • 2 eggs (beaten)
  • 4 chicken breasts (cut into chunks of roughly equal size)
  • Sunflower or vegetable oil (the amount will depend on the size of your pan)

Method:

Half fill a large deep pan with oil and set on a medium high heat.

Crush the nachos into a rough crumbly mixture with both large and small pieces (I poured mine into a deep jug and bashed the hell out of them with the end of a rolling pin – top quality catharsis) .

Sprinkle the nachos onto a baking tray or large plate, the flour onto another and the beaten egg onto yet another.  Dip your chicken chunks into the flour until coated and then follow with the egg and finally the nacho dust.  Repeat until all chicken pieces are coated (you can ‘double-dip’ with more egg and nacho dust if you have some left over).

Your oil should be hot enough by now (I test mine by dipping in the end of a wooden spoon – you’re ready to fry if bubbles form around the handle).  Carefully add your coated chicken chunks to the pan using a slotted spoon (cook in batches so as not to overcrowd the pan) and let them sizzle away until crisp and golden.  Remove from the pan and drain on kitchen towel to remove any excess oil.

I served my chicken chunks on their own (with a sour cream dip) as well as in a tortilla wrap (or three) with salsa, lettuce and grated cheddar cheese.

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