Thursday 31 December 2020

Spaghetti with cauliflower sauce

This easy and filling dish is delicious. The anchovies add a richness and the caulflower adds a great texture.


1 medium cauliflower 

dried chilli flakes a large pinch

2 cloves of garlic sliced

large pinch of chilli flakes

1 tin of anchovies in olive oil 

flat-leaf parsley ½ a small bunch, finely chopped

spaghetti 350g

 

serves 4

 

Method 

  • Boil the cauliflower in a large pot of water until well cooked, about 15 minutes
  • While the cauliflower is cooking pour the oil from the anchovies into a large frying pan, warm gently, then add sliced garlic cloves and the chilli flakes, cooking until softened, then add the anchovies, and cook for 2 minutes until the anchovies start to disintegrate
  • Take the cooked cauliflower from the pot, keeping the water to cook the spaghetti
  • Break up the cooked cauliflower into the frying pan with the anchovy, garlic, chilli mixture and mash it with a fork, keeping the frying pan warm
  • Cook the spaghetti in boiling water used to cook the cauliflower, according to pack instructions, then drain, reserving some of the cooking water
  • Pour the reserved liquid into the cauliflower mixture, and when it bubbles stir in the cooked spaghetti, stir through and turn off the heat.
  • Serve in a large bowl sprinkling over finely chopped parsley – or divide between four bowls and add the parsley.
  • Add parmesan if you like.

Or divide between four bowls and serve with the pine nuts and parmesan sprinkled over.

 


All the Gratins


These gratin dishes were originally put together to use the residual heat from the baker’s oven for the family Sunday meal, prepared and left with the baker to be cooked  in the cooling bread oven and be collected after church and taken home to eat.

 

These days we are used to strong flavours, but please don’t be tempted to add more herbs, garlic or stock. The way these dishes are put together makes them pack beautiful flavour. It’s tempting to tweak recipes, but try and resist.


You can make all the potato elements of these gratins into vegetarian or vegan dishes by substituting oil and plant milk.


The recipes are for a group of 6-8, using a large quantity of potatoes - I'll be working on versions for smaller meals and will post them in a while.

 

This recipe collection was saved by my parents, cut out from a magazine and kept, despite them having multiple cookbooks and years of experience. It's a high recommendation.


Gigot boulangere – roast leg of lamb on potatoes

 

For 6-8 people


cooking time 4h+

 

Ingredients

One leg of lamb 1.75-2kg

2.5kg/5½lb potatoes

100g butter

sprigs of thyme, bay leaves

2 cloves of garlic

pepper and salt

an oven dish as long as the leg of lamb, and around as deep as your finger

 

Method

set the oven to warm 6 (400 or 200) at least 15 minutes in advance


Lamb

 

The lamb can be prepared in advance but should be at room temperature when you start to prepare the meal

  • Peel the garlic cloves, cut into long slivers and with a sharp knife puncture the leg deep into the meat and push the slivers in, repeat until you’ve used all the garlic
  • Mash half the butter with pepper and salt, then slather over the leg of lamb and set aside.

 Potatoes

  • peel the potatoes and cut them into thin slices then spread them out in the oven dish in layers
  • between each layer put a sprig of thyme and a bay leaf and repeat until the potatoes are all in the dish
  • add enough water in the dish to reach the top of the potatoes, sprinkle with pepper and salt and add half the butter
  • set the potatoes to cook in the oven for around two hours – check them after 20m, and once they are boiling turn the heat down to 5/375/190. the potatoes  should be completely cooked before you add the lamb, but still be pale
  • take the cooked potatoes out and put the buttered, seasoned, garlic studded leg of lamb onto them
  • turn the oven to its highest setting
  • cook the lamb for 15m per lb/500g to be pink/a point or 20m per lb/500g to be cooked through
  • check the lamb every 20m, turning it if it’s very coloured, there is no need to baste it

Once cooked rest the lamb 15 minutes, when carving save the jus to pour over the cooked potatoes

 

Roti de porc boulangere – roast pork on potatoes

 

For 6-8 people


Cooking time 3h+


Ingredients

1.8kg/4lb rack or loin of pork

2.5kg/5½lb of potatoes

60g butter

thym, bay leaves

nutmeg

pepper and salt

 

Method

set the oven to warm 6 (400 or 200) at least 15 minutes in advance

 

prepare the pork by rubbing mashing the pepper and salt into the butter and rubbing it all over the meat

 

  • peel the potatoes and cut them into thin slices then spread them out in the oven dish in layers
  • between each layer grate a little nutmeg, crumble thyme and break up a bay leaf and repeat until the potatoes are all in the dish
  • add enough water in the dish to reach the top of the potatoes, sprinkle with pepper and salt and add half the butter
  • set the potatoes to cook in the oven for an hour
  • adding water to bring it up to the top layer of the potatoes if needed before sitting the pork onto the potatoes

  • the pork needs to cook through, in a low oven, allow 22-28m per lb/500g, so turn the oven to 2/300/150 ie around 1¾h depending on the thickness of the joint, then turn off the oven leaving the dish inside for 5-10m
  • at this point the liquid in the potatoes will be almost completely gone
  • put the dish on the table and carve the pork, pouring any juices into the potato gratin

 

Pommes boulangere – potato gratin or layered baked potatoes

 

For 6-8 people


cooking time around 2h

 

Ingredients

2kg/5lb potatoes

10 onions – medium sized

60g/4 tbsp of butter

tbsp oil

salt and pepper

nutmeg

 

Method

roughly chop the peeled onions and cook in a pan on a gentle heat with the oil and half the butter, stirring, making sure they stay pale. Cook until transparent.

 

Set the oven to warm mark 6/400/200 at least 15 minutes in advance

 

peel the potatoes and cut them into thin slices then spread them out in the oven dish in layers

between each layer grate a little nutmeg and add some cooked onion mixture and repeat until the potatoes are all in the dish

add enough water in the dish to reach the top of the potatoes, sprinkle with pepper and salt and add the rest of the butter and the cooking fat from the onion pan

set the potatoes to cook in the oven for an hour then turn the oven up to its maximum temperature and cook another 30m

 

This dish goes well with any roast meat, ham, dried or cooked sausages

 

Gratin Dauphinois – Creamy baked potato gratin

 

This richer version of gratin potatoes goes best with plainer roasts, boiled meats or plain fish dishes. It is delicious, but has a richness of a savoury pudding, and that’s why the quantity of potatoes is reduced. It’s delicious as a main dish and you can make it with plant milk to serve a vegan dish – don’t use coconut oil, it makes it too dessert-y.

 

Some versions of this dish include egg and even cheese, which creates something very like a potato version of macaroni cheese, tipping it over into excess stodge, don’t do it.

 

cooking time 1.5h+


For 6-8 people

 

Ingredients

2kg/5lb potatoes

four cloves of garlic

½ litre/1 pint warmed milk

tbsps cream or crème fraiche

 

Method

rub a peeled clove of garlic around a large deep gratin dish, and crush the remaining garlic into a paste

peel the potatoes and cut them into thin slices then spread half the potatoes into layers in the oven dish

season with pepper and salt, sprinkling of crumbled thyme and half the crushed garlic

add more layers until the potatoes are all in the dish

mix the milk and cream and pour over the potatoes, adding enough water in the dish if needed to reach the top of the potatoes – leave enough room above the layered potatoes so that when the milk boils it stays inside the dish

cook for 1½h or until the milk has boiled away and the potatoes are cooked through

 

Serve with plain meat or fish and lightly cooked vegetables

Wednesday 30 December 2020

This is Cauliflower Soup

In this strange period between Christmas and New Year the mind wanders. Mine has wandered to soup. I'm going to post a soup a week for a while. This week's soup is made from cauliflower. I'm recycling it from an earlier post... 

Cauliflower Soup

I like soup all year round, and in the winter I like it even more. The variety of consistencies of soup is also a delight, minestrone types - mixed finely chopped veg is great, but sometimes what is wanted is a smooth soup. Thanks to hand blenders these soups are very easy to make. When I can't lay my hands on a blender I have been known to scoop out some of the cooked vegetables so that I can mash them with a fork. The mashed veg then lend variety to the texture of the soup, and act as a thickener as well.

This recipe for cauliflower soup is very easy. I use leftover cooked cauliflower, but it would be worth cooking it especially for the purpose. Pureed cauliflower is very smooth indeed, velvety, like chocolate. Ok, I know that chocolate afficionados out there may be outraged, but it really does give the same pleasure when you eat it, at least from the point of view of texture. Mouth feel as it is called by some.

I am not oblivious to the fact that some people don't like cauliflower. Obviously, they are nuts. The low, slightly rooty and a little bit cabbagey flavour is wonderful, as far as I am concerned. I have converted people to cauliflower by cooking it in pieces (steam or boil) and then sauteeing in butter with plenty of black pepper and a pinch of salt. The sound as it rolls around the frying pan is great, the smell is terrific, it looks so tasty, with the little browned patches and when it comes to the taste, it is glorious. Rooty, nutty, peppery, buttery and sweet - and it hardly needs chewing. 

Recipe

Ingredients
 

a large bowlful of cooked cauliflower
1 onion
1 potato
1 clove garlic
large handful of parsley, chopped
three mugfuls of water/stock
pepper and salt
nutmeg

Method
  • Prepare the onion, potato and garlic - peel and chop up quite small - and cook in the water until soft
  • Add the cauliflower and chopped parsley, pepper and salt (to taste, but make sure there is lots of pepper) and a pinch of nutmeg, simmer for a couple of minutes
  • Blend the lot and serve
If you're greedy and organised you could accompany your soup with a nice samosa and pea fritter, or similar.