Monday, November 16, 2015

Flavours of Thailand Cookery Course at Food at 52

 
 
Thai food has largely been a mystery to me. I’ve never been to Thailand, and when I’ve cooked Thai food at home it’s usually been a case of a spoonful of Thai red curry paste from a jar and adding a tin of coconut milk. That’s Thai food, right? (Uh, not really).
 
I occasionally have Thai food when I eat out, and my future mother in law really likes a particular Thai takeaway, but the last time we got dinner from there, we waited 2 hours, gave up and went and collected it ourselves! I thought at the time, what I shame I don’t know how to make proper Thai food at home…
 
Luckily the nice people at the Food at 52 cookery school stepped in to help. You may have seen that I went to an Old El Paso product launch there recently.
 
The people who ran the cookery school, which Old El Paso had booked for the evening, invited me back to do one of their other courses. I had a look at the list on their website – courses range from kitchen confidence, mid-week seasonal suppers and meat-free Monday meals to the cusines of different countries such as Spanish, Moroccan, Southern Indian, Vietnamese and Thai. I signed up to Flavours of Thailand.
  
The cookery school is near Old Street in London so very easy for me to get to from work. There were 10 people, each at our own workstation along a long wooden table, with the chef John in the middle. The class was quite fast-paced but they don’t assume any prior knowledge – which is good as when it comes to Thai ingredients I didn’t have any. John also demonstrated good knife skills and passed on all sorts of other tips.
 
 
 
We began by making a Thai salad with green papaya – I’d never even come across a green papaya before and looked more like a giant cucumber than the orange-fleshed tropical fruit I was familiar with when I’ve eaten papaya. It was peeled and pushed through a food processor with a shredder attachment – this would form the basis of our salad.
 
 
 
John demonstrated how to prepare the other ingredients then we each took on one or two tasks – I was finely slicing ginger and lemongrass while someone else did red chillis.
 
I was then asked to thinly slice a piece of fillet steak which was sprinkled with lime juice, ceviche style, so it did not actually need to be cooked.
 
 
 
To make the dressing a large stone pestle and mortar was used, and we ground together chilli, palm sugar, garlic, lime juice, coriander stems and white sugar. We were encouraged to taste the dressing and while everyone was sagely nodding, saying it was a bit fiery perhaps, I couldn’t speak! I’m not good with spicy food and at this point wondered how I was going to be able to eat anything… then the fish sauce (nam pla) was added and it totally changed the taste. Before, you could almost pick out each flavour individually – the sharpness of the lime (there was a lot of lime) hit you first, then the warmth of the ginger, then the fiery chilli at the back of your throat. The fish sauce somehow brought all the flavours together and toned down the spice a bit.
 
 
 
To make our salad we took a handful of shredded green papaya, some beef, and added dried shrimp, dried red onion and some mint and poured the sauce over the top. It was delicious!
 
 
 
For the main course we made a green curry with seabass and green peppercorns. John held up some green birdseye chillis and asked how many we thought we should add to the dish.. I was thinking one or two or maybe even less, and I almost fell off my chair when he said the answer was 80! We each took 8 and learned the right way to prepare them – slice in half from the end, sliding a sharp knife through horizontally. Then use the heel of the knife – if it’s a big knife with a small handle like we had – to scrape the seeds and membrane out in one go. I used to turn chillis over and cut with the shiny, hard side facing up but this is wrong and you should actually have the soft underneath facing up.
 
 
The reason for adding so many chillis isn’t just heat – they also give flavour, and colour. Apparently some cheap curries use green bell peppers to give the same colour. But as you don’t want it too spicy to eat, the taste is tempered – as the salad dressing was – with fish sauce.
 
 
The chillis were put in an electric chopper along with something called galangal, some lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, coriander root, shallots, garlic, shrimp paste, peppercorns, coriander seeds and cumin seeds to make a paste.
 
 
Did you know you can make oil from coconut milk? When you open a tin of coconut milk you always get a thick layer of cream on top and the liquid – like water – underneath. Spoon off about half the thick cream and heat in a wok or frying pan. Keep heating until the cream actually separates – you are burning the water content off and reducing it down to an oil. This means there’s no need to add any extra oil to your pan.
 
 
 
Place 1 level tbsp. per person of the curry paste into the pan and heat, stirring. Pour in the rest of the tin of coconut milk – cream and water – and scrape around the sides to incorporate the green paste and add some fish sauce and palm sugar. We poured this into an earthenware bowl with a lid and left on one side for a while then put the bowl back on the heat to gently heat through. We added sweet Thai basil and peppercorns at the end to serve.
 
 
 
The curry was served over rice and was delicious – it had quite a kick but was nowhere near as spicy as I was expecting and it tasted so good.
 
 
We had a quick dessert which John demonstrated – sticky rice with mango. You just cook some glutinous (rather than jasmine) rice and mix some chopped mango with some mango puree from a tin (which has more flavour and provides the liquid you need). Spoon some rice into a bowl or plate, spoon the mango chunks and sauce around it and sprinkle with some dried coconut and torn mint leaves. Far better than the rice pudding I had as a child!
 
 
 
I really enjoyed the evening and the laid-back atmosphere of the chef- John was a great tutor and happy to answer questions on anything else (e.g. the trick to a good Pad Thai) and made the evening a lot of fun. They don’t stint on the drinks either – aside from suggesting we might want to go easy on the wine until we had finished chopping with sharp knives, the drinks flowed all evening and we really bonded as a group even though most people had come in pairs or on their own as I did. The course cost £115 but for that we started at 6.30pm and went on until 10; had starters of spring rolls, then of course ate the three courses we’d prepared, had plenty of wine and learnt some really useful techniques. I highly recommend Food at 52 – and will definitely be making more Thai food at home!
 
I was a guest of Food at 52 and asked to write a review – all opinions are my own.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Meal Planning Monday 2015 Week 47

Need a Saturday dinner. When were we going to see jules and dave?

Meal Plan

Monday
Butternut squash stew in freezer for me, sausage and mash for him

Tuesday - spaghetti Bolognese (meant to make last week but didn't)

Weds - at cake decorating class

Thursday
probably working late

Friday 
Slimming World burger and chips

Saturday
Lunch- bacon sandwich for him, Quorn sausage sandwich for me
Dinner: monkfish in lemon butter sauce for me, chicken for him


Sunday
beef in red onion gravy from this recipe

Bolo de Leite Condensado: Brazilian Condensed Milk Cake


 
Reaching into the larder for a tin of Carnation caramel recently, I grabbed a tin of Carnation condensed milk and only realised when I’d taken the lid off. Oops! So I needed to find a recipe to use the condensed milk.
 
 


Luckily, I was also looking for a Brazilian recipe for the next round of Formula 1 Foods, and happened across this recipe for condensed milk cake – bolo de leite condensado. Perfect!
 
Unfortunately, I didn’t like the cake all that much. It had quite a rubbery texture – I couldn’t entirely tell if this was from the condensed milk as it almost looked undercooked, but in fact I had to bake it for a lot longer than the 40 minutes the recipe instructed – it was in the oven for 1 hour 10 minutes, as even after an hour it wasn’t cooked through. There are a couple of comments on the website for this recipe, one of which says it took 90 minutes to cook and wasn’t great, but two other comments saying the cake is lovely if a bit too sweet and you could reduce the amount of sugar. So take from that what you will – I for one won’t be making this cake again, but since I went to all the effort (and I need a Brazilian entry for Formula 1 Foods) I am sharing it with you anyway.

 
 
You can read the full recipe here: the steps are very simple but as I said I would disagree with the cooking time and think it needs at least 70 minutes and perhaps it does need 90.

 
It does look very pretty when it comes out of the oven though!

 
 As I didn’t like the texture, I didn’t take it into work as planned, but also didn’t want to waste it. So I decided to try it as a hot dessert with custard which was a bit better!

I'm sharing this with Formula 1 Foods, the blog challenge I host, as the next race is in Brazil.


I also co-host Alphabakes with Ros of The More Than Occasional Baker and the letter she has chosen this month is M so I'm sending in this condensed milk cake.

 

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Chocolate Salted Caramel Christmas Pudding



Chocolate Salted Caramel Christmas Pudding - scroll down for the full recipe. Read on to find out how I developed the idea and created the melting middle.....

Stir-Up Sunday is the last Sunday before Advent begins and when families traditionally make their Christmas pudding. The idea is that everyone has a go at stirring the mixture and making a wish.
 
For any non-UK readers the idea of Christmas pudding might seem a bit strange. It’s actually a cake of sorts, but steamed rather than baked. It contains dried fruit, spices like cinnamon and ginger, and alcohol – the fruit is often soaked in brandy, and traditionally when the pudding is served, brandy is poured over the top and set alight.
 
I’ve never actually made a Christmas pudding before so when I was asked by Waitrose to come up with a recipe for a Christmas pudding with a twist, I was a little daunted. But I like a challenge, and more importantly the excuse to finally have a go at making a Christmas pudding, even if it wasn’t going to be a traditional one.
 
My recipe turned out really well; whether you make this or follow your great-grandmother’s recipe that has been handed down through the years, don’t forget that November 22 is Stir-Up Sunday! And if you forget, or don’t have time, then get yourself down to Waitrose and buy one of their Christmas puddings!
 
Thinking about what kind of twist I could add prompted several ideas, ranging from Christmas pudding cake pops to adding something like orange and Cointreau to the pudding mixture. When I was younger I didn’t particularly like Christmas pudding with all the fruit and would still prefer a chocolate cake to a fruit cake any day… which gave me an idea and I decided to make a chocolate Christmas pudding. But not just stop there: one of my favourite flavours is salted caramel, and I love melting middle puddings where you cut into it and the runny filling oozes out…. I wondered if it was possible to do that in a Christmas pudding given the extended baking time (up to 5 hours). Well, it turns out that it is! Just about, anyway… but I felt my Christmas pudding with a twist was a resounding success (and the results of the taste test were very positive).
 
I knew the challenge would be what to put in the middle that wouldn’t bake into the cake and would remain liquid – or rather, turn to liquid when heated. As I wanted to use salted caramel, I decided to see if Waitrose sold anything I could use- and they had a packet of Hope & Greenwood Salted Caramel Fudge, which I thought would be perfect.
  
I thought it would probably melt pretty fast though so I put the fudge in the freezer for a few hours, before baking it into the middle of my Christmas pudding. When the pudding was served, I cut into it, and there was actually some liquid caramel in the middle! There were also some chunky pieces of soft fudge which you can see in these photos.
 
 
  
Christmas pudding is traditionally served with brandy butter which I’ve never particularly liked, so instead I served it with Waitrose’s Seriously Caramel dipping sauce. You can of course make your own sauce but this is much easier!
  
Here’s the recipe in full:
 
Chocolate and Salted Caramel Christmas Pudding – an original recipe by Caroline Makes

100g raisins
100g sultanas
75g self raising flour
40g cocoa powder
100g breadcrumbs
100g light brown sugar
100g dates, chopped
100g glace cherries, chopped
100g ground almonds
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ground nutmeg
100g Lindt chocolate with salted caramel, chopped
50g butter, grated
75ml milk - I wanted to use buttermilk but it was out of stock when my online order came
1 egg
75ml brandy- I used Torres 10 from Waitrose
150g Hope and Greenwood salt caramel fudge

to serve: salted caramel sauce
 
First, take the fudge out of the box and put the plastic bag in the freezer for at least 2 hours, or longer.
 
Preheat oven to 170C and grease a 1.5- 2 litre pudding basin that you can put in the oven.
 
Mix the dry ingredients apart from the fudge in a large bowl: the raisins, sultanas, flour, cocoa powder, breadcrumbs, sugar, dates, cherries, ground almonds, cinnamon and nutmeg and chopped chocolate. Stir well to combine.
 
Sprinkle the grated butter over the top and stir well to combine.
 
Beat the egg and add it to the milk and mix together. Add the brandy to the milk and pour into the dry ingredients. Stir until everything is combined and you have a sticky, fruity - and quite lumpy - mixture.
 
Spoon a little of the pudding mixture into your pudding basin so the bottom is covered, then pile the frozen fudge on top. Carefully spoon the rest of the mixture around and on top of the fudge so it is totally covered.
 
If your pudding basin has a lid place this on top; if not - as mine didn't - cover with two layers of clingfilm and then two layers of foil. Boil the kettle.
 
Place the bowl in a roasting tray or similar pan you can put in the oven and pour in boiling water until it comes half way up the side of the pudding basin - or fills your roasting tray. You may need to boil the kettle twice. You may find it easier to part fill the roasting tin, then carry it to the oven, then top up the water while it is already in the oven.
 
Steam in the oven for 4 and a half hours. Check it once or twice during that time to see if the water in the roasting pan needs topping up.
 
When cooked, remove from the oven and allow to cool; be careful when you remove the lid or particularly if you have used clingfilm as steam will escape.
 
When the bowl is cool enough to handle, turn the pudding out on a plate. Serve with caramel sauce and look for the hidden caramel inside!

You can see other ideas for Christmas pudding with a twist here.

 




















Thanks to Waitrose for covering the cost of the ingredients.

 

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Slimming World Nacho-Style Feast


I’ve cooked a fair bit of Mexican food recently and had been meaning to make this dish for a long time, ever since I saw it in a Primula cheese ad in a Slimming World magazine.
 
For anyone who hasn’t come across Primula before – it was a staple of my childhood in the 80s, but is still around – it’s a soft cheese that comes in a tube like toothpaste. It has a much stronger flavour than cream cheeses like Philadelphia, and they make various versions flavoured with chives, shrimp and so on. It’s made from Gouda and Cheddar apparently – I discovered a fun animation on the company’s website about how it’s made.
 
The thing I like best about Primula though – aside from the fun of squeezing the tube – is that a large part of the company’s profits go to charity. You can read more about that on their website (note – this is not a sponsored post or written at the company’s request).
 
Primula is the suggested ingredient in this particular Slimming World recipe, I think partly because Primula is low in “syns”, though you could actually use any cheese for it. You can view the full recipe here, so I won’t repeat it.
 
I wanted to make my own potato wedges but my fiancé only likes the shop-bought kind for some reason so I used those, and left out the optional jalapenos.

The meal turned out pretty well - there was a tiny bit too much liquid in the bottom, but it's a good way to serve mince if you are looking for something different.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

USA Travel Reviews: Atlanta, Georgia

The USA is not simply one destination to visit – each state has its own identify and there is so much to see and do. I’ve been lucky enough to visit the US several times – I’ve now been to 21 of the 50 states – and recently took another holiday with my fiancé and his mum which began in Atlanta and ended in Chicago, by way of Nashville, Memphis and New Orleans.
 
I love to talk about (and photograph!) the food that I ate and the places I stayed, so this is a part restaurant review, part travelogue with hopefully a few nice photos as well – though the emphasis is mainly on the restaurants and hotels/B&Bs rather than a “what I did on my holidays” post. I hope you enjoy reading!
 
Atlanta, Georgia
 
 
 
We flew into Atlanta in time for DragonCon, the world’s largest sci-fi and fantasy convention. That wasn’t our intention but I ended up wishing we did have tickets for the event! We stayed in a lovely B&B called the Social Goat (they did indeed have goats, and more) and found that all the other guests were there for DragonCon, which made for a very interesting conversation over breakfast one day and then an opportunity to see their impressive handmade costumes and take some photos.
 

The B&B is just on the outskirts of Atlanta, near Grant Park and the Zoo; it only took about 15 minutes to get into the centre of town by car (if you are on holiday in America I highly recommend using Uber taxis!). Surprisingly for being so close to the centre of a big city, on this B&B you feel like you are in the countryside. You can sit on the front porch of the house and watch the animals in the yard – there were goats, chickens, ducks, and cats.
 
Our room was very comfortable (once we’d shifted one of the cats, Monkey, who wanted to sleep on our bed – and he’s huge, so took up most of the bed!) I did notice the bed was quite high, something I found in most of the B&Bs we stayed across the South – one owner told me that it stems from the days when windows had to be higher off the ground and so the beds were higher so you could see out. I also find these sort of rooms very dark – the dark wood and lack of an overhead light (there are lamps instead, but never enough for my liking) means I often feel like I’m straining my eyes.
 
The Social Goat was lovely though – there are two living rooms near the open-plan kitchen where we could sit on the sofas and read and the owner, Christy, was lovely – she insisted on driving us to a restaurant on our first night so we wouldn’t have to get a taxi.

 
 
Breakfast was very good – though it is served between set times and one day we had the brightest yellow eggs - they have chickens as you can see, who wandered into the kitchen one morning when they wanted their breakfast! We had to leave too early on our second and final day so missed breakfast. Christy was roasting peach slices in the oven and let me try one even though breakfast wasn’t quite ready – it was lovely! But we had to get to Nashville via the Jack Daniels distillery in time for a show at the Grand Ole Opry that evening.
 
 
 

 
Pretty jet lagged after a fairly long flight, we just about managed to stay awake until dinner time (local time that is) and after looking at a few menus provided by our B&B settled on the nearby Dakota Blue. It’s in a nice neighbourhood by Grant Park near the zoo and is an informal place popular with families with fairly basic décor, but friendly service - I forgot how you get refills on soft drinks before you have even finished them in the US!
 

 
I wanted food that was relatively plain and wasn’t hugely hungry because my body clock was telling me I should be asleep. I spotted a Cuban sandwich on the menu, which I’d never had other than the one I made myself after seeing the movie Chef, which also came in a smaller size (a half Cuban) so I ordered that with a side of Tater Tots – not realising the side dish would be huge. The Tater Tots were very bland and a bit greasy and would have been much nicer with some sort of sauce (I don’t like ketchup so I mean something like a cheese sauce). The Cuban sandwich was good but I didn’t think it was all that special though it was huge so only order the full size sandwich if you are really, really hungry! The bill was pretty cheap and came in at 40 dollars including a 20pc tip for the three of us!
 
 

Just a few lines to say this is well worth a visit, with some impressive exhibits (if it’s right to call the fish and mammals an exhibit) and the dolphin show is excellent.
 
We had lunch here having arrived much later at the aquarium than expected (as we were taking photos of DragonCon costumes in the morning!). There were a couple of places to eat but as we were passing the main cafeteria and it didn’t look too busy we went there. There wasn’t a huge choice of food but there were some hot dishes which were probably designed to appeal more to children but I really fancied the chicken goujons and a side of macaroni cheese; it was very good but that’s probably because I love American mac and cheese so even if this was mass produced I would have liked it! It wasn’t cheap though and we spent another 30 dollars on lunch on top of the 38 dollars each for our entry. Still, for the best part of a day sightseeing it wasn’t bad.
 
 
Right next door to the aquarium and a chance to see the vault where the secret recipe is kept (though my fiancé was highly doubtful it was really in there, as he said surely someone would have done an Oceans 11 style heist by now!). It’s interesting to see the collections of memorabilia and advertising and a bottling plant in action, and you can try Coke products from around the world.
 
 
My mother-in-law-to-be had been shopping instead of visiting the aquarium and Coca-Cola World with us, and we were due to meet her in the town centre to have dinner and do some people-watching as DragonCon takes over pretty much the whole city. We saw some amazing costumes just walking down the street.
 
It had started to rain heavily so she ducked into the nearest restaurant, which turned out to be a steakhouse called Cuts – where my fiancé had one of the best steaks he’d ever eaten.
fried green tomatoes
 
It was a fairly posh restaurant – stiff linen napkins, low lighting, that kind of thing – so it was pretty funny when we looked up and saw a man in a full-body parrot costume casually walk past to his table. In fact I don’t think I’ve seen my husband-to-be laugh so hard! The incongruity and completely blasé attitude of the staff, who must be used to this sort of thing, was amazing.
 
He (my fiancé, not the parrot) ordered a steak and said it was one of the best he’d ever had – on a par with Hawksmoor in London which is probably his favourite restaurant. The fillet steak was $39 for 8 oz – quite expensive and among the most expensive we saw on our trip around the US but Hawksmoor charges about that in sterling, meaning for us this didn’t seem too pricey.
 
I wasn’t as hungry so I had the Pecan Salmon – charred salmon served with garlic mashed potatoes topped with a roasted pecan butter sauce for $23. It was very good but after trying a little of my fiancé’s steak I did wish I’d ordered that!
salmon
 
His mum who is vegetarian was trying to decide between a salad and the fried green tomatoes, with a side of fries, but the waiter misunderstood and brought her both, so there was too much for us all to eat but she said it was very good, the tomatoes in particular.
 
In fact the food was so good that we wanted to try the desserts. They were all priced $7, which again is less than in the UK – in an equivalent restaurant you would pay £7 (so more like $10 or $11 – though I realise that the food is cheaper in the US but the tips we left were larger than if we were at home. As an aside, a waiter in a different restaurant told us he was only paid $2 an hour and expected to make the rest in tips – wow!).
 
 
My other half had the warm chocolate walnut fudge brownie which he said was very good; I wanted to try Georgia peaches while we were in the state but was told they were out of season; instead I had cheesecake with peach coulis which was amazing. We were very pleased considering we had gone into the restaurant by chance so I highly recommend it if you are in Atlanta.
 
 

F1 Foods - Mexico Round-Up and the next challenge: Brazil


I've made a few Mexican dishes lately which are appropriate as the most recent Formula 1 Grand Prix took place in Mexico.

I made these Green Chilli Chicken Chilaquiles, but definitely was too cautious with the chilli!



and I went to a blogger event hosted by Old El Paso where I tried out some recipes and their new Stand 'n' Stuff kits -check them out here.


Chilli does of course go very well with chocolate and Suelle from Mainly Baking made these spiced brownies. She said the spices had a warm and earthy flavour which sounds really good.



This weekend the Formula 1 Grand Prix comes from Brazil - I don't have any cachaca but I do have a Brazilian recipe up my sleeve! Please share yours - sweet or savoury - in the linkup below. You have until Sunday 22nd November so that should be plenty of time! ');