Saturday, May 14, 2016

Chicken en Papilotte with Orange Veg



Chicken breasts are a great stand-by for dinners during the week; both my fiancé and I like them, they are quick to cook, pretty healthy and you can do a lot of different things with them. I found this recipe for spiced baked chicken parcels – chicken en papilotte – on Serious Eats, and decided to make my own variation on it.
 
I already had za’atar, a Middle Eastern spice, I’d bought when we had the letter Z for Alphabakes, but I don’t like to eat peppers or tomatoes so instead decided to use a little bit of pepper and a portion of spiralized butternut squash. A squash is really easy to spiralize if you have a robust enough machine (mine is the Lurch one from Lakeland that you can buy on Amazon here:

 
 
I tossed the chicken breast, which I had butterflied out, with the spices, oil and herbs and then placed it on a square of foil with the peppers, onion, spring onion and butternut squash on top. I wrapped up the parcel and baked it in the oven; it only took 20 minutes as I had sliced the chicken relatively thin. When you unwrap the parcel you have a very tasty meal, which can be served with extra veg or perhaps with new or mashed potatoes for a more substantial dinner.



 

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Quinoa Cheese Tartlets


I’ve been following a low sugar diet for the last few weeks and bought the book I Quit Sugar by Sarah Wilson, which is full of healthy recipes. Weekend lunches are probably the meals where I struggle most to come up with dishes – my fiancé would have a bacon sandwich every Saturday and every Sunday if he could, but I prefer to cook different things and at the moment I’m not really eating bread so that doesn’t work for me at all.
 
I found a recipe in I Quit Sugar for quinoa and pumpkin tarts which I knew my fiancé would never eat, so I decided to do him a cheese and bacon tart on a pastry base to use up some shortcrust pastry I had in the freezer. For myself, I followed the recipe but scaled it down as I didn’t need it to serve 4. I also used butternut squash instead of pumpkin, and agave nectar instead of rice malt syrup. I also realised I didn’t have any parmesan so used a little gruyere instead, along with the blue cheese and ricotta.
 
It was a bit fiddly to make as you have to rinse the quinoa first then cook it, then let it cool and form a ‘pie crust’ and then bake it blind, while cooking the butternut squash at the same time. The quinoa created a surprisingly good base for the tart and it was really tasty – butternut squash and blue cheese is a nice flavour combination and the creaminess of the ricotta was a lovely addition. I don’t know whether I’d go to the lengths of making these again but I think if I was soaking and cooking quinoa for a couple of recipes at the same time, eg a salad for lunch at work and then these tarts the next day, then it would be well worth the effort.

Mixing the quinoa with the cheese and egg:


I used a mixture of loose-bottomed tart tins and, because I couldn't find where my cleaner had put the bottoms to the other ones, some mini foil pie dishes. Here they are about to go in the oven.


The base is baked, so adding the topping


Just out of the oven

Serve with lots of green salad

 
I'm sharing this with Meat Free Mondays, hosted by Jacqueline at Tinned Tomatoes
 
 
 

Lorraine Pascale's Blueberry and Limoncello Drizzle Cake

 

I have a great relationship with my personal trainer. She pushes me hard, but not too hard; she's encouraging, we have a good chat while I'm working out and she isn't draconian when it comes to diet. To prove th point, she hinted that since I like baking I could make her a cake for her birthday, which was the day after mine.

She'd told me she liked loaf cakes and I decided I wanted to make something that wasn't too unhealthy, so would involve less sugar than some cakes, not have piles of frosting, and include fruit but have an indulgent quality at the same time - it was her 40th birthday so a special occasion after all.

I turned to Lorraine Pascale's book A Lighter Way to Bake and found a recipe for a blueberry and limoncello drizzle cake, which ticked all those boxes - it wasn't a loaf cake but as it wasn't filled I decided there was no reason why I couldn't bake it in a loaf tin.

The recipe can be found online here; I had some blueberries in the freezer from a previous recipe and since I don't like them this was a good opportunity to use them up; I already had about a quarter of a bottle of limoncello left, I think from the Christmas before last, so the only ingredients I therefore had to buy was a little tub of yogurt and two lemons.

Making the batter
Adding the blueberries
ready to go in the oven
Here's the cake!
about to make the icing
drizzling over the icing


The cake took a bit longer to bake than the time given in the recipe; if you do it in a loaf tin the best thing is to keep testing it with a skewer.

I gave it to my personal trainer the day before her birthday when we had a gym session (actually on my birthday, I'm that dedicated!) and she said afterwards she and her friends really enjoyed it.



This isn't the cheapest recipe to make but for me it was pretty frugal as I was using up blueberries and limoncello I already had, which is quite a thrifty approach, so I'm sending this to Credit Crunch Munch. This month the challenge is hosted by Michelle at Utterly Scrummy and was devised by Helen and Camilla.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Restaurant Review: The Swan at Stoford, Wiltshire

My home town in Wiltshire is in beautiful countryside with some very good pubs. Growing up, my family never went to ‘proper’ restaurants – meals out were always in cosy pubs, often with a beer garden outside for my sister and I to play in. I doubt any of these places would describe themselves as ‘gastropubs’, as the food isn’t what you’d call high end and the beers are local rather than anything fancy – but that’s often exactly their charm. There’s nothing like a good Sunday roast or pub meal (scampi was my favourite as a child) shared with the family.
 
A couple of weeks ago I went down to Wiltshire to see my family on a Sunday as it was my birthday the following week, and we had lunch at the Swan Inn at Stoford. An 18th century inn, the website says it “offers the perfect riverside location amongst the rolling hills of Wiltshire, yet conveniently located on the A36”. Both parts of that statement are undoubtedly true – the location is picturesque, but the car park is on the opposite side of the road to the pub and you have to dart across the A36 to get in!
 
The Swan has all the things that make a Wiltshire country pub to me – an open fire, a garden, and a skittle alley. It’s on the river Wylye – as my late grandmother’s house was – and has fishing rights if you’re into fly fishing. It is also a B&B with 13 rooms though I haven’t seen inside any of them.
 
 
The lunch menu is extensive with light options, starters, sharing platters, salads, and a section of ‘classic mains’ versus ‘special mains’. Fish and chips, beef and ale pie, chicken korma and Stoford Chicken – chicken breast with bacon, BBQ sauce and Cheddar cheese – all count as classic mains, while special mains are more expensive, ranging from fish pie (not sure why that isn’t a classic), lamb shoulder, pork belly, grilled sea bream and so on. Separate to that is the grill section, with a choice of steaks, lamb or chicken and various sauces and sides, and there is a whole burger section with six types of burger and toppings.
 
There were six vegetarian mains on the menu, though as one is a cheese Ploughman’s I think perhaps that should have been under the separate Ploughman’s section which lists the meat options. My sister’s boyfriend ordered the Ploughman’s and there was some confusion from the waiter as to whether he wanted the vegetarian one, or one with meat (which was described on the menu as coming with both cold meats and cheese) and he ended up with only meat and no cheese.
 
I had the Sunday roast which was served from a carvery – my first carvery and I made a schoolgirl error! You go up to the station where someone is carving meat, and help yourself to the side dishes. I was asked if I wanted beef, lamb or pork and when I said I couldn’t decide was offered a combination; the lamb was a bit fatty but otherwise the meat was really good. I love roast potatoes and planned to pile my plate high, but took a giant Yorkshire pudding first, which took up most of the space on my plate. When I sat down I saw several other people with the roast dinner, all of whom had a pile of meat, potatoes and vegetables – with the Yorkshire pudding balanced on top like the cherry on a cake. That’s obviously the trick to maximising space, I will know for next time!
 
One of the side dishes was cauliflower cheese which I don’t often get with pub roasts, so it was a very welcome addition, though if I have one thing to say to the Swan it’s that their gravy is too thin! The waiter had also promised to let me know a couple of minutes before everyone else’s food was served that I should go up to the carvery so we could eat at the same, but obviously forgot, so I ended up queuing for my food while everyone else was tucking in to theirs. Other than that it was a really good meal and somewhere I think we will probably come back.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Birthday Girl Party Card



This birthday card was a quick last-minute make using some cardboard toppers from the same packet. There was a long wide birthday banner and two smaller pieces, one with a butterfly and one with the word 'party' raised from the card. I chose a pretty patterned backing paper and mounted the stickers on the card.

Monday, May 9, 2016

Meal Planning Monday Week 20


Last weekend was a scorcher and we had our first barbecue of the year. I don't normally eat bread at the moment but couldn't resist a sausage in a roll... I also had some bread at lunchtime and unsurprisingly my weight has crept up a tiny bit. Still, I had my wedding dress fitting on Saturday and the dress does need taking in, hooray! Unfortunately there is an underwear issue and I only have a couple of weeks to find something in my size (not easy) which I'm a bit dismayed about, as the shop has been telling me since last November that what I had was fine! So at this rate my weight will not be my biggest worry in terms of how the dress looks....

The weather is supposed to be nice this week but not so hot, with the possibility of showers most days during the week, so I don't know whether we will be barbecuing again or not.

Monday
I'm working from home
Lunch: barbecue salad leftovers
Dinner: dinner - deconstructed gyro salad  with beef meatballs for my fiancé as he doesn't like lamb

Tuesday
Lunch: chickpea and salmon salad similar to this recipe
Dinner: salmon with broccoli and cauliflower rice for me, my fiancé is probably going to his mum's but if he's home he can have chicken chargrills

Wednesday
Lunch: chicken salad
Dinner: supposed to be the nicest weather all week so we might barbecue again, since we have a gas barbecue that takes no time at all to heat up. I've got to stick to the diet better this week though (I'm allowed two days to eat 'normally' which is when I usually have things like bread) so no hot dogs and burgers for me this time. Instead we can have some spicy thin cut beef steaks I got from Tesco and he can have a couple of sausages as well and I'll have a tuna steak and salad. I will try this spring onion and red onion salad and see if I can get some watermelon as well - I love eating watermelon in the summer.

Thursday
Lunch: chickpea and salmon salad similar to this recipe
Dinner: out with old work colleagues; my fiancé is probably going to be out at his own work drinks

Friday
Lunch: salad of some kind
Dinner: chicken goujons and chips for him;

Saturday: my fiancé is on his stag night
Lunch:  homemade sweet potato soup (in freezer)
Dinner: shrimp and cauliflower salad

Sunday
Lunch: fajitas for him, with the same but on little gem lettuce for me
Dinner: pork medallions with balsamic honey glaze for me (to use up pork from the freezer), chicken breast for him, maybe with roast potatoes as I don't think the weather is going to be hot

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Restaurant Review: Cashmore Inn, Cashmore, Dorset

It's amazing how many little things there are to think about when you're planning a wedding. Two months before the big day my fiancé and I went down to our wedding venue (near my parents' house in Wiltshire) for a three-hour meeting with the event coordinator. We covered everything from final menu choice to what time we were slicing the cake to the fact that we needed a PA system so everyone could hear the vows.
 
 
By the time we were finished it was nearly 1pm and we were ready for lunch. I’d had a look online in advance to find a nearby pub that did light lunches, sandwiches and so on, and decided the Cashmore Inn looked good – it’s actually a B&B and some of our family and friends are staying there for our wedding.
 
 
When we arrived, I noted how pretty it looked – a nice little country pub. I’d only looked at the menu on their website a few days before so was surprised to be told when we entered that it had changed and they were now an Italian restaurant!
 
I wasn’t sure what to expect and while I’d gone in wanting a light lunch, I decided against the filled ciabattas (nice as they sounded, served with chips and a salad as well) and since my fiancé wanted a pizza I thought I’d have the same. He also wanted the cheesy garlic bread – he’s very predictable, and I knew he was going to order a margarita pizza as well, and I was right.
 
 
I chose the polpettini pizza, with steak mince meatballs, caramelized onion, tomato, mozzarella and basil, and it was absolutely amazing, with the onion bringing a delicious sweetness. The base was particularly good - the chef came out while I was in the bathroom and my fiancé told me afterwards that the chef is from Italy and makes the pizza bases himself with flour imported from Italy. I can imagine people come to the Cashmore Inn from miles around for the food - and if you are heading down to the West Country via the A354 it's definitely somewhere to stop!