- 2 Lamb Shanks
- 2 celery sticks, finely chopped
- 1 carrot, finely chopped
- 1 onion, finely chopped
- 1tbsp plain flour
- 1 glass red wine (rough as ya like!)
- Lamb or beef stock
- 1 handful of small onions (peeled)
- 1 handful of small button mushrooms
- Mashed potatoes
Monday, 13 November 2023
Braised Lamb Shanks with Titanic Plum Porter.
Monday, 6 November 2023
Toad in the Hole with London Pride
For me, one of the greatest of British comfort foods is Toad in the Hole. Opinion is divided as to what should be in the perfect toad and there is considerable evidence that this dish was originally made with all kinds of meats. Lamb cutlets. beef topside, pork cheeks and, of course, sausages. In essence, as with everything that involves Yorkshire pudding batter, it was a way of making an expensive piece of meat fill more bellies than it probably should.
For those of you who are reading from outside the UK a little explanation on Yorkshire pudding is required. It is actually a very simple flat pancake batter; the sort you would use for Crepes. Just a simple mix of eggs, flour and milk. This is then added to a hot deep roasting tray (one could use the tray that the meat has been roasted in as it rests on the side) or a muffin tin for individual Yorkies. Either way the fat has to be fearfully hot before the batter is added. Traditionally Yorkshire pudding was served only with beef and also sometimes as a starter with gravy to lower the appetite for the expensive meat mail course.
This is a classic, and with all classics, less is more! Don't mess with near perfection.Toad in the Hole. (Serves 2)
- 4 good large Butcher's Sausages.
- Plain Flour.
- Milk.
- 1 egg.
- Salt and pepper
Gently fry the sausages, just to seal them then pop them in a high sided roasting tin with a little nugget of lard, dripping, or oil with a high burn point. Pop them in a hot oven and let them sizzle for about 5 minutes. The fat in the tin needs to be really hot, almost smoking. Pull out the tin and pour in the batter so that the edges sizzle and bubble a little. Then its back in the oven and enjoy the magic of a rising Yorkshire pudding. Serve when it is crisp on top and has a bit of fluff underneath. Make sure there is something green and squeaky to go with it and lashings of onion gravy.
Tuesday, 31 October 2023
Chicken liver parfait and Toast / Coop Hazy Pale Ale
Parfait is a pate that is blitzed up after having been cooked, it is very smooth and packed full of livery flavour. I always like to think of this as a dish to make for a lazy lunch before a Six Nations decider! I have also made a Youtube video of the process. (link below)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SH0BW5zkZwI&t=533s400gms Chicken Livers
Sunday, 22 October 2023
Cheese board and Westmalle Dubbel
Your dinner has been a screaming success, the meal you spent hours on has been greeted with the right amount of "oooohs, argghs" and "how did you make the sauces?". The only thing left is the cheeseboard and what to serve with it!
Before I go on I must put a point of view out here. Traditional French cooking is my usual start point for all things food related and in France they would generally have the cheese course before the pudding and in many ways this is a good idea. However, I think this is one of those things that we Brits get right. A good cheese board is the perfect grazing plate and, when served at the end of the meal, allows everyone to relax and chat on into the small hours whilst helping themselves to little mouthfuls.
Let us first deal with what a good cheeseboard looks like: Primarily, you do not need 14 cheeses on your board. A maximum of 4 different cheeses is all that is required. This will not only make your shopping simple but also mean that you can buy large enough lumps of cheese to make for good keeping.
Moving on to the carbohydrate: Bread or crackers are both fine. Normally I would make the decision based on what has happened in the meal previously. Balance is everything here. For this board I chose crackers, specifically, Stockan's Oatcakes and Miller's elements Ale (which contain hops). Again, don't feel the need to put 25 different types of crackers on the board, you will simply end up with 25 stale half packs three weeks later.
The other bits on the board are really up to personal choice; though classics would include dried fruit, celery sticks and nuts.
The cheeses I chose were as follows
- Snowdonia Black Bomber
- St Marcelin
- Highmoor
It is very easy to fall back on old friends like Port and Madeira though be careful around red wines as often they are a poor match for cheese ( I promise you this is the case). However, this is all about beer so to beer we must look.
Trappist beers are are made within monasteries. Not only do they have to be made in specific holy places but the Monks must be involved in the brewing. This is monitored very strictly and often producers are removed from the list, so it is very difficult to give an exact number of Trappist breweries at any given time. Suffice to say, it's around 15. I must also emphasise at this point that "Trappist" isn't a style of beer it simply denotes the location and the manpower involved.
Westlmalle Dubbel is one of the more available Trappist beers with quite large production. It is very dark brown with a reddish tint. It kicks in at 7% so its not for the faint hearted. It uses secondary fermentation in the bottle and produces a light brown head of foam. On the nose it has a lot of fruit and spice with herbal hints. (almost a dandelion and burdock smell, honestly). On the palate it is rich and sweet with more dried fruit flavours. There is a very clear malt spine in the beer, rich and like wholemeal bread. The finish is both bitter and dry without being too much.
I was very pleased with how it matched the cheese and would happily do this match again.
Monday, 16 October 2023
Pub Lasagne and Hacker Pschorr, Oktoberfest Marzen
It's controversy time. Not only is Lasagne itself controversial, but one of its ingredients, the Bolognaise sauce, is its own controversy too. Let's start with the sauce:
Bolognaise does not really exist. It's a made up name for a meat and tomato Ragu for pasta. We Brits have taken the idea of a beef and tomato sauce added spaghetti and created a meal that has graces dinner tables all over the country. It has become the ultimate student dish owing to the fact that it can be made reasonably cheaply and batch cooked to gain economies of scale. The interesting thing about this sauce is that so many people claim to have the authentic recipe leading to all sorts of weird arguments and complaints.
Should I use pork and beef mince? Or even veal? Should I use red wine , white wine or just stock? Onion? Garlic? Both? Fresh tomatoes or tins? Beef stock or chicken or even vegetable? There is a plethora of choices and questions on route to the perfect bolognaise sauce.
Dear reader, let me assure you that it simply does not matter. There is no authentic sauce here. This is, in effect, peasant food, Cucina povera, so work with what is in your fridge. You can go quite light on the meat and bulk up with vegetables and add all kinds of bits and bobs you find. In the past I have added bacon (often), chopped up black pudding (you must try this) and even leftover steak (so very good). As long as the sauce is based on tomato and is thick enough to coat pasta then all is good. By the way, it tends to be much better if it is served with ribbons (taggliatelle, linguine, etc) rather than spag.
And now another controversy: The other sauce. This should probably be a bechamel, made with infused milk, however, I tend to go with a cheese sauce albeit made from scratch.
You can buy posh fresh pasta sheets or even roll your own but my recipe uses dried.
Pub Lasagne (for a large bunch of people)
- 1kg meat (mince, cooked roast leftovers, little bit of bacon, black pudding)
- Glug of oil
- 1 onion, finely chopped
- 2 medium carrots, finely chopped
- 2 celery sticks, finely chopped
- 3 to 6 garlic cloves very finely chopped
- 2 tins of plum tomatoes
- 2 beef stock cubes
- 1 small glass of dry sherry
- Salt, pepper, thyme, Oregano.
- 1 large squirt of tomato puree
- 60gms plain flower
- 60gms butter
- 500ml full fat milk
- 200gm mature cheddar
- Dried pasta sheet.
Sunday, 8 October 2023
Tri tip steak and Hop Back, Summer Lightning
The cooking of steak is a subject that is full of controversy. I am not going to dictate how anyone should cook their steak because it will inevitably just lead to an argument, Suffice is to say that you need to please yourself on this issue. Just do it the way that makes you happy!
However, I am here to tell you that there is a lot more to steak than the usual Fillet, Sirloin, Rump, Rib eye hegemony. So here are the instructions:
a) Buy your meat from a butcher who can tell you how long the meat has been hung.
b) Talk to you butcher about the less expensive steaks: bavette, onglet, feather, tri tip etc
c) After you have cooked it to your liking, leave it alone for a surprisingly long time before you serve it. This is science not affectation!
Tri tip comes from the front end of the Sirloin and is sold a triangular looking lump, it is, halfway between a steak and a roasting joint. One side of the steak usually has a layer of fat across it. Consequently I cooked it partly on the hob and partly in the oven. I must stress again, this is the way I like to cook a tri tip, perfectly reasonable people can have other opinions, especially about things such as salt.
Tri tip Steak
- 1 tri tip steak
- High quality salt
- Ground black pepper
- Oil or dripping with a high burn point.
- Aluminium foil
The Match
I first encountered Summer lightening on Cricket tour in the late 90's, and I have always had a bit of a soft spot for it ever since. It is not an over statement to suggest that this beer started a new beer style, Summer Ale. It comes in at a punchy 5% so it is not to be taken lightly. On the nose it has an almost lemony hit (but not in an American IPA way). On the palate, the lighter malts used hold their own and give the beer great balance. The finish is clean but not overly sharp or astringent. It manages to be both light and very much an English Ale. This is not just for summer drinking.
A darker, richer beer might have been more obvious, but I was serving this with a salad in a citrus dressing and the match up seemed perfect. Even if you were to build it up with chips or mash the malty body of the beer would be perfectly comfortable with the dish
Sunday, 1 October 2023
"Silly chilli chicken Thai noodle soup" with Hoegaarden
This is not, by any stretch of the imagination, an authentic recipe. This grew out of a desire to produce a light supper with some punch that felt like it was doing you some good. In essence it is a simple, spicy noodle soup with caramelised chicken on top!
Before you do anything you need to bone out and skin your chicken thighs. (You could buy these already prepared but you will miss out on a couple of things: Bones for the stock and skin to garnish. However, these are not critical to the recipe). This will take a little more time than you think but you get much quicker with practice.
This is one of those dishes that can simply make you feel a bit better. The name grew over a couple of drunken discussions about what this delicious soup should be called.
Silly Chilli chicken Thai noodle soup
- 4 Chicken thighs (boned and skinned)
- 3 tbsp sweet chilli sauce
- 2 tsp sesame oil
- 1 tsp Thai fish sauce (nam pla)
- 3 tsp soy sauce
- 1 ltr vegetable or chicken stock (made with cubes is fine)
- 2 red chillies
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 3 or 4 coins cut from from a ginger root
- 2 slices of lime zest
- 1 bunch leaf coriander
- 2 or 3 spring onions
- Two "nests" of dried noodles (you can use fresh ones too)











