Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Greek-to-Thai rebrand

On the weekend I popped over the river to Campsie and had my Chinese butcher butterfly a leg of lamb for yiros. But rather than go straight to a mini Greek feast (I didn’t have my kids last weekend), I turned my mind to what else I might do with marinated, medium rare, barbecued strips of lamb.

Re-enter the Bachelor Food principle of rebranding or, in this case, pre-branding!

In the recipe below, I pan fry a fillet of lamb. Last Sunday, I sliced from my freshly barbecued lamb prepared, the remainder of which was set aside for school and work lunches, and yiros dinners - including sliced onions, lemon juice and sumac - but that is another story.

For this recipe, strong, well-defined tastes are what you want. Use fresh herbs, not dried. For instance, I would normally use lemon grass, but had run out, so, instead of using dried lemon grass, I substituted chopped leaves from my lime tree.

Recipe: Thai lamb larb (warm lamb salad)

Serves 2 as a main, 4 as an entree

Ingredients

  • 300g lamb backstrap fillet
  • 2 tablespoons peanut oil
  • .5 cup chopped roasted, unsalted peanuts
  • 2 cups shredded baby cos lettuce leaves
  • 1 lebanese cucumber roughly chopped
  • 1 thinly sliced red onion
  • 2 thinly sliced radish
  • 1 carrot julienne
  • 2 tablespoons chopped coriander leaves
  • 375g rice noodles

Sauce

  • .25 cups ground, dry fried rice
  • 1 tablespoon peanut oil
  • 3 tablespoon fish sauce
  • Juice 1 lemon
  • 1 tablespoon palm sugar
  • Chopped fresh herbs, about a teaspoon each: Kaffir lime leaves, mint (or lemon grass, shallots, coriander - whatever is fresh!)
  • 2 birds eye chilies, chopped

Method

Heat rice in a dry frying pan, and cook until golden brown. Remove from pan and crush with a mortar and pestle.

Combine lettuce, onion, radish and carrot.

Place peanut oil, fish sauce and lemon juice in a small saucepan and heat, but don’t boil. Add sugar, crushed rice and chopped herbs and chili.

Heat peanut oil in a frying pan on medium-high heat. Fry lamb fillet two minutes on each side, then let rest at room temperature for 10 minutes. Slice into thin strips. The strips should be browned and slightly crispy on the outside, and lovely and pink, but not bloody, in the middle.

Place the lamb strips into the sauce.

Boil water in a saucepan and add noodles. Rice noodles cook very quickly, about two minutes should do it. Strain.

Arrange on plates or bowls: first noodles, then salad vegetables, then lamb strips, then sauce, and last garnish with crushed peanuts and chopped coriander leaves.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Apple crumble beats the tummy rumble!


I’m not a big dessert person but, with my oldest son going into pre-teen appetite overdrive, it is time to call for reinforcements. Enter: Grandma’s apple crumble!

When my youngest was 1 1/2 and my oldest was 3 1/2, I started two wonderful years as primary carer.

One of the first things I did was sit down with my Mum and go through all the meals that I remembered and loved from my early childhood, and collect them. It’s amazing how many meals from the sixties include a can of soup as a key ingredient! Not this one though.

Apple crumble is healthy, quick to cook, and cheap: a great way to fill up a growing child, and a super breakfast too for the following morning.

Recipe: my Mum’s apple crumble

Ingredients

Filling

  • 6 to 8 Granny Smith apples, depending on size
  • .25 cup water
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 2 lemon wedges
  • 2 cloves

Crumble

  • .5 cup wholemeal flour
  • .5 cup rolled oats
  • .25 cup brown sugar
  • 80 grams butter
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Method

Preheat oven to 180˚

Filling

You can either slice the apples and cover with crumble and do the whole lot in the oven, or steam the apples separately, then cover with the crumble and just finish off in the oven to brown the topping. I prefer to steam the apples separately.

So …

Peel, core, and slice the apples. Place in saucepan with water, sugar, lemon wedges and cloves. Cover and bring to boil, then reduce heat to low and cook for 2–4 minutes.
Pour off excess water. Remove cloves and lemon. Cover apple filling and set aside.

Crumble

Mix dry ingredients in a bowl. For the butter, I generally place it in a small dish on top of the lid of the apple saucepan so that it melts, but room-temperature butter is easily worked through the dry ingredients.

Once you have thoroughly worked through the butter and created a consistent mixture, you are ready for the next step.

Combining

Place the apple in a shallow baking dish, cover evenly with the crumble mixture, and place in oven for 10–20 minutes, or until the crumble is golden brown.

Serve with ice cream or custard.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Three pots


Pot number one!

In praise of the three pot rule

In some ways this is even more important in a big kitchen where all that bench space can tempt you to reach for one pot after another the moment you feel the need. Yet, for the bachelor kitchen, the three pot rule is equally relevant.

In fact, the only rule more relevant is this one: “Everything in moderation (including moderation)”.

Now, where were we?

Figuring out how the family meal (even on the nights when it is a family of one) can be accomplished with three pots or less is a way of planning the meal project, getting it done with good care and little waste.

My favourite pot is a Le Creuset shallow casserole dish. One of the many things I like about it (apart from it being a gift from good friends) is that the lid handle allows the lid to sit stable and flat, making it the perfect place to rest browned meat or sautéed vegetables.

Like this.

Recipe: Braised steak with onions, mushrooms and red wine

Ingredients

  • 1 large onion
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 2 tablespoons Lea and Perrins (or other Worcestershire sauce)
  • 4 tabasco or birds eye chilies
  • 1 double handful button mushrooms
  • 1 double handful garden herbs (parsley, oregano, basil)
  • 2 round steaks
  • 1 cup beef stock
  • 1 cup red wine
  • 1 cup plain flour
  • 1 tablespoon each: dried oregano, ground black pepper
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Method

  • Place flour, dried oregano and pepper in a clean bag
  • Halve the steaks and shake in the flour bag one at a time and set aside (like on the lid of your handy casserole dish!)
  • Peel and slice onions into rings
  • Clean mushrooms (I like to leave them whole for this dish, just trimming the stalks)
  • Peel and slice garlic cloves, chop chilies
  • Heat oil in a heavy based pan
  • Brown steaks on each side, then set aside
  • Add onion and drop heat to low. Sauté for a few minutes. Add garlic and sauté a few more minutes
  • Turn up heat, then add wine and boil off the alcohol and deglaze the pan
  • Add mushrooms and chilies and, once the liquid boils again, add stock, Worcestershire sauce and tomato paste, and again bring to boil. Return the steaks to the pan. Then, when the liquid boils one last time, drop to a very low simmer
  • Cover and simmer for one to two hours
  • 30 minutes before serving, toss in round beans and cover again
  • 15 minutes before serving, toss in garden herbs and cover again
Serve with steamed rice (pot number two)

A two-pot screamer!