Thursday 26 April 2012

Rancheros Pie

This 'Southern Style' shepherds pie is the very first dish i made in a slow cooker.

Because it was a new experience, a first, it lasts long and fondly in my memory, just like your first kiss.

Every time i make it it takes me back to a time before this particular pleasure was something i'd experienced and i wonder how life was ever interesting or acceptable without it?  


I'd obviously heard of slow cookers but being a very impatient person, my advent calendars have always been finished by the 3rd of December, i had never had a desire to use one - until Rachel and I moved in together and Rach, it transpired, came with a slow cooker and very attached to it she was too!

As she came with quite a small quantity of household items, the slow cooker, a couple of mugs and what looks like a snake charmers basket which is apparently used to keep tortillas warm, i felt that i should embrace these gifts she was bringing into our new home and decided to give it a go. 

My initial apprehensions, that i would be left starving while waiting 8 hours for my dinner to slowly become edible before my eyes were unfounded. I discovered that the slow cooker does not stop snacking or sandwich making in the mean time and the results of the dish it produces are often incredible for the simplicity of the techniques applied. The smells that it produces are possibly worth the purchase price alone, put away your jasmine scented candles and rely on this to fill your home with the relaxing aromas of slow cooked minced beef.

In all honesty and looking objectively at the Rancheros Pie it isn't the greatest dish of all time, a little like your first kiss will not have been the greatest kiss of all time, they're both a little messy, the basics are there but something just isn't quite right. The memory, however, of the life changing moment, the key point in your life when everything would change forever means this dish will always hold a special place in our heart and is fully deserving of a place on this blog!

Ingredients, to serve 4 -

500g Minced Beef
1 Onion, finely chopped
2 Garlic Cloves
Tsp Cumin
1/2 Tsp crushed dried red chillis
1/4 tsp ground all spice
2 stems of oregano, roughly chopped
3 tbsps sultanas
400g can chopped toatoes
250ml beef stock
Salt and Pepper

Topping -
500g Sweet potatoes, thinly sliced
25g butter
Extra dried chilli flakes

  • Add the beef and onion to a pan and fry until browned.
  • Stir in garlic, spices, oregano, sultanas, tomatoes and stock.
  • Bring to the boil and add a little salt and pepper to taste.
  • Spoon into a pre heated slow cooker and cover with overlapping slices of sweet potato, dot with butter and sprinkle with chilli flakes and a little black pepper.
  • Cover with lid and cook on low for 7-8 hours, remove the lid and turn up to high for the last hour or so if the sauce is looking too watery.
  • Brown and crisp under the grill (optional) before serving .

Thursday 19 April 2012

Jambalaya

When Rach and I have a child at some point in the future I'd be very tempted to call it Jambalaya, little Jambalaya Foster, Jumbo for short (let's hope it's not a girl).

My reasoning goes beyond the fact that it's a nice word to say or that i crave to repeat the tortuous school ground memories i personally have from being given my own unusual name.   

'Jambalaya' appears to come from a word which translates to a mish mash or mix up, a description of how the Spanish culture affected the local cuisine on the Caribbean Islands, where the dish was born. 

Our families have been similarly influenced, British mixed with Mexican and Polish nationalities to create us. So if a couple already from a mixed cultural background were to have a child it would be a real mix or mish mash of different cultures, a right little jambalaya if you will!


Ingredients -
 
150g chorizo, halved length ways and then sliced
3 hand fulls of leftover roast chicken torn into small pieces / 2 chicken breasts
2 medium onions, chopped
2 red peppers, chopped
4 garlic cloves, crushed
2 tbsp Cajun spice
2 tsp cayenne
440ml can of chopped tomatoes
750ml chicken stock
300g long grain rice

Grated Cheddar Cheese (Optional)
Hot chili sauce to serve

  • Fry the chorizo in a large pan until it starts to release it's oils, then add the chopped onions and cook until they're softened
  • Add the chopped pepper, garlic and left over chicken (if using chicken breasts then fry these beforehand on either side until done and then chop)
  • Add the Cajun and cayenne spices and stir through
  • Add the uncooked rice then pour over the chopped tomatoes and chicken stock
  • Cover the pot and allow to simmer for approx 20 minutes, until the rice is cooked. 
  • Stir the mixture occasionally to stop it from sticking and add a little more water if it's getting too dry and the rice is not tender. 
Serve drizzled with hot chili / Tabasco sauce to taste or if you want to make it a little less healthy grate cheddar cheese over the top and grill to melt.

Saturday 7 April 2012

The Foster Family Chicken Parmesan

Passed down through at least 2 generations of the Foster Family (probably only 2 bearing in mind the cooking equipment used...) this is my all time favourite.  

My mum would cook it for me when i came home from Uni, on special occasions and probably any time she thought i needed cheering up. It was passed to my mother from my father's mother who was the most lovely woman with a perfectly groomed white Marge Simpson esque barnet, see photo attached of Nana looking very glamorous holding the most beautiful baby (me!).

The microwave technique works perfectly with this dish, keeping the chicken nice and moist and meaning that you can have a lovely filling hearty dinner in no time.

Ingredients -
Approx 600g Chicken Breasts, chopped each breast into approx 3 thin pieces
1 Large Egg
60g fine dry bread crumbs
30g finely grated Parmesan
2 x 400g cans of good quality chopped tomatoes
2 tbsp plain flour
1 and a half tsp Garlic Salt
2 tsp Oregano
300ml chicken stock
75g grated mature cheddar and another 30g grated Parmesan (or try some mozzarella)
Olive Oil

  • Mix breadcrumbs and Parmesan together, beat the egg in a separate bowl, dip the chicken first in egg and then breadcrumbs until well coated.
  • Quickly brown the chicken on both sides in a generous amount of oil in a frying pan and then place the pieces into a large microwavable dish.
  • Mix the flour, in a large bowl, with a small amount of tomato juice. Add the rest of the tomatoes, oregano, garlic salt and stock.
  • Heat in the microwave for 3 minutes on full power, then remove and blend until smooth, check the seasoning.
  • Spoon the tomato sauce over the chicken and sprinkle the top with grated cheddar.
  • Heat loosely covered with greaseproof paper on full power for 7-10 minutes
  • sprinkle with grated Parmesan and heat uncovered for another minute to melt the cheese
Serve with fried potatoes and veg or over pasta.

Tuesday 3 April 2012

Toad In The Hole With Onion Gravy

'Have you ever had Toad In The Hole' i asked Rachel.

No was the reply... I was flabbergasted, how could someone not have had the joy of eating such a great classic British dish?

Thinking about it though i guess it isn't that fashionable at the moment and hasn't been for a while, you don't see it in any restaurants or even on many pub menus anymore, such a shame. 

And as Rachel has only been on these shores for half of her life she can perhaps be excused for not sampling it, it's obviously not that popular in Ireland, must be something to do with the lack of potatoes...

I've made it more patriotic, and a lovely yellowy colour, by adding a good dollop of English Mustard to the batter mix!


Ingredients -

8 Sausages (i used spicy beef)
100g plain flour
Tsp English mustard
1 egg
Pinch salt and pepper
300ml semi skimmed milk
Tsp thyme
Olive oil

For the gravy -

400ml beef stock
2 red onions, sliced
100ml red wine
A good shake of Worcestershire sauce
Tsp soft brown sugar
   
  • Heat the oven to 200/220C fan/not fan
  • Add a tbsp of olive oil to a 30 x 20cm roasting tin, add the sausages and mix around to make sure they're evenly coated. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes
  • Meanwhile make the batter, sieve the flour into a large bowl and add a little salt and pepper,
  • Make a well in the middle and break in the egg, add a little milk and the mustard and then stir combining a little flour with the wet mixture, keep adding a little more milk and combining in the rest of the flour until you're left with a smooth creamy batter.
  • Take the hot roasting tin out of the oven and pour the batter evenly around, it'll bubble with the fat from the sausages
  • Bake in the oven for 40 minutes until the batter has risen and is crispy. poke a knife into the middle it should be set, not sticky or runny.
 While the toad in the hole is baking make the gravy -
  • Slowly cook the sliced onions in a little olive oil until soft, approx 15 minutes
  • Sprinkle over the sugar and mix, cook for another 5 minutes
  • Sprinkle over the flour and mix well
  • Add the red wine and turn up the heat
  • Add the stock and Worcestershire sauce and bring to the boil, simmer until thickened. 
Serves 4 with veg (something green like broccoli)