Monday 19 November 2018

Dinner diary - Jugged Hare and Tagliatelle alla Lepre

So it seems little known that there's an Italian dish almost the same as the great English classic, jugged hare. And if you judge things right, you get a splendid two-for out of one big cook. If you've a chance to cook this then please, please have a go - this is one of the all-time classic dishes and it is of quite incomparable flavour. Hare isn't especially like rabbit - it is richer, gamier, darker, and just basically better. And this is from someone who you'll know, if you read this blog, loves rabbit.


To begin with, you must procure tour hare. If they're thin on the ground where you are, don't. If you can find a good game dealer who you trust then thats great. Ideally, you'd get the hare in its skin.

Now, if you do manage that (as I did with this one, but I'll spare the images of processing it for now) hang it head side down for a few days. I'd tell you exactly how long but you can't know. You know its ready when you brush aside the white fur on its belly and the fat under the skin is starting to turn green. That doesn't mean anything untoward is happening, it just means that the bacteria in its gut have done their job and its ready. Now skin it, carefully, and save all the blood you can.

When I got this hare, way back, I cooked the saddle in another dish and saved the rest alongside the offal (liver, kidneys and heart) and froze the lot. After defrosting, I marinated it. The marinade contains herbs (parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme, bay), a few cloves of garlic, olive oil, blackberry (or 'red') wine, salt, pepper and juniper berries. Some marinade it overnight, some don't do so at all. I like to put it on in the morning and cook it later. Does it make a difference? Yes, it really intensifies the flavour. But some don't like that as much, its already rich and gamey enough. Yes, that is the rib-cage in there. Yes, you do cook that. And strip the meat off it. 
Sautee stock vegetables until just turning brown (onion, carrots, celery, all chopped relatively coarsely) and reserve. Now get the pan very hot. Save all the wet ingredients from the marinade and dry off the hare before browning it. The smell at this stage is amazing. You could, if you really wanted to, not brown it and go very old-school with this recipe - literally put it in a big pan or a jug, cover it, and cook it therein. But its better browned, you get a more intense taste. After its browned, put it back in with the marinade, the stock vegetables, and probably the rest of the bottle of wine you used and the offal. And then add mushrooms, and plenty of them. 
Deglaze the pan with the rest of your wine (I use a whole bottle, half in the marinade, half added later). Season it the stew, and cook it now for at least three hours in a low oven, until the meat is very, very tender. And now its time to perform some genuine magic. Remember you saved the blood? You're going to put it in the sauce. Take the hare out, and when its cool enough to handle (because you'll need to strip it off the bones in a moment), put the rich sauce on a very low heat but do not boil it. Those clever folk in Italy realised that this is even better with some chocolate in it, so put a square of dark chocolate in the blood, and take some of the sauce and put it into the blood to warm it up. Then slowly add the blood mix into the sauce, stirring the whole time, while keeping it warm but not boiling it. Watch the sauce take on a sheen, a shininess. Strip all the meat off the bones as best you can, break it up, and put it back into the sauce.  And now you're ready to serve - its great with roast veg, but I go for mash or baked spuds to soak up the gravy, and something like cabbage.

We had a guest over when we had this as jugged hare, but we had enough for a really hefty portion with pasta the next day (image at the top). It should really be pappardelle, but my other half prefers tagliatelle - thats the dish at the top there. Its basically jugged hare with pasta, and its great. 

There are many variants of this dish. Some put shallots in the marinade. Some add some spices. But however you do it this is one of the greatest game dishes you'll ever encounter - and if you've got game lovers coming to dinner its hard to think of a better thing to cook for them. If you can't get it with the blood in, don't be put off, its still a great dish without. But there's something of a spectacle to cooking the blood in, so if you can do that, its even better. And it really does lift the sauce to another level - if you can't get that, maybe a little butter won't hurt. 

And thats it - a slow to prepare but actually very simple dish. And hard to beat.

Friday 16 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Beef and Mushroom Rogan Josh

Yes, we're making freezer space for beef coming next week, so we're eating a LOT more meat this week than normal. Which meant defrosting two big chunks on which the labels had faded. One turned out to be very exciting indeed, and I'll cook that tomorrow. The other turned out to be still pretty good - a big chunk of lean beef. And I had a hankering for something spicy. So, a simple Rogan Josh was the choice.



This is an easy enough dish to cook. Make a paste by dropping maybe three cloves of garlic, an inch of ginger, two or three chilis, salt, pepper, some cloves, cardamon pods, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, paprika and some lemon juice into the food processor, and zuzz them up. 



Now brown your meat off, in batches if you must, and put it into a stew pot. Turn the oven on at 180C, and try not to eat too many bits of beef once they're deliciously browned. When its all brown, put a bit more oil in the pan and soften off a chopped onion, before adding your paste and cooking it until its aromatic. It doesn't take long, but it makes such a difference to the flavour of the final dish if you do this. You're basically frying off the paste and using it to get the meat flavour back off the pan surface. When you've done this, add maybe a cup and a half of stock, swirl it around, and pour it on to the meat. 


Now in go the mushrooms - about the same volume of shrooms as of meat is good. Here I used the same as I've been putting in dishes all week - field mushrooms, horse mushrooms, blewits and parasols (with a couple of little oyster mushrooms) but use what you've got. 



And then in goes maybe a cup and a half of yoghurt, at least for the amount we were cooking, and half a teaspoon of cinnamon. Stir this in well. Yes, you can use low fat yoghurt if you like, in fact thats what I had so thats what I used. And then into the oven you go with it, for maybe an hour. If when you check it it looks a bit too watery, take the lid off and let it reduce.


And basically thats it - at the end, when you taste it, if you want a little more spice add some garam masala and cook it on the hob for a minute you can, but you might be happy with how it is before that so give it a go. 

I felt a bit retro yesterday so I cooked rice with a spoon of turmeric in. I like the flavour of that, and I love the colour. Basmati is my go-to kind of rice, so I used that. 

By cooking this with mushrooms its a really rich, deeply flavoured sauce, and by cooking it for an hour in the oven almost any cut of beef will work well. Its ideal if you've a mystery lump in the freezer.

Thursday 15 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Beef Fillet with Wild Mushroom and Tomato Tagliatelle

So this sounds impossibly posh. I know. Believe it or not, this was glut management. One of the joys of being a suburban peasant - this cost me less than a spagbol would have done!


We buy beef by the eighth of a bullock. There's a farmer we deal with directly, not far from here, feeds their cattle on nothing but grass and produces really excellent beef. The plus side? Supporting the habitat made good by grazing, keeping a local business afloat, and getting superb quality product at a brilliant price. The down side? Well its nose to tail and a flat price for everything, and it means storing a freezer load. But thats ok, we usually get two eighths and split it among friends. Much homebrew is drunk on beef sharing night. Its almost as exciting as pig day, but involves eating fewer ears and trotters.

Anyway, because its nose to tail we get everything, including cuts I'd not normally buy. Like fillet steak - which is good (amazing from a well raised animal like this) but just not as good as many of the other cuts. Honestly, a well aged sirloin steak is tastier. It is however amazingly tender and great to cook fast. 


I also had, if you remember the last recipe, a spare pan full of wild mushrooms that I'd cooked off in the oven yesterday. Now this is a handy trick - if you want to get a great texture out of mushrooms in a pasta dish like this, and if you want to really intensify the flavour, its a great idea. They were baked off in the oven for about half an hour the day before while I was cooking something else.


As for the other ingredients, there's some sliced onion, chopped parsley, garlic, and half a dozen tomatoes skinned and sliced. Oh, and a glass of wine. And, of course, the pasta. We've got a garden full of chickens so making pasta is a common thing for us - 250g of pasta flour and two eggs, and a little salt, go into the Kenwood chef bowl and get beaten to a breadcrumb texture. Thats put through the pasta attachment and hey-presto, inside of ten minutes while you're softening off your onion and garlic in a little oil, you've got pasta.



You don't have to make fresh pasta of course but, you know, why not? If you don't have an extruder like this its not especially hard to mix it by hand and use a pasta roller. But there's nothing wrong with buying pasta.

Take the onion and garlic out of the pan, put it back on the heat. and season the meat. Salt and pepper on one side, and when your pan is smoking hot put some oil in and put the meat in seasoned side down. Normally someone writing up a recipe would say how long for rare, how long for medium etc. But thats nonsense - this is thick cut fillet and you're having it rare. Look at the side of the meat when its in the pan, and when its approaching half way done at the edge season the top, flip it over and cook it just as hard on the other side. Then take it out and rest it.
While its resting, that's time to cook the pasta and make the sauce. You know how to cook a pan of pasta. For the sauce, deglaze the pan with some wine, chop the cooked mushrooms coarsely and put them in, add the tomatoes and parsley, and put the onions and garlic back in. And reduce it all down a bit. When the pasta is done, add a little butter to the sauce and that's it. The last thing to do is add the meat back in.

If you've cooked the meat right it'll look like this when you slice it up. 


You want it red and juicy. Now all you have left to do is drain the pasta and mix everything thoroughly. the most common thing people in the UK do wrong with a pasta dish is they don't mix everything together at the end. Take your time, get it all, including the meat, well and truly combined with the pasta.

Dress it with a little more parsley, and thats it. I know, right, it sounds sinfully extravagant. But heck, thats one of the big advantages of being a suburban peasant. Buy direct, pick your own mushrooms, and decadent luxury is entirely affordable.

Wednesday 14 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Partridge Buried in Mushrooms

I didn't post up our weekend nosh because, frankly, I'm not sure the world is ready for our pork chop recipe.

Until we deem the world can take that, here's something I cooked yesterday to use up the last two partridges from the freezer. Partridge Buried in Mushrooms. Doesn't sound right does it? Ok, lets call it perdrix sous les champignons. Sounds more like a £30 quid a plate job, right?



After defrosting the birds, this simple stew started out as most do, with onion, celery and carrot chopped up and sizzling in a pan.
Why do stews always start this way? You're softening up the cell membranes in the vegetables and releasing flavours to react with each other (pyrolysis of the sugars and all sorts of other things going on). But this holy trinity of stock vegetables turns a relatively bland idea into something fit for a king. If you want to save time, start them off with a little water and cook as hot as you dare until thats mostly driven off, and then add your oil for frying - you'll find you start getting caramelisation much faster that way.




While thats going on season the partridges with salt and pepper and dredge some flour over them. Just a little to brown and add colour. Just above the partridges there you'll also see a bouquet garni - or in other words a bunch of herbs tied together with string. I used parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme and bay. And then on to the mushrooms... This dish is absolutely divine if you use blewits, especially wood blewits, but you can hurl in whatever you have. I used a mix of wood blewits, field blewits, parasols, field mushrooms and I think there was a single yellow cracking bolete in there. 

If you have to buy mushrooms then you have my condolences. Chestnut or button mushrooms will do fine, but make sure you have enough to pretty much bury the partridges when they're in the pan. Chop them to a size that they're about eatable, and put them aside.

Now brown the partridges - scoop the veg out of the pan and put them aside, and heat the pan to smoking hot. Expect the partridges to leave some colour in the bottom of the pan - YOU WANT THIS TO HAPPEN, IT IS NOT BURNING. Brown them top and bottom, and see whether you've a stray glasses of wine or cider to de-glaze the pan with. 
Whats that, it looks like I burned the bottom of the pan? Yes, it does. That stuff is called flavour there - the browning there colours the sauce and gives you a rich flavour when you get it off in deglaze.

Now turn it down, put your stock veg back in and keep putting mushrooms in the pan until you can't see the partridges. Yes, really. And then add in enough stock to maybe go less than half way up the sides of the mushrooms, to not cover the partridges entirely. Yes, again, really. You're cooking the partridges in the mushroom juice in this dish, which gives them an amazing flavour and produces a sauce so rich and flavoursome you'll be amazed by it. 

This goes in the oven until its good and done. Cover it with a well fitting lid, give it half an hour at 180C, open it up and make sure that there's enough juice starting to flow. Turn the birds over, and then put it back in the oven for another half an hour at 180C. Then turn it down to 160C and forget about it. The meat is on the bone so it won't disintegrate, it'll just keep getting better and better. If you leave it in there an hour more it'll still be fine, but don't let it dry out. You should end up with the birds around half covered by the sauce. 

You've got a hot oven on when you're cooking this so use it all - I put baked spuds and roast pumpkin on at the same time to go with it, and also cooked another pan full of mushrooms at the same time for tomorrow. If you're heating that whole space, you might as well use it.

To serve, well, you can't go far wrong with a crisp, steamed brassica and whatever other vegetables you've baked or roasted. Put a generous scoop of mushroomy gravy on the plate alongside everything else.

This is an absolutely top dish to serve as an autumn-warmer or even for game loving dinner guests. If you find yourself with a few pigeons to eat, they're good cooked this way, as is rabbit, or even pheasants. If doing pheasant you might be well served to half them before cooking this way, and of course you'll want to joint your bunny. You can even cook chicken this way - its great with chicken legs. The important thing here is to cook the meat on the bone - you're giving it a long, slow cook, and you're not trying to make soup.

If you want to vary this dish a bit, garlic works. With pigeons adding a few crushed juniper berries is delicious. But don't feel restrained by any stew recipe - everything here is interchangeable. Just know your ingredients and cook what seems right.




Wednesday 7 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Partridge Baked in Pastry, Spiced Pumpkin

Wrapping a whole bird in pastry isn't new, but its something I think we should explore more. Whether its a short paste, puff paste or even a dumpling dough, this is something with a great and illustrious history - everything from batter puddings through to the decadent Cailles en Sarcophages of Babettes Feast, they're always exceptional dishes.



A while ago when we had a friend visiting with her kids I wanted to cook something that children would think 'wow thats amazing' but a parent might still get a kick out of, so I baked a whole chicken wrapped in pastry. Not a weekday dinner though, so today I did something rather more sensible. 

If you follow this blog you know I picked up a pile of partridges in Ely recently, and that I made extra pastry on Saturday

This evening I rolled out some pastry to, well, about the diameter of a small dinner plate, egged around the edges and put a partridge (seasoned with a few slivers of horse mushroom and some butter in it) in the middle before sealing it up. I did one bird each. Its a good idea to put them back in the fridge for a while to firm up the pastry before putting them into a hot oven.

Now while the oven was heating up I rubbed spices (coriander, cinnamon, paprika, salt and pepper) onto quarter of a pumpkin and put that into the oven. After that had 15 minutes or so, I put the partridges in. When they came out they looked something like this...


The pastry wrapped birds just needed a little rest, which is great because that gives lots of time to prepare everything else. While my other half washed some cauliflower and put it on to steam, I scraped the pumpkin out into the pan it was roasted in, added a little butter and lemon juice, and mashed it up. And thats it - a show-stopping dinner, and really easy. 

Monday 5 November 2018

Dinner Diary - PIE DAY!

Was going to be out at a friends monthly D&D game on Sunday which means making and taking some food. And for food on the go, nothing is really better than pie.


I'd say I'm not one to blow my own trumpet but thats a flat out lie. I make kick ass pastry, in a wide variety of recipes, but very often the simplest is best. One pastry, many pies, thats hard to beat. So this was a simple shortcrust - 400g of butter, 800g of flour, a half a teaspoon of salt, beaten with the K beater of a Kenwood chef until it was like breadcrumbs (or cut the butter up and rub it through your fingertips - won't take that long). Thats enough pastry for about four good sized (plate) pies, or, as I was planning, two pies with more pastry in the fridge for week ahead. Once you've got crumbs, keep adding cold water with one hand while working it with the other until you've got pastry. Take it out of the bowl onto a floured board, kneed for a few minutes, and then put it back in a bowl, put a teatowel over it, and put it in the fridge for an hour or two.

Resting your pastry helps so much - it'll work more easily and roll out better. After resting it, I buttered two plates (dinner plates with a good sized rim) rolled a glob of pastry out thin (a little over 1/8 of an inch) and cut it to size. Then its time to fill your pie.

I had a pack of pigeon breasts to used up, and a fridge full of wild mushrooms. So in go the breasts, then salt and pepper and the shrooms, then an egg wash on the outer edge and more pastry on top...



But what about blind baking? What about keeping the crust stiff? I'm glad you asked. Now get all that Bake Off bollocks out of your head, this is real food. Look, the shrooms there will shrink below the pastry, but not before the pastry has set when you put it into a hot-ish oven. So you're left with a lovely crisp top with a gorgeous pastry bottom thats set and firm underneath but soft where it meets the meat. Thats what happens when you butter use butter on the plate and butter in the pastry. 

Anyway, egg wash the top, crimp all round the side with a fork (savoury pies get a fork crimp) and importantly put a few fork holes in the top to let steam out, and you're ready to bake.

The other pie was apple - in go sliced cooking apples, a good hefty sprinkling of sugar and some cinnamon.

Tap it on the bench to sink the sugar and cinnamon in, and then top it as for the pigeon pie (egg round the edge, pastry, egg glaze) but crimp around it with your thumbs. This is a sweet pie, thats what you do. Thumb. Not fork crimp. And put a hole in the top for steam, and you'll get a good crust again.

Bung it in the oven at 200C for 10 minutes, then turn it down to 170C for about half an hour, maybe longer - until when you stick a skewer in its all hot through. And put it aside to cook - it will be delicious.

Pigeon and mushroom pie cooked this way gives a subtle mushroom flavour all through the pigeon, with a rich musoroomy layer on top. Look how the pastry is crisp and the innards of the pie moist and lovely.


And the apple pie is, well, an apple pie with lots of cinnamon. Its an all round champion of a pie, as apple pie always is.


Now this plate pie principle is pretty much universal. You can put in mince and onion (add a little splash of water and a teaspoon of flour), chicken and mushroom, or mince and potato, bacon and egg (literally chopped bacon and beaten egg, its great), sausage meat, quince and apple, blackberry and apple, quite literally nearly anything. Sliced veg and just a little white sauce is good. The basic principle of a thick plate pie is the simplest kind of baking you an imagine, and is pretty much always a winner. And its great game night food.



Saturday 3 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Pigeon Breast and Mixed Up Mash

Pigeon is the tastiest meat you can get. Its more or less perfect - rich, moist, low fat, easy to cook fast and serve red or you cook it slowly and it holds its form. And best of all, it is delicious and cheap. Stewing whole birds on the bone is great but, often, just using the breasts is better.



I had a whole pack of a dozen breasts from Radmore Farm Shop in Cambridge and I was making pigeon and wild mushroom pie for tomorrow (more of that to follow!), so I put four breasts aside for dinner.

Now, you can't just eat meat of course. So I sliced up pumpkin, potato and celeriac and put them into a dish in the microwave. While they were cooking I seasoned the pigeon breasts with lots of salt and pepper and cooked them in a hot frying pan with just a splash of oil, until they were good and browned on the outside and still red in the middle. While they were resting, that gave me time to add a splash of wine to the pan, a little cream, and the smallest dash of soy sauce (thats a secret, don't tell anyone) to make a sauce.

The pumpkin, celeriac and potato were mashed with lots of pepper and some butter, and the pigeon sliced and put on top with the sauce, and a big pile of cabbage to finish off the dish.

Wholesome and utterly delicious, I can't begin to describe how good pigeon is cooked this way. And yes, I'm going on, but pigeon is almost the perfect meat. Its cheap, delicious (shot as a pest for pities sake), low fat and more or less the most versatile meat there is. And with the mixed mash being rich, sweet and filling, this was the perfect dish for a cooler evening.

Thursday 1 November 2018

Dinner Diary - Ham and Pease Pudding Stottie

I knew we were going to have a couple of days when we'd be dashing out this week, but I had just the right thing in the freezer. The lads at Art of Meat, our local butcher thats well worth a visit, sold me some ham hocks a while ago. So I got one of them out, let it defrost, soaked it to get the excess salt out (put it in a tub, put water on, left it overnight) and then pressure cooked it (half covered it in water, heated the pressure cooker at full pressure for 40 minutes, and left it to cool). Its one of the cheapest cuts you can get and its thoroughly delicious. 


Even better is the stock. It will have set, so warm it up to melt it, take out the meat and put it aside, pour the stock off to cool. The fat will float up and be easy to remove when it sets again.

Now, the stottie. This is Geordie bread and its dead easy - make a simple white bread dough, let it rest once, roll it out thin-ish (like a bit under an inch), prick it all over with a fork and put to thumb marks in the middle. Then bake it in a hot oven for 14 minutes - and thats it. Don't prove the loaf once you've rolled it out. Its dense and tasty. I always reckon on getting two stotties from about the same amount of dough as you make for a loaf of bread.


Pease pudding is made from yellow split peas, the ham stock without fat, and one peeled onion. I'd give you quantities but I've no idea, its all done by eyeball, you'll have to google that. But it all goes into the pressure cooker, cooks on full for 20 minutes, then allow it to cool down until you can open it. Then blitz it up with a hand blender, and let it set. You've got Geordie pate, right there.


I can't tell you how much I love this stuff. Its rich, its salty, its smooth. And you can do a lot with it - straight into sandwiches, as a vegetable side dish with a dinner, or add some water and more veg and cook it into a thick pea soup. Its useful and tasty, its worth making a batch and keeping some in the freezer.

And then the combination... Split a stottie, smear pease pudding on one half, drop ham all over it, and make your sandwich. If you want, you can add some ketchup, chutney or brown sauce, they all work. Or if you're feeling especially decadant, a portion of chips. But whatever you put on it, after eating half a ham and pease pudding stottie you're not going to be hungry. 



Wednesday 31 October 2018

Dinner Diary - Wild Mushroom Bake

One of the things that differentiates how a forager cooks from how a chef does is the use of mushrooms. For us, its often the case that wild mushrooms aren't a luxury to be used in small volume for flavour or appearance, they're a bulk filler for other food.

How often have you seen some posh restaurant or television chef cook a mushroom dish and make sure all of the mushrooms are somehow visible? Its so often about display, about the expensive ingredient you're paying through the nose for, so you can see it and so those dining with you can see how much you're adding to the bill they're not looking forward to splitting with you. Its about display. But if you pick your own wild mushrooms you probably use them in much greater bulk, for flavour and texture. Yeah, I could have think slices of pretty mushroom on top of a dish - but who am I trying to impress? They're free, growing in a field. Why would anyone be impressed?

This dish really does exemplify the difference in attitude between a forager and a posh chef.


First, you've got to pick your mushrooms. This time I used horse, field and shaggy parasol mushrooms. I could pretend they were selected for the combination of almondy and mushroomy flavours and for the mix of soft and firmer textures, but I'd be lying.  I used them because I had a lot of them, I found a field full of mushrooms yesterday and the day before a patch under some trees covered with parasols. The trick to this dish is to cook the mushrooms first so they retain a better texture. Pack a pan load of mushrooms, drizzle some olive oil, salt and pepper on and put it in a hot oven for 20 minutes or so. While you're doing that wash and slice some potatoes, almost cover them in a pan with milk and simmer it. While thats happening the mushrooms should be ready to come out, they should have reduced in volume rather and they'll have a lovely smell and intensified flavour. 

Another optional step at this stage is to sautee some onion, carrot, celery and bacon in another pan ready to go into the sauce. You don't need this, but if you want to use the bacon as seasoning its a nice touch. Or if you want to keep the whole thing veggie leave out the bacon. I quite like this classic combination of stock vegetables. Somehow it makes this kind of dish more homely, more rounded. Less cheffy and more 'real' if that makes sense. Now, you've got your sauteed vegetables, pan of soft potatoes in milk, and your mushrooms. Its time to make your sauce. 
You all know how to make a white sauce, right? Take your musnrooms out of the skillet, put them aside. Put some butter in, melt it over a low heat and cook for just a minute or so before adding the milk you used for the spuds, slowly at first, stirring all the time to get rid of lumps. You can add some cream at this point if you really want it to be rich, but you don't need to. When the flour is cooked out, toss in a handfull of chopped parsley (if you have some) its time to assemble everything and put it in the oven.

Put a layer of about half of your spuds in the bottom of a casserole dish or big pan and season them. Put the sauteed veg (if you're including them) and mushrooms on top. Then put the rest of the spuds on, and pour the sauce on top. Now you can go and make your topping - drop a chunk of stale bread in the food processor or grate it, and make a bowl of breadcrumbs (always save some stale bread for crumbing). Put alternate layers of bread crumbs and grated cheese on top, with a final layer of cheese and a few knobs of butter at the end. You'll have something like this...


That goes into a hot oven for about 20 minutes, or until its crisp and browned. Dish it out piping hot with salad or whatever side vegetables you want, but I like something green with it.

This is another of those dishes thats more of a technique than a recipe. There's a thousand and one ways you can think of spuds, white sauce and a breadcrumb topping - you could put ham or chicken in it, you could have a layer of broccoli in the middle instead of mushrooms and cook it with a cheese sauce instead of a white one. Bluntly if its spuds, white sauce and cheesy breadcrumbs with something else in it, its likely to be delicious. But this is a really good way of using mushrooms, they're kind of meaty and intense in this dish, and you can really mix things up by using different kinds of mushroom. 

And best of all? This is cheap, substantial and filling. You won't be leaving the dinner table hungry. Enjoy.

Tuesday 30 October 2018

Dinner Diary - The Inevitable Rabbit and Pumpkin Mulligatawny

So on Sunday things got weird when I roasted a whole pumpkin with a rabbit curry in it. That was absolutely delicious but rather more food that you need for one meal, so on Monday the remains were stripped off into a pan to make soup. It made a really nice and basically almost free dinner for a week day.



So the rabbit stripped from the bones, the curry sauce with mushrooms, nuts, raisins and everything else tipped in, and the pumpkin skinned (the skin comes off easily after baking) and crudely crushed in the hand and tipped into a stock pot. 



All you need to do then is add some stock (I cheated and used a chicken stock cube), some more spice (whatever you want - I added some ground coriander and some garam masala mix), boil it for a while, check the seasoning (I needed to add a little more salt and some lemon juice) and thats it. A fast, easy and ridiculously substantial week-day dinner. Is it a real mulligatawny? I have no idea, the original version of the dish is, I'm sure, delicious, but its something that has become so Anglicised and adapted over almost two centuries that it kind of doesn't matter. I do know that whenever you end up with too much curry, if it was good to begin with, you can probably turn it into a soup the next day.

Dinner Diary - Hot and Sour Dogfish Soup

I had a chat with the fishmonger in Ely on Saturday when I saw this. He said it was huss, until I gave him an inquisitive look. Then he said it was rock salmon. So I asked if he really meant spotted dogfish, and he smiled and said yes. Then he sold it to me good and cheap.


Huss is way too rare to eat. Its a beautiful little shark, and quite delicious but it gives birth to live young and doesn't breed fast at all. So don't eat it. Spotted dogfish are smaller and plentiful - and every bit as tasty. But it really does need to be very fresh - give it a sniff and make sure there's not the slightest whiff of anything resembling ammonia. 

You've got a few bits of cartilage sticking in to the meat but really just the one bit to cut out down the middle - other than that its meaty and boneless.

I selected this because I had a pan of fish stock to use up, the remnants of a gurnard were in the pressure cooker, cooked in water at high pressure to make the stock sterile but still, it needed using up. Into the strained stock went spring onions, soy sauce, thai seven spice mix (inauthentic I know but trust me) lime juice and zest, rice wine, red chili and lots of grated ginger, a splash of rice vinegar, and that was boiled while I cut up the dogfish. I also put a pile of wild mushrooms into the soup because, well, its autumn and I've got a lot of mushrooms to use. While that was cooking I also put some noodles on to cook.

The fish (sliced thin) went into some beaten egg and into a hot pan. Once browned on both sides its basically done. The rest of the egg, I pitched into the soup and stirred in.



And then its simple - noodles go into a bowl, then the soup, and then some dogfish pieces on top, and you're done. 


The principle of this kind of soup is really simple and you can make a whole family of dishes like it, either for a lunch or dinner. As long as you've got some decent stock, you've got the basis of a great soup. And with the nights drawing in, I do like something good and spicy like this.

Sunday 28 October 2018

Dinner Diary - Curried Rabbit Baked in a Pumpkin

Yeah, this is about to get weird...




Rabbit is one of the great under-used meats. Its plentiful, and killed as a pest species to protect vegetable crops all over the UK. Its low in fat, high in protein, and its ridiculously delicious. In some cities (I'm looking at you, Cambridge) its peculiarly expensive, but in others (yaay for Ely!) its very cheap. This one was one of two I got for a fiver, and from the looks of him its an older male. A few years ago you used to see rows of rabbits hanging in front of game butchers in the better market places in British cities, but thats a thing of the past now. The advantage of that was you could pick out your bunny for the purpose you had in mind. Gamey old buck for a stew, younger doe for frying or roasting. These days its a bit more pot-luck, but a trained nose will usually find the right bunny.


I often cook rabbit by making up a curry paste, rubbing it inside and out, and marinading it overnight before stuffing it with nuts and raisins, wrapping it tight, and baking that slowly. I thought I'd try something different this time, so I made up a curry paste by dropping everything (onions, lemon juice and zest, chili, ginger, garlic, some oil and lots of spices - coriander, cumin, cinnamon, turmeric, fennel, clove, pepper, salt, mace, cayenne) into a food processor before rubbing it all over the (jointed) rabbit. I left that to marinade all day.

Later on in the afternoon I cut open the pumpkin (and yes, this is a Haloween pumpkin, they're quite delicious!) in the garden and scooped its guts (fibres and seeds) out to throw to my hens, who love them. Then I filled it up with the rabbit (with the marinade still all over it), handfulls of nuts and raisins, some more spice (garam masala), curry leaves, lots of salt (because pumpkin eats salt), some coconut milk to go about half way up, more lemon juice, and to top it off some mushrooms (I used wild parasol mushrooms, because thats what I had). 

Then the lid went on and I roasted the whole thing at about 170C for three hours or so, until it was done, and then left it in a warm (100C) oven until we were hungry. And it was, I must say, spectacular.



So we had a couple of bits of rabbit each and and a scoop of mushroomy, coconuty curry sauce with fruit and nuts in it, with rice and a nice big slice of the pumpkin. 

I don't as a rule cost my dinners, because if you're cooking from scratch its never expensive. A pumkin costs you a quid at the supermarkets, the rabbit was £2.50, the mushrooms were wild so they're free, the fruit and nuts? I dunno, but less than a quid. And a few spices and dried coconut milk? Not 50p. I'll turn the remnants into a curry soup for tomorrow night, so its going to be at least four portions, for about four quid. 



So if you want an absolute  show-stopper of a dinner, I really would recommend this.