Tuesday 27 September 2011

A pie for my love

Gareth loves a pie. He welcomes a pie from the oven like a lover in a new dress - a little whistle, a side look of lust. I never trust my ability to make pastry; sometimes my pies look more like an ill-fitting op-shop frock than designer threads, but none the less, my husband still pays his compliments for the effort sincerely made.

But! This time it really, really worked and she was so beautiful I had to take a photo of her.



Gareth bought me the Rick Stein's Spain cookbook as an anniversary gift (the gift that gives back) and so I made an empanada last week. My connection to Spanish cooking is long and impassioned - from the volatile year I spent working in the kitchen of the restaurant owned by my Spanish boyfriend with his mother - to my time cooking with the lovely Diana at her gorgeous tapas restaurant in Melbourne, De Los Santos.

Both experiences brought out what I called my inner mamma. I felt that the food of Spain required in the cooking a kind of inherent spirit, a Latin passion that guided your hands in the measuring and cutting and theatre of the kitchen. In these two all-female kitchens, we talked about love, we cried about the past, we sang to the radio, we sweated and cursed and laughed and worked our arses off. I loved it. I loved the food, which was a revelation of flavours to me, my experience so far being mostly of Italian and South-East Asian flavours. I was astounded at the mix of roasted squash with cumin, of squid with orange, of thick creamy butter beans with slow-cooked rabbit. I made potato tortilla everyday at  De Los Santos and could never resist eating a wedge warm with a slice of our home made bread.

So, anyway, perhaps it's no surprise that my empanada worked (and was admired and devoured by Gareth) - here's the recipe:

Empanada of tuna with tomatoes, peppers and pimenton
(Adapted from Rick Stein's Spain)


310g plain flour
3/4 tsp fast-action dried yeast
1/2 smoked paprika
125ml warm water
60ml olive oil
1 good egg, beaten to glaze
salt

For the filling:


3 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion chopped
2 garlic cloves crushed
1 red pepper seeded and chopped
1 tsp smoked paprika
1 400g can chopped tomato
250g best-quality tinned tuna in olive oil (I use Italian tuna, not the horrible grey mush from most supermarket brands)
A handful of green olives
Pepper

Method:

Make your dough by sifting the flour, yeast and paprika into a large mixing bowl, make a well in the centre.
Dissolve the yeast in the water and add to the dry ingredients untill a dough is formed.
Knead on a floured surface for 5 minutes until smooth.
Return to a clean bowl, cover and leave somewhere warm for 1 hour to rise.
For the filling, fry the onion, garlic, red pepper and pimento on a low heat for a long time (15 mins) until soft and sweet but not burnt.
Add the tomatoes and cook gently for a further 25 mins until the sauce is thick, not watery.
Add the tuna and olives to the sauce and turn off, allowing to cool slightly.
Preheat the oven to 200 degrees celsius.
Grease a baking tray (I used a flan tin) with some butter.
Bring out the dough and cut the ball in two - one piece slightly larger than the other.
Roll out the larger piece to fit your tray, and place in tray leaving about 1cm overhanging.
Spoon the sauce into the tin and sprinkle over the remaining olive oil.
Roll the second piece of dough out and brush the edges of the pastry in the tin with the egg before laying the lid on.
Pierce the top with a fork and brush with egg.
Bake for 30 mins or until golden.
Serve with love!

Wednesday 21 September 2011

Sexy Spanish mushy peas and urban kitchen wonders



The end of summer and rain in England.

A recent holiday back home to Australia ( http://www.takethefamily.com/features/long-haul-family-holidays-byron-bay-australia )  left us cashless and marooned in Manchester for the long six weeks of school holidays. One week - bare shoulders, properly warm and jubilant - I bought a paddling pool for the kids. It was the last day of sun. All the next week it rained and the grey blanket of sky wrapped us in a dreary embrace.

So I watched Rick Stein's Spain and yearned for the Mediterranean. The reliable heat: hot and hotter hours of long days. Finding that groove of holiday where everything tastes better and the light illuminates in a more flattering manner. I seem to cook better and look better in the Med. A stall of sunrich tomatoes and courgettes is enough to inspire a meal. I dress more simply - like my cooking, I need less faffing. It takes a week, but by week two, my husband Gareth and I  imagine ourselves to be kindred locals.

A local served up a great dish of broadbeans with mint and ham to Rick that got me cooking. Broadbeans have just come out of season, so use frozen if there is none to be found, just take their skins off after defrosting in some cold water. To keep things seasonal, I don't see why you can't use runner beans or french beans cut into 2cm lengths. I altered the recipe from the Spanish meat-medley - it had hock and black pudding - which I replaced with panchetta cubes as I never like to mix meats in one day let alone one dish. He used fresh garlic and included the green top part of the bulb - I found fresh garlic at the organic grocer - it's subtly different in flavour but has a really different texture, the cloves covered in a moist skin.
It was the technique of  cooking the beans down in stock with mint that I was curious to try. It was amazing, like sexy mushy peas all silky and minty and we mopped it up with toasted sourdough drizzled with some extra virgin olive oil.

Broadbeans with panchetta and mint
(Serves 2 for a rustic dinner)

2 tbs olive oil
150g panchetta cubes
2 white salad onions roughly chopped
3 big cloves of garlic chopped
2 cups of podded, skinned, fresh broadbeans (blanch the fresh beans for a few minutes then peel off the outer skin)
2 generous sprigs of mint
2-3 cups of veg or chicken stock
sea salt and  black pepper

Method:

In a heavy-bottomed fry pan fry the panchetta on a medium heat in oil till golden, then add the onion and cook till softened before adding the garlic.
When the garlic has released it's scent and softened but not browned add the broadbeans and stir to coat with the flavours of the oil.
Pour in the veg or chicken stock, add the mint and season (be careful with the salt as panchetta and stock can be very salty already). Turn the heat to high and let bubble for a minute before turning the heat to the lowest temperature and putting on a tight fitting lid (or covering with foil).
Let cook for about 20 minutes unitill the broadbeands are really soft and almost collapsing. Serve hot on toasted sourdough brushed or drizzled with oil and a crispy salad and/or fried potatoes.

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I am amazed at how much food is growing in Manchester. It's like being pregnant and suddenly so is every other woman - once I saw one tree groaning with apples in a neighbours garden - I began to see fruit and food growing everywhere. Rosemary, apples, pears, wild mushrooms sprouting in moist parks, cabbages in council planters, green tomatoes destined for chutney.

Gareth and the kids love scrambling around the garden of the abandoned house next door to us. They usually come back screaming from bramble pricks or ant bites or nettle stings, but last week they came bearing a bucket of mottled skinned pears. River, our four year old boy, ate them peeled and cut up, one after another; loving them perhaps in that way that eating something you have grown or picked or even just seen growing makes the experience richer, better, fascinating - so removed from the source are we normally.



Eventually, he tired of pears and so I decided to make a cake. It's an Italian recipe and can be used with plums too. Speaking of plums, I MADE JAM!

In my effort to be more like Jane, I used the bag of damsons we picked from her tree at Rushall House and made my first ever jam. It was easy: cook the plums, strain the flesh from the stones, add equal quantities of sugar to fruit and cook again with some lemon zest till it's thick enough to resist sliding down a plate...nice.






Italian pear cake

About 5 pears peeled and quartered
150g melted butter plus some for greasing
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla essence
150g castor sugar
250g plain flour sifted
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 cup milk

Method:

Heat oven to 180 degrees Celsius.
Grease a springfoam cake tin with butter.
Put eggs, vanilla and sugar in a bowl and whip until voluminous, pale and fluffy, pour in melted butter and fold in.
Add flour and baking powder and mix gently with a wooden spoon to incorporate.
Put half the pears on the bottom of the tin, scrape cake mix over them, top with remaining pears.
Bake for about 1 hour or until golden and set.
Serve with pouring cream.



Monday 12 September 2011

Aunty Vicki's first food memory



When I first moved to Melbourne from Sydney, 23 and reeling from a dramatic relationship break-up, it was Aunty Vicki who met me at the train station and wrapped me in her navy-coat warmth, smelling like Chanel, smelling like safety. She drove from Flinder's Street through South Melbourne and down the wide plane-tree lined boulevades to St Kilda. I remember her plum-red lipstick, the fat toast we shared in a graffiti-walled cafe, and that the sky was low and grey. Palm tree leaves whipped about in the salty air and yet there was no waves on the bay - the silver water seemed eeriely still, like a dream. I was used to the crash of white spray on cliff, azure blue above me and a glaring horizon. Here the horizon was contained by the bay's edges and I felt suffocated, compressed by the landscape and grief.

Vicki knows the power of food to heal and connect. She used food to draw me in to her heart and to inspire in me a love of Melbourne.  She took me to Acland Street for European cakes, Chinta Ria for laksa, Brunswick Street for coffee, Marios for pasta, her local Turkish takeaway for carrot dip and fresh pide and over time I did grow to love Melbourne despite my heartache and it's uncanny reflection in the heavy, melancholic skies.

I moved in to a share house with an ensemble cast of writers, herbalists and performers. About once a week I would go to Vicki's for dinner, opening her pantry, then fridge on my arrival. The sight of her neat jars of herbs, expensive olive oils and stocks of pasta was soothing, like a safety net beneath the whizzing trapeze of my life.

Vicki is famous for many dishes - her individual chicken pies, Vietnamese coleslaw, spicy tomato pasta with crispy salami, her myriad of ways to cook the fresh fish Uncle Roger brings home from the Victoria Market on Fridays -  but when you say "Vicki's famous..." it is usually followed by "plum tart".

She told me the story behind her famous plum tart while we pitted persham yellows from Jane's tree that lovely weekend at the end of August, that now feels like it belonged to a different life, as I sit here in my terraced house in South Manchester on a blustery September morning.

Plum Tart

A little girl called Marion lived across the road from us and used to play with us in the afternoons. Mum had a plum tree but didn't know what to do with all the plums (she was never much of a cook) and so she would give them to Marion's mum Claire. 
Claire was a holocaust survivor from Germany; she made this tart from the plums and would give it to mum as thanks - after the war the whole street would swap fruit and veg.
I loved this tart, it is my first real food memory, my first taste of European cooking, but I never got the recipe off her.
25 years later I was on the North Balwyn tram when I spotted her, Claire. She remembered me and, even though I had only three stops to go, I went to the end of the line with her and got this recipe. I have been cooking it ever since.

200g unsalted butter
6 tblsp castor sugar
2 egg yolks
3 tablespoon plain flour
1 tablespoon self-raising flour
1 kg plums - a dry variety
3 tablespoons golden castor sugar

Method:

Heat the oven to 180 degrees Celsius.
Cream  the butter and the 6 tablespoons of castor sugar in a food processor.
Add the eggs, incorporate, then add the flours in the proportion of 3 plain  to 1 self raising untill the mixture balls but remains glossy and moist.
When I saw Vicki make this pastry, she ended up using 9 tablespoons of plain flour and 3 self-raising.
Put the ball of pastry straight into a 20cm flan tin and spread out with your fingers to the edges, making it as even as possible.
Chill in the fridge while you pit and quarter the plums.
Place the plums on the pastry in a neat spiral, starting at the outer edges of the tin.
Sprinkle with golden castor sugar.
Bake at 180 for approx. 50 mins or untill the pastry is golden and set - check at the edges.









Tuesday 6 September 2011

Rushall House - the last hurrah of summer




 





My Aunt Vicki and Uncle Roger are over from Australia. We all converge for a long weekend at the end of summer at their friends Jane and Martin's house in country Norfolk. We love Rushall House. It's huge and elegant and like nothing we ever knew in Australia - stately with rambling gardens of roses and fruit trees - properly posh but in that easy way that's more bohemian and welcoming than austere and stand-offish.
A life-time spent living in urban landscapes makes me a gawping tourist to Jane's world. She breeds chickens and makes jam from her fruit trees. She grows all kinds of vegetables and collects French antiques that she restores, refurbishes and sells from a converted outhouse shop called Vintage Vanilla. She also runs the house as an occasional B&B when she's not already full of extended family or friends from London, all converging in the aga-warmed kitchen drinking wine and eating meandering meals of home-grown produce.

Gareth, the children and I spend an hour picking raspberries one afternoon, carefully selecting the deep crimson ones from the iridescent reds that are not yet ripe. They drop from their stems with the slightest of tugs; cradled in an open palm, they feel like precious jewels, sensuous and fragrant, leaking red juices like blood. Redcurrants on neighbouring bushes are as soft as tears; such delicacy required to pick them. After dinner that evening we devoured the berries with slices of nectarine and splashed with amaretto - it was an inspired combination.

Jane has basil growing in great abundance and already has jars and jars of pesto in her fridge from this year's crop. The secret to good basil is a warm summer she says, start the seeds indoors then lots of sun and only harvest them when the leaves are dry - not in the morning when the dew is still on them. She also makes a pesto from parsley and walnuts that she smears on grilled fish or serves with angel hair pasta

On the holiday Monday we have a lunch of mugs of courgette, potato and spinach soup, radicchio and avocado salad, chicken liver pate, preserved artichokes and olive tapenade with warmed pittas. Virtually everything had come from the garden, including the onions for the soup that Jane harvests each summer and stores in string sacks in the light of the greenhouse - onions grow again in the dark. One year's harvests lasts stored like this and serves them for another whole year.

Jane made a delicious damson cheese spiced with allspice she served after dinner one night with various cheeses and biscuits. She also makes damson icecream and jam.
One day I will be more like Jane.


Damson Cheese


2.75kg damsons
300 ml water
2 teaspoons ground allspice
sugar


Method:

Wash the damsons and place them in a preserving pan with the water. Cover the pan and simmer gently until the fruit is tender.
Sieve the fruit to form a puree then measure it.
Allow 450g of sugar to each 450g of pulp.
Return the pulp and the sugar to the pan and cook, stirring all the time until it is very thick.
Bottle in sterilised jars, cover and label. Will yield about 2.75kg.
(Other suitable fruits are blackcurrants, gooseberries and quinces.)
Serve with cheeses or cold meats.