May 02 2008

Summery Supper

Published by helen at 1:20 pm under Holiday Snaps, Quick Quick Slow, Speedy Gonzales

Sunday proved to be the first hot day of the year. As such an informal and laid-back dinner was called for.

  • Halloumi Bites (this time with pictures!)
  • Mexican Scrambled Eggs
  • Irish Cream Tiramisu

The sharp-eyed and keen-witted amongst my readers will recall that we did, in fact, make the halloumi bits right back at the beginning of the challenge; the first ‘friends for dinner evening’. However, at the time we forgot to take any piccies, and seeing as we’d both enjoyed it so much felt quite prepared to cook it again ‘in the interests of completeness’.

This time it was made with bona fide garlic oil, as opposed to just some garlic fried in oil. Presumably this added to the flavours; I think if anything it masked the lime juice and over all this was a little on the greasy side, compared to last time. Perhaps I am just remembering wrongly, of course.

Halloumi bites

The mexican scrambled eggs were chosen specifically for being a bit of an easy-going sort of dish. Of our guests, Le C we basically just know through blogging (although curiously she is one of my best friends’ best friends!) and we don’t know her boyfriend at all. So Dougal felt an informal tea was called for; no need to get the good china out! On the other hand it was a bit of a gamble; whilst we’d asked them if there was anything they didn’t eat, Dougal and I agreed later that someone could really hate scrambled eggs but never think to mention it if asked!

Between the halloumi and the eggs, this was a ‘make lots of little bowls up in advance and then fry with guests in the kitchen’ sort of meal. Added nicely to the relaxed vibe. For all I talk about liking having folk in the kitchen whilst I cook its not actually something I often do.

Scrambled egg filling, ready to go. Marinade for the cheese Tortilla Strips

Generally the eggs were pretty good. My mum makes awesome curried scrambled eggs, with tomato and spices in it and coriander on it; these eggs were pretty similar but without the curry and with the curious addition of fried strips of tortilla. I’m not sure if these oughtn’t have been a bit crisper- the oil wasn’t really hot enough when we fried them, bloody electric cooker- which might have made them a bit more obvious. As it was they added a bit of structure but I’m sure the dish wouldn’t have been weakened in their absence! As suggested in the pre-recipe blurb (but not as an actual recipe) we made a meal of the eggs by serving frigoles refritos with them. We’d neither of us made really-fried beans before (I’d only ever had them out of a can before) but we can report that made with tinned borlotti beans (soak overnight?…hah!) they are quick to make and most hearty and satisfying.

Mexican Scrambled Eggs with Frijoles Refritos

Pudding was chosen specifically for Le C, as the dish that pretty much got her through fourth year of her Part One in Architecture. She used to blog about it on regular occasion. I’d forgotten, but D had spotted the recipe in the book and said we have to make that for Le C. Whilst it tasted absolutely delicious and had the decency to serve beautifully and not fall apart on application of a spoon, as previously noted the proportions in the recipe seemed all wrong. We are currently eating our way through the remaining sponge fingers (very nice they are too) and you saw what happened to the coffee and baileys! Thing is, it’s not just that there was too much, as we ran out of mascarpone at about the point we would have expected. We probably could have soaked the sponge fingers a little more too, but not enough to use all that coffee mixture up!

The allotted measure of boudoir fingers Espresso and Marscapone mix 'Folding' mascarpone into egg yolks. Into the Fridge

Either way, it worked out very well, and was also most acceptable the following day when we invited HarveyNick over to help us polish off the leftovers.

Archeological Layers

5 Responses to “Summery Supper”

  1. Tazjaon 05 May 2008 at 9:23 pm

    That Tiramisu looks heavenly. And here I am, fancying chocolate. Mmmm, chocolate.

  2. Mikeachimon 06 May 2008 at 12:21 am

    Please note that every time I read the word “halloumi” I remember how good halloumi is, and I immediately have to rush out and buy a block, slice it and grill it, and then eat it with a drip of tangy olive oil on each slice. So please don’t mention halloumi very often.

    Writing this comment has taken 3 hours, because I made the mistake of reading it for typos. And I read the word ‘halloumi’ 3 times and acted accordingly.

    It’s now an hour later. That’s *4* times.

    ……

    I’m wondering if halloumi (edit: ***5*** times) is good chopped up and put in scrambled eggs, like other cheeses are good in them. I mean, when it’s cooked it goes tougher than normal and it less prone to melting. Plus the taste is a bit salted-chickeny. Hmmm.

    I may experiment.

    After I’ve digested the 3 kilos of hal…of that cheese that I ate this evening.

  3. lizzieon 06 May 2008 at 10:58 pm

    thanks for the curried scrambled egg compliment xxxx

  4. Mikeachimon 14 May 2008 at 11:25 pm

    I keep coming back and reading about the halloumi, and then buying some and eating it.

    You’re going to kill me.

    I’m going to be self-cheesed to death.

  5. helenon 14 May 2008 at 11:30 pm

    It’s okay. You can read about sesame noodles now (I could honestly eat my weight in them. Actually maybe not, 70kg of noodles would be a bit alarming) and maybe tomorrow you’ll be able to read about chilli…..mmmmm, chilli…

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