Archive for the 'On The Run' Category

Feb 26 2008

Will It Blend?

Published by helen under On The Run

It might have blended, had we had a proper blender.

  • Pea and Pesto Soup

Last week, Dougal’s Mum and Dad announced that they wanted to take us out for lunch. However, that same evening we were due to go for a pre-theatre dinner for my Dad’s birthday, and so in order to limit the scale of our repast, we invited them over for lunch Chez Us.

We were both keen to use the opportunity to cook something from the lunches chapter. Dougal proposed the Pea and Pesto Soup, and whilst I’d been harbouring fantasies of sending him off to work with a flaskful of steaming soup, the lack of thermos and the fact that I leave considerably after D meant I had to concede we were as well to just cook the recipe.

I dunno whether Nigella hand peels her peas before cooking, or whether ‘proper’ blenders really are different to food processors (we even used the liquid blending attachment this time!). Either way, this is the second blended soup we’ve made that has rather failed to cut the mustard. It was a bit thin- some stock wouldn’t have gone amiss- and the pesto was too distant a flavour. I was rather sad to have given this to D’s Mum and Dad, particularly when they could have had the delights of the Chowder from the other night. Such is life, I suppose.

Cooking up the peas Action shot! Hubble bubble.... Please sir, I want some more!

5 responses so far

Feb 17 2008

A flop

Published by helen under On The Run

Well it had to happen at some point. A Nigella recipe that did not work.

  • Hokey Pokey

I have a friend, from whom I borrowed a jumper to get home on a cold night. In December. I felt I owed her a little something to say sorry for hoarding her jumper for such a long time, so, in addition to inviting her and her fella for dinner, I decided to make her some Hokey Pokey as Nigella describes it as being good as a gift.

The instructions for this Cinder Toffee/Honeycomb creation were pretty short (in fact, in true express style, I made the stuff whilst simultaneously emptying the dishwasher and making my breakfast) and I wonder whether I could have done with a bit of micro-managment and hand-holding.

The end result was a rather flat slab of very chewy, not very bubbly, toffee-like stuff. Jaw breaking. I suspect that I did not fully appreciate the importance of one use of the word immediately and over whipped the mixture- removing all air. Either way it’s been quite nice to chew on, but wouldn’t have been much use as a gift. I may try it again at some time. Perhaps using a smaller pan and slightly warmer golden syrup to start with.

Making hokey pokey The pan Setting on greased foil

No responses yet

Jan 06 2008

New Year’s Day: A low-key nibble feast

  • Roquamole
  • Red-leaf, Fig and Serrano ham salad
  • Spanish omelette

New Year’s Day saw me inadvertently begin The Challenge (Mike didn’t lay out the details until the 3rd) when, on Hogmanay, I had a Nigella-like moment and ‘discovered’ I had people coming to supper.

The situation was thus: my mum had mentioned her and my dad popping in on the first, and us all going for a walk up the Union Canal before taking in a movie and perhaps food at Chop Chop, our nearest (and best in Edinburgh) Chinese Restaurant. However, whilst I was at work on the 31st, a flurry of emails revealed that Chop Chop was to be closed on the 1st. I gaily offered to ‘do food’.

Theoretically, whipping up some sort of light bites for my family, particularly when any empty stomachs could be filled with ice cream at the cinema afterwards, was not a demanding undertaking. But I was heading into the beginning of a rubbish cold, and Waitrose was heaving as I made my way round at 3pm. Heaving, but pretty light on stock. I felt bewildered and overwhelmed by ingredients and recipes and possibilities; I’d not made any plans for what precisely to cook and as such didn’t really know what I was doing. However, I had read through some of Nigella Express by this stage and so I had an idea of what to make, grabbing ripe avocados and manchego cheese (eek it was expensive) and soft goat’s cheese. I had a vague notion of doing some salads and some dippy-crisps thing.

The roqualmole was an almost resounding success. Dougal made it up, rather than me, but I think it was fairly straightforward to create. We let the side down slightly by not having any of those sliced jalapeno chillis to put through it and give it oomph, but nevertheless the ingredients were good and the result was flavoursome. My family ate it with gusto, my brother announcing that it was really good, ‘like guacamole but not quite’… unfortunately the very moment I revealed that its secret ingredient was blue cheese, he magically lost his taste for it. Even at 21 he can be a total child sometimes. Sadly we couldn’t manage blue tortilla chips (we barely managed real tortilla chips, but I was resolute that I would not have it with doritos!) even though I have eaten them in Scotland before so they must be available somewhere in Edinburgh.

The serrano ham salad was something I’d known I wanted to make when I walked into the supermarket, and as such I’d shopped specifically for the ingredients I needed. Sadly, I was let down by the lack of deliveries/frenetic panic buying of the other shoppers, because try as I might I could not get any reddSerrano and Manchego salad.JPGer than average salad leaves. In fact, in Waitrose I couldn’t get any salad leaves at all and had to buy them in Somerfield when I got back to the flat. I didn’t include any figs in my salad because I’ve only knowingly eaten fresh figs once in my life and wouldn’t know where to start when buying the things. Also, we didn’t have any sherry vinegar, so I used a mixture of cooking sherry and white wine vinegar. Whether this was to the detriment of the dish I doubt I’ll ever know, as I’m not sure there is really room in my life (or my condiments cupboard) for sherry vinegar. Lastly; I think Nigella must have a sharper potato peeler than I do because I found that only 1/2 of my manchego slices had an artistry to them. The others had chunks at one end. I enjoyed this salad (cheese AND ham in the one dish, hurrah!) but I think I’d better make it again, for so as not to be accused to failing to take the challenge seriously enough. And also because I’d like to eat it again.

The spanish omelette was a last minute addition to the menu and suffered a little a lack of planned shopping. We had no caramelised peppers in the house and so I made a hopeful New Year’s Day trip to the corner shop at the end of our road. It has always seemed quite big; however I discovered that in fact most of their stock is alcohol and dogfood. Further to that you can buy anything as long as it is in a tin or pickled. (Except for jalapenos!). So the spanish omelette was in fact made fairly traditionally in that there were no caramelised peppers in it. However, despite misgivings, I used only the weight of new potatoes the recipe called for, and used them halved (as directed) rather than sliced any smaller. I felt that there was rather too much space between the potato, that the omelette lacked structural integrity. One certainly wouldn’t have sliced a wedge off and taken it in one’s lunchbox, for it would only have fallen apart. Perhaps it would have been better with slices of potato, or perhaps it merely needed the addition of the magic 75g of peppers to bulk it out. Either way I was a bit disappointed by this one; I’d have made an equally good, if not better, spanish omelette without taking her advice on the matter.

Sadly I don’t have proper photos of the above, as we didn’t start out photo taking in earnest until the challenge had been laid down. However we made the same salad a couple of days later (although in a bowl rather than artily on a plate) so you get that picture.

The finishing touch to our little New Year’s Day supper was a tray of Neapolitan cakey things I’d picked up from the Italian cafe across the road. Perhaps now my dad will be convinced to come and take me out for coffee! Pastry filled with sweetened ricotta and cream and crystallised fruit… brilliant, and suitably decadent for a festive occasion.

One response so far

« Prev