Archive for the ‘On the Menu at Home - Recipes’ Category

Italian Comfort Food: Easy Tomato Soup

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Over the Easter weekend I ducked up to Auckland to see The Winter’s Tale, one of the plays being staged by the Bridge Project currently touring the world. With time to spare beforehand I ended up in Borders, and it must be said, the Auckland branch of this bookselling juggernaut has the most bewildering layout. I found myself going round and round in circles trying to get out of the childrens’ section – which I have no idea how I got into anyway – and into the open air.

Serendipitously though, quietly tucked behind the childrens’ section was a veritable goldmine of sale-priced cookbooks. It was here that I found, for $10, Italian Comfort Food by the Scotto family, who run Fresco by Scotto in New York. I normally avoid American cookbooks as the measurements and different names for ingredients are annoying to get my head around. Like measuring butter in sticks and cups. Also not many have appealed to me (apart from the delicious Barefoot Contessa). But this book is gorgeous – a complete bargain at such a price. I’ve already made several recipes from it, including this amazing soup…

Papa Pomodoro

This is a simple but hearty tomato soup, perfect for the increasingly bitter weather we are experiencing lately.

  • olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • 1 leek, finely diced
  • 2x 400g can crushed tomatoes
  • 750mls good chicken or vegetable stock
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1/2 a loaf stale, good bread, diced small
  • handful fresh basil

In a good sized pot, saute the garlic in the olive oil for 2 minutes. Add the leeks and continue to saute till the mixture is soft. Add the tomatoes and their juice. If you feel like you have particularly bland canned tomatoes you may want to add a spoon or two of tomato paste to oomph up the flavour. Add the stock and simmer for 30 minutes, or until you see the soup start to thicken a little.

At the honey, bread, and chopped basil. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Let the soup rest for half an hour before serving. This is important for the texture and to allow the flavours to develop. Quickly reheat and serve.

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It’s easy, cheap, healthy comfort food, the sort of thing the Italians do so well and which we could do well to learn from!

Laura Vincent

Come visit me at my stupedous blog Hungry and Frozen for more food-related hijinks…

Simple Indian Thali

Thursday, April 16th, 2009
Triangular Chapathi with Mixed Vegetable Paneer

Triangular Paratha with Mixed Vegetable Paneer

Triangular Paratha

Ingredients:

2 cups Atta flour
2 tbsp Rice bran oil
1 tsp salt

Extra:

Oil
Plain flour

Proceed:

Add flour, salt and oil to proceesor bowl, pulse it first and then add water (normal temperature) slowly until it forms into soft dough consistency (for me it takes approximately 3/4 th cup or bit more), turn this on a cleaned bench top and knead it soft for few mins, keep this in a bowl and cover for 30 mins.

Take lemon size balls out of the dough and roll into soft balls. Flatten each ball and dust with a little flour, then roll out to a 15 cm/6 in round, dusting with flour as necessary. Brush with oil, fold in half and brush with oil again. Fold to form a triangle, dust with flour and roll out to a 15 cm/ 6 in triangle.Brush with oil.

Heat a large cast – iron frying pan over a medium heat. Add a little oil, then cook 1 paratha at a time for 1 min or until air bubbles start to form. Turn and cook other side until golden.

Mixed Vegetable Paneer

Mixed Vegetable Paneer

Mixed Vegetable Paneer

Ingredients:

Mixed veges – 200 g (frozen pack (carrot, peas and corn), defrosted)
Paneer – 200 g ( chopped into bite size pieces and fried in a tbsp butter until golden on both sides)
Rice bran oil – 2 tbsp
Jalapeno – 1 small (sliced thinly)
Onion – 1/2 large (chopped finely)
Ginger and Garlic paste – 1/2 tsp (use fresh)
Chilli powder – 1 tsp
Turmeric – 1/2 tsp
Kitchen King Masala – 3 tsp (I used everest brand or which ever)
Whole tomatoes – 3 no. (small, chopped)
Coriander leaves – handful (chopped finely)
Water – 250 ml cup

Proceed:

Heat oil in a deep nonstick Kadai on medium-low heat. Once heated add jalapeno, fry for few secs (keep it cover). Add onions and fry until light brown.

Add gg paste and fry until golden color. Add turmeric, chilli powder and kitchen king masala and mix. Immediately add tomatoes and cook until 3/4 th cooked. To that add water and mixed veges, bring it to boil, keep covered and simmer for 10 mins. Add coriander leaves and salt, keep it covered and cook away for 5 mins. Lastly add paneer pieces, mix well and switch off.

Serve with Triangular Paratha and Plain Yoghurt on side (picture missing).

Tip: don’t have kitchen king masala – then add 1 tsp coriander powder, 1/2 tsp cumin powder, 1 tsp garam masala powder.

Note:

Measure the spices before hand in small container.

I used Home made Paneer.

Kitchen King Masala can be found in Indian groceries say Moshims (which is a common one :-) ) or else can be substituted with the tip above.

For my spice level it is mild for me not Indian Hot.

For Paneer recipe and more, please visit my blog amma-cheppindi.blogspot.com.

cheers

Rajani Rayudu

amma-cheppindi.blogspot.com

Breadmaker Hot Cross Buns

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

I am a convert to using my breadmaker for making bread. Not for baking bread, but for making the dough! It honestly takes all of the hard work out of breadmaking as far as I am concerned. This recipe just needs all of the ingredients adding to the machine, setting it to dough, then taking it out and shaping, leaving it to rise a further 45 odd mins and then in the oven. Before you know it you have gorgeous yeasty spicy buns, they are honestly that easy!

Here is the recipe I use……

Hot Cross Buns (for the breadmaker)

4 c high grade flour
1/2c sugar
1 tsp salt
4 tsp yeast
1 c milk
2 eggs
125g soft butter
2 tsp grated lemon peel
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp mixed spice
3/4 c raisins

Put all ingredients except raisins in breadmaker pan in order suggested by your bread machine instructions.

Set for white bread dough and press start. Add the raisins after the first kneading or when the machine signals it’s time to add fruit. When dough is ready, remove and punch down. Cut into 16 pieces and shape into rolls.

Place on a baking paper lined tray then cover loosely and set in a warm place to rise until doubled, 45 mins to an hour.

Bake in oven at 190C for 12 – 15 minutes.
Brush with sugar syrup glaze (I make sugar syrup by dissolving 2/3c sugar with 1/3c water over heat) as soon as they come out of the oven and when cooled pipe crosses on with basic icing (icing sugar, knob of butter and hot water)

hot-cross-buns

For more about this recipe and more pictures visit: http://wwwthinkingaboutfood.blogspot.com/2008/03/hot-cross-buns.html

Hot Cross Buns

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Easter is a great time to get into the kitchen. Baking and creating some delicious treats together excites my family almost as much as hunting for the chocolate eggs that miraculously appear on Sunday morning.

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If you need a cracker recipe for Hot Cross Buns tomorrow (they are traditionally eaten on Good Friday!) check out my recipe here on Bron Marshall, Classic and Creative Cuisine. It’s a more traditional recipe with raisins, currants and mixed citrus peel. However the fruit; some or all of them! Are easily replaced with dark, milk or white chocolate chips.
That is if you’re afraid the Easter Bunny won’t have organised you enough chocolate treats on Sunday!

Craving Warmer and Heartier Meals.

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

With the latest Southerly whipping up the country this week dumping snow along the Southern Alps and it’s foothills, it has been a stark reminder for us on the Mainland that Winter is just around the corner and cooler weather is well on it’s way. It’s the time of year when we all start to crave warmer and heartier meals.

thaimato_meatball_soup_copyright_bron_marshall

Now everyone needs some warming tucker in their belly to keep the energy and morale levels up and this soup fits the bill perfectly. It’s oh so simple to make, it’s spicy, filling and sure to be a winner with the whole family.
You could make the meatballs with any lean minced meat, beef, chicken or pork and even firm white fish fillets for a lighter meal would work gorgeously.

    Thai’mato Meatball Soup – From Bron Marshall

  • 600 grams of lean beef mince
  • 2 ½ tablespoons of Thai Red Curry Paste
  • 1 large free range egg
  • A pinch of salt
  • 1 tablespoon of olive oil
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped
  • 1 to 2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
  • 3 cups (750ml) of tomato passata / tomato purée
  • 4 cups (1 litre) of quality liquid beef, chicken or vegetable stock
  • sea salt and fresh pepper to taste
  • Fresh coriander sprigs, sliced spring onions and cherry tomatoes to serve
  1. Preheat your oven to 180°Celsius.
  2. In a food processor or in large bowl and your hands, rub 1 tablespoon of the Thai red curry paste through the mince with and pinch or two of salt.
  3. Add the egg and mix thoroughly, take heaped teaspoonfuls of the mixture and roll into balls.
  4. Place the balls on a lined shallow baking dish and bake for 8 to 12 minutes or until they’re holding together and almost – just cooked through.
  5. Meanwhile soften the onion and garlic together in a large saucepan with a little olive oil, add the remaining 1½ tablespoons of curry paste and cook for 1 minute or so until fragrant.
  6. Pour in the tomato passata and stock and bring to the boil.
  7. Add in the cooked meatballs and any juices from the baking dish into the soup and continue to simmer a further few minutes to combine the flavours.
  8. Taste and add extra salt and pepper if required.
  9. Ladle a few meatballs together with some of the soup broth into warmed bowls and garnish with sprigs of fresh coriander, sliced spring onion and cherry tomatoes if desired. Serves 6.

You can find more of my recipes and delicious photography @ Bron Marshall, Classic and Creative Cuisine.

Quick and Easy

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Now that the nights are closing in this is a great comforting dessert to whip up in a hurry.  In fact my 12 year old easily throws it together, so give it a go, you won’t be disappointed!

Quick Steamed Microwave Puddings (Jamie Oliver- Ministry of Food)

175g plain flour
50g brown sugar
75 g butter melted
1 level tsp baking soda
2 tsp ground ginger
2 large eggs
juice and finely grated zest of an orange (it’s ok to leave this out!)
150ml milk
11 tbsp golden syrup
butter for greasing

Grease the inside of 6 little microwaveable dishes or teacups with butter until well coated. Tip all the ingredients into a large bowl (except the golden syrup) and mix well. Add in 1 tbsp of golden syrup and mix until well combined. Spoon 1 tbsp of golden syrup into the bottom of each cup/ramekin, then divide the pudding mix between them.
Tear or cut 6 circles of greaseproof/baking paper a little larger than your dishes. Grease them with a little butter and then butter side down, pop them on top, pressing down gently onto the pudding mix. Place all dishes in the microwave and cook on medium heat for 7 1/2 minutes. Leave the puddings to stand for a further 5 minutes before carefully removing the paper.
To serve:
Warm 4 tbsp golden syrup in a microwavable jug for a few seconds. Turn the puddings onto serving plates and drizzle over the warm golden syrup. Accompany with creme fraiche, custard or icecream!

micro-steam-pud

To view more about this recipe and more photos visit:
http://wwwthinkingaboutfood.blogspot.com/2009/04/sugar-fiend.html

Homemade Soy Milk Chocolate Ice Cream

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Soy Milk Chocolate Ice Cream

Since I can’t eat dairy products, particularly milk, Summer is quite boring not to be able to lick creamy ice cream. Apart from my homemade Plum Butter Ice Cream, any other ice cream using milk and cream has failed the muscle test. There’s an option though, other than being miserable, to replace milk with soy milk that is. So, here’s my first soy milk ice cream ever! It is quite nice, to be honest, although you need to switch your creaminess level from cow’s milk to soy one. It may not be the same, but the addition of chocolate chips is awesome!

Soy Milk Chocolate Ice Cream

Ingredients

1 liter plain soy milk

1 tsp vanilla bean paste

½ cup caster sugar

8 egg yolks, separated

200g no-added sugar dark chocolate, shaved or chopped

Methods

Put soy milk and vanilla bean paste in a saucepan and put it on the stove over a low heat until warm. Meanwhile, whisk egg yolks with caster sugar until well combined. Pour in the warm soy milk. Bring the saucepan to the stove and cook on a low heat until the mixture thickens. Remove from the heat and let cool. Pour into a freezer container, cover and freeze for 2 hours. Remove from the freezer, put the ice cream into the food processor. Pulse until smooth. Pour into a freezer container and fold in chopped chocolate, mix well. Freeze again until ready to use. Makes 1 liter.

Traditional Indian Cooking in Kiwi Kitchen

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

Hi, my name is Rajani. Welcome to my contribution on MenuMania’s blog writerajani-rayudu4r’s guild.  To start with, I would like to thank the team at MenuMania for inviting me to be part of this guild.  It is an Honour!

A little about myself……..

I am originally from India and have been in New Zealand from the past 12 years.

Yup! I am a proud Indian in my heart and just melts away whenever I see anything related to India.

I come from a coastal town of peninsular India called Kakinada where seafood is in abundance. It’s in the state of Andhra Pradesh.

Yes, we still have cities, towns and villages in India. I still remember the fresh air of my ammamma’s (nana’s) village where its all clean and paddy fields as far as the eye can see, where everyone knows one another, and are very hard working.  Nostalgia!!!

The capital city of Andhra is Hyderabad; the land of pearls. The city has a rich muslim culture where nawabi cooking combined with south-indian style to give us a new unique style called hyderabadi-style.  In Andhra, apart from hyderabadi-style, we also have different regional cuisine like Telangana, Rayalaseema and Andhra. Every area has got its own spice blend and a different way of cooking that is unique and tasty.  India is a culinary land… not curry land :-)

I started my own blog (amma-cheppindi) in 2006, to document my home style cooking experiences. My mom is always the best cook for me. She cooks delectable dishes that are unbeatable. I am sure all daughters think the same way like me  about their mothers :-)

My blog represents me and my family and my culinary odyssey. Amma- cheppindi means ” Mother said So” a true journal of my family generation cooking.

Please check my blog at amma-cheppindi.blogspot.com and please let me know your feedback if you have tried any of my dishes.

Yours Always

Rajani Rayudu

choose your own adventure

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Kia ora everyone – I’m Laura, the latest addition to the Menumania blog writers’ guild. When I’m not posting here I enjoy absolutely zero fame and fortune through my own cooking blog, Hungry and Frozen, which I started two years ago as a penniless student. These days I’ve finished my degree in English Lit and Media and work full time. I am passionate to the point of delusion about cooking and baking and will scissor kick anyone who dares to use margarine instead of butter in my kitchen. I guess that says plenty about what I’m like as a person so I’ll choose this moment to segue into my first post for Menumania.

For many people making dinner is not so much a pleasure as an endless cycle of nightly struggle. I hope I don’t sound too smug when I say it is actually one of the things I look forward to most in the day. This doesn’t necessarily mean I always know what I want to cook, which is why I based this post on mood. Here are two recipes, one for when you are wanting to actively cook, slicing things finely and stirring attentively and never straying from the bubbling pan of food. Then there is a recipe that lets you bung everything in the oven, then go away to admire Taye Diggs in Private Practise or bathe the children or write your thesis or whatever it is that you would have been doing had you not been shackled to the kitchen, cooking dinner. It’s time for you to choose your own adventure.

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Zucchini, Pea and Spinach Risotto with Feta Cheese

This is the more involved recipe. Although it is a pleasing thing to stand at the stove, stirring serenely and constantly for 25 minutes, if you’ve had a bad day it will feel torturously miserable and the rice will seemingly take forever to absorb its liquid. Consider yourself warned.

  • 1 small onion, finely diced
  • 4 fat cloves of garlic, peeled and finely diced
  • A knob of butter
  • 100g risotto rice (arborio is cheapest)
  • A splash of Vermouth or other white wine
  • Good vegetable stock, about 750mls or so
  • 2 zucchini
  • 1 cup frozen peas
  • A handful of spinach leaves, chopped roughly
  • 100g feta

In a wide, heavy based pan, soften the onion and garlic in the butter without letting them brown. Add the rice – and I should point out here that I spent an obscene amount on a bag of carnaroli, which was indeed lovely, but don’t go feeling like a culinary pariah if all you have is arborio from the supermarket – and stir it through the buttery onion and garlic for a minute. Pour in the wine – about 1/4 cup – and stir everything quickly together. It should smell quite heavenly at this point!  Slice the zucchini into rounds and add to the pan, stirring all the while. Get used to seeing the word stir round here.

From here, add the stock slowly (I use a ladleful at a time) stirring till it’s absorbed before adding the next measure. This will take more or less forever. Once the risotto is thick and the beads of rice have swollen and softened, stir in some more butter if you like (and I do!) then stir in the peas and spinach. Serve with the feta crumbled over.

Serves 2.

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A good risotto can be comforting and elegant at the same time, and this one seems to tick both boxes. The gentle flavour of the zuchinni with the texture of the peas and more robust taste of spinach marries nicely with the generous sprinkling of creamy, tangy feta.

The next recipe requires considerably less effort, for those days when you are worn out but want something with a bit more dazzle than toast or takeaways.

Spaghetti with Roasted Vegetable Sauce

This could accompany golden roast chicken portions, or simply be eaten by the plateful on its own.

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  • Half a butternut squash (they are normally sold in halves)
  • 1 red capsicum (or orange, but please not green)
  • 1 bulb garlic
  • 4 plump tomatoes
  • A pinch of sweet smoked paprika
  • Handful of chopped basil
  • 200g spaghetti (or linguini, or anything at all really)

Set the oven to 200 C. Halve the tomatoes and capsicum,  scooping out the white seeds of the latter. Slice the butternut into small chunks, cutting off the skin as you go. Wrap the bulb of garlic (yes, a whole bulb, don’t be scared now, it mellows out in the oven) in tinfoil. Put everything on an oven tray lined with baking paper and place it in the oven. Leave it there for about an hour and a half.

When this time is up, remove the vegetables from the oven. Cook the pasta in boiling salted water till done. Meanwhile, throw all the vegetables into a food processor (you’ll need to squeeze the softened garlic cloves out of their papery skins which is, admittedly, a little fiddly) along with the basil and paprika and whizz to a smoothish sauce, adding about 1/3 cup of water and any juices left on the tray.

Mix the drained spaghetti and the sauce together, and serve sprinkled with chopped mint, almonds and feta (can you tell I’m attached to the stuff?) if desired.

Serves 2

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The texture of the butternut (and you could use pumpkin of course) adds a delicious richness, while roasting really enhances the flavour of the other vegetables, making even the anemic looking tomatoes that you see so often these days taste utterly luscious, especially when paired with basil.

I’d love to hear back from anyone who happens to make these recipes, or even just anyone who feels like saying hi. Hopefully you’ll see more of me round the place as I become a regular fixture here!

Feel free to check out more of my ramblings at my blog Hungry and Frozen. It is, quite honestly, pretty fantastic. I mean, I really like it, so you might also.

John Palino’s favorite Recipes: very addictive Buffalo Chicken Wings

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Now I am going to give you one of my most delicious recipes.

Buffalo Chicken Wings.  These can be very addictive when done properly.

(If you’re worried about the oil . . . you can bake these instead.)

INGREDIENTS

oil for deep frying
55 g butter
60 ml hot sauce
1 dash ground black pepper
1 dash garlic powder
0.6 g paprika
0.4 g cayenne pepper
2 g salt
10 chicken wings

DIRECTIONS

You cut the wing into two sections.  Cut it at the joint.

Heat oil in a deep fry pan to 190 degrees C.  The oil should be just enough to cover wings entirely, an inch or so deep.

Making the sauce:

Combine the butter, hot sauce, pepper, cayenne pepper and garlic powder in a small saucepan over low heat. Stir together and heat until butter is melted and mixture is well blended.  Remove from heat and reserve for serving.

Fry wings twice

First time is to cook them through.  Fry in hot oil for 10 to 15 minutes on medium heat until parts of wings begin to turn brown.  Remove from heat, place wings in bowl and set aside when ready to use.  These can be done up to a day in advance.  Remember to refrigerate for food safety reasons.  When ready to serve, put the wings back into very hot oil until golden brown.  This time it is to crisp the outside and warm the inside.  Remove them from the oil when done and put them into a mixing bowl. Add hot sauce mixture into a frying pan to warm up when warm toss the wings and sauce in the bowl to coat them well.

When fully coated remove them to a serving dish and serve with a blue cheese dip and fresh celery sticks.

Blue Cheese Dip

INGREDIENTS

235 ml mayonnaise
230 g sour cream
1 onions, finely chopped
3 g dried parsley
115 g blue cheese, crumbled
Garlic salt to taste

DIRECTIONS

In a medium bowl, mix mayonnaise, sour cream, onions, dried parsley, blue cheese and garlic salt.  Cover and chill in the refrigerator until serving.


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