Category: Champagne

Zero Waste – Basil Bellini

Greetings friends! Today is a quick post on a variation to the Rosemary Bellini I posted a few weeks ago.  The Basil Bellini came about as I had a few peaches leftover from making the Rosemary Bellini.  Rather than letting them go to waste, I thought I would make some of  Kylee Newton’s Peach and Basil Lemonade with them. Basil Bellini2Kylee’s recipe is delicious peachy basil-y lemonade that is so refreshing on hot days!  However, in her recipe (below) you need to strain out and discard the solids after blitzing.   But, those same solids are actually a delicious puree of peach and basil!  In my opinion, it was far too tasty to go to waste…y. (Sorry)

And so I made it into a hasty Basil Bellini! 

Basil Bellini

I added a spoonful of that peach and basil mix into a glass of sparkling and voila…a Basil Bellini!  

A side advantage of the basil bellini is that you can have the kudos of making your kids homemade peach and basil lemonade and also have quiet mummy (or daddy) juice on the side!  You could also add some of the strained mixture into your sparkling wine but then you would miss that little frisson of smug of also being zero waste!

Peach and Basil Lemonade Recipe

This comes from Kylee Newton’s book The Modern Preserver which I cannot recommend highly enough!

Peach and Basil Lemonade

I hope your week is just peachy!

Signature2

 

Dec 03 – Make Mine A Double

Hello, retro food lovers and Season’s Greetings from 2003!  This month I am using Delicious Magazine from December 2003 to prepare a menu where…well let’s see if you can guess…Hint..there’s a big clue in the title. 

The whole time I was cooking this month I also kept thinking back to my early twenties when we used to play a drinking game called “I’m going to the moon”.  The person who starts says “I’m going to the moon and I’m taking (for example) an apple”.  Then the next person says “I’m going to the moon and I’m taking a pear”.  The first person who is the game controller tells them if they can come to the moon or not.  If they can’t go, they need to stay on earth and have a drink.   There are many variations on this game but my personal favourite was based on the same theme as this month.  Let’s move away from my sozzled past to see what was happening in December 2003.  Although come to think about it, that was probably the same time as I was playing the game!

The Lord of The Rings:  Return of the King was the big movie of December 2003.  The Last Samurai was the next biggest.  And, quelle surprise, The Da Vinci Code was still the best-selling book.  Which all kind of explains why I was playing drinking games instead of partaking in pop culture.  Although the soundtrack to those drinking games would have been good with Here Without You and Hey Ya! being the number one songs that month!  

Moorish Champagne Cocktail1

The Menu – December 2003

Moorish Champagne Cocktail

Moorish Champagne Cocktail

I am always very happy to be able to start these menus with a cocktail.  The Moorish Champagne Cocktail was both easy to make and also very more-ish!  

Moorish Champagne Cocktail2

 

Moorish Champagne Tart Recipe

Dec 2003 - Moorish Champagne Cocktail Recipe

Salad of Dried Pears, Proscuitto, Blue Cheese and Walnuts

AKA a salad of a few of my favourite things!  If this hadn’t fit the theme, it would have surely been my Nigella item for this month!  And it was divine!

Salad of Dried Pears

Salad of Dried Pears, Proscuitto, Blue Cheese and Walnuts Recipe

Salad of Dried Pears recipe2

 

Salad of Dried Pears 2

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto

I apologise for the photo of this which is not great.  Having said this, the photo from the mag (which follows the recipe) is also not great.  Neither photo does this dish, which was amazing any justice!  But, trust me, it is worth taking a punt on as it was delicious! Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto

 

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto Recipe

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto recipe (1)

 

Mulled Wine Sorbet With Clove Biscuits

This was so nice and refreshing.  It is summer in Australia so this is a nice nod to wintry flavours but adapted for summer.  The sorbet mixture was very soft, for me it was more like a slushie than a sorbet so my recommendation is either not to serve it on a very hot day or to eat it quickly as it melts in moments.  Speaking of melting, the clove biscuits just melt in your mouth!  I am usually a bit wary of cloves – I’ve bit into them accidentally when eating things like curries and find the flavour a bit too much!  So, for the first few biscuits, I ate, I picked the cloves off. Since then, I have eaten them with the clove in and the flavour of them seems to be less powerful in the biscuits than in say a curry.  So, even if you don’t love cloves, give these a try with them!

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits Recipe

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits recipe (1)

My Nigella Moment  – Crispy Herbed Potatoes

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in because it is too good not to share.  

You had me at crispy potatoes!  And then when I saw how pretty these were, I knew they would be my Nigella item for this month.  If I hadn’t already bought what I needed to make Katrina Meynink’s Roasted Taters with Horseradish and Tapenade for Christmas Day, the Crispy Herbed Potatoes would have been on the menu.  (As an aside, I have just bought the aforementioned book From Salt to Jam and am absolutely loving it).  

Dec 2003 - Crispy Seared Potatoes3Crispy Seared Potatoes Recipe

Crispy Herbed Potatoes (1)

Overall a great month from Delicious December 2003.  If you have not yet guessed the theme, no going to the moon for you!  But in the interest of your liver, it was to find recipes with double letters.  Until I did this, I had never really thought about how many food items had these.  I was absolutely spoiled for choice with options:

(Update 6/1/24 – I had originally included links to items below that are still on the Delicious.com.au website.  Those links have been blocked but anything I have asterisked is available should you want to check them out.)

Starters

  • Baked eggs
  • Bruschetta with grilled artichokes and roasted garlic
  • B’stilla*
  • Cheese Crock
  • Chilled pea soup with lobster and risoni salad*
  • Goat’s curd in grappa*
  • Prawn and fattoush salad
  • Schiacciata*
  • Spanner crab chowder
  • Peppered Beef Salad
  • Smoked Salmon with clementines and cress
  • Terrine with microwave cranberry chutney

Mains and Sides

  • Beef fillet with spicy potatoes and horseradish
  • Butternut pumpkin with tasty stuffing
  • Cheeky Christmas turkey with braised leeks and the best wine gravy
  • Chicken noodle salad
  • Chicken with pepperoncini
  • Cinnamon and sultana couscous
  • Cold turkey salad with mango and honey dressing
  • Country chicken and mushroom pies
  • Chicken coconut curry pie
  • Crispy skin coral trout with roasted pineapple, coconut salad and rosti potato
  • Fillets of John Dory with olives, capers and rosemary
  • Flame grilled tuna with wasbi cake, bok choy and lime ponzu
  • Fricassee of chicken with mustard and grapes
  • Grilled coral trout with asparagus, red capsicum and sugar snap peas
  • Rice paper rolls with turkey
  • Seared barramundi with garlic skordalia, asparagus and creole salsa
  • Traditional Barossa ham in verjuice jelly
  • Turkey with saffron butter and preserved lemon and olive stuffing
  • Baked zucchini tarts with stuffed vegetables
  • Frisee, watercress and witlof salad
  • Goat’s cheese tarts with roast peaches and vincotto
  • Moroccan carrot salad
  • Open lasagne of asparagus with rocket tortellini
  • Roasted eggplant and tomato salad
  • Savoury Summer puddings
  • Sweet potato briks
  • Truffled potato mash

Sweets

  • Baked lime cheesecake
  • Boozy puddings with cheat’s custard*
  • Cherry clafoutis*
  • Choc-mint raspberry sundae
  • Chocolate and strawberry tartines*
  • Chocolate and brandied prune terrine*
  • Christmas morning muffins*
  • Christmas pudding ice cream with sweet cranberry sauce
  • Cinnamon ice cream with red wine poached figs*
  • Chocolate cake with plum pudding vodka*
  • Coconut and passionfruit slice
  • Eggnog custards*
  • Flourless Hazelnut roulade
  • Free-form berry trifles
  • Middle Eastern fruit cake*
  • Pannettone with berries and brandy sauce
  • Passionfruit panna cotta*
  • Raspberry ice cream sundae
  • Snowballs*
  • Starry night tarts*
  • Star-topped mince pies
  • Strawberry sundae*
  • Tutti Frutti ice cream*
  • Vanilla sponge with raspberries
  • White Chocolate and chilli ice cream with tropical fruit

Other

  • Hettie Potter’s suet-free mince meat
  • Easy cranberry sauce
  • Peanut Butter sauce
  • Raspberry sauce
  • Strawberry sauce
  • Irish coffee with orange rind and vanilla

 

Sorry for the massive laundry list but I really wanted to show how many items had double letters!  I was honestly astounded! 

So, my question to you lovely readers is – if you were making your own double-letter dinner, what would you choose? Either from the extensive list above or things that have not been mentioned – baguettes, beetroot, jelly, waffles, green beans, toffee, frittata, dill, mayonnaise, cabbage, spaghetti, mozzarella…the list goes on!

Couscous which is in the list above is the only thing I could think of with the same series of letters twice.  Can you think of any others?

And one last thing.  Thank you all for reading and commenting through the year!  Best wishes for an amazing 2024!

 

 

 

Sparkling Cyanide – Rosemary Bellini

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  This month our menu is a tribute to the late Rosemary Barton, one of the characters in Agatha Christie’s Sparkling Cyanide.  We are remembering Rosemary with a Rosemary Bellini.  We’ll get to her in a moment but first let’s take a moment to ponder the US title which was Remembered Death.  Now, why on earth when you have an AMAZING title like Sparkling Cyanide, would you change it to something as humdrum as Remembered Death? 

Sparkling Cyanide Photo 1

 

Sparkling Cyanide – The Plot

“Six people were thinking of Rosemary Barton who had died nearly a year ago…”

Agatha Christie – Sparkling Cyanide

A year before the novel is set the lovely Rosemary Barton and six of her family and friends gathered for dinner at the swanky Luxembourg Hotel. Rosemary collapsed and died during the dinner.  The coroner’s verdict was that she committed suicide due to depression after a bout of flu. (I was quite surprised to hear that depression from the flu was considered a thing back in the day.  I guess now with long covid, we are seeing much the same thing but under a different name).

Six months before the novel is set, Rosemary’s husband, George gets a series of anonymous letters saying that Rosemary was murdered.  George hatches a plot to find her killer by having another dinner at The Luxembourg exactly one year after Rosemary’s death with the same people attending.

Dumb idea?  Totally.  Because George dies of cyanide poisoning on the night.  

Making one of the dinner guests the murderer of both people.  If George was killed because he was getting too close to the truth,  who, at the table wanted Rosemary dead?  Turns out, everyone has a motive!

We have:

  • Iris Marle, Rosemary’s sister.  She stood to inherit her sister’s considerable fortune
  • George himself may have killed Roseary as he had discovered she was having an affair.  Did he do himself in out of guilt?
  • The enigmatic Anthony Browne threatened Rosemary with death.  Did he poison her to keep her quiet about his shady past?
  • Stephen Farraday, a politician whose career was on the up was having an affair with Rosemary.  Did he kill her to avoid a public scandal if she revealed their dalliance?
  • Lady Alexandra (Sandra) Farraday, Stephen’s wife had a great reason for wanting Rosemary dead.  She wanted to keep her husband. 
  • Ruth Lessing George’s secretary who has a crush on George and hates Rosemary

Good thing we have Co lonel Race on hand to bring the killer to justice!

Sparkling Cyanide Photo 2

The Moving Finger – The Covers

Sparkling Cyanide collage
Sparkling Cyanide collage

 

I was so happy to find a load of covers for Sparkling Cyanide and so many non-English covers!   However…Portugal and France both seem to have confused champagne for martinis as covers from both countries feature glasses containing olives. 

 

The Recipe – Rosemary Bellini

Print

Sparkling Cyanide – Rosemary Bellini

A lovely twist on a traditional Bellini

Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 peaches (I like white peaches but you can use yellow if you prefer them)
  • 6 springs of rosemary
  • 1 egg white
  • 1 tbsp caster sugar plus more for garnish
  • 1/2 glass white wine, prosecco, sparkling wine, orange juice or water
  • 1 bottle champagne

Instructions

  • Halve the peaches
  • Place the peach halves and two of the rosemary sprigs into a saucepan with the sugar and the 1/2 glass of wine / prosecco / juice water
  • Cook over low heat, stirring occasionally until the sugar has melted and the peaches are soft. 
  • Cool the peach mixture then puree.

Frosted Rosemary Garnish

  • Lightly beat the egg white
  • Take the 4 remaining rosemary sprigs and dip them in the egg white then dredge them in the caster sugar.
  • Set aside.

Assembly

  • When you are ready to serve, place a dollop of the peach puree into the bottom of a cocktail glass.  
  • Top with champagne and give a light stir.
  • Garnish each glass with a frosted rosemary spring.

Enjoy!

 

Every murderess was a nice girl once

 Sparkling Cyanide – Agatha Christie

 

 

Links To The Christieverse

None that I could find but Colonel Race appears in:

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in  Sparkling Cyanide

January’s Read is Death Comes As The End

      SPOILERS*SPOILERS*SPOILERS*SPOILERS*SPOILERS

 

We are told twice that a certain character has no pity in them.  I.e. is the type of person who may resort to murder…

Whose name might indicate that they are this type of person?  

 

 

 

 

Champagne Cocktail – Dead Man’s Mirror

Hello food lovers and crime readers!   Welcome to the first Dining with the Dame of 2023!  We are celebrating the new year with a classic Champagne Cocktail and the final story from the Murder in the Mews Collection.  I improvised here as there is no food mentioned in Dead Man’s Mirror. However, the sound of a cork popping features in the story so a Champagne cocktail feels fitting. Besides, who doesn’t love a Champagne cocktail?

Champagne Cocktail 1

 

Dead Man’s Mirror- The Plot

Hmm…we have a dead man in a locked room. If it sounds familiar is because it is also kinda, sorta what happened in  Hercule Poirot’s Christmas which was last month’s read. This time the patriarch who meets an untimely end is Sir Gervase Chevenix-Gore.  Sir G as we will call him because if I have to type Sir Gervase Chevenix -Gore every time I name him, I’ll be writing this into next year summons Poirot to his home at Hamborough Close.   Much like Simeon Lee from last month, Sir G is obsessed with not having an heir to carry on the family name.  He is also a bit of a martinet when it comes to timeliness.   For instance, dinner is announced by a gong which is sounded twice – the bangs being seven minutes apart.  Guests who are late for dinner are not invited back! On this night Sir G himself does not appear by the second gong. He is found, shortly thereafter,  in his locked study, with a bullet in his brain and a pistol lying on the carpet by his body.  A piece of paper with the word “Sorry” written on it lies on the desk in front of him.  A clear-cut case of suicide.

Or is it?

We have

  • For the bullet to have smashed the mirror, Sir G must have shot himself at a very odd angle
  • As in Hercule Poirot’s Christmas, we have a woman picking up something from the floor of the crime scene
  • Ruth, Sir G’s adopted daughter.  Sir G was keen for her to marry her cousin Hugo Trent which would keep the family line going.  Only Ruth has some secrets.
  • A lack of footprints in the flower bed

Champagne Cocktail 2

Luckily we have Poirot around to solve the mystery of the Dead Man’s Mirror!

Dead Man’s Mirror – The Covers

Dead Man's Mirror CollageAs expected, many of the covers feature a broken mirror.  I particularly like the one in the top which shows the dead man in the mirror, holding the note in his skeleton hand.  However, my absolute favourite is the one on the far right which shows the Egyptian head and scarab beetle, in reference to Vanda, Sir G’s wife who believes she is the reincarnation of the Egyptian pharaoh Hatshepsut and a priestess from Atlantis.  It’s such a minor plot detail but makes an amazing cover! The broken mirror around her eye also gives it a bit of a steampunk look, decades before there was such a thing!

The Recipe – Champagne Cocktail

I am using the from a book called Fantastic Cocktails and Mixed Drinks.  I have added a garnish of an orange wedge and a maraschino cherry to make it look prettier!

Champagne Cocktail Recipe

Champagne Cocktail 3

 

“You see, I thought the first gong had gone, so I hurried up with my dressing, came dashing out of my room, heard, as I thought, the second gong and fairly raced down the stairs.  I’d been one minute late for dinner the first night I was here and Hugo told me it had about wrecked our chances with the Old Man, so K fairly hared down.  Hugo was just ahead of me and then there was a queer kind of pop-bang and Hugo said it was a champagne cork but Snell said “No”to that.

Dead Man’s Mirror – Agatha Christie

Links to The Christieverse

Mr Satterthwaite, who we last met in Three Act Tragedy makes an appearance in this story.  He not only mentions that case but also that he has seen Mary Lytton Gore recently.

Champagne Cocktail 4

 

Other Food & Drinks Mentioned in Dead Man’s Mirror

  • None

If you are wondering why this post is unusually early, it is because later today we are going to see The Arctic Monkeys, then tomorrow we are flying to Darwin for a week to celebrate the Fussiest Eater in The World’s birthday.  Neither of us has been there before so it will be an exciting trip for us.  It is by far the farthest north in Australia we have ever been!  Also, just to put the distance in perspective, Darwin is about 400km closer to Singapore than it is to Melbourne! I am expecting some delicious seafood, tropical fruit, and some spectacular scenery

I may have to delay next week’s post due to the holiday. However, we have all the more time now to get stuck into February’s read – Appointment with Death.

Vincent Price’s Chicken in Champagne Sauce

When the opening sentence of a blog post is:

“I am drinking champagne alone, on a Monday night, in bed”

I know I am reading the words of a  kindred spirit.

So began Jenny’s blog post on Vincent Price’s Poularde Pavillon aka Chicken in Champagne Sauce.  I was therefore delighted to see that this was one of the recipes that Jenny had chosen for us to cook as part of the Vincent Price Cookalong.

So, if you’d read my last post you’d know I’d brunched like the King of the Grand Guignol himself on a Buckingham Eggs Jaffle.    A few hours later, on what turned into Vincent Price Sunday,  I was ready to take on the main event.  Here ’tis:

Vincent Price Chicken in Champagne Sauce1If my chicken looks a bit weird it’s because it was a butterflied one I had in the freezer.  It tasted lovely but just did not have the classic appearance of a normal roast chicken. The recipe calls for the chicken to be trussed and, in a moment of dumbarseness I got out my kitchen twine ready to do the necessary. Then paused.  How do you truss a chicken with no bones?  Short answer you don’t.

Vincent Price Chicken in Champagne Sauce 2To tell the truth, I was a bit narky with this recipe when making it.  Basically because I am terribly lazy and Doctor Who was on the telly.  Walking the maybe ten steps from the couch to the oven (voice of the pedant – 9 steps) every 8 minutes to baste the chicken seemed like a bit of a palaver at the time.  In retrospect those 56 steps were utterly worth it. The chicken was beautifully tender and cooked to perfection. And the champagne sauce went perfectly with the sides of steamed asparagus and roasted potatoes.

Vincent Price Chicken in Champagne Sauce3The sauce, as also noted by Jenny is much more than what you need for the chicken.  She was going to try freezing hers.  I had mine over pasta with the leftover veg and some steamed broccoli and beans the following night and it was…..

Just kidding, it was deeeelicious.

The Chicken in Champagne Sauce was a lovely classic, and elegant, way to finish the weekend!  If the two recipes I have cooked are any reflection on the rest of the book, then I totally understand why Jenny sings its praises so highly.

So, although it is not Monday and I am not in bed, I am alone and drinking a little champagne toast to Jenny and, of course, to Vincent and Mary Price and their fabulous book. (And in an “it’s all about me”  side note, OMG!!!!!  You have no idea how long it took to get an even half way decent photo of me trying to concurrently do a wink like the little girl in my sign off logo and raise the champagne glass and take a selfie.  Half of them looked like I was heavily sedated on anti-pyschotics and the other half looked like I needed to be.  In the end I gave up and took a picture of the glass by my “movie star” mirror!

PicMonkey CollageIf your idea of a good time involves doing a bit more than poncing round your bedroom for HOURS looking more and more deranged with every click of the camera, there are a host of events to celebrate the release of the 50th edition of A Treasury of Great Recipes.  To find out the wheres and whens, click on the links below:

Vincent Price Treasury Cookalong with Silver Screen Suppers
Vincent Price Legacy Tour – for details of celebratory events in the UK
Amazon Page for the 50th Edition of A Treasury of Great Recipes

Print

Vincent Price’s Chicken in Champagne Sauce

Ingredients

Scale

For The Chicken

  • 1 x 3lb chicken
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 cups dry French champagne

For The Sauce:

  • 4 cups cream
  • 3 shallots, finely chopped
  • 4 mushrooms crushed with a bottle or rolling pin
  • 1 sprig parsley chopped
  • 2 bay leaves
  • pinch of thyme
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 1 glass dry champagne

Instructions

For The Chicken:

  1. Preheat the oven to 350F / 180C / Gas mark 4.
  2. Season the chicken with the salt.
  3. Truss it and place in a small casserole with the butter and the two cups of Champagne.
  4. Cook in a moderate oven about 45 minutes.
  5. Baste every eight minutes and turn until the chicken is an even golden brown on all sides.
  6. Remove chicken, cut off string and keep warm on a hot platter.

For The Sauce:

  1. Add to the juices in the casserole the cream, shallots, mushrooms, parsley, bay leaves and thyme.
  2. Simmer on top of stove until the sauce has reduced to two thirds of the original amount.
  3. Strain through a fine sieve into a clean saucepan.
  4. Place over a medium heat and swirl in the butter.
  5. Add the glass of champagne

For The Presentation

  1. Spoon some of the sauce over the chicken. Serve the rest separately.
  2. This recipe is originally from Le Pavillon in New York. To serve the chicken as per Le Pavillon take the chicken to the table whole and carve it there.

Have a great week!Signature 1 Vintage Valentine Quick as Wink2