Category: Dishiest Dish

Fruit & Nut Gingerbread Loaf

This post for Fruit and Nut Gingerbread loaf was originally written and published in Dec 2015.  It is one of many of my older posts, which due to some unknown technical hitch ended up being put back into draft.  I am trying to repost them all but please excuse any references that seem odd or out of date!

What a week!  Some weeks are diamonds and this week everything I  made turned out really well and there was not much to choose between them.  So I thought I would talk to you about them all.

Fruit and Nut Gingerbread Loaf3

First up there was a mash up of this recipe from Donna at A Cookbook Collection which is a super blog that I read all the time:

https://acookbookcollection.wordpress.com/2015/10/21/roasted-grapes-with-feta-and-walnuts/

And Niki Sengit’s entry for Goat Cheese and Walnut from The Flavour Thesaurus where she says:

“Paneer is a white tablet of feta as smooth as a bar of Ivory Soap and usually scattered with crisp walnuts.  It’s generally accompanied by sabzi, a thicket of fresh herbs, to offset it’s richness.  There will be plenty of mint, plus tarragon and dill, bulbous scallions and, nestled somewhere in among the sprigs and leaves, little radishes like baby robins in their next”

This OMG, I want to eat it right NOW delight is on the menu at a restaurant called Patogh on the Edgeware Road in London.  And next time I’m there?  I’m there!

Not being there, I made my own and I threw in a heap of roasted grapes à la Donna too!  And it was so good!  I love being able to nibble food from a platter and this recipe will feature on my Friday night grazing platter all grape season!

 

Roasted Grapes with Feta & Sabzi

Crab and Corn FrittersFor a delicious main meal I made some Crab and Corn Fritters from this recipe from Australian Gourmet Traveller.

Corn and Crab Fritters

I also made a toasted marshmallow pavlova which was A-MAZING – even if I do say so myself.

Toasted Marshmallow Pavlova

The Gingerbread Loaf

Also in the sweet realm but at the opposite end of the spectrum was a fruit and nut gingerbread loaf with lemon icing.  The pavlova was light as air and so pretty.  The gingerbread loaf was not nearly so pretty but wow! It was kind of like a linebacker against the pavlova’s ballerina, in the best possible way.  So full of flavour.  And quite right for the time of year!  Also, like a good wine, this baby just gets better with age. And it lasts.  It kept for about a week in the fridge. It probably would have kept for longer, we just ate it all.

Fruit and Nut Gingerbread Loaf

This week, I am looking forward to cooking

Lunch, Starter or Salad: Italian Stuffed Deli Loaf

The Main Event: Chicken, Mushroom and Walnut Cannelloni from Katie Quinn Davies for the Cookbook Guru

Sweet Dreams: Honey Pots

In Other News, I Have Been

Shopping

Another bit of a cookbook binge – I bought the next two Tasty Reads book club books.  And as my Christmas present to myself, the new Nigella:

Books Collage2

Reading

I gave up on The Reckoning.  Life’s too short for a book you don’t enjoy.  I have started the December t book club selection,  The Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks.  Personally, I would not have chosen to read this in a billion years – the fictional lives of Biblical characters not being high on my list of interests but I am finding myself increasingly drawn into this story.  Which is exactly why I joined the book club – to widen my reading horizons.

I also gave up on The Last Werewolf and am now listening to Time and Time Again by Ben Elton on audio which so far has been great.  And I do love a bit o’ time travelling!   The only problem with this is that I keep thinking it is called Time After Time and I have had that Cyndi Lauper song in my head for DAYS!!!!

 

Books Collage3

Watching

Along with time travelling, I am also very fond of a conspiracy theory and I happened to catch the last half of Room 237 on the telly the other night.  It blew my mind!  How I have missed this up to now I do not know   A film about all the hidden meanings in a film I love?   I loved it!!!  I’m watching it again this weekend. From the start.  Possibly several times.

"Proof" The Moon Landing Was Faked By Stanley Kubrick

Danny’s jumper is apparently one of the many clues hidden in The Shining that point to Stanley Kubrick having staged the moon landings. For the rest and many more theories about the movie, watch Room 237.  It’s mad and awesome and cuckoo lala.

For something else that is nutty in all the right ways, you could try making this Fruit and Nut Gingerbread Loaf!

I adapted my recipe from this one:

Sticky apple and gingerbread pecan loaf cake

Print

Fruit and Nut Gingerbread Loaf

A delicious fruity gingerbread – perfect for this festive time of year!

Ingredients

Scale
  • 150g salted butter plus extra to grease
  • 200ml milk
  • 150g brown sugar
  • 150g golden syrup
  • 250g plain flour
  • 11/2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 50g dried apricots, chopped
  • 75g pecans roughly chopped (plus more whole to garnish)
  • 50g crystalised ginger, roughly chopped (plus more to garnish)
  • 2 green apples, peeled, cored, cut into a 1 cm dice
  • 50g sultanas
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 250g icing sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 180C. Grease and line a 1.5L loaf pan with baking paper.
  2. Place the butter, golden syrup and brown sugar into a small saucepan and stir until the sugar has melted and the mixture is smooth and has thickened slightly.
  3. Stir in the milk.
  4. Set aside to cool.
  5. Sift the flour, cinnamon, ground ginger and baking powder into a bowl.
  6. Make a well into the centre and pour in the cooled milk mixture.
  7. Stir with a wooden spoon until well combined, then fold in the apples, ginger, pecans, sultanas and apricots.
  8. Pour the mixture into the prepared pan and bake for 50 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.
  9. Cool for 5 minutes in the pan then turn out onto a wire rack.
  10. Mix the lemon juice and icing sugar. The mixture should be a thick liquid.
  11. Once the cake is completely cooled, pour the lemon icing over the top.
  12. Top with reserved pecans and ginger.
  13. Enjoy!

Question Time

This week, I want to know your answers to the questions posed on the front of Time After Time Time and Time Again:

“If you had one chance to change history

Where would you go?

What would you do?

Who would you kill?

I can’t wait to hear what you come back with!

Have a great week!

 

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The Dishiest Dish – Green Sauce

English is meant to be one of the most descriptive and eloquent languages in the world.  Why then, do some phrases sound so blah when contrasted to their foreign counterparts? Take Green Sauce, this week’s dish o’ the week. How much better would it sound if it were called Salsa Verde or Sauce Verte or even Pesto?

Green Sauce 1

All of these suggest a zing, a zippiness, a brightness that plain old Green Sauce totally fails to convey.  However, out of everything I made from The Meatball cookbook, the green sauce was an absolute standout highlight which I will make over and over.

This stuff is like crack.  Seriously, make it once and you will want to smear, drizzle, spread this over EVERYTHING.  And here’s the thing – it’s good with everything.  Here are some of the stuff I have eaten it with outside of the meatballs:

  • Steak
  • Roast chicken //Poached Chicken
  • Pasta
  • Bread
  • Fish or any white seafood – lobster, crayfish, prawns, scallops
  • Baked and boiled potatoes

And it’s not just me.  Everyone in the book club who made this sauce agreed it was the bomb!

It’s also a good way to get rid of some of the herbs you have used in other recipes that might otherwise go to waste.  I have added tarragon and mint into the mix and it was delicious both times.

Make it.  Make it today.  You will not be disappointed.  I promise.

Oh yeah, the meatballs were good too!  These are the chicken, cheese and corn balls.

Green Sauce 2 No real recipe fails this week – just me failing to make some Banana Buttermilk Pancakes (which have been top of my list for weekend breakfasts) for maybe the tenth week in a row. I’ve given up, I’m making a saffron and pistachio kulfi with the buttermilk as we speak.

This week I am looking forward to cooking:

After  the meatfest that was meatball week, I am looking forward to making some salads and this Cucumber, Pistachio, Grape and Feta salad from Australian Gourmet Traveller is hitting every button I have.

So is this Shaved Asparagus, Cured Beef and Manchego Salad but I’m not sure if I can be arsed curing my own beef.  Does that make me lazy?  Or is that asking too damn much?  What is a good substitute?  I was thinking I could use pastrami.  Suggestions gratefully accepted!

Hmm…there’s buttermilk in that dressing.  Maybe the banana pancakes are back on the menu.

In the oven at the moment is Vincent Price’s Champagne chicken for the #treasurycookalong over at Silver Screen Suppers, it is smelling delicious!

In Other News I Am

Listening To

I have downloaded but am yet to listen to The Message Podcast.  I’ll let you know how that one works out.

Reading

Still on Orphan #8.  Had a moment this week sitting in the doctor’s waiting room to get my foot x-rayed  whilst reading about a woman who had her whole life destroyed by x-rays and briefly wondered if I should make a run for it.  Sadly, the most I could have managed was a slow hobble.

Reading/Listening

For some reason my computer decided to wipe all the files for  Life After LifeWhich is a shame because I was really enjoying it. I’m not totally upset though because I think it is something I will like even more by actually reading it.

I have switched to audio reading Jon Ronson’s  So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed and I am  loving it.  I think Jon Ronson is brilliant and have read (nearly) all of his books and never been disappointed.  There is something about those smart witty British boys (Ronson, Alain De Botton, Louis Theroux) that does it for me BIG time.  I am also totally loving that Jon Ronson is reading the audio himself.  I would recommend this to anyone who has any online presence (this means you)  in terms of how to behave on the old dub-dub-dub that we all share.

Niki Sengit’s The Flavour Thesaurus is a book I have dipped in and out of for years.  I am  now reading it cover to cover.  And loving it too.  I can’t tell you what I enjoy more, her scalding wit or the great recipe suggestions.

Watching

I  watched Best in Show earlier today and it was as funny as ever.  I had totally forgotten some of the mad random bits of hilarity such as Eugene Levy’s two left feet.  Utterly watchable!

I have a real hankering to go back and watch some early XFiles.  I have yet to scratch that particular itch but it’s there….

Here is the Green Sauce Recipe and if you are only ever going to act on one thing from this blog make this green sauce.

It comes from this book:

Print

Green Sauce – From Meatballs The Ultimate Guide by Matteo Bruno

Ingredients

Scale
  • 50g (a large bunch) flat leaf (Italian) parsley, leaves picked
  • 50g (a large bunch) basil, leaves picked
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 35g blanched almonds
  • 10g anchovies
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 120ml extra virgin olive oil
  • 25 parmesan cheese, finely grated

Instructions

  1. Blitz the herbs, garlic, almonds, anchovies, lemon juice, olive oil and a pinch of salt and pepper in a food processor for around a minute or until a smooth sauce has formed.
  2. Add the parmesan and blitz for another minute.

What’s going on in your life / kitchen?    What was the best thing you made this week?

What are you looking forward to making next week?

What are you reading, watching, listening to?

Please share!

Have a fabulous week everyone!

Happy Cooking!

Signature 1 Vintage Valentine Quick as Wink2

 

 

 

The Dishiest Dish – Black and Blueberry Crumble

Black berries, blueberries, dots of marzipan, almonds, choc chips, a splash of amaretto and, of course some custard?  How could the Black and Blueberry Crumble not be the dish of the week?

Black and Blueberry Almond Crumble

Close second was Karen Martini’s Sausage, Ham & Egg Pizza.

Sausage, Ham & Egg Pizza

Fail of the week?  The Broccoli con Anchovy from The River Cafe Cookbook.  I’m not sure what it is with me and this book.  Last week the rotolo was a fail.  This week, I didn’t even get to cook anything.

Here’s the thing.  I put broccoli on my shopping list.  I ticked it off my list meaning it had gone from shelf to basket.   I should have had broccoli in my fridge. BUT I tootled off to twilight yoga on Sunday afternoon planning to have a healthy broccoli con anchovy supper on my return.  Got home, had my aromatherapy bath, got into my jamies. And no broccoli.  Not in the fridge, not misplaced in the cupboard.  Not in the car.  Just a black hole of broccoli.

And yes, I could have gone and bought some but I was already in my pyjamas and Doctor Who was about to start.

This week I am looking forward to cooking:

Tasty Reads is coming up, I am going to make the Chicken, Cheese and Corn meatballs and the Raw Tuna Meatballs from the meatball cookbook. I found the Turkey Cran meatballs I made a little too sweet for my taste.  I will try these again but instead of the dried sweetened cranberries required by the recipe I will use fresh (frozen) cranberries.  They will bring a much needed touch of tartness.  Also place the balls in the freezer for maybe 15 minutes so the cheese doesn’t ooze out everywhere.

Black and Blueberry Almond Crumble2In Other News I Am

Listening To

  • I know I spoke about this last week but OMG Episode 3 of Limetown sent shivers up my backbone.  The last ten minutes?  Possibly the scariest thing I have ever listened to.
  • In the same creepy vein, Mark had never heard of Jonestown until this week.  Reminded me of this other creepy, but this time true, pod.  

Reading/Listening

I finished A Rush Of Blood on audio,  It was ok. I think the author drew a long bow for the reasons for the murders.

Am about to start Life After Life.

Watching

We saw William Shatner’s Stage Show the other night.  Briilliant.  We have started marathon watching Boston Legal on the back of it. It’s still immensely watchable!

Also A Beautiful Lie on ABC.  This is a modern day version of Anna Karenina which so far has been superb.  Except for one teeny thing…the Vronsky character is not at all good looking.  In fact, Mr Karenina is waaay more handsome.  Despite this, absolutely loving it.

 

Print

Green Sauce – From Meatballs The Ultimate Guide by Matteo Bruno

Ingredients

Scale
  • 50g (a large bunch) flat leaf (Italian) parsley, leaves picked
  • 50g (a large bunch) basil, leaves picked
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 35g blanched almonds
  • 10g anchovies
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 120ml extra virgin olive oil
  • 25 parmesan cheese, finely grated

Instructions

  1. Blitz the herbs, garlic, almonds, anchovies, lemon juice, olive oil and a pinch of salt and pepper in a food processor for around a minute or until a smooth sauce has formed.
  2. Add the parmesan and blitz for another minute.

What’s going on in your life / kitchen?    What was the best thing you made this week?

What are you looking forward to making next week?

What are you reading, watching, listening to?

Please share!

Have a fabulous week everyone!

Happy Cooking!

Signature 1 Vintage Valentine Quick as Wink2