Tag: Fish

Nov 03 – Gimme Some Oven

Hello retro food lovers and welcome (back) to November 2003!  This month I am using Delicious Magazine to prepare a menu where we use the oven for each component.  I know a heap of people who never use their oven so I was hoping this might inspire some people to do so.  Unfortunately, this didn’t quite turn out as I was a bit disappointed with a few items on the menu.  There were many items to choose from, so maybe I just chose badly.  But before we get there, let’s take a little look at what was happening in the world in November 2003.

The War on Terror, the occupation of Iraq, and Paris Hilton’s sex tape were big news in November 2003.   There were also some cracking movies out.  Matrix Revolutions was number 1 at the box office, followed by Elf at #2 and Love Actually at #7. 

 The DaVinci Code was still the best-selling book and Baby Boy by Beyonce was #1 on the charts.  Personally, Outkast’s Hey Ya (#3) is a much better song but each to their own!

The Menu – November 2003

November 2003 Menu

Crab and Gruyere Tart

I was very surprised to find that the Crab and Gruyere Tart (I made one large tart instead of a few small tartlets) was largely tasteless.  This was a Rick Stein recipe and I normally find him very reliable.    This is not what I expect from a Rick recipe.  I feel this needed a herb or something to liven it up a bit! Neither crab nor gruyere is a cheap item so this also did not rate on value for money. 

Interestingly, Nathan Outlaw who, apart from having an amazing name, has worked with Rick Stein and, like Stein has a restaurant in Cornwall, has a recipe for a Crab and Cheddar Tart.  His recipe also contains spring onions and leeks.  I wonder if this would provide the flavour boost I felt was lacking in the Rick one.  

Crab and Gruyere Tart

Crab and Gruyere Tart Recipe

Nov 2003 - Crab And Gruyere Tartlets

Fish in a Herb Crust with Lemon Oil

In total contrast to the above, this is a Jill Dupleix recipe which I loved.  Personally, I don’t rate Jill Dupleix.  She hosted a night in conversation with Nigella Lawson I went to once and she came across as a bit obnoxious.  I really liked this recipe though!  It was quick and easy to make and was packed with flavour!  It was a lovely weeknight dinner. 

Fish in A Herb Crust

Fish In a Herb Crust with Lemon Oil Recipe

Fish in A Herb Crust recipejpg

Madeleines

I love a Madeleine.   So, as soon as I saw that there was a recipe for them in Delicious for November 2003 I knew I would have them as part of my menu.  In retrospect, maybe I should have chosen something else as this was not a good Madeleine recipe.  I have read many recipes for Madeleines and all, except for this one, call for the cake batter to be refrigerated for about an hour before baking.  This one didn’t.  It also only said to grease the Madeleine pan, not grease and flour it, again something that is in all the other recipes I have seen.  

Madeleines

These were a nightmare to get out of the pan.  They also lacked the nice crust that you usually get on the outside.  I think that was mostly stuck to the pan.  So another disappointment from this magazine.  

Madeleines Recipe

Nov 2003 - Madeleines

My Nigella Moment  – Turkish Pizza

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.  

My Nigella moment this month came in the shape of a Turkish Pizza, which is not a pizza in the traditional sense but a totally yummy combination of spinach, feta, and mozzarella in Turkish bread. I loved this!  So easy to make and so tasty!  I will defintely be cooking the Turkish Pizza again!

Turkish Pizza Recipe

 

So, it was very much a mixed bag from Delicious Magazine from November 2003.  The oven did not deliver the loving I was hoping for with two of the four recipes not worthy of keeping. The fish was quick and easy and I will make it again.  That Turkish pizza though?  Perfection!  I have already made it twice more and it continues to delight me!

Have a great week!

 

 

October 2003 – The White Menu

Hello retro food lovers and welcome to October 2003 where today I am using Delicious magazine to create a white menu.  White food has the double reputation of being 1) boring and 2) overly processed so my aim with this menu was to try to combat both of those.  But first, let’s take a look at what was happening in pop-culture in October 2003.  

School of Rock was #1 at the box office and The Five People You Meet In Heaven was the best-selling book.  Number 1 on the pop charts was Where Is The Love by The Black Eyed Peas.  Two weeks earlier it was White Flag by Dido which would have fit in perfectly with this menu!  Let’s hope I won’t have to wave a white flag with my menu!

Now I also realise that this view of my cheesecake is not white, however it just looked so good, I couldn’t resist sharing it!  

Cheesecake Oct 2023

 

The Menu – October 2003

I found this menu template on Etsy.  Isn’t it gorgeous?  We’ll be seeing it a lot more from now on!

Menu October 2003

 

 

Mozzarella and Grilled Chilli Salad

This was AMAZING!  So tasty and the perfect way to kick off a meal!  I loved the simplicity/minimalism of this Jamie Oliver recipe.  It also not only looked beautiful on the plate but tasted divine!  Another recipe from this same article, a squid and cannellini bean salad nearly made the cut for the main dish in the menu and is something I am still very keen to try!

Mozzarella Salad

 

Mozzarella and Grilled Chilli Salad Recipe

Mozzarell and Grilled Chilli Salad recipe

Fish Stew With Lemongrass and Lime

This is an Ainsley Harriott recipe and was also divine!  It was light and refreshing and, as he says in his intro, very different from the usual tomato-based fish stews.  Like the  mozzarella starter, this would be a perfect summer meal. 

Lemongrass and Lime Fish Stew

Lemongrass and Lime Fish Stew Recipe

Lemongrass and Lime Fish Stew recipe

Low Fat Cheesecake

I felt bad that I could not deliver a cheesecake for the Birthday Party, Cheesecake, Jelly Bean, Boom!  menu.  Because I LOVE cheesecake!  So I was delighted to find one in this issue of Delicious.  And this was a beauty too.  It’s a pretty classic baked cheesecake.  Even though it is low fat, it feels  rich,  The rest of this menu is light though so this seemingly decadent dessert won’t weigh you down too much!

Cheesecake Oct 2023 2

Low Fat  Cheesecake Recipe

 

Low Fat Cheesecake Recipe

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My Nigella Moment  – Beef with Lavender Mustard

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 the context of 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 either because I made it and it was really good, or I just didn’t have time to make it but it was one of the most appetising things in the mag!

Beef with Lavender Honey

OMG, this beef just melted in my mouth!  And if you’re thinking you don’t have any Lavender Mustard, come back next week.  I’ll have a little treat for you.  I added a spoonful of honey to my Lavender Mustard to give the required sweetness to this.   Also, I misread the ingredients and I bought a rump roast and not rump steak for my version.  I seared the meat as per the recipe and then roasted it until it reached 72C / 165F on my meat thermometer.  

Beef With Lavender Mustard

 

Well, Delicious Magazine from October 2003 really came through with a delicious white-themed menu for me!  Certainly no Didoesque white flag moments for me!  

 

Girl’s Night – February 2003

Hello Friends! This week we are stepping back in time to February 2003 via Delicious magazine. It just so happened that the topic that came up in my random generator was Girl’s Night.  So it seemed like a perfect opportunity to tie this into Galantine’s Day.

Before we get into that, let’s set the scene for February 2003.  The month started with “Beautiful” by  Christina Aguilera topping the charts.  This was replaced by Avril Lavigne with “Im with you” for the remainder of the month.  Number one in the box office was “How to Lose A Guy in Ten Days” and the best-selling book this week was The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold.

Watermelon Vodka

My menu has somewhat of a pink theme which seems fitting for a Girl’s night but the content is definitely adult, starting with a watermelon vodka cocktail!

Watermelon Vodka

 

Watermelon Vodka Cocktail

This was so simple!  I added a little squeeze of lime into the watermelon and vodka mix as I felt it was a bit too sweet / one note without it.  It was super refreshing and made the most of our lovely summer produce!  Be careful though…too many of these and you’ll be slurring

I am beautiful no matter what they sayWords can’t bring me downI am beautiful in every single wayYes, words can’t bring me down, oh noSo don’t you bring me down today

into a pretend mic and telling all your gal pals how much you love them before dessert!

Watermelon Vodka Recipe:

Watermelon Vodka Recipe

Beetroot Confit and Marinated Goat’s FetaTarts

I didn’t make these because I pretty much hate beetroot.  To me, except for one Beetroot Tzatziki which I love, it tastes like dirt.  The funny thing is though, it is something I really want to like.  So I keep trying to make things with it in the hope that I will find the magic recipe that turns that switch in me from off to on.  In this instance, I love the look of the pastry dotted with poppy seeds, the shape of the tiny little black dots echoed in the round of the goat’s cheese, and the gorgeous crimson of the beetroot in between.

Beetroot Tarts Picture

Confit Beetroot and Goat’s Cheese Tarts Recipe:

Confit Beetroot Tarts (1)

 

Tuna Carpaccio

Tuna Carpaccio

I loved this!!! It was so good!  (one thing, I completely forgot to add the cucumber to this!). Also, I had no mixed baby cress so I subbed in watercress.  When I was in Darwin recently, we went to a restaurant called Pee Wee’s at the Point for the Fussiest Eater in the World’s birthday.  There, I had a buffalo carpaccio which was one of the best things I have ever eaten in my life!  That dish came with a Hot English Mustard Mayo which inspired me to add my own mayo to this carpaccio.  I made a Wasabi Mayonnaise (you can see a little dab of it front and centre in the above photo).

Here is a pic of that buffalo carpaccio.  Just looking at it makes we want to go all the way back to Darwin so I can eat it again!

Buffalo Carpaccio

Tuna Carpaccio Recipe:

Tuna Carpaccio collage 2

Baby Tiramisu

These look adorable!  And despite not being pink, they are the perfect way to end the evening…or to snack on as you are settling on the couch to watch a dvd or two!  And because they are tiny, you can eat one and still fit into a dress just like Kate Hudson’s in “How To Lose A Guy in Ten Days”! 

Baby Tiramisu Recipe:

Tiramisu Collage 2

My Nigella Moment – Duck with Berries

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 the context of 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 either because I made it and it was really good, or I just didn’t have time to make it! 

This month, my Nigella dish is Duck with Berries which came from an article on romantic food to cook for Valentine’s day.  It was so good! Timing is so important when cooking duck and this recipe nailed it!

Duck with Berries

Duck with Berries Recipe:

Duck with Berries recipe (1)

Delicious Magazine certainly delivered on the Girl’s Night Menu!

Please let me know if you make the Beetroot Tarts. I am so intrigued by them! And also, if you are old enough to have had a girl’s night in 2003, would this have been the menu you would have chosen?

If you would like to contribute a theme, please let me know,  I’m up for any challenge you can throw at me!

And happy Valentines, Galentines or however you want to spend the coming Tuesday!

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Fish with with Mulligatawny Flavours

The Daily News Cookery Book is a stalwart of Sri Lankan Cooking, first published in 1929.  My mum was given a copy as a wedding present which we still have and I have a copy of the 2013 edition which seems to be a paperback copy of the 1964 edition without the vintage ads but with all the quirkiness. This quirkiness oftentimes means it is not the easiest book to cook from.   The methods of cooking can seem outdated, the measurements can be odd.  So, I often use it more as an inspiration rather than something to follow exactly.  This is how my dish of Fish with Mulligatawny Flavours came about.  It was so tasty and delicious that I wanted to share it – and after all, it is truly revamping a retro dish for modern times!

Fish with Mulligatawny Flavours 1

So, I hear you ask, why not just make this as a mulligatawny?  I had some really nice roti and I wanted to dip that bread into something thicker than a soup.  A curry gravy seemed like the perfect thing.  So, why not just call it a fish curry?  I wanted to recognise the OG recipe which was for a fish mulligatawny.   There are also some very non-traditional ingredients here – for instance, you would never see Thai Basil in a traditional Sri Lankan curry.  However,  I love its flavour, particularly with fish!  Roti is also not a traditional accompaniment for Sri Lankan food – we do have a coconut roti but this is not the flaky type of bread I am referring to here.

Fish With Mulligatawny Flavours – The Recipes

And now here is the OG recipe.  You can, of course, choose to make this version if you wish.  Please let me know how it turns out if you do!  If not keep reading for my version!

Fsh with Mulligatawny Flavours Recipe

Fish With Mulligatawny Flavours 2

Print

Fish with with Mulligatawny Flavours

A modern take on a vintage recipe for Fish Mulligatawny

Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 red onions, 2 sliced, 2 chopped finely
  • 1 sprig of curry leaves (about 20 leaves)
  • 2 tbsp ghee or coconut oil, split
  • *450g-600g fish fillets (I used Rockling) but any white fish would work.
  • 1 270ml can of coconut milk
  • 200g vegetable stock
  • 1 tsp ground coriander
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1/2 tsp fenugreek powder
  • 2 cloves of garlic, crushed
  • 1 tsp ginger, grated
  • 2cm stick of cinnamon
  • 2 tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 10cm stick of celery cut in 4 pieces
  • 150g of green beans, chopped (optional)
  • Salt

To Serve:

  • Lime cheeks
  • Thai basil or Coriander
  • Roti or Rice

Instructions

  • Heat half the ghee or coconut oil in a large saucepan over medium heat.
  • Add the sliced onions, half the curry leaves and a pinch of salt.
  • Drop the heat to low and cook, stirring occasionally until the onions are a deep brown.  Take your time with this, it took me 20 minutes to get the onions as dark as I wanted them.  Remove these from the pan and set aside.

 

  • Wipe the pan and add the rest of the coconut oil / ghee.
  • Once this is melted turn down the heat and add the chopped onions, the rest of the curry leaves, the coriander, cumin, turmeric, fenugreek, cinnamon, garlic, ginger and celery.
  • Cook stirring often until the spices are fragrant and the onions are softened.
  • Add the stock and coconut milk.  Cook this mixture down until the gravy reaches the consistency of thickened cream.
  • Add the beans, if you are using them, to the pan.
  • Sprinkle your fish fillets with salt and add to the pan.  Cook for 2-3 minutes on each side, depending on the thickness of your fish.  When you turn the fish over, add the chopped tomatoes.
  • Check for taste – add more salt and or a squeeze of lime to balance out the flavours.
  • Remove the cinnamon stick and the pieces of celery.**

To Serve

  • Place a fillet of fish on each place, spoon over the gravy and top each piece of fish with the reserved onion and curry leaf mix.
  • Garnish with coriander, Thai basil and lime wedges
  • Serve with rice and/or flaky roti to soak up that lovely gravy.

Enjoy!

 

Notes

*I had 450g of fish which was three fillets however there was a lot of gravy so you could easily add another fillet in for this same quantity.

** I do not like the texture of cooked celery so I like to remove it before serving.  If you are happy to eat it, chop the celery into smaller slices, as you would when making a soup and leave it in.

 

Fish with Mulligatawny Flavours 3

This is a lovely gently spiced delicate dish – the perfect response to anyone who thinks that all Sri Lankan food is blow your head off hot!

I also found myself eating the leftover gravy with more of that roti the following day and it was also delicious!

I hope you have enjoyed my updating of this old recipe!

Have a great week!

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A Murder on The Orient Express Collab

All aboard!  Welcome friends to a cooking and murder collab between Silver Screen Suppers and Retro Food For Modern Times.   Jenny and I have been tallking about doing this literally for months!  I am breaking my usual Dining with the Dame Format to cook recipes by the stars of the 1974 version of Murder on The Orient Express and half a world away in London Jenny is doing the same.  Jenny provided the recipes and we agreed to watch the film on the same day!

Murder on the Orient Express1

Murder on The Orient Express 1974 – The Film

As with the Kenneth Brannagh 2017 film, the 1974 version of Murder on the Orient Express is a star-studded affair!  The rather schlocky trailer describes it as the “Who’s who in the whodunnit”.

Albert Finney stars as Poirot  Agatha Christie herself gave Albert the thumbs up in his portrayal of Poirot.  (He was excellent, and his denouement at the end is amazing – he had to learn 8 pages of script off by heart to do it – but for me, David Suchet is, and will only ever be, the true Poirot).

Others in the cast include Lauren Bacall, Ingrid Bergman, Jacqueline Bisset, Sean Connery, Sir John Gielgud, Anthony Perkins, Vanessa Redgrave and Michael York to name but a few!   Ingrid Bergman won an Oscar as best supporting actress for her role in this.  Albert Finney was nominated but missed out to Art Carney from Harry and Tonto.

The film follows the story of the Agatha Christie novel with the luxurious Orient Express train stuck in a snow bank with no one being able to get on or off the train.  One of the guests is stabbed to death in the night.  It is up to Hercule Poirot to discover whodunnit!.  He soon learns that the victim is connected to the kidnapping of Daisy Armstrong 5 years before.  And the group of seemingly disparate strangers on the train may not be all they seem!

The stroy is based on two true events, the first being the very famous kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby i n 1932, the second was an incident when the Orient Express was trapped for 6 days in a blizzard in Turkey in 1929.

But now, we would like you to head over to the buffet car to sample today’s menu,

The Menu

Trout in Cream Saice

For your dining pleasure on today’s journey from Istanbul to Caiais, we are delighted to be serving Trout with Cream Sauce, a recipe by Ms Ingrid Bergman.

Murder on the Orient Express2

This was delicious!  Trout is such a delicate fish and the lemony cream sauce was a perfect accompaniment to it.  I served mine with chips (very un Orient Express), beans, broccolini and some cherry tomatoes.  It was also incredibly easy to make!!! Without the chips, it is an elegant and light dish which would be worthy of the Orient Express!

The whole time I was making the trout I was singing the Billy Bragg  / Wilco song :

Ingrid Bergman, Ingrid Bergman
Let’s go make a picture
On the island of Stromboli
Ingrid Bergman
And I deft anyone who knows this song to do otherwise!

Ingrid Bergman Trout (1)

Ingrid Bergman plays Greta Ohlsson in the film and she won the Academy Award for best-supporting actress for her role. I would give her an Oscar for that trout recipe because it was chef’s kiss mwah!!!

Prune Fool Syllabub

To end your meal, we are serving  Prune Fool by Ms. Wendy Hiller.   Wendy plays Princess Dragomiroff  in Murder. I feel that the Prune Fool, despite its name has the hint of gravitas equal to such a grand dame!

Murder on the Orient Express3

I LOVED the Prune Fool!  The prunes and currants (I didn’t have sultanas in the red wine combined beautifully with the cream and shortbread.  Eating this made me feel like a grownup.  for something that is so simple to make, the end result is sophisticated.

I feel both of these dishes would meet Poirot’s approval!

Just as an aside, it appears as if, whilst on the Orient Express, Poirot has eschewed his normal tisanes and sirops for a little glass of…creme de menthe? Drunk via a straw no less.

Murder on the Orient Express4

But, I digress, back to the Prune Fool.  Murder on the Orient Express5
I know I am biased but how pretty is it?

Here’s the recipe:

Wendy Hiller Prune Fool (2)

 

Cooking for this was so fun!  I loved the film as well!  And it is always fun to have a shared project.  Thank you Jenny for the recipes and for joining in particularly on one of the big hitters like Murder on The Orient Express.  (Let’s not wait 6 months before we do another!!!)  And if anyone else would like to Dine with the Dame and me, please let me know!!!

If you would like to see what Jenny cooked and how she celebrated Murder Sunday, head over to Silver Screen Suppers for a look!

I’ll be back next week with a more traditional version of Dining with the Dame – Murder on the Orient Express 2 (Electric Boogaloo).

Have a great week and happy watching!

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