Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Talking and cooking tour

I'm starting to travel to friends' houses, demonstrating new ways to use everyday ingredients to groups of people, in the hope of perking up our everyday eating lives. Seems like everyone is stuck in the same family cooking cycle of bolognese, pesto, sausages, fish fingers and pizza. I think of it as Lowest Common Denominator Cooking. I'm on a one woman mission to break habitual cooking. Here I am, prepping for the first demonstration, looking somewhat nervous (but loving my new Bodum ceramic knife, so sharp! Cutting will never be the same again). On the menu: pumpkin houmous, better beans on toast, puy lentil and tenderstem broccoli salad, Miso pollack (with apologies to Nobu), chicken teriyaki (great for kids), sausagemeat with chilli and fennel, and eastern trifle, all from the new book, Cooking for Real Life. Seems like everyone had as good a time as I did. Can't wait for the next one.

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Fishy paella with preserved lemons


Friends for supper last night, and I had not been wildly organised. One of the things I find hardest in the country is not having easy access to good fish (I'm not too keen on buying from the supermarket). Had some good fresh Cornish mackerel in the freezer, small, dark purple sweet peppers in the greenhouse, and our own onions hanging in the garage - enough, along with smoked sweet paprika, plenty of garlic and some short grain brown rice to make a pleasing fishy paella. Perfect with Sam's Ottolenghi preserved lemons that she'd brought as a gift, and a rocket salad on the side, along with some of the few ripe tomatoes from the greenhouse.

Medlars in the Snow


Snow today. Amazing and terrifying - how long is this winter going to be? Saved all the medlars - our only tree fruit crop this year - we could find. After last year's less than popular medlar jelly, I'm wondering if you can make medlar membrillo? Need to let them blet (start rotting) first. Watch this space.