Saturday, 6 August 2011

Summer Linguine with Aged Pecorino

I've actually got organised and put in an order from Ocado (25% off? Yes please) which is going to turn up til Monday night.  So a storecupboard supper using up the bits and bobs left in the fridge definitely seemed the way to go tonight. One of those bits was a hunk of glorious aged Pecorino that I picked up on a visit to Borough Market a couple weeks ago - I'd love to tell you which stall it was from but I've no idea, and besides - half the fun of Borough is exploring and trying so I invite you to go and find out for yourself is you get the chance!  I'd not used Pecorino before, but it has the deep, salty umami taste of a parmesan but with more of an earthiness to it and a less crumbly texture.  As my housemate noted - its also quite pongy for a hard cheese so you might want to lock it up well!

Also the diet seems to have gone a bit haywire again - I blame multiple hangovers and a lingering bout of flu that's been hanging on for over a week.  I mean its AUGUST - WTF???  So carbs have sneakied back into my diet this week - sometimes only the comfort derived from a bowl of steaming pasta will do.  Today was such a day.

For once this isn't a bastardisation of a known recipe - but these ingredients are such natural bedfellows that when you combine them you know it by instinct anyway. Its not startlingly original, but its fresh and satisfying, and great for a cool summer evening with a nice crisp white.

Ingredients
Linguine - or other pasta, but preferably something long like spaghetti, Tagliatelle or Pappardelle.
Good Olive Oil - several glugs
Garlic - 2 or 3 cloves grated or crushed
4 spring onions - the whites chopped quite small, the green left bigger
handful of ripe cherry tomatoes
peas - frozen are fine, just pour some boling water over them to defrost
some fresh basil
A squeeze of lemon
Aged Pecorino (finely grated)  - Parmesan is great instead.
1 egg (optional)
salt and pepper

Equipment
1 large saucepan
1 other large pan - sauce pan or frying pan is fine - what ever you have
Garlic crusher or grater

Method
This is a quick recipe, so you should be able to make the sauce in the time it takes to cook up the pasta
  1. Put the water on to boil and cook the linguine according to the instructions on the pack.  Drain, and reserve a little of the cooking water to loosen the sauce if necessary.
  2. Warm a couple of glugs of olive oil in the other pan over a low/medium heat. Add the crushed garlic and spring onions. If you crush the garlic rather than chop it takes less time to cook and distributes more evenly through the sauce.  You don't want any of it to colour or over cook - just take away the harshness of the raw.  2 or 3 minutes should do it.
  3. Cut the cherry tomatoes in half and add to the onion and garlic, along with the basil and the peas.  Cook for another couple of minutes to heat the peas and cause the juices from the tomatoes to start to run.  
  4. Add a squeeze of lemon - this really helps to lift the flavours and lightens the whole dish. Taste and season - remember you still have the salty cheese to add, so don't go too wild with the salt.  Add a little more lemon to your taste - but go easy, you don't want to over power it, so add a little at a time and taste after each addition.
  5. Add the drained linguine to the sauce, drizzle a little more oil over if you like and a few more basil leaves.  If it looks a bit dry, then add a little of the cooking water to get it moving.
  6. Serve with a generous sprinkle of the grated Pecorino and a grind or two of black pepper.


Optional extras
There are a couple of tweaks that work well with this sort of recipe that you might find works better for you.  The recipe above is very light, fresh and clean.  The two following options make for a deeper, richer and thicker sauce.

Option 1: Cheesy Linguine... This gives the dish a much more intense flavour from the cheese.

Once you've drained the pasta, toss it in some of the grated Pecorino.  The residual heat will cause the cheese to melt and cling to the pasta instead of melting into the sauce as it does when you add it at the end.  Then add the pasta to the sauce as before. I'd love to claim this as my idea but i actually heard about it in a book - Frances Mayes' "Everyday in Tuscany".  I've got all of her books on audio - perfect for some vicarious daydreaming on my dreary commute along the Metropolitan line.

Option 2: Eggy goodness - for a richer, thicker, creamier sauce - without using cream.  I never have cream in the fridge - but I've almost always got an egg to hand.  Its the same idea as for as a carbonara, and would work very well if you are using one of the broader, flatter pastas like Tagliatelle of Parpadelle.

Follow the main method right up until the point of serving. Once you've mixed in the linguine to the sauce - turn off the heat and break an egg in on top.  Stir vigorously with a wooden spoon to mix up the egg, but try not to bash the tomatoes around too much (tricky).  The heat from the pan and the other ingredients will cook the egg and with it give the whole lot a lovely silky texture.  BUT only if you don't have too much heat or cook it for too long. If you do that, you will probably end up with pasta and scrambled egg!  So keep stirring and watch the consistency as it changes.  Then serve as before.

And that's it - to quote a Meerkat (ahem) - Simples!

Have fun making it your own!

Monday, 18 July 2011

Totally Guilty Carrot Cupcakes


I was feeling particularly guilty at the weekend as I was about to tell my team at work that I had handed in my notice and was abandoning them.  So i decided to do some guilt baking to soften them up - and these little beauties are just right for the job.  I'm a big fan of carrot cake - in fact its right up there in my top - oooh 5 or so cakes (its a hard choice), but have found that its hard to get that depth taste and texture with the mini versions which have a tendency to dry out.  Not so with these bad boys - they are very moist, with the soaked sultanas giving an extra pop of flavour with you bite into them - and the rich sticky icing is enough to make even the most saintly soul feel a little bit guilty!

The recipe is adapted from http://www.joyofbaking.com/CarrotCupcake.html - thanks for the inspiration! As usual i didn't have all the ingredients and have tweaked it out of preference and necessity.


My scales are broken at the moment, so everything was done the American way - by volume and I have to say I may be a convert.  I also have very little in the way of kitchen equipment, so most things are done by hand in my method - if you have a lovely Kenwood mixer or something then by all means use it (especially for the icing which is a total ball ache by hand)!  This should make about 20 little parcels of carrotty loveliness.



Ingredients:
 2 cups (260g) plain flour
1 1/2 teaspoons bicarbonate of soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 teaspoons ground Allspice
4 large eggs, beaten
1 cup (200g) soft brown sugar and caster sugar (use what you have in the cupboard - I used about 3/4 brown)
1 cup (240 ml) sunflower oil or other light flavourless oil (vegetable or a very light olive oil)
21/2 cups (260g) grated raw carrots
1 large apple grated
1 cup (100g) sultanas
2 tbsp orange based fruit juice
Some hot black tea
Optional : 1/2 cup (55g) pecans or walnuts, coarsely chopped and dusted in flour to help stop them sinking (I leave them out)

Vanilla Cream Cheese Icing
1/2 cup (113g) unsalted butter, room temperature
8 ounces (227g) cream cheese, room temperature
3 cups (330g) icing sugar, sifted
2 tsp Vanilla paste (if you have to use essence then only use 1 tsp)

Equipment:
Two large mixing bowls
one small bowl
Measuring jug
Wooden spoon
Sieve
Whisk
Metal spoon
Hand mixer
Paper Muffin Cases
Muffin or cup cake baking trays - a normal flat baking tray will do, but your cakes won't be very round!

For the cakes
  • Pre heat the oven to 180C and line your muffin tins with paper cases.
  • Place the sultanas and juice into the small bowl, boil the kettle and make yourself  a cup of tea - before you add the milk, pour enough of the hot black tea on to the sultanas to nearly cover them in liquid.  Give them a stir and zap in the microwave for about 15 seconds.  Leave to soak - they should plump up considerably.

  • In one of your big bowls whisk together the dry ingredients (Flour, salt, bicarb and spice).  Whisking has a similar effect to sieving the flour by adding air, but with less kitchen coverage.

  • In your other bowl whisk the oil and sugar together until slightly thickened (I used my little electric hand mixer for this) then whisk in the beaten eggs til throughly mixed
  • Fold in the flour with a big metal spoon, don't beat out all the air.  Then fold in the grated carrot, apple, plumped-up sultanas and nuts if you're using them.

  • Now divide your mixture between the cases and bake for about 20 minutes. Test by sticking a skewer into the centre of one, if it comes out clean its done. Take them out and cool on a rack.

For the icing
  • In a big bowl, cream the butter with a wooden spoon - use an electric mixer if you have one.  Then beat in the cream cheese until its all smooth and pale. 
  • Now beat in the sifted icing sugar - its may help to put a damp tea towel over the bowl as you start this to help reduce the blizzard-in-a-kitchen look. 
  • Finally stir in the vanilla paste and mix thoroughly.  You should now have something resembling very thick cream shot through with little specks of vanilla - and it tastes GORGEOUS!! 

    And Finally
    My icing went a bit runny so I just dolloped a spoonful on each cooled cupcake and swirled it about a bit.  If you want yours a bit firmer then beat it for longer or try adding some more icing sugar which should help thicken it up a bit - then if you're feeling fancy you can pipe it on to the cakes.  Either way its all good!

    Now get unloading that guilt - although i ate rather a lot of mine, so ended up feeling even more guilty.  What a bitch.
     

    Saturday, 5 March 2011

    Welcome to my blog!

    I love to cook and I love to write.   I don't always have the time I'd like to as much of either as I'd like, so this seemed like a great way to make sure I do lots of both!  So - the name?  Well I don't know about you - but i never EVER seem to have all the ingredients, kitchen equipment or time to follow a recipe completely from start to finish.  And to be honest - rarely the inclination either - So I wander off the restricting path of the recipe and make my own way down the culinary mountain!  Sometimes it works and you have the most delicious experience, and some times you wipe out - with the cooking equivalent of a face-plant.  But you know but its great fun, very exciting and I've hardly ever ended up in hospital...

    Hope you enjoy reading it!  And if you wipe out?  Dust yourself off and get back out there!