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Cavolo, Kale and Chorizo Rigatoni

May 16, 2017 by natalie Leave a Comment

I have entirely neglected the blog, for a year or so.  It is frightening to think how rapidly the time has slipped through my fingers.

Although I have not been checking in on here, I have been cooking away, preparing every meal from scratch and, when I remember, have been jotting things down for a couple of cookbook projects, which I hope one day to actually pull off. We moved the kids to another school in September so it has been a year of adjustments for all of us and a year for the blossoming of surprisingly lovely friendships.  I think I have some kind of addiction to checking my phone, which massively eats in to my time to actually achieve anything significant, the main culprits being Instagram and Facebook, I fall down that rabbit hole and whole hours just vanish!

One small request via instagram a day or so ago, to share this recipe following a snap I shared on there, seems like a perfect opportunity to convert some of that listless cyber meandering into a real connection and get back to food-inspiration.  So here goes.

This can be made with basically any brassica (kale, cavolo nero aka tuscan kale, broccoli etc.) that you have to hand and any high quality Mediterranean sausage, as these tend to be less rubbery and no gristle or bread crumbs in their mixtures and have a more granular texture when fried off.  This makes for easier distribution of the sausage over the pasta. This recipe is also GREAT with fried anchovies and garlic instead of sausage if you prefer, and it is what I had intended to make it with the day before yesterday until I realized I had no jar of anchovies to hand.  Essentially the fried fish or meat protein is what lends it the fabulous umami element.  You can get something almost as good by frying capers, tempeh, seaweed and adding tamari but it ends up tasting much more asian so you might as well change the pasta to noodles otherwise Italians will start lining up with axes to grind. These ingredients are what I had to hand, and the meal took approximately 15 minutes to make AND eat!

This can be made with basically any brassica (kale, cavolo nero aka tuscan kale, broccoli etc.) that you have to hand and any high quality Mediterranean sausage, as these tend to be less rubbery, contain mercifully little or no gristle or bread crumbs and have a more granular texture when fried off. This makes for easier distribution of the sausage over the pasta. These ingredients are what I had to hand, and the meal took approximately 15 minutes to make AND eat! In the past I have fried garlic and chilli etc. with the sausage but I found that the chorizo had so much of its own flavour and garlicky power that this was unnecessary, which is great when you are in a hurry. I also like the brand of chorizo called "Unearthed" as it does'nt contain a pile of nitrates and is relatively lean. The only reason I did it with chorizo is that I realized I had no jars of anchovies to hand. This recipe is GREAT with fried anchovies and garlic instead of sausage if you prefer. Essentially the fried fish or meat protein is what lends it the fabulous umami element. You can get something almost as good by frying capers, tempeh, seaweed and adding tamari but it ends up tasting much more asian so you might as well change the pasta to noodles.

Filed Under: Mains, Recipes

Mad Men, a Mad Woman and a Shake Up

September 12, 2016 by natalie Leave a Comment

Blind corners

Blind corners, light interspersed with shadow

Is it writer’s block /chaos /lack of discipline /general laziness that has kept me away? A combination of all, probably.  Having no formal help at home for a whole year is of course how the vast majority of the world lives, but at least in my case, it comes at the expense of personal pursuits (exercise, reading, writing etc): When there’s constantly a child tugging at my sleeve, a doorbell to answer, a dishwasher to unload or a supper that needs cooking I usually do not succeed in ring-fencing time for myself, or when it eventually rolls around it is akin to drinking a cup of cold tea.  I can’t concentrate with music on, let alone with the drip-feed of interruptions that accompanies childcare.  I’ve touched on this before, the frustrating return to the starting blocks your mind has to execute numerous times a day. I have a new-found respect for actors and the umpteen takes they pull off to deliver one successful scene.

So the last year has been eventful albeit undocumented. I turned 40, our youngest child began nursery, we dealt with a very upsetting inter-familial Cold War, we pulled our kids out of school (for a variety of unpleasant reasons) and in to a different system, we lost two sparkling and intelligent friends, both in the prime of their lives (both had young children and beloved spouses), my best friend nearly lost her newborn in intensive care and we also faced a possible move abroad for my husband’s job… So 40 was jarring not because I was anxious about aging, but because I felt all too mortal and vulnerable. What I wanted to feel was satisfaction and accomplishment, a sense of reaching my peak and knowing in which direction I was headed. Instead I found myself at a huge cross-roads with the feeling I was embarking on an arduous yet mysterious and possibly quite perilous journey.   …

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Filed Under: Emotional sustenance, Home

A Turkey Christmas.

January 20, 2016 by natalie 2 Comments

 

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Somerset House

Merry Christmas Everyone! I truly mean that.  I know it is basically a month late, but this is the kind of reaction time I am operating at these days.  My tree came down on 7th Jan, punctually, but all I felt I had to get off my chest just languished, unvented.  So with a few temporal tweaks, without further ado, here is my very tardy end of November / Christmas post, in case you were wondering what was really lurking behind all those lovely instagrammed meals:

…

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Filed Under: About, Christmas and Festive Holidays, Parenting and Family, Topics from the School Run, Uncategorized Tagged With: Christmas, kids, parenting, stress, tradition, turning 40

LIGHTNING CURRY

January 13, 2016 by natalie Leave a Comment

IMG_3377This is a super-fast post, because I can’t seem to string together more than 15 minutes in front of the computer these days.  I also slashed the tip of my thumb open on my mandolin making the sprouts recipe earlier this week and it hurts to type.  This recipe was a rip-roaring surprise of a success last night and the 2, 5 and 7 year olds ate ADULT portions of it.  Crucially for children, it is mild, but far from dull as it is very aromatic.  I know my kids are not the norm, but I believe that if you expect a lot from them, they will deliver.  I held my breath with my back turned as they first tucked in, and lo and behold, they did not complain, far from it!

I will come back and replace my iphone pics with high-res. photos to accompany this recipe when I next make it as this one doesn’t really do it justice.  I instagrammed yesterday evening’s results and whole load of people asked for the recipe.  I ate the leftovers for lunch today with my husband, it was so tasty, although I confess it was spiked with chillies for our palates and worked wonderfully too.  You know something is good when you eat it several meals in a row with no complaint.   I think you could substitute the chicken with sweet potato or tofu and make it veggie… I’ll give it a whirl and let you know. 

I call it lightning curry as:

  1. it can be made in a flash (literally the time it takes to cook the rice)
  2. it is like a dazzling lightning bolt of golden energy beaming right in to your winter kitchen, eradicating doom, gloom and viruses.
  3. it can almost qualify as a non-vegetarian detox style dish and is most certainly healthy if not vegan therefore is could technically be part of a weightloss programme (“lightening”, geddit?)

The short, basic formula for any easy, fast curry is as follows:

  1. chop everything before hand
  2. make  a curry paste with herbs, spices and roots in a chopper (or use shop-bought)
  3. fry onions (a bit like soffritto)
  4. add paste to onions
  5. add meat or main star ingredient to onions
  6. sear main ingredient to seal in flavour before adding liquid
  7. pour in liquid (be it stock, water, coconut milk)
  8. bring to boil
  9. THEN add tender veg (or else they will become mush)
  10. turn off heat and season
  11. garnish well with something pretty and colourful eg. chillies / spring onions / coriander (cilantro)

The detailed version, for this curry however, is:

The curry in the photo was a mild version in its original incarnation, but it morphed in to a spicy one once my husband and I were having it as left overs on day 2. If you like heat, then use chillies. If not, this is a great recipe, as unlike when I use quality, shop-bought Thai curry pastes, you get to decide on how spicy you want it to be. The cooking time of the rice (if you use a rice-cooker) is more than sufficient to get on with the rest if you use a chopper to mince up all your spices and roots etc. We use a rice cooker a lot in our house - I used to think they were just another unnecessary piece of kitchen kit, until my husband brought one into my life after being converted to its wisdom during a stint living in Asia. In actual fact I have grown to really appreciate this gadget very recently on discovering that I can cook dried beans or split peas in a fraction of the time and even then, they no longer give me bloating nor do they retain that grassy, overly "al dente" chalkiness that can make them so unappealing. The other advantage is that I can be on the school run or whatever, while the rice-cooker bubbles away, basically leaving it to get on with things. If I have understood correctly, a rice-cooker is not a pressure cooker, but the seal in the rice cooker somehow amplifies the cooking speed and thoroughness. Secondly, if you want to prepare ahead, you could chop your meat and marinate it in half the spices as much as a day in advance if you fancy (I did not, and it was still wonderful). The other half is best fried over with the onions and the marinated meat/spice mixture then added. Whenever you cook meat, be sure to let it come to room temperature before cooking as otherwise it will clench up like a scared mollusc and end up tough and chewy. The thermal shock on the muscle-fibres makes them shorten, whereas if you don't subject, it to unnaturally extreme spikes in heat, it yields and becomes tender. With this in mind, remove your meat from the fridge at least 15 minutes before you want to throw it in the pan.

Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Mains, Uncategorized, Veggie Headliner Act Tagged With: broccoli, cauliflower, chicken, coriander, cumin, curry, garam masala, garlic, ginger, nigella, onion, scallions, shallot, spring onion, turmeric, vegetarian, yoghurt, yogurt

The Brussels Sprout Recipe to trump all others

December 22, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

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This photo is a version in which sprouts are mixed with a variegated white and green curly kale. This one deep bowl about 25cm across served 4 generously as a side.

I started writing another post, as I often have done, but relegated it to the unpublished pile because it was too depressing and too contemplative.  If on the other hand you feel like a shit parent and want to feel better, and I receive requests to indulge in my self-deprecating open-kimono self-shaming I will gauge interest and may post after all.  For now I won’t be a buzz kill at such a festive time of year.

All you need to know in terms of what has been going on since my last post is:

  • Baby has had all sorts of A&E visits of late due to a variety of bonks, scrapes and daredevil endeavours.
  • I turned 40 and had a shit weekend (mainly due to grief)
  • Have no childcare for the last 6 weeks at all so am losing my shit with the kids as they have been off for the best part of a fortnight and are trapped inside an awful lot, thanks to this unfestive, misery-inducing December mild drizzle.

Now that the scene is set, I am going to share with you a recipe which is the culinary equivalent of the mildly irritating saying that goes: “When life gives you lemons, make lemonade!”.  This recipe transforms the much maligned, often bitter sprout in to a real delicacy.   I get why the sprout has such a bad rap; it is so easily cooked wrong.  In stressed and rushed hands, it can be over-cooked and then turn mealy, mushy, metallic and sulphurous, a little ball of poison, all bitterness and obligation.  From childhood (in the UK at least) we are encouraged to imbibe something verdant in brownish-sea of animal protein and rich trimmings on Christmas day, and once a year out they have come, the little balls of misery.  Since the 80s there have been huge leaps as a nation in our cooking prowess, knowledge and open-mindedness, and even kale has finally gone from awkward wallflower to the nerdy popular superstar at the gastro-party.  If we can eat kale, we can eat sprouts, and this recipe is basically a way to combine and transform pretty much any combination/ ratio of the following arse-kicking, cancer-fighting, alkaline forming, green cruciferous vegetables eg:

  • Sprouts
  • Pointu /Savoy Cabbage (even a white cabbage but it would look slightly less green and inviting, although the texture would withstand this kind of preparation and cooking)
  • Cavolo Nero / Tuscan Kale
  • Spring Greens / Collard Greens
  • Curly Kale (any colour)

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The key to this recipe’s success is this:

  1. DO NOT OVERCOOK THE GREENS!!  A few minutes stirfrying is all that is necessary – they must be wilted only, not cooked through.  This ensures they do not turn bitter and mushy.  It is like steering a boat into dock in that you need to turn off the power (heat) before you reach “doneness” as there will be residual heat carrying the greens along that can make them overcook.
  2. Use greens with intrinsic toughness and bite (as listed above), that are compact and that can withstand fine slicing.  The flavours work well with all cruciferous veg (broccoli, cauliflower etc) but not all can be finely sliced and still look good and maintain a firm texture.
  3. Slice the greens as finely as you can stand.  I have lost many an edge of a thumbnail in the deployment of my mandolin (so frequently and painfully so, that I have a high-end version, with finger guard on my Christmas list – like this.). Slicing finely means that you can essentially eat the greens raw and they will still be delicate and tasty enough.  This also give them volume and lightness and allows the flavours to  reach even the hidden depths of the vegetable pile.
  4. Make it on the spot, all can be prepped in advance, but they need to be stir-fried 3 minutes before serving.  I made this at a friend’s house who was hosting us for Thanksgiving, as one of our dinner contributions and it was quick and painless, as I had all the ingredients pre-sliced and arranged to go. [Incidentally, the other guests asked for the recipe (even the anti-sprout militants) saying it was the tastiest sprout recipe they had ever tasted.]
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Fresh turmeric in the foreground, ginger in the background

For years I made sprouts with pancetta and chorizo and chesnuts, but these are much lighter and more appealing when paired with all the other foods normally served at Christmas.  In fact I eat this all the time once the sprouts are in season, even if slicing them is quite literally, a chafe.  Fresh turmeric root is one of the planet’s most potent super-foods and fights cancer and a battery of other diseases.  Amazingly it is now quite widely available.  I can get it at my local market and on Ocado.  It is responsible for the crazy lime-green colour of the sprouts in the photo and it has a wicked flavour and aroma too.  If you cannot find fresh turmeric, or you can’t face an Ottolenghi-length quest for ingredients, you do not need to use ALL the spices I suggest.  I often make these with only garlic, ginger and lemon zest.

Here you go:

If we can eat kale, we can eat sprouts, and this recipe is basically a way to combine and transform pretty much any combination/ ratio of arse-kicking, cancer-fighting, alkaline forming, green cruciferous vegetables eg: Sprouts Pointu /Savoy Cabbage (even a white cabbage but it would look slightly less green and inviting, although the texture would withstand this kind of preparation and cooking) Cavolo Nero / Tuscan Kale Spring Greens / Collard Greens Curly Kale (any colour) If you are serving to children, hold the szechuan pepper and chilli. The quantities of turmeric, garlic, ginger etc. can be adjusted according to your taste. After years of laboriously using a knife to slice my sprouts, I have moved on to a mandolin for really fast and fine slicing. Take care of your fingers though! I imagine you could use a slicing attachment in your food processor for similar results, but the slices should really be not more than 2-3mm thick. THIS IS KEY: DO NOT OVERCOOK THE GREENS!! A few minutes stirfrying is all that is necessary - they must be wilted only, not cooked through. This ensures they do not turn bitter and mushy. It is like steering a boat into dock in that you need to turn off the power (heat) before you reach "doneness" as there will be residual heat carrying the greens along that can make them overcook. Use greens with intrinsic toughness and bite (as listed above), that are compact and that can withstand fine slicing. The flavours work well with all cruciferous veg (broccoli, cauliflower etc) but not all can be finely sliced and still look good and maintain a firm texture. Slice the greens as finely as you can stand. Slicing finely means that you can essentially eat the greens raw and they will still be delicate and tasty enough. This also give them volume and lightness and allows the flavours to reach even the hidden depths of the vegetable pile. Make it on the spot, all can be prepped in advance, but they need to be stir-fried 3 minutes before serving.

Filed Under: Christmas and Festive Holidays, Mains, Recipes, Sides, Veggie Headliner Act

Spag Bol and General Tso’s Chicken… how to make real Ragù alla Bolognese

November 23, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

IMG_8060 (1)

The pattern of the legendary often national or regional dish vs the native reality really fascinates me.  It’s like this Croatian-Canadian colleague I had years ago who described how at weddings in Canada the Croats had this “oompa” music with accordians and fiddlers (similar to gypsy music) because, having emigrated things had remained frozen in time, circa 1930.  When she returned home to Zagreb for the first time she was shocked to find that most young people were dripping with designer gear, attending pilates classes, and listening to techno etc. and cringing at what she thought was local music.   The same can happen with food, in a form of suspended animation – or sometimes in the form of gradual but irreversible gastronomic Chinese Whispers.  When I watch the Sopranos, I definitely don’t think their food is in any way authentically Italian.  My dad winces at the word “gravy” taking it literally – to him it signifies death-juice, not food!  When I go the to US, I avoid Italian restaurants like the plague because it makes me seethe with frustration and indignation at how most are way off the mark.  This is not just true of Italian cooking apparently – there are several dishes that are ultra popular in their adoptive countries that either simply don’t exist in or don’t at all resemble any of those in their country of origin.   Indian cuisine has a few of these (hardly surprising in view of the breadth of their cuisine, the size of population and the extent of their world migration).  One is the Balti (which apparently means “bucket”, and was supposedly a joke of the immigrant on the native UK patron) another is the Vindaloo, apparently fabricated to scratch the itch so-to-speak of the macho male customers who wanted to prove how big their balls were by imbibing the hottest food imaginable during the beer-athon at the local curry house.  Lastly and literally, since we’re talking Chinese Whispers, there’s also General Tso’s Chicken (if you have time,  please watch this very entertaining documentary on Netflix about it, it’s really fun).

My main criticism when I am asked by non-italians or reluctant-cooks how to improve their pasta and sauce-cooking technique, is usually that they rush and they don’t allow the ingredients to marry together satisfactorily (see here: “sugo fails”).  With few  exceptions (eg. seasonal variations) a cursory cooking through is simply not enough.  Similarly, certain cuts of meat require long slow cooking in order to be at their best, so with something like a Ragù where you have the trinity of the soffritto AND meat AND tomato… well, you can only benefit from not rushing the cooking time.

Requests for an authentic recipe for Ragù keep coming up.  Predictably it’s mainly men who ask me about meat dishes.  Is it that they are attracted to the seriously macho task of sourcing, then marinating and caressing their chunk of flesh, a signifier of red-bloodedness perhaps? Or is it the peacock parade of conoisseurship, the serious financial investment of buying a prime rib or more likely, the return of the caveman instinct – primal and gutsy? … Slow and ceremonious cooking, the dazzling “ta-da” of a hunk of meat carried to the table is also an ego kick and suggests gravitas and culinary dedication, discernment if you will; not something to be casually rustled up on a whim.  There is an element of the ceremonial with Ragù too.  It was often a Sunday dish, made by mamma and served after mass in the way a British family today might serve up a roast dinner.  Yet Ragù, for its usually female chef, has a softer, subtler input creating a more rounded, more mellow meat dish.  I love it for its Yin and Yang qualities: the marriage of bold, paleo meatiness on the one side and the gentle, subtle, protracted stove-top simmer that is less confrontational.  Ragù cooking coaxes out flavour, is a masterclass in tenderness and like a mother who negotiates cannily and with warmth and love, the dish is discreetly allowed to develop into itself.  It is both brawn and brains, boldness and inner strength, male and female.

I would liken it in some ways to American southern barbecue for its “low and slow” approach.  Just recently my husband and I whisked ourselves away for a romantic little midday meatfest à deux courtesy of Pitt-Cue (the no-bookings joint in Soho that houses just a tiny smattering of tables) for some delicious US style barbecue while we soaked up the hipster/wholesome vibe.  Small digression:  I even went as far as to buy him the Pitt Cue cookbook and it is really good both in terms of form and content.  What American Barbecue (not at all like our UK BBQ) has in common with Ragù, is the need for long, slow cooking which unravels the meat flavours and gives the muscle fibres permission to relax, which all the while are drenched in deep and complex flavours which slowly permeate through the meat.  This is something that takes gentle heat and lots of time, charging the dish with a yielding texture yet resonant flavour.   A good ragù should also have these qualities, albeit with quite a different and wholly Mediterranean flavour.

In Bologna, the real home of traditional Ragù (capitalised, as opposed to any meat-based sugo which I shall refer to as ragù) it is no less than legendary.  It is a pride-worthy regional dish, a labour of love, not a quick fix for a Tuesday night.   There is no resemblance to the boiled, gristly, scarlet dissolved-meatball mess that is the fruit of a scant 20 minutes’ bubbling away in a pan, served with sticky own-brand spaghetti (yes, spaghetti!!) and doused in pre-grated vomity Parmesan dust.   Excluding the vegetarian contingent I would wager that there is not a UK student that isn’t familiar with that awful description.   Having researched this a little what I have found is a general abandonment of Spag-Bol as we grow and become fully-fledged adults.   The reality is that NO Italian would eat anything like this.  Maybe the only common thread between real Ragù and Bolognese is mince and the merest suggestion of tomato but the details, the proportions, the cooking time of the real thing vs the UK aberration are entirely different: it would be akin to likening the Wimbledon Final with a kids ping-pong game based on the premise that rackets, and balls figure in both games.  Thankfully, the trusty if grim “Bolognese” gets put on a metaphorical shelf as we morph from students in to urban sophistcates.  Often with the arrival of children I have noted that there tends to be a bit of a gentle back-pedal and we reassess our old “recipe”, and wonder how to “do it right” as it has all the criteria for an ideal family menu option: good for young and old, a one dish meal and keeps well and is often better on the second day.  Perhaps this is why many parent-friends lovingly and sheepishly make it and ask for tips sotto voce.  As much as we have cut right back on meat in our house, the kids are very carnivorous so about once a month, we make our Ragù which, crucially I must add, is not to be served with spaghetti, but with tagliatelle.

Without further ado, and in the spirit of objectivity of my much cherished “Best Recipe” cook book, I have put two recipes on here.  Take your pick.  (My own recipe is a hybrid of these made with pork products from the Abruzzo and slightly heavier in tomato than meat in terms of ratio).   My friend Helena’s mother-in-law is Bolognese and makes spectacular tortellini, in brodo) and the Zip recipe link is her Ragù recipe.  But since Helena has a wonderful company (Yummy Italy) that inducts people in to the culinary traditions and products of the Emilia Romagna region, of which Bologna is the epicentre, and the home of Ragù (and Massimo Bottura), she also recommends the following link which provides the version ratified by the Bologna Delegation of the Accademia Italiana della Cucina itself, back in 1982.   Incidentally, if you want a bespoke experience, love and appreciate food, then get in touch with her – Helena’s hooked in to every major artisanal supplier / producer of some of Italy’s best and most lauded products (Prosciutto di Parma, Parmigiano etc.).  Regardless – as with all recipes – there will be someone from Bologna in this case, who will have their own variation and objection I’m sure!

The longer your Ragù cooks, the better it tastes. I would recommend a heat diffuser under the pan to aoid it sticking when you are not around to stir it. It can be cooked for up to 10 hours in fact. Historically people would put it on at night and take it off the stove in the morning. The old ladies say that the 'ragù calls you when it is ready'. Add salt at the end of cooking when the ragù is cool because it reduces down and concentrates a lot so it could end up too salty if you don't take particular attention. If you make a batch as large as this, you can freeze it in portions to be served with pasta when you need it.

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Filed Under: Home, Mains, Parenting and Family, Recipes, Uncategorized

Sugo al pomodoro classico (classic tomato pasta sauce)

November 3, 2015 by natalie 3 Comments

Sugo rosso classico

Sugo rosso classico

 

Classic tomato sauce aka sugo.  

There is no reason any non-native Italian shouldn’t be able to make an authentic, reliable, tasty, easy go-to pasta sauce.  I advise you to just shrug off the casual snobbery / subtly xenophobic tendency that fellow Italians have, where they are deeply suspicious of any other nationality making anything from their classic culinary repertoire.

This classic red sauce will cause disagreements in every household and by my estimation is probably the primary source of initial rifts between daughters-and-mothers-in-law as there are as many recipes for it and opinions on it as there are families in Italy.   Often but not exclusively, each family hands their recipe down from mother to daughter (and of course sometimes son, look at Bottura, Carluccio, Contaldo, Locatelli et al) in this way for generations.  it’s not a secret recipe usually, it’s just a basic survival skill in all families an a very polarizing one at that.  IMG_2360Some don’t diverge from a minimalist, purist version (tomato, olive oil, garlic and salt and maybe (oooh!) a single basil leaf) – my friend Ute calls it “sugo finto” in her house (which means “fake sauce” and recommends this particularly with fresh, seasonal summery tomatoes – I will provide her exact recipe soon… others will only approve of a soffritto base and then the addition of tomato.  To give you another example of a totally valid yet surprising departure from the majority of recipes – from a bona fide, card-carrying Sicilian friend of mine, Elena who is a paediatrician living in the UK called her mother in a panic when pregnant in order to get the exact recipe for her sugo such were her cravings.  She used to make her own (just one of her mother’s variations) but the nostalgia component was insurmountable as she craved a particular recipe which had no soffritto or oil at all involved in the cooking.  Controversially Elena’s mother’s recipe involved boiling the tomato and carrot and celery and onion without the initial frying off, just the combining and boiling of all the ingredients and the addition of fresh, raw extra virgin olive oil just before serving….

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Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Mains, Recipe Vault, Recipes, Starters, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts, Veggie Headliner Act

The great pasta debate, the food police and how to eat sensibly

October 22, 2015 by natalie 1 Comment

IMG_8017I am on a bit of a pasta jag at the moment.  Let’s be honest though -when, with kids am I not?  I say: “Eat pasta and be proud!”.  Since going back to school we have been through a Ragù phase, a pesto revival phase, an orecchiette ai broccoli phase (and all the brassicas in between), there is never a week that passes that I don’t have classic red sugo in the fridge ready to furnish my kids’ hot pots for school… I have done pasta al forno and all manner of seafood pasta.  But even I recall that here in England there was a time when pasta was considered exotic.  When I started being served it at playdates in the 80s in place of meat and two veg it was seen as groundbreaking, modern and sophitiqué yet also practical, tasty and quick to prepare.   It was a true case of how did we ever manage without it.  It was basically the denim jean of culinary traditions.  There were also aberrations like alphabetti-spaghetti and spaghetti hoops which would make my parents recoil in horror, but which I remember all of us kids universally liking at the time.  Those mass-produced tinned monstrosities were proof that pasta was hitting the mainstream, that it was a ‘legit’ food.  But then, along with sun-dried tomatoes (bleurghh!!), low-fat diets and white processed carb-based meals, pasta kinda lost its A-list celebrity status (outside the family-cooking arena at least).  Just like how the mum-jean ushered in the combat trouser uniform, suddenly we all turned against the tide, saw fault in it becoming suspicious of pasta, bread, all types of starch.  But just as jeans will be with us forever, just in reworked and improved, more lightweight iterations, I think there is a place for pasta, not just classic wheat past, and it is here to stay.  Even in Italy (if you ask me – and Massimo Bottura – one of the most gastronomically conservative countries in the world) I see change.  Pasta still features very regularly on my relatives’ tables but it is not necessarily served up every single day (revolutionary I know!), and when they do indulge, they now try and savour it and are quite careful to limit their serving size.  The spectre of type II diabetes and diet-led disease is top of mind across all cultures it seems.  Even more recently I have been amazed how such a closed culinary tradition has allowed kamut and gluten-free pasta in to the mainstream –  no-one  even bats an eye when these are available at restaurants these days.

Really I wanted to write this post because …

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Filed Under: Food & Health Trends, Parenting and Family, Recipe Vault, Topics from the School Run

The BASICS: How to cook pasta

October 16, 2015 by natalie 2 Comments

IMG_8030Apologies to anyone who doesn’t require these pointers but I do get asked frequently for the genuine, Italian method for cooking pasta.  I do find that many of my non-Italian friends get little things “wrong” and this does make things trickier / less reliable in terms of outcome.  My best friend in Italy, Ute who has the family run restaurant has whole banks of water on the boil, in the way that Brits would have deep-fat friers constantly on the go with wire baskets bubbling away, except in Italy these contain hot salted water.  Gluten-free vats are set aside to be left totally free from wheat contamination and this is now becoming the norm in Italy.  The tips below may seem to only define minor differences between the happy-go-lucky most cooks employ, but they make the difference between authentic tasting pasta and slop.  Trust me.

Here we go:

  1.   Use a larger pan than you think (at least a c.3L pan for 500g [ie. one pack] pasta)
  2.   Use more water than you think (fill the pan 3/4 full) and be prepared to top up the water from a kettle or boiling tap if the water looks overly cloudy or gloopy or simply insufficient if need be
  3.   Salt well (eg. at least one heaped tablespoon of salt for a pan that size) – you will get a hang of doing this by eye. I do it by throwing in a hanful of sea salt or one swirl of fine salt
  4.   Do not bother with adding oil etc. to the boiling water, if you stir it properly (and this is the only true way to avoid it gumming together) then it will turn out well
  5.   Be prepared to stir a lot in the first 5 minutes to prevent the pasta from gluing itself together and to the base of the pan
  6.   If you are cooking ‘long’ pasta (spaghetti, linguine, tagliatelle, fettuccine, bucatini, capelli d’angelo, chitarra etc.) then stand over the pas with a large wooden fork and twist the long stems into the water until they are all covered up and stir until flowing freely under the water with no clumping.
  7.   Remove the pasta before it is really cooked through to your desired bite level (very ‘al dente’ for me) and, crucially DO NOT OVER DRAIN it, leave a small puddle of cooking water in the pan (about 2-3 tablespoons) so that when you tip the pan, a corner of water can be seen.  This is because the pasta will keep on cooking and absorbing the water until you eat it and it can become ever so dry and stodgy in that time unless you pre-empt this.  Alternatively you can drain the pasta very cursorily (so it is still sopping wet) leaving plenty of milky-looking cooking water aside in case it is needed, until you dress the pasta and combine it properly with the ‘sugo’
  8.   OPTIONAL: you can stir in a tiny drizzle of olive oil if you are afraid of it sticking but only if there is a delay between cooking the pasta and adding the sauce.  In Italy most health conscious families tend to add fresh olive oil just before serving as it is healthier uncooked and is almost always a welcome addition
  9.   Lastly, a trick I see used at my bestie’s restaurant is to complete the cooking of the pasta with the sauce in a large sauté pan so that the pasta and the sauce “fuse” and really combine.  You can either do this in the boiling pan if your sauce is pre-made, or add your pasta to the sauce sauté pan which is still cooking away on the stove alongside the boiling pasta.  Not only does this allow me to serve pasta that is hot enough but more importantly it allows the flavour to penetrate the pasta and to perfect the “cuisson/cottura”, ie how al dente the pasta is.  This last step is not necessary but it does make a real difference.

NOTE:  I rarely if ever see a mound of naked boiled pasta with a pile of sauce pooled in the middle.  This is a bastardization of our way of serving that has been propagated by countless commercial pasta sauce adverts and is a method that Italians never use.  We might lightly stir in a sauce and then serve a blob in the middle for effect upon serving but that is it.  No-one is seasoning and stirring in their pasta on their plate as if it has been plopped there by some two part pasta dispensing process, it is messy and doesn’t allow the flavours to meld.

Now you know.

Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Recipe Vault, Recipes, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy

The Basics: Soffritto, my umami – how I love thee, let me count the ways!

October 3, 2015 by natalie Leave a Comment

IMG_1902I can’t keep up with writing up the volume of things that I think can be useful / interesting to share on here.   Sometimes I master something new and I think – wow, what took me so long?  There are countless other elements like broths and stock, and bread dough that I can pull together and which make the rest of my cooking more tasty, more flexible, more interesting.  It is definitely a confidence thing, being able to make any kind of soup, sling any fish of any size and shape in the oven and to not have to consult a  recipe book or double check the correct oven temperature, the ability to eye progress and adjust,  how to pre-empt ‘doneness’ by bearing in mind the residual heat a dish contains before you serve it…  At last, turning 40 a month from today, I actually have that elusive ‘feel’ for things – both in the kitchen and without.  It is as if the culinary trajectory runs parallel to other elements in life:  you become seasoned with a patina of firsthand exposure, layer upon layer of trials and tribulations borne of personal effort, time and experience that not matter how beautiful and fresh the greenness of youth may be, it simply cannot match it.

Recently I realized that I can make caramel by eye, and a few months back I mastered something that seemed so unfamiliar and Anglo/French and faux-grand that I thought it would be fiddly but it really wasn’t: roux and by extension, béchamel.  Then my friend Brooke said: “i feel I could do with a real intro in to the basics… like how to make a roux, or a soffritto as these things crop up all the time…”.  So I’m going to include this and many others on here, with hyperlinks so that you can refer to these recipes when they crop up as a subset of another recipe.  I would also be very open to suggestions (grateful) at what to include in the basics section, as I think different families and cultures have a particular “house style” and a different way of approaching things and therefore everyone has their ‘essentials’ list.  My take on cooking is that to be a successful intuitive cook (ie. someone broadly competent and comfortable in the kitchen), it helps to learn some of the extensive culinary alphabet.   For me, coming at this cooking lark from a definitely Italian angle, soffritto is definitely one of the basic building blocks.

Soffritto is one of those things that Italians assume everyone beyond the confines of Italy must familiar with, as it is a ‘starter’ and enhancer of simply so many dishes.    I use soffritto to make variations of “shepherd’s pie” and “cottage pie” that I would otherwise never be tempted to make for my family.  My childhood memories of eating Shepherd’s pie and its relatives, is one of a dark and muddy 2 dimensional gristly meat base taking its colour from bovril or bisto granules.  We do use stock cubes in our house, and Bouillon powder, but there is nothing that can compare with the savoury and wholesome tang that comes from frying over a little pile of diced vegetables.  The classic soffritto I am referring to is basically a sepia take on the Italian flag:

  1. Celery (green)
  2. Onion (white)
  3. Carrot (red – sort of!)

I have often heard that celery is rich in umami and this must be why it is a key vegetable in soffritto.  Apparently Parmesan is also rich in umami (no wonder Italian food is so addictive and why I end up using so much of these ingredients in my own cooking).  Anyway, carrot has sweetness, as does onion once golden, and combined they produce that perfectly synergistic collision of several of three of the five key tastes once you throw in seasoning ie. sweet, salty and umami.   According to Wikipedia:

Many foods that may be consumed daily are rich in umami components. Naturally occurring glutamate can be found in meats and vegetables, whereas inosinate comes primarily from meats and guanylate from vegetables. Thus, umami taste is common to foods that contain high levels of L-glutamate, IMP and GMP, most notably in fish, shellfish, cured meats, mushrooms, vegetables (e.g., ripe tomatoes, Chinese cabbage, spinach, celery, etc.) or green tea, and fermented and aged products involving bacterial or yeast cultures, such as cheeses, shrimp pastes, fish sauce, soy sauce, nutritional yeast, and yeast extracts such as Vegemite and Marmite.[26]

Many humans’ first encounter with umami components is breast milk.[27] It contains roughly the same amount of umami as broths.

There are some distinctions among stocks from different countries. In dashi, L-glutamate comes from sea kombu (Laminaria japonica) and inosinate from dried bonito flakes (katsuobushi) or small dried sardines (niboshi).

It would seem that most food cultures try and access that umami perfection but I had never consciously realized that the flavours I am drawn to most (many of the apparently eccentric elements in my store cupboard such as dashi, bonito, kombu, and less eccentric more widespread ones such as fish sauce and yeast flakes)  are precisely things that boost flavour in this category.  Umami is said to ‘magnify’ taste, which to me seems like a cook’s cheat, a way to just make things taste more, taste better.  Retroactively I feel less of an obsessive saddo for making my own fish stock and faffing around pouring it in to my baby weaning cubes and freezing it for future use as in fact I am just lusting after umami in my cooking.  To me it makes the world of difference but I get it that for a lot of people making stock is just a bridge too far in terms of hassle sometimes…  In which case I highly recommend soffritto as it gets you a lot of the way there in terms of amping up the taste of many a dish.

A soffritto can also contain garlic and chilli, (especially in Abruzzo) and in Italy we often use celery leaves rather than the stem.  This is probably due to the fact that the celery you find there is much more leggy and hardy, over all much greener and more wiry (when you buy it at a real market) than the water-rich, virtually albino variety found further north.  For this reason you may find that your frying time varies, depending on water content.

Lastly, when I make a pasta sauce for the kids and I want to morph it in to something more compelling and more dashing with heat and oomph, I will often slice up a clove or two of garlic and give it a gentle fry with some fresh chillies (or dried if that’s what you have to hand) and then heat the sugo up in the two-ingredient soffritto before adding to the pasta.  Soffritto is also the key to tomato sauce, most of my risotti, the key to making an amazing Ragù and basically anything you care to make with mince. Look no further:

IMG_2348

Slice off one edge to stop the carrot rolling then slice the removed edge and the remaining carrot into 3mm-deep slices…

 

IMG_2349

In turn flip the slices on to their sides, slice them up lengthways in to matchsticks and then once more slice these matchsticks crossways (perpendicular) to create tiny chunks…

IMG_2332

cut the stems of celery in to pieces roughly 10cm long and one inch across, then ribbon these in to long matchsticks as you did with the carrots…

IMG_2345

then slice these crossways into small cubes

IMG_2346

remove the core of the onion, peel it and flip it over for slicing finely…

IMG_2347

chop the slices perpendicular to the onion layers and little chunks will be the outcome

IMG_2352

place the vegetables for the soffritto into a heavy-based pan and fry gently in enough oil to cover the bottom of the pan and coat the veg… be sure to add the garlic once the onion starts to turn golden, not before or it will burn and ruin the flavour.

 

This recipe is a soffritto that would be suit a sugo that would serve c. 10 people (made with 2-3 x 700g bottles of passata). Simply halve this amount for a regular 2L saucepan size. You don't need to weigh your veg unless you want to, it may be helpful first time around, until you 'get you eye in'. I know a large handful of each vegetable is a good measure for me, and should occupy most of the bottom of the sauté I use, once dropped in and spread thinly and evenly across the breadth. Sorry to delve in to detail with the chopping technique, but it makes a whole word of difference to your speed and outcome. You could of course use an electric chopper appliance but it doesn't make cubes, it makes little chiselled pieces of varying size so your veg don't fry very reliably. I have done this many a time with no qualms, when horribly pressed for time.

You can also, if you are the kind of person who in your more manic moments likes to batch cook and store for a rainy day, you can make an industrial amount and preserve it in jars…

All you do is up the quantities of the above veg in proportion, (you might want to skip the garlic as then you have the option of adding it without too much hassle when needed), salting it (1 part salt to 4 parts veg, in weight –  1:4).  In Italy they often advise the following:

1/2 kg rock salt

1kg carrot

1kg celery

1kg onion

2 tbsp fresh parsley / thyme (I don’t recommend basil as it doesn’t keep well at all so is best added fresh).

… Make sure these are, as ever, all finely chopped and then sprinkled with the salt and allowed to sit for 10 minutes in a large bowl.   The veg are then strained and patted dry and then mixed with olive oil so as to be thoroughly coated, and then spooned in to glass jars (sterilized if you prefer, but I never bother) and covered over with more oil.   Make sure you bang these jars firmly on a tea-towel on a work surface to allow any air-bubbles to escape, then top up again with oil, so that unlike an iceberg, no single point of the soffritto mix is surfacing above the oil. Close with a lid and store somewhere cool such as a cellar or fridge or shed for a month or more.  When my aunt does them they keep for months!

As you use the jars, but perhaps don’t finish them, simply top them up with more oil to create an air-seal and continue to store.  Voilà!  Next time you are making something on the hoof, no faffing with peeling and chopping, two heaped tablespoons and you’re done.  Just be sure not to add any more salt to your final dish as the preserving salt will be quite potent.

Filed Under: Gluten-Free, Pantry and Suppliers, Recipe Vault, The Abruzzo... the most underrated region of Italy, Tips, Tricks and shortcuts, Veggie Headliner Act

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