Categories
food ham pork

ham



Wow, how exciting is that title?! You’re desperate to read on, aren’t you.

I wanted to make my own ham. I think all these home preserving techniques are getting lost, and the results you get are so unique and personal compared to vacuum-wrapped plasticky salt logs.
I’ve started here with pork leg, very inexpensive. I then made an 85% brine solution and added juniper berries, peppercorns, bay leaves and a couple of cloves. But these could be any number of aromatic things. Now I’m leaving the pork submerged in this liquid for a day and a half per pound (that’s four and a half days for me). See you on Saturday for the results!
Categories
asparagus broccoli food potatoes

asparagus and potato tart


I made this a while back but just found pictures of it so thought I’d share. I bloody love asparagus, but optimistically I’ll leave it til the season to wax then.

This is a Jamie recipe, and deserves heaps of praise for making the most of it’s wonderful homely ingredients. It’s boiled new pots mashed together with cream, eggs and cheshire cheese (that lovely crumbly one), poured into a filo pastry-lain dish. This is then topped with charred asparagus and baked in the oven til set. Mega-filling and handsome with some salad leaves.
Categories
bacon food halloumi pineapple prunes

devils on horseback and cheese & pineapple

Summoned to a classy 70s party, I was asked to provide some canapés and I do love a challenge. The host was some mean foodie himself, so I can’t just roll up with a tube of Pringles and Iced Gems. My mind starts grinding back to the old clichés: prawn cocktail, melon and ham, glacé cherries… a little browsing and I’ve got it. Abigail’s flashback Devils on Horseback. The idea sounds disgusting, wrapping stodgy prunes in bacon. But I hope with a few touches I can elevate them a bit. I marinate the tinned prunes overnight in whisky, then stone them. In the cavity I spoon mango chutney. Then they’re wrapped in bacon.

That can’t be it, need something else too. I’m sure there’s something I can do with cheese and pineapple but I can’t quite place it and I want a replacement for the pineapple. I decide to caramelise the pineapple based on an old Gary Rhodes recipe that I’d looked at often but never done. Taking inspiration from that I fry the pineapple in some port until ruby red, and then a little brown sugar to up the ooze. So that’s the pineapple done, what else? And then it’s obvious, a different cheese other than cheddar. I pick salty, waxy halloumi as a counterpoint to the sharp and sweet pineapple. Impale with cocktail sticks on to half a melon, and we’re away. I’m very pleased with the results. They certainly disappeared quick amongst the flares – congratulations to Jenny for getting the last one.
(I’d love pictures but foolishly they were eaten before I could snap!)
Categories
beef blackberries carrots food

autumnal stirfry

Seasonal is the name of the game here; everything’s bursting with readiness. Using my stirfry principles as per Yaki Soba, I add strips of beef, then put to one side. Then I fry carrots and red cabbage until tender, then add beansprouts. Now come fruits: blackberries and a sliced plum. Then the beef goes back in and it’s all pulled together with a slosh of honey and balsamic. It’s interesting and colourful – very Autumnal.

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