Categories
beef lasagne marmalade mince pork

lasagne al forno with a twist of marmalade

Do you have a quirky recipe in your repertoire? Some sneaky spice or magic combo that just makes it? Maybe you like a dusting of chilli in your hot chocolate, a squirt of Marmite on your eggs, or a grating of nutmeg on your vanilla ice cream?

This is the concept behind Sainsbury’s Little Twists campaign. They floated the idea of roast lamb with ginger beer, eggs benedict with avocado, or a hot cross bacon butty. They asked me to come up with an dish with similar inspiration.

So here’s a classic lasagne al forno… with marmalade.

Before you turn your nose up at this combo, marmalade in a lasagne really works. The bitter, rich flavours give a wonderful acidity against beefy, tomatoey, creamy lasagne al forno. You can customise your usual lasagne recipe to accommodate this too, and adapt the vegetables as you like. I haven’t listed a recipe here for bechamel or white sauce, you can find one easily online or buy if you prefer.

You may usually associate orange marmalade with tea and toast, but this shows how it’s flavours can work well in savoury dishes too. Give it a try!

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lasagne al forno with a twist of marmalade

Course Main Dish
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings 4 people
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 1 onion diced
  • 1 pepper diced
  • 250 g pork mince
  • 250 g beef mince
  • 1 tin tomatoes
  • 1 teaspoon mixed herbs
  • 400 ml beef stock
  • 1 tablespoon tomato puree
  • 10 - 15 sheets lasagne
  • 600 ml bechamel sauce
  • 2 tablespoons orange marmalade
  • 200 g grated cheese (I like a blend of mozzarella and cheddar, but whatever you like)

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 190C. Heat a splash of oil in a large saucepan and gently fry the onion and pepper for 5 minutes until softened. Put to one side.
  • In the same pan, fry the minces in batches until browned. Add the meats, onion and pepper into the pan along with the tomato puree and herbs and fry for a minute. Add the tomatoes and stock and bring to the boil. Simmer for 20 minutes and season to taste.
  • Get a large rectangular baking dish ready. Start with a layer of pasta, a layer of meat sauce and then a layer of white sauce. Add a layer of pasta and then spread your marmalade on this. Carry on with your layering until you reach the top, and then cover with cheese. Bake for 30 minutes or until a knife goes through easily. Allow to sit for five minutes before serving. Serve with a green salad and bread.
Categories
food mince pasta

batch cooked bolognese

This guest post is something a little different: a recipe from a qualified chef! Here’s Chris’s recipe for batch cooked bolognese. Here’s Chris’s tips in one handy infographic! Over to you Chris… 

Before we get started, let me take a few moments to introduce myself; my name is Chris, i’ve known Gary for about 6 or 7 years now and enjoy a meeting of minds on both food and technical subjects.  We regularly have family get togethers where we take it in turns to cook a meal and chat about the topic of the day.  Our girls play together, in their own little world as 6 year old girls tend to do.  Here’s a pic and me and my little bundle of joy.

I myself started life as a chef, spending 3 years at the Westminster School or Catering before spending another 3 working my way through various levels of the industry, developing my love of food.

I’ve always been rather intrigued by bigspud.co.uk so was thrilled when Gary invited me to write a guest piece for him.

Now what to write about……?

My wife and I do our best to steer clear of convenience foods on the whole, which leads us to do a lot of batch cooking. We’ll make 40 helpings of curry/bolognese/stew then freeze portions individually, giving us a tasty and nutritious meal in a snap. I recently completed one of these batch cooking sessions and thought I’d document the process to pass on a few tips and tricks.

So, having said all that, lets get cracking with batch cooked bolognese. Bear in mind this isn’t a recipe with an ingredients list and a method – if the truth be known nothing I cook is, I tend to be a “throw it together and see what happens” type of cook ;o) – but should be looked at as rather an overview of the process with a few tips highlighted along the way.

Tip #1: Make a lot

The process can take a while, so use the time well and make at least double your usual amount.

So….first of all, we start with some veg…..

We have about 7 onions, 9 peppers, a couple of bunches of parsley, a couple of bunches of basil, a couple of heads of garlic and a large box of mushrooms.

Tip #2: Always use fresh herbs

Always always use fresh herbs.  Dried herbs will always taste that way – dried!

Also don’t cook your herbs, wait until the very last knockings of the cooking process before you add them. Herbs are delicate plants with delicate flavours, if you put them into your sauce too early, they will cook too much and lose a lot of their impact on the senses.

Here’s some arty shots to show the amount of garlic and meat that went in.

Right, now to some cooking; all the veg goes into the biggest saucepan we have, in our case we use an old jam making saucepan my wife inherited from her grandmother.  Due to the amount being cooked, the veg takes a good 20 minutes to sweat off.

While the veg is sweating off we fry the meat. There’s about 1.5kg of beef mince. This frying process sears the meat and builds lovely browned flavours, so shouldn’t be skipped.

Fry the meat as hot as possible and never overload your frying pan.

You want to sprinkle your mince meat into your smoking hot frying pans so it forms a single layer. Once you’ve added it to your pan, leave it alone for a good few minutes. The more you poke and prod the meat at this stage, the more heat you knock out of your frying pan.  If your frying pan isn’t hot enough you will end up boiling your mince in it’s own juices and no-one likes boiled mince…

Tip #3: Use more pans to save time

Don’t be afraid to use every frying pan that will fit on your hob at this stage.  The most important thing is not to overload your pan.

Once the meat is fried, pour it into a colander over a bowl, until you’re ready to add it back into the main saucepan. This will allow excess fat to drain away. 

When you’ve finished browning your meat, your veg should be sweated off enough and it’s time to get to the sauce.

Tip #4: Max the flavour to survive freezing

Freezing can kill off the flavours, so use plenty of seasoning to counteract it.

The approximate ingredients for my sauce are 7 tins of tomatoes, half a bottle of Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce, a tube of tomato puree, a couple of generous desert spoons of Bovril, half a bottle of wine and 8 stock cubes.

Stick all that lovely flavour into the pan with the veggies and bring to the boil.  Now add the meat and any juices you’ve collected in the bowl, give everything a good mix and reduce to a simmer.  Leave that to simmer for about 2 hours, stirring occasionally, then, just before you are going to take it off the heat, stir in those lovely fresh herbs.  Mmmm, my mouth is watering as I type….

Tip #5: Cool it quick

In industrial kitchens there are devices called ‘blast chillers’.  They are basically large cabinets which blow chilled air over whatever you put in them to cool the food down ASAP.  I mimic this blast chilling idea at home with a desktop fan and a baking tray.  The baking tray maximises the surface area of the bolognese, so as much of the sauce has cold air touching it, and giving it a good stir every few minutes shortens the chilling time as well.

You might also think about setting this rig up in the coldest part of your house, a conservatory or larder works great.

Ok, so we’ve cooked our sauce and are ready for storage.

Tip #6: Use freezer bags


As always, get yourself prepared and ready to be industrious. Get your freezer bags ready, I normally use the small sandwich bags with zip lock strips across the top as they hold a good portion size, are easy to handle and the zip locks are very reliable.

Tip #7: Date and label them

Most importantly, write the date on each bag and what the contents are.  This bolognese might be in your freezer for 6 months so you’ll want a reminder as to what it is and when you made it, that is if you’ve got a memory as bad as mine you will ;o)

When your bags are all written and ready to go, fold each bag over your hand to make filling easier and ladle in a portions worth. Portion size i’ll leave to you, but for me about a good ladle should do it.

Tip #8: Freeze flat

Freeze ’em flat! Once you’ve put a portion of your bolognese into a freezer bag and sealed it shut, gently flatten the bag. You can then freeze your bolognese ‘pancakes’ in a stack, saving you freezer space.  

Defrosting the sauce is also a doddle when they have been frozen flat, simply peal off a layer from the stack, give it a quick run under the tap, making it flexible enough to snap, then break it into pieces into a bowl ready for microwaving. No more getting a big frozen bolder of bolognese out of the freezer the night before!

Well, that concludes my guest appearance on the fabulous bigspud.co.uk.  I hope my ramblings have given you a little food for thought – pun intended – and of course you can use the same principles outlined above whether you’re making, stews, curries or anything else.

It’s great having a delicious, home-cooked, meal available in the time it takes to boil some pasta or make some rice. I recommend batch cooking to everyone,and this batch cooked bolognese is a great way to get started.

Happy Cooking!

Chris


Categories
beef food mince pasta stock

spaghetti elvedenese

Some of the best meals come when your hands are tied; everyone’s hungry and you just have to work with what you’ve got. I had this recently whilst on holiday at Center Parcs Elveden Forest. Worn out from trekking, swimming and climbing, the troops needed fuel!

We’ve been to this village several times over the years and never failed to have an amazing time. We have kids separated in age by 9 years. This presents it’s own challenges which is well catered for by the variety of activities available. The big ‘un can go climbing trees and archery whilst the littl’un can go to fairy parties and learn to ride a bike. I’ve always loved the swimming complex, packed with inventive ways to be thrown about in the water.

And of course you can return to the home base of your self-catering villa. Being a cooking-loving kinda person I always cast a critical eye over the kitchen. You’re sorted for an oven, hob, microwave, dishwasher, fridge and letterbox-sized freezer. The range of utensils and pots can be challenging, with what seems like the Argos value pan set in the cupboard. There’s just three things I wish they’d include in the standard kitchen kit to keep me happy: some tongs (invaluable for turning things on a grill, and the best thing for serving spaghetti dishes), a decent knife to chop an onion with (blunted for safety no doubt), and a decent-size casserole dish. For this dinner (to feed 4) I had to juggle a couple of pans to cook my mince mixture.

I can’t be the first person to make spag bol here surely? It’s a real challenge to try and make family portions in small pans.

This is a minor criticism. I’m certain I must be the only one grumbling about this issue but being a food person the kitchen situation is never going to be perfect.

So here’s my rescue dinner, a kind-of crowd pleasing spaghetti bolognese, with odds and ends from home and a few essentials from the village supermarket. If you can pick up Knorr Flavour Pots they’re a great way to shortcut flavour into your dinners.

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spaghetti elvedenese

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 500 g beef mince
  • 2 onions peeled and diced
  • 1 tin tomatoes
  • 1 Knorr Mixed Herbs flavour pot
  • 1 tablespoon tomato ketchup
  • 1 teaspoon Marmite rounded
  • 200 g spaghetti

Instructions

  • Brown the mince in a saucepan, in batches if required. Put to one side when done, removing with a slotted spoon. In the same pan, gently fry the onion. Once the onion has softened, pop the mince back in the pan.
  • Add the tomatoes, then fill the tin back up with water and add that to the pan too. Stir in the stock pot. Once it all comes up to the boil, add the ketchup and Marmite. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes while you cook the pasta according to the packet instructions.
  • As the pasta finishes, check the mince for seasoning. Drain the pasta and then combine in the pan with the mince. Give it a real good stir for a minute to let the spaghetti soak up the flavours. Serve with grated cheese and crisp salad leaves.
Categories
chickpeas cumin curry food mince nigella seeds sweetcorn tomato

keema chana curry

This was completely inspired to the ideas I’d been absorbing from Jamie’s 15 Minute Meals. Keeping a few pans on the go, everything cooked separately and brought together, powerful spices to give the flavours a kick… It’s exactly in keeping with the way some of the Jamie recipes work.

I do have one ingredient in there I’m not convinced Jamie would approve of… frozen mince and onion. But I can’t ignore the time-saving this offers me.

If’ I’d have had coriander leaf to scatter on top, it would’ve been perfect. But I was happy enough.

Keema chana curry (serves 2):

250g frozen mince and onion

1 teaspoon cumin seeds

½ teaspoon turmeric

1 red onion

1 clove garlic

1 tin tomatoes

1 teaspoon nigella seeds

1 teaspoon garam masala

1 tin chickpeas, drained

2 sweetcorn cob halves

½ teaspoon smoked paprika

  1. Get two frying pans and a saucepan on pretty hot. Get the kettle on to boil.

  2. Add a dash of oil to one of the pans and add the cumin seeds and turmeric. After a minute add the mince and onion and stir often.

  3. Get your blender ready, and whizz up the onion, garlic, tomatoes, nigella and garam masala with a pinch of salt until liquid. Add to the other pan and allow to bubble. After a couple of minutes add the chickpeas.

  4. Fill the sauce pan with boiling water and add the sweetcorn. Simmer for 10 minutes until tender, then drain. Return to the pan and add a knob of butter, a pinch of smoked sea salt and paprika. Pop the lid on and toss well.

  5. Serve the mince on top of the tomatoey chickpeas with the sweetcorn on the side.

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