Categories
asparagus bacon cheese cream egg food

improving the coronation quiche

For the first time in a very long time, Britain (and other countries for reasons I don’t want to get into in a recipe blog) have a new monarch. And as is customary, we will have a coronation ceremony in May 2023. And more importantly for most people, we get a bank holiday. A bank holiday so you can celebrate in your own way whether that’s hosting a street party, a garden BBQ, afternoon tea or throwing eggs at a rich person that you don’t like.

You know what the signature dish was for the 1953 coronation? It was called “poulet reine Elizabeth“, but everyone knows it as coronation chicken. It’s a creamy curry sauce that’s got an Indian vibe and you can either chuck it in a salad or slap it in a sandwich.

From Le Cordon Bleu cookery school

Apparently, the dish was the brainchild of food writer Constance Spry and chef Rosemary Hume from the fancy Cordon Bleu cookery school in London. They whipped it up for the queen’s coronation feast. It was inspired by a dish called jubilee chicken, which was created for George V’s silver jubilee back in 1935.

For Queen Elizabeth II’s golden jubilee in 2002, there was another jubilee chicken dish. This one was made by the chefs at Buckingham Palace and was a baked chicken cut into bits and smothered with a mix of creme fraiche, mayonnaise, lime and ginger. They served it up with pasta salad, lime slices, and flat leaf parsley, all packed up in a Waitrose plastic tub.

Now, for her platinum jubilee, they had a pudding competition and the winner was a lemon swiss roll and Amaretti trifle recipe. Nice, eh?

For King Charles’ coronation we have the coronation quiche. Perfect picnic fare, this quiche is flavoured with broad beans… and spinach?

Eh. It’s a bit dowdy, isn’t it? Doesn’t reek of celebration or festivities. Likely in the backdrop of cost-of-living crisis with rising energy bills and being squeezed, it was selected as being muted in tone to be a bit more down to earth. But I think we can do better than that, celebrating the best of British produce. While it’s nice to use broad beans it’s a bit… post-war rationing. Why not the undisputed king of British summertime, asparagus? Bang on season and something I wait for every year. And let’s add in some bacon, by the fact that everything is better with bacon. I also think we can do a little more with that pastry, so let’s amp that up. And finally let’s use some precision in the baking. None of this “20-25 minutes until golden”, let’s cook it until it’s actually perfect. With science!

Can you buy the coronation quiche?

I don’t think you can buy the coronation quiche in any shops. The only way to get the real deal is to use the official recipe, or you know, just be invited to the coronation.

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my coronation quiche

A celebratory quiche suitable for any gathering or garden party. One of the best things about a quiche is it really doesn't matter when you eat it: straight from the oven hot with a salad, or the next day packed up for lunch.
Course Main Course
Cuisine British
Keyword eggs, garden party
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Servings 6 people

Ingredients

Pastry

  • 200 g plain flour
  • 50 g cold butter
  • 25 g lard
  • 25 g cheddar cheese
  • 1 egg
  • milk might need a splash

Filling

  • 300 ml double cream
  • 2 medium eggs save a tablespoon of it for later
  • 1 tablespoon fresh tarragon chopped
  • 100 g grated cheddar cheese
  • 100 g bacon diced
  • 150 g asparagus spears

Instructions

For the pastry:

  • I use a food processor for speed and to be honest, it's better: add the flour, butter, lard and cheese and pulse until it forms a sandy breadcrumb texture. Whizz in the egg and if needed pulse in the milk until it comes together - be sparing and stop the moment it comes together. If doing by hand, rub fats, cheese and flour together until it resembles breadcrumbs, then beat in the egg and milk as required to form a dough.
  • Wrap and allow to rest in the fridge while you get on with everything else.
  • Put a frying pan over a medium heat. Add the bacon to a dry pan and fry for 4-5 minutes. While this fries, snap off the woody end of the asparagus spears. Then finely slice the stalks but stop at the tips. Add all the asparagus pieces to the pan and continue to stir fry for another 3-5 minutes until softened. Remove to a plate to cool down.
  • Preheat the oven to 190°C.
  • Put the cheese, cream and tarragon in a jug, add salt and pepper and stir well to mix. Hold back about a tablespoon of the egg mix to one side for later.
  • Remove the dough from the fridge and roll out to the thickness of a British pound coin. Lay into a quiche dish (appropriately enough) or similar and prick the base all over with a fork to stifle it rising. Brush your reserved egg over the base to seal it. Pop in the oven for 20 minutes, where it should have gone a biscuity brown.
  • Take the pastry base out and reduce the oven temperature to 140°C.
  • Spread the bacon-asparagus mixture over the base, then pour over the liquid mixture. Place into the oven and bake for 20-25 minutes until the middle of the quiche gets to 85°C.

Video

Notes

You can stop cooking this when you're happy with how golden it is. By using a probe thermometer you can capture it when it's perfectly smooth and not scrambled-eggy.

Want more quiches? I took a lot from this fantastic cheese and onion tart I made years ago. Or take a look at Big Foodie Geek’s video.

Categories
apples food onion pork

pork chops with apple and burnt onion

This pork chop dish only came about because I had too many apples knocking about. Could do a crumble… but apples go great with pork. If you don’t have any creme fraiche any dairy would do, or a bit of stock or even water would still be tasty. Go with what you’ve got.

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pork chops with apple and burnt onion

Course Main Dish
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings 2 people
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 2 pork chops
  • 2 apples I used Pink Lady but whatever works for you
  • 3 baby onions or 1 normal onion
  • 1 teaspoon dried sage
  • 1 heaped tablespoon creme fraiche

Instructions

  • Get a frying pan on a high heat. Don't add any oil. Meanwhile, peel and halve the onions (if using a large onion cut into 6-8 wedges). Peel and segment the apple, discarding the peel. Season the pork with salt, pepper and sage on both sides, and rub some olive oil into them.
  • When the pan is hot add the onions cut side down. Leave for around five minutes until a char develops, then add the pork and apples. Turn the heat down to medium. (If your chops have a decent layer of fat, using tongs hold them fat-side down in the pan until starting to colour, then lay them down.
  • Continue cooking for 5 - 10 minutes until cooked to your liking, turning a couple of times to colour both sides. Turn the apples and onions as you go too. When the pork's done, turn the heat down and add the creme fraiche. Add a splash of hot water to loosen the sauce down to a creamy consistency. Allow to bubble for a minute or two and season to taste. Serve with rice or mash.
Categories
food pork

porchetta salad with parmesan cream and spinach

Inspired by a fantastic starter I had at Union Street Cafe, this dish is a great light meal. The porchetta itself makes a fantastic roast joint. The porchetta as a roast serves 4 as a main dish, but save a couple of slices and serve cold for this recipe which would make a perfect starter portion.

Here’s the Gordon Ramsay’s Union Street Cafe version:

A light and tasty starter plate of food made with wafer-thin slices of porchetta. The radish was gossamer-like, and the gentleness of the parmesan made it a refreshing dish. It was part of a celebratory meal I had at the Gordon Ramsay restaurant in the Southwark area of London. It has a breezy, laid-back atmosphere with lots of mid-week specials (if you want high-end, try Petrus) and has the feel of a trattoria. We had a great meal, sampling the gratinated eggs (would be perfect for brunch), a fresh, summery sea bass with new potatoes, roast chicken with pea puree and lots more. The focus is on fresh seasonality, with the menu changing quickly as stock becomes available.

I’d also recommend asking to view the kitchen – I’ve never seen such jolly chefs happy to see you and carry on with service!

Anyway, back to the porchetta dish. Porchetta is an indulgent stuffed pork loin, often flavoured with garlic and lemon turned into a stuffing and roasted like a Sunday joint. It’s well worth trying. But I wanted to take this and try my starter with thick slices of roasted pork. It’s just as tasty but more satisfying, taking it in a different direction

Want something more warming? Try suckling pig with chorizo potatoes.

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porchetta with parmesan cream and spinach

Course Starter
Cuisine Italian
Servings 2 people
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

For the porchetta:

  • 2.5 kg pork loin joint
  • 100 g stale bread
  • Grated zest of 1 lemon
  • 6 black olives
  • 2 sprigs rosemary
  • olive oil

For the garnish:

  • 100 ml single cream
  • 10 g parmesan
  • 50 g spinach
  • 4 radishes
  • 20 ml white wine vinegar

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 200C.
  • Begin by butterflying the pork loin. With the joint fat side up, using your sharpest knife slice horizontally along one side, so it can be opened like a book. Season the pork liberally with salt and pepper then make the stuffing.
  • In a food processor combine the stuffing ingredients. Add enough oil to form a paste. Spread this paste along the middle of the open pork. Roll the pork up and tie around the joint with string. Place in a sturdy roasting tray, drizzle with oil and put in the oven.
  • After 15 minutes turn the oven down to 150C. Continue cooking until the pork is at least 55C when tested with a probe thermometer. If eating now, allow to cool for at least 15 minutes before serving. Otherwise, allow to cool and refrigerate until needed.
  • To pickle the radishes, sprinkle salt and sugar into white wine vinegar until it tastes quite sweet. Add the radishes thinly sliced and leave to macerate while you do everything else.
  • Now make the parmesan cream. For best results whizz up the parmesan in a food processor to make small rubbly pieces of cheese - they melt unevenly and make a pleasing texture. Gently warm the cream with half the cheese but don't boil, you just want the cream to melt the parmesan.
  • Lay the spinach in warm serving bowls. Drizzle over some of the parmesan cream so that it wilts. Add a thick slice of porchetta, garnish with radish slices and a little more cream. Scatter over the remaining parmesan and drizzle with a touch of balsamic vinegar if you like.

Notes

Always test roasting joints with a probe thermometer. They're dead cheap and the safest, surest way to prevent over or undercooking. Buy one from Amazon.
Categories
meat recipes pork potatoes

lemon and fennel pork with roast potatoes

Shock. Horror. Another roast potato recipe.

But this time, it’s not about the technique, it’s about the variety. In this case, the Larner.

Great British Chefs hosted an event to show off this new variety of potato. The Larner variety is a pheruja cross potato developed by Greenvale AP. It is a rich, buttery potato with golden flesh and a sweet, nutty flavour. It’s only available in Co-op from 10th December as part of it’s Irresistible Roasting Potato range.

Showing off it’s roasting qualities was brilliant chef Emily Watkins. Her no-nonsense approach showed off the potato at it’s best: a fluffy interior with golden crunch. She prepared it in multiple ways: with garlic and bay, in goose fat, or roasted from raw. But most temptingly of all, par-boiled potatoes tipped into the simmering fat of a pork joint that’d been roasting for a few hours. When done they were burnished gold and dripping in the tangy flavours of fennel and lemon that had been rubbed into the pork rind.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BqrUOixH-53/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

It’s a really simple roast. I tried it myself at home, and it couldn’t be easier: score the pork rind, and massage in a rub of salt, lemon and fennel seeds pounded together… then roast. Tip in the potatoes towards the end and that’s it.

You can see the recipe on the Great British Chefs website here.

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