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food pastry raisins

pain au raisin

I’d had a big lunch and didn’t fancy dinner. I know, I’ll make pain au raisin.

Not that I had much of an idea where to start; digging through some old magazines I found a great article on making your own danish pastries. Turns out it’s a lot like making croissants: tons of butter rolled into puff pastry. Roll, fold, rest, roll, fold, rest… lots of interim rolling stages.

But was it worth it? Sure they were tasty (anything with that much butter and sugar has to) but given the relative cost of buying them from a baker’s versus the time and effort you put in, they were significantly better than what you can buy. An interesting experiment, but not one I think I’ll be repeating.

Pain au raisin (makes about 16):

For the dough:

7g sachet yeast

3 teaspoons caster sugar

110ml milk at room temperature

1 egg

125g flour

½ teaspoon ground cinnamon

110g butter

For the filling:

75g butter

75g caster sugar

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

60g raisins

1 egg, beaten

  1. Whisk the yeast, sugar, egg and milk together and cover loosely. After ten minutes it should be quite heady.
  2. Sift the flour, sugar, cinnamon and a pinch of salt together and stir in the milky yeast. Combine to a soft dough and knead for 5 minutes until smooth. Chill and rest in the fridge for 30 mins.
  3. Roll into a rectangle and dot the top two-thirds with butter. Fold both ends into the middle and roll into a rectangle again. Cover and chill for another 30 minutes. Repeat that process 3 more times, before leaving the pastry to rest overnight.
  4. Preheat the oven to 200C. Beat the butter, sugar and cinnamon together. Roll out the pastry to a rectangle again and spread the mixture all over it. Scatter with raisins and roll up into a sausage. Use a sharp knife to cut into 1cm thick slices and move to a baking tray. Brush with egg and bake for 20 mins until golden brown and puffy. As you get it out of the oven to cool sprinkle with sugar.
Categories
food mozzarella pork raisins tomato

moorish pork chops with marinated mozzarella & tomato salad

A tale of two halves here: cheeky Essex boy meets Eastern-influenced vegophile.

Jamie Oliver’s current series Jamie Does… visits different cities and squeezes the food out of them. I’ve scribbled quite a few of them down, but his recent Andalucian pork chop recipe really connected with me. He cut a slit in a pork chop, then stuffed it with a juicy raisin stuffing. Mine is simplified to my store-cupboard. I couldn’t quite manage the meat pocket, my chops were more steaks and I couldn’t get enough knife in to stuff without going through. I instead plonked the marinade on top after cooking on one side on the barbecue. The flavours were there but I imagine it would be sensational properly stuffed. Next time I’ll get proper fat chops.

The other part of the dish was courtesy of Ottolenghi’s new book Plenty. I was fortunate enough to get one of these courtesy of their Twitter competition and couldn’t decide where to start, it’s stuffed with great ideas and brilliant (yet simple) invention. I started simple: mozzarella rendered to fluffy, yummy gooeyness. Fennel seeds popped in the mouth among the creamy cheese. Simply delicious.

Jamie Oliver’s original recipe for the pork chops can be found here.

Moorish pork chops with marinated mozzarella and tomato salad:

For the pork:

4 pork steaks

A handful of raisins

A good splash of sherry vinegar

A dash of extra virgin olive oil

A couple of teaspoons of thyme leaves

For the mozzarella salad:

A couple of tomatoes, cut into chunks

400g mozzarella

1 teaspoon fennel seeds

A couple of teaspoons of thyme leaves

A dash of extra virgin olive oil

1 garlic clove, crushed

Zest of 1 lemon

  1. Fry the fennel seeds in a dry pan until they pop. Put them into a pestle and mortar and crush lightly. Add the thyme, garlic, oil and lemon zest and toss with the mozzarella. Leave this alone while you get on with everything else.
  2. Combine the raisins, vinegar, oil and thyme and leave for a few minutes so the raisins absorb the juice.
  3. Cut a slit horizontally in the side of the pork. Push some of the stuffing into the gap.
  4. Barbecue the pork on each side until nicely browned. Serve with the mozzarella and tomatoes, garnished with a drizzle of oil.
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