29.12.16

Vegan(ish) lentil curry

A slight adaptation of something I found at the Hungry Hutch. Definitely worth a look:

Ingredients:

2 cups lentils, washed
2 red peppers, cut up into chunks
1 medium-sized sweet potato, peeled and diced
Onion, peeled and diced
Garlic to taste, minced
Chilli to taste, chopped finely
About a tablespoon of chilli powder/garam masala
About a tablespoon of turmeric
900 ml chicken or vegetable stock
2 tomatoes
400 ml coconut milk
Salt and pepper to season
Basmati rice, coriander, and plain yoghurt to serve

Fry the sweet potato for about 3-5 min in a fair-sized pot (3-5 litres minimum), then add spices, onions, peppers, garlic, and chillies and cook for another 5 min or so. Add the tomatoes, mix well and cook for another 2 min, then add stock and coconut milk. Add lentils, bring to the boil, season with salt and pepper, and then let simmer for 40-45 minutes. Serve over rice, with coriander and yoghurt if desired.

3.8.16

Homemade tomato pasta sauce

An adaptation of a couple of recipes I found online. A work in progress, but the initial result is promising:

Ingredients:

about 1.5 kg ripe tomatoes (the riper the better)
1 onion, diced
3-4 cloves garlic, minced
1 pepper, diced
2 carrots, peeled and diced
About 200-300ml tomato juice (optional)
Fresh basil to taste, shredded/torn up
1 tbsp or so Provencal herb mix
Pepper
Some salt to taste
1/3 cup red wine
2-3 bay leaves
1-2 full stalks celery - don't cut them up!
2 small cans tomato paste (or maybe only 1, depending on taste. Should be around 2 tbsp or so of tomato paste)

For the tomatoes, score them at the stalk end and then drop them into boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes to loosen the skin. Peel and core them, then dice them roughly. If you want, leave one or two intact.

Add onion, garlic, peppers and carrots to a biggish pot and cook for around 5 minutes until the onion is soft. Then add your tomatoes, as well as the tomato juice, basil, herbs and spices and red wine, mix in, then add the celery and bay leaves.

Cook for 1-2 hours on a very low heat, add the small tins of tomato paste and cook for another 1-2 hours (I cooked mine for 1 and 1, but varying recipes say 30 mins all the way up to 2 hours. Take your choice).

When it's all ready, remove the bay leaves and celery and leave to cool, then freeze or serve with pasta. Your choice.

1.8.16

Mulligatawny soup

I guess this is an Anglo-Indian recipe that came about under the British Raj. It raises some interesting cultural questions, but it also works well as a relatively quick and simple dish. This one is adapted somewhat from the Wanderlust Kitchen's recipe. Good stuff all told.

Ingredients:

1 biggish onion, diced
1 carrot, peeled and diced
1 chilli or to taste, diced
3-4 garlic cloves, minced
2 cm or so ginger, diced
1 biggish or 2 small apples, peeled, cored, diced
1 or 2 400g tins tomatoes, depending on taste
1 tbsp curry powder
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp Provencal herbs (or thyme)
1/4 tsp cardamon
Pepper to taste
2/3 cup red lentils (uncooked)
1 litre chicken stock
1 can coconut milk
Spring onions and coriander to serve

Cook onion, carrot and chilli for 5 min or until onion is soft. Add garlic, ginger, apples, and tomato and cook for a few minutes, then add spices and mix in. Add lentils and stock, bring to boil and then cook for 30 minutes on low heat. Once done, add coconut milk, heat once more, then serve with spring onions and/or coriander. Add bread of your choice too.


25.7.16

Gazpacho

This is a cold tomato soup perfect for summer. Very nice too. It's a slight adaptation of a recipe I found on food.com.

Ingredients:

800 g flavoursome tomatoes
Tomato juice
1/2-1 cup cucumber, peeled, deseeded and chopped up
1/2-1 cup red pepper, deseeded and chopped up
1/2-1 cup red onion, chopped up
1 chilli (or to taste), finely chopped
Garlic to taste (usually 1-2 cloves), minced
Olive oil
Lime juice to taste
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
2 tsp worcestershire sauce
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
Coriander, to serve

To peel and deseed the tomatoes, cut a cross into the top or bottom of the tomato and then drop it into boiling water for 15 sec. When deseeding, put the remains into a sieve over a pot or bowl and try and get as much juice as you can from it, and then top up whatever juice you get with the tomato juice until it is about 1 cup. Put everything into a blender or food processor and blend until quite smooth. Leave overnight in the fridge, or serve with ice cubes and coriander.

23.7.16

Fresh pickled cucumbers (Värsked hapukurgid)

One of summer's great treats in Estonia. Also known as soolakurgid. Make sure you use little cucumbers rather than the long English variety.

This recipe is for 1 kg, but if you want to make more, just adjust the quantities as need:

1 kg cucumbers
1 bundle (kimp) of flavouring (horseradish, dill, blackcurrant leaves, garlic) - this is usually on sale in Estonian markets, but you might have luck finding it where you are
1.5 l room-temperature water
30% vinegar, salt, sugar

For every 1.5 l of water, mix in 3 tablespoons each of salt, sugar and vinegar. If using 8% vinegar, increase the volume of vinegar by 3.5 - use around 10 tbsps of vinegar.

Before salting, soak the cucumbers in cold water for a few hours. Before salting, top and tail the cucumbers and slice them in half lengthwise.

Line a big bowl or bucket with the kimp, and then add the cucumbers on top. Add your water/vinegar/salt/sugar mixture, and leave out in a room somewhere to pickle overnight, or ideally for 24 hours. Make sure the cucumbers are covered by the water - I usually weigh mine down with a plate, but whatever works for you. 

25.2.16

Goulash

Something from a while back. Very rich, very filling, very good.

Ingredients:

500 g stewing beef, cut up into 1 cm cubes
50 g oil
100 g onion
5 tsp paprika
1 chilli (or to taste)
2 litres water
2-3 potatoes
1.5 tsp salt
2 carrots
Parsley to taste (although I left this out and replaced it with celery)
1 tsp caraway (also known as fennel or cumin, I guess, or harilik köömen)
25 ml thick cream
For the dumplings:
1 egg
150 g flour

1) Dice onions and fry until soft.
2) Add 1 tsp paprika and the chilli.
3) Add beef, mix well, then add carrot, parsley/celery, cream and caraway seeds. As the mixture cooks, top up with water if it dries out.
4) Once the beef has cooked, cover with water and add diced potatoes and salt. Cook until soft.
5) Once potatoes are ready, mix the egg and flour together, break off small pieces to make dumplings, and boil the pastry until ready.

22.2.16

Pork, shallot and mushroom casserole

This is an adaptation of a recipe that I found on food24.com. Here's the original, but I've changed a few things. Make sure you add sherry. It really brings out the flavour.

Ingredients:

500-600g pork sirloin
2 tbsp Dijon mustard
4 big banana shallots, cut into quarters or eighths
2-4 cloves garlic
250-300 g regular button mushrooms
about 100 g chanterelles (kukeseened in Estonian. The original calls for 60 g porcini or shiitake mushrooms, covered with boiling water and left to rehydrate, but it's up to you).
fresh or dried sage (I used about 2 tsp of dried sage)
60-100 ml sherry (or Marsala wine, according to the original)
1 tsp wholegrain mustard (or 1 tbsp)
about 3/4 of a cup of relatively weak chicken stock
lemon juice
250-300 ml cream
salt and pepper to taste

1) Cover the pork with the Dijon mustard, salt and pepper and brown on all sides in a sufficiently large pot. Remove and put to one side.
2) Add shallots and garlic, cook until caramelised.
3) Add mushrooms, cook on high heat, and wait for liquid to evaporate (shouldn't take too long). Season well with salt and pepper.
4) Deglaze pot using sherry (or Marsala wine), and reduce by half.
5) Stir through wholegrain mustard.
6) Add stock, lemon juice, and cream.
7) Return pork to pot, cover with sauce and mushrooms. Cook for 20-25 min, turning halfway through. The sauce should reduce slightly and be a bit thicker than cream.
8) Once ready, remove from heat and leave to rest for 5 min.
9) Slice pork into 1 cm-thick slices, then return to sauce and heat through.
10) Serve with salad and mash (as we did) or with tagliatelle.