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Saturday, February 20, 2016
Saturday, February 13, 2016
Fixin' Supper
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One of my
favourite things to do is to put together a nice old-fashioned supper. I find cooking to be both creative and relaxing in equal measure!
Now, it's
really fun to cook without a recipe, especially meats, fish and potatoes.
Today, we had roast chicken legs, roast potatoes, and Yorkshire puddings. I'll
get to the fantastically easy puddings in just a minute.
To start
with, I pureed a little olive oil, a small purple onion (peeled and halved),
half a bulb of garlic (both peeled), lemon zest, some fresh-frozen rosemary,
salt, black and white pepper, chilli flakes, honey and yellow mustard. The
puree was creamy and white, and then I just used it for the whole chicken legs and
the potatoes. You can probably tell by the list of stuff that I just walked
around the kitchen and picked spices to put in together!
You just
can’t go wrong with chicken if you put:
·
Salt and
pepper
·
Something
sweet
·
Either
onion or garlic
·
Something
green (Italian herbs)
·
Optional:
Something sour (Lemon zest or balsamic vinegar)
·
Optional:
Something spicy (Cayenne pepper, paprika)
·
Optional:
Sauce. Meaning tomato, mustard, Worchestershire or soy
The
secret to good roast chicken of any cut is something sweet. It took me awhile
to figure out that the best black pepper chicken must have honey in it – the flavour just POPS with the honey, but
without it, it tastes flat. Same with grilled salmon. Or battered fries. Or
most savouries for that matter – a light pinch of sweetness goes a
looooooooooooooooooong way. Plus, sugar causes caramelization and there’s
nothing more appetizing than golden-brown, succulent and not-burnt meat.
Like this guy |
But not this guy. He's a 1-inch wide miniature saltdough sculpture titled "My Ex Boyfriend" |
#recipefreed #artimitateslife
Since
everything was in the oven at 230C (that’s 482 Fahrenheit), which is about the
ideal temperature to roast chicken it, I thought I’d try popovers. After
looking up some recipes, Yorkshire
Puddings looked like a good idea. So I reduced the recipe to give it a test
(we ended up finishing two eggs worth of Yorkshire Pudding)
One Egg Yorkshire Pudding
·
Fat/drippings
·
1 egg
·
50gm milk
·
35gm
flour
·
Seasoning
to taste
Method:
·
Rub fat generously
onto a non-stick muffin or bun pan, and heat the pan in the oven. It should be
sizzling hot but not smoking. Be
careful of the smoking point.
·
The
simplest method would be to pop everything in the blender and WHIZZ. Make sure
there are no lumps and that the batter is full of air.
·
Test the
pan for sizzling hotness by drizzling a drop of water. Work with extreme haste to distribute the batter
and pop everything into the oven (230C) for twenty minutes. It should be in the
center.
·
DO NOT
OPEN THE OVEN DOOR until the puddings are well browned. It should be about 2-
minutes.
·
A one-egg
batch makes 12 perfect small Yorkshire
pudding. Eat’em FRESH. *nom nom nom*
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