Wednesday 31 December 2014

Edible gold and cranberry syrup.

I've already written a post all about Christmas dinner when I had a house-full in 2012, but I wanted to share this year's menu too.  It wasn't as complicated as two years ago, we just had my parents for dinner so there were only six of us, but I was still pretty excited and inspired weeks in advance by the festive editions of the food magazines, especially Feel Good Food which is a favourite at present. It was the cover of this magazine which featured a red velvet roulade that caught my eye and I was immediately on ebay ordering edible 24 carat gold at a very reasonable £2.49!  More of this later, here's a rundown:



Champagne / Cranberry Gin Fizz / Fruit juices
Sausage rolls (made by my Mum)
Iberico ham and melon on sticks
Crisps
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Beetroot & vodka cured salmon
Pickled cucumber salad
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Roast Turkey with sausage, sage & onion stuffing
Pigs in blankets
Apple & Bourbon roast smoked gammon (served cold)
Deluxe roast potatoes & parsnips
Glazed sprouts & carrots with nutmeg
Bread sauce, cranberry sauce, gravy
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Red velvet roulade with white chocolate and gold leaf
served with Bailey’s cream
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Cheese and biscuits, grapes, port
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Coffee / tea, chocolate mint leaves



The cranberry gin fizz was an idea in the Lidl Christmas magazine.  Frozen cranberries were cooked with sugar and water to make a syrup when mashed with a potato masher and sieved.  One part of the cooled syrup was mixed with one part of gin and topped up with prosecco, and frozen cranberries added instead of ice cubes.  I has one as a little cook's treat while cooking the veg.

The Iberico ham and melon on sticks was a memory of our Spanish holiday this summer (see earlier post), Lidl had some Iberico ham in and it went beautifully with the drinks. I used the little wooden sticks that come with my graze boxes which was a nice touch, a little less boring than plain old cocktail sticks.



The salmon was cured on the Sunday before Christmas, giving it four days in the fridge. This was also from the Feel Good Food magazine. I'd cured salmon with beetroot before but this was a slightly different twist, using vodka, coriander seeds, fennel seeds, black peppercorns, salt, sugar, lemon zest and grated raw beetroot with dill. It was served with a simple salad of ribboned cucumber dressed with white wine vinegar, sugar and more chopped dill.




The turkey was simply cooked, as was most of the main course, and I haven't got photos of it, but above is one of the gammon.  It was boiled in apple juice and spices, then roasted with a glaze of apple sauce and bourbon whisky.  We did find it a bit dry, and I think in future I'll always roast gammon instead of boiling as somehow it does turn out to be more juicy that way.  It was still nice though, and has all been eaten!



Here's the aforementioned roulade. I made the red velvet swiss roll on Christmas Eve, using up all the rest of my "Christmas red" food colouring paste. After it had cooled and been spread with the cream cheese icing, I cut the ends off and left it in the fridge overnight to set before decorating.  Eating the ends on Christmas Eve I was a bit worried the sponge wasn't actually all that tasty but it got better by the morning.  My daughter had made white chocolate decorations with a kit of templates and a silicone mat given to me by a friend for my birthday, so I added those plus gold edible glitter and the edible gold leaf which was a bit tricky to handle but not too bad once you got the hang of manipulating it with a table knife.



I also used the edible gold on this trifle, made a few days later for a Christmas get together with my husband's family. Chocolate cake and white chocolate chunks soaked in blueberry liqueur, lemon jelly with blackberries and blackcurrants, custard, cream with crushed meringues,lemon zest and decorations (plus non edible holly from my tree).

The family gathering featured a gingerbread nativity competition.  We didn't win,but here's our entry, complete with jelly baby Jesus:


Finally, here's a fun idea that I found on Facebook, my children and I made two with my nieces when they came to stay recently.  A Terry's chocolate orange in the middle, with maltesers stuck to it, white chocolate and icing holly on the top.



All in all, there was much feasting, and as January beckons, I'm thinking about abstinence and healthy eating!

Thank you for reading,

Caroline :-) 



Ostriches and samphire.

Welcome to my first blog post in a while. It was meant to be written in August when I got back from a trip with my children to visit my Uncle, however the return journey from said trip involved a serious car crash (not my fault) that resulted in all of us being hospitalised, normal life going out of the window for quite a while and the laptop that I write my blogs on being broken beyond repair. I'm happy to report that we have all healed well and made a full recovery AND I have a replacement laptop, and can finally get back to blogging.

On one of our days out while visiting the above-mentioned Uncle, who is a confirmed carnivore, we went to an unusual type of farm shop.  It was at an ostrich farm, which sold the meat and eggs from their ostriches, as well as other unusual meats including crocodile, wild boar, kangaroo and zebra. They also sold venison, and camel and llama when in season.


Now, although I eat meat I do like to know that the animal or bird in question has had a good life, so it was good to see the ostriches living a happy free-range existence at the farm before having a "mixed grill" - only in a frying pan - that evening. We were assured that the other speciality meats that we tried had been either culled due to overpopulation or farmed naturally on wide open pastures. A major selling point was also the fact that the meats are a low fat option.  We liked them all, the crocodile was a bit like chicken, and I liked the kangaroo best, it was very tender and flavoursome.

Read more about the farm at www.oslinc.co.uk.

That afternoon, we drove further on, to the coast, and found a beach with more samphire than I had ever seen before.  I had picked and eaten samphire from Wells-next-the -sea harbour before but this was something else!  


I'm not saying where it was as I was a bit worried about the entire beach being decimated. We saw a group of people pulling it up by the roots and taking it away by the sackful!  They claimed it was for their own personal use but that seemed a bit unlikely to me.  I thought perhaps they had a pub or restaurant and it was going to feature on the current weeks specials board or something...  they did give me cooking tips though.

We picked a sandwich box full and not by the roots, enabling the plants to re-establish and grow again.


Apparently picking it by the roots enables you to prepare it by holding it by the roots, swishing it in some clean water to wash, then stripping off the good bits.  I just floated ours in a bowl of water and let the dirt fall to the bottom, then wrapped it in a tea towel and whirled it around my head while standing in the garden. I simply boiled it, then added butter and black pepper.  Salt isn't required as it's naturally salty from growing in sea water.

It's good with a poached egg on top, with seafood risotto, or as an accompaniment to fish dishes.  I've seen it used quite a bit on masterchef this year. See www.bbc.co.uk/food/samphire for more ideas.
 
Today is the last day of the year, so I've totalled up by new recipes for 2014 - and there were 87, including 13 meat free main courses. Since January 2008 the running total is 821.
May there be many more in 2015!  It's the first time the annual total has dropped below 100, but that was due to the car crash rather than lack of inspiration...

Thank you for reading.  I'm hoping to write another post about this year's Christmas menu today too and I've got lots of ideas for future posts, so I'm firmly back in the blogging community.

More soon,

Caroline x