Friday 28 November 2008

Vegetarian Night

After the last successful ‘Nancy Boy’ dinner on my birthday, me and Emma decided to make another one, but with total vegetarian food, and yes, we do like challenge sometimes.

Shamefully, I actually don’t have much experience on veggie cooking. My culinary skill on this particular category is limited to veggie stir-fry and using meat substitute to make most of meat dishes into vegetarian. It has been some difficulties for two devoted carnivores to set up a quality vegetarian menu, but we got our starter and desserts sorted quite easily. I guess most of starter and desserts are vegetarian, it was not too hard to pick a good one. The hard bit was the main course, it has to be something more substantial, more powerful on visual impact and it should fill you up, so you feel satisfied. However, for an exquisite dinner, veggie lasagne, veggie cannelloni, veggie chill con carne, curry or stir-fry is not going to be good enough. Finally, we decided to make a pudding like steak and kidney pudding, but instead of those ‘bloody’ fillings, heart warming Portobello mushroom and chestnut are the ones to give you a winter hug.

So, what exactly is the menu? Brace yourselves, here we come.

Cold Starter
Heart of Romaine with apple, walnut and celery with camembert dressing
Warm Starter
Broccoli Cheese Souffle

Some of the recipe will be posted on here soon. Keep checking!!

Wednesday 26 November 2008

Answer to email: Smoked salmon and Spag Bog

Recently I received an email from my first blog fan. He asked me how to make smoked salmon and he had some difficulty when making pasta sauce. I can’t say that I’m an expert in Italian dishes. However, Spaghetti Bolognese is one of my mum’s crowd pleaser for many years, and I have picked up some tips from time to time.

Smoked Salmon & Cured Salmon

Facts of Smoked Salmon and Cured Salmon

Smoked Salmon is fresh salmon that has undergone a smoking process, usually by one of two methods-hot-smoking or cold-smoking. Most of supermarkets sell both types of smoked salmon. However, the delicate flavour of cold-smoked salmon makes it becomes people’s favourite. Also, it is very easy to use in cooking, either directly put on soda bread with sour cream as canapé, or slightly cooked in pasta.

Cured Salmon is practically raw fish. The method has been used for centuries to prevent food from spoiling. The process usually involved good quantity of sugar or salt or both. Herbs or citrus peel can be put into to make a dry rub mix which is then applied onto surface of the fish. It takes a few days to a week to ‘cook’ the fish, depends on the size of the fish. The sugar and salt draws a large amount of liquid from the fish and replacing it with sugar/salt mixture, thus gives the fish ‘cooked’-liked finish.

Even though, they are different in making process, their tastes are similar and can be applied in cooking in same way. However, of course, cured salmon has no smokiness.

Gravlax
This Swedish speciality of raw salmon cured in sugar-salt –dill mixture is famous around the world. The fish is sliced paper-thin and served on dark bread with mustard-dill sauce as appetizer.

I adopted the original recipe and came up with a citrus-flavoured cured salmon. I love it, and all of my family and friends love it, why don’t you give it a try.

450g/1lb salmon fillet (preferably middle-cut), pin bones removed
25g/1oz coarse sea salt
25g/1oz caster sugar
1 tsp crushed white peppercorns
1 lemon, zest only

Get two salmon fillets of total weight 450g/1lb. Ideally, they are about the same size. Wash the fillets and towel dries them.
Then mix the salt, sugar, pepper and zest in a mixing bowl. Lay a large piece of cling film on your worktop, and then put a quarter of the salt mix in the centre of the cling film. Put one fillet on top of the salt, skin side down. Then rub and other 2 quarters of the mixture on the salmon, put another piece of salmon on top, sprinkle the rest of the salt on top.
Wrap the fish with the cling film tightly. Then place the parcel on a shallow dish to prevent leaking of the liquid. Place another plate on top of the parcel, and apply some weight. Keep the fish in fridge for at 48 hours but no more than 3 days. Some liquid may leak out from the parcel, but don’t worry, that’s normal.
Before serve, unwrap the parcel, wash off any residual mixture from the fish with cold water, and then serve it the way you like.

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Spaghetti Bolognese

A world famous pasta dish that everyone loves, Spaghetti Bolognese is originated in Bologna, Italy. This pasta dish is with a meat based sauce, sometimes taken to be tomato sauce. However, the original recipe has very small amount of tomato paste, perhaps a couple of tablespoons.

The traditional ingredients of Bolognese sauce (Ragù) were confined by the recipe issued in 1982 by the Bolognese delegation of Accademia Italiana della Cucina. It involves beef, pancetta, onions, carrots, celery, tomato paste, meat broth, white wine, and milk. However, there are numerous of interpretation worldwide, and nowadays the term ‘Bolognese’ usually applied to a meat-tomato sauce, which vaguely bear the resemblance of traditional Ragù.

Ma Luk’s Spaghetti Bolognese
Serves: 4

450g/1 lb mince beef
3 cloves garlic, crushed and chopped
1 large onion, finely chopped
2 tomatoes, coarsely chopped
750ml pasta sauce
1 teaspoon sugar
Salt and pepper
150g Cheddar cheese, grated

350g dried pasta (Spaghetti, Penne, Rigatoni or Tagliatelle or any pasta you like)
30g butter, cut into knobs
1 tablesppon olive oil
2 teaspoon sugar
3 tablespoon ketchup

Heat 2 tablespoon of oil in a frying pan, fry garlic and onion to golden brown but do not burn, then fry the mince until just cooked.
Tip away some of the oil in the pan, then add the sauce, tomatoes and sugar. Stir through the mince and let it simmer for 15-20 minutes uncovered or until the sauce is reduced to two-third. Then add salt and pepper to taste. Set aside.
Preheat a 220oF/ gas mark 4-5 oven. Meanwhile, boil a large pan of salted water. Put the pasta into boiling water. Stir to avoid sticking and cook for 10-15 minutes or until al-dente.
Strain the pasta through a colander, put the pasta back into the pan. Put butter, oil, sugar and ketchup onto the pasta and mix until all pasta are coated.
Pour the pasta into a casserole dish, add the Bolognese on top, sprinkle grated cheese all over the top, then bake it in oven until the cheese is melted and golden.

Ben’s Spag Bog
Serves: 4

450g/1 lb mince beef
3 cloves garlic, crushed and chopped
1 large onion, finely chopped
1 tinned chopped tomatoes
300ml passata
1/2 tablespoon tomato paste
1 tablespoon dried oregano
1 teaspoon sugar
Salt and pepper

350g pasta
Parmesan cheese, finely grated to serve

Heat the pan with a few tablespoon of olive oil, then shape the beef into small meatballs, about less than an inch diameter and brown them all round. Remove them from the pan and set aside.
Use the same pan, fry the onion and garlic until golden but do not burn them. Pour in the tinned tomatoes, passata, tomato paste and oregano, mix well. Simmer the sauce to reduce to two-third, about 15-20 minutes. Then put the cooked beef balls into the sauce, simmer at low heat. Add salt and pepper to taste.
Boil the pasta according to instruction on the package. Then strain them and put it back to the pan. Stir through a couple spoons of olive oil, then pour the sauce into the pasta, mix through and serve with grated parmesan and extra black pepper.

Tips: if the sauce was runny, but you would like to have good amount of sauce. Thicken the sauce with flour and water mixture (1 tablespoon of flour to 2.5 tablespoon of water). Do not pour the mixture all at once, pour them in portions and stir until it thickens to your like.


As I mentioned before, spaghetti Bolognese has different interpretation. You could put more vegetable, such as mushroom and celery. You also could use basil instead of oregano. I hope you all are happy making spag bog with your own style J

Friday 21 November 2008

Starter : Beetroot Cured Salmon with Horseradish Sour Cream

Hi everyone, Christmas is getting close, where are you going to have your favourite Chirstmas Dinner? Posh Restaurant? Friend's House Party? for me, a wholesome home-made Chirstmas Dinner is unbeatable. The following dish that I have served on my birthday dinner as a starter also fit well in Christmas. The dark red beetroot taints the edge of salmon slice in red and leaves the middle orange pink. Horseradish gives it an extra dimension on the fish, you definietly can 'Taste the Difference'. With horseradish cream and Irish soda bread, this dish is the perfect starter for a lot more to come.

For the Salmon:

2 skin-on salmon fillets (about 1.3kg/3lb in total)
200g caster sugar
140g sea salt flakes
85g grated horseradish from a jar
3 medium raw beetroot (about 250g/9oz), coarsely grated (no need to peel)
1 bunch dill , chopped

For the Sour Cream:
200ml tub sour cream
juice 1 lemon
2 tbsp grated horseradish from the jar
handful dill fronds, roughly chopped
Soda Bread (I chose Paul Rankin’s) for serving
1. Lay the salmon fillets, skin side down, on a board and brush your hand along it. If you feel any little pin bones pinch them out with your fingers or tweezers. In a bowl, mix all of the other ingredients for the salmon together to make the cure.

2. Stretch two large sheets of cling film over a work surface and spoon over some of the cure. Lay one of the fillets, skin side down, on the cure, then pack over most of the cure, and sandwich with the remaining fillet, skin side up. Top with the last of the cure and wrap both fillets together tightly with lots of cling film. Place in a container with sides, like a large roasting tray, put a smaller tray on top and weigh it down with a couple of tins. Leave in the fridge for at least three days or up to a week. Don't be alarmed by the amount of liquid that leaks out, this is normal. Once a day, pour away the liquid, turn the salmon and re-apply the weights.

3. To serve, unwrap the salmon from the cling film and brush off the marinade. Slice the salmon into thin slivers. Make the dressing by mixing all the ingredients together with some salt and pepper, and pour them into small ramekins, one for each guest. Serve each guest with a few slices of salmon, few slices of soda bread and the dressing at the side. Once made the salmon will sit happily in the fridge for up to a week and can be used just like smoked salmon.

Wednesday 5 November 2008

FoodSnapper

Was it crazy to take picture of food? It is quite embarrassing when someone you know do that excessively, and I m sure I have embarrassed Z and a few friends of mine in numerous occasions. My appreciation of food doesn’t stop at the point I finished it, in fact, it escalates when I break down the food in my mind, thus I want to remember and learn from the goods and avoid the bads. It wouldn’t be a good idea to keep a portion of my creation for future reference, so at least I would like a picture as a trophy.

For years, I thought I am the only loony in the bin, putting pictures of my own sweet creations on facebook. If I said there was nothing to do with self indulgent, it would be a lie. However, receiving comments and genuine interest about food from the others are far more satisfying than the praise on its own. Recently, someone contact me thorough facebook, told me about a website called FoodSnappers, a website full of ‘loonies’ (in a good way) like me. It was great to see like-mind people have same passion on cooking and food. This public blogsite encourage us to take picture of food and drink, to share the joy of having good food and prolong the moment of indulgences. If there is an ‘xtube’ on food and drinks, FoodSnappers is the master of amateur ‘gastroporn’. Of course, visual stimulation is not the only high in the website. Recipe section is the place for amateur or even professional chef to share recipe and discuss culinary skills. Some of those recipes are developed from experience, failure and then modified. Blogmaster Joe regularly posts seasonal recipe with article and pictures that makes you feel the urge of cooking. After all, FoodSnappers is the blogsite for all amateur chefs, food critics, foodies or generally food lover to exchange skills, recipes, opinion and the joy of cooking.