Thursday, November 5, 2015

Mini Pumpkin Stuffed with Cauliflower Rice


It may be a little late now but perhaps you have your Halloween pumpkin left over and are wondering what to do with it? Providing it isn't too past it - or you haven't left it out on your doorstep all night for passing wildlife to nibble on (or worse) then of course you can eat it!


I bought a couple of mini pumpkins or 'munchkins' from Sainsburys for 90p each which I thought were just the right amount for one person - though I forgot that once you scoop the seeds out, there's not a huge amount of pumpkin left. So I would do these as a side vegetable rather than as the main course -though you could use the same recipe with a larger pumpkin for a main course.



I roasted the whole mini pumpkin in the oven for about half an hour, by which point it was soft enough to cut in half and scoop out the seeds (if you can, just cut a small section off the top and scoop it out that way as it looks better when it's served).



For the filling, I mixed some cauliflower rice - which I explained how to make here, but in this case I bought a tub of it from Tesco - with some diced red pepper and red onion, though you can add whatever veg you like. I fried it until the peppers and onion were soft and then filled the pumpkin with it.

 I served it on a bed of spiralized carrot which I also bought in Tesco.


 
I'm sending this to the Extra Veg challenge hosted by Helen at Fuss Free Flavours - I don't often have entirely vegetarian meals and I don't even like pumpkin all that much but these are fun and seasonal so I can't resist!
 
 

Delicious Alchemy Gluten-free, Dairy-free Oaty Cookies


One of my work colleagues is gluten intolerant but most of the bakes I’ve brought into work recently have been things I’ve made to have at home and had some left, and I thought it was about time I actually made something gluten free.
 
Every so often I purchase a Degustabox – it’s a monthly subscription service but you can dip in and out, which I have reviewed (after buying with my own money) before. I had one of their boxes a couple of months ago which included a packet of gluten-free cookie mix so one evening – given I’m always short of time after work – I decided to make the cookies.
 
The company behind these mixes is called Delicious Alchemy; they make cake and bread mixes and cereals as well and have a limited edition Christmas fruit cake mix available at the moment as well. It was started by a computer games producer who discovered she was coeliac and went off to university to study food science and marketing. They’ve launched products in Sainsburys and Waitrose and they are also available through their website. I’d never come across the company before but I love their colourful packaging and fun approach – the company history timeline has an anecdote about how the founder discovered she was coeliac (an ear of wheat down her sock!) and another about the time the company accountant got stuck in a lift.
 
The mix I had, the Oaty Cookie mix, was so easy to make. All you do is mix the contents of the bag with melted butter and water – you can also make these cookies vegan by using a butter-substitute which is what I did, after hearing that another colleague also can’t eat gluten or dairy.

 
I got 9 cookies out of the mixture and they were so quick and easy to make, and tasted pretty good too. I think they would have been better with butter and they were not particularly sweet – which is a good thing as it makes them feel a bit healthier. Also, my colleague said that often gluten-free products are packed full of sugar and she finds them too sweet, so she really likes these. In fact when I told her about the packet mix I’d used, she went on to the company’s website and ordered some herself!


I'm sharing these with Treat Petite, hosted by Kat the Baking Explorer and Stuart at Cakeyboi, as their theme this month is autumn, and I think there is something very autumnal and warming about oats.

 

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Old El Paso Stand 'n' Stuff Kits

Mexican food is surprisingly easy to make at home, though it’s not something I’ve done very often in the past. Since going to Mexico earlier this year though my eyes were opened to a whole range of dishes that would appeal to even my super-fussy fiancé and most importantly are quick and easy to cook.
  


I thought that might be the thinking behind Old El Paso’s “Taco Tuesday” campaign – you can make midweek meals quick and easy by doing tacos or something similar. But a quick Google has actually revealed that the phrase comes from a happy hour event where bars and restaurants offer cheap tacos and beer on Tuesdays.
  
Even so, I’ll go with the ‘midweek made easy’ idea which Old El Paso is promoting. They invited me to a cookery evening recently at Food at 52, a cookery school in London’s Clerkenwell, which is a great little place. Upstairs, there are comfy sofas where we got to know each other over drinks and nachos, and then you go downstairs to the kitchen area. Each person had a workstation – Foodat52 runs a range of classes and can be hired for private events (from hen nights to corporate team building sessions) and the people running it were great. They demonstrated, we cooked, the wine flowed then we ate.
So what did we cook? We were divided into pairs or groups of three, with each making either a vegetarian or meat-based dish. We were all trying out the Stand ‘n’ Stuff soft taco kit, which apparently is being relaunched rather than a totally new product, but I’ve never come across it before. And it’s genius! In the past I’ve eaten tacos in those crispy shells, which don’t stand up by themselves so you have to lay them down and half the filling falls out, and you take one bite which cracks the shell and then the rest of the filling falls out. Or, I’ve eaten soft tortillas, which I prefer, but am hopeless at wrapping them properly and have to eat them with a knife and fork – if I pick them up, the filling falls out (are you starting to see a pattern here?).
These tacos are like little boats – they are soft, but stand up by themselves and allow you to pile in the filling, and when you hold it in your fingers and bite, you don’t lose any of the filling. I will definitely be using these from now on!
I was using beef mince and my recipe was very straightforward – brown the mince first. I learnt that you shouldn’t actually move the meat around while it’s browning, and you need the pan (and oil) to be very hot first. Once it’s browned, drain the mince and add the Old El Paso seasoning mix, which you either get in the meal kits or can buy separately, and a little water.
While the meat was cooking I chopped some lettuce and grated some cheese, while my partner chopped tomatoes. To serve, pile the mince into the taco shell, top with lettuce, tomato and grated cheese, and enjoy.
The pairs making the vegetarian recipe had a little more to do; they chopped courgette, red pepper, onion and sweet potato and added a jar of Old El Paso cooking sauce and a little water. The veg cooked for about ten minutes until the sauce had reduced, then they added some kidney beans. I don’t like kidney beans so didn’t try this particular dish but it looked very colourful and healthy and this has given me a great idea for the next time my vegan friend comes to dinner.
The Stand ‘N’ Stuff kits come in a variety of flavours – garlic & paprika; extra mild and smoky BBQ and retail at £3.79 (though Tesco has them for £2 at the moment) and you can buy the tortillas separately, for £1.89 for 8, if you want to make up your own flavour combinations. I will definitely be using these again for a quick midweek dinner and maybe trying shredded chicken instead of the mince next time.
Thanks to Old El Paso for inviting me to the event at Foodat52.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Green Chilli Chicken Chilaquiles



This weekend's Formula 1 Grand Prix took place in Mexico but was declared by my fiancé to be "boring" because Louis Hamilton has already won the overall championship. I was hoping our Mexican dinner would be a little more exciting but in fact it also turned out to be rather bland. Though that may have been my overcaution with the chilli!


I've had a Mexican recipe book called, um, Mexican Recipes, for many years (it came from Woolworths so that gives you a clue). I haven't made much from it but am getting bolder now with food, particularly after a trip to Mexico earlier this year. I chose a recipe called Green Chilli Chicken Chilaquiles as something that my fussy fiancé might enjoy. I adapted the recipe a bit so here's what I did.

You can either bake tortilla strips until they are crispy or use ready-made nachos, which is what I did.

To serve 2, you need:
salsa cruda - see below
3 large handfuls nachos
2 chicken breasts
1 tbsp. fresh coriander
1 tsp chopped dried oregano
1 clove garlic, crushed
200ml chicken stock
150g Cheddar, grated plus more to sprinkle over the top (which I forgot to add at the last minute!)
sour cream to serve; I also served this with a few potato wedges and some green veg (broccoli)

Salsa Cruda
3 tomatoes, chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
handful of fresh coriander, chopped
pinch of sugar
1 green chilli, finely chopped (I only used half, which is perhaps where I went wrong)
2 spring onions, chopped


Place all the ingredients for the salsa in a food processor and blend until you have a smooth texture. Add a little oil if necessary.



To prepare the meal, fry the chicken breasts in a pan with a little oil. Meanwhile preheat the oven to 190C.

When the chicken is cooked, shred it and place half in a greased casserole dish or lined oven proof pan. Spoon over half the salsa cruda, half the coriander, oregano, garlic and cheese.



Repeat with the remaining chicken, salsa and spices then top with the nachos.


Pour over the chicken stock and sprinkle with grated cheese (I forgot to add the cheese at this stage). Bake in the oven for 30 minutes and serve.


This was an unusual and interesting dish - which I don't mean in a bad way - but I didn't make it spicy enough and I don't think leaving the cheese off the top really helped!



I'm sharing this with Formula 1 Foods, the blog challenge I host as the current theme is Mexico.


Sunday, November 1, 2015

Meal Planning Monday Week 45


My other half was working late a lot last week and may have to work late every night this week as well as the weekend :-( So I'm going to plan meals for me and find something for him depending on what time he gets home or if he's already eaten at the train station.

For breakfasts and lunches I'm still doing the protein shakes recommended by my personal trainer.

Monday
Chicken piccata with butternut squash noodles from this recipe, with beansprouts, not sure they really go but they need using up!
 
Tuesday
Spaghetti Bolognese
 
Wednesday
Probably out for drinks after work and either will eat on the way home or have left over spag bol
 
Thursday
Our five year anniversary - hope we can go out for dinner but my fiancé will probably have to be at work so I will have tahini chicken and carrot noodles from this recipe with beansprouts, not sure they really go but they need using up!
 
Friday
Slimming World burger and chips

Saturday
My fiancé is working all weekend on a big office move (it's his responsibility to make sure all the IT stuff from servers to the door pass system is working)
Lunch: baked potato
Dinner: hopefully he will be home in time for dinner: steak and dauphinoise potatoes

Sunday
Lunch: just me again. Creamy avocado pasta like this recipe as I have an avocado to use up and I don't really like them.
Dinner: hopefully he will be home in time for dinner: roast chicken
 
 

Alphabakes Round-up October 2015: W

 
Happy Halloween! I was hoping for one or two witchy recipes for this month’s Alphabakes as the letter we chose was W, but instead we had a lot of wedding-related entries!
 
There was a good reason for that: once again, congratulations to the lovely Ros from The More Than Occasional Baker, my co-host for this challenge, who has become a Mrs! It was a beautiful wedding though I probably had as many nerves in the morning as the bride herself, as I was making the wedding cake! Luckily it arrived at the venue in one piece and went down very well; you can read more about it below as it was one of my entries into the Alphabakes challenge this month.
 
But as always I will go through the entries in the order in which they were received. First, I took the opportunity to publish a post I have been working on for a while – a wedding cake decorated with rose petals, brush embroidery and a wire flower on top. It took me a while to finish the post as I’d done separate ‘how to’ posts for each separate element first! This isn’t the cake I made for Ros, in fact it isn’t actually a real cake – we used a polystyrene cake dummy –so strictly speaking it isn’t something I baked but as a lot of baking blog posts are about decorating techniques I wanted to share it with you all as well.
 
 
 
The next entry comes from Elizabeth’s Kitchen Diary; she made this Hungarian plum cake from a recipe given by a neighbour, who in turn received it from a Hungarian friend. She says that despite the sugar content, the cake is almost savoury. The W in the recipe comes from chopped walnuts, though Elizabeth actually used almonds instead. Still, I guess if I can enter a cake that isn’t real, she can enter an ingredient she was supposed to use but didn’t!
 
Hungarian Plum Cake

 
Stuart at Cakeyboi made this chocolate pecan cake, which is topped with whipped cream; he says it’s perfect as a Sunday afternoon treat with the howling wind outside.

chocolate pecan cake with maple whipped cream
 
Jean at Baking in Franglais made this beautiful gluten free wedding cake for her friend and the recipe for the cake itself is very versatile - you could make it for a birthday or Sunday tea just by decorating it differently.
 
wedding cake2
 
These raspberry fudge brownies come from Choclette at Tin and Thyme; she made them using dark chocolate containing raspberries and are slightly healthier than many brownies as they are made with wholemeal flour and less butter, but still taste really fudgy. They also contain white chocolate chips as well as raspberries.
 
Raspberry Fudge Brownies

 
 
Suelle at Mainly Baking made a date and walnut pudding which is gluten free and dairy free; she replaced butter with coconut oil which is something that wouldn't have occurred to me, so I might have to try it! This looks delicious:

 
 
More walnuts, this time in these sweet potato, cranberry and walnut cupcakes from Lili’s Cakes. She lives in Barcelona where October 31 is celebrated with the Catalan tradition of la Castanyada, which translates as chestnut time. Sweet potatoes as well as chestnuts are eaten so Lili has made these cupcakes and decorated them in Halloween colours. The contrasting flavours and textures sound really good.
 
Sweet potato, cranberry and walnut cupcakes
 
 
These ‘easy-peasy’ five ingredient waffles from Family Friends Food are very simple, but you do need a waffle maker of course- though you can pick them up quite cheaply these days. You can serve them however you like as they are very versatile. Have a read of Helen’s blog post to find out what to look for when buying a waffle maker as well.
waffles with berry compote
 
Shaheen at Allotment 2 Kitchen sent in these white chocolate blondies, a version of chocolate brownies, which she says are very sweet and best eaten while warm - now why didn't I think of that?
 
 
Ros from The More Than Occasional Baker decided to bake cakes to give out as favours to guests at her own wedding – I know she had a lot of other things to do in the run-up to the big day so I was very impressed! The cakes tasted very nice (I was a guest at her wedding) and had cute little discs with her and her husband’s initials on. I loved the way they were packaged up as well – there was one at each place setting.
 
 
 
And finally, Ros’ wedding cake itself, which I made. The bottom layer was actually fake, which made my task a lot easier! The middle layer is chocolate and the top layer is lemon, and I made the roses on top myself. I was very pleased with the way that it turned out and thoroughly enjoyed my first experience of making a wedding cake!
 
 
 
As I'm slightly late with the round-up Ros has already announced which letter we are baking with in November - enjoy!