About

Search Cooksister!

Waiter, there's something in my

Cooksister to go


  • Digital Dish, The Freshest Writing and Recipes from Food
Blogs Around the World

  • You liked the Cooksister site? So why not buy the Digital Dish, featuring contributions by none other than Cooksister! It's easy - use the buttons below and pay by credit card (or Paypal) to have the book shipped to your front door! Click on the button below for international orders anywhere outside the USA ($30.95, about £17.50 or about R200.00 including postage & packaging)


  • Click on the button below for domestic orders anywhere within the USA ($24.95 including postage & packaging)

LinkWithin Related Stories Widget for Blogs

« December 2007 | Main | February 2008 »

January 2008 posts

January 31, 2008

Mamma's no-recipe scones

20071209_scones1caption What do you do when you miss somebody that you'll never see again?  When your head is full of questions that you still want to ask them, questions that hadn't even been formulated when you said goodbye?  When your arms ache to be around them?  When your ears strain to catch the memory of their voice; your nose, the memory of their scent?

I'm afraid I'm not the burning bush and I don't have the answers.  All I can tell you is what I do, and that's to haul out my mom's index book of recipes.  It bears an alarming resemblance to my own, with some recipes written in her confident hand, some pasted in and others stuffed in higgeldy-piggeldy - torn from magazines, snipped from the back of cartons or scribbled on the back of meeting minutes.  As I page through the recipes, each one brings back a memory - the person who gave her the recipe (like Evelyn's nutty wheat bread), the occasion when it was made (like Black Forest trifle for a party) or how we used to make it together (mmmmm, chocolate fudge).  And at the back are her weekly budgets, complete with copies of the invoices sent by the Chinese-owned grocery store Harris who, in those days, delivered to your door after you'd phoned in your order.  I remember visiting the store sometimes too, where I referred to the owner as die tannie met die laggesig - the lady with the laughing face.  What a wonderful world view a child has!

But one of the recipes that we made the most and the first recipe I successfully replicated outside our house won't be found in that book.  I fact, I don't think it's written down anywhere.  It lived in Mamma's head and, like her ample hips and slim wrists, she seems to have passed it on to me like a genetic imprint. 

One way or another, scones had been a part of our family weekend routine for as long as I can remember.  Some Sundays when the sun was shining, my dad would announce that we were going out for breakfast.  This was always a source of great excitement to me, even though we always went to the same place.  In those days, there was a little tearoom and a big open patio attached to Port Elizabeth's premier tourist attraction, the Oceanarium.  It was nothing fancy - just wooden picnic tables and chairs and a collection of middle-aged ladies serving teas (were they from a charity??).  But on your right, if you were lucky, you could catch a glimpse of the dolphins leaping high out of their pool during a show, and on your left you had an uninterrupted view out over the shimmering ocean in Algoa Bay.  Invariably, our family would order a big pot of tea and four sets of scones with cream.  I used to relish not only the big bowl of whipped cream that came with the hot scones, but also the fact that they came with strawberry jam.  At home it was always apricot jam, so strawberry jam added to the sense of occasion :)

Even on Sunday mornings when the family stayed home, scones often featured.  The division of labour in our house for as long As I can remember was that my dad would get us up in the morning on weekdays, make breakfast and get us to school; but on weekends, the roles were reversed.  My mom and dad would wake up and have their early morning espresso (I still marvel at what exotic beasts they must have been in the Port Elizabeth of the 1970s!) and then while my dad shaved, my mom would go through to the kitchen to start breakfast.  Often I'd go with her, and often she'd bake scones.   She never seemed to use a recipe - it was something she had made so many times before that the recipe came as naturally as breathing.  And when she taught me, I also learned by doing, rather than by reading a recipe.  In fact, I was quite disconcerted the first time I made these away from home and without my mom's measuring jug.  I'd never learned the exact quantities, just up to which mark on the jug you should pour!  Luckily I knew what consistency the dough had to be and my first attempt to make these at a friend's house, aged about 10, was a roaring success.

Both the old glass measuring jug and my mom are no more.  One met a fatal accident when my father decided to heat milk in it... on the stove.  And the other met with an incurable and equally fatal kidney disease.  But the recipe, it seems, is imprinted in my DNA and when I miss my mom the most, I make these scones and let the taste and the smell carry me away to another time.

MAMMA'S SCONES (makes 8-10)

Ingredients

2 cups plain flour20071209_scones2e
3.5 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 cup of oil
2/3 cup of milk
1 egg

Method

Pre-heat the oven to 180C.  Lightly grease or spray a large baking sheet.

Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt.  Beat the egg together with the milk and oil.

Make a well in the centre of the flour and pour the liquid into it.  Then mix using a wooden spoon, making cutting motions as if you were drawing a noughts and crosses grid.  Turn the bowl after each grid.

Mix until all the liquid has been absorbed but do not over-mix.  If there is still some dry flour visible, add milk a tablespoon at a time and mix till all the flour is absorbed.  The mixture should be sticky but firm enough to hold its shape when you form the scones on the baking sheet.

Form a rough balls from the dough and place them on the baking sheet, evenly spaced.  You can make them as neat or as free-form as you like but remember they are not going to look like cookie-cutter, egg-washed scones!

Bake for 15-20 minutes or until golden - test with a toothpick to see if they are done.  They are delicious with sweet or savoury toppings - in the picture, I have gone for butter and red cherry jam.  In the unlikely event that there are any left over from breakfast, slice in half, top with grated cheddar and pop under the grill for a tasty mid-afternoon snack.

I am submitting this post as a (late!) entry into Jeni and Inge's wonderful Apples and Thyme event celebrating our culinary memories of our mothers and grandmothers.

January 27, 2008

Kalyn's roasted green beans

RoastedgreenbeansOne of the very best things about food blogging is the fact that, if you regularly read other people's blogs, you will have a never-ending supply of tried and tested recipes at your fingertips to inspire you every day.

Sometimes you will see something that's so amazing that you will print the recipe and make it almost right away.  Other times you will be inspired by something you saw on a blog and make your own interpretation.  And sometimes you will see something and file it away for future reference, knowing that it will leap out at you again when the time is right.  This is one of those recipes!

Green beans (or French beans as they are also known) are some of the first vegetables I grew to like as a child, after peas and carrots.  There was something appealing abotu their cut-grass taste and their twirly tips, and I remember my mom telling me that my grandfather used to grow them in his vegetable garden and that as a child, she would eat the beans straight off the plant, still warm from the sun.  Although I never had the chance to do this, every time I bite into a breen bean I picture my mom as a little girl, biting into a bean in her Pretoria garden.

"French beans" is actually a misnomer as these beans were originally cultivated in South and Central America and were only brouight to Europe after the Spanish conquest. But whatever their nationality, they are rich in Vitamins A and C, as well as potassium, and are delicious when eaten raw or cooked.  If you add the high Vitamin C content of the red onions and high Vitamin E content of the almonds, you could almost say you were eating this purely for your health.  Only, it's so delicious nobody would believe you! The beans stay fairly crisp but the roasting seems to bring out a nuttiness in them which steaming never does.  And I love both the sweeetness of the red onions and the crunch of the toasted almonds - a perfect combination.  Thanks Kalyn!

KALYN'S ROASTED GREEN BEANS (serves 2-3)

Ingredients

500g green beans, washed, topped & tailed
1 medium red onion, sliced into slim wedges
2-3 large cloves of garlic, minced
extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup flaked almonds
salt and pepper
lemon juice

Method

Pre-heat the oven to 200C.  Cut the green beans into 5cm pieces and toss in olive oil together with the onion slices and garlic until well coated. 

Place the vegetables in a large, shallow oven-proof dish big enough that the vegetables form a single layer.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Pop the dish in the oven and roast for about 15 minutes or until the ends of the beans start to shrivel slightly.

Meanwhile, toast the almonds over medium heat in a dry non-stick frying pan.  Watch them like a hawk and turn frequently so that they don't burnm and remove from the heat when they start to brown.

When the beans are done, toss them in a serving bowl together with the toasted almonds and a splash of lemon juice and serve immediately.

[And before you ask, yes it is winter in the UK and these beans are not locally produced - they came from Kenya.  In an aeroplane.  Being from Africa, I have very mixed feelings about the fanatical avoidance of foods flown in from there.  I do try as far as possible to buy produce grown in the UK, but I have to confess that when I see South African grapes (or Kenyan beans, for that matter) I do often buy them.  I figure if we boycott them altogether, that's another source of income denied to a continent that urgently needs to find an alternative to foreign aid packages. Here is some further reading on that debate.]

Whb_2_yrs_2I'm submitting this post as my entry to this week's Weekend Herb Blogging, kindly hosted by Anna at Anna's Cool Finds.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

January 26, 2008

Waiter, there's cheese, cheese and MORE cheese in my terrine!

20080119_cheeseterrineservedcaptionAs I have told you all ad nauseam, I spent my Christmas skiing in Andorra.

No, I haven't blogged it yet, nor have I blogged my first trip in March last year, which generally isn't a big issue (because I have sworn off blog guilt his year!!).  But is it a bit of a pain when I want to refer to something I noticed during the week and I can't just link to the previous post to give you background!

So I'll have to fill you in manually...

The hotel we stay at is very much the norm in Andorra - a huge and not particularly character-filled building populated mainly by people like me on one week ski packages.  The accommodation is nearly always half-board by default and in many of the hotels, dinner is always a buffet.  Having grown up on Southern Sun hotel buffets as a child (we nearly always holidayed at their hotels), I don't particularly mind buffets.  Some people seem to shudder at the very word and I know that buffet sometimes is shorthand for lazy or sloppy cooking, but a good buffet is a thing of beauty.  And I think our hotel is pretty good in the buffet department: the dishes are replaced often enopugh that nothing looks too mangled; there is a huge selection of dishes; and there isn't too much obvious recycling of leftovers going on.

With one exception.  There was one section of the buffet, the end of the table bearing cold dishes and desserts, facing the grill, that seemed to be eternally reserved for a smorgasbord of inventive leftover uses.  And in particular, some chef in the recesses of the cavernous kitchen had a flair for terrines.  Leftover carrot salad?  Watch out for the creamy yellow carrot terrine tomorrow night.  Caprese left uneaten?  Spot the Mediterranean terrine.  Leftover roast?  Behold my lovely meat terrine, complete with hard-boiled egg in the centre!  Each plate of fanned terrine slices was a thing of beauty and I longed to tell him that his inventive frugality appealed to me immensely. And nobody who has mastered the art of the terrine ever needs to throw away any leftover food, it seems.

I wish I could say that I was as noble in my use of leftovers when making my dish for this months' edition of Waiter There's Something in My (the themed monthly cooking event hosted in rotation by me, Johanna and Andrew). Johanna was wavering between a choice of themes and finally went for terrines and I have to say, I was not exactly jumping for joy.  I have attempted terrines on two previous occasions:  my roasted pepper and ricotta terrine looked lovely but totally fell apart on slicing.  And my summer fruit and sparkling wine terrine didn't even look that lovely!  I pictured jewel-like berries in a clear pink jelly, but got a nasty opaque pink jelly that tasted OK but looked vaguely medicinal and had the consistency of a squash ball.  Bah.

So this time I thought I'd keep it very very simple and make a terrine that seemed fairly flop-proof and preferably didn't have layers that had to stick together through the onslaught of the knife.  I was having guests for lunch and although serving up a disappointing dish to my husband doesn't faze him, I certainly didn't want to present my kitchen calamity to guests! So I opted for adapting a recipe from stalwart Delia and I have to say, if you have any worries about your consumption of saturated fat, this one is NOT for you! Three cheeses, double cream and mayo - woo hoo, hear those arteries slamming shut!  It also calls for gelatine, which is not an ingredient I'm overly familiar with.  In the end, it was fairly simple to deal with according to the instructions, but I must say it did give me a fright once or twice by hardening up when I didn't epect it to.  Don't worry though - just return it to its hot water bath and it can be re-liquified. 

The finished product was really delicious and didn't taste nearly as rich as the ingredients suggested.  My only criticism would be that the pressure of the knife when slicing it flattened it a bit, so the slices ended up being long and thin, rather than square, but the taste was fabulous.  I served mine on a bed of rocket and accompanied by a spoonful of a wonderful butternut and chile jam that I brought back from South Africa (if it's still available at Woolworths, those of you living in SA should rush out and get some - it's the perfect partner for cheese!).

THREE CHEESE TERRINE (serves 8 as a starter)

Ingredients

100 g buffalo Mozzarella, drained
110 g Danish blue cheese (or substitute a blue of your choice)
250 g ricotta or Philadelphia cream cheese
11 g sachet of powdered gelatine (can use a vegetarian alternative)
75 ml mayonnaise (I used Hellmanns)
1 Tbsp lemon juice
150 ml double cream
2 spring onions, finely chopped
2 tsp chopped fresh dill
1 Tbsp chopped fresh chives
salt and black pepper

Method

Lightly oil a 450g loaf tin (15 x 9.5 x 7 cm) with canola oil.  Line the tin with a large piece of20080119_cheeseterrinewholeborder  clingfilm, big enough to cover all sides of the tin with enough hanging over the sides to fold over and cover the tin once the terrine has been poured in.

Sprinkle the gelatine powder into a cup or basin containing 2-3 tablespoons of water. Stir, and when the gelatine has soaked up the liquid, place the bowl or cup in a pan of barely simmering water and leave until the gelatine has dissolved completely and turned transparent. If you are unsure, dip a teaspoon in, turn it over and you will clearly see if there are any undissolved granules.

Prepare the cheeses.  Dice the Mozzarella and blue cheese into 5 mm cubes and mix.  Blend the ricotta, mayonnaise and lemon juice together until absolutely smooth. Whip up the double cream until it has thickened to the floppy peak stage - but don't let it get to the stiff peak stage!

Add the ricotta to the dissolved gelatine (make sure it is still liquid before you attempt this!) and stir really well so as to distribute the gelatine evenly, then add the diced Mozzarella and blue cheese, spring onions, herbs and a good seasoning of salt and freshly milled black pepper.

Fold in the cream and turn the mixture into the prepared tin - work fast or the terrine will begin to set!  Make sure the mix is evenly distributed so that the terrine will have a flat base when it is turned out, then fold over the bits of clingfilm hanging over the sides so as to cover the terrine.  Chill in the fridge for several hours (preferably overnight) till firmly set.

To turn out the terrine, unwrap the clingflim from the top of the loaf tin and tug gently upwards to loosen the terrine.  Invert the loaf tin on to a serving plate and remove the tin while holding down the clingfilm - the terrine should slip out easily.  Serve the terrine in slices on a bed of rocket, preferably with a tangy preserve such as mostarda or chile jam.

As I mentioned, this post is my entry into this month's WTSIM.  You still have until 31 January to get those terrines in and frankly, if I can make one, anyone can.  Check out Johanna's post for details on how to enter. 

January 25, 2008

Quick chile-cheese and caraway-cheese bites

20071215_lunchathome_cheesechilebitThe starter is chilling in the fridge, the mains are bubbling away on the hob and the dessert is prepared and ready to be popped in the oven.  The wine is chilled, the table is laid and the guests are about to arrive. 

All is perfect... except for the fact that you forgot to buy the olives and marinated artichokes that you had planned to serve with pre-lunch drinks. 

Panic. 

Say bad words.

Take deep breaths, a swig of whisky and stop panicking.  Open fridge door, spot large chunk of cheddar.  Glance across at spice rack and see chile flakes and caraway seeds. 

Remember something seen on the lovely Pille's blog last year.

Spirits lift (and I don't mean the whisky). Slow smile spreads across face.  Springs into action like well-oiled machine (pun fully intended!).

CHILE-CHEESE AND CARAWAY-CHEESE BITES (makes about 30)

Ingredients

about two cups of grated full-flavoured semi-hard cheese (I used mature cheddar but would like to try pecorino!)
chile flakes and/or caraway seeds

Method

Cover a large baking sheet with baking paper.  Make small heaps of about a tablespoon each of grated cheese, spaced evenly across the sheet.  Make sure to leave about 5cm space betwen the heaps (and from the edge of the sheet!) as these babies spread like crazy.

Bake in a preheated oven at 180C for 5-7 minutes.  Keep an eye on them and try to take them out only when the cheese is fully melted and is going a dark gold colour along the edges.  Leave them in for too short and they won't harden; leave them in for too long and they will have the unpleasant bitter taste of overbaked cheese.  It's a fine line.

While they are still hot and melty, sprinkle a pinch of caraway seeds or chile flakes in the centre of each bite - I did half with chile and half with caraway.

Allow to cool and when cool enough to handle (and slightly hardened), peel carefully off the baking paper.  Serve with drinks - ours paired very nicely thank you with hot mulled wine!

20071215_lunchathome_cheesecarawayb

January 24, 2008

Salmon tournedos at the Cookbook Cooking Club

20070512_salmononlentils1e_2I have written previously about the Cookbook Cooking Club, our inspired idea to keep Johanna "in the loop" while she was home and looking after baby Henrik way back in the spring.  I even posted a Flickr album of photos of the day.  And yet somehow I never actually blogged it.  But in the spirit of carpe diem and general new year tying up of loose ends, all will now be revealed!

As I explained, the idea was for a group of us to get together and choose a cookbook from which to cook a meal at our following meeting, and then to decide on the menu in an informal vote.  And of course, we started off our first meeting by breaking the rules ;-)  Two recipes came from the wonderful book Formulas for Flavour, but the main course was concocted from various other sources, together with a dollop of our own inspiration.  Ah well - rules are for sissies anyway! 

At the appointed hour, Jenni, Christina, Bonnie and I all presented ourselves at Chez Passionatecook and got ready for a day of cooking - and eating!  The menu for the day was:

Canapes:  my cheese olives20070512_cheeseolives

Starter:  salmon tournedos on spiced puy lentils with fig jam and foie gras

Main:  tea-smoked duck breasts on Parisian gnocchi with asparargus vinaigrette

Dessert:  shortbread rounds with macerated strawberries and a balsamic vinegar ice cream

I whipped up the cheese olives pictured on the right for us to snack on while cooking, and then we swung into action, chopping, slicing and preparing.  I'll leave the salmon till last, seeing as it is the only recipe I am posting.  Our mail course of tea-smoked duck was a bit of a guessing game, seeing as none of us had ever actuall smoked a duck... Oh sure, I had been around when Nick smoked pork fillets or a beef fillet on our Weber at home, but that's always his domain and I've never been that involved!  Besides, he always has woodchips that he smokes his meat with - we were after a tea-smoked effect.  In the end, we made our own concoction of rice, tea leaves, cinnamon, cloves, apple wedges and citrus peel which we soaked in water and then drained, and placed it on a foil tray to be put inside the enclosed gas BBQ.  The duck breasts were popped into the BBQ on a grill over this concoction and cooked for about half an hour (anybody else who was paying closer attention is free to correct me it this is wrong!).  We then browned them in a pan, both for appearance and flavour.

20070512_smokingspice20070512_asparagus2e

Accompanying the duck we had Parisian gnocchi.  For those who don't know, these differ from traditional gnocchi in that they do not have a potato base, but are made of choux pastry.  Johanna whipped up the choux pastry in her nifty Thermomix in no time at all and Bonnie was on hand to pipe the pastry into a pot of boiling water as another willing helper snipped the pastry into gnocchi-sized chunks.  In the meantime, the asparagus was also being prepared by having the tough ends trimmed.  Once the gnocchi were boiled and the asparagus steamed, it was a simple task to slice the duck and serve it on top of the gnocchi, flanked by the asparagus.  I must say that although the duck was delicious, there was not as much tea flavour as we had hoped for.  The dish also suffered from the fact that we were all still feeling the effects of the generous portion size of our rich starter (see below) - but this was hardly the fault of the duck.  As the Afrikaans saying goes: "as die muis dik is, is die meel bitter" (when the mouse is full, the flour tastes bitter)!

20070512_slicingducke20070512_teasmokedducke But strangely enough, after all that we still had space for dessert!  Dessert was the third of our ambitious endeavours and Christina and I were left in charge.  This amused us both no end as neither of us is a particularly enthusiastic baker and suddenly we found ourselves tackling the shortbread rounds...  Luckily Johanna's trusty Thermomix was on hand to help out with the balsamic vinegar ice cream because in our giggly state of hysteria I could see that going pear-shaped rather rapidly...  As it was, the ice cream stubbornly refused to freeze to a properly solid consistency, which goes some way to explaining the rather melty state of the picture below. Kind of Dali Does Dessert, if you see what I mean.  You're looking at strawberries macerated in balsamic vinegar, icing sugar and black pepper, sandwiched between two doughnut-shaped shortbread rounds and topped with balsamic vinegar ice cream and vanilla whipped cream (recipe available in John Campbell's Formulas for Flavour).  It didn't look much like the glossy photos in the book, but I have to say it was delicious. 

20070512_strawberryshortcakestacke

All in all it was an interesting afternoon as the three dishes were each pretty fiddly and there is no way that I would make them on my own for a dinner party.  Not while I still have to work for a living, that is!  But the beauty of the CBCC is that many hands really do make light work and producing this restaurant-quality meal at home seemed perfectly achievable.   Would I make the dishes again?  Probably not - the ratio of effort to result was just too great - with one notable exception:  the salmon tournedos.  Of everything we had to eat, this was far and away my favourite thing, and the textures and flavours of this dish were, to me, in absolutely perfect balance .  The number of steps and the amount of advance planning involved looks daunting, yes.  But with a bit of organisation, it's easily done and nothing was actually tricky or difficult to do (except deveining the foie gras which resulted in such a mess that we couldn't sear it at all - just mashed it into a paste and made a quenelle of it!). Next time I would, however, make it as a main course as it is very rich.  In fact, to cut down on the richness and expense, I would even say you could leave out the foie gras - it really is gilding the lily.  Or the fish, in this case :)

TOURNEDOS OF SALMON, SPICED LENTILS AND FOIE GRAS

For the fig & apple chutney

Ingredients:

1 cooking apple peeled and cut into 1cm dice
20 g of onion, diced
50g dried figs, chopped
25ml white wine vinegar
1/3 Tbsp English mustard
a pinch of cayenne pepper
1/2 a clove of garlic
50g sultanas
2 tsp sugar

Method

Combine all the chutney ingredietns in a heavy saucepan.  Bring to the boil, then lower the heat and simmer for 2 hours. Add a splash of water if the mixture dries out before the 2 hours are up.  Leave to cool, then liquidise until the mixture is the consistency of jam.  Add the sugar and store chilled until ready for use.

For the spiced lentils20070512_salmononlentils2e_2

Ingredients:

100g Puy lentils
a pinch of ground cumin
40g red onion, finely chopped
25ml balsamic vinegar
1 clove garlic, crushed
20g pickled ginger, finely chopped
25ml soy sauce
1 Tbsp tomato ketchup
2 Tbsp sweet chile sauce
1 tsp chopped coriander leaves (cilantro)
a squeeze of lemon juice

Method:

Soak the lentils overnight before cooking (and if you can make the full dish in advance, the flavour improves if the dish is refrigerated overnight).  Cover the lentils with fresh boiling salted water and boil for 30 minutes or until tender.  Drain and leave to cool. 

Warm the cumin in a dry saucepan to release the flavour - when fragrant, add the onions, vinegar and garlic.  Cook over medium heat for 10 minutes.  Add the rest of the ingredients plus the cooked lentils and stir well.  Adjust the seasoning to taste with lemon juice. 

Remove from the heat and cool completely.  Store in an airtight container in the fridge until ready to plate the dish.

For the herbed creme fraiche:

Ingredients:

100ml creme fraiche
1 Tbsp finely chopped chives and parsley
a squeeze of lime juice
salt and pepper to taste

Method:

Combine all the ingredients in a small bowl and mix, adjusting seasoning to taste.

For the salmon:

Ingredients:

50ml corn (or canola) oil
1 large salmon fillet, about 1.35kg
200g foie gras cut into slices

Method:

Check that the salmon is free from pin bones and skin.  Trim off the fatty grey flesh on the underside of the fillet.  Lay the fish on a cutting board, lay the fish with the thickest end of the fillet pointing away from you and the tail pointing towards you.  Cut a straight line down through middle of the fillet towards the tail at an angle of approximately 30 degrees, splitting it into two long thin fillets. 

Place the strips of fish together, head to tail, on a piece of clingfilm and roll tightly into a long tube, expelling all the air.  Leave to rest for at least 12 hours in the fridge.  To cut the salmon roll into serving portions, leave it wrapped, take a sharp knife and cut the roll into cylinders approximately 4cm wide.  Leave the plastic in place but roll it gently towards the centre of each cylinder, making a "belt" to hold the cylinder together while cooking.

Heat the oil in a non-stick frying pan and season the salmon on the cut ends with salt and pepper.  When the oil is hot, place the salmon in the pan, cut side down, and cook until each cut side is golden brown.  Then reduce the heat and cook slowly for another 3-4 minutes until only the centre of each cylinder remains pink.  Remove from the pan and leave to rest in a warm place.

To finish:

Warm the lentils and place a spoonful in the centre of each serving plate.  Cut away the plastic wrap from each cylinder of salmon and place the fish on top of the lentils.  Spoon the herbed creme fraiche around it.  Heat a frying pan until very hot.  Season the slices of foie gras with salt and pepper, place int he pan and cook briefly until golden brown - only 20-30 seconds on each side.  Place a foie gras slice on top of eash piece of salmon and finish with a quenelle of chutney before serving.

January 22, 2008

Graham Beck Brut Cuvee 2000 - proudly South African bubbly

20070325_grahambeckcuvee2000glass_2 Yikes!  Where has January gone?  A rather belated happy new year to all Cooksister readers!

I know, I know - I had been gone so long you were beginning to wonder if I had survived the skiing.  Well, now I can reveal that yes, I did survive with all limbs intact!  Although I've written nothing about it so far (hmmm, spot the trend), I have managed to post my photos to Flickr, so do have a look at my album if you are interested. 

What better way to start off the New Year than with a glass of bubbly?  For most people, this automatically means the French stuff:  Moet for the mere mortals and Cristal for P Diddy and his ilk - but definitely French.  OK, so they did come up with the original idea of champagne, but why are people still so obsessed with drinking it to the exclusion of anything else?   I'm not saying that we should all be drinking cheap carbonated fizz, but there is middle ground, people! 

And besides, I would bet money on the fact that many champagne snobs who go around saying "oh, I ONLY drink the real thing!" would not be able to pick out the champagne in a blind tasting of top quality bubbly from around the world...

The one thing that you do have to look for in a sparkling wine, if you are moving away from Champagne, is the way it's been made.  Cheap fizz can be made either like ordinary wine and then carbonated; or by tank fermentation, meaning that the wine is left to ferment and form bubbles naturally and then bottled.  Premium sparkling wines, on the other hand, are bottled and then allowed to develop their bubbles in the bottle.  After this process is complete (takes several months of painstakingly moving the bottles gradually from the horizontal storage position to a position where the cap is pointing almost vertically downwards.  This makes the spent yeast from the fermentation process gather in the neck of the bottle, which is flash-frozen before the bottle is opened and the frozen cap of yeast debris removed.  Each bottle then has to be topped up to its correct level of liquid and sealed.  Think about all that the next time you are tempted to complain about the price of Champagne!

Strict regulations mean that only sparkling wines made in this way from grapes in the Champagne region of France may be called Champagne, but there is nothing stopping winemakers from around the world using the technique described above.  And it's an indication of this technique that you should look for when you want to explore premium sparkling wines from outside Champagne.  These wines will variously be labelled as Methode Cap Classique (South Africa), Cremant (France, outside Champagne), Cava (Spain), Methode Champenoise or Methode Traditionelle and as far as I'm concerned, particularly in the New World, represent excellent value for money.

But it seems that good non-French (and particularly South African) sparkling wines available over here in the UK suffer from two things:  One is its relatively high price (sometimes often almost as much as the French stuff!); and the other is a problem of perception - a PR problem if you will.  Because many of us (me included...) grew up on Cinzano Spumante and JC Le Roux (sticky sweet cheap bubblies), a lot of people of my generation and older still seem to think that this is as far as the South African sparkling wine repertoire goes, and this seems to be an opinion shared by UK wine buyers.  Wrong, wrong, wrong.  We make some top class stuff and the picture above represents one of my all-time favourites.

Graham Beck Vineyards was started (unsurprisingly!) by entrepreneur Graham Beck in 1983 when he purchased the Madeba farm outside Robertson, South Africa, the the ambition to establish a world-class winery in the region.  Nearly 25 years later, the estate's reputation has been cemented with a cabinet full of awards, both international and local, and winemaker Pieter Ferreira (who is reputedly obsessed with getting the mousse of his sparkling wines just right) is still steaming ahead making wonderful sparkling and still wines. The estate itself is well worth a visit as it represents a radical departure from the traditional Cape Dutch homestead, and being able to taste a range of their excellent sparkling wines is always a pleasure.

The estate produces a Brut (non-vintage, classic mix of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir grapes); a Blanc de Blanc (vintage, 100% Chardonnay), a Brut Rose (non-vintage, Chardonnay and Pinot Noir), and a Demi Sec (non-vintage, Chardonnay and Pinot Noir).  Pictured above is the special Brut Cuvee 2000, made specially for the millennium celebrations, bought at the estate in 1999 and saved till recently.  It's a full-bodied sparkler with a creamy mouthfeel that's at least as much due to the very fine mousse as to the Chardonnay grapes, with yeasty, lemony notes and is very, very appealing.  Although you are unlikely to get your mitts on the Cuvee 2000 any more, look out for more recent vintages that are, I'm sure, equally delicious.

Other premium South African bubbly to look out for includes Simonsig Kaapse Vonkel, Cabriere's Pierre Jourdan, Pongracz and Twee Jonge Gezellen Krone Borealis.

Cheers!

The picture used in this post is my entry into this month's edition of Jai and Bee's Clicklogo wonderful Click! food photography event.  But don't expect to see me on the winners' podium... because I'm a judge!  The theme this month is liquid comfort and you still have until 30 January to get your entries in.  So get clicking!

January 15, 2008

Men for Hope - winners of the UK prizes

Menuforhope4logolargeWhat a great way to kick off the year. 

After weeks of anticipation, the waiting is finally over for those of you who generously bought tickets for the Menu for Hope campaign this year and helped to raise the $90,000 or so destined for a school feeding programme in Lesotho.  Chez Pim has announced all the winners, and here is a list of who won which of the UK prizes:

UK01  Cooking class at Eat Drink Talk - Mr Howard Vaan
UK02  Cooking class at Eat Drink Talk - Ms Jennifer A Williams
UK03  Organic chocolate hamper from Natural Collection - Ms Kit Heathcock
UK04  Foodie tour of London from Eat the Right Stuff  - Mr Richard W Kaszeta
UK05  Private wine tasting in London from Food Glorious Food - Mr Richard G Lee
UK06  Paella making kit from Ambrosia and Nectar - Mr Yishay Mor
UK07  Bottle of whisky from A Wee Bit of Cooking - Dr Paul H Ting
UK08  Custom designed wedding cake from Vanielje Kitchen - Mrs Lucy Vanel
UK09  Tasting menu for 2 at Les Trois Garcons - Mr. Colin Cameron
UK10  Mexican goodie hamper from Xochitl Cooks - Mr. Colin Cameron
UK11  icar -novelty mp3 speaker system from Dusty Traveller  - Mr Marty McCarty
UK12  The National Association of Indian Women Cookbook from Quick Indian Cooking  - Ms Elin M Davies
UK14  A pair of Irish cookbooks from Eat Like a Girl - Mr Alastair Bathgate
UK15  Box of home-made British cookies from What's the recipe today Jim - Ms Jacquie Astemborski
UK16  Dinner cooked at winner's house (in London) by Crash Test Kitchen - Ms Helen R Harris
UK17  Meal for two at 1802 restaurant in London - Mr Jim L Armstrong
UK18  Sourdough bread baking starter kit from the Passionate Cook - Miss Alisha B Adams
UK20  Moro cookbooks trilogy from Traveler's Lunchbox - Ms Shuna Lydon
UK21  Ripe London surprise box from Ripe London - Ms Kirstin Fearnley
UK22  Thermomix hamper from the Passionate Cook - Ms I-Ling Chua
UK23  Indian cookbook with spice kit from Spicyandhra -  Ms Heather E Pristash
UK24  'Farmers Market - Round the Seasons Cookbook' plus some local goodies from Hampshire from Gluten Free Journey  - Ms Valerie J Taylor
UK25  Choose one of 4 original food photographs from Cooksister! - Mr Wouter Rosekrans
UK26  Le Creuset mini-cocotte from My Cooking Hut - Miss Nonnie R Wijaya
UK27  Dinner for Two at Patterson's restaurant in London from Yumchia - Ms Shana S Worthen
UK28  Vintage winemaking book from The Cottage Smallholder - Ms Alana M Vincent
UK29  Indian cookbook with spice kit from Spicyandhra  - Ms Savina Tessitore
UK30  English Tea goodie box from Xochitl Cooks - Miss Julie A Elefante
UK31  An original watercolour painting from My French Kitchen - Ms Josi Jenneskens
UK32  One day stage and dinner at Bacchus with Nuno Mendes from Food and Drink in London - Miss Naomi White
UK33  Historic British menu for 2 from Heston Blumenthal - Miss Karen Groeneveld
UK34  Companion spot on a review dinner with Jay Rayner - Mr James Adams
UK35  San Lorenzo hamper of Italian specialties from Kitchen Pantry - Ms Isabelle Vella Gregory
UK36  Authentic Nigerian egusi stew recipe and spice kit from Black Looks - Mr Howard Vaan
UK37  Bottle of Chapel Down English methode champenoise sparkling wine from Superfood -  Ms Shana S Worthen
UK38  Box of British teatime treats from Almanzo's Belly  - Ms Savina Tessitore
UK39  Tasting Menu for 2 at the Sportsman in Seasalter, Kent - Mr Jeff Trockman

Huge thanks once again to all the prize donors who gave their time, effort and bandwidth so generously and so graciously.  And of course thank you to every single one of you who bought a ticket.

See you again next year - same time, same place??

Sponsored by




Copyright notice


  • All text and images on this site, unless expressly specified otherwise, belong to Jeanne Horak-Druiff. If you wish to use any image or text from CookSister, you MUST obtain prior authorization and you MUST link back to the site, crediting me.

Proud winner!

I'm also on...




  • blog counter

  • Food & Drink Blogs - Blog Top Sites


  • Afrigator


  • sarocks_badge.jpg


  • South Africa's Top Sites


  • www.flickr.com



  • Stumble Upon Toolbar


  • I shmaak SA Blogs, sorted with Amatomu.com



  • Visit UK Food Bloggers Association


  • The South African Food and Wine Blogger Directory



  • Visit BloggerAid Changing the Face of Famine

End of Month Egg on Toast Extravaganza

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 05/2004