Author: Taryn Nicole

Going Brazilian

So, I did something a bit different last week.  Cooking wise I assure you!  One of our Melbourne restaurants, Atlas Dining is surviving lockdown by sending out food boxes based on a theme.  Included in the price of the ingredients are a series of masterclasses with the chef, done via Youtube showing you how to cook each meal.  There are also written instructions for those who prefer to read rather than watch.  I chose the Brazilian Food box because I have never eaten Brazilian food and thought it would be a great way to introduce myself to that cuisine, learn something new and eat some delicious food along the way.  Win, win, win!

 

Brazilian 1

I was so excited when the box was delivered!  It was like food Christmas!  The food was all of the highest quality and there was a LOT of it.  I ordered the singles box because the Fussiest Eater in the World was working on most of the nights I intended to cook.  However, there was enough left over each night for me to have for lunch the following day.

And, to be honest, I am still eating some of the veggies!

Sausage Feijoada

Meal one was a Sausage Feijoada (pronounced Fey-zwah-dah) for those like me who have no knowledge of Brazilian food!  This is apparently one of the most common dishes in Brazil.  It is a stew usually made from mixed meats and black beans.  Our version was made from sausages and it was 👌.  It was served with a little salsa made with the most delicious guava dressing!!!  This was my favourite meal of the week.  It was so tasty and only took about 20 minutes to cook.

Brazilian 2

I am sure that a traditional Feijoada would take hours to cook and so this was a “dumbed down” of it but TBH, I don’t care. I was looking for an entry into the food of Brazil and this provided the perfect way to dip my toe in without getting too overwhelmed!  Atlas had also done a lot of the work by pre-preparing the black bean mix which was delicious!

Pumpkin Vatapa

This was meant to be the meal for the third night but I decided to move things around because the Fussiest Eater in the World was going to be home on night 3.  He  is not really one for vegetarian food in gen and pumpkin in particular!  He does like a steak however so the switcheroo occurred.

Again, this was quick and easy and so delicious.  It’s kind of a Brazilian curry.  It is late autumn here and these meals were perfect comfort food for cold nights!  The vapata was served with a  little salsa and two mixes sprinkled over the top. The salsa brought some freshness, the mixes brought some crunch.  All in all this was delicious!

Because I made these out of order, I did not realise that one of these mixes on the top was also meant to be used with the beef dish and I used it all on the Vatapa.  My suggestion here would be that if you are doing something different, to watch all the videos before cooking anything just so you know exactly what to use and when!

Brazilian 4 - Pumpkin Vatapa

Carne Churrasco

Night three was a gorgeous marinated steak with parmesan polenta and a corn salsa and more of that brilliant guava dressing!  It was a bright, colourful and luxurious way to finish off a superb three nights of food!

Brazilian 5

I loved cooking out of the Brazilian box, so much so that I have already signed up for the American box which is coming out in a couple of weeks!  As soon as lockdown is over I definitely want to try some more Brazilian food.  And who knows, one day when all of this is over maybe even travel there to sample it in situ!

Tell me, have you eaten Brazilian food? If so what can you recommend? Are there any must-haves I need to try?  What about the desserts?  I might try to find some delivery options!

Also, for any Americans reading this what would you include in an American food box?  Two meat meals and one vegetarian?  I would like to see how close your ideas line up with what’s in the box!

All props to Atlas Dining for such an innovative solution to life in lockdown!  The meal box could not have been more welcome!  At a time when all the days seem the same it brought a bit of vibrance that made me feel a little like this!

Have a great week everyone!  Stay safe!

 

Omelette Berrichonne – Murder on The Links

Welcome to the third chapter of Dining with the Dame.  If you haven’t read chapters one and two, this is a series about the food found in the novels of Agatha Christie.  Murder on the Links is the third Christie novel, published in 1923.  This one, let me tell you had me worried.  There are plenty of mentions of dejeuners (it is set mostly in France) but no actual food until towards the very end when finally, Poirot and Hastings sit down to “an excellent omelette”.  Thank goodness!  My back up, given the proximity of a golf course, was going to be a Golf Pie.  I would totally eat it but I think it may be a little too basic B for Poirot!  Luckily I was able to choose an Omelette Berrichonne as a more classy alternative!

Omelette1

Murder on the Links – The Plot

After meeting a charming girl on a train from Paris to Calais, Hastings returns to London eager to tell Poirot about the love of his life but Poirot is having none of it.  He is bored and irritated by his current cases.  He then reads a letter from Paul Renauld imploring him to come to France as soon as poss.  They arrive at Merlinville to find Renauld has been murdered on the golf course next to his home by masked men who took him from his home leaving his wife tied up in the house.

There is:

  • a sexy neighbour and her mother, possibly the mistress of the dead man
  • a disinherited son
  • shonky South American business dealings
  • rivalry between Poirot and the French Inspector Giraud
  • a crime from the past
  • another dead body found in the shed and
  • Hastings’ romance with Dulcie Duveen who will go on to become his wife

There is no shortage of action in this one!  I whizzed through it in a couple of days.  I am really enjoying these reads!

The Covers

This has become one of my favourite parts of this series.  I love seeing how the covers have changed over time.  Here is a selection of them and there is not a dud in the bunch.  Well, maybe the one in the bottom left corner but all the rest are crackers!

I love the top row second from the left and second from the right which features a Magritte style man with a goofball head.  And of course the second from the right on the bottom row with its pulp fiction cover!

Do you have a favourite?


The Recipe

Omelette Berrichonne1

“Finally…we set out for the town.  It was past our usual hour of dining, and we were both famished. The first restaurant we came to assuaged the pangs of hunger with an excellent omelette, and an equally excellent entrecote to follow”

Murder on the Links, Agatha Christie

The book did not give much away in terms of what kind of omelette the excellent omelette was so I had to improvise.  I turned to the expert, Elizabeth David. And also followed her example by pairing my omelette with a glass of wine!

I used David’s recipe for an Omelette Berrichonne because I had a leek in the fridge and mint in the garden!

Here are some suggestions on how to make the perfect omelette.  And here are Elizabeth David’s additions for the Omelette Berrichonne.

Omelette Berrichonne2

I was a little bit unsure about the mint here but it worked really well!  Delicious!

Omelette Berrichonne2

Other Food Mentioned in Murder on The Links

The next read is The Man in the Brown Suit.  I am already about half way through as it is another page turner…or whatever the ebook version of a page turner is!

Hope you are having a wonderful week.

Stay safe friends!

Not Quite Seeni Sambol

Seeni Sambol is a Sri Lankan side dish, served as an accompaniment to rice, curries and hoppers as per the photo below.   It is an integral component of lampries, which despite Covid-19, mum and I made this year at Easter, as per our normal habit.  I made the seeni sambol this year, something we never really do as it takes so many onions!  I used 8 onions to make mine and in the end, there was not enough for all our lampries and we ended up having to use a shop-bought version as well!

Please don’t judge my hoppers, I am playing with a recipe which I will post on here as soon as I have it right!  The main ingredient of Seeni Sambol is onions.  Put very simply you caramelise them down add some spices and voila – there you have it.

Our 2020 lampries.  This is a SriLankan meal consisting of ghee rice, lampries curry, eggplant pickle,seeni sambol, prawn blachan and frikadeller which mum and I cook annually.  We make enough to last the year, packing individual servings into foil packets and putting them into the freezer to reheat and eat whenever the mood takes us!

Lampries

What I am trying to say is, that I know a bit about Seeni Sambol.  So, when I saw that there was a recipe for it in the Good Housekeeping World Cookery Book, 1972 I was intrigued.  My gut feel is that books this old do not do justice to “ethnic” recipes.  But for the sake of the blog, I was willing to give this one a go.

But, because WordPress loves a subheading,  let’s break it down a little.

The Title

The actual title is fine.  In that, all words are spelt correctly.

It’s the subtitle that made me pause.

And call my mum.

“Are you meant to just eat Seeni Sambol with prawns?”

“No.  Why?”

“No reason”.

So fail on the title.  Seeni Sambol actually means sugar sambol and relates to the sweetness of the caramelised onions and the sugar you add towards the end of cooking to balance out the flavours.  No prawns at all.  Whatsoever.

Seeni Sambol 4

The Ingredients

There are two very non-traditional additions in these ingredients.  Tomatoes play no part in seeni sambol and neither does milk.

You probably could not have got fresh milk in Sri Lanka in 1972 – it would have either been evaporated or coconut milk.  Either way, I inadvertently left the milk out of my version.  I added the tomatoes though.

There is also an ingredient that is used in a traditional Seeni sambol called a Maldive Fish which is a cured dried fish which adds protein and umami flavours to the Seeni Sambol  If you want to make this, and you cannot find Maldive fish, you can substitute Asian fish sauce.   Or you can leave it out altogether which is what they do in vegetarian versions.

Overall though, the ingredients are pretty close to home.  Just forget the tomatoes and the milk if you want to keep it real!

Oh, and btw?  No prawns.

Seeni Sambol 61

The Method

Seeni Sambol

So, it all seems legit until…WTF why are they talking about Prawns? There were no prawns in the ingredients so why are there prawns in the GD recipe???

There are no prawns in Seeni Sambol.  And that’s not just me saying that.  That comes direct from my mum.  And I may be an idiot who knows nothing but she knows Sri Lankan cooking!

So, this is kind of a shambolic recipe.  However, if you ignore the magical prawns that do a disappearing act in the ingredients and reappear in the method and the milk which has no place here what so ever. this is not a bad recipe. I didn’t even mind the tomatoes in the final dish!

Here is the full recipe:

Seeni Sambol 11

And here is a better one from chef Manu Fieldel.  This is a vegetarian version so does not contain the possibly hard to find Maldive Fish.

Hope you are having a good week!  Stay safe friends…the light at the end of this tunnel seems to be appearing!

 

Quince Blancmange

I’m fairly sure that Quince Blancmange was invented when someone put the names of the most old fashioned fruit and the most vintage of desserts through a random generator to see what came up.  It could have been worse.  We could have been eating Medlar Junkets.   or Whortleberry Possets.  BTW…just in case you are writing an academic history of quince blancmange don’t quote me on that origin story!  For everyone else?  That’s how it happened.  Other people will tell you that blancmange originated in the Middle Ages and used to contain chicken and other meaty treats.  That it moved from savoury to sweet in around 1600 and that the name is a portmanteau of the French words for white (blanc) and to eat (manger).  And I’m not saying that they are wrong.  “Quince” blancmange however?  Random name generator.  For sure.  100%.

Quince Blancmange1

Quince are one of the weirdest fruit around!  If you are not familiar with them, they are those bright yellow fruit that look like large misshapen pears that you might see in your greengrocer in autumn.  When you cut them open the flesh is white and so, so sour and a little bit bitter.  But when you cook them that flesh becomes a glorious deep pink to dark red and sweet.

And blancmange? Is pretty much jelly / jello with cream or milk mixed through it.  Who knew!

So, I bought a quince because I didn’t really read the recipe first and made the assumption that quince blancmange would contain quince.  I mean stands to reason right?

Hmmm….wrong.  The quince blancmange recipe uses the quince jelly you buy to eat with cheese.  Now, for some reason we had a shit ton of this in our fridge.  Well, one of them was Fig paste but for the purpose of the blancmange, it was all the same.  I have no idea why we had so much of this.  I suspect they came in hampers or were freebies with something because the only other time I have ever cooked quince was to make my own membrillo which is the proper name of Spanish Quince paste and we have been eating that.  Delicious too I might add!  If you do make it, a little splash of vanilla essence in the quince mix does not go astray.  Trust me on that one.

Quince Pastes

Quince blancmange is so easy to make.

First, tip your paste into a sauce pan, add water and melt that jelly down.  Taste.  Add sugar if needed, or if already very sweet a dash of lemon juice.  Add a splash of vanilla too.  Then, turn off the heat, allow to cool slightly and stir through the cream.  This looked so pretty as it made a beautiful marbled pattern.  It was very soothing moving the spoon through the swirls of colour…

Quince Blancmange 5

Then add some gelatine pour into the mould and you are done!

Print

Quince Blancmange

A fruity dessert that tastes better than it looks!

  • Yield: 6 1x
  • Category: Dessert

Ingredients

Scale
  • 200 grams Quince Jelly
  • 100 grams water (Plus moe for gelatime)
  • 1 tsp Vanilla extract
  • 4 Gelatine leaves
  • Sugar, to taste
  • Lemon juice, to taste
  • 250 ml Cream
  • Berries to serve (Optionaal)

Instructions

  1. Add the quince jelly to the water in a small saucepan and simmer over medium heat until the jelly melts.
  2. Add the vanilla.
  3. Taste and add sugar and / or lemon juice to taste.
  4. Remove from heat. Stir through the cream.
  5. Soften the gelatine leaves in a little cool water, then removeand squeeze out the excess water. Stir the gelatine into the warm cream andquince mixture.
  6. Pour into a mould and chill until set.
  7. To serve, invert the mould and garnish with the berries.

If I did not now know this was quince flavoured I would not have guessed that was it was.  And I don’t think that was because of the figs because it did not taste overly figgy either.  It tasted generically fruity sweet.  The Quince Blancmange was much nicer to eat than it was to look at.  Because it looked revolting.  Really bad.  It reminded me of being back in school and seeing a picture of some lungs with all the arteries and veins running through it.

Spot the Difference

Quince Blancmange 8

So, not fail but not a total win.  I probably will not make this exact recipe again but I am definitely going to experiment with blancmange a bit more to try to bring out the actual flavour of the fruit.  I wonder if it would have been different if I had used fresh quince instead of the jelly?

Have a great week friends and stay safe!

 

Tijuana Sunset and Buenos Noches – Two Evening Themed Cocktails

Ola people of the internet! Today we are celebrating all things Mexican with a couple of cocktails, the Tijuana Sunset and the Buenos  Noches both from Cantina.   Regular readers would know what I have set myself a task to cook through this book by the end of the year.  Readers from the way back would know that this book and I have a troubled past.   Too cheffy, too complicated, too many hard to find ingredients have been my complaints of this book in the past.

Tijuana Sunset1

Let’s kick things off early in the evening with..wait for it…we need some sort of fanfare…ah…here he is…

Da da dadada…TEQUILA!

The Tijuana Sunset

This is billed as “A sophisticated take on the tequila sunrise”.

Okay fine.  But IMHO, the only thing that makes a tequila sunrise any good is that gorgeous ombre effect of the grenadine and the orange juice. And if you are going to call that drink a sunset then that ombre effect needs to run the opposite way to the sunrise right?

 

Well, it is totally missing from the Tijuana Sunset so I guess the way the gradient goes is immaterial right?

Now, bear in mind I made both of these drinks in iso at a time when even generally easy to come by ingredients were scarce on the ground.  Blood orange juice was an impossibility.  I decided to sub in Blood Orange Soda instead of Blood Orange Juice and Soda.  Did this affect the colouring?  Possibly.  However, as there is no picture in the book I suspect that they also did not get that beautiful colour array.

Looks may be one thing but taste is another.  And when it came to taste the Tijuana Sunset was OMG….100% delicious!!! 😍😍😍. Tangy from the lime, a little sweet from the soda, a nice kick from the tequila and the touch of salt was GENIUS. I loved this so much I immediately made another which I garnished with a little slice of jalapeno.  This made it even better!

Tijuana Sunset2

I loved the Tijuana Sunset.  I just wish it had a different name so there weren’t those expectations of what it was going to look like!

Wait up.   Hold on.  Do you think that by making the claim that it is a “sophisticated” take on the Tequila Sunrise that the authors are trying to say that the beautiful orange to deep red shading is somehow unsophisticated?  Are they making fun of my love for a drink that looks pretty as well as tasting delish?

OMG…see what this book does?  It makes me crazy!  Or maybe that’s life after what now…seven weeks in iso?

Buenos Noches

Now this one looked the biz! It is a Mexican take on an Irish Coffee which is a drink I hold dear.  And on paper it sounds delicious.  Chilli infused tequila, cinnamon infused coffee…sign me up!

Buenos Noches1

 

Okay, so truth be told.  This was one of the worst things I have ever put in my mouth.  Particularly because I had to wait 3 days for the tequila to infuse with the chipotle.

I actually cried after tasting this. Which I admit is an extreme reaction. But, at the moment, when our lives are so restricted, something that I was looking forward to for THREE days and which turned out to be a bitter disappointment might actually be worth a tear or two.

I felt this was bitter and flat.  It lacked any sweetness to counteract the bitterness of the coffee and the heat of the chilli and had no zestiness to bring the bitter and hot flavours together.

Buenos Noches2

I’m calling Goodnight Irene on the Buenos Noches.

But here’s that recipe. Just in case you have really repressed emotions and need to cry over something dumb instead of the horror that is the world as we know it.

Have a great week!  Stay safe!