Author: Taryn Nicole

The Ultimate Shawarma….Man!

For my modern take on Turkish food, there was only one choice.  It was always going to be shawarma.  And my first thought was that I could give some props to my girl Sabrina Ghayour.   I own all of her cookbooks and Persiana remains one of my favourite books to cook from.  Sabrina’s recipe for ultimate chicken shawarma comes from her book Feasts and it is totally delicious!!!!

Chicken Shawarma 2

But, as I was cooking the shawarma, I reallised I had another connection (that does not involve late night stops at the Hollywood Palace) and that connection is my new favourite podcast, or actually set of pods.  I ‘m sure I have spoken about my love of the true crime pod before and some time ago I started listening to Small Town Murder.  I virtually inhaled every episode so I was able to catch up on the back catalogue of then 80 something episodes pretty quickly.  I’m listening to  Episode 114 as I write.

Chicken Shawarma3

But what do you do when you run out of pod and don’t want to wait a whole week to hear more from the funniest guys in podcasting?  Well, in my case, despite barely knowing one sport from another, you start listening to their other pod Crime In Sports.   And let me tell you, you don’t have to know anything about sport to enjoy it.  

Both of these pods are amazing, the hosts, James Pietrogiallo and Jimmie Whisman are hilarious!!!  And the stories!!!! Who knew????

For a good start to the level of crazy Crime in Sports reaches, why not give Episode 58 a try? 

#058 – If He Could Kill The World… – The Terribleness Of Viacheslav Datsik

This tale contains neo-Nazi’s, naked snow wrestling, armed robbery, unrestrained testicle pummelling, bare handed escapes from Russian mental asylums and the self-nicknamed Red Tarzan.  Believe me, amongst all the, what James and Jimmie would call nudnickery, there is not much time for too much sport. 

Another favourite of mine comes from my own country…

#058 – Such is Annihilation – The Chaoticness of Ben Cousins

Aka…you hid your meth where?

Chicken Shawarma4

What has all this to do with Shawarma you ask?  Well, there are some recurring characters in Crime in Sports, a few special guests that pop in for a fleeting moment in each episode and one of those is the Shawarma man.  Spawned in Episode 32, (Dave Meggatt), the Shawarma man invariably refuses to serve some hapless and very confused sporting criminal some lovely lamb shawarma.  I wonder what he would think about Sabrina’s chicken version!

Chicken Shawarma1

Just quickly back to Sabrina, her shawarma contains normal pickles.  I made some pickled turnips for mine.  Normally when you see these they are a gorgeous hot pink.  This normally comes from beet juice.  I think beets are the food of the devil so I added some radishes to my turnips which turned my pickles a much paler but still rather pretty pink.

That’s me done!

Read and cook Sabrina, listen to Small Town Murder and Crime in Sports and tell me what you think!

Also, please let me know your favourite cookbooks and I’m always up for a good pod recommendation.

For now?  

Sign says closed!

 

 

 

 

Use By: Pesto Potato Salad

What did people eat before the pesto boom of the ’80’s? I love pesto and eat it by the bucketful but I always seem to end up with a bit left in the jar that is not enough for a batch of pasta.  Well, this Pesto Potato Salad is one of my favourite ways of using up that annoying last bit. It’s also good for using up some of those veggies you have sitting in the bottom of your fridge.

I used radishes, edamame and red onion in mine.  You could use beans, peas, tomatoes, zucchini whatever you have in the house or your favourite veggies.

The idea behind this is that you use what is left in the jar to make the dressing.  Add some oil and lemon juice into your jar of pesto, close it up tight and give it a good shake.

Taste – add salt, pepper, some chilli flakes, maybe a little more garlic if you like.  I added some extra parmesan cheese to really ramp up some of those pesto flavours.

Shake again and pour over freshly boiled potatoes while they are still warm.  This will allow the flavour to really infuse into the potatoes as they cool.  Cos no one likes a bland potato salad!

You can make it up to this point in the morning or even the day before you are planning to have the salad.  Just pop the potatoes and dressing into the fridge until you are almost ready to serve.

At that time, remove from the fridge, stir through the rest of your veggies, throw in some toasted pine nuts and, some finely chopped basil leaves (I didn’t have basil and felt it would be against the spirit of a Use By Post to buy some just for the Pesto Potato Salad so mine is garnished with chives).

This salad is great with BBQ’s, seafood, chicken, anywhere you would have regular potato salad but maybe want to shake things up a bit.  I could eat potato salad every day of the week so something a bit different from the classic mayo-based salad (but for a great one of them, see here) makes a refreshing change.

Pesto Potato Salad2

Here’s the recipe.

 

Print

Pesto Potato Salad

A delicious and versatile potato salad

Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 medium potatoes, diced
  • 1/2 cup edamame
  • 1/2 red onion, diced
  • 4 radishes, sliced
  • 1/4 cup pine nuts, toasted
  • 1 tbsp Parmesan cheese
  • Basil leaves, chives to garnish
  • Dressing!
  • 1 jar of bought pesto with around 1 tbsp of pesto left in the bottom
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • Juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 1 clove of finely chopped garlic (optional)
  • A sprinkle of chilli flakes (optional)
  • Salt and Pepper to Taste

Instructions

  1. Dressing!
  2. Place all the ingredients in the jar of pesto, seal and shake well until mixed.
  3. Boil the potatoes until just tender
  4. Pour the dressing over the top.
  5. Just before serving mix through the remaining vegetables and pine nuts.
  6. Top with the herbs.
  7. Enjoy!

Notes

  • Feel free to add whatever cooked or raw vegetables you have into this salad!

 

Pesto,  may well be  the quiche of the ’80’s but it also makes a damn fine potato salad!

I also wrote "Pesto is the quiche of the '80s."

Have a great week!

 

 

Shish Kebabs

So as luck would have it, the week I wanted to write about the Turkish meal of Shish kebabs, there has been a diplomatic incident between Australia and Turkey.  But this blog is not afraid to tackle contentious issues.  Actually, no, scratch that, this blog doesn’t want to have anything to do with this debacle.  To be frank, both sides of this spat are terrifying and we here at RFFMT are cowards peace lovers who just want to eat some meat on a stick.  

Or, to be etymologically exact roasted meat (kebap) on a sword (sis). 

Or to be even more precise, delicious roasted meat on a sword.

The recipe for these Shish Kebabs came to you direct from 1972 via Good Housekeeping’s World Cookery.  As usual, the introduction to each chapter comes with a gorgeous drawing of representing the food of the region:

Turkey2

 

Each chapter also has an overview of the food of the region.  Some “facts” I learned about the food of Turkey:

  • The Turks have more than forty ways of cooking eggplant

  • People in Istanbul, choose their drinking water with as much care as people in France choose wine.

  • Peaches and apples are ordered by name for those from different areas have a different flavour and fragrance

  • A formal dinner can start with as many as thirty or forty appetisers


The shish kebabs are simple to make, look really pretty with all the colours of the vegetables and taste delicious!

A little drizzle of pomegranate molasses over the top sets these off to perfection.

These shish kebabs are also a tasty lunch treat!  

Shish Kebab3

Have a great week. And be kind to each other!

Use By: Apricot, Lemon and Basil Sorbet

There were so many things I could have named this post.  But hey, I made an Apricot, Lemon and Basil Sorbet. So when I couldn’t decide between witty or explanatory  I decided to go with plain old pragmatism. Who knew ice cream was so complicated?

Apricot, Lemon, Basil Sorbet

BEING MORE FRENCH

Towards the end of last year, one of my work buddies and I were talking about New Year’s Resolutions. He said he never made the traditional resos of saving money, losing weight or getting fit.  Instead, he chooses something that explores a different way of being / thinking / creating.  So, it could be a  year of reading the financial papers or a year of being vegetarian or a year of being celibate or totally slutty or otherwise exploring a part of your personality that you feel needs expressing or you just want to have fun with.

“You know, like a year of being more French”

My reaction?

 

BUT WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

This is the beauty of something like this – it can mean whatever you want it to be.  For me…in no particular order:

Dress More French

  • Such as totally indulging my love of a striped t shirt.

 

Eat / Drink more French food (and wine)

Fromage anyone?

Fig, Fennel and Pistachio Roulade10

Watch More French movies / French tv shows

Including one of my favourite films ever The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

And just to balance out all that sweeetness, some gritty French police drama.

Be more Cultured

Self Care

French women take fabulous care of their skin and have amazing beauty regimes.

I plan on getting me a piece of that. My first foray into this realm was to buy some French eye drops that were RAVED about in a beauty blog.  They have made absolutely no discernible difference so that was money down le toilet but  I will try a new product each month.

 Read More French

I haven’t quite decided where this bit lands

  • Dip my toe in – Read more books set in France…eg Cara Black’s Murder In….Series
  • Float along – Read more books by French authors…I have some Proust and some Zola and some Binet in my TBR.
  • Dive in deep – Read French in French – I also have Flowers of Evil by Baudelaire and, weirdly a French translation of a James Patterson novel.

Maybe a bit of each…

Other ideas not fully thought out yet

  • Have an attitude
  • Start a revolution
  • Sexy Frugality

Mais, bien sûr

Cook More French

Which brings us back to doh oh oh oh.

The topic for our latest Tasty Reads Book Club was a “non book” book.  So you could cook recipes off the interwebs or the tv or, in my case a food magazine.  I bought this mag when I was on holiday last year and had not cooked anything from it.  

So, when some friends gave me a big bag of apricots of varying degrees of ripeness,  I decided to

  1. Be more French,  and
  2. To use this produce before it went bad (Year of Less Waste)

By cooking the Apricot, Lemon and Basil Sorbet from the mag.

Here’s the recipe.

In English.

Print

Apricot, Lemon and Basil Sorbet

A delightfully refreshing fruity sorbet

Ingredients

Scale
  • 500g apricots
  • 12 basil leaves
  • juice of 1 lemon
  • 3 eggs
  • 200ml of cream
  • 150g sugar
  • 1 tbsp honey

Instructions

  1. Infuse 6 basil leaves in cream for at least 2 hours.
  2. Then put the apricots, the rest of the basil, lemon juice and a little water into a pot and cook over a medium heat for 5 minutes.
  3. Taste and add the honey (a little more or less may be required depending on the sweetness of the apricots.
  4. Cook for another five minutes.
  5. Let cool.
  6. Separate the eggs.
  7. In a large bowl, beat the yolks and the sugar until the sugar is dissolved and the mixture turns pale. Then stir in the apricot mixture.
  8. In a separate bowl, beat the whites to soft peaks.
  9. In a third bowl, beat the cream to soft peaks.
  10. Add the cream to the apricot mix and blend through.
  11. Gently fold in the egg whites.
  12. Pour into a container. Freeze for 24 hours

Au revoir mes amis and have a lovely weekend!

 

 

Mock Food (And a Real Cocktail)

The Irish artist Francis Bacon once famously declared

Champagne for my real friends, real pain for my sham friends.

Today, friends we are looking at some sham or mock foods.  And we may not have champagne but we have a cocktail that looks like this and tastes super delish!

Tequila Mockingbird1

We’ll come back to the cocktail later.

Believe me, we might need a stiff drink or two after the horrors I’m about to inflict on you.

So, I was flicking through the pages of “Possum Pie, Beetroot Beer and Lamingtons”  and  I noticed a trend for mock food.

STARTERS

MOCK OYSTERS AKA WHAT TO EAT WHEN THE WORLD ISN’T YOUR OYSTER

So what would you expect to be in a mock oyster?  My first thought was maybe a mussel?  Oysters are spendy.  Mussels are cheap.  Open your mussels, add some bacon, Worcestershire sauce and a dash of Tabasco sauce, pop it under the grill and you might have a fairly close approximation of a Kilpatrick Oyster.

Alternatively, why not give brains and walnuts a whirl?….

Mock Oyster

I don’t know WTF a mix of brains and walnuts would taste like (and I don’t ever want to know) but I’m willing to bet it isn’t oysters!

Not a fan of un-oysters?  What about some delicious crispy fried non- whitebait?

MOCK WHITEBAIT BECAUSE EGGY CHIPS DOESN’T SOUND CLASSY

Mock Whitebait

Okay, I think we can all agree that this is not NEARLY as bad as that brains and walnuts combo.  But no one is going to be fooled!

MAIN COURSES

MOCK DUCK – FAKE FOOD OR REAL GANGSTER?

Mock Duck

I’m just going to say this right now. This recipe makes no sense.

I kind of get the oyster thing and even the whitebait thing on a monetary level.  Oysters are expensive. Whitebait not so much but eggy fries would be cheaper still.  I totally understand why people might want to take a cheap ingredient and dress it up to taste like something a bit fancier.  Now it may be different where you live, but here?  Steak, good steak, is far more pricey than duck. 

I also have absolutely no idea of what kind of 50 shades of bondage moves you would need to tie a steak into the shape of a duck.

And finally…I don’t care what shape you tie your steak into. It will not taste like duck

For a far more interesting Mock Duck, let’s take a trip on the way back machine to 1900 in New York’s Chinatown.  Here,  a “cherubic, ever-smiling, moon-faced Machiavelli” gangster called….wait for it….Mock Duck was terrorizing rival gangs.  If you have ever heard the term “hatchetman” you have Mock Duck and his gang,  the Hip Sing,  to thank.  The term was coined due to their practice of carrying hatchets with sharpened blades in their sleeves.  Mock Duck was a total badass who wore diamond buttons on his shirts and a chain mail vest to stop bullets!   More about Mock Duck’s Exploits can be found here.

 

MOCK SQUAB PIE – ITS A CONSPIRACY OF BAD TASTE

The word squab always reminds me of a scene from the movie JFK when Tommy Lee Jones says  “Hope you like squab.”

Except,  he says it with a Southern drawl so the A in squab lasts for like an hour.

Squaaaaaaaab.

Well, if you like squab but are having trouble finding some, look no further.

Mock Squab PieMock Squab Pie

So squab tastes like meaty apple pie?   In that case Tommy Lee, “No, I don’t like squaaaaaaab”.

SOMETHING ON THE SIDE

IMITATION SPINACH – IT’S NOT EASY BEING GREENS

I might be talking from a very 2019 Melbourne centric stance here.  But spinach is EVERYwhere.  I cannot think of a place where I could be where I was not in walking distance of a bag of spinach. Why you would then want to imitate it is unfathomable to me.  No spinach?  Have beans.  Or cabbage.  There are lots of other vegetables out there.  We don’t need to fake spinach.

Mock Spinach

 

And also Pumpkin shoots?  I have no idea where I would find any sort of pumpkin shoots, let alone tender ones.  I guess you need a vegetable garden.  In which case you could probably just grow spinach.

SHAM GINGER – WHAT NO COPYCAT MARYANNE?

 

Mock Ginger

This one is just ridic.  Making sham ginger from cucumbers and ground ginger?  Why not just use the ground ginger?

 

DESSERTS

LETS END IT ALL WITH SOME CHEESECAKE PUDDING

So, cheesecake…technically not a cake.  But always containing cheese right?

Not so much.

Mock Cheesecake

Q: How disappointed would you be if someone told you they were making cheesecake for dessert and it turned out to be sieved potato with a smattering of sultanas?

A:

I THINK WE ALL MIGHT NEED A DRINK!

In fact, it’s time to totally relax because all the bad food is behind us and kick back with a glass of the very appropriately named Tequila Mockingbird Cocktail!  This is soooo good.  Fruity, sweet, spicy and with a little kick of da da da da da da da…Tequila!

Tequila Mockingbird Recipe


I hope you enjoyed this little foray into the weird and…well…certainly not wonderful world of mock foods.  Tell me?  Do you have recipes for Mock Food in your collection? Have you ever made a mock food?  And did it taste like the real deal?

Have a wonderful week!