Category: Use By

Use By: Roast Vegetable Bubble and Squeak

What can you do with a load of leftover roast veggies?  Make one of the best-named dishes ever – Bubble and Squeak!  Bubble and Squeak is a British recipe which is traditionally made from the leftovers from the traditional Sunday roast.  It is supposedly called Bubble and Squeak due to the noises made during the cooking process.  I think this last bit may be apocryphal.  My Bubble and Squeak neither bubbled or squeaked.  It was totally delicious though!

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So what’s it all about Alfie?  Given the Britishness of this dish, feel free to use your best Michael Caine cockney voice as you read that too!

Well, get your leftovers – I had some Ottlolenghi Harissa Potatoes and some Brussels Sprouts. You can use pretty much whatever veg you have as long as you have one that can be mashed up.  Mashed potato will also work a treat in this.

 

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Mash up your veggies and add a beaten egg.  The rest is up to you. Add some of your chopped up leftover roast if you like, throw in some herbs or some cheese.  Add some chill or a dollop of mustard.  Be as fancy or as simple as you like.  I kept these pretty simple, just the veggies and egg because the potatoes already had some harissa and spice seasoning.

When you are ready, pan fry your Bubble and Squeaks  to make delicious patties.  These are delicious as a side dish, make a great vegetarian burger patty or are good just by themselves.

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Topped Bubble and Squeak

My favourite way to eat Bubble and Squeak is to pan-fry the little cakes until they are all crispy and brown on the outside and then top them with all sorts of delish things.  These are one of my go-to’s for lunch (or breakfast) when I am working from home.

Breakfast Bubbles

No, I’m not talking about champagne although, having just come back from Europe where a glass of sparkling is de rigueur with your brekkie I’m totally on board with bubbles in the AM.  Hmm…if you had some sparkling wine with your breakfast Bubble and Sqeak I guess that’s double bubble!

Bubble and Squeak with an egg makes a for a super breakfast.  You could pan fry some bacon as you heat the bubble and squeak if you wanted to have some meat but I like to have mine just with egg.  Grilled cheese on top of your B&S is another delicious breakfast option.

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Lunchtime Squeaks

Come lunchtime, I like to top my Bubble and Squeak with some chilli labneh and pickled red cabbage or hummus and tomato salsa as per the top picture.

I love the combination of the crispy roast veggies, the creaminess of the yoghurt and the bite of pickle!

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Bubble and Squeak can become quite addictive and now I routinely cook extra veg just so I can have them over the next few days!

Here’s a recipe but feel free to experiment as you wish with herbs, condiments etc.  My version does not include cheese in the mix but, if you were going to add it, you could play around with different types.  Having said that, now I desperately want to have Bubble and Squeak with some blue cheese crumbled through it!!!

Tell me, what is your favourite way of using up roasted veg?

Have a great week!

 

Use By: Watermelon and Feta Salad

To me, watermelon is an icon of summer and happiness.  And I love feta cheese.  So I am unsure why I was initially so resistant to the idea of a watermelon and feta salad. But the minute I tried it, I realised how wrong I had been.  It is DELICIOUS!!!!  And a really good way to use up a little bit of watermelon you may have left in your fridge.

It is winter and dark and grey here in Melbourne at the moment so this salad is a mere memory of sunshine.  However, for those of you in the Northern Hemisphere, I hope this becomes as much a staple on your summer table as it is now on mine!

Before we even get onto the taste, let’s talk about how my Watermelon and Feta salad looks!.

It is such a lovely contrast of colours – the deep pink of the watermelon against the white of the feta, the deep blackish purple of the olives, the lighter purple of the onions and the bright green of the leaves.

And as for the taste?  It will get your tastebuds dancing lust ike this!

The girl in the white mini dress is the watermelon…it’s the first thing you notice and she’s bringing the sweetness.

The girl in the leafy bikini is the feta. Also up front but bringing a bit more complexity by adding some salty creaminess to the mix.

Blue Speedo guy is the red onion.  He’s adding some pow!

Sitting down girl is the olives – she’s bringing some more salt and a briny oiliness and somehow keeping all the others on beat.

White bikini in the background?  She’s the leaves – she’s bascially a supporting player for the front four

And finally, orange Speedo’s?  He’s  the sprinkle of fresh dill and chilli flakes….not noticeable all the time…but when you do…it’s memorable!

Add them all together and you’ve got a party just ready to happen!

This is a fun salad and if you aren’t into the beach party breakdown I have given you, look at some other ways people have had fun with it:

Rubik’s Cube Salad (via Cityline TV)

 

Watermelon Cups (via Clean Food Crush)

 

And my favourite, just because it is so pretty! Watermelon Stars (via Taste.com.au)

This starry version will be part of Christmas lunch this year for sure!

My recipe is fairly loose, depending on what I have on hand.  Check out any of the recipes above for an exact version.

But don’t forget to add the olives.  None of the other recipes include them and believe me, they bring it!!!

Have a fabulous week!

 

 

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.

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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!

 

 

Use By: Oven Fries with Marinated Feta and Rosemary

One of my goals for the new year, inspired by Jenny over at Silver Screen Suppers is to cut down on my food waste.  To that end, I spent a day or so over the break adding every item of food and drink in my house – of which I apparently have 530+ – ranging from Agnostura Bitters to Zulu Spice Mix into a spreadsheet. 

Zulu Spice Mix?  WTF?  I don’t even know why I have Zulu spice mix.  I also don’t know why I have 3 unopened boxes of cream of tartar  (or even exactly it does) or two unopened jars of Char Sui Paste… But all of that stuff could wait.  In the dairy shelf of my fridge (another Jenny inspiration), there was some very delicious (and also very expensive) marinated feta that absolutely positively could not go to waste.   

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So, then to my “Recipe Schedule” spreadsheet to see where I can use some marinated feta.  Wow..I’m giving you all my spreadsheets!

Don’t even get me started on my spreadsheets.  Because this will then become a blog about where and how to use a multi embedded what if scenario and not at all about food. On the other hand, if, like me, you are all about the spready, head over to my other blog www.tarynisexcellent.com* for all your spreadsheet needs, wants and desires.  (*Not a real blog. Unless you want it to be…)

Back to my marinated feta and the concept of the “Use By” post. In each post, I will use up an ingredient that would have otherwise had to be thrown out.  And will try to use that ingredient in a manner that does not entail buying several more items which will then have to be logged and “used by”….. 

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Yotam Ottolenghi’s latest book, Simple contains a recipe for fries with feta and oregano. I had feta, I had potatoes.  I didn’t have dried oregano but I had fresh rosemary and I love rosemary flavoured roast potatoes so I subbed in the rosemary for the oregano.

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Let me tell you, these fries are GENIUS!

That drizzle of garlic oil over the top takes them to next level.  Add the feta and we’re talking eleven.

Being a philistine I also tried to add ketchup and vinegar to these fries  Because normally, fries without them are useless.

Rosemary Marinated Feta Fries

These were fine without!

These are possibly the best home fries I have ever eaten!

And a super recipe for using up any leftover feta cheese you may have!