Category: Potato

Feb 2004 – From the Garden

Hello dear readers!  I was updating the index for the Twenty Years Ago Today posts this week and I realised I had not actually posted this one from way back in February!  Given that today’s post was just a little teaser for Murder is Announced which will be released on Tuesday, I thought why not post this today so you also get some real content.  Enjoy!  

Hello, retro food lovers! Buckle up for a delicious journey back in time! Today, we’re using the magic of Australian Table magazine to teleport ourselves to February 2004, and build a menu that celebrates the vibrant bounty of the garden. Talk about perfect timing, with our own gardens bursting at the seams right now! But before we whip up some culinary magic, let’s take a nostalgic stroll down memory lane and see what was buzzing in pop culture back then.

First up, music: Australia was rocking out to Shannon Noll’s powerful cover of the Moving Pictures classic “What about Me?”. Fun fact, this very song just gave me some serious bragging rights in a pub quiz! So, while it might have retired from the charts, it’s clearly not forgotten.

Now, onto the literary world: can you guess the top-selling book of the first half of February 2004? Drumroll please… yep, you guessed it, it was the phenomenon that was The Da Vinci Code. And if you think its grip on pop culture was about to loosen anytime soon, think again!  Speaking of cultural giants, Jesus himself made a big splash on the big screen, with The Passion of the Christ becoming the highest-grossing film of the month. So, get ready for a menu that’s not only fresh and seasonal, but also infused with a touch of early 2004 nostalgia. 

Fun Fact From Australian Table February 2004

I found this little timeline of how food evolved in Australia over the last 70 years fascinating  I particularly liked it that they did this by looking at old magazines.  Hmm…now what does that remind me of?

Feb 2004 70 years

Now, let’s take a look at our menu.  

The Menu – February 2004

Feb 2004 Menu

Summer Cocktail

Garden ingredient : Mint

This was a take on a Classic Pimms Punch combining gingerale, lemonade, Pimms, cucumber, mint and orange.  Many of these recipes often also contain strawberries which we also have growing but this one didn’t.  It was however delicious.  This was summer in a glass! 

 

Summer Cocktail

Summer Cocktail Recipe

Feb 2004 Summer Cocktail

 

Seared Scallop Salad with Macadamia and Coriander Pesto

Garden Ingredients, Mint, Lime

Seared Scallop Salad

While I am not a huge scallop fan this was delicious!  Next time I make it I would use prawns.  Confession: I took some liberties with the salad, swapping out the red capsicum and beansprouts.  I can’t eat red capsicum and I could only find huge bags of beansprouts at the greengrocer.  Bean sprouts aren’t bad, but buying a giant bag just for a few felt wasteful! I opted for cherry tomatoes (home grown) and red onion instead.   This dish is colourful and pretty and the macadamia and coriander pesto is divine!

Seared Scallop Salad with Macadamia and Coriander Pesto

Feb2004 Seared Scallop Salad

Rosemary and Lemon Chicken with Mint Dressing

Garden Ingredients:  Rosemary, Lemon, Mint

This was a great quick and easy midweek meal.  Nothing elaborate but relatively quick and tasty. 

Rosemary and Lemon Chicken

 

Rosemary and Lemon Chicken with Mint Dressing – Recipe

Rosemary and Lemon Chicken Recipe (1)

Potato Salad with Garlic and Caper Mayonnaise

Garden Ingredients:  Lemon, Parsley

I love potato salad.  Roseanne Cash Potato Salad remains one of my favourites but the Garlic and Caper Mayo on this one was superb!

Potato Salad with Garlic and Caper Mayonnaise

Potato Salad with Garlic and Caper Mayonnaise – Recipe

Feb 2004 Potato Salad with Garlic and Caper Mayonnaise

Angel Cheesecake

Garden Ingredients:  Limes

I am not 100% sure why this is called an Angel Cheesecake.  Maybe because there are egg whites in the filling to make it lighter?  Maybe because the combination of lime and passionfruit is divine?  

Angel Cheesecake

We have a passionfruit vine in the garden but it is only tiny so has not had any fruit on it yet.  I am looking forward to making this again with some homegrown passionfruit sometime in the future!  

Angel Cheesecake – Recipe

My Nigella Moment  – Barbecued Green Rice

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in because it is too good not to share.  

This month I chose a recipe that used a technique that was new to me.  I have never thought of putting rice on the bbq.  But I made the sushi with crispy rice out of the book Eat California by Vivian Lui (highly recommended BTW) and I loved it.  And this gave me the same vibes.  It was really tasty and I did get the crispy rice I was after but this recipe really needed some salt to make it a 10/10 instead of an 8/10!  We also do not have a bbq at the moment so I made this in a pan on the stove.  

Bbqed Green Rice

Barbecued Green Rice Recipe

Feb 2004 Barbecued Green Rice

 

I really enjoyed this month, it just felt very lemon and mint-heavy in terms of garden produce!  There were some absolute winners in the taste department too – the pesto, the potato salad, the cheesecake, and the rice are things that will become part of my repertoire!  

 

 

March 2004 – No O’s

Hello, retro food lovers! Today we are stepping back in time for a fun theme.  Remember the childhood book “Ghosts and Crows and Things With O’s?  Well, today is the opposite. My aim today was to create a menu where none of the recipes contain the letter O in its name.  Weird?  Yes but so is Omicronphobia which is a fear of the letter O.  Just in case you ever happen to be entertaining someone suffering from this affliction, here is a menu for you.  Also, please don’t tell them I called them weird!  Our guide today is the March 2004 issue of Delicious Magazine.

Blue Cheese with Walnuts and Honey2

So, what else was happening in March 2004?  Well, a fire crew in a hurry to get to a fire in Melbourne Florida left a fryer on in the firehouse.  A little later they got a call to come and put out another fire…at their firehouse!  In popular culture, the Da Vinci code was still top of the best seller lists and The Passion of  The Christ was number 1 at the box office.  Yeah by Usher was the number one song.

Now, that we have set the scene, let’s get to the menu

The Menu – March 2004

No O Menu

Prawn Caesar Salad

This was not strictly a Caesar Salad as the dressing was more of a Marie Rose-type thing but it had a Caesar-ish vibe about it.  It was also delicious! You can find a more classic Caesar Salad here

Prawn Caesar Salad

Prawn Caesar Salad Recipe

Prawn Caesar

Teriyaki Steak with Wasabi Mash

I loved this, it was my favourite dish on the menu and so easy to make as well.  I often found bought teriyake sauces much too sweet for my palate but this was perfect. And the wasabi mash was a perfect accompaniment.  I also served some edamame and pickled veg alongside. 

Teriyaki Steak with Wasabi Mash

Teriyaki Steak with Wasabi Mash Recipes

Steak Teriyaki (1)

Crème Brulée

March has been a very custard and caramel month around these parts.  Last week I made caramel custard and this week, its more sophisticated cousin, Crème Brulée.  I will say though that I cannot recommend this recipe.  For a start, the cooking time was completely out.  I had to cook my custards for about double the time they suggested! I was also intrigued by their suggestion of grinding the sugar to make it easier to torch.  It did not. All it did was add to the time taken to cook the recipe, and burn the sugar when I torched it.  After the first two, I went back to my usual way of using normal caster sugar and it was fine.  Just listen to this.  This is the sound of a good Crème Brulée. 

Crème Brulée Recipe

It was a bit of a dud but I am including it for compleness sake.  And having said that, the custard was delicious.  And once I reverted back to my usual non-powdered white sugar, the bruleed top became perfect!  

creme brulee recipe

My Nigella Moment  – Blue Cheese, Honey and Walnuts

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in because it is too good not to share.  

I have long said that cheese is my love language so this recipe immediately called to me.  So simple and so delcious.  And if you wanted to bring this recipe up to date?  Sub out ordinary honey for some hot honey.  This is a perfect after-dinner cheeseboard for one, or many.  I served mine with  a green salad and a croissant for a delicious lunch.  This recipe is proof that the simple things in life are often the best!

Blue Cheese with Walnuts and Honey

 

Blue Cheese with Walnuts and Honey Recipe

Blue Cheese with Walnuts and Honey recipe

 

Apart from a few hiccups with the Brulee, I loved this month.  Delicious Magazine has allowed the Omicronphobes (and me) have some beautiful vibrant and tasty meals!  

Have a great week! 

 

 

Dec 03 – Make Mine A Double

Hello, retro food lovers and Season’s Greetings from 2003!  This month I am using Delicious Magazine from December 2003 to prepare a menu where…well let’s see if you can guess…Hint..there’s a big clue in the title. 

The whole time I was cooking this month I also kept thinking back to my early twenties when we used to play a drinking game called “I’m going to the moon”.  The person who starts says “I’m going to the moon and I’m taking (for example) an apple”.  Then the next person says “I’m going to the moon and I’m taking a pear”.  The first person who is the game controller tells them if they can come to the moon or not.  If they can’t go, they need to stay on earth and have a drink.   There are many variations on this game but my personal favourite was based on the same theme as this month.  Let’s move away from my sozzled past to see what was happening in December 2003.  Although come to think about it, that was probably the same time as I was playing the game!

The Lord of The Rings:  Return of the King was the big movie of December 2003.  The Last Samurai was the next biggest.  And, quelle surprise, The Da Vinci Code was still the best-selling book.  Which all kind of explains why I was playing drinking games instead of partaking in pop culture.  Although the soundtrack to those drinking games would have been good with Here Without You and Hey Ya! being the number one songs that month!  

Moorish Champagne Cocktail1

The Menu – December 2003

Moorish Champagne Cocktail

Moorish Champagne Cocktail

I am always very happy to be able to start these menus with a cocktail.  The Moorish Champagne Cocktail was both easy to make and also very more-ish!  

Moorish Champagne Cocktail2

 

Moorish Champagne Tart Recipe

Dec 2003 - Moorish Champagne Cocktail Recipe

Salad of Dried Pears, Proscuitto, Blue Cheese and Walnuts

AKA a salad of a few of my favourite things!  If this hadn’t fit the theme, it would have surely been my Nigella item for this month!  And it was divine!

Salad of Dried Pears

Salad of Dried Pears, Proscuitto, Blue Cheese and Walnuts Recipe

Salad of Dried Pears recipe2

 

Salad of Dried Pears 2

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto

I apologise for the photo of this which is not great.  Having said this, the photo from the mag (which follows the recipe) is also not great.  Neither photo does this dish, which was amazing any justice!  But, trust me, it is worth taking a punt on as it was delicious! Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto

 

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto Recipe

Grilled Salmon with Thai Green Risotto recipe (1)

 

Mulled Wine Sorbet With Clove Biscuits

This was so nice and refreshing.  It is summer in Australia so this is a nice nod to wintry flavours but adapted for summer.  The sorbet mixture was very soft, for me it was more like a slushie than a sorbet so my recommendation is either not to serve it on a very hot day or to eat it quickly as it melts in moments.  Speaking of melting, the clove biscuits just melt in your mouth!  I am usually a bit wary of cloves – I’ve bit into them accidentally when eating things like curries and find the flavour a bit too much!  So, for the first few biscuits, I ate, I picked the cloves off. Since then, I have eaten them with the clove in and the flavour of them seems to be less powerful in the biscuits than in say a curry.  So, even if you don’t love cloves, give these a try with them!

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits Recipe

Mulled Wine Sorbet with Clove Biscuits recipe (1)

My Nigella Moment  – Crispy Herbed Potatoes

For first-time readers, this refers to the moment at the end of Nigella Lawson’s cooking shows when she sneaks back to the fridge to have another bite of something delicious.  In these Twenty Years Ago posts, it is something contained in the magazine that does not fit with the overall menu theme but I’m sneaking it in because it is too good not to share.  

You had me at crispy potatoes!  And then when I saw how pretty these were, I knew they would be my Nigella item for this month.  If I hadn’t already bought what I needed to make Katrina Meynink’s Roasted Taters with Horseradish and Tapenade for Christmas Day, the Crispy Herbed Potatoes would have been on the menu.  (As an aside, I have just bought the aforementioned book From Salt to Jam and am absolutely loving it).  

Dec 2003 - Crispy Seared Potatoes3Crispy Seared Potatoes Recipe

Crispy Herbed Potatoes (1)

Overall a great month from Delicious December 2003.  If you have not yet guessed the theme, no going to the moon for you!  But in the interest of your liver, it was to find recipes with double letters.  Until I did this, I had never really thought about how many food items had these.  I was absolutely spoiled for choice with options:

(Update 6/1/24 – I had originally included links to items below that are still on the Delicious.com.au website.  Those links have been blocked but anything I have asterisked is available should you want to check them out.)

Starters

  • Baked eggs
  • Bruschetta with grilled artichokes and roasted garlic
  • B’stilla*
  • Cheese Crock
  • Chilled pea soup with lobster and risoni salad*
  • Goat’s curd in grappa*
  • Prawn and fattoush salad
  • Schiacciata*
  • Spanner crab chowder
  • Peppered Beef Salad
  • Smoked Salmon with clementines and cress
  • Terrine with microwave cranberry chutney

Mains and Sides

  • Beef fillet with spicy potatoes and horseradish
  • Butternut pumpkin with tasty stuffing
  • Cheeky Christmas turkey with braised leeks and the best wine gravy
  • Chicken noodle salad
  • Chicken with pepperoncini
  • Cinnamon and sultana couscous
  • Cold turkey salad with mango and honey dressing
  • Country chicken and mushroom pies
  • Chicken coconut curry pie
  • Crispy skin coral trout with roasted pineapple, coconut salad and rosti potato
  • Fillets of John Dory with olives, capers and rosemary
  • Flame grilled tuna with wasbi cake, bok choy and lime ponzu
  • Fricassee of chicken with mustard and grapes
  • Grilled coral trout with asparagus, red capsicum and sugar snap peas
  • Rice paper rolls with turkey
  • Seared barramundi with garlic skordalia, asparagus and creole salsa
  • Traditional Barossa ham in verjuice jelly
  • Turkey with saffron butter and preserved lemon and olive stuffing
  • Baked zucchini tarts with stuffed vegetables
  • Frisee, watercress and witlof salad
  • Goat’s cheese tarts with roast peaches and vincotto
  • Moroccan carrot salad
  • Open lasagne of asparagus with rocket tortellini
  • Roasted eggplant and tomato salad
  • Savoury Summer puddings
  • Sweet potato briks
  • Truffled potato mash

Sweets

  • Baked lime cheesecake
  • Boozy puddings with cheat’s custard*
  • Cherry clafoutis*
  • Choc-mint raspberry sundae
  • Chocolate and strawberry tartines*
  • Chocolate and brandied prune terrine*
  • Christmas morning muffins*
  • Christmas pudding ice cream with sweet cranberry sauce
  • Cinnamon ice cream with red wine poached figs*
  • Chocolate cake with plum pudding vodka*
  • Coconut and passionfruit slice
  • Eggnog custards*
  • Flourless Hazelnut roulade
  • Free-form berry trifles
  • Middle Eastern fruit cake*
  • Pannettone with berries and brandy sauce
  • Passionfruit panna cotta*
  • Raspberry ice cream sundae
  • Snowballs*
  • Starry night tarts*
  • Star-topped mince pies
  • Strawberry sundae*
  • Tutti Frutti ice cream*
  • Vanilla sponge with raspberries
  • White Chocolate and chilli ice cream with tropical fruit

Other

  • Hettie Potter’s suet-free mince meat
  • Easy cranberry sauce
  • Peanut Butter sauce
  • Raspberry sauce
  • Strawberry sauce
  • Irish coffee with orange rind and vanilla

 

Sorry for the massive laundry list but I really wanted to show how many items had double letters!  I was honestly astounded! 

So, my question to you lovely readers is – if you were making your own double-letter dinner, what would you choose? Either from the extensive list above or things that have not been mentioned – baguettes, beetroot, jelly, waffles, green beans, toffee, frittata, dill, mayonnaise, cabbage, spaghetti, mozzarella…the list goes on!

Couscous which is in the list above is the only thing I could think of with the same series of letters twice.  Can you think of any others?

And one last thing.  Thank you all for reading and commenting through the year!  Best wishes for an amazing 2024!

 

 

 

Ham Slaw Baked Potato

Hello friends and welcome to a midweek quickie. Today we are talking leftovers, specifically what to do with leftover Ham Slaw.   I recently, please don’t laugh at this, but I only very recently learned that you could “bake” potatoes in the microwave! Combine the two and you get a super yummy ham slaw baked potato.  AKA Work from home heaven!

 

Since then though, I have been making up for lost time and about once a week when I am on a working-from-home day and have suitable leftovers, I have been baking up a potato and having it with my leftovers for lunch.  The Ham Slaw was AMAZING!

Ham Slaw Potato

And how does it taste?

 

Ham Slaw Potato2

There is something I find so comforting about a baked potato. And at 6 minutes cooking time, you can bake your potato, walk your dogs and eat all in your lunch hour!  The ham slaw is a pretty robust salad so will last in the fridge for a day or two so if you make a bit more than you need, you can have lunches for a few days.  I had this as a work from home lunch but there’s nothing to stop you re-heating your potato in the office microwave either!

Ham slaw, a baked potato hack and two Taylor Swift gifs?  What more could you want in a mid-week quickie!  Hope your week is going well.

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Moscow Potatoes

Hello, friends, we are back from our hols – more to come about that later!  Never have I agonised over a post as much as I have over this one.  Not because these Moscow Potatoes weren’t fabulous.  They were delicious and tasted like something special even though they are made from only four ingredients! My dilemma was about whether this might be seen as me taking a pro-Russian stance on wider world events. So just to be really clear, this is not a political statement, this is a food blog.

Moscow Potatoes6

The recipe for Moscow Potatoes comes from the February / March 1990 edition of Vogue Entertaining which is the same magazine that brought us the flowery delights of a rose petal salad.  For this one, we are turning away from flowers and turning the usually humble spud into a ritzy item.  It’s the culinary version of the plain girl taking off her glasses and becoming a glamour puss.

Moscow Potatoes

I had some of the salmon caviar left over from making the Oysters with Caviar so  it made sense to give the Moscow Potatoes a try.  We had these as a little starter before our New Year’s Day dinner of Tomahawk Steak with a coffee spice rub and a caesar style wedge salad.  This was a delightful way to welcome in 2023!  I served these on a plate meant for deviled eggs and I think they looked adorable! You will see I left some of the potatoes un-caviared in case people did not like it.  In the end, I had to add some of the gorgeous salmon caviar pearls to the plain ones as no one wanted them!

Moscow Potatoes2

Moscow Potatoes – The Article

The recipe for Moscow Potatoes comes from a feature called “Fed in The Clouds” .  It is about Alan and Elizabeth Crompton Batts who are as posh as they sound.  He was a food writer, and chef and owned a PR company that was involved with a LOT of very famous London restaurants including Chez NicoTamarind, and Christopher’s.  He was also at one point the manager of The Psychedelic Furs whose song Pretty in Pink is in my Top Ten of best-ever songs.  Her family used to own The Ivy. In short, these two are food royalty!

Alan and Elizabeth Compton Batts
1990’s Power Couple, Alan and Elizabeth Compton Batts

Although I had never heard of either Alan or Elizabeth Crompton Batts before starting this post, and coming into this wanting to be a bit mocking about the whole 80s excess of it all, I was actually very sad to read that Alan Crompton Batts passed away in 2004 at only 50 years old.  This meant at the time of this article in 1990, he was 36 and had already achieved everything I mentioned before!  This took my breath away.  What an absolute powerhouse!

Their menu is also amazing and I”m sure we will see more from the Crompton Batts’ in future posts.

In the meantime though, let’s find out how to make Moscow Potatoes!

Moscow Potatoes – The Recipe

Moscow Potatoes Recipe

You will see from the pictures that I swapped out the mint for some chives.  I think you can go your own way on this.  Dill would also be amazing.

Moscow Potatoes5

Have a great week! Signature2