Dinner party feast – chicken liver ravioli and double chocolate meringue cake

The Freshly Blogged competition is in its 6th week already, wow! This week’s challenge was sponsored by Robertsons Spices and it was a double whammy with a brief that said that we had to create two dishes, both containing cayenne pepper and cinnamon. The other ingredients we had to use were chicken livers, cream and white chocolate, and we could also include any three fresh ingredients and two grocery items.

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Pan Fried Pilchards with Veggie Timbales and Brown Rice Salad

Week 4 of the Freshly Blogged challenge saw us presented with a rather interesting, and I’ll admit, challenging list of ingredients. The shopping list looked a little something like this: cabbage, tinned pilchards, feta cheese, green beans and brown rice. We were not allowed to omit anything on the list and the dish had to be cooked on the stove top, so grilled pilchards was not an option! We were also not allowed to include any grocery items – just 2 fresh ingredients (fruit, veg or herbs) as well as the approved pantry items. 

This was not going to be easy! I considered various options including cabbage rolls and paella… but with so many different and dominant flavours on the ingredients list I decided that throwing them all together and hoping for the best was not the best way forward. Instead, I opted to keep things simple – combining the flavours that worked well together. 

I chose to add cherry tomatoes and carrots as my fresh ingredients. Tomatoes to add flavour to and compliment the feta in the brown rice salad. Carrots to add colour contrast and a touch of sweetness to the vegetable timbales. Added to that a selection of aromatic spices and suddenly a seemingly odd collection of ingredients became an incredibly tasty meal! 

There was yet another first for me this week. I love a fresh piece of fish but have never cooked with tinned pilchards before. I was pleasantly surprised and urge you to try them if you haven’t done so. 

This is not a traditional timbale recipe, which usually includes cream. I wasn’t able to include this so had to improvise a little and decided to add a basic white sauce instead – luckily it worked out! You don’t have to stick to the same vegetables as me when it comes to making the timbales. Try butternut, chickpeas and red peppers – the more colourful the better!

To vote simply click HERE, it only take a few seconds.

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PAN FRIED PILCHARDS WITH VEGGIE TIMBALES & BROWN RICE SALAD


Serves 4

For the vegetable timbales:

250g peeled carrots, thinly sliced
220g cabbage leaves, shredded
250g green beans
1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon flour
1/2 cup milk
pinch of salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
3 egg yolks
For the brown rice salad:

pinch of saffron
1 tablespoon warm water
1 cup brown rice
1 tablespoon olive oil + 2 tablespoons for dressing
pinch of salt
3 cups water
1 teaspoon light brown sugar
pepper
200g cherry tomatoes, halved
120g plain feta


For the pilchards:

1 tablespoon sunflower oil
1/4 teaspoon medium curry powder
1/8 teaspoon paprika
1 x 400g tin Lucky Star pilchards in tomato sauce
salt and pepper

To prepare the vegetable timbales:

Step 1.) Steam the carrot slices and cabbage until tender.

Step 2.) Top, tail and slice the green beans. Boil in salted water for 6 minutes or until soft.
Step 3.) Use a food processor or stick blender to purée the vegetable seperately. Set them aside while you make the white sauce.

Step 4.) Melt the butter in a small saucepan. Whisk in the flour and cook for a minute.

Step 5.) Take the saucepan off the heat and gradually whisk in the milk. Add a pinch of a salt and the nutmeg. Whisk over a medium heat until the sauce bubbles and thickens.

Step 6.) Divide the white sauce between the three puréed vegetables and mix in. Mix an egg yolk into each purée.

Step 7.) Return the green bean purée to the stove and heat for a few minutes to thicken slightly.

Step 8.) Divide the cabbage purée between four well greased dariole moulds. Smooth the top with a teaspoon so you have an even layer.

Step 9.) Next add a layer of carrot purée, remembering to smooth the top.

Step 10.) Add the green bean purée next. Smooth the top so that the purée goes right to the edges of the mould.

Step 11.) Cover each mould with a piece of tin foil. Place the moulds in a deep saucepan and carefully add hot water to the pan. The water should come halfway up the sides of the moulds. Cover the saucepan and allow to simmer for an hour, or until the timbales have set.

Step 12.) To serve: invert a dariole mould onto a plate. Give the plate a good shake, carefully lift the mould and the timbale should come out easily.


To prepare the brown rice salad:

Step 1.) Soak the saffron in a tablespoon of warm water for a few minutes.

Step 2.) Put the rice, a tablespoon of olive oil, saffron and a pinch of salt in a pot. Add the water. Bring to the boil. Reduce heat and simmer with the lid on for 40 minutes or until cooked. 

Step 3.) Whisk the brown sugar with 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Season with salt and pepper and set aside.

Step 4.) Stir the cherry tomatoes and olive oil dressing through the hot rice. Crumble in the feta.
To prepare the pilchards:

Step 1.) Heat the sunflower oil in a saucepan. Add the curry powder and paprika and cook for a minute.

Step 2.) Drain the pilchards, reserving the tomato sauce. Add the pilchards to the saucepan and cook for 3 minutes. Carefully turn them over and cook for a further 3 minutes.

Step 3.) Add the tomato sauce. Season with salt and pepper. Cook until the sauce is heated through.

Toad-in-the-hole: South African style!

We are onto week 3 of the Freshly Blogged challenge already! I am having so much fun creating these recipes and I hope you will try them at home too. The theme for this week’s challenge was “S.A.’s best” and the ingredients list read something like this: Drosty-Hof Pinotage (or any Drosty-Hof red wine), mielie meal, ostrich sausage, waterblommetjies or green beans, chutney and mixed dried fruit. As usual we were allowed to omit one of these ingredients and this time around we were able to include three fresh ingredients and three spices.

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Moroccan beef with spiced flatbreads (with video)

It’s week 2 of the Pick ‘n Pay Freshly Blogged challenge! Voting has opened and this is the recipe I produced for the second round – a Moroccan inspired beef dish served with delicately spiced flatbreads.

The ingredients list for this challenge was as follows: beef shin, beef suet, Knorr beef stock pot, a soup pack (containing assorted vegetables), star anise and white wine vinegar. We were allowed to omit one of these ingredients and add one grocery and two fresh items of our choice. I decided to use all of the ingredients on the shopping list and added in an onion, fresh coriander and ground cumin.

As I pondered the ingredients list the first thing that came to mind was slow cooking – the cooking method best suited to tougher cuts like beef shin. This got me mulling over stews and casseroles, which then turned my thoughts to tagines and then Morocco, which then (this is quite a process!) got me thinking about my favourite spice – cumin! I do not need any excuse to use this versatile and warm seasoning in my cooking, and so I decided to make a Moroccan inspired beef stew served with lightly spiced flatbreads to soak up all of that lovely sauce.
Beef stew recipe with flatbreads.

 

I have to admit that I have never used suet before, it is not the most appetising ingredient to use! But I was excited to try something new and decided to incorporate it into the flatbreads. I would have saved myself some trouble if I had asked the butcher to mince it for me! Nothing my good old stick blender couldn’t sort out, but if you are making this recipe try and buy minced or shredded suet to save yourself the extra work.

If I had been able to add other ingredients I probably would have included some extra spices – some turmeric and a pinch of chilli flakes would have gone well with this dish I think, but even without these the stew was super tasty with the cumin and star anise turning ordinary beef into something special. The beef shin was deliciously tender and coated in a thick, rich gravy which we enjoyed scooping up with the warm flatbreads. A wonderfully hearty winter supper which I am sure you will also love.

If this sounds good to you please pop onto the Freshly Blogged website and VOTE for my recipe. (Prizes to be won!) Thank you to everyone who voted last week – let’s keep it going!

Edit: In April 2018 I made this beef stew on the Expresso Show. You can watch the video here:

 

 

MOROCCAN BEEF WITH SPICED FLATBREADS

For the beef stew:

  • 500g beef shin
  • 3 tbsp flour
  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • salt and pepper
  • 1 tbsp sunflower oil
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 3 tbsp finely chopped celery
  • 3 medium carrots, peeled and cut into 1cm slices
  • 1 tsp star anise
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 1 Knorr beef stock pot
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 tbsp finely chopped parsley + extra to serve
  • small handful fresh coriander, roughly chopped + extra to serve

For the flatbreads (makes 6):

  • 2 cups plain flour
  • ½ tsp ground cumin
  • ½ tsp fine salt
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 60g beef suet, minced or shredded
  • 210ml warm water

1.) Cut the beef shin into 2-3cm cubes. Combine the flour and cumin and add a good pinch of salt and pepper. Toss the beef in the spice mixture and set aside. 

2.) Heat the sunflower oil in a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add the chopped onion, celery and carrots and fry for 2 minutes. Add the star anise pieces and cook for a further minute.

3.) Add the beef to the pan and brown for 3 minutes, stirring constantly. Add the white wine vinegar, cover the pot and leave to cook over a low heat for 5 minutes.

4.) Add the Knorr beef stock pot and the water to the pot and mix well. Replace the lid and cook over a gentle heat for 1-1½ hours, stirring every 20 minutes or so, until the beef is very tender.

5.) While the beef is cooking you can prepare your flatbreads (see separate instructions below).

6.) Try as best you can to remove the star anise pieces from the beef stew, then stir in the chopped parsley and coriander. Allow to simmer for a further 5 minutes with the lid off.

7.) Check the seasoning of the beef. Dish onto warmed plates and top with extra parsley and coriander if desired. Serve with freshly made flatbreads.

To make the flatbreads:

1.) Sift the flour, cumin, salt and baking powder into a bowl. Add the suet and mix everything together.

2.) Add most of the water to the flour and mix to combine. Continue adding water until the dough starts coming together. Tip onto a lightly floured work surface and knead for 5 minutes until you have a soft dough. Place the dough back in the mixing bowl, cover with a tea towel and allow to stand for 30 minutes.

3.) Divide the dough in half, then divide each half into three equal pieces. Roll each piece into a ball. Dust your work surface with a little flour, then use a rolling pin to roll each ball into a circle about 2-3mm thick.

4.) Heat a dry griddle pan over a medium heat. Place a flatbread in the pan and cook for 1½ minutes. Flip the flatbread over and cook the other side for 1½ minutes or until the bread starts to puff up and colour. Repeat with the remaining flatbreads. Keep the breads warm until serving time.

 

Roasted Thai vegetable pie

If you’ve been onto my Facebook page recently you have probably heard about the competition I’m participating in. It’s week 1 of the Pick ‘n Pay Freshly Blogged challenge! 40 local food bloggers, including myself, were given a shopping list and a few days to create and photograph an original recipe using those ingredients. We were told that we could omit one of the ingredients on the list and add one of our own, as well as use ingredients from an “approved” pantry list which included standard items like olive oil, eggs, flour and the like.

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Honey, soy and lime chicken with noodles

It has been a few weeks since the last “dinner in a flash” recipe post, and I hope you will agree that this one is a goody! This last week has been a whirlwind of appointments, errands and social get-togethers… nothing out of the ordinary now that I think about it! I’m sure most of you can relate to that feeling of being run off your feet, so, flag this recipe because it is perfect for those evenings when, after a crazy day, you want to enjoy a good home cooked meal but with minimal effort. And by minimal I mean you can have this dish on the table in less than twenty minutes – winning!

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Sweet and sour pork with pineapple

 

A beach in Grand Baie Mauritius
Grand Baie, Mauritius

My husband and I were lucky enough to enjoy a trip to Mauritius for our honeymoon. The minute you land on this small island in the Indian Ocean you really feel as though you have reached tropical territory – stifling heat, humidity, sugar cane fields and leafy green vegetation as far as the eye can see.

Mauritian cuisine is as diverse as its people, with influences from France, China and India to name a few. We enjoyed incredible curries, seafood, beef chop suey and samoosas. Whatever it is that your tastebuds fancy you are likely to find it here!
 

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Angelfish with steamed asparagus and lime beurre blanc

Steamed asparagus

Bonjour! We are getting ever so slightly posh this week with a little help from our French friends. This is the kind of meal usually reserved for those occasions when I have an evening out and can enjoy my dinner at a restaurant, but it is surprisingly simple and perfect for when you want to prepare something extra special at home.

Beurre blanc if you didn’t know is a creamy, butter sauce. It is extremely versatile and can be prepared in many ways – you could add herbs, stock or even red wine. The variations are almost endless, and this is my version.

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