Showing posts with label easy suppers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label easy suppers. Show all posts

14 December 2011

Sausage Pasta

Sausage Pasta

Happy twenty twelve! Wowsers i can't believe how the last few years have flown by. It's been twelve years since i celebrated the millennium in Malaysia with school friends, my first big trip without parents it kicked off my love for spicy food & taught me that humid weather is not kind to curly hair. It's been at least seven years since i spent a ski season in Saas Fee, Switzerland where i learnt how to drink every night for six months while not getting liver failure & the beauty of Swiss food. And most fun, it's been almost four years since i swept the Houseboy off his feet while sailing around Croatia, since then i have learnt the joys of Cherry Ripes & Bundaberg Rum & not worrying so much. Fun times. 

Home
We had Christmas in Scotland which was brilliant as usual, Mrs Rhodes loved having the brood all back & spent the week flapping round the kitchen producing amazing meals & feeding us all till we couldn't move. Luckily the Scottish Borders is a pretty place so there was lots of long walks to be had, despite the fact it was blowing a gale for most of the time. We joined Mr & Mrs Robinson for a night out in Edinburgh starting with an amazing evening trip round Edinburgh Castle, then on to dinner at Maison Bleue where i had a lovely venison dish. We finished up at The Whiski Rooms on the Mound for a nightcap, there i tried a 'Smokey Mary' a twist on a traditional Bloody Mary with the addition of 10 year old Ardbeg...i couldn't drink more than one at a time, but it was very good. New Year was spent at the Piano Bar in South Kensington, London which was Mr Bird's great choice. Small & intimate it was a fun evening of Champagne & piano playing, although we all relatively behaved ourselves i did wake up on January the 1st lying on a pile of clean washing in the spare room (apparently i went to turn off a light) while the poor Houseboy suffered the worst hangover in a long time. Not even homemade soup & sympathy could save the poor soul, so i ate all the soup & left him watching cartoons. 

Home
I've never really been a new years resolutions time of girl, it always feels like jumping on a band waggon which everyone promptly falls off. But, this year i have a few which i would like to undertake. Firstly to blog more (poor you) i initially decided to blog twice a week, but then downgraded to a solid once a week & anything else is a bonus. I guilty of setting goals which are unreachable which then annoys me & i give it up. I'm excellent at starting things but not very good at finishing things. You can see throughout our flat which is littered with half made cushions, half painted pictures & pieces of knitting that could be the start of a scarf. Losing a little weight is also kind of a goal (ironic given i'm writing this while eating Mrs Rhodes' excellent Christmas Cake) so there will be more spinning classes & less baking. 


After all the festivities January should be filled with healthy options, but the does the current weather really make you want to have a salad (it's tipping down with rain in London Town) so gently ease into the healthy food with a warning sausage dish. Use decent quality sausages as it makes all the difference, also you could add vegetables to this dish, Courgettes, Mushrooms, anything that takes your fancy. 


Ingredients:
  • 6 good quality sausages
  • 160g sun blushed tomatoes
  • a good splash of red wine
  • 7 shallots 
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 300g of rigatoni pasta
  • s&p
Method:

Put the pasta onto boil in salted water, while its bubbling away slice the sausage into chunks add to a hot pan with a slug of olive oil. After a few minutes quater the shallots, crush the garlic & slice the sun blushed tomatoes. Add all three ingredients to add to the pan along with the wine. Let it simmer away for a couple of minute & then turn the heat right down. Check the pasta & when it's ready, drain & add the sausage. Mix well & serve straight away. You could throw caution to the wind & sprinkle with some grated cheese. 

Home

28 October 2011

Coconut & Chilli Chicken


Wow. It's going to hard to make healthy food as the weather turns colder, i keep dreaming about Ox Tail Casserole, Steak & Ale Pie, Sticky Toffee Pudding... Salad is not getting a look in. I will however be trying to strike a balance, otherwise i will be giving the Christmas Turkey a run for it's money. Being 5'3 is extremely unforgiving at this time of year, a couple of extra kilos & a winter coat & i look like a lego man (with better hair). Ah the perils of a cold climate! A text from the Houseboy's mum in Australia (a much much better climate) asking me to make a wish while she stirred her Christmas Pudding has made me realise i have to get my behind in gear & crack on with this year Christmas Cake. It needs plenty of time to mature & to be dosed with brandy or whiskey (or whatever the Houseboy won't miss from the booze collection) I can't say that it' my favourite cake but i do enjoy making it &certainly gets you in the festive mood.   

Last weekend i was in York with Mrs Robinson for a retail therapy session & catch up. It's a great place for a weekend, small enough to cover in a couple of days, but enough to keep you interested. There was an amazing Fruit & Veg market which reminded me of Borough Market without the pretentious crowd & astronomical prices. The produce looked truly amazing & the choice of Meat & Fish would have a carnivore drooling. Unfortunately our hotel room didn't have a fridge otherwise i would have been boarding the train South with a bunch of Leeks & a Leg of Lamb! We had the most delicious Hot Chocolate at Monk Bar Chocolatiers in the heart of the 'Shambles' an acient street harking back to the fourteenth century with over hanging buildings & wooden beams. Who needs the history channel when you can see the real thing!


I'm a little obsessed with Nigel Slater at the moment. (sorry Nigel) I have had a few of his cookbooks for ages but they have been languishing at the back of the kitchen &, looking through them this week i have no idea why. So i am going to devote a little time to him over the next few weeks. This recipe received a resounding thumbs up from the Houseboy, it's not too hot, but does have a lovely warmth to it. I love apricots in savoury dishes & this is no exception, they take the edge off the spice & compliments the chicken perfectly. I also discovered it's great after three glasses of wine & a wobble home on the bike. So happy to find it in the fridge last night!  

Ingredients:
  • 3 stalks of lemon grass
  • 50g fresh ginger
  • 2 hot red chillies
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • a bunch of coriander
  • 2 limes
  • 2 tbsp ground nut oil (although i used vegetable oil)
  • 200g fresh tomatoes
  • 2 tbsp fish sauce
  • 2 tbsp dark soy sauce
  • 8 chicken thighs
  • 400mls coconut milk
  • 8 apricots halved

Method:

Peel and discard the outer leaves of the lemongrass- they can sometimes be tough. Cut the inner leaves into short lengths and put in the food processor. Peel the ginger, then slice into thin pieces and add to the lemongrass. Chop the chillies, discarding their stems and add to the ginger with the peeled garlic. Roughly chop the stems and half of the leaves of the coriander to add to the food processor, reserving the rest for later.

Grate the lime zest into the food processor, reserving the limes for later, then turn the machine on and let it chop everything to a coarse paste. Add a little groundnut oil and scrape the sides down with a spatula if it sticks. Add the fish sauce, soy sauce and the tomatoes and process for a few seconds longer.

Warm a further tablespoon of groundnut oil in a deep pan over a moderate to high heat and use it to brown the chicken pieces, turning them so they colour nicely on both sides. Lift the chicken pieces out and pour away anything more than a tablespoon of oil and juices. Add the spice paste and let it fry over a moderate heat for two minutes till fragrant, stirring almost constantly, then return the chicken to the pan. Pour over the coconut milk, stir, cover and leave to simmer over a low heat for 15-20 minutes. Meanwhile halve and stone the apricots and leave them to one side.

Test the chicken for doneness making certain it’s cooked right the way through, then add the apricots. Leave to simmer for a few minutes, then add the juice of the limes and the reserved coriander leaves.