May 21, 2012

Beef, Mushroom and Ale Pie

Triple 'B'

Ale, great for pie and drinking

I love shortcrust pastry on top of my pies, but you can use suet crust, puff or flake pastry. If you aren’t a pastry making person or are short of time, ready made pastry works really well.

Beef, Mushroom and Ale Pie

Enough for 4 healthy eaters.

600g diced beef (2.5 cm cubes) (ask the butcher for beef suitable for stewing, I like to use chuck or skirt with the gristle removed. A bit of fat is good for flavour, so don’t trim this off)
2 large onions, sliced or diced
2 carrots, bite sized chunks
300g mushrooms (button mushrooms used whole or large open cup mushrooms sliced)
1.5 tbs flour with good pinch of salt and pepper added
25 g of butter or dripping or 1 tablespoon sunflower/rape seed oil
1 tbs tomato puree or ketchup
400 – 450ml ale (*I like to use a local ale)
Herbs optional (a couple of bay leaves, some chopped parsley stalks and fresh thyme or winter savoury)
1 clove garlic, chopped (optional)
Ground nutmeg optional(about 1/5th tsp)
Salt/pepper
Shortcrust pastry (400g flour will make the correct amount if you want to readjust the recipe).
1 egg to glaze top of pie

  1. Make the pastry and chill, or make sure your pastry has been defrosted.
  2. Make sure the beef is dry and toss it in the seasoned flour . It is easier to do this in 2 or 3 batches so the pieces don’t stick together.
  3. Heat 1/3 of the fat in a saucepan with plenty of room to hold all the ingredients. Add 1/3 of the meat, coated in the seasoned flour and brown gently, remove from saucepan and place in a bowl. Add the next third of the meat and repeat, adding more fat as required.
  4. Once all the meat is browned, deglaze the saucepan with a splash of the ale . Pour the tasty liquid over your beef in the bowl, set aside.
  5. Add the remainder of the fat to your saucepan and add the onion and carrot. Brown ever so slightly, add mushrooms, garlic and nutmeg if using. Cook for a couple of minutes.
  6. Now add the tomato puree and stir. Return the beef to the saucepan.
  7. Gradually add the ale until the mixture in the saucepan is covered.
  8. Add herbs and bring to a gentle simmer. Cover saucepan and cook for around 1 – 2 hours until the beef is tender. Stir regularly to prevent mixture from sticking. Add more ale if necesary, the mixture wants to remain well covered with liquid. If using skirt this may take a bit longer to become tender, but the flavour is well worth the wait.
  9. Preheat oven to 190F / 375C/ gas 5.
  10. Roll out pastry to fit top of pie.
  11. Decant the mixture into a suitable pie dish.
  12. Brush the rim of the dish with egg and gently place your rolled pastry on top of pie. pressing gently to edge (egg will help pastry seal). Quickly brush top of pastry with egg (I do this before I place the pastry on top of the pie, to speed along the process. The less amount of time the pastry is on top of the pie before it is placed in the oven the better). Make a hole in the pastry in middle of the pie to allow steam to pass through.
  13. Place in the centre of the oven for around 45 minutes, until pastry cooked through and golden.

You can make the filling in advance and chill or freeze and make into a pie as and when required.
Delicious with mash or baked potatoes and fresh vegetables.

*Oxfordshire Ales, Triple ‘B’, Extra Ordinary Bitter, from Marsh Gibbon. Delicious to drink with your pie as well as use in it. An ale ”For everyday quoffing, we traditionally brew our classic bitter to give a light nutty malt, well-hopped bitterness and easy drinking enjoyment. This is no ordinary ale.”  Available from Eynsham Cellars.
Oli from Eynsham Cellars also recommends Luberon, a wine from the Southern Rhone, made from a blend of Grenache and Syrah. “It is well balanced on the palate with black fruit aromas (blueberry, blackberry and blackcurrant) and  white pepper. It is refined with a great length. this wine will stand up well to hearty food like beef and ale pie”.

 

Banana, Apricot and Walnut Loaf

Banana, Apricot and Walnut Loaf

This delicious recipe comes from Jackie Jones, wife of Pete Jones, landlord of the Queens Head, Eynsham.
When Jackie first made the loaf for the ex deli, she said the bananas could not be too ripe! This advice is the making of the loaf, the riper the bananas the better the flavour and the keeping quality. If possible keep the loaf for a day or two before eating, quite a challenge!
I have just changed one ingredient from Jackie’s recipe. Walnuts have been substituted for the original pecan nuts, mainly because the cost of pecans has become exorbitant.

Date, apricot and walnut loaf

Date, apricot and walnut loaf

200g self raising flour
1/2 tsp salt
100g butter
150g caster sugar
100g dried, ready to eat, apricots (cut into thin strips)
50g walnuts (coarsely chopped)
100g sultanas
400g very ripe bananas, weighed with skin on
2 large eggs

  1. Grease and line the bottom of a loaf tin (22.5cm, by 12.5cm by 7.5cm approx.)
  2. Preheat oven to 180C / 350F / Gas 4.
  3. Rub the flour, sugar, salt and butter together to form fine bread crumbs.
  4. Add dried fruit and nuts, and mix together.
  5. Mash the bananas, beat the eggs and mix together.
  6. Combine the flour and fruit mixture with the banana and egg mixture. Using a metal spoon, mix together thoroughly but gently.
  7. Pour into the prepared tin and place in the oven for approx 1 hour (until a skewer comes out clean).
  8. Allow to cool for around 30 minutes and then turn onto cooling rack until completely cool.

This loaf keeps for a week in an airtight tin, it also freezes really well.

 

Tomato Chutney

Tomato Chutney

200g onion, finely diced
500ml malt vinegar
1 kg ripe tomatoes, peeled and chopped
300g apples, weight after coring and peeling, chop
250g sultanas
1 tsp mustard seed
5cm piece grated fresh ginger
good pinch cayenne pepper
1/2 tsp salt
300g soft brown sugar

  1. Place the diced onions in a saucepan and add 100ml vinegar. Simmer gently until soft. Stir to prevent sticking.
  2. Add the tomatoes and apples and cook gently until soft, stir regularly.
  3. Add all the other ingredients, bring to the boil and cook until thick, remember to stir occasionally.
  4. Taste (be careful as very hot) and adjust seasoning if necessary. Bear in mind the chutney will mature, the spice flavour will intensify a bit, and the vinegar will mellow.
  5. Pour into sterilised bottles and seal immediatly.
  6. Store for 3 months (if you can!) before using.

Tomato Ketchup

Tomato ketchup

425ml vinegar (malt vinegar is best as it helps give the ketchup a rich colour)
2 bay leaves
1 dessert spoon pickling spice
2kg ripe tomatoes, peeled
1 large onion, roughly chopped
2 large cooking apples, peeled, cored and roughly chopped
175g demerara sugar
1 dessert spoon salt
1/2 tsp of either paprika / cayenne pepper / chili (choose one, depending on whether you want it to have a kick or not)

  1. Spice the vinegar by boiling it with the spices and bay leaves for 5 minutes. Cool slightly and strain. Discard the bay leaf and spices.
  2. Gently cook the onion, apple and tomato until soft. The moisture from the tomatoes should help in the cooking process. Do not add any liquid at this point. Stir regularly to prevent sticking.
  3. Thoroughly press through a sieve. The more pulp you get through the thicker your ketchup will be.
  4. Add the other ingredients and boil steadily until thick. Stir regularly. Be careful as the mixture may “spit”.
  5. Pour into sterilised bottles to about 2cm from the top.
  6. If you want to keep the ketchup for any length of time, place the jars in a saucepan, large enough for them to stand in. Put a tea towel or some other padding in the bottom of the saucepan first. Boil for 10 minutes and then seal bottles very well, immediately.
  7. If you don’t sterilise, then the ketchup should keep for at least 1 month in the store cupboard and longer in the fridge.

Green Tomato Chutney

Green Tomato Chutney

250g onion, finely chopped
280ml vinegar (can be distilled, malt or wine)
250g apples (weight after peeling and coring)
1kg green tomatoes, skinned
1 tsp pickling spice
1 – 2 bay leaves
1 green chilli (deseeded and chopped) – optional
1/2 tsp salt
250g granulated sugar

  • Place the onions in a saucepan with 1/4 of the vinegar.
  • Simmer gently until soft. Stir regularly to ensure onions don’t burn.
  • Chop the apples and tomatoes (no bigger than 1cm square).
  • Add the tomatoes and apples and cook till soft, stir regularly to ensure they don’t burn.
  • Place the pickling spices in a muslim bag if desired (1 just put them in the chutney, it gives a slightly more intense flavour and you have to pick out the bigger ones when eating).
  • Add all remaining ingredients and boil until mixture thickens (around 30 – 45 minutes).
  • Remove muslim bag if used and bay leaves.
  • Place in sterilised jars and seal whilst hot.

When making jams and chutneys it is best to make small batches. When you make larger batches, it takes longer and is sometimes harder to get them to set or thicken
All chutneys are best if kept for at least 2 months to mature!

Plum Jam

For the best flavour and setting results it is best to use slightly under-ripe plums when making plum jam as their pectin content will be higher. If the stones are difficult to remove, it may be easier to make a plum cheese.

Plum Jam

This will make approximately 1 1/2 kg of jam.

1kg plums, stoned
1 kg granulated sugar
If fruit under ripe use up to 250ml of water

  • Simmer the fruit until soft, adding water if necessary
  • Add the sugar and stir until dissolved
  • Bring to the boil and boil rapidly until set.
  • Pour into prepared jars.

Try using mixed varieties of plums or adding some peeled and cored apples.
A little bit of orange zest added when you add the sugar and then removed before pouring into jars, gives a good flavour.

 

Plum Cheese

This is a great way to preserve plums which are a bit too tart to eat or with stones too tricky to remove when cooking.

Plum cheese is delicious spread on toast, served with cheese (like the Spanish Membrillo), as an accompaniment with roast pork, or a topping for a baked cheese cake .

Plum Cheese.

For each kilo of sugar you used you will make about 1 1/2 kilos of cheese.

Plums
Sugar

  • Place your plums in a heavy bottomed saucepan and gently cook them to a puree, add some water if the mixture starts to stick on to the bottom of the pan. If using plums with stones in, cook until flesh has cooked off the stones.
  • Press the puree through a sieve.
  • Measure the amount of sieved puree.
  • For every 550ml of sieved puree add 400g of granulated sugar.
  • Warm sugar and puree gently until sugar has dissolved.
  • Then bring to rapid boil until setting point reached.
  • Pour into prepared jars.

Plum Torte

This recipe is delicious if kept for 24 hours before eating. You can substitute peaches, nectarines or apricots for the plums. I have made this with Victoria plums and Mirabelles. The torte made with Mirabelles was my favourite, although both were delicious.

Plum Torte:

26cm cake tin, greased and lined with baking parchment on the bottom.

300g plain flour
100g ground almonds
1 tsp baking powder
300g caster sugar
4 large eggs
grated zest of 1 lemon or 1/2 an orange
1/2 tsp cinnamon (optional)
150g butter, melted and cooled
enough plums when cut in half to cover the cake tin twice
extra caster sugar for dusting top of torte

  • Preheat oven to 180C/350F/gas 4
  • Beat the eggs and sugar together until light and fluffy.
  • Mix the flour, almonds, baking powder, zest and cinnamon (if using)  together.
  • Add 1/2 of the flour mixture to the creamed eggs and sugar, and beat in gently.
  • Add 1/2 the butter and beat in gently.
  • Repeat the last 2 steps.
  • Pour 1/2 the mixture into the prepared cake tin.
  • Place 1/2 the plums over the cake mixture (you don’t need to worry about any order).
  • Add the remaining cake mixture and then place the remaining plums on top of it. You can do it orderly or higgledy piggledly – both ways will look good and taste delicious.
  • Sprinkle top  generously with caster sugar.
  • Place in oven. This takes around 50 minutes to one hour to cook. If the plums start to burn, lightly cover the top with foil.
  • Once cooked allow to cool and then turn onto a cooling rack.

This cake keeps for at least five days. It freezes well too.
It is delicious on its own, with cream, clotted cream, creme fraiche or mascarpone.

 

 

Moroccan Style Mint Tea

This recipe makes one litre.
The minty flavour is most intense the day of making, thereafter it starts to weaken.

Moroccan style mint tea

Moroccan style mint tea

Moroccan style mint tea

3 tea bags  (I used Ceylon, but you can use any tea of your choice)
1 mug full of fresh mint leaves (remove stalks and rinse leaves, press down in mug so really chokka)
3 dessert spoons sugar

To serve: ice cubes, slice of lime / lemon / orange, sprigs of mint.

  • Boil 1 litre of water.
  • Place tea bags, sugar and mint into a heatproof container, suitable to brew the tea. (It is best not to use metal).
  • Pour water over tea etc.
  • Brew for 5 minutes, then remove teabags.
  • Leave to cool, covered with clean tea towel.
  • Once cool, taste and add more sugar if needed.
  • Chill.
  • To serve, fill glass with ice cubes, pour in tea, add sprig of mint and slice of lemon or lime or orange.

 

Beetroot, Juniper and Orange Cake

Turn that extra beetroot into a luxury cake for morning coffee, afternoon tea or a summer picnic.
(Although there was intent for a photograph, due to friends popping in just as cake iced, only dirty plates and forks left!)

Beetroot, Juniper and Orange Cake

Tin size: 21cm round or 22cm/32cm oblong - both reasonably deep ( 10cm ish)

400g of grated raw beetroot
4 large eggs
200g golden caster sugar
150ml sunflower oil
1 tbs golden syrup
250g self raising flour
10 juniper berries, crushed using a pestle and mortar
Zest of 1 orange
Icing: Mascarpone with orange zest mixed in (as much or as little as you fancy!)

  1. Preheat oven to 180C / 350F / Gas 4.
  2. Grease and line bottom of selected baking tin.
  3. Beat sugar, juniper and eggs together until creamy (either by hand or in food processor).
  4. Slowly whisk in oil, and then golden syrup.
  5. Add orange zest and flour, fold in.
  6. Add beetroot and fold in too.
  7. Pour into prepared tin and place in oven for 50 – 60 minutes (cooked when light and springy to touch and skewer comes out clean).
  8. When cool, remove cake from tin if baked in round tin.
  9. When cold ice. If round cake cut in half and fill middle. If oblong just ice top.

You can add some chopped hazelnuts to the cake mixture, fold in around 75g with the flour.
If you want to be really adventurous, fill the round cake with Nutella and mix mascarpone with Nutella to ice the top of both the round and oblong cake.