We had clams again on Saturday! This because I bought a few more than we could eat on Friday. I put them in a bowl of water and kept them in the fridge overnight. Three had opened itself a little so we threw them away, but 12 of them were fine, and Christopher made them into this lovely starter. It was a bit fiddly openening the shells with a knife, but worth it.
This was also the christening of the lovely escargot dishes I got for my birthday. It is definitely time for the escargots next!
Clams au gratin, serves 2
12 clams
butter
garlic
chopped parsley
breadcrumbs
Open the clams carfully with a small knife. Keep one half of each shell with the clam on it. Place these on a dish. Melt butter, add garlic and parsley and spoon ot over the clams. Place some breadcrumbs on top and pop the dish under the grill or in a hot oven (225C or so) until the breadcrumbs are golden and crisp and the clams are cooked. This only takes a few minutes. Serve with some nice bread.
On my lunch break on Friday, I made a quick visit to the wonderful Borough Marke. I found some girolles, cepes and Jerusalem artichokes that got to come home with me. I didn’t really have a plan of what to use the mushrooms for when I bought them, I just can’t resist the golden girolles. If I had known I was to use them in a nice creamy sauce with a splash of cognac, with pasta, I would have bought lots more, so the pasta – girolle ratio isn’t what it should be, but it still tasted lvoely.
Pasta with girolles, serves 2
pasta of your choice (about 250 g dried pasta)
girolles
olive oil
a knob of butter
400 ml cream
1-2 cloves of garlic, pressed
1 splash of cognac
1 tsp chilli sauce
2 tsp persillade
grated parmesan (Parmiggiano reggiano is to prefer)
chopped parsley
Cook the pasta. Heat up oil and butter in a sauté pan until it is really hot. Fry the mushrooms for a while, sprinkle on some salt and pepper. Turn the heat down and add the cream, add the other ingredients apart from the parsley, and adjust the seasoning to taste. Drain the pasta and add it into the sauce. Serve with some more grated parmesan, some nice bread and a glass of wine.
Nigella’s new series, Kitchen, is on at BBC at the moment, and this recipe is from the first episode. First you roast some potatoes in the oven, then you scatter seafood on top, add some wine and put the dish back in the oven for another 15 minutes. This was utterly delicious with homemade aioli and nice crusty bread.
Nigella’s seafood bake with potatoes, serves 2
4-5 large potatoes
1 lemon
1/2 red onion
olive oil
4 squid tubes
some large raw prawns, unpeeled
clams
50 ml white or rosé wine
persley, chopped
Don’t peel the potatoes, just cut them into 1,5 cm thick slices and cut each into four pieces. Put the potatoes in an ovenproof dish. Cut the lemon into pieces the same way as the potatoes and scatter over them. Cut the onions into pieces and scatter around the same dish. Pour over some olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Put in a 200 C oven for an hour. Meanwhile, soak the clams to remove grit. Throw away the opened ones. Take out the dish from the oven, cut the squid into rings and put them into the dish, next add the clams and prawns. Pour in the wine and add some more olive oil. Bake in the oven for another 15 minutes. Crank up the temperature to 220C if you like. When it is all done, scatter some parsley on top, maybe squirt some lemon juice and serve with aioli and nice bread.
Following the Jerusalem artichoke soup with girolles as a starter, and pork fillet with crunchy potatoes and lovely sauce, I served Nigella’s glitzy chocolate puddings as dessert at last week’s dinner party.
I expected the chocolate pudding to be good, but not as good as it was. Please, please, try this, or you’re really missing out on a fantastic pudding!
In the recipe Nigella suggests ramekins, but normal sized ramekins are a bit too big for this recipe I think. I used Christopher’s chinese tea cups that are smaller and that was the perfect size following two courses.
Break up the chocolate and melt it with the butter in a bowl in the microwave or in a double boiler. Once it’s melted, sit the bowl on a cold surface so that the chocolate cools.
Preferably in a freestanding mixer, beat the eggs and sugar until thick and pale and moussy, then gently fold in the flour, bicarbonate of soda and a pinch of salt.
Fold in the slightly cooled chocolate and butter mixture and then divide between eight ramekins, put in the oven to bake for 25 minutes.
Meanwhile, get on with the glaze by melting the chocolate and butter in a microwave (or double boiler), then whisk to form a smooth glossy mixture, and spoon this over the cooked puddings.
Decorate with Crunchie rubble: I just put the bars in a freezer bag, set to with a rolling pin and strew over the top.
Last week before I went to Budapest we had Ian and Anna over for dinner. It is always lovely to see them, so I don’t want to spend all evening in the kitchen but actually spend time with them, and that worked well with the following menu:
Jerusalem artichoke soup with girolles, parsley, garlic and shallots
Pork fillet with dijon and cognac sauce, steamed broccoli and crispy parmesan potatoes
Nigella’ glitzy chocolate puddings
I love the Jerusalem artichoke soup, this time I fried the artichokes quickly in some oil in the saucepan before boiling them, to induce their flavour. Fry the girolles in butter and add garlic and chopped parsley. Pour the soup into bowls and put the girolles and chopped shallots in the middle. Sprinkle over some olive oil in a circle.
For the maincourse I made pork fillet with a lovely sauce and crispy parmesan potatoes. I forgot to take a picture of the lovely potatoes, but promise to make them again soon and post it here. 🙂
Pork fillet with dijon and cognac sauce, serves 4
2 pork fillets (about 400 g each)
a knob of butter and olive oil for frying
700 ml single cream
3 tbsp soy sauce
2-3 tbsp tomato paste
3-4 tsp dijon mustard
1 clove garlic, pressed
3 tbsp chilli sauce
a splash (or two) of cognac
concentrated beef stock
salt
white pepper
a bunch of chives, chopped
Trim the tendons and fat off the fillets and fry them whole in butter and oil on high heat until they are nice and brown all around. Place them in an oven dish and cook for about 20 minutes in 200 C. Make sure they are cooked all the way through and take them out of the oven to rest for a few minutes. Slice the fillets into 1cm thick slices and place them in a clean ovenproof dish. Next mix all the ingredients for the sauce apart from the chives, bring to a boil and let it thicken for a few minutes. Season after taste and add the chives. Pour the sauce over the fillets and put the dish in the oven to heat up for a few minutes. Serve with the amazing potatoes (recipe to come) and steamed broccoli. Nice and simple!
Nigella’s puddings I will post tomorrow, as they deserve their own place in the spot light! Stay tuned.
Both my parents and I really enjoy food and cooking, so our first stop on Saturday was the food market on Vaci utca.
In the market hall they had lots of meat (including chicken heads, pig’s trotters, pig’s ears, big blocks of lard etc.), seasonal vegetables, lots of Hungarian sausages (the biggest brand is called Pick) and of course paprika powder. I also found saffron really cheap!
Hungarian platter with interesting sausages, ham, cheese and pickled peppers with soft cheeseSmoked salmon baguette with cucumberdressing, and ham and egg baguette.Lovely caramel sundae!
On the Saturday we made sure to eat our lunch outside and found a nice café on a square. There were mainly tourists eating there, but despite that it was a nice place. Dad enjoyed an Hungarian platter, while mum and I had regular baguettes. Afterwards we treated ourselves to amazing caramel sundaes! 🙂
For dinner on Saturday we went to Central Kavehaz on Karolyi Mihaly utca, an old style café and restaurant. The interior was amazing in grand old style and a band were playing classical music throughout the evening. The menu was Hungarian with French influences, so to start dad chose the Goulasch soup, mother had smoked trout and I chose a platter with their own cured ham, bacon and paté. The ham was excellent but the paté was only liver and I like mine mixed with other flavours, this one was a bit too ‘livery’ for me, but otherwise good.
For main course we all had different things again. Dad had duck breast with red cabbage and potato dumplings and said the duck was cooked to perfection, pink inside and crispy on the outside. Mum chose pike-perch with mashed potatoes and interesting spinach crisps, that were really nice. I had forest mushroom ravioli with spinach and ricotta with an amazing velouté. One of the best pasta dishes I’ve ever had. The ravioli wasn’t the neatest ones I have ever seen, but the taste was amazing. The mushrooms really came through and was supplemented well by the spinach and ricotta, but the veluoté was what made it so classy. Subtle in sweet flavour, silky smooth and enhanced the other flavours.
On the menu they only had three desserts and they didn’t seem to exciting, but then we discovered the pastry counter we could choose desserts from. Mum had a raspberry mousse cake, I chose the passionfruit and coconut cake (not knowing it was coconut in it), I am not a fan of coconut, but it went well with the passionfruit. Mum’s rasberry mousse was even nice but dad was the winner with his lime, mango and vanilla pudding.
We could see one chef working the whole time from our table, but the music drowned out the noise from the kitchen which was good. The waiter also misunderstood when I ordered the starters because the band (although they were excellent musicians) played so loud it was difficult to hear each other, but the quality of the food definitely made up for that blunder.
All restaurants only had Hungarian wines in the wine list, and to be honest we didn’t know much about white and red Hungarian wines. At the Central Kavehaz we tried a dry riesling which was really really good, so will try to see if I can find it outside of Hungary. With our desserts we of course had a glass of the local Tokaji.
The following evening we went to another restaurant recommended by Spotted by locals. Gerlöczy restaurant was just off the main centre (on the street with the same name), and looked very cosy and bohemian from the outside. This restaurant was also a grand café style place, but a bit more run down than Central Kavehaz. The bar was on the ground floor as well as the smoking section, whereas non smoking was upstairs where it was slightly less cosy. We only had two courses this evening, as it felt like we were constantly eating. Mum and I decided on the guinea fowl with mash potatoes and it was very rich in flavours. The mash was nice and glossy with lots of butter in it, and there was herb butter wrapped in the quinea fowl that was then wrapped in parma ham, so the butter was all nice and melted and contributed to the juicy meat. The plate looked simple, but the food was delicious. Dad had steak with peppercorn sauce and fried potatoes, he though it was really good, but a tad too much pepper in the sauce and not enough potatoes. For dessert mum and I chose the same again, a pear tarte, even though my mum really wanted an apfel strudel, but they were all out. The tarte came on its own with only a little raspberry coulis, but it would have been nicer with custard or icecream. The pastry was nice and soft though. Dad chose the creme brulee which I thought was too runny but dad liked it.
Mum and dad outside the Gerlöczy restaurant.
It was easy to find Goulasch soup, dad had this one our first evening when we just walked into the first restaurant we saw. We were dying of hunger and really tired because (both) our flights were delayed. It wasn’t as easy to find langos, but they sold them on the Margrethe island. 🙂
At the airport they had a good selection of the Tokaji wines, which was great as we only had hand luggage and therefore couldn’t buy it anywhere else. The left one is 5 puttonyos and the right one was just a really cheap (€6) one to try.
I also bought a few different Pick sausages, paprika powder, saffron and some biscuits. No point shopping for other things than food, as the selection of shops was quite poor.
I went to Budapest on Friday to meet up with my dear parents and explore the city for a long weekend. It was lovely and sunny, cooler than London, but perfect autumn weather with crisp air, blue skies, warming sunshine and autumn leaves in all its colours.
Below are some sightseeing photos. It’s a lovely city, don’t you think?
The Buda castle
View from the castle
The Széchenyi bridge
The liberation statue
Another beautiful bridge. This one is called the Szabadsag bridge
The Parliament
Greenery on the Margareth Island in the middle of Danube
Wilted spinach is one of my hangups at the moment. To be honest I first made it the other day, and it is sooo easy and yummy. The perfect side dish for the autumn. As usual when I get an hangup, I have it with everything, but it is actully a very versatile side dish, so try and see which your favourite combination is.
Wilted spinach
Melt some butter in a small frying pan or sauce pan. Add a large handful of spinach and stir it around occasionally and watch it shrink, then add some more, and some more until you have as much as you want. Be warned though, it shrinks a lot! Just season with salt and pepper and if there are lots of liquid left in the spinach just press it out in a sieve.
Sometimes I wonder if I should have been born a man. That might be an exaggeration, but sometimes I feel quite masculine. Only sometimes though. Like when I just have to have steak, rare steak, and bearnaise sauce. Not the girliest of meals, but I love it!
We eat this quite a lot, and this last time it was really really good. The steak was nice and tender, the sauce was perfect (I hate to brag, but it was) and the root vegetables and potatoes (parsnips, carrots, swede and potatoes cut into strips/wedges, baked in oven with olive oil and persillade) were lovely. Christopher bought some nice wine on his way home as well, and we had a lovely evening.
Even though I don’t know where to find this lovely meat in London, I have to recommend it to you!
First of all, try cooking pork fillet. Really nice meat and quite cheap. I haven’t met an English person yet who has bought it, but DO, I highly recommend it. It is the best part of the pig, hardly any fat in it, and it is very versatile, and of course (obviously) it’s tasty.
Simple and delicious!
The smoked version I didn’t discover until this summer when I was back home in Sweden. Christopher fell in love with the meat and of course we had to buy some and bring with us back. We have manged to keep it in the freezer until now, and that is quite remarkable.
It is best served cold or lukewarm and cut into thin slices. We had tzatziki and new potato salad with it, and leftovers became yummy sandwiches the next day together with some decent bread, dijon mustard and mayonnaise.
IF you come across it here, I hope you will do two things! 1. Buy it and enjoy it. 2. Tell me about it! Many thanks.