Archive for the ‘preserved food’ Category

Woodfire Preserved Fig & Strawberry Jam Dessert Pizza

I LOVE pizza…yup…no two ways about it!  But in saying that I’ve got to make it clear that I won’t eat what’s served up at places like Dominoes and Pizza Hut etc!  The only pizza that i’ll eat that I don’t make myself is from Good Life Organic Pizza here in Adelaide.  They make divine pizza but they’re NOT cheap.  So, to satisfy my love of pizza, I’ve been making my own for a while now.  I bought a pizza stone to go in my gas oven and started trying different dough recipes.  More recently, I’ve been cooking them in our outdoor woodfire oven.

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Dried Herbs

 I love fresh herbs!  It’s satisfying being able to walk out my back door and cut fresh herbs as I need them.  But invariably, winter sets in and the herb garden becomes somewhat dormant.  And that’s where drying the bounty grown throughout summer comes into its own!

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Lamb Tagine with Preserved Lemon

This is a recipe that is a hybrid of two others that were a little dull individually but together make a great tagine of lamb! If you are using a traditional tagine, don’t forget to soak it in water for an hour before you begin cooking.
Tagine of Lamb

Ingredients

1 kg of trimmmed lamb pieces cut into generous mouth sized portions (a little bit of fat is fine, but get rid of any sinew)
Olive oil (enough to brown meat & onions with)
2 onions chopped
4 cloves of garlic minced/chopped
1 tbsp of each paprika and ground cumin
1 tsp of each ground turmeric, ground cinnamon, and minced/finely grated fresh ginger
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
1/8 tsp ground cardomom
2 1/2 cups of chicken broth/stock (use stock cubes dissolved in water if you have no stock on hand)
1 can of diced tomatoes or 4-5 ripe med fresh diced tomatoes (I always use fresh when possible)
2 tbsp tomato paste
salt & pepper to taste
1 bunch coriander (cut bunch so that leaves and stalks with roots are separated. Finely chop stalks & roots then set aside. Roughly chop leaves and set aside)
1/4 or 1/2 preserved lemon (remove flesh from skin & rinse skin then chop finely. If you love the flavour you can use both skin & flesh, but rinse flesh really well. If you use both 1/4 of lemon should be fine)
handful of raisins
handful of slivered or shaved almonds
3-4 mdm pototoes (adjust for how many pple you are serving) Peel, and quarter
3-4 carrots (adjust for how many pple you are serving) Peel and slice diagonally into thick chunky slices)
Note 1: Pumpkin, sweet potato, red capsicum, green beans all go well with this dish. Add smaller veg to pot closer to serving time.
Note 2: Use a diffuser between your tagine and heat source to distribute the heat more evenly and reduce the risk of cracking your tagine.

Text Color
Method

1. Heat olive oil. When hot enough, brown lamb.
2. Add onions garlic and cook over medium heat til soft; stir often. Add paprika, cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, ginger, cayenne, and cardomom; stir until very fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add tomatoes, broth/stock, preserved lemon, coriander roots & tomato paste. Bring to the boil over high heat. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer, stirring occassionally, until lamb is tender when pierced; about 1 hours.
3. Add large vegetables & cook til almost tender.
4. 10 minutes before you are ready to serve add any small vegetables, almonds, and raisins.
5. Just before serving add remainder of coriander.
Serve with rice or couscous. Enjoy!
 

Lemons, Lemons, Lemons

Well my two little myer lemons are in the bottle on the left..along with a ring-in to fill the botte LOL…and i used bought lemons to make the jar of lemon curd.
I made Stephanie Alexander’s banana bread recipe to make banana bread which goes with lemon curd, like you wouldn’t believe. Toast the banana bread and you’ll be in lemon curd heaven. The lemon curd recipe is from Stephanie Alexander as well; it’s a ‘quick’ version of lemond curd; it’s delish!
I bought a moroccan tajine this weekend and used it for the first time tonight…we had moroccan lamb tagine; it was yum. I’ll take a pic for the next blog…hopefully with lamb tagine in it.
Tomorrow i’m making poussin vegetable casserole…will definately be taking pics of that one.
i’m really looking forward to being able to use my own preserved lemons in cooking. They’ve been getting progressively more expensive. Yesterday i bought a bottle and it cost me $15.90…NO JOKE. Isn’t that rediculous??? Well that made me mad and i decided that each time i empty a bottle of preserved lemons i’ll make up a new one. At least then i’ll have a little stockpile going on. I refuse to pay that rediculous price for preserved lemons.
okay that’s it for us here in Adelaide.
xx suse
 

Preserved Lemons or Lemon Curd?

My bigger myer lemon has been slow to fruit…these two have been on the tree forever. Finally, they turned yellow and are ready! There’s lots of new fruit on the tree now and it’s starting to flower. Fingers crossed i get lots more fruit.
Now the dilemma is do i preservere these two or add a few more and make a bottle of Stephanie Alexander’s lemon curd?? Both lemond curd and preserved lemons are expensive to buy…perhaps the preserved lemons are the more expensive of the two…
 

From dried capsicums to capsicum powder.

I’ve been wanting to make chilli pasta for a long time now. I once bought some at a rediculous price because i wanted to see what it tasted like…well it was really yummy!

So now i’m going to make some using the capsicum powder; i’m using that because i don’t want to use hot chilli’s. I bought some flaked dried capsicums and then used my bamix dry mill to make the powder….all ready to go!

Tonight is pasta making night; i’ll be making lasagne sheets and chilli pasta.

Chloe is in Berlin at the moment. She emailed overnight.
She said it’s one of her most favourite places on her travels so far.
We also got a postcard from her;
i’ll take a picture of it because it’s just fabulous.
She’s used water colour postcards
and drawn a wonderful picture of Berlin. It’s stunning.
I’ll be putting that in my journal; it’s a keeper.
I love her art…I still live in hope that oneday she’ll give
me her John Lennon inspired painting…she reckons it
will never happen LOL, but i still have hope hahaha
 

Tomatoes; baby lemons, mosaics and chillies


Whilst doing our usual weekly shop at Central Markets i spotted boxes of wonderfully ripe, fresh small tomatoes. I bought two boxes. Each are 10kg and were $10. I got 9 bottles of sauce out of the first box which works out to cost $1.10 each bottle. With the second box i’m going to make: pizzaola sauce; basil sugo pasta sauce and a oregana & basil pasta sauce

I made up some nifty labels for all of the bottled items that i’m making with the tomatoes.

My Myer lemon has had a baby! i’m soooo excited. Now there are two lemons on the tree.

The red cherry chillies are growing at an astounding rate. I’ve got plans for the crop which is prolific: freezing; salsa; and chilli powder. This is the first chilli from the bush since it has matured enough to fruit. Nigel is just about to eat it with dinner; i’ll let you know what he thinks of it since i’m not the chilli eater!!

The mosaic is coming along really well. i got bored doing all the orange trunk so i moved on to the red fruit and green leaves.

Chloe arrived in Munich in the wee hours of last night. She said it was snowing and very beautiful. Chloe will be travelling close to where i was born: Rinteln. It’s a very odd feeling having my daughter travelling close to where i was born! LOL
Will let you all know where she is as she travels.
xx
Sue