Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Creamy Chicken with Beer

12 Chicken Thighs, boneless
2 Large Onions
4 cloves of garlic
2/3 small tub of double cream (1/3 pint, I think.)
1 glass Belgian Beer – I used Leffe Blonde, but most should do well.
2 Chicken Stock Cubes
Lea & Perrins
Thyme
Sauce (Fine) Flour.

Chop the onions and fry them up in a large casserole for 10-20 mins, until almost transparent. Stir often to avoid sticking to the bottom and burning. Towards then end, crush the garlic and add. Remove everything from the casserole and set aside.
Brown the chicken in 2 batches.
Remove everything from the casserole, and add in the beer. Scrape around a bit to get as much of the gunge on the bottom of the casserole. Add the onions and chicken back in. Dust with flour.
Make up the stock cubes in about 1 pint water and add to the dish. Add a generous helping of Lea & Perrins, and a fair bit of Thyme.
Chicken should be covered by the liquid – just. Add more beer (or water) if not enough.
Cook over a high heat for ½ hour. Keep stirring it to minimise it sticking to the bottom. Should be quite thick once done. Turn of the heat and allow to cool for a minute. Add the cream, stir in and return to the heat, although a medium – low heat this time. Cook for another 5-10 mins until the sauce is a nice consistency.

Serves 5-6 with mash, peas & sweetcorn.

Wednesday, 13 February 2008

Shredded Spicy Chicken

6 Legs of Chicken (with skin & bones)
3 Bell Peppers
1 ½ Large Onions
5 Red Chillies
Cajun Seasoning
Thyme
Lea & Perrins
Soy Sauce
Tabasco Sauce (chipotle)
1 chicken stock cube
6 Roast Tomatoes (from a jar)
¾ bottle cheap white wine
Olive Oil

Cover the base of a casserole dish with olive oil. Place the chicken in. Chop up the onions, peppers and chillies and place over the chicken. Put the Tomatoes in.
Cover liberally with Cajun seasoning & thyme. Splash in Lea & Perrins and Soy sauce (be generous). Tabasco to taste, but be generous again. Crumble the stock cube over the lot. Cover with more olive oil (I used the oil from the jar of tomatoes here).
Add the wine until it just covers everything. Stir the veg into the gaps between the chicken.
Leave overnight in the fridge.

Cook on low heat (150 C) for 4-5 hours. Add water (or more wine) if it looks as though it is drying out.

Take the chicken out of the casserole, remove the skin and bones. Tear the chicken into small pieces with a fork. Put everything into a large frying pan and cook on the hob for another 10-15 mins. Make sure there is enough oil in the pan.


Serves 6

Tuesday, 4 December 2007

Onion and Mustard Gravy

This one to go with sausages. Good, quick gravy.

3/4 Large Onion
2 beef oxo cubes
Splash sherry
Garlic Italian Seasoning
Mixed Herbs
Lea & Perrins
1 large teaspoon dijon mustard

Chop the onion into thin strips. Gently fry in oil until translucent.
Boil up 1/2 - 3/4 pint water, and add the oxo cubes.

When onion ready, splash in the sherry. Let it reduce down to almost nothing. Add the oxo stock, the Lea & Perrins and the herbs.
Cook over a med-hot heat until reduced down to the consistency you want it.
Stir in the dijon, and cook for a minute or so. Should lighten the colour and go a bit creamy.

Serve with real sausages and mash.

Friday, 9 November 2007

A sort of cheat's Canelloni

Not really sure if you can cheat with cannelloni - it's so much fuss to do in the first place. I didn't use any white / cheese sauce for this, but just piled on the cheese.

1 lb Hereford beef (not the lean stuff).
1 tin chopped tomatoes
1/2 jar sun dried tomato pesto (try to avoid the oil if possible)
2 beef oxo cubes
3 large cloves garlic
1 mozzarella
1 small pot (1/4 pint?) sour cream (Double cream should do as well, the shop had run out though).
9 - 12 Cannelloni.
Cooking wine (or real wine!) - about 1/2 glass
ketchup
Lea & Perrins
Mixed Herbs
The leaves of 1/2 small fresh basil plant. Chopped.


In a large saucepan;
Cook the mince until nicely browned (use as little oil as possible - none if possible). Add the tomatoes, wine, and pesto. I washed the jar and tin out with a little water and added that too - but then again I'm not afraid to thicken with cornflour and had enough time to cook it down. You should avoid if in a hurry.
Crumble the oxo cubes straight into the saucepan and stir in. Add the herbs, garlic (crushed) and cream. Simmer.

I had to spoon off excess oil at this point - if you've followed advice you might be able to get away with it.

Put the oven on hot.

Cook up until nice and saucy, or bored and then thicken with cornflour.

Take off the heat and leave for a few mins.

Cover the bottom of a small - medium pyrex dish with the sauce. Fill each cannelloni with sauce and put it in the dish, getting a good covering of pasta, but bear in mind you don't want to cut them when serving if possible.
Pour the remainder of sauce over the top.
Slice the cheese and cover the dish.

Cover the dish with tin foil. Pop in the oven for 35 mins.

Take the foil off, and return to the oven until the cheese is browned and crispy on the top. About 5-10 mins.

Serves 3-4

Monday, 1 October 2007

Moroccan Style Lamb

This dish does not, unlike all the ones in resturants contain coriander, or at least corriander leaf. I can't stand it.

Generously serves 2.

4 lamb steaks - chopped into about 1" cubes.
1 large onion - diced
1 red pepper, cut into about 1/3" squares
2 lamb stock cubes, made up in about 3/4 pint boiling water
1 large twig of rosemary, de twigged
1 heaped tbsp corriander seed, crushed finely
a little garam marsala
a tsp ground cumin
a little cayanne pepper, or to taste.
Lea & Perrins.
Sauce flour.
1/2 cup rice per person.

Fry up the onions, until almost transparent. Add the peppers until the onions are transparent. Set aside.
Add more oil and fry the lamb up until browned on all sides. Return the vegetables.
Give a good dusting of flour, and stir in. Add the stock and the spices.
Cook until nice and saucy; 40 mins should do it, but should really be left longer. If cooking for longer, use less flour, and put a lid on the pan.

Serve with rice.

Thursday, 6 September 2007

Sausage & Cider Casserole.

Fairly straightforward casserole.

6-8 Pork & Apple Sausages (good ones).
250g Bacon - chopped.
500ml dry cider
2 apples (try to get cooking apples, but they are so hard to find these days I had to settle for eating apples) - peeled, cored & chopped.
4 carrots - chopped.
1 lrg onion
Flour
Sage (6 leaves)
Lemon Thyme (handful of sprigs)

Cook up the sausages and bacon on a low heat for 10-15 mins, then set aside.
Fry up the onion in the same pan, until starting to turn transparent. Add more oil if necessary - don't burn it. Add in the carrots after a few minutes, and the apple just before done.
Return the sausages and bacon to the pot and dust with flour. Stir in.
Add the Cider and herbs. Bring to the boil.
Cover, and simmer for 1 hour.

I imagine this could serve 4 if accompanied by mash.

Tuesday, 4 September 2007

Tasty / Healthy Snack

3 Tomatoes
1tsp green pesto
Olive Oil
Balsamic Vinegar

1 Slice of Fresh bread


Slice Tomatoes
Cover with the tsp of pesto, olive oil and balsamic vinegar. Mix up well.

Use the bread to mop up the remaining dressing.