| the Tunnock Teacake mystery! |
the great tunnock teacake mystery
it's all gone a bit jackson pollock! (or when food photography goes wrong . . .)
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| our Jackson Pollock moment! |
It all went a bit Pete Tong as they say.
sausages roasted with honey and mustard dressing
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| honey mustard sausages |
party food on a stick: cherry tomatoes, mozzarella and pesto
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| cherry tomatoes stuffed with pesto and mozzarella (without their sticks!) |
summer pea soup
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| summery pea and ham soup |
this being a tale of serendipity and liquid enchantment: the velvet slipper cocktail
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| velvet slipper cocktail |
So why serendipity? Well a few days ago, I had restored an old CD full of ancient files I haven't looked at in years, because I had thought that the CD was damaged beyond repair. On it I rediscovered this fabulous cocktail, the recipe for which I had also assumed lost for good.
mezze: herby courgette and feta fritters
turkish-style stuffed tomatoes
On my mission to be frugal I had decided not to throw out some leftover rice, intending to make a Turkish or Greek rice stuffing for some kind of vegetable. I would decide on which vegetable to use when I actually got to the market and saw what was available. Of course all my frugal intentions went out the window when I saw (actually smelt first) a beautiful mound of the plumpest most scarlet tomatoes I have ever seen.
Still on the vine, you could smell their intense green clove-like aroma from about 30 feet away. I had to have them. At all costs. This turned out to be the debt of a small sovereign nation) All my frugal intentions went out the window. Well life is not too short to stuff a tomato!
Still on the vine, you could smell their intense green clove-like aroma from about 30 feet away. I had to have them. At all costs. This turned out to be the debt of a small sovereign nation) All my frugal intentions went out the window. Well life is not too short to stuff a tomato!
who’s that man?
| Heathcliffe: my favourite geius! |
To begin with let’s start with some History; I love it, Heathcliffe doesn’t. But in the same way that I use his brain to help me understand Science, he will tap my brain for historical context. So here is some of that historical context!
tip: making breadcrumbs
tunisian salad (salade meshouiwa)
| Tunisian salad (without the egg and tuna!) |
Tunisian cooking is a very rich and quite complex cuisine, with culinary influences both ancient and relatively modern, from Rome, Carthage and the Ottoman Empire, to the Middle East and North Africa. It really is a delightful combination of Mediterranean and Arab cuisine with a strong Italian and French influences, a sort of big hello from the other side of the Mediterranean.
what's in season: august
| a glut of tomatoes preserved in olive oil |
In August
When the days are hot
I like to find a shady spot
And hardly move a single bit
And sit
And sit
And sit
And sit.
Anonymous
I am rather fond of August, particularly when the sun comes out. It the perfect time to eat outdoors - preferably with an interesting selection of tapas or mezze, little nibbles of something amazing, under the vine-laden pergola while swigging lashings of cold white wine. Well a girl can dream!
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