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| hot-smoked salmon salad with mustardy crushed new potatoes and summer green vegetables |
hot-smoked salmon salad with mustardy crushed new potatoes and summer green vegetables
a cooling summer courgette soup
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| a cooling summer courgette soup |
mouthwatering velvet chicken and summer vegetable stir fry
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| velvet chicken |
some are hot and some are not! padrón peppers: the vegetable equivalent of russian roulette!
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| tapas: padrón peppers |
It is said that one in 20 padrón peppers is a hot one. In Galicia there is a saying "Os pementos de Padrón, uns pican e outros non," which means "padrón peppers, some are hot and some are not." So try them if you dare!
artichoke heart salad with preserved lemon and honey dressing
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| artichoke heart salad with preserved lemon and honey dressing |
Here comes the sun, here comes the sun
And I say it's all right
Here comes the sun, here comes the sun
It's all right, it's all right
George Harrison, 1969
I think I may have had an ancestor who was an Inuit or more likely a Viking, or perhaps just some kind of troglodyte who never saw the light of day. Because even with the best will in the world, total sun block cream, hats, scarves and plenty of iced water, I just can't spend too much time in the sun or it's a trip to A+E for me - just me and my minor case of sunstroke. Which is all a bit sad really.
poached cherry, roasted balsamic red onions and goat's cheese salad with cherry vinaigrette
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| poached cherry and goat's cheese salad with cherry vinaigrette |
In itself, this is not a problem. Unless you are like me; you write a food blog and have set yourself the challenge of getting out of a culinary rut (number one in my culinary New Year's resolutions). I had assumed that no-one would want to read the same old, same old, with my minor tweaks and fol-de-rols.There are also times when frankly I had tinkered too far and the food was only fit for the compost heap. (But let that be our little secret.)
nigel slater's baked tomatoes (and a few baked sweet peppers) with fragrant spices and coconut
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| Nigel Slater's baked peppers with tomatoes, spices and coconut |
(it shouldn't work but it does)
Nigel Slater's recipes are often seductive in their simplicity. The Kitchen Diaries II recipe simply entitled tomatoes, spices, coconut is the perfect case in point. Although I have to confess to being a teensy bit perplexed by his addendum ("shouldn't work but it does").
Why shouldn't it work? Is it because Nigel has stuffed tomatoes with well, yet more tomatoes?
It can't be because of a gorgeous combination of onions, garlic, fresh ginger, mustard seeds, peppers, cherry and vine tomatoes, red chilli, turmeric and coconut milk? Can it? No, of course not!
yotam ottolenghi's baharat-spiced beef and lamb meatballs with lemony broad beans
Yotam Ottolenghi's beef meatballs with lemony broad beans |
The meatballs are freshened with a zingy mixture of fresh herbs, including dill, coriander, mint and parsley. I ran out of dill and used some chopped fennel tops, which is why the meatballs in my photo are strewn with spiky herb fronds. Delicious none-the-less.
yotam ottolenghi's baharat spice mix
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| Yotam Ottolenghi's baharat spice mix |
I was planning on making the beef and lamb meatballs with lemon broad beans from Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi's superb Jerusalem cookbook. The meatballs are spiced with fragrant baharat, which you can buy from the Ottolenghi online store. However the recipe is so easy and I do have a spice grinder, that it seemed easier to make it myself.
an english potherb and soft cheese pie, with a little help from yotam ottolenghi
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| an english potherb and soft cheese pie |
One of my absolute favourite things to bring to a picnic, or indeed any party, is spanakopita, a cheese and herb filo pie (or little triangles) from Greece and popular in many forms around the Mediterranean and Middle East.
foxes at play
I realise that foxes can be a bit controversial - love them or hate them. But I defy anyone not to enjoy this!
My particular favourite bit is about 40 seconds in, when the littlest cub loses his footing, plonks to the ground, a bit like Eeyore, and sticks his nose in the air, enjoy the brisk breeze!
My particular favourite bit is about 40 seconds in, when the littlest cub loses his footing, plonks to the ground, a bit like Eeyore, and sticks his nose in the air, enjoy the brisk breeze!
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