Following on from last weeks blog, here are some of my favourite Winter comfort foods. Other than these recipes I also make lots of soups, stews, and meat/fish/veg type stuff, but although my man prefers the simple things, those recipes were too boring to bother blogging!
My awesome korma recipe
I found this recipe on the net and it’s really great! I make it at least every couple of weeks, either with some chicken or lamb and a couple of veggies, or just with veggies. It’s really tasty and really warming.
Diced lamb or chicken breast
Cubed veg, either sweet spud, pumpkin, eggplant etc
Green veg like green beans or broccoli
2 cloves garlic
3 cm piece ginger
1 finely chopped onion
1 tin organic chopped tomato
½ cup natural pot set yoghurt
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tbsp coriander powder
2 cloves, whole
2 cardamoms, whole
1 tsp turmeric powder
1 small stick cinnamon, whole
Salt and chilli powder to taste. Sometimes I use fresh chilli, whatever you’re in the mood for!
Mince the garlic and ginger together, place in a bowl and cover with 2 cups cold water. Set aside.
In a frypan with a fitted lid, gently sauté the chopped onion in some butter or ghee. Add the cumin and stir til fragrant, then add the tomatoes, then the remaining spices. Allow the tomatoes to reduce a little.
Meanwhile brown meat in another pan in some butter or ghee. If I’m using potato or sweet potato I fry them too for extra flavour!
Stir the yoghurt into the tomato and spice mixture, then add the meat and any firm veggies, pop the lid on and let it sit on a low heat about 20 mins til the meat is tender. Every so often lift the lid and add some ginger/garlic water and stir. This gives the right texture to the sauce.
Finally, add the green veg and allow to cook through. Serve with rice.
Pumpkin & Spinach Risotto
Make an ordinary risotto, starting with a base of organic butter and onion, then adding your home made chicken stock, seasoned with sea or rock salt. Just before the rice finishes cooking add some big handfuls of spinach. In another pan fry about 3 cups of pumpkin cut into 1cm cubes til they get a little caramelised on the sides, then stir into the risotto as it finishes absorbing the stock. Add lots off parmesan to serve.
Grilled Veg and Quinoa Salad
This is a good winter salad and great for the lunchbox the following day. It’s great with some grilled haloumi too!
1 cup quinoa
1 1/2 cups chicken stock
2 cloves of garlic
a little butter
rind of one lemon
juice of half lemon
1 or 2 tsp turmeric
a zuchini
an eggplant
some cherry tomatoes
more garlic
olive oil
Slice up the vegies, mince a clove garlic and combine with oil in a bowl, toss the veg to coat.
Mince another clove of garlic and warm in the butter in a medium pot, then add quinoa and warm through. Add turmeric and stock, bring to a boil, pop lid on and turn to lowest heat on smallest element until quinoa is cooked.
Meanwhile, grill veg on a grill pan.
Once the quinoa is cooked remove it from the heat and add lemon rind and juice and stir through. Mix the grilled vegies through the quinoa, drizzle with olive oil and serve with some fish or chicken, or a salad of baby spinach leaves.
Polenta and lentils
As a kid I loved lentils! So soft and flavoursome. The best thing about making polenta is making extra then letting it set in a biscuit tray, cutting it into bars, crumbing them and grilling or frying them into big fat polenta chips! (Which are also great for lunch boxes)
You’ll need lots of your home made stock, maybe 6 cups to serve 2 with some left over for chips, then a little more for the lentils, organic instant polenta, organic dried lentils, organic tinned chopped tomatoes, garlic, onion, carrot and celery and some dried Italian herbs. It’s also a great treat to occasionally include some free range spicy Italian pork sausage!
This one is an overnight process since you’ll have to soak the lentils, and the cooking process needs to be started early too. Once they’ve soaked for 24 hours boil the lentils til they’re mostly soft, then drain. In another pot, heat some butter and fry the diced onion, carrot and celery, then add the garlic once the others have softened. Add the dried herbs, then the tin of chopped tomatoes and cook them down for a bit. The tomatoes need to spend some time losing their acidity. If you’re adding sausages, fry them now in a dry pan, cut into forkfuls and set aside. Finally, add the cooked lentils and a little stock (and sausage if you’re using it), and allow everything to sit with the lid on over a low heat while the flavours entwine! Season with good salt.
The polenta part is really easy, just season the stock and add the instant polenta, whisking it up until it’s thick. You can add a handful of fresh chopped parsley at this point if you like. Serve onto plates, (with the lentils over the top) then immediately pour the remainder onto a tray with sides and stick in the fridge.
Polenta chips
Once the polenta has set cut into bars and cover with egg and salted breadcrumbs, then either grill or fry them in a non stick pan with a little oil. They’re good either hot or cold!
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
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