Tuesday 16 June 2009

vegetarian sausages

I fell in love, properly, with cooking when I was about 12. My mum had this fabulous recipe book - the name escapes me at present, but I think it might have been Green Feasts? I would pour over it page by glorious page and taste the flavours with my eyes. The only recipe I ever actually produced from the pages of that book was a vegetarian sausage. It was a long time ago, so I've forgotten the exact recipe, but the essentials are unchanging and easily replicated.

You will need:

Approximately 3/4 of a standard size loaf of bread
1 free range organic egg
1 corn (on the cob)
1 small cooking onion
3 garlic cloves
1 cup loosely packed flat leaf parsley
1 small red bell pepper
1/2 cup cheddar cheese, grated and loosely packed (optional)

Olive oil for frying.

What to do:


Preheat the oven to 180'c.

In a food processor, wizz the bread until you have coarse breadcrumbs. Remove half of the mixture and put it in a mixing bowl. Quarter the onion and peel the garlic cloves. Add them to the processor and blitz until a moist mixture forms. Add the parsley and pulse for a few seconds. Transfer the wet bread and onion mixture to the large mixing bowl. Slice the corn from the cob and add to the mixing bowl, as well as the bell pepper, diced. If using, add cheddar cheese.

Whisk the egg in a small bowl and add to the bread mixture. Season with salt and pepper. Use your hands to form sausages - the above quantities should yield about 10 - 12 small and fat sausages.

Fry over moderate heat, rotating every few minutes until properly sealed. Transfer to an oven tray and finish off for about 15 minutes.

Yummy and healthy breakfast. dd.x

Thursday 11 June 2009

cooking challenge twenty: slow roast leg of lamb with crushed chickpeas


As you can probably tell from the above, I seem to have leaped over the final hurdle in my meat eating quest with great gusto. Now, I have made friends with my local butcher and am working my way through the various cuts of meat at my disposal. Amazing.

This roast took ALL day. I modified a recipe from the most recent Australian Gourmet Food & Travel (aka, my bible).

You will need:

1 x leg of lamb (mine was about enough for 6 people)
3 lemons
2 x 400g chickpeas
1/4 cup olive oil
1 litre chicken stock
50g dried harissa
150ml Olive Oil
250ml water
1 cup loosely packed flat leaf parsley
1 spanish onion, roughly diced

What to do:

Mix about 100ml olive oil with the harissa, and the juice and zest from two lemons. Chop what is left of these lemons and scatter them over the base of a deep roasting pan. Rub the harissa mix over the skin, place the lamb on top of the sliced lemon and leave to absorb the flavours for around 3 hours. It's winter here, so I left it covered, on my bench top, but if you're cooking somwhere hot, refrigerate it for 2 hours then remove for 1 hour.

Preheat the oven to 150'c. Pour 250ml cold water into the base of the pan. Cover with foil. Roast for 3 hours, then turn the temp down to 120'c and continue to roast for 3 - 4 hours.

Ok, for the crushed chickpea side dish, strain and rinse the chickpeas, then add them to a deep saucepan with the litre of chicken stock. Simmer for 30 minutes. Ladle out 1 cup of stock, and then strain the chickpeas. Add them and the reserved stock to a food processor and "pulse" for a few seconds until they are slightly mashed.

Fry off the onion in a little oil. Add the chickpeas and parsley, and the juice from the final lemon. Drizzle with remaining olive oil before serving. Season with salt and pepper.

When this is done, the meat will literally fall from the bone. It is the most tender and succulent way to roast meat that I've ever tried. I can't wait to attempt this with pork belly, and I'm also going to try using red wine or ale instead of water.

Will I make this again? Oh, yes. I am going to be making this as often as time permits!!

Friday 5 June 2009

long, lazy days

Hi fellow foodies.

I apologise for my absence.

I haven't fallen into the abyss. Though for my northern hemisphere friends, Australia might well seem like it.

My internet access is patchy. My kitchen appliances even more so. I am a food loving blogger without access to all the things that make me tick most.

However, I have taken up a blissful lifestyle by the beach, and the regular recipes should resume within the week.

I haven't desserted my challenge. Just the opposite. This low-fi time has provided a great opportunity to peruse endless cook books and fantasise hungrily about what's to come, what's to learn.

love, dd.x