Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Monday, 21 April 2014

ZOO - part III



Well, and the best part... After all the fun at zoo I still had enough energy to make a quick apple pie.

Open apple pie with cinnamon cream


For the dough
·         350g/12oz plain flour,
·         200g/7oz cold butter,
·         1 egg,
·         1/2 tbsp baking powder

·         3 large apples, preferably sour, cored and sliced
For the cinnamon cream
·         200ml/7fl oz double cream,
·         4 sp sugar
·         1 tbsp vanilla sugar
·         6 eggs
For sprinkling the top

·         ½ tsp ground cinnamon
·         2 tsp icing sugar

Preparation method

1.      Preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4.
2.      For the pie, place the flour into a large bowl and mix with baking powder. Then add the butter, and slice it with the knife until resembles breadcrumbs. Add one egg and continue until all sticks together, then knead gently like a dough.
3.      Put the baking paper in the baking sheet/tray and evenly spread out the mixture, preferably with the thickness of a pound coin.  
4.      On top put the slices of apples, preferably in neat rows.
5.      You can use the same bowl now – pour in the eggs, double cream and sugar, add vanilla sugar. Whisk it all together. If you like, graind outside of a lemon and add to the mixture. Pour the ready mixture over the applea so it spreads out evenly. .
6.      Bake for 30-40 minutes in the oven, or until the top looks golden-brown.
7.      Take out, sprinkle with sugar, mixed with cinnamon, and put back in still hot oven to slowly cool off.


Even better. After all that I sat down and managed to make 24 flowers for the pheasant quilt but these I might show tomorrow only. It had been a really productive day for me.

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

The size of the friendship


Just one... A little airy meringue, decorated with whipped cream...

Like everybody, I have friends. Some are big friends, some are just friends, you know. But now I have new measurement for friendship. Cakes. LOL

My friend was coming for some girlish chat time. Great. Coffee... and what? Genius idea - some cakes (I have very good bakery just around the corner with gorgeous cakes!) So I bought home a big box of cakes to decorate the coffee table.

And then arrived my friend.
With TWO large boxes of cakes from her favourite bakery...

How many cakes you can digest in the name of the friendship?

Saturday, 25 August 2012

Ancient stone licker on my plate



I’m not a big fan of seafood. Some white fish is nice as well as salmon but that’s about it all for me. Except these three things. A flounder (Platichthys flesus), an eelpout (Zoarces viviparous) and a river lamprey (Lampetra fluviatilis).





Tonight I enjoyed my lamprey. To prepare it’s quite easy. We just roast them. We usually buy them already prepared but it is possible to do it at home if you keep some simple rules in mind. Send the family out for a day, open the kitchen window and then start only! They smell horrible when roasting. Neighbours will complain! The rest is easy! 

We use wooden buckets to make things nicer. Layer after a layer of roasted lampreys go neatly in the bucket, then a lid on top and on top of a lid – a stone adding some pressure while they cool off... And then the gourmand meal can start. A sprinkle of lemon juice and a loaf of fresh bread is all what I need for complete happiness. (It is easy to eat it into public – just cut in pieces and eat – no bones to worry about at all!)

I went the easiest way – just bought some at the mall tonight. They are not cheap - $ 30 per kilo. 

The lamprey feels firm and soft at the same time. The flesh just beneath the skin sprang to the bite. The interior flesh is like marrow: tender, slightly firm and a little mealy all at once. A thin rip-cord of cartilage running through the middle of the fish adds a springy accent. It’s oily, but different than eel and different than salmon. I do not like oily fish but lamprey is an exception. In everything. Because it’s not even a fish. 

The common name "lamprey" is derived from lampetra, which translated from Latin means "stone licker" (lambere "to lick" + petra "stone"). 

Lacking paired fins, adult lampreys have large eyes, one nostril on the top of the head, and seven gill pores on each side of the head. The unique morphological characteristics of lampreys, such as their cartilaginous skeleton, suggest they are the sister taxon of all living jawed vertebrates (gnathostomes), and are usually considered the most basal group of the Vertebrata.

It is quite commercially important as annual catch each year is about 170 tons here.
In Europe you can meet lamprey from southern Norway to France, including Ireland and the British Isles. It lives here, in the Baltic Sea and along the French and western Italian coasts of the Mediterranean Sea as well. Absent from Black, Caspian and Polar seas. Landlocked populations can be seen from Lake Mjosa in Norway, Lakes Ladoga and Onega, upper Volga in Russia, Loch Lomond in Scotland, some Finnish lakes and possibly in Lough Neagh in Ireland.

Still rare in some areas, but populations have markedly recovered following earlier pollution problems in central and western Europe.

Anyway, if you are brave and have a chance, take a try – cold, even slightly chilled roasted lamprey with some lemon juice (just some) and some bread... Yum-yum!