cookbook challenge

Greek shortbread

Cookbook Challenge: Week 5
Theme: Greek
Recipe: Greek shortbread
From: The Australian Women’s Weekly – The Complete Book of Modern Entertaining

Second recipe: Lamb skewers with tzatziki
From: Darina Allen’s Ballymaloe Cookery Course

Greek shortbread

This weekend, Rilsta from My Food Trail invited me, Kat from Spatula, Spoon & Saturday, and Arale79 from Meals on Budget over to do some baking. The idea was to bring a recipe, ingredients, do the baking, and then eat our creations!

I decided to kill two birds with one stone, and do Greek Shortbread so I could tick off my Cookbook Challenge recipe.

After a delicious lunch of Rilsta’s moussaka, and Arale’s watermelon and feta salad, Kat and I headed into the kitchen to make some baked goods. Let me tell you, Rilsta’s kitchen is the cleanest, most organised kitchen I have ever been in. Since I’m a rather messy cook/baker, I had to try my best not to get flour, butter or sugar everywhere!

Fortunately, the shortbread were easy to make, so there wasn’t much of an opportunity to make a mess. However, I over softened the butter, so the shortbread dough was EXTREMELY soft, and very difficult to shape. I mostly plopped bits of dough on to the tray and poked them into rough crescent shapes!

When the biscuits were ready, they were meltingly soft and crumbly. I think that may have been because the butter was so soft. I didn’t do very well coating them in icing sugar though – whoops!

We finished off the afternoon with Kat’s delicious semolina and yoghurt syrup cake and some home made ice cream from Rilsta. It was a fun day, thanks gals!

Lamb skewers with tzatziki

When I got home, I managed to do another recipe for the Challenge – lamb skewers with tzatziki. I thought the lamb was tasty, but I do wish I had tasted the marinade before adding lemon juice. I thought it was a touch on the sour side. But apart from that, the lamb was nice and tender and I would try the marinade again.

See previous Cookbook Challenge posts here.

Update: Head to My Food Trail to see the round up of other people’s posts this week.

Greek shortbread

Greek Shortbread
From The Australian Women’s Weekly – The Complete Book of Modern Entertaining

250g unsalted butter, chopped and softened
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup (80g) pure icing sugar, sifted
1 egg yolk
1 tablespoon brandy
1/2 cup (70g) finely chopped toasted flaked almomnds
2 cups (300g) plain flour
1/2 cup (75g) self-raising flour
pure icing sugar to coat

Preheat the oven to 160°C.

Beat the butter, vanilla extract and sugar in an electric mixer until it is pale and fluffy.

Beat in the egg yolk and the brandy.

Stir in the almonds and the sifted flours.

Take a tablespoon of dough and roll it into a sausage shape, tapering slightly at the ends. Bend it into a crescent. Repeat with the rest of the dough.

Place the shortbread on a lightly greased oven tray and bake for about 15 minutes or until slightly browned. Leave on the trays for 5 minutes to cool.

Dust the shortbreads heavily with sifted icing sugar and cool on a rack.

Lamb skewers with tzatziki

Lamb skewers with tzatziki

Adapted from Darina Allen’s Ballymaloe Cookery Course

Serves 8

900g lean shoulder or leg of lamb

For the marinade:
300ml natural yoghurt
2 cloves crushed garlic
2 teaspoons ground corinader
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
juice of 1/2 lemon (I recommend tasting your marinade to see how sour it is before adding this)

Cut the lamb meat into 2.5cm cubes and season with salt and pepper.

Mix together the marinade, and put the meat into it for at least an hour (I left mine overnight).

Drain the meat and thread the pieces on to skewers.

Grill for 7-10 minutes on a barbecue until cooked, and serve with the tzatziki.

Tzatziki

1 cucumber, peeled and diced into 3-5mm cubes
salt
1 garlic clove, crushed
425ml greek or natural yoghurt
1 heaped tablespoon mint, freshly chopped
salt and papper

Put the diced cucumber into a sieve and sprinkle with salt. Leave it to drain for 30 minutes.

Dry the cucumber on kitchen paper and then place into a bowl with the garlic, yoghurt and mint. Stir well to combine and season with salt and pepper.

Cookbook Challenge: Week 4, Beans

Recipe: Dressed cannelini beans
Cookbook: Daily Italian by Tobie Puttock

Dressed cannellini beans

Beans! I really love beans, and I would have liked to have done something more interesting than the recipe I choose, but I ran out of time this week. For some odd reason, I thought the theme this week was Greek, and I only realised it was actually beans midway through the week.

By Saturday, I still hadn’t decided on a recipe, and our Saturday was spent out in the shops on a mega mammoth Xmas shopping frenzy. By the time we arrived home, I was exhausted and really not up to doing anything terribly complicated, nor wanting to go back out for ingredients.

Doing my recipe on Sunday was out because – well, today is my birthday! And we went out to the Press Club for a massive lunch, so I knew I wouldn’t be eating dinner (blog post to come later, perhaps?).

Fortunately, when we arrived home on Saturday, I picked up Daily Italian, and the first recipe in the book was for dressed cannelini beans. Simple and easy, and I had all the ingredients at home. Done and no more thinking required.

I’m not generally a fan of cannellini beans, but these were alright! The original recipe suggested dried cannellini beans, but I substituted with canned ones for that quick and easy factor. Once dressed, the beans were tangy and tasted fresh and zingy from the herbs and chilli. While they probably wouldn’t be the star of a meal, they worked well as a side dish.

See previous Cookbook Challenge posts here.

Update: See a round up of everyone else’s posts at My Food Trail.

Dressed cannellini beans

Dressed cannelini beans

Adapted from Daily Italian by Tobie Puttock

6 cloves garlic, peeled
2 x 400g cans of cannellini beans, drained and rinsed well
3 sprigs sage
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon white-white vinegar
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
2 fresh red chillies, finely chopped
10 mint leaves
10 flat-leaf parsley leaves

In a small pot of water, simmer the garlic cloves until they are soft and cooked through.

Mash up the garlic, and add them to a large bowl with the cannellini beans, sage, oil, vinear, chillies, mint and parsley. Season well with salt and pepper and toss well to combine.

Cookbook Challenge: Week 3, Hor d’oeuvres

Recipe: Coconut Prawns
From Australian Women’s Weekly – Food We Love

Coconut prawns

The weeks are going past so quickly – we’re on to Week 3 of the Cookbook Challenge already! For this week’s theme, hor d’oeuvres, I made coconut prawns.

There is a little blurb about this recipe in the cookbook that says, “My friends are always impressed with these prawns, and the best part is that they’re easy and fast to prepare.” Now, I don’t know what crazy world the author of that blurb comes from, but I don’t consider a recipe where you have to peel and devein a kilo of prawns “fast to prepare”! The rest was easy though, so I will give them that.

Whenever I peel prawns, I like to leave the tails on. I think it looks nicer, plus I like to eat the tails – they’re like a crunchy prawn chip!

Coconut prawns

The prawns smelt so good when I took them out of the oven. And they were delicious! The prawns were lovely with the fragrant toasted coconut, and a hint of coriander and chilli. If I was served these at a party, I would be very happy indeed.

The book suggested serving them with sweet chilli sauce, but since I am not a sweet chilli sauce fan, we ate them with homemade chilli sauce that had some added chopped coriander. Alastair, Bro and I scoffed these so quickly once the photos were taken. It was definitely worth peeling all those prawns!

See previous Cookbook Challenge posts here.

Update: See My Food Trail for a round up of posts for this week.

Coconut prawns

Coconut prawns

Adapted from Australian Women’s Weekly – Food We Love

24 uncooked medium prawns (1 kg)
1/4 cup (35g) plain flour, seasoned with salt and pepper
2 eggs, beaten lightly
1 & 1/2 cups (115g) shredded coconut
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh coriander
1 small chilli, finely chopped
24 short bamboo skewers
Chilli sauce to serve

Preheat oven to 180°C. Lightly oil two oven trays or line with baking paper.

Mix together the shredded coconut, coriander and chilli in a bowl. In separate bowls, place the seasoned flour and beaten egg.

Shell and devein prawns (leave the tails on if you like). Coat the prawns in flour, shaking away the excess, then dip into the egg and then finally the coconut mixture.

Thread one prawn on to each skewer. Place in a single layer on to the baking trays. Bake for about 15 minutes, or until the prawns are cooked.

Serve with your desired chilli sauce.

Cookbook Challenge: Week 2, Indian

Vindaloo

Recipe: Vindaloo
From Jamie Oliver’s Ministry of Food

Bonus recipe: Roasted cauliflower with cumin, coriander and almonds
From Jame Oliver’s Cook with Jamie

It’s week two of the Cookbook Challenge, and this week’s theme is Indian. I had a bit of trouble finding a recipe for this theme. I do own a couple of Indian cookbooks but I had cooked from those books before so told myself I wasn’t going to look in them.

I looked through a few cookbooks before I picked up Ministry of Food by Jamie Oliver. In it was whole section on curries. Dilemma solved!

Out of the curries in the book, I choose the vindaloo recipe. I made the vindaloo paste the night before and marinated some lamb chops in it overnight.

Roasted cauliflower with cumin, coriander and almonds

The next day I cooked the vindaloo and then made a bonus recipe to eat with the curry – roasted cauliflower with cumin, coriander and almonds. It’s “Indian-ish in style” so I figured I may as well throw it in here!

The vindaloo was fantastic! The sauce was slightly sour, sweetish, and full of flavour. It was wonderfully spicy, which Bro and I enjoyed, but poor Alastair struggled a bit! If you’re a chilli-wimp, I’d recommend cutting back on the amount of chilli.

I think it’s one of the best curries I’ve made – so I highly recommend giving this recipe a go. In fact, it was better than some of the curries we’ve eaten in restaurants (toot toot goes my horn).

The cauliflower was okay, it was rather spicy and sour. It wasn’t a bad side dish, just eclipsed by the curry.

See previous Cookbook Challenge posts here.

Update: My Food Trail has a round up of posts for Week 2. See what others made!

Vindaloo

Vindaloo

From Jamie Oliver’s Ministry of Food

Serves 4-6

To make the paste:

2 cloves of garlic, peeled
a thumb sized piece of ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
4 dried red chillies
1 tablespoon turmeric
1/2 teaspoon sea slat
3 tablespoons groundnut oil (I used canola)
2 tablespoons tomato puree
2 fresh red chillies
a small bunch of fresh coriander

Spices for toasting:

1 teaspoon black peppercorns
4 cloves
2 teaspoons coriander seeds
2 teaspoons fennel seeds
1 teaspoon fenugreek seeds

Put a dry frying pan on medium to high heat and add the spices for toasting. Toast them lightly for a few minutes until golden brown. Remove the pan from the heat.

In a mortar and pestle, add the toasted spices and grind until fine.

Place the ground spices in a food processor with the rest of the ingredients and process until you have a smooth paste.

For the curry:

2 medium onions, peeled and finely sliced
4 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely sliced
1-2 fresh red chillies, finely sliced
a thumb sized piece of fresh ginger, peeled and finely sliced
a small bunch of fresh coriander, leaves picked and stalks finely chopped
4 ripe tomatoes, cut into quarters
vegetable oil
a knob of butter
800g diced pork shoulder (or other meat – I used lamb)
vindaloo curry paste as above
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
6 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1 tablespoon runny honey
Yoghurt, to serve

Place a large pot on medium heat and add a dash of oil and the butter. Add the onions, garlic, chilli, ginger and coriander stalks and cook for 10 minutes, until softened and golden.

Add the pork and the vindaloo curry paste. Stir well and season with salt and pepper.

Add the tomatoes, balsamic vinegar, honey and just enough water to cover everything. Stir to mix and bring to the boil. Turn the heat down to low, put the lid on, and let it simmer until the meat is tender.

When the meat is tender, taste and season with salt and pepper (mine didn’t need any additional seasoning, so do check it first).

Serve on rice with yoghurt on top. Sprinkle with the coriander leaves.

Roasted cauliflower with cumin, coriander and almonds

Roasted cauliflower with cumin, coriander and almonds

From Jamie Oliver’s Cook with Jamie

Serves 4

1 head of cauliflower, outer green leaves removed, broken into florets
sea salt
olive oil
a knob of butter
2 teaspoons cumin seeds
2 teaspoon coriander seeds
1-2 dried red chillies
a handful of blanched almonds, smashed
zest and juice of a lemon

Preheat the oven to 200°C.

In salted boiling water, blanch the cauliflower for a couple of minutes. Drain in a colander, letting it steam dry.

When dry, toss it in some oil and the butter.

In a mortar and pestle, grind your spices and chillies with a pinch of salt. Mix with the almonds and put them in a hot, dry ovenproof pan.

Toast the spices and almonds for a couple of minutes. Add the cauliflower and cook for a couple more minutes.

Add the lemon zest and juice and mix well. Fry for another minute.

Pop the pan into the preheated oven for about 15 minutes to crisp up.

Rice and lemon souffle

Rice and lemon souffle

Cookbook Challenge: Week 1
Theme: Citrus
Recipe: Rice and lemon souffle
From Made in Italy by Giorgio Locatelli

Hooray! It’s my first Cookbook Challenge recipe. The theme for the first Challenge is citrus and I decided to make a rice and lemon souffle.

This is not a quick recipe to make and it uses rather a few bowls. I started with the lemons – large lemons are halved and hollowed out, before being brushed with a juice, sugar and butter syrup. The lemon “ramekins” are popped into the fridge while the rice is cooked in two parts. One part becomes like a “rice milk” and the second batch is to just cook the grains until they are al dente. After this, you’re supposed to drain and discard the milk the rice was cooked in. I missed this step, but it didn’t seem to affect the end result.

After the cooked grains have cooled, the rice milk and the grains are combined with cornflour and gelatine. Next, meringue is whipped up, and combined with the rice, before being spooned into the lemon halves and baked until they (hopefully!) rise and become golden.

I didn’t have any issues with making the souffles – mine rose well and they looked very pretty in the lemons. It did take me a while to get everything together though. And as soon as the souffles were out of the oven, the race was on to photograph them before they deflated!

Rice and lemon souffle

But most importantly, how did they taste? Well, actually, I thought they were rather bland. The rice was only cooked with milk, so I didn’t think the souffle was sweet enough. Not only that, but cooking the souffle in the lemons only imparted a TINY amount of lemon flavour. It smelt fantastic while it was in the oven, but once out you could barely taste any lemon. It didn’t seem worth the fuss of making the lemon ramekins.

I think this would be better if these were cooked in normal ramekins, with a layer of rice pudding on the bottom, then some lemon curd, and finally the meringue on top. So it’s probably not something I would make again, at least, not without significant variations.

Finally, I halved the recipe below, but I had a ton of rice/meringue mixture left over. I filled 3 lemons, and still had enough for four LARGE ramekins. The souffle in the ramekins rose really well though – check it out below!

Update: for a round up of all Cookbook Challenge posts for week 1, see My Food Trail for details. Thanks Rilsta!

Rice and lemon souffle

Rice and lemon souffle

From Made in Italy by Giorgio Locatelli

Serves 6 (I reckon more like 10, but whatever)

200g carnaroli rice
2 litres milk
1/2 vanilla pod, split lengthways
25g orange juice
50g caster sugar
50g unsalted butter
3 big similar sized lemons or oranges
65g cornflour
3 gelatine leaves, soaked in water and squeezed (the book doesn’t specific what strength gelatine leaves, I substituted with 3/4 tablespoon gelatine powder)

For the meringue:
250g egg whites
190g caster sugar

Place a tray into the fridge so that it gets cold. Preheat the oven to 200°C.

Prepare the lemons or oranges by trimming each end (so that it sits flat). Cut each fruit in half width ways and scoop out all the flesh with a spoon. Discard the flesh. Place the fruit “ramekins” into the fridge for 30-60 minutes.

In a small pan, place 80g of the rice with half of the milk. Bring it to the boil, then turn to a simmer and let it cook until the rice is really soft. Blend the rice and milk with a hand/stick blender until smooth and then put the mixture through a fine sieve. Set aside.

Scrap the seeds out of the vanilla pod, and place with the rest of the milk into a pan. Add the vanilla pod and bring the milk to the boil. Add the rest of the rice, turn down to a simmer, and cook until the rice is al dente. Drain through a fine sieve, remove the vanilla pod and spread the rice out on the tray that you placed in the fridge. Set it aside to cool (but not in the fridge).

In a separate pan, warm the orange juice and sugar. When the sugar has dissolved, take if off the heat, and whisk in the butter until incorporated. Brush the inside and rims of your prepared fruit with the orange juice mixture. Make sure each bit is completely covered, this seals and smooths the insides so that the souffle doesn’t catch as it rises.

Lay the fruit upside down on a tray and place it back into the fridge for about 5 minutes to drain off any excess syrup.

With a knife, chop through the cooled rice grains to produce finer pieces. Place into a bowl.

Put the reserved rice “milk” back on the heat, keeping back 4 tablespoons. Add the cornflour to this milk.

When the rice milk comes up to the boil, add the cornflour mixture, stirring all the time. Cook for about a minute.

Remove from the heat and add the gelatine. When it has dissolved, pour the mixture over the ice grains, stirring all the time as it will be very thick.

Next, make the meringue. Whisk the egg whites in a mixer until soft peaks form. Add the sugar slowly, until the whites form stiff peaks.

Fold a third of the meringue into the rice mixture. Add the rest of the meringue to the rice mixture and fold in lightly. Don’t overwork it.

Spoon the mixture into your prepared fruit, to about 1/2cm below the rim. Bake them in the oven for about 8 minutes, or until puffed up and golden.

The Cookbook Challenge!

In an effort to use my cookbooks more (many of which I have never cooked from…!), I have joined the Cookbook Challenge, organised in collaboration with Rilsta from My Food Trail, Kat from spatulaspoonandsunday and Iron Chef Shellie.

There are 52 weeks to the challenge, with a different theme set each week. The challenge is to cook a new recipe each week from our cookbooks. The recipe needs to relate to the theme for that week.

Week 1 of the 52 week challenge starts on Monday (tomorrow!) and the theme is citrus.

Check out Rilsta’s post for more details. Join us!

The weeks and themes are as follows:

Week 1 Monday 16/11/2009 Citrus
Week 2 Monday 23/11/2009 Indian
Week 3 Monday 30/11/2009 Hor d’oeuvres
Week 4 Monday 7/12/2009 Beans
Week 5 Monday 14/12/2009 Greek
Week 6 Monday 21/12/2009 Christmas
Week 7 Monday 28/12/2009 Soft
Week 8 Monday 4/01/2010 Sweet
Week 9 Monday 11/01/2010 Berry
Week 10 Monday 18/01/2010 Cool
Week 11 Monday 25/01/2010 Mixed
Week 12 Monday 1/02/2010 Eggs
Week 13 Monday 8/02/2010 Love
Week 14 Monday 15/02/2010 Japanese
Week 15 Monday 22/02/2010 Muffins
Week 16 Monday 1/03/2010 Noodles
Week 17 Monday 8/03/2010 Vietnamese
Week 18 Monday 15/03/2010 BBQ
Week 19 Monday 22/03/2010 Rice
Week 20 Monday 29/03/2010 Tangy
Week 21 Monday 5/04/2010 Thai
Week 22 Monday 12/04/2010 Red
Week 23 Monday 19/04/2010 Leaf
Week 24 Monday 26/04/2010 Chocolate
Week 25 Monday 3/05/2010 Silky
Week 26 Monday 10/05/2010 Green
Week 27 Monday 17/05/2010 Insect
Week 28 Monday 24/05/2010 Breakfast
Week 29 Monday 31/05/2010 Blue
Week 30 Monday 7/06/2010 Baked
Week 31 Monday 14/06/2010 French
Week 32 Monday 21/06/2010 Potato
Week 33 Monday 28/06/2010 Seafood
Week 34 Monday 5/07/2010 Soups
Week 35 Monday 12/07/2010 Spanish
Week 36 Monday 19/07/2010 Comfort food
Week 37 Monday 26/07/2010 Hearty
Week 38 Monday 2/08/2010 Spice
Week 39 Monday 9/08/2010 TV Chefs
Week 40 Monday 16/08/2010 Apple
Week 41 Monday 23/08/2010 Celebration
Week 42 Monday 30/08/2010 Bird
Week 43 Monday 6/09/2010 Crunchy
Week 44 Monday 13/09/2010 Chinese
Week 45 Monday 20/09/2010 Raw
Week 46 Monday 27/09/2010 Cup
Week 47 Monday 4/10/2010 Italian
Week 48 Monday 11/10/2010 Bread
Week 49 Monday 18/10/2010 Ice
Week 50 Monday 25/10/2010 Picnic
Week 51 Monday 1/11/2010 Creamy
Week 52 Monday 8/11/2010 Outdoors


Books I haven’t cooked from yet… eep!!