Monday, 17 September 2012
Ange's Pork & Veal Meatballs
Veal is one of my favourite meats - rose or ruby veal that is. Raised outdoors, alongside their mothers, grazing & feeding naturally ruby veal is full of flavour, delicate texture and is a world away from the box raised, milk feed white veal that once earned the meat such a poor reputation. Chris & Denise at Peelham Farm do a superb job mixing it with their delicious organic pork to make the perfect blend for Italian classic.
As the nights draw in and the weather gets colder this warming dish is an ideal dinner. Easy & quick to make (all the prep only takes 15 minutes and my girls love getting their hands in the bowl to mix up the mince and rolling all the meatballs) I love the smell coming from the oven as it slowly roasts away guaranteeing succulent meatballs that absorb the delicious flavours from the sauce. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
Makes 6 generous portions
For the Meatballs
1 packet of Peelhams Organic Pork & Veal mince, 1 packet of Peelhams Organic cooking chorizo (remove meat from skins), 20g garlic puree (peel & grate on a micro grater), 140g spring onions (finely chopped), 5g salt, 50g corriander (roughly chopped), All the zest from large lemon
For the Sauce
2 medium red onions (130g), 2 red chilli’s (25g), 1 tin of Suma Organic cherry tomatoes, 50ml olive oil, 5g salt, 2 cloves garlic (10g), 250g fresh tomatoes (roughly chopped)
Method - Meatballs
Whack all your meatball ingredients into a big bowl and mix together thoroughly. Portion up into golf-ball sized pieces (you should get 18 0r so) and roll into ball shapes. Seal them in a frying pan on a gentle heat (you just want to get them nice & brown all over). Place in an ovenproof dish & pour over your tomato sauce mixture. Cook at 180 C for 1 to 1 1/2 hours or until the meatballs are soft.
Method - Simple Tomato Sauce
Finely slice up the red onions, red chilli's & garlic then gently fry in the olive oil until soft. Roughly chop the tinned & fresh tomatoes and salt then add the to pan, heat until simmering and you are ready to pour over the meatballs.
Serve with your favourite pasta, with some of James's delicious crusty baguette or Ange's favourite - basmati rice.
Dig-in
Sunday, 5 August 2012
Darren's Sweet Chilli Chicken Wraps
Darren's Sweet Chilli Chicken Wraps
Ever since John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, decided to ask his servant to bring him slices roast beef held between two pieces of bread so he didn’t need to leave the card table to dine, Britain has been sandwich obsessed. Here at Earthy, however, we like to think outside the bun when it comes to quick & easy lunchtime snacks and Earthy chef Darren has come up with a cracker.
An ideal way to use up left over chicken from the previous night’s roast these tasty wraps can be made in minutes then popped in the picnic hamper, lunchbox or just devoured on the spot.
Ingredients (6 generously filled wraps)
500g Free-Range Chicken - Darren’s favourite is Hugh Grierson Organic
70ml Amaizin Sweet Chilli Sauce
A good handful of corriander - finely chopped
50ml Free Range Mayonnaise - Stokes is fantasticly clean & fresh, Tracklements has a more mustardy bite.
3 organic spring onions - sliced
1 bag of Phantassie Organic Mixed Lettuce Leaves
1 pack Amaizin Tortilla Wraps
Method
If you are using left over chicken, clean the carcass, roughly tearing the meat into bite sized pieces. If you are working from scratch put a splash of water and a squeeze of lemon in a covered casserole dish & roast a couple of thighs (by far the best combination of flavour & value) at 180 degrees for 20-25 minutes. When they are done, allow to cool and strip off all the meat from the bone.
Next combine all your ingredients except the leaves in a large bowl, mix together & season with salt & pepper.
If you are eating straight away simply pop the chicken mix, leaves & wraps out on the table and let people build their own. If it is for later in the day get a dry frying pan good & hot then toast the wraps for a few seconds on each side (this stops it going soggy), add some leaves & a big dollop of the chicken mix, fold in the ends of the wrap then roll, burrito style, to stop the mix falling out the ends.
Dig-in
Sunday, 10 July 2011
Dirk's Paella
This recipe (except the chilli) was taught to me by my good Spanish friends in Madrid - Alberto and Carlos. Use it as the basis for fish, meat or vegetarian paellas, and like me, adapt it as you see fit. It works well at any time of year - but is best served lookwarm, outside, on a warm summer's evening, just as the heat of the day is starting to fade and the rose wine is suitably chilled.
For 4 hungry Earthlings
Ingredients:
For the spicing: 1 tsp each of sweet, smoked paprika (pimenton), turmeric, salt & a good pinch of saffron threads.
500g 'Bomba' paella rice; 2-3 peppers of any colour or shape, de-seeded and cut into thin strips; 1 small head of fresh fennel, finely chopped; 4 chicken legs and 4 chicken thighs - each chopped into 2-3 pieces; 1 spicy chorizo sausage; 250g fresh squid (cleaned and cut into thin strips); 150g 'French' beans; 1 medium hot red chilli (optional); 2 cloves of garlic, minced; 500g (total) of mixed fish (a mixture of shellfish and/or salmon, hake, ling or other sustainable white fish works well); 500ml of good chicken stock a good glug of Spanish olive oil.
Heat a paella pan and add the oil. Brown the chicken pieces all over in the pan, then remove. Add the chorizo and then the squid, and then the peppers, chilli (if using) and the garlic, turning well. Add the rice and coat well with the oil. Now add around half of the stock and mix well. Add the spice mixture and stir in. Finally return the chicken pieces into the pan and give it one final stir. Simmer gently, topping up with the stock but DO NOT stir from this point on. When the rice is almost cooked and has soaked up all of the liquid, add the french beans before covering over the paella pan with either a lid, or a piece of tin foil. After 5 minutes, add the fish and re-cover with the foil so that the fish gently steams. Cook for a further few minutes until the fish is just cooked through. Turn off the heat and leave to cool a little before serving. The ideal paella has some of the rice sticking to the bottom of the pan - this caramelised rice is almost the best bit of a paella and is often 'fought' over in Spanish households. Salud!
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
Indigo's Tantalising Tomato Recipes
Confit cherry vine tomato soup.
750g Jim Craig's red cherry tomatoes.
250g vine tomatoes
4 red onions
1/2 a head of celery
one large carrot
one bulb of garlic
generous bunch of rosemary
generous bunch of thyme
tablespoon of sherry vinegar
teaspoon of brown sugar
basil leaves and creme fraiche to garnish
Slice tomatoes in half, roughly dice red onion, cellary, carrot and garlic.
Place in a large roasting tray, add picked herbs sea salt, cracked black pepper, cherry vinegar and a very generous glug of extra virgin olive oil, mix through the vegetables.
Cover the tray with tin foil, place in the oven at 180 degrees C, leave for one hour.
Remove foil then place back in oven for 30-40 mins until the tomatoes begin to char.
Place in large saucepan, blend until smooth adding water and seasoning to taste and texture.
Finish with torn fresh basil, creme fraiche and extra virgin olive oil.
Panzanella Salad
500g Jim Craig's mixed cherry tomatoes
1 red onion
small bunch of basil
small bunch of oregano
small bunch of parsley
some old bread
3 cloves of garlic
cherry vinegar
Slice tomatoes in half. Finely slice red onion. Add a 2 tablespoons of cherry vinegar, and 3 of extra virgin olive oil, season with sea walt and cracked black pepper.
Tear old bread into chunks, place in a roasting tray with garlic cloves, not pealed, drizzle with olive oil, season and roast in oven at about 150 degrees C until golden brown.
Pick some parsley, oregano and basil and add to the vegetables.
Finally add the bread, removing the garlic cloves and serve straight away.
Perfect with white fish, or chicken.
Producer of the Month - June 2011 - Jim Craig
The Earthy Producer of the Month
Jim Craig
Jim Craig is one of the last of a once mighty breed, the Clyde Valley tomato grower. Up until the 1930’s the region was Scotland’s orchard, with acres of apple trees, some stretching back for hundreds of years. Seeing their livelihoods whittled away by cheaper English & continental imports the farmers embarked on what is still reckoned to be the biggest single investment in Scottish agricultural history – they built state of the art, water heated greenhouses of a size & scale never seen before. So successful was the gamble that, by the 1950’s the Clyde Valley was synonymous with tomato production, but just as in the 30’s, growers in the 60’s & 70’s found themselves undercut as better transportation allowed Spanish & Italian growers to deliver their tomatoes all over Europe.
Always price conscious, supermarkets squeezed the pricier, but fresher and better tasting Scottish tomatoes off the shelves. Facing this huge drop in demand dozens of the Clyde Valley growers either sold out to garden centres & nurseries or simply allowed their majestic green houses to fall into disrepair & collapse. Slowly, but surely, however, a mini revival is occurring. Spurred on by the increased consumer desire for local produce, growers like Jim are circumventing the supermarkets to sell directly to the public either at farmers markets or at stores like Earthy where the fuller flavour and firmer texture that only fresh Scottish tomatoes can provide are appreciated. Jim admits that Scottish tomatoes are now a niche product, but that allows them to specialise in heritage varieties & even expand his range to include strawberries and cucumbers.
Available from late April until early November, Jim Craig’s tomatoes are a taste of the past. So next time you are hankering for tomatoes ‘like they used to be’ try one of Jim’s.
Monday, 16 May 2011
Byam Trotter's Hot Pepper Chocolate Cake
Not content with simply creating tasty condiments, he trys to inspire you to get cooking as well. His website is a mine of cracking recipes of which this scrumptiously spicy cake is a recent favourite.
Ingredients
• 1tbs ground almonds (extra for dusting)
• 300g dark chocolate (65% minimum)
• 220g caster sugar
• 110g Hot Pepper Jelly
• 165g unsalted butter
• Pinch of sea salt
• 5 large eggs
• Icing sugar
• 20cm round cake tin (with removable base)
Method
Preheat the oven to; 180C/375F/Gas mark 5 or bottom right in an Aga
Brush the tin with a little oil, sprinkle in half the ground almonds and spread around evenly.
Melt the chocolate and butter with the sugar, salt and Hot Pepper Jelly in a heatproof bowl over simmering water or in a low oven or the top left of an Aga
Whisk the eggs with the remainder of the ground almonds and fold it into the chocolate mixture
Pour into the cake tin and bake for 30-40 mins (check after 30)
Remove cake from tin and leave on base to cool
Eat... yum yum!
The cake should be thick and a little gooey in texture.
Thursday, 13 January 2011
Celeriac Schnitzel
The Earthlings are talented & cosmopolitan bunch - outwith their phenomenal knowledge of fruit, veg & food in general, we have experts on everything from Scandinavian poetry to particle physics - which means that we get a fantastic range of recipes from our staff. This simple take on a German classic, which makes brilliant use of the unusual texture & flavour of celeriac to really make it the star of the show, was suggested by Esther Kuck (Bonus Talent - Trained Florist) one of the shopfloor Earthlings.
Ingredients
1 good sized celeriac
100g breadcrumbs
2 medium eggs (beaten)
Salt & Pepper
Method
Peel the celeriac and cut into ½ inch slices, then season each slice with salt and freshly ground black pepper, dip into beaten egg and ideally you own home made bread crumbs (the organic boxed ones we sell are good if you are feeling lazy).
Fry on both sides in butter and olive oil until golden brown. This leaves the schnitzel with a bit of crunch.
Serve with sauce hollandaise and buttered potatoes with lots of fresh flat parsley. You can also throw a handful of chopped capers through your sauce for really tart accompaniment.