What do you do when your uncle buys you a 1.5kg bag of Craisins for Christmas?
My solution, is adapting Jamie Oliver's 'rosemary rasin' bread.
refer to this recipe
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/jamie-oliver/rosemary-and-raisin-bread-recipe/index.html
The only problem/ concern I had was the cook time, so I just let it cool completely in the oven to do a little extra passive cooking.
My favourite combo for this was served with Saint Agur french cheese (not cheap at $90+ a kg).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Agur_Blue
Welcome back to KATSCUISINE. After a sabbatical I'm back with fresh ideas and new recipes. As a new mum to my gorgeous twins I am trying to juggle cooking new and improved low fat and low sugar recipes, with feeding and playing with babies. This is the next evolution, come and join me.
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New postings as they happen
28 December 2011
the simple things in life part 2
Continuing on my Alain Ducasse adventure comes 'light pesto' pasta.
This is an astonishingly simple recipe, it takes no time at all.
All you need is 4 peeled cloves of garlic, 20g of freshly grated Parmesan cheese, 30g of pine nuts, 2 bunches of basil, 6 tbsp of water, 6 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil.
Cut the garlic cloves in half and remove the little green sprouty bit from the centre.
Meanwhile, put a pot of water on to boil, once boiling add plenty of salt then the pasta of choice (Alain uses pappardelle, but fettuccine or whatever) cooking according to the packet instructions.
While the pasta is boiling, toast 40g of pine nuts and then place on paper towel to cool.
Grate 20g of fresh Parmesan and set aside.
Drain the pasta and then put in in a large fry pan over medium heat and add a couple tbsp of the pest along with the extra Parmesan and pine nuts to heat the pesto through.
That's it, serve in the pan or on a platter.
yummo.
I served this pasta with a little salad of home grown mignonette lettuce, home grown cucumbers, and a little red onion, dressed with salt, pepper, lemon juice and a splash of olive oil.
This is an astonishingly simple recipe, it takes no time at all.
All you need is 4 peeled cloves of garlic, 20g of freshly grated Parmesan cheese, 30g of pine nuts, 2 bunches of basil, 6 tbsp of water, 6 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil.
Cut the garlic cloves in half and remove the little green sprouty bit from the centre.
- Place 3 of the cloves (6 halves) into boiling water for 2 minutes.
- Put the remaining fresh garlic clove along with the blanched cloves, pine nuts, Parmesan and basil (I would recommend tearing the basil into pieces before bashing) into a mortar and pestle and combine to a traditional pesto consistency. (I cheated a little, I wasn't achieving the required consistency and so I abandoned the pestle and mortar in favour of my handy Cuisinart moulie).
- Add the water and olive oil, continuing to bash or blitz, as is your preference.
- season with salt and pepper, then put in a jar in the fridge to keep the flavours fresh. If you leave it on the bench the basil can loose it's 'ozone' (thanks Rick) freshness.
Meanwhile, put a pot of water on to boil, once boiling add plenty of salt then the pasta of choice (Alain uses pappardelle, but fettuccine or whatever) cooking according to the packet instructions.
While the pasta is boiling, toast 40g of pine nuts and then place on paper towel to cool.
Grate 20g of fresh Parmesan and set aside.
Drain the pasta and then put in in a large fry pan over medium heat and add a couple tbsp of the pest along with the extra Parmesan and pine nuts to heat the pesto through.
That's it, serve in the pan or on a platter.
yummo.
I served this pasta with a little salad of home grown mignonette lettuce, home grown cucumbers, and a little red onion, dressed with salt, pepper, lemon juice and a splash of olive oil.
the simple things in life
After Christmas and days of over indulgence, and more left overs than you can poke a stick at I'm yearning for some simple pleasures.
Thus we welcome Alain Ducasse, and his amazing cookbook 'Nature. Simple, Healthy and Good'.
From this philosophy I have made a Caprese salad from my home grown tomatoes, a mixture of heirlooms and cherry toms, a ball of buffalo mozzarella, basil from the garden and a balsamic glaze, with the obligatory swirl of extra virgin olive oil.
My tip for a sensational Caprese is texture.
Don't just dice your tomatoes into indenticate cubes, halve your cherry toms and chunky slice your larger toms.
This is a celebration of seasonal produce, home grown veggies and the scent of summer in the air.
perhaps the other important piece of advice, which should go without saying is seasoning.
Use salt and pepper. Salt and tomatoes are like potatoes and duck fat, an unbeatable combination.
Enjoy, because I certainly will.
Thus we welcome Alain Ducasse, and his amazing cookbook 'Nature. Simple, Healthy and Good'.
From this philosophy I have made a Caprese salad from my home grown tomatoes, a mixture of heirlooms and cherry toms, a ball of buffalo mozzarella, basil from the garden and a balsamic glaze, with the obligatory swirl of extra virgin olive oil.
My tip for a sensational Caprese is texture.
This is the first of my heirlooms to ripen, not the prettiest, but she sure is tasty. |
This is heirloom number 2. |
Don't just dice your tomatoes into indenticate cubes, halve your cherry toms and chunky slice your larger toms.
This is a celebration of seasonal produce, home grown veggies and the scent of summer in the air.
perhaps the other important piece of advice, which should go without saying is seasoning.
Use salt and pepper. Salt and tomatoes are like potatoes and duck fat, an unbeatable combination.
Enjoy, because I certainly will.
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