VJ’s Chicken Curry

IMG_2790When my parents were travelling in Canada they were taken to a very popular Indian restaurant in Vancouver called VJ’s. As a gift from their hosts they were also given a cookbook produced by the restaurant. This is the only recipe I have cooked from the book. It’s so good that I haven’t managed to cook anything else from it yet! Over time we’ve tweaked a couple of the ingredients and added capsicum and we think it’s perfect.

This curry is stunning. Delicious the night that it’s made and freezes really well too. We usually make a double batch and freeze half for a quick and easy mid-week meal. Serve with steamed rice and pappadams – delicious!

Serves 4

Ingredients
1 tbsp olive oil
1 large onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, finely diced
2 tbsp ginger, grated
1 tbsp salt
1/2 tsp ground black pepper
1 tsp turmeric
1 tbsp ground cumin
1 tbsp ground coriander
1 tbsp garam masala
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper (more or less to suit your palate)
1 can chopped tomatoes
1 kg chicken thigh fillets, skinless
1 red capsicum, sliced
1 cup light sour cream
1 cup chicken stock
1/2 cup chopped coriander

Method
Heat oil in a casserole dish over low-medium heat. Add onion and saute until golden, add garlic and saute for another couple for minutes. Add all spices and tomatoes and cook for about 5 minutes until the oil starts to separate and is very fragrant.

Add chicken and cook for 10 minutes until all white. Add capsicum, chicken stock and sour cream. Simmer for a further 15 minutes until chicken is cooked through. Let chicken cool slightly and pull apart to bite sized pieces. Stir through chopped coriander and serve with rice and pappadams.
IMG_4013Or, if you’re feeling up to it make sure you get some naan on the go to mop up all the sauce…yummo!

Runny Yolk Ravioli

runny yolk ravioliI originally came across this ravioli on My Kitchen Rules. I must say, I’m glad I could see what they’re doing, but it is fairly straight forward, just a little fiddly.

This little entrée certainly has the wow factor, but it’s also fairly high maintenance. The trick is to cook it to perfection so that when the ravioli is cut open, the yolk oozes out, just like a perfectly poached egg. It is very important that the yolk remains intact throughout preparation. There are two points when this can go wrong…when the egg is separated and when the yolk is lowered onto it’s bed of ricotta and spinach. Make sure you have a few extra eggs on hand just in case!

Unfortunately, there’s not a lot that can be prepared ahead of time. If the spinach is left to sit around for a while it will probably start to leech more water – even if you’ve already squeezed it out – and make the mixture too sloppy. The pasta dough can be made in advance (it should have about half an hour to rest) but should be rolled out close to cooking time. If the dough it dry it will be hard to stick the two sheets together to seal the ravioli – which is very important.

With all of this in mind, you’ll do great!

Serves 4

Ingredients
1/2 quantity fresh pasta
Ravioli filling
3/4 cup fresh ricotta
1 bunch spinach (about 200g)
1/3 cup parmesan (preferably grana padana), finely grated
pinch of finely grated nutmeg
finely grated zest of 1/2 a lemon
4 egg yolks
Burnt Butter Sauce
100g butter
8 sage leaves

Method

Prepare the fresh pasta dough and rest in the fridge for half an hour.

For the filling, start by wilting the spinach in a dry frypan, if the spinach doesn’t already have a bit of moisture on it put a few drops of water in the pan. Remove from the heat and set aside in a strainer. After it has cooled for a few minutes push out as much liquid as possible and roughly chop.

In a bowl, combine ricotta, parmesan, lemon rind, nutmeg and spinach. Season with salt and pepper. Don’t over-season with salt as some saltiness will come from the butter sauce.

For the butter sauce, over a medium-high heat melt the butter. Once melted add the sage leaves. The butter will start to foam and once brown flecks start to appear remove from the heat. Set aside. The sauce can be quickly reheated while the ravioli are cooking.

Divide the pasta dough in two and working with one at a time roll out to 6 on the dial, they will be quite thin. You will need 2 long sheets of pasta, at least 15 cm wide. Flour the bench well, there’s nothing worse than assembling the ravioli and then not being able to get them off the bench! At this point it would be good to get the water boiling so that once the ravioli are ready you can cook them immediately.  Be sure to salt and oil the water.

Starting at one end, about 5 cm from the end, dollop about 1½ tbsp of ricotta mixture in the middle of the pasta sheet. Make it into a nice round blob and create a small well in the centre for the yolk to sit in. Repeat 3 more times along the length of the pasta sheet, with at least 5 cm in between each.

One at a time, separate the eggs. As you separate, drop the egg white into a glass and once free of the white gently roll the yolk into the well that you have created in the ricotta mixture. If the yolk breaks in any way, discard and try again. Once all egg yolks are in place cover with the second pasta sheet. Working your way along the pasta sheet from left to right, gently press the pasta onto the filling to eradicate any air bubbles. At the edge of the filling seal the two pasta strips together. Tip: don’t press too hard as you don’t want to stick the pasta to the bench top! Once all are sealed, divide them into individual ravioli using a pizza cutter or knife.

Cook the ravioli 2 at a time in the boiling water for 4 minutes. It is best that the water is on a slow boil so it doesn’t destroy the ravioli as they enter the water. If possible, have 2 pots of water on the go so that all ravioli are ready at the same time. Once cooked, the yolk should still be bouncy to touch, remove with a slotted spoon. Once all ravioli are on their plates, pour over the burnt butter sauce, it should just be a drizzle, ensuring all plates have a couple of sage leaves. Top with a little more grated parmesan as desired.

IMG_2543

When your guests ask for seconds it would be wise to show them how long the recipe is and tell them they were lucky to even get one! It might seem like hard work but it’s worth while.

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Melt & Mix Chocolate Cake

IMG_3183This chocolate cake is amazing. I’ve tweaked this recipe from it’s original form by adding 50g of dark chocolate to the melting mixture. I also prefer to use a good quality dutch cocoa powder, usually found in the supermarket but in a different section to the standard cocoas (it higher cocoa solids content than regular cocoas in the supermarket). The cake takes on a richer, deeper chocolate flavour. If you’ve got any old bananas lying around, mash a couple up and stir through the mix to make an excellent choc-banana cake. A couple of years ago I experimented with making candied orange with oranges from Dad’s tree. Once I made them I didn’t know what to do with them! Chocolate and orange go together though…finely dice the candied orange to add to the mix and you’ll have a choc-orange cake…delicious! This can also be easily achieved by adding finely grated rind from 1 orange to the cake mixture and also infusing the chocolate ganache with orange rind.

I prefer to ice with a chocolate ganache but a basic chocolate icing also tastes very good.

Perfect if you want to whip up a chocolate cake quickly or use it to layer up, just as I did in my black forest cake.

Ingredients
125g butter
1 cup buttermilk
300g caster sugar
25g cocoa powder
50g dark chocolate, chopped
220g self-raising flour, sifted
1/2 tsp bicarb-soda
2 eggs
Ganache icing
75ml cream (35% fat)
150g dark chocolate, chopped

Method

Preheat oven to 180°C and grease your cake tin (20cm square, round, fluted or ring tin all work well).

In a heavy-based saucepan, over a low heat, melt butter, milk, cocoa and sugar. Stir until smooth. Remove from the heat. Add dark chocolate pieces, the residual heat will melt the chocolate.

Off the heat, mix through flour, bicarbonate of soda and eggs.  Stir until smooth. #If adding bananas or candied orange, stir through now.

Pour into prepared tin. Bake for 30 minutes or until a skewer inserted comes out clean.

For the ganache, bring the cream to the boil in a small saucepan. Remove from the heat and add the chocolate. Wait until the chocolate is mostly melted until stirring to combine.

Once the cake has cooled, smother it in ganache.

This cake keeps well for several of days in an airtight container.

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First day success!


Today I had my first retail experience. After approaching my local green grocer, Lean & Green, they agreed to trial some of my goodies. The order consisted of 20 croissants, 5 almond croissants, 5 pain au chocolat, 8 half dozen packets of macaron & 6 caneles. After getting up at 5am I had everything to them just after 8am. When I popped in to get some veggies for dinner at 3pm all that was left was 2 packets of macarons and a few croissant crumbs!

Not bad for the first day of trade! They are keen for another order next Friday (with an increase in pain au chocolat numbers) and we hope to be at the Rokeby market next weekend. Will keep you all posted via facebook if we get confirmation (fingers crossed).

Baguettes

BaguettesThe beauty about this recipe is that you can casually start this recipe in the morning (even if you sleep in…but not too late!) and have fresh baguettes ready for lunch. How good is that?!

If you’ve got a thriving starter but not ready to commit to sourdough in its purest form, then baguettes are for you. It is a semi-sourdough as yeast, as well as sourdough starter, is used as a leavening agent. As I said, baguettes can be made in a morning, rather than an 18+ hour ordeal like sourdough. The waiting is far more tolerable for the impatient.

Yield: 6 (delicious) baguettes

Ingredients
540g sourdough starter
680g stone-ground organic plain flour
7g (1 sachet) dry active yeast
275ml filtered water
12g sea salt

Method
Throw all the ingredients into the bowl of your stand mixer. Mix on low speed for a couple of minutes until all ingredients are combined. Increase the speed to medium and knead for another 6-10 minutes until the dough is easily stretched without breaking, it should be fairly see-through once stretched.

Set aside in an oiled container with plenty of room to rise and cover with cling film for an hour. Lift the dough out of the container and fold it over itself a couple of times. Place back in the container and cover for another hour.

Divide the dough into 3 equal portions. Working with one portion at a time, stretch the dough out to a rectangle, about 20 x 10 cm (as it’s rolled up it lengthens). I prefer to push the dough out with my fingers, the thickness distorts if pulled too much. Starting with the long edge, tightly roll the dough towards you. As you roll, you’ll hear the most delightful popping sounds as you squeeze all the air pockets out (which is a good thing). Place the rolled up baguette, seam side up, on a floured tea-towel. Bunch the tea-towel up between the baguettes so that they don’t stick together as they rise. Sprinkle with flour and cover loosely with cling film.

 

Rolling, resting, flipping, slashing

Rolling, resting, flipping, slashing

Preheat the oven to the highest it will go and place a pizza stone or tile on the middle shelf. Allow to rise for about half an hour. The baguettes should have risen by at least half, if not doubled. Very delicately transfer the baguettes to a baking-paper lined tray with the seam underneath. Slash the baguettes with a sharp knife, serrated works well, in long diagonals. Overlap each slash by a third to get the tradition “bridging” on a baguette (I’m still working on it).

Bake in a hot oven on a pizza stone for about 15 minutes. Pay attention to the bottoms so they don’t burn. The baguettes are ready once tapped on the bottom they sound hollow.

Now that you’ve mastered the baguette, you’re ready for sourdough. Go on, give it a try, you’ll be great!

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