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Archive for the ‘Recipes’ Category

After years of procrastinating, I finally glazed a leg of ham!

I started with a magnificent free range, double smoked, half-leg ham made by David at Gojak’s Meats in Haberfield.

I wanted to buy a small shoulder, or a boned out leg, but Pete wouldn’t let me – he won’t eat shoulder ham, and announced (rather loudly, in the shop…sigh) that boned ham always “tastes funny because all the connective tissues are squashed up in a strange way”.

Whatever cut you use, I do think it’s important to buy one that tastes wonderful to start with, as no amount of glazing will fix a too salty or too dry ham.  I should also point out that our ham was already cooked, so it only needed heating up in the oven.

After allowing the ham to rest at room temperature for a couple of hours, we removed the rind, scored the fat, and basted it with a mixture of homemade quince paste, brown sugar and white wine, following these instructions by Maggie Beer.  In just forty minutes, it baked to a glossy, caramelised finish.

Pete’s siblings, Katey and Uncle Steve, came over for an early Christmas dinner, and we all ate until we couldn’t move.  We served the ham with a rich potato salad (dressed with a homemade two-yolk mayonnaise), sourdough ciabatta, and cucumbers picked fresh from the garden.

Now…I just need to find recipes for leftover ham!

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How’s the Christmas prep going?

We left our run quite late this year, but we’ve finally finished putting together our mini-hampers. Here are a few last minute suggestions (which hopefully won’t necessitate a visit to the shops)…

Packaging

Our hampers are packed in paper gift bags decorated with discount store stickers…

We always make our own gift tags, and thought we’d share them with you. Just print them out on thin card and cut them up as needed (we use a guillotine). The links are here

♥ ♥ ♥

Decorating

Marilyn’s Christmas geese are a perfect school holiday project. They’re a little fiddly to assemble, but oh so very cute…

Have a look at the other Christmas papercraft on Marilyn’s website!

♥ ♥ ♥

Last Minute Treats

Every year, in the final days leading up to Christmas, I decide we need just one more thing for the hampers, and we end up making these spiced nuts.  They’re incredibly easy!  I made a quadruple batch this time (two kilograms) using egg whites leftover from a recent batch of microwave custard.

This year’s mix included hazelnuts, macadamias, brazil nuts, walnuts and almonds, but you could really use whatever nuts you have on hand…

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I have two batches of June’s vanilla kifli dough sitting in the fridge, waiting to be rolled, cut and baked just before Christmas day…

kifli 018

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I hope to bake a batch of toffee bars this week – at this hectic time, I instinctively seek the uncomplicated, and this is one of the easiest recipes I’ve come across in a long time.  For more simple baking recipes, please have a look at our recent Five to Share post…

♥ ♥ ♥

Here’s a peek inside this year’s hampers – each bag contains a jar of jam, a bag of vanilla sugar, six plum pudding truffles, and a bag of spiced nuts…

I hope you’re all having fun this December!  ♥

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I created this festive shortbread cookie to use up the dried fruit and nuts leftover from our other baking projects.  It’s a quick and easy recipe to make in the food processor, and an ideal last minute Christmas gift.

Feel free to use whatever ingredients you have on hand – the cookies above were loaded with Callebaut 70% dark chocolate callets, candied orange rind, cranberries, brazil nuts, currants, dried figs and glacé apricots.

Our second batch (below) included red and green glacé cherries, dark chocolate, glacé apricots, candied peel, walnuts, almonds, cranberries and dried blueberries…

Fiesta Cookies
(An original Fig Jam and Lime Cordial recipe)

  • 250g (1 cup) unsalted butter, chopped
  • 250g (8½oz) mixed dried fruit and nuts, chopped
  • 150g (5½oz) dark chocolate chips (70% cacao)
  • 300g (2 cups) plain (AP) flour
  • 110g (½ cup) white sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder

1. In a large food processor, combine the butter, flour, sugar and baking powder.  Pulse until combined and starting to form a ball.

2. In a large mixing bowl, stir together the fruit, nuts and chocolate chips.  Tip the dough into the mixing bowl and work the mixture together with a clean hand.

3. Divide the dough in two, and shape each portion into a log, approximately 5cm (2″) in diameter. Wrap each log in parchment paper and chill in the fridge for a couple of hours.

4. Preheat oven to 175C (350F) with fan.  Remove the logs from the fridge and slice into 1½ cm (½”) cookies, then lay them out on parchment lined trays, allowing a little room for spreading. Bake for 20 – 25 minutes until lightly golden.  Rest the cookies on the trays briefly before transferring to a wire rack to cool.

Click here for a printable version of this recipe

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The Lemdell Mushroom stall at Flemington Markets is one of our favourites, and over the years, Mary and Roula have become dear friends.

Roula and her husband now run their own fruit store on the main street of Kogarah, but we still see Mary at the markets every fortnight.  We were hosting a vegetarian dinner party last weekend, so I asked her to source some gourmet mushrooms for us.

There were locally grown pink baby oyster mushrooms…

…Huon Valley shiitake (I didn’t even know we were growing these here!) and Swiss browns…

…and the most beautiful cream-coloured Australian enoki…

We turned the Swiss browns into Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s Cambodian wedding day dip

…and combined the shiitake, enoki and oysters with white button mushrooms in  Ottolenghi’s mushroom lasagna.

Here’s the dinner menu we printed for the occasion…

Starters

Freshly baked sourdough ciabatta con semola rimacinata di grano duro

Roasted beetroot dip with cumin, coriander and smoked sweet paprika

Cambodian wedding day dip

. . . . .

Main Course

Exotic mushroom lasagne, with pink and white oyster mushrooms, Huon Valley shiitake and locally grown enoki mushrooms

Oven baked ratatouille of red and yellow capsicum, eggplant and zucchini
in a San Marzano tomato sauce

. . . . .

Dessert

Valrhona Manjari Chocolate Cake, served with
sweetened Mascarpone cream and Valrhona chocolate sauce

. . . . .

The wedding day dip was the hit of the night – a rich, spicy mix flavoured with peanut butter, curry and garlic.  It was delicious served on sourdough, but would have been equally as good as a main meal on rice.

Roula and Mary, thank you for such beautiful produce.  It made our dinner party extra special!

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As a rule, I try to buy local seafood whenever possible.

The only real exceptions I make are for some tinned fish (it’s impossible to buy local anchovies), and these Portuguese sardines.  They’re ludicrously cheap – this one kilo bag contained nine large sardines and cost just $6.90 at Faros Brothers in Marrickville.

The fish were in pretty good shape despite the freezing and transporting – apart from the tails and fins, which were brittle and mostly shattered.    They still had quite a lot of scales on them, which gave them a beautiful iridescent glow – I tried to photograph it to show you, but my camera couldn’t quite capture the gleam…

I filleted the sardines and dipped them in a traditional flour-egg-breadcrumbs mixture before shallow frying.  They were a big hit with Big Boy and Small Man, both of whom love oily fish.

Best of all, there was enough protein to feed the four of us for under seven dollars!

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