Monday, 21 July 2014

Heston's cornbread muffins.

Heston: "The spiced butter used in this recipe is great for perking up any stew or mince dish. It’s really easy to make and can be kept in the freezer for up to a month. If you find it difficult to find cornmeal for the muffins, replace with it polenta for a slightly heavier but equally delicious result. I always serve chilli con carne with fresh lime zest and juice, soured cream and grated cheese."
Serves 4
Ingredients
For the spiced butter
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1½ tsp ground cumin
  • 1½ tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1½ tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp tomato ketchup
  • ½ tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • ½ tsp Marmite
  • 125g unsalted butter, at room temperature
For the kidney beans
  • 500ml brine (50g salt dissolved in 500ml tap water)
  • 150g dried kidney beans
  • 500g cherry tomatoes on the vine
For the chilli
  • Olive oil
  • 450g minced beef
  • 1 large onion, peeled and diced
  • 2 star anise
  • 1 large carrot, peeled and diced
  • 3 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 green chilli, de-seeded and diced
  • 30g tomato purée
  • 375ml red wine
  • 50g spiced butter (or more if desired)
  • 3 medium tomatoes, diced
  • 500ml beef stock
For the cornbread muffins
  • 120g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
  • 120g cornmeal
  • 20g baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 40g unrefined caster sugar
  • 280ml buttermilk
  • 100ml whole milk
  • 2 large eggs, lightly beaten
  • 50g unsalted butter, melted and cooled, plus extra for greasing
  • 3 preserved jalapeño chillies, diced
To finish and serve
  • 2 red peppers, de-seeded, roasted and peeled then chopped
  • Salt and black pepper
  • Finely grated zest and juice of 3 limes
  • Spiced butter
  • Grated cheese
  • Soured cream
Method
1. To make the butter, heat the olive oil in a frying pan and lightly fry the cumin and chilli powder for a couple of seconds. Pour into a bowl and add the smoked paprika, tomato ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, Marmite and butter. Mix together thoroughly, cover and keep in the fridge until required (for up to a week), or freeze for a month.
2. For the beans, put the brine in a container, stirring until dissolved. Add the beans, cover and refrigerate for 12 hours.
3. Place the tomatoes and 50ml water in a pressure cooker, reserving the vines. Put on the lid and place over a high heat. When it reaches full pressure, cook for 20 minutes.
4. Remove from the heat and allow to cool before taking off the lid. Place the pan over a high heat, stirring frequently until the liquid has reduced by half (approximately 10 minutes).
5. Leave the tomatoes to cool, then tip into a container, adding the vines to infuse a fresh tomato flavour.
6. To cook the beans, strain them and place in the pressure cooker. Remove the vines from the tomatoes and add the tomatoes to the beans. If necessary, add some water so that the beans are covered in liquid.
7. Put the lid on and place the pressure cooker over a high heat. When it reaches full pressure, reduce the heat and cook for 20 minutes. Leave to cool completely before opening. Add this mixture to the chilli when completed.
8. To start the chilli, coat the bottom of a large saucepan with olive oil and place over a high heat until smoking hot.
9. Add the mince, in batches if necessary so that it browns rather than stews, and cook until evenly coloured. Remove and drain the meat
10. Add a little water to the same pan to deglaze it, and tip the water and bits in with the drained meat so none of the flavour is lost.
11. Turn the heat down to medium and add another thin layer of olive oil. Add the onion and star anise and cook over a medium-high heat for approximately 7–10 minutes until the onion begins to colour, then add the carrot, garlic and green chilli. Cook for another 10 minutes or until the carrot is soft.
12. Add the tomato purée, stir and cook for another 5 minutes until everything turns a brick-red colour. Pour in the red wine and allow to reduce by two-thirds. Remove the star anise and discard.
13. Stir in the spiced butter (for mild-medium heat), the browned mince, diced tomatoes and stock, and simmer over a low heat for 2–3 hours, stirring occasionally.
14. To make the cornbread muffins, preheat the oven to 180ºC/gas mark 4. Sift the flour, cornmeal, baking powder, salt and sugar into a bowl and make a well in the centre. Mix the buttermilk, milk, eggs and melted butter together and pour into the well. Stir with a wooden spoon until the mixture comes together. Stir in the chillies.
15. Butter and flour a 12-hole muffin tin and fill the moulds three-quarters of the way up. Bake the muffins in the oven for 20 minutes. Remove from the oven, de-mould and allow to cool on a cooling rack.
16. To finish the chilli, fold the beans and chopped peppers into the chilli, and bring to a simmer. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper, lime zest and juice, and stir in more spiced butter to increase the heat. Serve with grated cheese, soured cream and cornbread muffins.
Recipe from Heston Blumenthal at Home, Published by Bloomsbury

Friday, 11 July 2014

Heston's tips for perfect eggs.

Whether they're boiled, poached, scrambled or churned into ice cream, as sure as eggs is eggs, Heston's will be perfect every time.
1. The secret to the perfect boiled egg is... don't boil it! You'll end up with rubbery whites or undercooked yolks. Instead, put your egg in a pan of cold water, bring up to the boil, and, the moment it starts boiling, take it off the heat and leave in the pan for six minutes. The residual heat will cook it gently, leaving the yolk nicely cooked, but runny.
2. For good poaching, your eggs need to be fresh. Test them out by dropping a whole egg in to water - a fresh egg will sink, an old egg will float.
3. For the perfect poached egg, there's no need to create a whirlpool or add vinegar to the water. But do lay a plate on the bottom of your pan to protect the egg from the direct heat of the hob, and strain off any stringy white before poaching.
4. Buy a thermometer! You want the water at 80°C for perfect poaching.
5. Mayo is easy, don't be afraid. Heston managed to add a whopping litre and a half of oil to one yolk before the mixture split - seven times what most recipes advise.
6. Keep the yolk in your Scotch egg runny by only half-boiling them (off the heat for 3 mins) then dunking them in ice water to stop them cooking, before peeling and coating in the sausage meat.
7. Forget hot pans or the microwave. For truly silky scrambled eggs, cook them low and slow over a bain marie for about 15 minutes.
8. When making a lemon tart, use coins instead of baking beans when you bake your pastry blind - coins will conduct the heat better, for a crisper finish.
9. There's no need for the wobble test! Simply check the centre of your tart filling with a thermometer and take it out of the oven when it reaches 70°C.
10. Too impatient to wait for an ice cream maker to freeze your mix? Use dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide) to turn your custard to ice cream in less than a minute

Thursday, 10 July 2014

Heston's perfect potato crisps.

Heston Blumenthal cooks his perfect roast potatoes recipes on How to Cook Like Heston
Heston: "This recipe makes roast potatoes just the way I like them – with a crisp, glass-like crust and a fluffy interior. The key is to cut the potatoes so they have lots of sharp edges then to cook them until they are almost falling apart. Don’t scrimp on the amount of oil added to the pan – it is the fat gathering in the cracks that make the potatoes so crispy. Olive oil works really well or you can use goose fat or beef dripping but they will give a different flavour.
The garlic and rosemary are optional. You can either add them to the water when boiling the potatoes or to the roasting tray 5 minutes before the end of the cooking time."
Serves 6
Ingredients
  • 1.25kg large Maris Piper potatoes
  • 1 head of garlic, split into cloves and bashed with the flat part of a knife or by hand (optional)
  • 30g rosemary sprigs (optional)
  • Olive oil
  • Salt
Method
1. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/fan 160ºC/gas mark 4.
2. Wash and peel the potatoes and cut into quarters. Put them into a bowl under running water for 5 minutes to wash the starch off.
3. Cover the potatoes with water in a large saucepan then add the garlic and rosemary if using and bring to the boil. Cook until the potatoes are very soft and almost breaking apart (approximately 25–30 minutes). Drain carefully and leave to cool in the colander.
4. Pour 5mm of olive oil into a roasting tray large enough to hold the potatoes in one layer. Place the tray in the oven to pre-heat the oil for 15 minutes.
5. Add the potatoes to the pan and coat them in the hot oil. Place the tray back in the oven for at least 1 hour and 15 minutes, turning the potatoes gently every 20 minutes, until the potatoes are golden brown and crispy all over.
6. Drain on kitchen paper and season with salt.
Recipe from Heston Blumenthal at Home, Published by Bloomsbury

Heston's perfect risotto.

The first part for me was sorting through the recipe to find the risotto – his “perfect” risotto has so many separate bells and whistles that I wonder if that can really be perfect risotto. I mean it might be the perfect risotto & accompaniments but I wouldn’t really call it perfect risotto. As I main goal was making arancini balls with the leftovers, I omitted the bells & whistles not directly related to the risotto.
Components:
  • Basmati-infused chicken bouillion – YES
  • Puffed rice – NO
  • Velouté stock – NO
  • Butter emulsion and toasted rice – YES
  • Toasted rice tuiles – NO
  • Saffron butter – YES
  • Horlicks and coffee salt cubes – NO
  • Dried mushroom powder – NO
  • Pandanus crème fraîche – YES (but I omitted it as I was unable to find pandan leaves – I’ve since found them at asian grocery stores)
I have the full recipe if anyone wants to make the whole lot – for this blog, I’ve just included what I have done to make JUST the risotto.
Ingredients:
Basmati-infused Chicken stock:
  • 8 organic chicken legs or thighs, chopped – approx 1.5kg
  • 250g/8¾oz carrot, thinly sliced
  • 250g/8¾oz onion, thinly sliced (Comment: I forgot to buy onions so I used spring onions instead, the green part was added with the parsley below)
  • 125g/4½oz leek, white and pale green parts only, thinly sliced
  • 2 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
  • 5 whole peppercorns
  • 1 bunch fresh parsley
  • 100g/3½oz basmati rice
Butter emulsion & toasted rice: (My comment: you can halve this as you only need 60g for the recipe)
  • 200g/7oz onion, chopped
  • 375g/13¼oz dry white wine
  • 375g/13¼oz white wine vinegar
  • 200g/7oz butter (for toasting rice)
  • 50g/1¾oz Gli Aironi Carnaroli rice (My comment: I used a different brand of non-carnaroli rice)
  • 300g/10½oz butter, cubed and chilled (for wine, vinegar & onion syrup)
Saffron butter:(My comment: You can definitely halve this recipe, you need a few little cubes per plate)
  • 100g/3½oz butter, softened to room temperature
  • 1 packet saffron (about ½g)
Pandamus creme: (My comment: I omitted it for 2 reasons, the only crème fraîche at the shop had the face of a chef I don’t like on it and I couldn’t find pandamus – found it later at an Asian grocers)
  • 100g/3½oz crème fraîche
  • 10g/1oz pandanus leaves washed and cut into 2cm/¾in strips
Finishing the risotto:
  • 20g/¾oz butter
  • 300g/10½oz Acquerello carnaroli rice (or substitute another brand of carnaroli rice)
  • 100g/3½oz dry white wine
  • reserved chicken bouillon
  • 80g/2¾oz reserved toasted rice butter
  • 20g/¾oz Parmesan cheese, finely grated
  • salt
  • reserved cubes frozen saffron butter
  • reserved pandanus crème fraîche
Method:
Basmati-infused Chicken stock:
  1. Put your chicken in a large pot, cover with water and bring to a rapid boil. Once boiled, tip out water & put chicken into cold water & rinse out your pot (this will get rid of blood & impurities)
  2. Put chicken back into your pot & cover with water. Put on your lid & bring to the boil then leave to simmer for 2 hours (My Comment: Heston uses a pressure cooker so he cooked his out for an hour – I do not have a pressure cooker)
  3. Add the rest of your stock ingredients except parsley and rice & simmer for another 1.5 hours
  4. Let pot cool a bit until it’s warm, then add the parsley to infuse for 30 mins then strain out your solids (My comment: I forgot to add garlic so I let some infuse in the stock after I strained it – oops)
  5. Rinse basmati rice 3x in cold water & add to stock, & simmer stock for 20 mins
  6. Strain out rice, then fridge stock until needed later
Butter emulsion & toasted rice:
  1. Add wine, vinegar & onion (or in my case spring onions) to a pot & cook on high until the liquid turned into a thick syrup
  2. Take pot off the heat, then whisk in cold butter cubes constantly but only a couple at a time to keep things emulsified & sauce-like
  3. Strain out the onion bits and reserve the sauce
  4. In another pot, put in your butter & rice and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly
  5. You want your butter to be brown & nutty (ala clarified butter) and your rice is golden & toasty
  6. Whisk your brown butter & rice into the reserved sauce above until evenly mixed, then allow to infuse for 10 mins
  7. Strain out the rice & fridge emulsion until needed (My comment: if you’re doing the full recipe, keep the rice for the rice tuiles)
Saffron butter:
  1. In a small bowl, put your saffron & 1 tsp of hot water to release the flavour & colour
  2. Add softened butter & mix thoroughly
  3. Spread out to 5mm layer (My comment: I used the same bowl, why wash more when you don’t have to?), cover with cling wrap & fridge til needed
Pandamus creme: (My comment: as mentioned above, I omitted this)
  1. Heat both ingredients in a pot for a few minutes, stirring constantly
  2. Whisk it up so it goes green & releases more flavour
  3. Strain out the greens, then fridge til required
Finishing the risotto:
  1. Melt butter in a large pot over medium-high heat
  2. Add rice & mix constantly for 3-4 mins – you want it toasted but not browned
  3. Add your wine & stir rapidly to deglaze the pan & remove any caramelised flavour on the bottom of the pot, cook it down until almost evaporated
  4. Start adding stock. Add one ladle and wait until it’s nearly evaporated, then add another – keep going until your rice is al dente. Stir (or jiggle the pot) occasionally so rice doesn’t stick to the bottom (we’re doing risotto, not paella) (My comment:every risotto recipe says you should have a separate pot for your stock to keep it hot – but I’m lazy…)
  5. Make sure to keep it a bit liquid in the pot – but yo don’t want your rice clumped or mushy so don’t over stir – jiggle the pot instead
  6. Add 60g rice butter & cheese
  7. Cover with cling wrap & let sit off the heat for 5 mins
  8. After 5 mins, stir & season if required
  9. Divide onto plates and jiggle around until it’s flat on the plate
  10. Grate over more parmesan & add your cubes of saffron & panadamus creme if you’ve got it
Voila! All done.
Tasty, I’d say not one of his best because the original recipe has so much going on but still a good risotto – not something I’d do again any time soon. It was actually quite a simple recipe (without bells & whistles), not hard or too time consuming compared to other recipes.
I enjoyed the acidity of the toasted rice butter and the saffron cubes added little bursts of flavour.

Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Butter fried lobster tail.



Total Time: 13 min
Prep: 5 min
Cook: 8 min
Yield: 2 servings
Level: Easy

Ingredients

1/2 cup water
21 ounces lobster tail
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 .15 ounces hot clarified butter
Directions
Heat frying pan and add 1/2 cup of water. Rinse the lobster. Open the lobster tail inbutterfly form and sprinkle with salt and pepper, to taste. Place the lobster tail in thefrying pan. Cover. Steam cook for 8 minutes. Serve with clarified hot butter.

Macaroon tower by Adriana Zumbo.


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Recipe by: Adriano Zumbo

Method

  1. Preheat ovens to 200°C.
  2. Separately weigh out 2 batches of macaron ingredients.
  3. Using a drum or fine sieve, sift each batch of almond meal and icing sugar together in a bowl. Mix each batch of fresh egg whites with the almond mixture to make a paste until well combined and smooth
  4. Add each batch of sugar and water to a saucepan. Place one saucepan over low heat, stirring until the sugar has dissolved. Increase the heat to medium-low and slowly bring the mixture to a rolling boil. Add the red colouring to one saucepan and the black and maroon colouring to the other, stirring each to combine. Cook the mixture until it reaches 119°C, brushing down the sides with a dampened pastry brush. Remove from the heat (the mixture needs to be added to the egg mixture at 121°C).
  5. Meanwhile, using an electric mixer, add the old egg whites and powdered egg to a large bowl and beat until combined. Slowly add the sugar syrup (at 121°C) in a thin stream and beat on a medium speed until thick and glossy. Continue to beat the meringue until it has cooled completely.
  6. Start the second batch (repeating from step 5) whilst beating the first meringue (to cool).
  7. To make the raspberry jelly, combine the pectin, gellan and sugar in a bowl. Heat the raspberry puree, then add the pectin mixture and bring to the boil. Cook for a couple of minutes until it reaches a set. Transfer the mixture to a bowl and place in the refrigerator to set.
  8. To make the beetroot butter cream, add the sugar and water to a saucepan and bring to the boil, cooking until it reaches 118°C. Using an electric mixer, mix the eggs and egg yolks in a large bowl until combined. With the mixer running on medium speed, pour over the sugar syrup and continue to beat until 50°C. Carefully and slowly add the butter, then the beetroot powder. Transfer the mixture into 2 small piping bags. Place in the fridge to firm up slightly.
  9. Fold ¼ of the red meringue into one batch of the almond paste, to loosen up the mixture, then fold through remaining meringue until combined.
  10. Place the red macaron mixture in 2 large piping bags.
  11. To finish the olive macaron mixture, repeat steps 9 and 10 and place into 2 large piping bags.
  12. Pipe each batch of macarons, 3-4cm circles onto 6 lined baking trays (4 x 7 macarons each tray).
  13. Leave to set for at least 30 minutes to form a crust.
  14. Once the raspberry jelly has set, gently whisk the mixture to loosen it up, then transfer to small piping bag.
  15. Place the red macarons into 2 ovens (3 trays in each oven). Turn the ovens off and leave for 10 minutes, then turn ovens on to 155°C and bake for a further 9-10 minutes. Remove from the oven. Repeat process with kalamata macarons. Leave macarons to cool on trays.
  16. To make the kalamata olive ganache, melt the white chocolate. Place the candied olive puree in an electric mixer and pour over the melted chocolate, mixing to combine. With the mixer running, beat in the butter then slowly add the olive oil, mixing until well combined. Fold through the chopped olives. Place the mixture into the refrigerator to cool slightly, then transfer to a small piping bag.
  17. To finish the macarons, pipe the raspberry jelly and beetroot buttercream onto half of the red macarons, then top with remaining red macarons. Repeat process with kalamata olive ganache, pressing 1 lemon candy into the centre. Top with kalamata olive macarons. Place the finished macarons in the fridge to sit for about 10 minutes before assembling.
  18. To assemble the macaron tower, place toothpicks on a slight angle, tilting upwards into the cone before placing macaron onto a toothpick creating a pattern as desired.

Ingredients

For the raspberry jelly :
For the beetroot buttercream :
For the kalamata olive ganache :