Showing posts with label Cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cooking. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 June 2011

If only every Suburb had a Community Garden and a Kitchen Gardeners Swap Meet.

Batty's Garden-8Allie & Steve's Visit-146
Many people today are striving hard to fit into today's culture.
Many of us vegetable gardeners feel a little out of place at social gatherings. We would much prefer to be in our gardens, pruning, planting, weeding, picking or preserving our produce.
Our to do list is endless, sorting seeds, making sauerkraut, pickling olives, transplanting seedlings, propagating cuttings and there is always pruning to be done.
I meet very few gardeners who are not keen to talk about what they have been growing or how the weather is affecting their garden.
So we have this group of home gardeners who meet together every few months and we always have a good time.
When we meet to swap seeds, excess produce and ideas, we also share part of our lives with each other.
We may meet for just a couple of hours but friendships are formed, phone numbers exchanged and the promises are made to share produce as it ripens and matures.
Someone has chokos to share, someone else has excess chillies, another has apples and firewood, the list goes on and on.
Cuttings and prunings, excess seedlings, potted plants are brought and given away.
Cuttings of herbs, curry leaves and berries, ginger, galangal, lemongrass and cardamom plants are divided and shared.
Variety is being added to people's gardens, new plants and ideas are being introduced.
People are taking things home to grow, things they had never heard about before. New flavours are introduced and as people try new things and use them at home, their palates change and they look forward to trying new and interesting plants.
Chesnuts-2Beef, Beans & Basil-7Curry Leaf Tree-2
And so for a few short hours people are introduced to new things, new ideas and new challenges.
If we lived in any rural area in any other country it would be a natural thing to save seeds and share with neighbours. But in Australia the majority of people are buying their fruit and veggies from large supermarkets or fruit stores. These unknown, mass farms are often using many harmful chemical sprays and fertilizers to achieve a perfect looking product, which looks good but lacks the flavour and nutritional value of organically grown produce.
Our priorities in life should be healthy pure rain water, fresh clean air, viable seed, local, organically grown food and a healthy lifestyle.
Lasagne-1Seedlings & Purple Chilli-3Brown Rice, Besan & Chive Cakes
A lifestyle which includes rest and relaxation, time to spend with others, time to share a simple meal or wander around a friend's garden.
When you live in a city you see people constantly rushing around, driving children from one paid activity to another. Children who have been in child care all day are seen throwing tantrums in shopping malls and supermarkets as their hassled parents fill supermarket trollies with chemical laden foods, coloured beverages and other sugar laden sauces, cereals, sweets and cookies.
I guess I am just getting to be a grumpy old granny, but to those of us who grew up in the forties or fifties we remember a much different world.
Seedsaver Maggie-20Seedsaver Maggie-5Colours of Autumn-14
Most families grew their own vegetables, had chickens for eggs and chicken for a special occasion.
There was no television, people sat and chatted about their day, listened to the radio or read books, played cards or board games.
All the neighbourhood children played cricket on the road, there were fewer cars and people rode their bikes, walked or caught public transport.
Anyone remember going to work in an old steam train?
I did. I caught the train from Liverpool Station to Central station in Sydney. A group of us teenagers met in the same compartment each day and played cards or just chatted.
Now the people I see walking the streets are plugged into their  iphones or ipods and don't even look at anyone.
Time is money now, so people rush everywhere, drive like maniacs and have no concern for anyone but themselves.
So it is with great pleasure that I look forward to when our garden group meets again.
Our dream would be for every suburb to have a Community Garden and every Community Garden to have such groups meeting several times a year.
   Seedlings & Purple Chilli-1Colours of Autumn-7

Friday, 21 January 2011

Middle Eastern Spicy Chickpea Salad

 

Batty's Garden-58

Today we had lunch with some friends so I made this delicious salad.

I always use organic dried chick peas, soak them overnight, drain them and then simmer them in fresh water until tender then drain them.

When cooked I sprinkle the chickpeas with salt, cracked black pepper and a little paprika and olive oil.

For this recipe I heated a couple of Tablespoons of Middle Eastern spice mix in a little oil to infuse the flavours.

I added this to the chick peas with some finely sliced red onions, the juice of 2 lemons, some chopped tomatoes, chopped cucumber, a dollop of tahini, a handful each of chopped mint and parsley, more black pepper, paprika and crushed garlic.

I served it on a bed of wild rocket.

It is great to have all these lovely herbs in the garden to flavour your food.

Most folks brought summer produce from their gardens including eggplant dip, zucchini fritters, tomato and basil salad and cold rolls filled with home grown veggies and herbs.

All these dishes make delicious, healthy, summer salads or vegetarian mains.

I was going to say I love summer garden produce, but then I love winter produce just as much. Whatever season it is there is always something to make flavourful meals with when you grow lots of vegetables & herbs in your garden.

Monday, 20 December 2010

Easy Christmas Pudding

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I have made this easy Christmas pudding recipe for years ever since my Auntie Win gave it to me.
So it is really called Auntie Win’s Overnight Christmas Pudding. It is a light flavourful pudding and is great eaten cold the next day.

Ingredients
1  375 gram pkt of Mixed Dried Fruit
1 cup of water
1/4 cup of sherry or rum or brandy
Mix the above ingredients together and stand all day.
Then add
1 cup of freshly made breadcrumbs
1 cup of Self Raising Flour
1 teaspoon of mixed spice
2 tablespoons of melted butter
1 small teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda
1 tablespoon of honey or golden syrup
1 or 2 beaten eggs
Mix well .
Spoon into a greased pudding basin.
Cover with buttered greaseproof paper.
Cover with aluminium foil.
Tie these around the lip of the bowl with cotton string.
Leave to stand overnight.
Next day boil the pudding for 3 hours in a pan with boiling water and a lid.
Remove from the pan, allow to stand for 15 minutes, turn pudding onto a plate and serve with custard, cream and seasonal berries.
This pudding keeps for months in the refrigerator or it can be frozen.
The original recipe had 1 cup of sugar which I leave out. Dried fruit, honey and sherry add ample sugar. I usually multiply the recipe by 4 to make 4 puddings and I substitute 1 375 gram pkt currants for the mixed fruit. Dried black currants add a wonderful flavour and richness.

Monday, 13 December 2010

Spinach Soup with Leeks, Garlic, Black Pepper and Pizza Thyme.

Sometimes you cook something which is absolutely delicious.

After a busy day I went into the garden to find lots of spinach ready to be cooked and eaten.

I felt too tired to make spinach triangles and as it is a cool rainy evening soup seems very appealing.

So I blanched some spinach, drained it, added some cooked baby leeks, black pepper, chopped new season garlic, salt, a little cornflour blended with some milk and a handful of pizza thyme.

I cooked this gently for a few minutes then pureed the mix.

I served the soup with a dollop of sour cream and voila! an amazing delicious, nutritious soup.

All fresh from the garden and more delicious than most soups I have tasted.

Spinach Soup-6

Friday, 30 April 2010

Aubergine ( Bringal, Eggplant ) - a vegetable for cooks to enjoy!

Eggplant

This has been a great season in Adelaide for growing aubergines most of us are still harvesting this good looking vegetable.

Aubergine has a distinctive flavour and is delicious when freshly picked, sliced, sprinkled with salt, brushed with olive oil and grilled, baked or fried.

Store bought aubergine often needs to be sprinkled with salt, weighted for 1/2 an hour and then rinsed to remove any bitterness. I have found that this is not necessary with plump, fresh, organically grown aubergines as they are not bitter at all.

Aubergine is great when added to Indian coconut curries, Mediterranean tomato pasta sauces, onion bhajis, mushroom and olive filo parcels, vegetarian burgers, lasagnes, beef or lamb casseroles, meatballs, kebabs and moussaka.

The flavour of aubergine is enhanced with the use of herbs and spices particularly garlic and oregano. But there are many ways to use these purple fruits of the summer garden.

TASTING AUSTRALIA 2010 is happening here in Adelaide this weekend. I wonder if the chefs of the world can cook as well as some of us Adelaide kitchen gardeners gardeners can?

When you have your own organically grown, freshly picked, seasonal produce you have a great pantry of flavours and colours and textures to create with. Or better still lots of our produce can be eaten straight from the garden.

Freshly picked beans and peas, heirloom tomatoes and apples, lettuce, rocket and basil, mandarins and pomegranates, watercress and radishes, lemons and fresh broccoli need no chef or cook, just hungry hands to pick them.

Have a great weekend, whether you are planting or picking or just relaxing and eating.

Wednesday, 23 December 2009

TED and Jamie Oliver

Congratulations Jamie Oliver – 2010 TED Prize Winner

 
Chef, restaurateur and health activist

“Every child should be taught to cook in school, not just talk about nutrition all day. Good food can be made in 15 minutes. This could be the first generation where the kids teach the parents.” – Jamie Oliver

 

About Jamie:

Jamie Oliver is transforming the way we feed our children, and ourselves.

Jamie Oliver has been drawn to the restaurant kitchen since he was seven or eight. First working in his father’s pub-restaurant and then training in England and France, he not only displayed incredible culinary talent but also a passion for creating fresh, honest and delicious food. Although he is now one of the worlds top celebrity chef’s, his commitment to simple, unpretentious food remains and with it his drive to break people’s unhealthy eating habits and get them cooking again.

With the obesity epidemic growing globally, Oliver is using his notoriety to bring attention to the changes Englanders and now Americans need to make in their lifestyles and diet. Campaigns such as School Dinners, Ministry of Food and Food Revolution USA combine Oliver’s culinary tools, cookbooks and television with more standard activism and community organizing to create change on both the individual and governmental level.

Learn more about Jamie at jamieoliver.com.

This post is thanks to Sustainable Pattie

Monday, 7 December 2009

Sushi, French toast and a Capuccino Martini

Australia is a funny place, and Adelaide funniest of all. After spending close to 6 months living in south west France, where everything is so French, it is refreshing to be back in Adelaide, where anything goes... food wise, at least. Don't get me wrong, I love  France and I love it being so French but coming from a country like Australia, whose white inhabitants have no particular culture, to me French food lacks spontaneity. I am used to growing whatever will grow in the climate and turning it into whatever meal I feel like, without regard to any preconceived ideas on its preparation.

image The pantry of a keen Adelaide chef like Hugh is filled with spices from every culture in the world including native Australian ones,  Indian and Thai curry ingredients, Japanese seaweeds and condiments, and the freezer is packed with his home made chicken, beef and fish stocks often to be made into exquisite French sauces or hearty soups.

 

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And so it is that the food coming out of son Hugh's creative kitchen and garden can be anything from sushi with a green salad, roast chicken with Asian vegetables, French toast with berries and yoghurt or a club sandwich with a mango lassi.

Who needs traditions when you can have them all?

 

Today gardening was at Kathy's. In particular Kathy has a beautiful herb garden and a wonderful flair for making people feel welcome. Kathy also makes some of the best cakes in the entire world, and usually serves them with berries, either from her garden or picked from nearby, fresh or just cooked until the juices run. Today was no exception but the true highlight was the capuccino martinis she made for us...iced coffee with class!

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Espresso iced coffee frothed in the blender... dusted with cocoa and a few coffee beans
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Add straws and voila! Cheesecake, raspberries and capuccino martinis.... what more could a gardener want?

Tuesday, 13 October 2009

Summer and Winter Garden Harvest Recipe Plan

Garden & Dandelion 011 Garden & Dandelion 015

This year I am going to start a folder with recipes I would like to try using produce from the garden or bought locally.

Nothing is more frustrating than having a table full of produce that you want to eat raw, cook or preserve and not have recipes and ingredients ready, so you can get cooking straight away.

I usually head for the computer do a Goggle search and end up with all sorts of ideas and no time or energy left to do anything.

So this year the Google searches will be done in advance and the recipes will be clearly arranged with the spices, vinegars or honey and empty jars already in the cupboard. There will be a plan!

Last year Cath had given me her peach chutney recipe which I adapted as different fruits appeared in the kitchen.

There are some great gardening, cooking, preserving bloggers around the globe who have great recipe blogs.

One of my favourite cooks is Laura from Mas Du Diable Cevenol Kitchen who has loads of great recipes including an Indian section with all sorts of pickles, chutney’s and preserves.

Tamra from Eat Seasonally has some great seasonal recipes as part of her gardening blog. As soon as the purslane appears in the garden I am going to make her “weed Tacos”. Read the story that goes with the recipe about her teenagers’ text messaging their friends when told they are having weed tacos for dinner.

Olives and artichokes have a wonderful Mediterranean recipe section as part of their blog. It show wonderful ideas for what they do with daily produce from their garden.

There are many different groups that form part of Kitchen Gardens International. My favourite groups are the Pickling and Preserving, the Harvest group and the Kimchi group. I have enjoyed reading the members pickling and harvest adventures through out our winter. Gillian a KGI friend from Queensland posted a great tomato & chilli sauce recipe, I have bottles already for that recipe.

Please join KGI and share your ideas and gardening experiences with people from all over the world.

Because we have a small garden we tend to harvest everything and then prepare the soil for our next batch of seedlings.

This week we pulled up all the celeriac and fennel.

When trimmed back the celeriac was roasted and some sliced and eaten raw. The tops went in the compost. We may not grow celeriac again, it was in the ground for a long time, I think the leaves may have been trimmed back more. We had huge leaves and smallish bulbs. Have you grown celeriac, is there a secret?

I remembered a recipe on our Recipes Gardeners Gastronomy section, which Kate recommended and which I cooked last year. It is absolutely delicious. Fennel bulbs and beetroot chunks are roasted, covered with olive oil and balsamic vinegar. It is quick and delicious, lovely eaten hot and even better kept in the fridge and eaten as a salad.

Organic gardening is fun, watching seeds germinate and grow is exciting, planting and then harvesting veggies is a great experience, cooking and eating those delicious veggies is a heavenly experience. I hope your new seasons veggie patch is exciting and delicious.


Beetroot and Henley 004 Garden 033

Saturday, 11 April 2009

THE AROMAS OF COOKING FROM THE GARDEN

 

image Autumn is an abundant time in South Australian fruit and vegetable gardens and sometimes it is hard to keep up with all the produce. Kitchens can be overflowing with aromatic ripe mangoes like those from my mother's garden, pans full of rich tomato flavours to be bottled for winter pasta meals, quinces bubbling away to produce jellies and pastes, roasting capsicums for preserving in olive oil, food processors working overtime making basil or rocket pesto packed with the punch of garlic and parmesan cheese and preserving pans heaving with late season, dark red plums being made into jams and sauces.

 

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I so wish we had smell-a-blog so we could visit each others kitchens and smell the aromas of the foods we are cooking from the produce in our gardens. Barb gave me a box of golden delicious apples and I have lightly stewed  most of them to put into breakfast sized portions in the freezer because I love stewed fruit with my yoghurt and nuts and seeds.

 

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But after that I had all the cores left, so I made apple and jaggery tea and THAT is what is the latest smell in my kitchen right now. 

 

 

 

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Earlier this morning I started making a curry from some bits and pieces of feral goat that were on special at Wild Oz at the Central Market. I used my favourite Rick Stein recipe and this is how it looks now, several hours later. There are lots of vegetables from the garden in it too, some pureed and slowly simmered with spices down to a thick, rich sauce, with an aroma to make you go weak at the knees!

 

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The green leaves in the curry is the bitter outside leaves of some Chicory Trevise that Deb sowed for me months ago. They hold their colour even when cooked. The central heart is such a gorgeous colour I will cook it separately another day, so I can marvel at it on my plate before I eat it. Unlike some other greens, this has not gone to seed in the hot weather and still looks fresh and new in the garden.

 

Although not in the original recipe, I added quite a few Red Cornos and Yellow Cornos capsicums from the garden. The tomatoes were some of Glenys' magnificent specimens and the plants look like they will still be producing at Christmas!image image

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ian has been making Hot Cross Buns, in a Kitchen Garden in France..... imagine how wonderful his kitchen smells.

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

WALNUTS; FROM TREE TO TABLE

image  One day recently I noticed a whole lot of green balls hanging from a tree at Glenys' s and went to see what they were. Some of the green balls had split open at the bottom and there, about to fall out of each ball, was a walnut. I was so excited and started gathering them up until I had more than I could carry and went to get a basket. I have written a lot of stuff about vegetables and fruit so it may surprise you to know that I have never seen walnuts growing before. Lots of people have shown me their walnut trees but never when they have had walnuts on them and friends have given me walnuts from their trees, but I have never actually seen them growing.  image

Later I found a nut cracker and openned a couple and found them to be full and nicely coloured but very soft. Then I was worried I had picked them too soon. But how could this be so when they were falling out already? Anyway that was a week or so ago and I hadn't eaten any more since. Then it was coming up to Wednesday gardening and it was my turn to cook.... and I thought about the fantastically delicious walnut tarts I had eaten in France..... and I noticed I had a couple of recipes, one in French in a book I had bought in France and the other in Stephanie Alexander's book "Cooking and Travelling in South West France", in English. So I decided to make a sort of combination of the two. I tried another couple of walnuts and now they had hardened up and were perfect. Today was the day I made walnut tart, my way.....

I don't know why but I was quite restless all night, and this darn walnut tart was on my mind. So, once it was getting light I got up and thought ..... well if I make it early and it is awful then I will have time to make something else before the garden girls arrive. First thing to do was to crack open the walnuts, enough to make 300g. Well, as it turned out, first thing was to find some scales to weigh them...and it took me a while to work out how to adjust these giant, old-style scales I eventually found....and then I realised I didn't have a flan dish...or a measuring jug..... oh, the things you don't think of when you are at someone else's house....

I turned on the radio, sat at the kitchen table in my pj's and began the little job of getting 300g of walnuts assembled.... I thought I might be getting close at one stage..... but the scales said no.... so on and on I went and time ticked by.... At somewhere around 45 minutes of work my hands were getting sore from the sharp bits of shell and I was getting hungry so I had breakfast, got dressed, tidied the place up a bit then got back to work. It took me a good hour to shell 300g walnuts! A few were black and they were all quite small, but I had not bargained on so much time to complete step 1 of the recipe. Actually the recipe just said 300g walnuts, and did not even mention all the work involved in getting thus far, including the picking and shelling. Slow food.... is slow.

Time to make the pastry. Now, I love making pastry so no problem..... but it was a little different to the method I usually use and I had to keep putting my glasses on and reading the recipe again and again and by now it was far too late to contemplate making something else. Then I couldn't find a rolling pin so I did the French thing and used a bottle of wine! This recipe also said bake blind which means lining the pastry-lined flan dish with greaseproof paper and filling it with dried peas and beans and cooking it for a while before taking all that out and pouring in the filling. I don't usually bother with baking blind....I am a lazy cook, but this is a special French recipe and I thought I would do it. Problem..... no dried beans..... so I though I would be clever (hahahaha). I had plenty of pastry so I just flopped the excess over the rim of the flan dish (all I could find actually was a cake tin) to stop it all falling into the centre as it heated in the oven.....Never ever try this!.... So now I had a big, soggy mess of hot pastry to sort out!!

Although it was very cold this morning, by this time I was very hot and bothered and just working in my short sleeves. After a lot of tricky manoeuvring I got all sides of the pastry to stay put at once but it was very soggy and uncooked. Undaunted, I soldiered on making the filling, changing it to make it more like those I had so enjoyed in France but ashamed to even use "France" together with my hopeless version, in the same breath! It was hard to measure small quantities of ingredients on scales meant to weigh about 15kg of produce..... but it was all I had and anyway this was a tart not a sponge cake so it should be ok....

After the recommended cooking time of 45 minutes, it was nicely browned, and the pastry was mostly doing the right thing..... sort of.... but it was still unset. Of course.... mine was all cramped up in a cake time, with horrible soggy, raw pastry so it was bound to take longer. Eventually I did Sally's trick.... turn the oven off, leave the tart/ cake/ whatever/ in the oven and let it sort itself out while you get on with the gardening.

image Half an hour before we were due to eat, I removed the tart from the oven and I couldn't believe my eyes.... surely this was not my walnut tart! This tart was perfect.....and the kitchen smelled so good and the pastry..... oo la la la..... flaky, lightly browned and probably the best pastry I have ever made! I dusted the filling lightly with icing sugar to disguise the rough bits and in they all came, the garden group girls I mean..... and gazed in awe at my masterpiece.... and after the first mouthful..... silence.... then those sounds people make when eating something really really good......mmmmmmmm, oohhhhhh, wowwwww.....

And you know..... I never told them about the near disaster...and that it took me 3 hours to make it..... and unless they read this, they will never know..... they just think I am so good at walnut tarts.... promise you won't say a word.....

Tuesday, 9 December 2008

CHRISTMAS FUN IS FOR BIG KIDS TOO

It is such fun when you have children and, like me, you have time to do things with them. When they were young we used to make all our wrapping paper by laying reams of brown paper all over the kitchen floor and stamping Christmas designs all over it. I made the stamps by cutting out shapes of stars and Christmas trees and so on out of kitchen sponges which they then dipped into paint.

I also used to make them a new Christmas T-shirt each year, decorated with fabric paint.....I got quite good at it eventually, just as they grew out of the idea! We used to do a lot of fabric painting, making bags for holding things like pencils and music books etc.

Hugh used to cook the best mince pies and he regularly still makes chocolate truffles from the Haigh's recipe leaflet you can get at the shop.

Every year for 20 years or so we have made gingerbread at Christmas time too. It doesn't matter how big your children get, they never get tired of Mum's gingerbread. They used to help decorate them and that was very messy and "creative" but never-the-less the cooking and icing was done and a lot of fun was had by all. They used to take them for their school friends and teachers so we used to triple the recipe so we had enough to leave some for ourselves. One year I left a plate piled up with them on a coffee table in the lounge while I saw my mother to the door, and when I came back ALL the gingerbread had been eaten by the dog and the serving plate - a hand-made wedding present - was smashed. Needless to say that dog got no dinner.....for several days!

This year Roger and I made the gingerbread for our great-nieces and nephews.....oh dear, we must be very old.....I remember my great aunt and she was ancient! Well, its not so bad when you think that I was only 14 when I became an auntie. Anyway, both our boys are away and won't be home for any gingerbread this Christmas so we only made one quantity. I will put the recipe on Gardeners' Gastronomy....maybe it is already there...

imageRoger made the piping bags from greaseproof paper, while I mixed up the 4 colours of icing for the decorating.

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The cooked pieces......are transformed into whatever Roger and I can come up with...

 

 

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....like this bikini beauty of Roger's... and then packed into cellophane bags .

 

I am taking some of these to our seedsavers picnic in the Botanic Gardens tomorrow.... see you there.

Monday, 15 September 2008

CHEFS IN THE MAKING

image For the last 3 months son Hugh has not been working on the One and All ship because it is in Sydney having some work done. Instead he has been doing certificate 2 in hospitality at the City Campus of the TAFE. This all culminates in the class of 16 running the kitchen of the Tiros Bistro in the eastern end of the TAFE building in Currie Street, for 4 weeks. This coming week will be their last and  I have been there twice now for lunch, which is served Wednesday, Thursday and Friday each week.

image Unlike Deb's experience in the previous post, these were the best meals I have had at any bistro or cafe ever!

 

Now that is not a mother's pride because Hugh will tell you I am a mean judge of bought food, no matter who is cooking it! The desserts are divine, outstanding, indulgent and cheap and should not be missed. There is a standard menu plus each day there is a special. This week Hugh is responsible for each of the specials. The meals are incredibly cheap... from $6 to $9 for a main course and I want to recommend anyone reading this in Adelaide to go and support the budding chefs and, in particular, to order the specials and tell the waiter you are a friend of Hugh's mum..... they really like it when family and friends come along. 

 

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Although the food is not advertised as local, Hugh took a huge bag of chervil from our vegetable garden and I think this got him some extra brownie points from the head chef!

You have to book ahead and they are sometimes booked out. The phone number is: 82078484 and ask for the Tiros Bistro.

 

You won't regret it....

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Pickled Daikons

Viggies Gnomes asked me about the pickled Daikons I made for Kitchen Gardners' Day. I have to admit that it was first time I grew Daikons and it was first time I made pickled Daikons. (It doesn't taste quite the same back home.)

The main goal is to make daikons as crunchy as possible, and then mix in the dressing or sauces you like for some time to let the flavour go into them.

1.Cut and dry it:
Wash Daikons, cut into strips. (Leave the skin on) Put on a mash to sundry for a day or two, untill the surfaces of Daikons are dry and not stingy and the Daikons are soft. This process makes Daikons more crunchy and makes the unpleasant taste of Daikons go away. You could omit it.
2.Salt it:
Salt them a little and knead a few times. (they'll become more moist).
3.Compress:
Put them tightly in a jar or put a heavy stone on them for a day or two at room temperature.
4. Seasoning:
Mix with the dressing or sauces you like for some time to let the flavour go into them.
For example:
Ginger + rice wine+ soy sauce
Miso
Chili sauce
Hot chili oil + fermented black beans(black beans sauce)
If put in the fridge, it should last for one week or two.

I think it's best to eat pickle daikons with plain rice soup:)

Have fun!



I found the below picture of pickled Daikons with chili sauce on the net.