Improvised Crumble

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My mum had grown so much rhubarb in her garden it was in excess of her requirements. She left some with my sister, who never bakes and is from the “overcook pasta, add cheese” school of cookery. My sister presented me with a recipe handed down to her by one of the oldies at her office. Hand written and on yellowing paper, it was for a rhubarb and orange flan. Pretty basic stuff, but way beyond the skills set of my sis, who I’m pretty sure I witnessed kneading some pastry for ten minutes once in order to lovingly present the family with the worlds chewiest pasties. After purchasing the missing ingredients for the flan, I set about making it in my sister’s ill equipped kitchen. Blunt knives, no round flan base or pie dishes and more crucially, no weighing scales. I toyed with the idea of guessing the weights, but felt it was too high risk that the curd filling would not set or be too hard. I also considered going and getting my own scales, but could not be arsed. In the end I announced that we would be having rhubarb and orange crumble instead and set about making something totally easy without the need for scales.

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I chopped the rhubarb into small pieces and stewed it with a big handful of sugar and the juice and grated rind of an orange. When soft, I checked it and added more sugar to taste.

I got about half a packet of butter and roughly the same volume of sugar and rubbed the butter into twice its volume of flour, before adding the sugar. I used a large tumbler to roughly measure volume. I squashed it into a dough ball and pressed that into rough shaped biscuits and baked in a medium to hot oven until crispy and golden .

I never understand why I am so often presented with crumbles that are more soggy than crumbly and crunchy. What I usually do is make rough biscuits, as described above, then when cooked, crumble big chunks onto the fruit base adding smaller crumbs as well and warm quickly in the oven before serving with ice cream, cream, or custard. I saw Raymond Blanc on the TV adopting a similar technique for avoiding a soggy crumble a short while after I had devised my own genius method, so don’t knock it!

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How To Make Elderflower Cordial

When the Elderflower trees start sprouting their fragrant pretty flower heads, it marks the start of the English summer. So abundant, this tree lines many a public park or roadside. Once you are aware of it you begin to see them everywhere. So why not pick a few blossoms here and there and make yourself some delicious sweet and fragrant cordial at a very small cost and with minimal equipment needed…?

I recommend using a recipe like this one that uses citric acid. It is easy to find in the Home Brewing sections of shops such as Wilkinsons here in the UK and is inexpensive.

Here is what you need:

  • 20 Elderflower heads (or to your own taste)
  • 1.8kg granulated sugar
  • 1.2 litres water
  • 2 unwaxed lemons
  • 75g citric acid

1. Shake the flowers and remove any debris and insects. Place into a large bowl

2. Place the sugar and water into a large saucepan and bring to the boil, stirring at times to help dissolve the sugar.

3. Whilst the sugar is dissolving, strip the zest from the lemons and place in the bowl with the flowers.

4. Slice the lemons and add to the bowl also.

5. When the sugar has dissolved and the water is boiling, pour over the flowers and lemons. Add the citric acid and stir well to mix. Now cover well and leave at room temperature for at least twenty four hours and up to five days. I left mine for two days.

6. When you have left it for long enough, get some sterilised bottles ready. I used three wine bottles. Strain the liquid through a sieve and some muslin or a new j-cloth that has been rinsed in boiling water. I caught the large items first in a colander. Ensure all of your equipment is clean also.

7. Use a clean funnel to ladle or pour the strained cordial into bottles. Label and decorate if you like…like this one here, which I gave as a gift with some gin and instructions of how to make a cocktail and recipe ideas.

Elderflower cordial is delicious simply topped up with soda and ice, can be added to gin or vodka and topped up with champagne or tonic water. It can be used to sweeten fruit for crumbles and other deserts and is also good poured over ice cream.

I’m going to try making some fruit jellies with mine:

BBC – Food – Recipes : Elderflower and fruit jellies.

Homemade Chicken Stock

Making a stock from a leftover chicken carcass is really easy and a damn sight tastier than salty, flavourless stock cubes and jellies. Until last week I had never done it before. I cannot believe it! I’m going to do it all the time now.

I stripped the meat from the bones and put them in a large pan with a couple of chopped celery sticks, a roughly chopped onion, a couple of carrots, a load of garlic, rosemary, thyme, bay leaves and a big handful of black peppercorns. Basically, following a standard recipe but doubling to quadrupling all flavour enhancing ingredients. This is my number one cooking tip.

Add a big pinch of salt and cover with water. Bring to the boil, then simmer gently for, well, Gordon Ramsey says half an hour but all other recipes say two to three hours. Use your own judgement. I felt it was still a bit bland after half an hour and continued to around two hours, as I was making myself late for work otherwise.

Don’t throw out the meat either. That can be saved and frozen, ready for pasta sauces, pies, soups and so much more.

I strained it and left it in the fridge, and the next day I skimmed off the fat that had formed on the top. Some went into jars for the fridge, to be used in soup and the rest I reduced down to a thick concentrate, which I froze into ice cube trays for popping into future recipes. Not having enough ice cube trays, I cut out some of the plastic trays that chocolates came in and used those too…a double thrifty hit!

For chicken Noodle Soup I took inspiration from the following two recipes and used the leftover chicken meat and also added Chinese Five Spice.

Oh yeah…I also forgot to buy noodles and threw in some spaghetti instead. Nobody cared.

  Chicken noodle soup recipe – Recipes – BBC Good Food.

Quick & easy hot-and-sour chicken noodle soup recipe – Recipes – BBC Good Food.

Now make a wish x

Yes MSG!

There’s nothing to worry about, it’s not bad for you after all. I’m not going to go into it here, you can do your own research and either side with the crazies who just KNOW that it makes their brain swell up or with the legitimate research that shows there are no side affects associated with ingesting a little MSG here and there. Like Crispy Seaweed from your local Chinese Resturant? Spring greens and MSG. Yum.

Crispy Seaweed Recipe.

My boyfriend is always tweaking recipes so I made him his own recipe book for Christmas. Its a plain hardback sketchbook with a denim cover hand-stitched by me.

And his first entry:

Kedgeree, with added MSG. It was delicious.