Sunday, 23 October 2016

[Temporary Technical Setback]

Well, it seems that Google Drive and Blogger (owned by Google!) have different ideas what it means about photo sharing so I apologise for my last post not having any pictures of last week's lunch I made in the office in about five minutes.  

Also I've noticed a lot of my old pictures have been removed.  I think I need to read the manual on Google Drive again, as I was getting tired of uploading pictures to Drive and having to download them again in order to post them.

Nevertheless, I'll have a post featuring an insane amount of hot chillis and chicken dopiaza up today, tomorrow at latest.  Once I've finished uploading all my old pictures again.  Gah...

Here are some nice (mainly non-food related) pictures from my own archives of happier times,in the meantime, to keep myself sane and happy while I sort this mess out.  Thanks for your patience.

EDIT:  I've managed to find the pictures of my improvised working lunch, see my previous post for pictures!  Still working on finding the rest of them...


The old garden

Ah yes, happier times making that chicken chachocka

There's video footage on my YouTube channel of the opening and tasting of this on our visit to the GBBF 2016

Just a few of the plants at my dad's house.  Many good meals consumed there

Bit jealous of Dad manging to grow a chilli...



...and lettuce

Happy camping at Ballycastle
.  Not pictured was the budget burger supper I cooked up on a stove


The original budget beer festival I had when I was broke and couldn't make it to London.  I don't miss the cider, but |I miss that blanket...

That'll be me in silhouette then. 

Now THAT was a good Thai coconut, chilli and coriander soup/stew...Yum

It might not be budget, but the winter brings belfast's continental market, where I'll score a few goodies and enjoy the ambience with friends.

Good old soda bread.  Difficult to get right, but when I made this a few years back, it was cheap AND satisfying.

My experience at a Colombian restaurant in '13. those were some good empanadas...  

Wednesday, 12 October 2016

Fiscally responsible business lunch




Fiscally responsible business lunch – Caprese salad with a twist




I’ve made salads before on this blog, but today you may notice a difference in the surroundings they were prepared in...



I prefer to focus on the hills and forests, not on the cars or my job at lunchtime.  And no, I did *not* go dumpster diving either!


Correct – this is obviously not the SupermarketValueFood® kitchen, this is the view from the canteen in my office.  A challenge to make anything from scratch, other than in a microwave.  Normally it’s heated up soup, or pay for sandwiches like everyone else for lunch for the staff. But not for me today.



Today’s budget ingredient (in addition to some of the iceberg lettuce and salad tomatoes I picked up from the Co for 59p each a few weeks back) is this ball of Basic Mozzarella for 50p.
50p for a large fist shape of cheese?  Let's give it a shot...



*munch* - It’s not so much of a cheese as a sphere of edible consistency.  I can see it being an addition to something, just not an ingredient on its own.  If you had enough toppings it would go well on a budget pizza.  I *do* like the texture though – pleasantly stringy and chewy.



Classic Caprese salad is simply tomatoes, basil and buffalo mozzarella seasoned with olive oil and salt.  But I need to bulk this up if I’m going to last the day at the desk.



Ingredients - for one as a light lunch or two as an antipasto


-          Half a ball of mozzarella, peeled; torn off, not sliced.

-          2 or 3 salad tomatoes, sliced.

-          1 bunch of basil, torn

-          Olive oil

-          Salt and pepper


Here I deviate from tradition, add extra edibles, and also experiment…

-          4-5 leaves of iceberg lettuce, cut or torn into fork sized chunks.

-          1 small handful of chard, or any other salad leaves you have to hand.

-          1 small bunch worth of mixed chopped herbs – I got the chard, plus a bunch each of coriander, parsley, and the basil, from St. George’s Market for a quid, and there’ll still be plenty left after this…  So coriander and parsley it is.

-          2 or 3 tsp soy sauce.  Yes, soy sauce. 

-          Dried herbs – oregano and basil today, for garnish.

Method


Put a layer of iceberg lettuce and some of the herbs on the bottom of a plate.

Top with a layer of tomatoes.  Add some salt to them.  Now put a chunk of the mozzarella and a bit of basil on top of each slice.  Dress with a little olive oil.

Layer more of the chard/ iceberg lettuce, salad leaves and chopped herbs, and repeat the process with the remaining tomatoes, mozzarella and basil.  Dust with the dried herbs and finish with a little more oil.

Now drip the soy sauce down to the bottom of the plate in four corners and add a small amount on top over the oil.  Serve.
Healthy, fast, tasty, cheap, what more do you want to keep you going through another 5 hours of work?



*munch*

I’ll be honest, the parsley is maybe a bit too bitter for this recipe and I’m not getting much from the dried herbs (although they do look aesthetically pleasing).   I also should have taken the tomatoes out of the fridge sooner (it’s way colder than mine at home and they were almost frozen – they should really be left in the sun to ripen and go juicy…)



That aside - each forkful of tomato, mozzarella, basil and oil, is delicious.  This recipe is a classic for a reason, and the extra salad veg layered in makes this feel more like a lunch than a starter.  The real surprise is how well the soy sauce and oil, and the fresh coriander keeps things interesting.



That’ll keep me going through the 3 o’clock meeting, and all at a fraction of the cost of what you’d pay for in a restaurant (on expenses)
There were some jealous looks in the office when I knocked this together



PS:

The next day I was able to make a “Superfood “salad, containing chard, rocket, kale and beetroot (priced at …) with the rest of the iceberg lettuce plus a few grated radishes, a pack of which cost 9p, the remaining herbs (minus the parsley) with Supermarket chicken peri-peri (priced at £1.35 down from £2.99) I added a home-made mustard and olive oil dressing (1 heaped tsp Dijon mustard to 1/3 cup oil, whisked thoroughly.

Sunday, 25 September 2016

Value kebabs with extra punch,

Lamb Kofta Kebab




I'm afraid due to Google Cloud being ridiculous, I lost my lamb kebab picture, but here's a couple of wicked prawn kebabs I did last year.


I love a nice kebab, and while tonight's budget buy isn't perfect, it's better than the usual elephant leg you get in a dodgy eatery after a night out on the town. 

 These ten little lamb mince lollies, below, fed me for dinner and lunch in August.  All it needed was some sauce and some vegetables to go with it.  And I even had enough money for a budget dessert!

I've made kebabs before, although the recipe was a little different, so these aren't souvlaki style shish kebabs, which you may have seen me cook.  These are koftas, that use minced lamb.  I'll give you the recipe for them from scratch, below.

These Value versions are "minted" so the sauce of choice will be tzatsiki, a Greek cucumber, mint, garlic and yoghurt dip, with some of our harissa from last time going in with my leftover tomatoes and some artisanal Dorset Naga chilli sauce adding the firepower.  Plus some lettuce really balances with the yoghurt and the heat.


The method is simple enough.

For 4


Kebabs


1 pack of minced lamb or 10 small SupermarketValue lamb sticks
2 tsps cumin / curry powder.
Mint.  Fresh is best and easy to grow but a handful of dried will help bind the mince.
Salt and pepper.


Method

Roll the lamb mince into small cylinders and then roll in the cumin/ curry powder.  If you have a skewer, all the better, soak it in water first if it's wooden, and place the lamb under a hot grill for about 10-12 minutes.  If not, you can make these as meatballs and use a frying pan.  Or the grill.  Works for both, just make sure you get a nice crust on your lamb.


There's most of what went into the tsatziki, plus the kebas in the corner

Tsatziki


Per person:
1 tsp of jarred mint, or a large bunch of fresh mint, chopped.
2 tbsps Greek or natural yoghurt
1/4 of a cucumber, shredded and drained, with a little salt.
1 clove garlic, preferably cooked off first but half a fresh raw one is OK.
1 large pinch of dried oregano, or a big bunch of fresh if you have it.


Method

Chop everything, mix, and refrigerate.  Easy.


Chilli Sauce

Per person 
One tomato, squashed, with salt.  I used a leftover roasted tomato I had from last time.
1 or maybe two tablespoons of vinegar, a "nice" one if you have it.
1 tsp sugar.
1/2 a small chili, birdeye or similar, or one you made earlier like I did.  
Harissa, 1tsp.  I did pay out for this when doing my shakshouka a few weeks ago so a shame not to use it again to give some flowery subtle heat.
Coriander paste , 1tsp gives this a little twist as well.
And, maybe... 1/4 tsp of ginger.  
And of course, if you have a store cupboard favourite chili sauce to add heat, add some of that to taste

Ideally for a chilli sauce you want to cook it down slowly, make a lot of it in a batch and freeze it, but to each, their own today...

*munch*

Mmm...


These go well with either rice, couscous, or in a pitta, with the shredded lettuce to garnish. 

Normally with a kebab you get pickled red cabbage, but today while I remembered, I had some cheap steamable vegetables to use up, so I pickled them in a mixture of vinegar, salt, chilli, garlic and olive oil, in a clean Kilner jar.

For dessert, I had some mango and watermelon slices dressed with salted yoghurt and honey.  A little like what I posted last time...

There you are - a little healthier than the normal article and a lot more flavour for the pound than stopping off at AbraKebabera, or wherever...




Saturday, 10 September 2016

Pasta alla Puttanesca, a variation on...

Cheat's Fast Fresh Pasta alla Puttanesca

I was really hungry after work and wanted something quick and easy - comforting pasta came to mind.  Knowing I had a discounted bag of fusili and some tomatoes in the fridge, but also knowing I didn't want to faff around defrosting my home made sauce, or use shop bought, I improvised one of my favourite dishes.
A Non-standard reduction sticker, but at 25% of normal cost, I don't mind.
Finest* ripe tomatoes for half the price.  Nice.

So I picked up the bag of fresh fusili above for 30p, and those lovely high grade piccolo tomatoes as well at half price.  Bar my, unorthodox, ingredients, more of which later, everything else came from the store cupboard. 

"alla Puttanesca" means "in the manner of a prostitute" - I have no idea what the origin of the term is but it seems to be recent.  One theory is if you're too much of a sk**k to go to the market, you use what's in the cupboard.  Olives, capers, anchovy, garlic, chilli and tomato ragout form the basis of it.

The proper way to make the sauce, and some recipe variants, can all be found online of course, But here's my alternate take on it.

Ingredients (per person)

Tonight's ingredients.  Not quite the classic Italian, but...
  • 2 Handfuls of fresh pasta.  Tonight I used fusili but spaghetti is more authentic.
  • 6-8 small piccolo tomatoes, chopped.  Any ripe tomato would do but a ragout made with onion, chilli and garlic is, again, nearer the mark for authenticity.
  • 2 anchovy fillets, chopped
  • 6 olives, chopped.  I used jarred green but black, unstoned, are tastier.
  • 1 dash of chilli sauce.  I've used a nice fruity habanero sauce for extra firepower and flavour.
  • 1 heaped tsp capers.
  • Salt and pepper
  • Olive oil to dress.
  • Herbs - oregano, thyme, basil, parsley, etc.  Probably cook those in your ragout if making from scratch if dried, and use fresh to serve.  See below*
  
Here's where I experiment:

  • 1 small portion of feta cheese, crumbled.  This dish would maybe be served with a dusting of Parmesan but not outright lumps of cheese, let alone a Greek cheese.
  • 1 tsp pesto sauce - *As I was out of even dried herbs, this gave the dish a bit of extra flavour despite it not being a classic ingredient of puttanesca sauce.
  • 3 large iceberg lettuce leaves, chopped.  Bit of a risk but I think this will work; lettuce isn't just for salad - I've made soup with it, for instance.

Method

Boil the pasta for 5-8 minutes if fresh, or however long it says for dried, probably about 12 at a guess.

Meanwhile chop all the ingredients up and add some oil and the pesto to a small bowl.  Combine the ingredients thoroughly.

Our "sauce" taking shape.  Note my blue t-shirt in foreground (not essential to recipe)
When the pasta is ready, drain, reserving some of the water, and add the pasta to the sauce / salad.  Mix well, and add a little dash of the reseved cooking water.

Serve

*munch*

Yum yum.  Light, fresh, salty, savoury, spicy.
Yum.  This hit the spot perfectly.  Not too salty - the olives and capers are mellowed by the fresh tomato and lettuce, making it quite light.  The feta cheese melts slightly in the liquid and with the heat of the pasta, and the pesto gives it body, texture and herby goodness.  There's just a slight kick from the chilli as well.

Absolutely perfect - I could not have asked for a nicer ad-libbed supper.  It's even better when made with a proper tomato/garlic/onion slow cooked sauce.  Tuna also works well with this recipe, but I was feeling very satisfied.  Again, yum.

Saturday, 3 September 2016

Quick budget smoothies

Smoothies


You got a bit of a cheat last week with the addition of fruit to pasta salad, so here's an extra post.  I don't write much about snacks,breakfast or dessert. Or even fruit in general.  So here's what I had/have for breakfast, and have been known to have as a dessert.



A big rake of fruit, about to blended with  natural yoghurt and juice.


3 slices watermelon or Galia melon (usually cheaper)
4 chunks of cucumber.
4 slices of mango.
1/2 an apple, sliced.
1 small pot of natural yoghurt.
Top up with apple juice, or whatever you have to hand.

Blend until smooth, and knock back.


The watermelon didn't blend well; it was a bit under ripe when I tried it.  I think I need to invest in a SupermarketValueFood® food processor...

Lots of smoothies or juice drinks will use beetroot, carrots and kale, and I'm guessing you WILL need a proper blender for those recipes, but the ease of which you can put yoghurt, ripe fruit and juice, in a pot, is pretty satisfying.  

Kept me going well into lunchtime.

Other nice things I like to add to smoothies include:


  • Oatmeal, for thickness and carbs.  Use a fine oat, normal milled porridge oats work if ground finely first
  • Honey.
  • Spinach or lettuce - soft greens work well.
  • Any soft fruit you like, but nothing too sharp.  Prefer raspberries and blackberries myself, if strained.
  • More juice.


I don't like bananas taste wise, but they're pretty useful in smoothies for vitamins and texture, they blend well, so go for it if you like them...

There you go, reduced, healthy, tasty, breakfast.

Normal schedule will resume from now on - once a fortnight, or once a week if I have a small bonus post or aside to share.  Enjoy!

Thursday, 25 August 2016

Bonus Post: Budget Pasta "Salad" plus fruit.

Improvised Caesar / pasta / Waldorf salad

I've been on holiday, so this is a quick filler post from when I had to grab a fast budget picnic lunch, and hope for the best.



I've been on holidays for the last ten days, and it was great.

Short on time to catch a train, a fast lunch was necessary.  I picked up a "Caesar" Salad with pasta, chicken and bacon, plus a mini-pack of apples and grapes from the T.

*munch*













Tasting the dressing tube first, I don't think it's improved an iota from back in the days when I made this Caesar much better.

I'm only going to dot it about and throw the rest the hell away. Too much vinegar, too much mayo.  Yuck.

  • The pasta as always is over cooked, but isn't soggy today. Croutons, but yeah, they wouldn't travel... 
  • The chicken is dry-ish; edible. 
  • The salad - few leaves of iceberg at the bottom; disappointing.  
  • The bacon is smoky but not crispy, and that smoke flavour isn't from wood...
  • There's some cheese in here as well.  It...works with some mouthfuls, I'll give it that, but it's just T-ShopValueCheddar® instead of a nice Pecorino.



So, today, all I'm doing is tipping fruit into a store bought salad and adding a dash of sauce to balance it

 Will apple and grapes turn this into a half-Waldorf,  or a half-baked horrible disaster?


Pasta Chicken Bacon Caesar salad, per person



  • 1 serving of pasta - fusili or similar. 
  • 4 lettuce leaves, iceberg.  Little Gem also works from scratch.
  • 1 half-portion of chicken - say half a breast, or 1 thigh or 1 drumstick.
  • 2 rashers of streaky smoky bacon, chopped into 1/2cm strips
  • 1 apple, quartered, then chopped into thumb-sized chunks.
  • 6 grapes, plus or minus 1.
  • A few shavings of your finest (ahem...) ripe cheese.  Parmesan is best but any hard mature cheese is good.


About the dressing:

If I was trying to reverse engineer this dish, I'd do a garlic mayo myself, from scratch.  Otherwise a nice olive oil and vinegar mix  (4/1 ratio) would work.  Some folks do (3/1) oil / vinegar but I don't like the acidity.  But whatever floats your boat.


Method


 If you're cooking it from scratch:
  •  Boil pasta for the requisite time, say 7 minutes for fusili.
  •  While this is on, fry the bacon.
  •  Drain pasta, allow to cool.
  •  Shred your salad ingredients and dress appropriately.  I'd add the bacon fat in myself as part of that.  
  • - Dress with your dressing of preference, (I'd go for olive oil and white wine vinegar) to your taste, season, chill in the fridge.
  •  - Add the apples and grapes last, and serve.



*munch*

I must say for something I have put no effort into, I can report that, if I had shelled out an extra pound on a packet of nuts or seeds, or even 30p on celery, this would have been even better, and probably a very good budget Waldorf.  Not great you understand, but better than what you would get at your company barbecue.



I hope that's given you some ideas for messing around with your pre-bought picnics when you are in a rush to get to somewhere sunny.




I looked online and some recipes for Waldorf Salad and Caesar can be found here, as well as mine.  So yes, maybe it's O.K. to quickly play with your food, when on holiday.




Monday, 8 August 2016

Chicken 3 ways 2/3 - Shakshouka & couscous

For my first post for almost a year, I am lucky - The supermarket reduced section was pretty kind to me the other day - I have a bucket load of Mediterranean grains and veg.






First onto the fork is some couscous "salad" - I'm aiming to eat these mass-produced edible-constructions first, before I play around with them afterwards...
Wasn't great in it's raw state...

*munch*
What I can say for this couscous is that the peppers and chilli it comes with are punchy, but these grains are as dry as the Sahara, and need some sauce if they are to be some form of dinner.

I have been wanting to make this next dish for a while, as I've eaten its Basque cousin Piperade, which is delicious.  

Shakshouka or chakchouka, is an Arab / Mediterranean / Middle Eastern dish of baked eggs, tomato, peppers, onions / other vegetables, and spices.  I've added some leftover chicken drumsticks into the mix as this is normally a breakfast dish served with breads but it's my supper tonight.  I think lots of tomatoes will help rescue the couscous, and what's not to like about everything else, so this recipe should be perfect.

  There's a very comprehensive article here about shakshouka; I've read it, understood it, but I'm going to adapt it to my circumstances.


Ingredients - per person


2 eggs
1 orange (bell) pepper
Lots of tomatoes - 4 salad, 12 cherry is what I used.  
1/2 a small onion
1 chicken breast / drumstick / thigh, cooked*  

* This addition is non-standard but I promised recipes about how to use a whole chicken, and it worked...

About 250g couscous, fresh steamed is probably better.  
A little olive oil, maybe about 2 tsps.
Spices
 - cumin or curry powder
 - harissa paste - today's store cupboard rescue.  £3.50 for the harissa but that'll    add flavour until next March.  Dot that liberally over the ingredients.  
 - pimentón - another store cupboard staple for me.  Hot, dry, spicy, tasty.  
 - 1 + 1/2 cloves of garlic, smashed up with salt.  Poke the  cloves into the tomatoes




Method.

In a casserole or ovenproof dish, lay down the couscous, and add the chopped onions, tomatoes, peppers and garlic over the top of it.  Put into a low oven for an hour, at about 160°C.  
Allow to cool.

Chop the chicken up into rough chunks, almost like "pulled" chicken.
Add a tsp of cumin/ curry powder, 1 or 2 of harissa and half a tsp of pimentón or your nearest equivalent chilli powder,  over the top of the veg and couscous saucery.

Now then - make 2 wells / hollows / spaces in the dish under the couscous & veg, and crack the eggs into them.

Turn the oven back on to about 140°C and leave the eggs to bake for about 20-30 minutes.  Timing's not important, but keep your eye on your oven.  You want the eggs soft and slightly runny, but not underdone.

Hopefully this long slow process will give you slow roasted veg and wobbly baked eggs, and I'm hoping the couscous will not be as dry as it was thanks to all those tomatoes.... but let's see...




*munch*


You can't see the eggs here but I'll take a photo of the leftovers with more baked eggs as it was good enough for me to make again.


The harissa dotted about lifts this into the stratosphere of taste highlights - fiery but flowery.  I am also very pleased with how the juices from the roasted tomatoes have rescued the store bought couscous.  The leftover chicken has absorbed a lot of the tomato as well, and is a nice addition of texture and flavour.  One more way to use your entire chicken, done.

  As for the baked eggs, they are a real treat - absolutely lovely.  But the number one key to the dish, I reckon,  is the cumin / curry powder, just scattered over the top.  

I'm having seconds, and I'll post a photo of them later in the week.