• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Nourished

  • Home
  • Recipes
  • Book Reviews
  • Restaurants
    • 3 Michelin Stars
    • 2 Michelin Stars
    • 1 Michelin Star
  • Journal
    • Art Journal
    • The Renaissance Diary
  • About
    • Contact Me
    • Instagram
    • Loves
    • Suppliers
    • Masterchef Links

The Eleven Madison Park Granola

Warm spring salad, with a wild garlic dressing

Antioxidant Rich Smoothies

Recent Vegetarian Recipes

Warm spring salad, with a wild garlic dressing

Antioxidant Rich Smoothies

Saffron Jewelled Rice

Braised lettuce, with spring onions and peas

Pink Peppercorn Salad

Giant couscous, vegetables, herbs, pea-shoots

Get your bake on…

Churros, with Pistachio and Cardamom Sugar

French Apple Tart…

Tamarillo Tart Tatin

Pain Perdu, Pineapple and Coconut

The Meringue Girls Meringue Kisses…

Orange and Cranberry Scones

Where to Eat…

Le Bernardin, New York

Midsummer House, Cambridge

Corrigan’s, Mayfair

Angler, Moorgate

Alyn Williams, Mayfair

Fera, at Claridges

A Few Thermomix Recipes

Coconut Cream Ice-Cream, with Lime Zest [Thermomix]

Coconut Milk Creme Patisserie

Banana Bread [Thermomix]

Pecan and Salted Caramel Brownies

Heston Blumenthal's perfectly poached egg

Eggs Benedict and Heston Blumenthal’s Perfectly Poached Eggs

Thermomix Sauces: Béarnaise

June 29, 2012 Mister Truffle

Risotto, with mushrooms, cep roasted chicken, and summer truffle

Risotto, with mushrooms,
cep roasted chicken, and summer truffle

There are a thousand different ways to make risotto, but how do you make risotto memorable?  In the last twenty years there are three that I can recount in vivid detail:

  • In Lucca, we had an amazing barolo risotto with gorgonzola – umami heaven – salty, blue notes, rich, dense, it was utterly heavenly.
  • When Ramsey at Claridges was still a restaurant, and not a tourist destination, we had an amazing risotto with guinea fowl. The risotto was rich and dark – with a jus poured over it at the table – intense, meaty, the guinea fowl succulent and yielding.
  • There used to be an amazing little restaurant just above Picadilly, on the first floor at the apex of the junction of Picadilly and Regent Street – I have absolutely no memory of its name. Here we had a complete contrast – a light spring risotto of new peas, broad beans and asparagus… It was still rich and flavoursome, but I think had been lightened with something like marscapone, so it was silky and rich, but didn’t swamp the spring vegetables…
  • All of these are some time ago and I’d all but given up on risotto – for heavens sake – you can buy risotto in a tub now to be microwaved! But at Dinner we had an incredible saffron risotto that was so eye-wateringly rich and moreish that I decided it had to reappear on my menu.

The opportunity presented itself when I couldn’t decide what to do with the truffle I’d bought from @mistertruffle. I always automatically stick a truffle straight into my risotto rice when it arrives – an opportunity that can’t be missed – so it was already delicately scented before I began. There were a number of factors that made me decide on risotto, not least of which is a well-stocked larder, and some exceptional suppliers.

Ingredients:
Aquerello carnaroli rice from Infusions for Chefs
Morels from Mrs Tee
Summer truffle from @MisterTruffle
True Foods veal jus
Cep powder from Fine Food Specialists
Wine or Noily Prat
Cornfed chicken breasts
And a jar of my standby favourite mixed mushrooms – I use the oil to boost the mushroom flavour in stews, soups etc.  With ingredients like that, how could you go wrong?
Method:
  1. Before you begin, pop the jus into a pan to warm, I think I used three packets, they’re not huge, but substitute good stock if you don’t have this
  2. Brush the chicken with oil, and dust with a coating of the cep powder, pop in the oven
  3. Puree the morels and cook them out in a separate pan with the drained oil from the jar of mushrooms, or some olive oil
  4. Pop in the risotto rice, and cook it until the rice becomes translucent
  5. Pour in a small glass of wine at this point, and allow the rice to absorb it – actually I usually use noilly prat because I have it to hand…
  6. Once the rice has absorbed all of the alcohol, gradually ladle in the stock, two ladles at a time, until the liquid is absorbed
  7. Once the rice is cooked, grate some truffle over the top of the risotto and stirred it in, off the heat.  I’ve added it at the end because this is a summer truffle, and the scent and flavour is much more delicate than the winter – you don’t want to lose it in the rice
  8. Plate, with the roasted chicken, and top with finely sliced truffles… Oh, and a tiny drizzle of truffle oil…  Fabulous!
Summer truffles….
The rice, after the stock is added for the first time…
The colour comes from the morel puree and the oil from the mushrooms
The cornfed chicken, roasted in a coating of cep powder
The risotto receives it’s adornment of grated summer truffle
Risotto, with mushrooms, cep roasted chicken, and summer truffle

June 23, 2012 Fish

Roasted Salmon in African Volcano PeriPeri Sauce

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAI’ve been eating for two weeks… This may seem like a bit of a dream for some people, but my palate is jaded, I needed something much more comforting and zingy.  I’ve also been up since 4am this morning, and I’m definitely not in the mood for one of my elaborate cookery sessions – so it has to be fast!

At this time of the year my fridge is full of summery seasonal produce, but the weather speaks much more of autumn.  So, what to make? I check what I have – a large salmon fillet, Jersey royals of course, English asparagus, etc… Not really what I’m after I must admit…

I eye up my last remaining bottle of my favourite African Volcano peri peri marinade, and wonder when I will actually see Grant again to get some replacements…  But it’s too late.  My palate is already craving the rounded heat of Grant’s sauce, and there will be no alternative.

I decide to make a variation of one of my regular ‘quick’ dishes, here with a swift kick of spice to bring it alive.  I always have a large fillet of salmon in my fridge – it’s an incredibly versatile ingredient… You can marinade it in white miso, or brown miso, teriyaki, olive oil and herbs… Anything you fancy really, so I knew it would take to Grant’s marinade with aplomb.

I popped the fillet into a food bag with the marinade, but I also added a small handful of crushed pink peppercorns – I wanted that tart piquancy that they add, and of course the colour doesn’t look strange here either.  Then I wandered off for half an hour.  Pop the salmon in a roasting tray covered in foil for 10 minutes, then uncover it for the remaining 15 to allow the skin to crisp up.  I also popped in some lime quarters as roasted lime is delicious with fish.

While the fish was cooking I peeled the asparagus and popped that in a foil parcel to roast alongside the salmon, and prepared some boiled and crushed Jersey royals with olive oil.  How simple is that?

Now.  Jamie Oliver has a sweet potato mash that would have worked perfectly with this, but I didn’t have sweet potatoes in my fridge today.  We make this mash regularly, it has a spicy kick, and an amazing tangy savoury contrast via a combination of lime, mango chutney and soya sauce…  Next time I will definitely make this dish using that mash and not the Jersey royals, lovely though they were.  The recipe is in Jamie’s 30 Minute Meals, but I’ve included a link below from the Daily Mail website for ease.

Line your trays with foil, and the whole thing will take you about 15 minutes of prep, and about the same of actual cooking.  Result.

If you want to try the African Volcano marinade or sauce for yourself (and you should!), you can pop along to the Maltby Street Market on a Saturday, or contact Grant directly for a clandestine handing over of bottles…

Jamie’s Sweet Potato Mash

Ingredients:

700g (1lb 9oz) sweet potatoes
A small bunch of fresh coriander
2tbsp mango chutney
Soy sauce
2 limes

Wash the sweet potatoes, trim off any gnarly bits, then stab them a few times with a knife. Put in a large microwave-safe bowl, halve one of the limes and add to the bowl, then cover with a double layer of clingfilm and microwave on full power for 12 minutes, or until cooked through.

Finely chop the coriander on a large wooden chopping board, setting a few leaves aside for the garnish. Add the mango chutney, a good splash of soy sauce, a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil, the juice from ½ a lime and the reserved chopped chilli. Chop and mix everything together on the board.

Get the sweet potatoes out of the microwave and check they are cooked through, then use tongs to squeeze over the juice from the hot lime halves and discard them.

Carefully tip the sweet potatoes on top of the mango chutney mixture and use a knife or masher to chop and mash everything together, including the skins. Season to taste, adding more fresh lime juice if needed.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

This is last week’s salmon by the way, when I was clearly feeling much more summery and light :0)

June 23, 2012 Restaurant

Parade Ring Restaurant, Ascot

Dining at racecourses can be a bit of a hit and miss affair, and is a very difficult thing to get right. Over the years I’ve eaten in many different courses, and at many different levels – from the sandwich stalls to lobster, and everything in between.  For the last couple of years we’ve used the Parade Ring restaurant at Ascot, and I continue to be impressed by their commitment to innovate, titivate, and more importantly facilitate dining between races.  This is much harder than it sounds, and the task falls to the in-house management team and to Sodexo, who are the main caterer at Ascot.

During Royal Ascot the restaurant serves 200 customers several courses between the arrival of the Queen, five sets of parade ring viewings, race and presentations – it’s an incredible feat.  The food has to be as fresh as possible, and yet be easy to deliver in a consistent format to the customer.  Things aren’t always perfect at the beginning of the week, but by the end of the week the standard is incredible, and you can see the development of the dish along the way, as things are tweaked, refined and improved.  
There are many excellent restaurants at Ascot, but if you fancy a treat, book yourself into the Parade Ring, and let the staff pamper you!
Royal Ascot June 2012

Canapés: salmon with roe, sour cream and ?,
quails egg with celery salt, a cornet of beef with parmesan and horseradish

Chilled garden pea, buttermilk,
and snow pea velouté, serrano ham, and mint flowers
“Hot Shells”: Roasted crevettes, parlourde and razor clams,
 mussels and queen scallops, marsh samphire and cream fish reduction 
Seared foie gras, asparagus gelée, 
fleur de sel,  extra virgin olive oil, black truffle juice
 
Heirloom tomato and basil salad,
mozzarella ice-cream, tomato and lemon thyme tea
Scallop ceviche, asparagus, samphire,
tarragon and crab salad, tangerine vinaigrette
Roast fillet of Angus beef with foie gras, port and red wine braised shallots,
wild mushroom tortellini, summer vegetables and bordelaise sauce
Poached lobster, crushed Jersey royal potato salad,
pink grapefruit and English asparagus
Frais de bois vacherin, lemon and basil parfait, strawberry gelée,
French meringue tears, strawberry sorbet, edible flowers

June 23, 2012 Iced Berry Souffle

Michel Roux Jr’s Iced Red Berry Soufflé

18b87-screenshot2012-06-23at10-58-28Continuing with my soufflé obsession, here we have an iced soufflé.  Unlike a chilled soufflé which uses gelatine to stabilise the dish, a frozen soufflé can be much lighter because it’s obviously frozen.  The obvious drawback in the average kitchen, I would suggest, is that you need enough free shelf space to sit the dishes for 12 hours.
On the plus side, you can make it in advance, and can actually use up those bags of frozen fruit we all seem to have in our freezer.  Use the space you free up to set the soufflés!  The perfect summer dinner party dish, if we ever get enough sun to truly call it summer…

…

Read More

June 14, 2012 Market

Manhattan’s Union Square Greenmarket

In one of Manhattan’s few green and open spaces lies the world-famous Union Square Market. Established 36 years ago, the farmer’s market runs four times a week and is a must for local shoppers and foodies. Open on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, there’s ample time for a visit in even the briefest of schedules. It’s also open all day, but jet-lagged Europeans can head there early to see the stallholders setting up – it’s the perfect way to start your day. It’s also just one of dozens of markets run in the city by the non-profit New York Greenmarket initiative.

When the market opened in 1976 there were just seven suppliers, and the market was sold out of everything by noon. Now, during the peak season, it serves over 250,000 customers a week, and has over 140 traders and artisanal food makers of all kinds. From the smallest stalls offering homemade preserves, to huge stalls offering the best vegetables straight from the farm, suppliers aim to provide over a thousand varieties of fruit and vegetables during the height of the season. Even better, much of the unsold produce is donated to local soup kitchens and charities like City Harvest for redistribution among the hungry and homeless. On the day that I visited the market there were sixty-one producers listed on the market’s website. Updated for each market day, the list lets you know who will be selling that day, and gives you an idea of their range. It also details the many food demonstrations that will be taking part within the market. That day the range included everything from herbal tinctures, to hydroponic tomatoes – there was even a stallholder selling emu and ostrich eggs. 

I spoke to the chaps at Bread Alone Bakers – they make their bread by hand, and in a wood-fired oven. Established in 1983 in the Catskill Mountains, they were one of the first supplies to send goods to the market when it was formed. They stock a large range of bread made with organic grains, as well as pastries, muffins and cakes. All of their grains are sourced locally and many are grown specifically for them. As a result they are able to minimize their food miles to produce sustainable and ethically sound bread.

Another huge and founding stall-holder, the S&SO Produce Farms, come from Goshen, sixty miles to the North of Manhattan. Goshen is in the “black dirt” region formed at the end of the ice age, when glaciers melted to form a shallow lake. The resulting soil is peaty, rich and perfect for growing vegetables. Their stall is packed high with spring onions, radishes, red and golden beetroot, turnips carrots, and herbs of every kind. On display were at least six varieties of tomato, and several of spring-onion. They also sell their own pickles and sauces. 
Wandering down the stalls I come across the Bullich Mushroom Farm. A third-generation farm, they specialize in a variety of exotic and regular mushrooms. The only cultivated mushroom farm in New York, they grow their fungi in 700 acres of temperature-controlled barns. Founded by a Yugoslavian immigrant, the family-run Bullich Farm is the last remaining mushroom farmer in the Hudson Valley, from a peak of around forty in the 1950’s. This success is due party to their early adoption of the Union Square Greenmarket, where they can sell mushrooms picked within the last twenty-four hours directly to the public. Mushrooms are delicately placed in paper bags, and handed with over with care. Nearly three months of intense work has gone into these fungi, and they want you to have them in perfect condition.

The boys from McEnroe Organic Farm laugh at my accent, but happily pointed me in the direction of the farm’s website and Facebook page. Farmers in the market are happy to engage with their customers on all manner of levels, and the McEnroe Farm has over a thousand followers on Facebook. It also regularly tweets pictures of its produce to its followers. Fresh tomatoes were carefully laid out on the stall to avoid bruising, and they had little tasting samples to allow the public to taste their wares. 

I also met Heather Graves of Berkshire Berries. Based out in Massachusetts Heather sells her family’s jellies, jams and maple syrup at the Union Square market twice a week. Her parents established Berkshire Berries in the late seventies, and they still make their produce from fruit grown either on their land, or locally. Heather also sells her father’s famous New York City Honey from hives based in Manhattan, Brooklyn and the Bronx. With hundreds of thousands of bees producing around 350lbs of heavily scented honey a year, David Graves is looking to increase the number of hives he has dotting the skyscrapers and roof-gardens of New York. 

Throughout the market there is a real sense of dedication and pride in the produce. From the tiniest to the largest, vendors were answering questions about the provenance of their goods. The Union Street market is a testament to consumer’s engagement with the food they eat, and the producers who deliver it. Even this early in the season there were the first of the peaches, young cherries, a huge abundance of root vegetables and salads. The Square also provides the backdrop for a vibrant café scene, and the garden within the Square saw people happily eating lunch bought moments before in the market.

Walking around the stalls I buy a sourdough roll, lambs lettuce, a young peach, a fine sliver of raw-milk baby Swiss cheese, and head into the small but verdant park. From farm to lunch in around twenty-four hours, sitting in one of the busiest cities in the world, you can’t help thinking New Yorker’s are onto something.

For a list of the Greenmarkets in New York City, and a breakdown of the day’s supplies, go to http://www.grownyc.org/. 

 

Who’s IN today at NYC’s Union Square Greenmarket?

To better serve you, we plan to provide attendance information every market day.  
*New Pickin's: Peaches, Red Currants, Cherries, Blueberries, Raspberries, Strawberries, Zucchini, Summer Squash, Scapes, Purslane, Heirloom Carrots, Shishito Peppers, Fresh Pesto, Herb Butter, and Tinctures.







 




 

 














Wednesday, 06.13.12
--------------------
ANDREW'S LOCAL HONEY
Raw Honey Varieties, NYC Rooftop Honey & Bee Products.

ARCADIAN PASTURES
Pork, Beef, Lamb, Chicken & Eggs.

BAKER'S BOUNTY
Breads & Baked Goods. Gluten-free options.

BERKSHIRE BERRIES
Raw Honey, NYC Rooftop Honey, Maple Syrup & Jams.

BETH'S FARM KITCHEN
Pickled Goods, Jams & Chutneys.

BLUE MOON FISH
Shellfish, Smoked & Fresh Saltwater Fish.

BODHITREE FARM
Vegetables, Strawberries & Herbs.

BODY & SOUL BAKERY
Vegan Baked Goods. Gluten-free options.

BREAD ALONE BAKERY
Baked Goods. Cert/Organic Breads.

BREEZY HILL ORCHARDS
Orchard Fruit, Hard Cider & Baked Goods.

BULICH MUSHROOMS
Cultivated Mushrooms.

CARADONNA FARMS
Orchard Fruit.

CATO CORNER FARM
Cow's Milk Cheeses.

CHATEAU RENAISSANCE WINERY
Wine & Sparkling Wine.

CHERRY LANE FARMS
Vegetables & Berries.

DIPAOLA TURKEYS
Whole, Parts, Ground & Sausage.

DUTCHMILL GARDENS
Cut Flowers.

DUVA FARM
Cut Flowers.

ECKERTON HILL FARMS
Vegetables & Smoked Peppers.

FANTASTIC GARDENS
Potted Plants & Herbs.

GARDEN OF SPICES
Chicken & Duck Parts (including Eggs) & Pork.

GREENER PASTURES
Wheatgrass Plants & Juice. Micro green Shoots.

HAWTHORNE VALLEY
Cert/Organic. Cow Dairy Products, Beef, Pork, Ferments & Baked Goods.

HODGSON FARMS
Potted Plants & Herbs.

HOEFFNER FARMS
Potted Plants & Vegetables.

HOT BREAD KITCHEN
Non-Profit. Breads & Baked Goods.

HUDSON VALLEY DUCK
Whole, Parts & Cured Products.

KEITH'S FARM
Cert/Organic. Vegetables & Herbs.

KNOLL KREST FARM
Eggs, Fresh Pasta & Frozen Soups.

LOCUST GROVE FARMS
Orchard Fruit & Berries.

LYNNHAVEN GOAT FARM
Goat Milk & Meat Products. Eggs: Chicken & Duck.

MADURA FARM
Vegetables, Eggs & Cultivated Mushrooms.

MARTIN'S PRETZELS
Hand-rolled Hard Pretzels.

MAX CREEK HATCHERY
Fresh & Smoked Farmed Trout. Vegetables.

MIGLIORELLI FARM
Vegetables & Orchard Fruit.

MILLPORT DAIRY
Cow's Milk Cheeses, Eggs & Meat Products.

MOUNTAIN SWEET BERRY
Vegetables, Strawberries & Potato Chips.

NATURE'S HEALING FARM
Potted Plants & Herbs.

OAK GROVE PLANTATION
Potted Herbs, Beef, Pork, Cornmeal & Whole Wheat Flour.

OUR DAILY BREAD
Breads & Baked Goods. Gluten-free Options.

PET-AL PLANTS
Potted Plants & Herbs.

PHILLIPS FARMS
Berries, Plants & Value Added Products.

RED JACKET ORCHARDS
Juices & Orchard Fruit Products.

ROAMING ACRES OSTRICH
Emu & Ostrich Eggs. Ostrich Products & Meat.

ROGOWSKI FARM
Cert/Naturally Grown. Vegetables & Value Added products.

RONNYBROOK DAIRY FARM
Cow's Milk & Cow Dairy Products.

ROSE MEADOW FARM
Roses & other cut flowers.

S&SO PRODUCE FARMS
Vegetables & Value Added Products.

SHUSHAN HYDROPONIC
Tomatoes, Herbs & Vegetables.

SILVA ORCHIDS
Orchid varieties.

SILVER HEIGHTS FARM
Cert/Organic. Potted Plants & Herbs.

STOKES FARM
Herb bunches, Vegetables & Strawberries.

STONY MOUNTAIN RANCH
100% Grassfed Beef.

SYCAMORE FARMS
Vegetables, Strawberries & Greenhouse Tomatoes.

TAMARACK HOLLOW
Vegetables, Livestock Meats & Chicken Eggs.

TELLO'S GREEN FARM
Chicken Eggs.

TERHUNE ORCHARDS
Orchard Fruit, Berries & Baked Goods.

TWEEFONTEIN HERB FARM
Herbal Tinctures, Salves (etc), and Pesto.

TWO GUYS FROM WOODBRIDGE
Hydroponic Greens & Herbs. Cultivated Mushrooms.

VALLEY SHEPHERD CREAMERY
Pasture-raised, Cow & Sheep's Milk Cheeses.

WINDFALL FARMS
Micro Greens, Shoots, Vegetables, Herbs & Eggs.
****************

June 12, 2012 Fish

Aqua Grill in Soho, New York…

I’m in New York – hurrah! City to some of the finest restaurants in the world, and a mecca for foodies everywhere.  Every street corner boasts a diner or deli, and with produce coming in from all over the country and overseas, it’s no surprise that it also has restaurants like Aquagrill.

On the day that we visited, Aquagrill had no less than 27 kinds of oysters available on its huge ice-packed counter… And that’s just the oysters. There were also countless kinds of fish, produced in a myriad of different ways.

We were six for dinner, and in the time we sat there, tables emptied and refilled around us.  Platters of fruits de mer seemed to be the most popular dish, and trays heaving with shellfish poured up and down the room.  It’s obviously an extremely popular local restaurant, and the pace never lets up.

There’s just one tiny problem – I can’t actually eat oysters…  Yup…  So why come here?  I chose Aquagrill precisely because I appreciate this kind of dedication – fish and shellfish of this standard should be applauded, and I just wish we had something comparable in London.  Of course we have Scotts, Bentleys et al, but this is different – this isn’t a fine dining restaurant – this is just sheer and unadulterated homage to the produce, served in a continental style.

Given that there were six of us, it would have been impractical for me to photograph everyone’s food (not to say annoying in the extreme), so I have my dishes, and a couple of others…

The kitchen sent us some lobster tartare on a game chip to begin – really good tartare, some hint of horseradish in there that might have been a touch of wasabi.

Lobster tartare on a game chip

I began with the lobster salad…  A good combination of tail and claw meat, well dressed salad, avocado, zingy ruby grapefruit and tiny beetroot dice for texture and sweetness.  The lobster was succulent, and a lovely light way to begin the meal.  Hubby had this too and thought it very good. The others had lobster cocktail (apparently good), and soft shelled crab (good, but a little salty).  I’ll check the other dishes when I get a minute.

Maine Lobster salad with avocado,
ruby grapefruit, and a champagne vinaigrette
Crispy soft shelled crab, with sautéed spinach, jicama,
ortaniques, and micro greens in a spicy citrus vinaigrette

Hubby and I both followed this with a special of the day, porcini dusted loin of yellow fin tuna, porcini polenta, fiddlehead ferns, fresh porcini and arugula salad (that’s rocket to us Brits) in a truffle vinaigrette… What’s not to like? Rare tuna and an intense umami kick from all the mushroom elements.  These didn’t overwhelm the tuna, and fiddleheads…  Strangely enough I had a (twitter) conversation with Sat Bains and James Tanner recently about fiddleheads, and we were commenting on the fact that they’re eaten more in the US than the UK.  I know some varieties are considered poisonous, but these were lovely…  I can’t really describe the texture or the flavour, but they eat as you’d imagine they would.  Here they completed that sense of the woodland when combined with the porcini, and added an extra forest-like dimension.

Porcini dusted loin of yellow fin tuna, porcini polenta,
fiddlehead ferns, fresh porcini and arugula salad dressed in a truffle vinaigrette
Seared diver scallops, with Peekytoe crabmeat risotto
and sugarsnap peas in a tomato shellfish emulsion

To finish I had the creme brûlée – not the best one I’ve ever eaten to be honest, and I couldn’t get a decent picture of it.  The custard was a tiny bit granular – always a possibility with creme brûlée – though the sugar top was crisp and good.

Creme brûlée 

Two of my chums had the panna cotta, which they thought was very good, and another two had the apple tarte which they also thought good.

Apple tarte

Overall we had a good meal – the quality of the ingredients were exceptional.  Some of us did have a issue with heavy-handed seasoning.  It’s difficult to assess – all the food I’ve eaten in NewYork to date has been pretty heavily seasoned, so perhaps this is fairly typical?  Certainly this wouldn’t have been the case if we’d tucked into the fruits de mer, and judging by the sheer quantity zipping past our table this is by far the most popular fare!  If you’re in Soho, go visit Aquagrill – I defy you to find a better selection of fish and shellfish in any restaurant in the city.

Aquagrill
210 Spring Street

Soho
New York
NY 10012
@AquagrillNYC

Aquagrill on Urbanspoon

June 12, 2012 1 Michelin Star

Harwood Arms…

The Harwood Arms is the perfect kind of local pub.  Set in a nondescript street in Fulham, it looks completely unassuming and decidedly local. People were popping in and out all afternoon, and from what I saw, the majority appeared to be on foot and knew the staff well.  The interior is all stripped down wood and feels airy, and light.  However, a quick glance under the bonnet reveals a much racier engine – Harwood is actually a joint collaboration between Mike Robinson, chef patron of the Pot Kiln pub out in Berkshire, and Brett Graham of the Ledbury.

I’d been speaking to a well known food blogger and @Hermanoprimero on twitter for a while now – we’re all techies, we’re of a similar age, and we’re all obsessed with food.  I thought it would be fun to organise a lunch, so when one of them suggested we meet there, it seemed like a very good choice. I’ve eaten Mike’s venison before (some of the best I’ve ever had), and The Ledbury is one of my favourite restaurants in London.

The man currently behind the stoves at is Barry Fitzgerald, who’d previously worked at Arbutus and Honey.  He recently took over the mantle from Stevie Williams, who’d made the Harwood Arms the only Michelin starred pub in London.

We began with an amazing venison scotch egg – crispy panko breadcrumbs, delicious meat, perfect egg.  I think the picture speaks for itself…

Venison Scotch egg

I had the Cornish crab on toast, with a chilled courgette and basil soup.  The soup was packed full of flavour (and not too courgetty actually), a bowl of green seasonality, with spiky basil, and clean herby flavours.  The crab toast was delicious!  The light white meat on the top was delicate and sweet, but the bottom of the toast contained a rich layer of brown meat.  It wasn’t just that the brown meat was packed full of flavour, it tasted as though it had actually been dressed in a reduction of shellfish.  It tasted of the best bisque, a sort of ground shell intensity that worked perfectly on the toast and was a perfect foil for the verdant soup.

Cornish crab on toast, with edible flowers
Chilled courgette and basil soup, with Cornish crab on toast 

Next I had the plaice – perfectly cooked fish, lightly dressed vegetables, salty samphire, sweet baby gem lettuce.  A lovely dish, clean and yet packed full of flavour.

Roast plaice on the bone, with smoked potato, baby gem and potted shrimp butter

There were lots of amazing puddings on offer, but I’m a bit addicted to sea buckthorn after my travels to Paul Foster at Tuddenham Mill, so there was no way I was going to turn down any dish that contained it.  In this case there were perfect tiny doughnuts, dusted in sugar and cinnamon.  The sea buckthorn came as dipping sauce, and also mixed with sour cream.  Light and fresh, they complimented each other perfectly.

Brown sugar doughnuts, with sea buckthorn curd and sour cream

The staff at the Harwood Arms, headed by Alex Sergeant, were charming and attentive. We were there for hours talking about all manner of things, and they kept us topped up, fed and watered in a friendly but unobtrusive way.  The food is of very good quality, and well executed.  Actually I think it’s very good value too – I wish I lived next to the Harwood, it would definitely be my local – I wish it could be my local… As it is, it’s definitely going on my regulars list.

@Hermanoprimero‘s Lunch

Warm salad of wood pigeon, with
creamed livers, bitter leaves and turnips

Cheek and jowl of Middlewhite portk,
with celeriac, white cabbage and crackling

Fresh mint ice-cream with Harwood Arms bournon biscuits

The other lunch…

Chicken live pate, with spiced chutney,
chicory and caramelised onion bread
Slow cooked neck of roebuck, with
creamed celeriac, wild mushrooms and horseradish




Raspberry and blackberry trifle,
with sherry sponge and brandy snaps

(and yes, it really is that colour!)

Harwood Arms
27 Walham Grove
Fulham
London SW6 1QP
@HarwoodArms
Harwood Arms on Urbanspoon

June 8, 2012 2 Michelin Stars

Dinner, Knightsbridge

I felt somewhat apprehensive about booking a table at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal – it feels as though everything that can be said about the experience, has been said.  Yet as a technical cook any Blumenthal offering surely had to be on my list to try.  So at the prescribed hour I duly rang, got straight through, and very quickly made my booking.

Hubby and I had eaten in Foliage several times, but Dinner has made better use of the space.  The atmosphere is buzzy, though it wasn’t busy when we arrived.  There were a mixture of diners, some looking for a gastronomic experience – others literally just for dinner.  And I think perhaps this lies at the heart of my experience.  Where we had unconsciously come to view it as a ‘one trick pony’ – certainly Heston has commented in the past that the most diners will only ever visit the Fat Duck once – Dinner is actually a fully-functioning seasonal restaurant, in which you could eat regularly and still find lots to interest and excite.

From our vantage point overlooking the glass kitchen we could see the brigade in action, and it’s a very slick operation.  There’s a Josper oven on which all the steaks are cooked, and when the chef opens the door, there’s a tiny delay before plumes of flames erupt into the kitchen.  On another counter a rotisserie grill endlessly turns the glazed pineapples for the Tipsy cake, and ticket machines punctuate the view with orders appearing both at the pass and in the meat section itself.

The menu is based on historical and traditional recipes over several centuries, and the detail describes when the dishes were recorded, with a reference on the reverse to specific ingredients, techniques and  sauces.  The dishes have been compiled from a wide variety of texts, and Heston and Ashley have referred to the historians at Hampton Court Palace, and to items in the British Library to try to ensure authenticity.

I told the Hubby that everyone eats the Meat Fruit – we look at each other – really, do we have to?  I liked the look of the scallops, and Hubby really wanted the Salamugundy… Neither of us was prepared to give up our dish when lo, like manna from heaven, a Meat Fruit arrived with the compliments of the kitchen.  Up close it really is as beautiful as all of those photographs would suggest, and breaking open that mandarin glaze reveals an incredibly smooth and clean chicken liver parfait.  It’s not just the theatre of the dish, this is perhaps the best chicken liver parfait I’ve eaten and the acidity of the mandarin cuts through the dish cleanly.  Do order it – ignore your instincts to forego it – it’s an great dish.  It’s served with farmhouse bread which has been grilled in a criss-cross fashion, the slightly charred edge adding to the overall combination.  (If you want to make it at home, here’s the recipe).

Meat Fruit

My scallops and cucumber was really more about the cucumber than the scallops.  The ketchup includes a hit of dill, adding to that slightly pickled element, and provided a clean acidic hit on the palate.  The braised cucumber hearts are held sous vide with a little oil, before being chargrilled – this solidifies the texture, and the charring highlights the sweetness of the cucumber.  The scallops were fine, but felt more like a vehicle for the cucumber and borage.  I like this dish, it tastes clean and fresh, and was a good dish to sit between the parfait and the rice.

Scallops with cucumber

Hubby was a little less keen on his Salamugundy (chicken oysters, salsify, marrow bone and horseradish cream ). He loved the textures of the two kinds of chicken (the said oyster, and he thought chicken breast), but thought the dish was over seasoned.  I suspect whatever seasoning is put onto the skin of the breast enhance the crispiness contributed to the salty flavour.  Hubby doesn’t usually complain about saltiness, and I’m pretty liberal at home. (Forgot to take a photo).

Next, Rice and Flesh.  This saffron risotto is probably the best saffron dish I’ve had (often I find the taste quite metallic and flat), and one of the best risotto’s I’ve had in ages.  There’s nothing worse than poor risotto, and this was luscious and yielding.  My picture is deceiving, the dish is actually only a fine layer of risotto, and not as wet as it looks here.  The flesh in question is calves tail, and is a tiny mouthful of umami-rich intensity.  You couldn’t eat much of this dish, but the slightly blue note combined with the meaty rightness  is well balanced.  I’d happily forgo a main course for this dish, and Hubby really liked the meagre spoonful I allowed him.

Rice and Flesh

Hubby had the Savoury Porridge – very pretty it includes roast cod palette, and smoked beetroot.  He wasn’t terribly keen on the texture of the cod palette, though he did like the flavours in the rest of the dish.  He passed me a piece – no – fine for me… He insisted it was a bit slimy, and passed me another – and this piece was much more slippery and fishy.  I’m assuming cod palette is actually cod cheeks, though surely that would make it cod palate not palette?

Savoury porridge

I had the fillet of beef, which I think perhaps was unnecessary given the other yumminess on offer – in future I’d happily just eat a variety of starters.  It was of course perfectly cooked in that Josper oven, and came with a disk of bone marrow not the top.  I’m not usually that keen on bone marrow which can sometimes be too slippery for me, but here it complimented the meatiness and worked well with the crumb.  The triple cooked chips were crunchy and well seasoned, and I also ordered some braised lettuce, which ‘let down’ the meatiness – that is to say, the clean flavour refreshed the tastebuds between mouthfuls.  The beef jus is incredibly intense, as is the mushroom ketchup, so I think you do need some kind of vegetable side dish.

Aberdeen Angus fillet steak with mushroom ketchup
Triple cooked chips

The Hubby had the Black Foot pork chop, with Hispi cabbage, lardo, ham hock and Robert sauce.

Black Foot pork chop

I’d pre-ordered the tipsy cake (which you have to order at the same time as your starters), and the brioche arrived in a tiny cast iron pot, which a carved sliver of charred pineapple.  The brioche is soaked in Sauternes, and lightly dusted with powdered sugar crystals – absolutely delicious.  It tastes a little like a rum baba, but is more fragrant, and not as sweet and sticky.  The pineapple is so richly condensed by this stage that it almost has an umami edge, it tasted very gently of that savoury depth you get from blue cheese, if thats not too strange an analogy.

Tipsy cake with pineapple

We’d decided to have a side-order of the liquid nitrogen ice-cream, and the undulating trolley was duly wheeled over.  There’s an old-school Kenwood style mixer built into the trolley, and our waitress combined the vanilla custard base with the liquid nitrogen to form instant ice-cream.  Served in little sugared cones, there were a choice of four toppings – freeze dried cherries, popping candy, praline I think, and sugar coated fennel seeds.  This is a great bit of theatre at the table, but the resulting ice-cream melts so quickly in your hands that Hubby soon abandoned his.  Mine was a little firmer and was surprisingly like a Mr Whippy ice-cream – I had assumed it would have a more conventional texture.  Whilst it does provide a little bit of theatre at the table, I’m not sure it would work that well if you were in a larger group.

Liquid nitrogen ice-cream

Ironically I think I had a lot more fun with the menu than the Hubby.  We found the cooking technically accomplished, the atmosphere relaxed and buzzy, and the staff very attentive – the only question which couldn’t be answered immediately resulted in a better informed member of staff appearing promptly at our table.  Where perhaps the Hubby didn’t personally appreciate all of the dishes he’d ordered, he said it certainly wouldn’t stop him from returning and ordering some of those I’d had.  Talking to the Sous Chef, we said that we’d noticed one particular dish absolutely flying off the meat section – what was it?  Apparently it’s the pigeon, so this is what I’ll be ordering next time.  There’s a great little chef’s table overlooking the pass, and next time I think we’d bring people with us to enjoy the buzzy atmosphere.

If you’ve not been yet – do go to Dinner.  Don’t think of it as a one-time venue, but as somewhere you could eat in the way you would at, say, The Square, or Marcus Wareing.  My scallop dish had just come back onto the menu, so it’s not quite as fixed as we’d imagined.  Truthfully it’s not in our top five for London, but given the variety on offer these days this is certainly not a criticism.  I’d also say that the booking process was not as complicated as we’d anticipated, and @elizabethonfood’s advice to try walking in early seems sound to us.

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal
The Mandarin Hotel
66 Knightsbridge
London

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal on Urbanspoon

May 30, 2012 Art Journal

The Queen | Art and Image

Queen Elizabeth II, by Dorothy Wilding

Queen Elizabeth II, by Dorothy Wilding

To mark the Diamond Jubilee, The National Portrait Gallery is staging an exhibition of images of Queen Elizabeth II throughout her sixty year reign.  The portraits have been chosen by Paul Moorhouse, the Curator of Twentieth Century Portraits, and without reference to Buckingham Palace.  As a result there are some surprising inclusions, with images by Gilbert & George, Andy Warhol, and Gerhard Richter nestled amongst the more traditional portraits by Beaton, and Annigoni. There’s even one portrait that pitches Queen Elizabeth against Diana.

There are also rare unguarded moments, such as the snapshot take on the morning of the fire at Windsor Castle – one of a series of events which marked the Queen’s ‘annus horriblis’, in the fortieth year of her reign.  As a result, the exhibition can be read on many levels – from the changes in fashion to attitudes about the upper classes – the show is as much about charting changes in society over the last sixty years, as about visual appropriations of the Queen.

Included, for example, is the Sex Pistols cover of God Save the Queen in 1977, marking the Queen’s silver jubilee.  Highly contentious as the time, the song was banned from many radio stations, and marks a very specific moment in punk rock history.  Now some 35 years later, the cover is part of the mainstream lexicon of Elizabeth II’s imagery and is no more offensive than the other portraits on show.

Equanimity

Equanimity

More revolutionarily is the first lenticular portrait of the Queen Elizabeth, Equanimity, generated from over 10,000 still shots. Surprisingly, the portrait remains somehow static, despite the Queen following us around the room.  Created by Chris Levine (artist) and Rob Munday (the holographer) Equanimity has now been gifted to the National Portrait gallery.

Q3

Lightness of Being

 

More revealing perhaps is Levine’s Lightness of Being, which shows Elizabeth with her eyes closed.  This portrait shows a more vulnerable queen, and says something about Elizabeth’s age. Despite the regal attire, somehow Elizabeth is more fragile than the iconography.

Q4

Elizabeth and Philip Potent

Another unconventional portrait is Elizabeth and Philip Potent, created by Gilbert and George in 1981.  Using postcards of Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh, the pair have managed to create a potent cross.  More commonly found in heraldry, the term potent allows them to comment in a very playful and sophisticated way about the iconography and status of the royal family.  In the show is also Gilbert and George’s postcard collage Coronation Cross, also from their 1981 Crusade exhibition.  Crusade was intended to bring together art and a sense of national identity.  The royal family was seen as very much central to that sense of nationhood.

This exhibition isn’t going to appeal to everyone, but if you read it as a social commentary I think it’s perhaps rather revealing. Pictures intended to shock seem somehow more commonplace when set against countless other portraits.  I found myself more surprised by the intensity and size of Freud’s tiny portrait, than that of the endlessly reproduced Sex Pistol’s cover.  I couldn’t help thinking about Queen Elizabeth’s namesake too, Queen Elizabeth I.  Elizabeth I’s iconography was set out specifically to create and image of a strong queen, a goddess, a virgin, a ruler of lands, and we can see parallels with the early portraits of Elizabeth II. However, as technology has progressed, we are presented with an unprecedented number of pictures of the Queen on a near daily basis.  The iconography of Elizabeth II still stands in those seminal portraits by Dorothy Wilding and the like in the show, but it’s actually those unguarded moments, like the morning of the Windsor Castle fire, which speak more loudly. In these unguarded moments, we see the vulnerability of the Queen, and ironically, it is where we identify with her that we perhaps gain a better understanding of her.  Looking at each portrait as a tiny moment in time will offer a better reading of the exhibition, than trying to absorb the iconography as a whole.

The Queen | Art and Image is on at the National Portrait Gallery until the 21st October 2012.

May 27, 2012 Canapes

Vietnamese Summer Roll

One of my favourite things to eat are Vietnamese Summer Rolls, or Gỏi Cuốn.  Served cold, they can include pork, and in the UK I’ve had them with crispy duck in, which is lovely.  However the more typical variant is a prawn roll.  The wrapper is made from rice flour, but unlike a wonton wrapper that you might use for a spring roll, these become translucent when dampened in water.  The wrappers are assembled with this in mind, so that the prettiest ingredients are placed at the centre of the roll.

Typically I include the following, though they’re not all traditional…

Ingredients
Rice wrappers
Prawns, cooked, and sliced in half lengthways
Vermicelli noodles – don’t overcook them (also called glass noodles)
Herbs, especially mint and coriander, but I usually include dill too
Chives, or shredded batons of spring onion
Carrot batons, finely sliced
Enoki mushrooms

Dip the wrapper into water briefly – don’t worry about it being firm still, they’ll continue to soften on the board.  Lay your herbs, then put the remaining ingredients lengthways, at the end add the prawn.  Fold the vegetable section over first, fold in the two sides like an envelope, and then roll over the prawns.  There’s a good example of the technique in this video by EatNowCryLater.

I got my 11yo to make these, which is why some are a little irregular, but this is the perfect dish for children to make, if you get all the ingredients together, it becomes merely an assembly job.

If you want to make a traditional Vietnamese roll, you include leaves, bean sprouts, vermicelli noodles, some poached pork belly, and the halved prawns.   It is usually served with a hoisin/peanut dipping sauce…  I found an example in the Erica Treuille Canapes book, useful little book if you have a lot of parties, manages to ring the changes, which is difficult for canapes…

Peanut Hoisin Dipping Sauce

Ingredients
2 tbsp hoisin sauce
2 Tbsp smooth peanut butter
1 Tbsp tomato ketchup
5 Tbsp water

Combine the ingredients together.

You can buy Eric Treuille’s Canapes book here>

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 13
  • Go to page 14
  • Go to page 15
  • Go to page 16
  • Go to page 17
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 23
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • ▼Recipe
    • Baking
    • Breakfast
    • Cheese
    • Dessert
    • Eggs
    • Fish
    • Heston Blumenthal
    • Italian
    • Jamie Oliver
    • Marcus Wareing
    • Mediterranean
    • Pasta
    • Patisserie
    • Risotto
    • Smoothie
    • Sous Vide
    • Squash
    • Thermomix
    • Vegan
    • Vegetarian
    • Yotam Ottolenghi

Categories

  • ▼Book Review
    • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
    • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
    • Baking
    • Meat
    • Patisserie
    • Restaurant Cookbook
    • Vegetarian
    • Yotam Ottolenghi

Categories

  • ▼Restaurant
    • 1 Michelin Star
    • 2 Michelin Stars
    • 3 Michelin Stars
    • British
    • Fish
    • French
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Peruvian

Categories

  • 101 Cookbooks (1)
  • 3 Michelin Stars (1)
  • Advert (1)
  • Alan Murchison (2)
  • Alba Truffle (1)
  • Almond (1)
  • Angela Hartnett (1)
  • Angler (2)
  • Art Journal (2)
  • Artichokes (1)
  • Axis (1)
  • Azelia’s Kitchen (1)
  • Baking (9)
  • Baldwin (1)
  • Bara Brith (1)
  • Basics (1)
  • Beef (1)
  • Beetroot (2)
  • Ben Spalding (2)
  • Blackberry Soufflé (1)
  • Blackening Spice (1)
  • Blood Oranges (4)
  • ►Book Review (75)
    • Baking (10)
    • Meat (1)
    • Patisserie (6)
    • Restaurant Cookbook (3)
    • Vegetarian (3)
    • Yotam Ottolenghi (2)
    • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (16)
    • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (8)
  • Bread (3)
  • Breakfast (1)
  • Breakfast Tart (1)
  • brioche (1)
  • Brockhall Farm (1)
  • Bruschetta (1)
  • Bryn Williams (1)
  • Burrata (1)
  • Butter (1)
  • Buttercream (1)
  • Camembert (1)
  • Canapes (1)
  • caraway (2)
  • Casserole (2)
  • Chelsea Buns (1)
  • Chestnuts (1)
  • Chicken (3)
  • Chickpea (1)
  • Chocolate (4)
  • Chocolate Fondant (1)
  • Christmas (1)
  • Ciabatta (1)
  • Cinnamon (1)
  • Citrus (1)
  • Citrus Drizzle Cake (1)
  • Clams (1)
  • Coconut (2)
  • Coconut Milk (1)
  • Confectionary (1)
  • Creme Patisserie (1)
  • Dan Lepard (1)
  • Dessert (1)
  • detox (1)
  • Doughnuts (1)
  • Dried Fruit (1)
  • Drop Scones (1)
  • Ducasse (1)
  • Duck Egg (1)
  • Eggs (3)
  • El Bulli (1)
  • en Cocotte (1)
  • Epi (1)
  • Eric Treuille (1)
  • fennel (2)
  • Fettuccini (1)
  • Fish (1)
  • FrontPage (28)
  • Fruit Tea (1)
  • Glutamate (1)
  • Goat’s Cheese (1)
  • Gỏi Cuốn (1)
  • Granita (1)
  • Herbs (1)
  • Heritage Tomato (1)
  • Hibiscus Flower (1)
  • Hope and Greenwood (1)
  • Ice-Cream (3)
  • Iced Berry Souffle (1)
  • Icing (1)
  • Italian (1)
  • James Martin (1)
  • Jelly (1)
  • Journal (9)
  • Karen Scott (1)
  • King Oyster Mushroom (3)
  • Kummel (1)
  • L’Ortolan (1)
  • Lamb (1)
  • Lavender (1)
  • Laverstoke Park (1)
  • Lemon (3)
  • Lemon Drizzle Cake (1)
  • Lemon Grass (1)
  • Lemon Meringue Tart (1)
  • Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins (1)
  • Lentils (1)
  • Limewood (1)
  • Liquorice (1)
  • Liquorice Ice-Cream (1)
  • Lobster (3)
  • Lucas Hollweg (1)
  • Luke Holder (1)
  • Macarons (1)
  • Mango (1)
  • Marcus Wareing (1)
  • Mark Lloyd (1)
  • Market (1)
  • Mary Berry (1)
  • Meringue (1)
  • Michael Moore (1)
  • Michel Roux (3)
  • Mint (1)
  • Mister Truffle (2)
  • Modernist Cuisine at Home (1)
  • Moroccan (1)
  • Muffins (3)
  • Murano (1)
  • Mushroom (1)
  • Ollie Dabbous (1)
  • Ollie Fararr (1)
  • Ox cheek (1)
  • Palourde Clams (1)
  • Pancetta (1)
  • Panna Cotta (1)
  • Parmesan (1)
  • Passion Fruit (3)
  • Pasta (1)
  • Patisserie (1)
  • Paul Heathcote (1)
  • Pea (1)
  • Peter Reinhart (1)
  • Petit Fours (1)
  • Philip Howard (1)
  • Pierre Koffman (1)
  • Pierre Koffmann (1)
  • Pimms (1)
  • Pistachio (1)
  • Pistachio Soufflé (2)
  • Pistacho (1)
  • Pork (1)
  • Prawn (1)
  • Quiche (1)
  • Rachel Allen’s 30 Day Muffins (1)
  • Raspberry (2)
  • Ravioli (1)
  • Raymond Blanc (1)
  • ►Recipe (192)
    • Baking (17)
    • Breakfast (2)
    • Cheese (1)
    • Dessert (7)
    • Eggs (3)
    • Fish (2)
    • Heston Blumenthal (5)
    • Italian (3)
    • Jamie Oliver (1)
    • Marcus Wareing (2)
    • Mediterranean (3)
    • Pasta (3)
    • Patisserie (7)
    • Risotto (1)
    • Smoothie (1)
    • Sous Vide (1)
    • Squash (1)
    • Thermomix (19)
    • Vegan (1)
    • Vegetarian (20)
    • Yotam Ottolenghi (2)
  • ►Restaurant (124)
    • 1 Michelin Star (17)
    • 2 Michelin Stars (9)
    • 3 Michelin Stars (3)
    • British (19)
    • Fish (4)
    • French (4)
    • Italian (3)
    • Japanese (1)
    • Peruvian (1)
  • Richard Bertinet (1)
  • Risotto (1)
  • Roganic (1)
  • Rolls (1)
  • Roux (3)
  • salad (2)
  • Salmon (2)
  • Sardinian Cookery (1)
  • Scandiliscious (1)
  • Sea Trout (1)
  • Sherbet Dab (1)
  • Signe Johansen (1)
  • Silvana de Soissons (1)
  • Simon Rogan (1)
  • Snail Caviar (1)
  • Soda Bread (1)
  • Sorbet (1)
  • Soufflé (11)
  • Soup (1)
  • Sous Vide (2)
  • Spice (1)
  • Stew (1)
  • Stuffing (1)
  • Sugar Baby (1)
  • Sugarwork (1)
  • Sumosan (1)
  • Supper (1)
  • Sweetcorn (1)
  • Sweetcorn Fritters (1)
  • Tamarillo’s (1)
  • Texturas Fizzy (1)
  • Thai (2)
  • The Bertinet Kitchen (1)
  • The Square (1)
  • Thermomix (10)
  • Toffe Fudge Muffins (1)
  • Tom Kitchin (1)
  • Tomato Bread (1)
  • Tony Fleming (4)
  • Tribute Dish (2)
  • Truffle (1)
  • Truffles (6)
  • Umami (1)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • Vanilla (2)
  • Vegan (1)
  • Vegetables (1)
  • Vegetarian (3)
  • Verveine (1)
  • Vietname Summer Roll (1)
  • Watermelon (1)
  • William Curley (1)
  • yeasted dough (1)

I’m passionate about food, its provenance and its sustainability. As a technical cook, I like to see what’s happening in the kitchens of Michelin starred restaurants, but you’re just as likely to find me at home making sourdough. You can find some of my recipes in In The Mix 2, an award-winning Thermomix cookbook.

I’m also truly blessed – I can open my fridge at any time and know it’s crammed with all manner of loveliness – but that’s not the case for everyone. There are people all around me in the UK who rely on food banks to feed their kids, and themselves, and every box of cereal or teabag makes a difference. You can donate food to your local food bank, or time, or money, and if you want more information the best starting place is http://www.trusselltrust.org.

You can also find me here:

Foodies100 Index of UK Food BlogsFoodies100
The Renaissance Epicurean... London restaurants
Top Food BlogsUK Food Bloggers Association

The Eleven Madison Park Granola

Copyright © 2025 · Cookd Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Nourished
  • Home
  • Recipes
  • Book Reviews
  • Restaurants
  • Journal
  • About