Kitchens on My Travels 2

Palace kitchen garden

Palace kitchen garden

As you know, I had a wonderful experience at Kew Gardens on my recent UK trip. It was the day before I flew home and for once the weather was absolutely lovely – blue skies and not too cold, just perfect for wandering around looking at the most amazing plants, flowers and old buildings.

You might remember a few months ago, I made Barley Broth from the Kew Palace kitchens’ YouTube channel. I was really looking forward to visiting the kitchens, which haven’t been open to the public all that long, and I wasn’t disappointed! It took me a while to find the kitchens, as the gardens are humungous and I had expected them to be close to (but detached – fire risk!) the palace itself. In fact, the kitchens (which have a lower floor for the actual kitchens and laundry rooms, and an upper floor where the estate accounts were managed – a bit more elegant upstairs!) turned out to be a fair distance away, and when I enquired about this (because I was picturing a trail of servants carrying tea & cakes between two places*), I was told the kitchens actually belonged to the White House, the home of Frederick, Prince of Wales. This house was demolished in 1802, but the kitchen buildings are what we see restored today.

Nosegay Garden

Nosegay Garden

There are lovely gardens behind the palace itself – known collectively as the Queen’s Garden – one section is the Nosegay Garden and it is full of herbs and other “smellies”, which apart from their herbal/medicinal properties are just gorgeous to look at – it must have been a stunningly pretty view, at a sad time in their lives, for George III‘s family, looking out of their back windows on to the lovely grounds and flowers.

Georgian Cooking

Georgian Cooking

So, inside the kitchens, which are below ground level and would be extremely cold if there wasn’t a fire going for cooking, I found the two gentlemen who feature on the Historic Royal Palaces recipe videos! They were lovely and very chatty, and apparently spend their days divided between Kew and Hampton Court, cooking up a Georgian/Tudor storm which is served at 4pm each day. What a life – cooking fun stuff all day every day, without the pressure of serving in a restaurant, and getting paid for it! There were various dishes in different stages of preparation, and I cannot remember what they were although I did ask lots of questions at the time – the only thing mundane was that a plate of boring ham and cheese sandwiches was being made!

Fit for a Georgian King

Fit for a Georgian King

I had to be pushy and jump in behind the big table to get a photo of myself with “famous” (well YouTube is the TV of today, right….) chefs. They were lovely and didn’t mind at all, and I had a real warm fuzzy moment, hanging out in a Georgian kitchen with these two guys.

Masterchef Georgian Style?

Masterchef Georgian Style?

Apparently the ham you can see on the front left of the above photo, is cured especially for Kew, and costs an exorbitant amount – which I can’t remember, but it could have been like £200 or something ludicrous.

As for the rest of the palace itself (which is not very big and is not completely restored yet), there was one morbid moment – in a bedroom is a black chair with a small placard on it – see pic below. The placard states “Queen Charlotte 1744-1818 Died in this chair 17 November 1818″. Hmmmmm gee thanks for sharing that image!

The Chair of Death!!!

The Chair of Death!!!

Speaking of food at Kew, I never did get the Kew Explorer Muffin recipe from them – they very nicely acknowledged my request and passed it on to the bakers (a national concern), but I never heard back. Shame as it was such a yummy healthy, fruity, seedy piece of yumminess. I’ll have to have a go at making it up some time.

Happy Fooding!

* a-la-Downton-Abbey-Red-Nose-Day hilarity – watch this 2-part parody Uptown Downstairs Abbey if you haven’t seen it before – it’s a crackup!

Party Nibbles 1

Dec12LavashRollups

I made a batch of mountain bread rollups on Christmas Day – these little savoury bites always go down well and you can put whatever fillings in you like. In this case I made some with smoked salmon, some with asparagus, and some with both.

These are quite suitable for making the day before and then just slicing up when you are ready to serve – always a plus at party time.

There aren’t really proper quantities here – just make as many as you like. I usually keep going ’til I’ve run out of cream cheese.

Rollups

lavash/mountain bread (you could also use thin tortillas, but you get a fair bit of wastage by the time you trim them into a rectangle/square shape)

cream cheese (I use low-fat)

smoked salmon

fresh asparagus spears (I prefer to use them raw, for a bit of crunch, but if you prefer you can blanch them in the microwave for 1 minute per bunch)

cracked pepper, to taste

Spread each sheet of bread thickly with cream cheese. Lay fillings on the lower half, topped with cracked pepper and then carefully roll the bread up as tightly as you can.

Wrap the “log” in cling wrap and refrigerate for a few hours (or overnight). Thinly slice and arrange on a plate to serve.

Other filling ideas: grated carrot, thin slices of ham or turkey, shredded lettuce, alfalfa sprouts, canned tuna, cucumber (skip things like avocado, tomato etc as they will just go soggy or discoloured by the time you slice them up).

Happy Summer Fooding!