Charming Chicken Pie

Using dishes available

Using dishes available

When I first moved out of home, I had quite a glory box stashed away – linen, lots of pottery, fine bone china, kitchen odds and ends etc. I also had a few cookbooks – not many, as I had not done much cooking apart from at school, and didn’t know how much I would come to enjoy playing around with food later on. This was pre-Internet too (wow, I cannot imagine going back to that!).

One of the cookbooks I had was a small, slim hardback, a pocket sized book almost, containing chicken recipes. It was part of a set, and I think I had 3 or 4 different ones. I can’t remember much about the books, but I do know that my chicken pie recipe came from this time, and was one of the first successful recipes I actually cooked in my new “adult” life. For many years it was a staple in my house, and I later adapted it to make a vegetarian version by just leaving out the chicken and putting in chunks of carrot, potato, pumpkin or whatever else I had lying around.

This week I decided to make a chicken pie for the first time in about 4 or 5 years. The only trouble was, as I am in between houses (move part 1 down, move part 2 coming up in about 10 days’ time!) and most of my kitchen stuff is in boxes, I have limited baking dishes at hand – and my favourite pie dish is not at hand! I am trying to use up what is in the fridge/freezer this week, and I had two sheets of shortcrust pastry to use, but they don’t quite stretch to fit the larger-than-pie-dish I had available. I ended up just improvising and making the shape of the pie slightly freeform (that’s all the rage now anyway, right?) within the dish. I was a bit worried the filling might ooze out during cooking, but in fact it worked out really well and was totally delicious.

Freeform is trendy...

Freeform is trendy…

Conveniently using a store-bought cooked chook, this pie is great cold the next day, and also reheats well.

I did blind-bake the underneath pastry sheet this time, but if short of time I don’t always bother – it depends how you like your pastry, and I don’t mind mine a bit soft and raw underneath (and yeah, I did used to nick bits of pastry and raw sausage meat when Mum was making sausage rolls, as a kid).

I also had to place a square of foil over the centre after the first 10 mins or so, or else the pastry would have burnt.

Served with eggplant skewers

Served with eggplant skewers

Chicken Pie

1 barbequed chicken

2 sheets frozen puff or shortcrust pastry, thawed

2 tbsp butter

2 tbsp plain flour

2 button mushrooms, finely chopped

½ green capsicum, finely chopped

1 stalk celery, finely chopped

2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped

⅔ cup milk

1 ¼ cups chicken stock

cracked pepper, to taste

beaten egg, to glaze

Line a greased pie dish with 1 sheet of pastry. Optional – bake-blind for a few minutes until puffed up slightly.

Pull the meat from the cooked chicken, discarding skin/bones. Depending on the size of the chicken you will probably need about ⅔ of it, so put the rest aside to use in something else.

Chop the chicken meat and place in a dish with the mushroom, capsicum, celery and parsley. Set aside.

Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat; add flour, stir well to break up any lumps and cook until bubbling. Add the milk first and then the chicken stock, gradually, stirring constantly to form a smooth sauce. When all liquid is incorporated, fold the chicken mixture through the sauce and gently combine over low heat for a minute or so.

Pour chicken mixture into pie dish. Top with the second sheet of pastry, press down to seal edges, and glaze with beaten egg.

Bake in 200C oven for approx 30 minutes, or until pastry is puffed up and golden brown. If the pastry puffs up too quickly and starts to burn, cover with a square of foil over the centre.

For vegetarian version – leave out the chicken and instead, add chunks of vegies of your choice – if using hard vegies like potatoes, partially steam for a couple of minutes in the microwave first before adding them to the sauce. Use vegetable stock instead of chicken.

Serves 4-6 depending on appetites and what you have with it.

Happy Fooding!

 

Summer Simplicity

Jan14 Quorn Meatball Fajitas

Well, Christmas has come and gone yet again….hectic, relaxing, busy, overindulgent, exciting, lots of pressies, and overall gone in a flash! I was away in Melbourne for Christmas week, but didn’t have to do much cooking, just some nibbles to take to my brother’s (cashew & lentil balls, which we discovered are brilliant dipped in guacomole!).

Leading up to Christmas I went to a masquerade ball, then spent 4 days in the Margaret River wine region down South, eating lots, tasting wines and generally chilling out. Then NYE was HUGE – a “bling” themed party at a pub – and so was NY Day, with a trip to the Perth Cup annual horse race for frocking up and yet more champagne drinking, in a very relaxed atmosphere with friends. My feet are still sore from all of the dancing in high heels that I’ve done over the last few weeks!

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Now we’re sort of back to normal, although a lot of people are still on holidays as are the school kids, so Summer holiday mode is definitely the thing of the hour. It is very hard to be motivated to go to work I can tell you.

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With a maximum temperature of 39C today, food that is suitable for hot weather and not a lot of hot appliances is the go, and this throw together vegetarian fajita dish fits the bill perfectly. I just made this up and it worked really well!

Quorn Fajitas

2 tbsp olive oil

1 large brown onion, cut into wedges

8 button mushrooms, cut into thirds

400 gm pkt Quorn frozen meatballs

1 pkt fajita seasoning mix

¼ cup water

splash white wine

splash soy sauce

125 gms fresh bean shoots

tortillas and Greek yoghurt to serve

Heat olive oil in wok or frypan; add meatballs and toss for 2 minutes.

Add onion and mushrooms, and stir-fry for 2 minutes.

Add seasoning, water, wine and soy sauce, and simmer for 5 minutes, stirring often.

Add bean shoots and simmer for a further 1 minute.

Serve wrapped in tortillas, with yoghurt as desired.

Serves 2

Happy Summer Fooding!

 

What To Do When The Trains Are Running Late…. Again

Aug13 Mushroom Spinach Broccoli Tortilla

Sometimes in the morning on the way to work I have very good intentions of cooking something amazing, grand, special, gourmet, whatever, that night. Then on my way home I start to flag, physically and mentally, and by the time I get home I’m thinking “order a pizza” or “have a box of BBQ Shapes” (yes that is a weakness of mine) instead! I get up at 5.15 some days and it’s a long day by the time I get home and have to start cooking when all I want to do is pour a glass of wine and vedge out watching a DVD or reading (as if I don’t get enough closeness to books, all day at work lol). It’s also, to be honest, very hard sometimes to get motivated when there’s no one to cook for but yourself – much as I love food and all that goes with it – sometimes the lack of people to share the food with is, well just plain depressing.

So, the other morning I had this pang for mushrooms, spinach and feta – I was thinking of something vaguely burrito-ish but hadn’t quite decided what. I bought mushrooms, baby spinach and yummy Danish feta on the way to work, and some lovely fresh broccoli as well. All I knew for sure was, YES I really want to make something super-extraordinaire!

Hmmmmmm. Got to the station after work. Trains running late due to “point delays” (??????). The longer it took, the more my enthusiasm for cooking dinner just disappeared. By the time I got home, all I could think was omg how quickly can I have a shower and get a glass of wine poured (I can tell you from lots of experience, that going straight to the fridge, pouring the wine and taking it to the bathroom with you, is actually the best plan of attack).

I decided to chuck vegies in a pan and do something super fast and just eat it – it would be healthy at least. I wasn’t planning on making something blog-worthy at this point, but it actually tasted SO good that I just have to tell you what I did. Nothing of the rocket science variety, but the perfect super-fast-can’t-be-bothered-healthy-meal-for-one.

No real quantities here, just a great combination of flavours. I didn’t use the feta, decided on tasty cheese instead, so I kept the feta for a salad instead.

Heat a bit of olive oil in a wok or large pan. Add whole button or cup mushrooms, zucchini (chopped into chunks), and broccoli (cut into very small florets). Saute for 1 minute on medium heat, stirring a lot. Add 1 tsp chilli paste, about 1/3 cup condensed tomato soup (I had this leftover from a can I opened for the beef stroganoff the other day) and a good splash of soy sauce. Saute, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes, then add some baby spinach and cracked pepper, and saute for a further 1 minute until spinach is wilted.

Drain off the liquid and serve in tortillas with grated taste cheese sprinkled on top.

As I wasn’t planning on this being a perfectly presented and photographed meal, I didn’t take a photo until I’d already eaten two-thirds haha – so the pic above is the leftover bit, sprinkled with cheese and ready for lunch the next day.

Delicious, easy, very quick and stress-free for those pesky train-bothering days.

Happy Fooding!

Beef Stroganoff

Aug13 Beef Stroganoff

I’m eating meat again at the moment, although not much, and I couldn’t resist trying this delightfully simple crockpot Beef Stroganoff recipe from Best Recipes, on the weekend. I love this recipe site, and this beef dish will now be a firm favourite. Not only was it easy, but it tasted fabulous and the consistency was perfect – rich and creamy just like a stroganoff should be.

I did it on LOW so all up it was 8 hours cooking time – the 5 hours they say at the top of the recipe is if you cook on HIGH.

This definitely serves 6 as the recipe states, and could actually serve more if you have it as part of other dishes – great for a party buffet. I didn’t bother cooking pasta and green beans, as suggested, because I knew it would be very filling and there’s only me to feed – I just had a little black rice with mine. I have lots of leftovers in the freezer now!

Happy Fooding!

Cooking With Herbs – An Old Fave

Chicken, mushrooms & vegie snags

Chicken, mushrooms & vegie snags

This terrific and easy marinated chicken thigh fillet recipe is from another great old Women’s Weekly Cookbook from yesteryear – Cooking With Herbs. My copies of all of these old WW books are very food-stained, falling apart at the seams and generally well-loved! When I first bought this particular one, coriander was one of those “weird” herbs that you had to be innovative and daring in your food tastes, to use! Now of course it is a staple flavour in most kitchens, and deservedly so.

I have usually made this in a wok, but this time decided to rev up the barbie, as I had just given it a good clean (anticipating Summer, even though it’s still only mid-Winter – ever hopeful, I am). As you can see, I threw on a lot of food for just one person, but I find if I’m going to heat up the barbie, I have to make it worthwhile, so I just cook a heap of stuff and then have it as leftovers on sandwiches or in salads etc.

The fresh herb/garlic/ginger odours as the chicken cooked, were lovely – a good aroma coming off the bbq is always a delight.

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Coriander Ginger Chicken

2 cloves garlic, crushed

1 tsp crushed fresh ginger

1/4 cup chopped fresh coriander

1/4 cup chopped fresh mint

2 spring onions, finely chopped

1/4 cup light soy sauce

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

2 tsp castor sugar

cracked pepper, to taste

6-8 skinless chicken thigh fillets, trimmed of fat

Add chicken to combined remaining ingredients in a bowl or marinating dish. Mix well and refrigerate for several hours or overnight.

Cook chicken in a single layer either in a wok, a medium frypan or on the bbq, for 5-7 minutes each side until cooked through. Pour over any leftover marinade during cooking.

Serves 4.

Need to Get Healthy Again….

Salsa

Salsa

I had a severe meat overdose last week.

Firstly, I made a beef stir-fry which lasted me for two evening meals – no particular recipe, just chucked in some marinated beef strips plus whatever veggies I had and a few sauces. It was good.

Secondly, I tried the Indian cafe at the end of my street, for the first time (even though it’s been there for over 2 years….) on Friday night – I bought takeaway lamb saagwala, rice, naan bread and vegetable pakoras. Apart from the pakoras, which were delicious, the rest was awful – undercooked, tough lamb with no flavour, and too-chewy naan bread. The service was also very poor – 25 minutes to get a takeaway order when there was only one order before me and one table of 6 in the actual restaurant. Plus, the girl taking the orders stopped halfway through an order to take an obviously personal phone call, which she then proceeded to take outside to carry on in private! I won’t be going back there again. Shame, as it is so close to home and they home-deliver for free if I really can’t be bothered walking 100 metres haha.

Thirdly, on Saturday, I decided to cook lamb shanks in a cook-in-the-bag thingy, with roasted veg. This was quite lovely – I don’t use a lot of pre-prepared foodstuffs, but I like the convenience of these flavour sachet/bag things for an easy, family-style meal occasionally. I had, however, eaten the leftover lamb saagwala, on a roll at lunchtime (because despite its lack of flavour excitement, I do hate to waste food, especially when an animal has died to provide it), plus I had a slice of roast beef on my crumpet for breakfast, so the whole day was very meat-intense, which is not like me.

And finally, on Sunday I went to “high tea” at a posh hotel in the afternoon. I deliberately ate nothing but a crumpet early in the morning, to build up a good appetite. I will write about my total pig-out separately, but suffice it to say, I did not need dinner that night and in fact felt quite disgustingly bloated and huge afterwards. Not only that, but the skirt I wore to the high tea was tight and it is usually quite a loose fitting one, so that means I still haven’t physically gotten over my excess of cheese and pastry whilst in the UK!

Time has come for some detoxifying……for me that means not eating meat for a while – not that I will ever completely be a vegetarian, as I do love a good curry, roast or  meat stir-fry. But I know my body, and I do just feel a lot healthier when I stick to veg & fish/seafood. I’d like to say I would give up alcohol to detox, but hmmmmm that will never happen. I have to have something to keep me sane….

I’m really big on mushrooms at the moment, so this is what I had last night – I simply placed 200 gms (9) cup mushrooms (stalks cut off then finely chopped) in a baking dish and topped with 100 gms crumbled feta, the chopped mushroom stalks, 50 gms pitted kalamata olives, cracked pepper and some fresh basil leaves. Baked it for 30 minutes at 160C and served with a freshly made salsa – in this case I used the kernels from 1 corn cob (I don’t bother blanching it, just slice it off raw – yummo), 1 red onion (finely chopped), 1 tomato (finely chopped), 1 avocado (chopped), a pinch of salt, cracked pepper and a splash of lime juice.

Mushrooms, Feta, Olives

Mushrooms, Feta, Olives

This was a delicious and healthy comfort food – filling and “meaty” tasting thanks to the mushrooms, but without the blurrrrggggghhh feeling of eating too much meat in one hit.

This mushroom idea actually works well as a side dish, rather than the main meal that I made of it. I made this quantity just for me – it was too much of course, but bearing in mind that mushrooms shrivel a lot when they cook, you would need to increase the quantities if you wanted this to be a main dish for a few people or a side dish for a large group.

Mushrooms + Salsa = Yum

Mushrooms + Salsa = Yum

Happy Fooding!

Still on the Vegetable Crusade….

Chopped veg

Chopped veg

With my mountain of vegies to play with, I found this easy Pumpkin & Lentil Curry dish from the 4 Ingredients website – I mean you can’t get much simpler than this really – but I decided than rather than just pumpkin, I’d throw in a variety of vegies, because, well, why the hell not?!!

I was also feeling very lazy, so didn’t even peel the skin off the pumpkin…..

The result was okay, nothing too flash – actually it doesn’t look so great but it tasted better than it looks. A bit stodgy, but healthy and filling.

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I’m off to an ANZAC Day picnic today, and yes I probably should have made Anzac biscuits, but I just couldn’t be bothered. I made olive tapenade and a zucchini slice, homemade bread and coleslaw instead.

Happy Fooding!

Getting My Irish On…

Mar13BeefGuinnessStew

I made this beef stew with Guinness, on St Patrick’s Day, and OMG it was so delicious.  Of course it made enough to feed an army lol, and there was just me, so I now have portions in the freezer, but with something as yummy as this I don’t mind at all.

There was about 20 minutes of chopping up/prep involved, but once that was done the cooking itself was pretty easy. I do so love things that simmer away on the stove creating gorgeous smells, while you get on with the important relaxation things of life…..in this case I was stitching away merrily on a Henry VIII cross-stitch project that I am obsessed with currently, and watching the Australian F1 Grand Prix.

I keep forgetting to tell you, I have a new Twitter handle for this blog, so feel free to follow me @salmonavocado and share with your friends by retweeting!

A little bit of Henry

A little bit of Henry

Happy Pot of Gold Fooding!

Restaurant Review: Fantastic Pub Fare

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Last week I was in Melbourne for a few days, visiting my awesome kiddies and parents, and I had several yummy meals, including a family bbq at my mum’s (where I stay when I’m there), scrambled eggs for brekky at Geo’s Cafe (complete with champagne, because it’s always 3pm somewhere!), and lunch with my mum Kaye and good friend Linda, at Kelly’s Motor Club Hotel in Cranbourne.

I’d been to this pub once before, several years ago, and I don’t really remember what the food was like, so it can’t have been too memorable, but the pub itself is an historic icon in Cranbourne and has been owned by the same family (the Kellys, strangely enough!!!) since 1923.

I felt like a salad, so decided to have a Caesar – but there was the option of paying a bit extra for either chicken or salt & pepper calamari with it. I love calamari so thought that would be good, and was expecting really just a ‘garnish’ of a few pieces on top of my salad.

WELL, as you can see from the photo above, there was actually more calamari than salad! It is rare that you get such generous portions (the prices were very good – but then I tend to compare with Perth which is more expensive than Melbourne anyway). There was a substantial amount of salad to begin with (and the poached egg was cooked to perfection and actually still HOT, which is rare by the time it comes out to your table lol), which is not that obvious in the photo, but believe me this was a humungous meal. I couldn’t eat it all and ended up wrapping half of the calamari up in a serviette and taking it home – I had it cold in a bread roll with Greek yoghurt, for lunch the next day (yes, I am strange, but you already know this).

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Kaye and Linda both had “Seniors meals”, which are smaller servings, priced accordingly, and include dessert. Kaye had the battered fish & chips, which as you can see is still a reasonable size, and Linda had porterhouse steak with mushroom sauce – and they made a gluten-free sauce for her, as she can’t eat wheat. They also brought out a special serving of gluten-free bread, without being asked for it, which Linda said it was delicious (often GF breads are pretty disgusting!).

Even though the fish and steak were smaller sized options, neither of the ladies could fit in their free dessert, which was a shame as the choice was a massive mixed berry cheesecake or a very large serving of chocolate mousse.

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The menu choices were really great, so much choice that in fact it was really hard to decide what to have. Service was great and staff very friendly. We were all very impressed and I will definitely go back there.

Happy Fooding!

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Medieval Mushrooms!

Making the puffs

Making the puffs

After years of wanting to, I recently finally joined the Society for Creative Anachronism. I’m still getting my garb together (I have made one houppelande dress – not my best effort, but at least I have found that my clothes sewing skills have not completely disappeared from years ago!) and am slowly working out how it all works, deciding on my period of interest, developing a persona etc.

There’s a lot to take in, but I have finally been to my first event – a tourney, with a “pot luck supper”. As my main areas of interest (apart from a love of history) are Arts & Sciences and Cookery, I have been doing a lot of reading up on medieval foods, customs and recipes, both online (there’s so much out there!) and via books through the library I work at.

I really wasn’t sure what to expect at the tourney, food-wise – I know it’s supposed to be an attempt at something authentic if possible – but on the competition list was “decorated cupcake” – hardly 14th century haha.

I decided to just keep it simple for my first time, and made food that didn’t necessarily need heating up or facilities that might not have been available in the hall. This turned out to be the right decision, as we just put things down on tables and didn’t heat up anything.

I made a loaf of wholemeal bread (bread machine, but still homemade, sort of…..), and these cute Mushroom Puffs from an SCA recipes resource.

I wasn’t sure how many the quantity of filling would make – it didn’t seem like a lot so I made double, and just thawed out 4 sheets of short-crust pastry (I know, I should have made my own but it was 42C here and even in the air conditioning I needed to make things as comfortable as possible). I ended up making 33 puffs, but still had about a third of the filling mixture left, which I’ve frozen for another time (or it would be good folded through scrambled eggs, a crepe or an omelette). I made them slightly bigger than the 2″ circles noted in the recipe, as I used my trusty cheap plastic empanada press, which makes moulding filled pastries and dumplings SO easy. I wish I could buy round empanada wrappers here like I used to in Chile – no cutting out or rolling out the scraps of pastry needed then – but I’ve never seen them here unfortunately. I used to make empanadas all the time with leftovers, to freeze for lunches, but it’s nowhere near as convenient with the sheets of pastry or homemade stuff.

Served in a basket, wrapped up in linen.

Served in a basket, wrapped up in linen.

Instead of regular salt, I used truffle salt to increase the mushroom-y-ness – but just a pinch, as I didn’t want it to be too salty.

The puffs came out very cute, and tasted good. Definitely a recipe to make again. And I had fun!

Happy Fooding!

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