Friday, March 29, 2019

Autumn Leaves Cocktail



Intro

In 2016 I did the coolest thing in my life and went on a 3 month round the world trip meeting people in the Koha community. It was amazing and is blogged about extensively on my other blog, Library Matters. The second half of my trip was in USA and I stayed with Brendan from Bywater in Portland. 

We spend one glorious afternoon at an amazing restaurant at the top of a building with the most outstanding views, food and cocktails. We drank 'Autumn Leaves' and I have never been able to replicate it - although this comes close. 

Recipe

  • 3/4 oz Wild Turkey rye whiskey
  • 3/4 oz apple brandy
  • 3/4 oz  vermouth
  • 1/4 oz Strega
  • 1/4 oz cinnamon bitters
  • 1/4 oz Cointreau (optional)
Shake over ice and serve with a twist of orange peel.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Sourdough Pancakes

Intro

So you will have figured out that I am in love with sourdough and have quite a repertoire now of recipes to use up discarded starter - including these pancakes.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups flour
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup sourdough starter
  • 1.5 cups milk
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tablespoons oil

Method

Sift dry ingredients together, then add the rest of the ingredients and mix together. Cook in 1/4 cup dollops on a greased, hot cast iron pan. When bubbles have appeared flip the pancake over for a further minute or so until cooked. 

Sourdough Bread




Intro

In 2018 I was off work for awhile because I had a PE. In my boredom I started a sourdough from scratch out at Waitarere Beach. I have had that starter ever since and still find it a miracle that from 'fresh air' I was able to make a lively yeasty thing that with only flour, water and salt makes gorgeous bread for about 50c a loaf. 

Maintaining the Starter

The starter needs to be fed every 12 hours.

To feed the starter weigh it then take out what you need for baking (see bread recipe below, cracker recipe or pancake recipe or chocolate brownie recipe.. You need to save a minimum of 140g of starter to be going on with.
Generally I feed my starter with its equal weight so for 140g of starter I add 70g of strong bread flour (high grade) and 70ml of almost luke warm water. You can change the formula if you prefer a wetter starter so 60g of flour and 80ml of water. If you want to grow the starter faster then add 140g of flour and 140ml of water to the 140g of starter.  Stir it well, doesn't matter if its a bit lumpy, then place in a sealed glass jar on a bench etc but out of direct sun and head.

If I am planning on baking that day I feed it at 7am and can then use it to bake from about 11am - 2pm.

The starter can keep in the fridge for a week. If you want to cook on Saturday then get it out and feed it Friday night and Saturday morning.

Sourdough Bread 

3 sizes are shown below depending on how much starter you want to use:
  • 130 / 260 or 390 grams of sourdough starter
  • 25 / 50 or 75 grams of rye flour*
  • 25 / 50 or 75 grams of wholemeal flour*
  • 250 / 500 / 750 grams of strong bread flour (high grade)
  • 1.25 / 2.5 / 3.75 teaspoons of salt
  • 250 / 500 or 750 mls of lukewarm water (approx)

* Ideally - but you can just use plain flour so: 300g/600g/900g of plain flour instead of the 3 flours.  

Place all ingredients except the salt in a mixer with a dough hook and mix for a couple of minutes until a raggy dough. Cover mixer with a towel and leave to autolyse for 30 mins at least but up to an hour or two. Then add the salt and mix for 5 minutes or more until it is a smooth mix. It will be looser than a hand kneaded dough (and you could do this by hand). 

Tip into an oiled bowl, cover with glad wrap. Every 30 minutes or so get your hands into it and lift, stretch and fold the dough over itself several times.  If you can do this 3 or 4 times it makes a good difference. This stretches the gluten. Leave the dough to double in size. This will take a long time.  If I make it at 11am it might not have doubled until 3pm. This is because of the natural yeast. My favourite way is to leave it to rise overnight in the fridge.  This also makes the next step heaps easier.

Once it has doubled in size push it down then portion it out shaping it into oiled tins or make cobs. You want to stretch the shape over itself and under to create a tension on the top.  (Find a video on You Tube for this step - its really hard to explain.)  Pop into tins or a bannetton, sprinkle with flour and leave to rise again. Ideally you really want to do one of the rises slowly in the fridge.

Preheat your oven to 250c. Place an empty dish into the oven with about a cup of water in it. Slash the tops of the risen loafs several times using a razor blade.

Place the loafs in the oven, along with the dish with water, and bake for 40 minutes, dropping the temperature down to 220c for the last 20 mins if the loaves have browned too much. Remove from tins and cool on a rack. Sourdough keeps really well and also freezes well.

Notes and variations

  • I use the 390g of starter recipe and place it in 2 loaf tins. The dough fills 2/3rds of tin and rises to the top. This produces a big loaf great for slicing and toast.
  • I sometimes spread dough out into a big lamington tray and make focacia. eg stud it with cubes of cheese and teaspoons of onion marmalade, or olives and cheese, pushed into the dough. Once the dough rises brush it with oil and sprinkle with Maldon sea salt or herbs.
  • You are not supposed to use a tin for sourdough and I have used a baneton quite successfully, cooking the cob in a preheated Dutch oven works the best. 
  • Replacing a quarter of the flour with seeds works really well: sunflower, pumpkin, linseed and sesame is a good mix. 
  • Walnuts, apricots, raisins and mixed spice.
  • For paprika and cheese bread make a thick slurry with olive oil and paprika (3 tablespoons of paprika) and on one of the last folding steps spread the dough out flat and brush the paprike oil on and top with a cup of grated cheese. Then do the last folding steps to swirl the paprika through. Carry on as normal. 




Thursday, November 29, 2018

Brisket

Intro

When I visited the States in 2016 I tried bbq brisket with Brooke in Washington and with George in Kansas. Both times absolutely yummy. I tried to replicate at home but my gas bbq is just not the right kind. Then I found this recipe in a book that Sharon gave me and voila. Its not the same as Amwerican bbq but the bacon gives a smokiness and the flavour is great. A whole brisket is quite a cost effective way to feed a crowd too.

Ingredients

Brisket

  • 2.5-3kg brisket roast (trim fat to 1/2 cm)
  • 500g streaky bacon


Rub

  • 1.5 tablespoons packed brown sugar
  • 1.5 tablespoons smokey paprika
  • 2 teaspoons ground black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

Sauce

  • reserved bacon from cooked brisket
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup cider vinegar
  • 1/3 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1-2 cups chicken stock
  • 1/2 cup tomato sauce
  • Chilli flakes

Instructions

  • Heat oven to 135 deg C.
  • Mix the rub ingredients together in a bowl.
  • Rub dry rub all over brisket and poke holes all over with a fork. Place half of the bacon going crosswise in a roasting dish and place brisket fat side down on top of the bacon. Lay the rest of the bacon crosswise on top of brisket, wrapping it down around the sides, and tucking any excess under. Cover pan with foil and place in oven for 4 hours then remove from oven and turn the brisket over so the fat side is up. Replace foil, turn oven off, and return to oven for another hour.
  • Pour juices from brisket into measuring jug and place in fridge for fat to rise to the top. Remove bacon from brisket and chop into pieces. Cook bacon in medium saucepan over medium heat for about 5 minutes, until fat has rendered. Add onion and cook until softened, 4-5 minutes. Take off heat and add vinegar and dark brown sugar. Return to heat and simmer until reduced to a syrupy consistency, about 5 minutes.
  • Skim fat from meat juices and add chicken stock to make a total of 3 cups. Add to mixture in saucepan and reduce until about 3 cups in volume, 8-10 minutes. Take off heat and add tomato sauce. Mix well and strain if desired. 
  • Turn oven to grill. Brush brisket with 1 cup sauce and broil until top is lightly browned and fat starts to crisp. 
  • Cut brisket against the grain into 1/4-inch slices and serve with extra sauce.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Vicky's Pancakes


Intro

Ive never been great at pancakes - crepes I've mastered but not fluffy pancakes. Anyhow, I stayed with a lovely lady called Vicky at Bethell's Beach while attending a wedding and this is her recipe which I think was an old family recipe.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups flour
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 2 eggs
  • 450ml milk

Method

Sift the dry ingredients together, then add eggs and milk and beat to combine. Remove spoon from the mix and leave it to sit while pan heats up. Don't mix it again and don't leave the spoon in the  batter. It might need thinning as it thickens on settling. Pour mixture into a buttered pan and cook pancakes until bubbles appear..

Brendan's BBQ Ribs

Intro

In 2016 I did this crazy amazing thing and went on a 3 month round the world tour staying with people in the Koha library community. One of the incredibly hospitable homestays was with Brendan and Sonia in Portland. And we had BBQ ribs!

Ingredients

  • Baby back pork ribs - 3 racks

Spice rub

  • 1 part Lawry's seasoned salt
  • 1/4 part white sugar
  • 1/8 part McCormicks Montreal steak seasoning
  • 1/8 part spice to your liking: eg cumin, garlic powder, onion powder, coriander
  • 1/8 - 1/4 chilli powder / cayenne / smoked paprika etc (ie a pepper)

Method
Combine rub ingredients, pat it 'in' to the ribs, leave to rest for about half hour (sweaty meat)

Put in your smoker or oven (indirect heat) for 135 degrees for about 3 hours. Scratch test (spice rub kind of set not flaky). Not  too much smoke - a kiss of smoke (3 fist sized chunks and briquettes - 135 degrees)

We cooked these on a Weber - Ceramic kamdo grill dome (see photo)

Remove from heat and then coat in sieved brown sugar. Sprinkle on 2 or 3 tblsps of liquid per rack: apple juice / peach juice / pineapple juice / ginger lemonade).

Wrap in tinfoil like a burrito, put back in heat ie oven 135 degrees for about an hour,  toothpick test to see it goes straight meat without tension

Remove from heat, divide into ribs.

Martha's Coconut Biscuits

Intro

I dunno if I'm gonna get hammered for posting this here because it is Martha's straight recipe but I had to save it here in my blog because these are the best biscuits ever and I definitely don't want to lose this recipe.

Ingredients

  • 8oz butter
  • 1/2 cup sugar plus 2 tblsps
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1.25 cups flour plus 2 tblsps
  • pinch salt
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 4 cups coconut chips

Method

Cream butter and sugars relly well - 10 minutes in an electric mixer with the whisk attachment. Switch to a paddle. Add egg. Fold in half the coconut and half the dry ingredients, then the rest of the coconut and dried ingredients.

Roll into balls, squash and cook about 15 mins until golden.  350 degrees Fahrenheit ( about 179c in a fanbake).