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February 11, 2006

The good pizza


the good pizza, originally uploaded by kitschenette.

The pizza recipe from The River Cottage Family cookbook is excellent - I've made it every week since I got the book at Christmas. The recipe itself is simple, and I'm sure it's not so different to other pizza recipes, but, well, I'm particularly enamoured of this one at the moment. I think it's the teaspoon of sugar and no salt in the tomato sauce that does the trick. Last night I made this pizza and we had a pizza picnic in front of the telly watching this, complete with picnic blanket and paper napkins. The kiddies loved it.

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February 09, 2006

Weekday lunch


weekday lunch, originally uploaded by kitschenette.

I took the time today to make myself a proper meal and actually sit down to eat it. I so often find myself eating on the run or in a rush that it's nice to eat at a leisurely pace for once. I hate being rushed to eat.

Today I found myself home alone over lunch and decided to make this roasted tomato, garlic and spinach linguine, with a glass of bubbly on the side and the latest LRB in front of me.

February 08, 2006

Books for cooks

Kitchendiaries

I love this book.

Booksforcooks

an armful

Victoriasponge

traitorous victoria sponge recipe

With money that my Mum and Dad gave me for Christmas (thanks, Mum and Dad!) I indulged in a few weighty tomes to add to my already groaning cookbook shelves - Nigel Slater's The Kitchen Diaries, Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall and Fizz Carr's River Cottage Family Cookbook, and The Silver Spoon.

These books are all enormous - a real armful. What is it about cookbooks these days that they feel they must be all-encompassing? Despite their heft though, I've enjoyed them all immensely, for different reasons.

Nigel's Kitchen Diaries documents a year in the life of his good eating, with accompanying real-life (shock: not studio!) pictures. The River Cottage Family cookbook is intended as an all-ages pass to good cooking and eating, also with real-life  photos. The Silver Spoon is the English translation of an Italian staple cookbook - the Italian Edmonds cookbook, if you will. No self-respecting Italian leaves home without one.

The Kitchen Diaries is a fantastic, inspiring read. I read it like a particularly gripping book, unable to put it down til I got to December, and his suggestions for leftover Christmas cake (warm in a pan with melted butter, then a swoosh of cream - corr!). It's also a beautiful, tactile book,  with a linen-bound spine and gorgeous unbleached, matte pages that blessedly don't reflect glaring, blinding light into your eyes as you try to read. I loved the homey, in situ photography too, none of this fussy studio stuff. I appreciate that. While I love to look at food porn as much as the next foodie, it's also nice to see what food REALLY looks like, before the food stylist gets in there with a spray bottle of glycerine or oil to make it all shiny.

But it's the writing itself which I really love. Nigel is the food writer I want to be when I grow up. Of course, it helps that he has a fantastically interesting life and lifestyle to write about, but godammit, the man can write. I think he is my favourite contemporary food writer.

The River Cottage Family Cookbook has a similar feel to that of the Kitchen Diaries - it's what a family eats, day to day, real life. It also goes the unbleached matte paper route (I love it), and does the homey photography, too. Actually, I think the photography is the thing I like the best about this cookbook, the snapshots of the authors' children kneading dough, gutting fish and sticking their fingers into jelly, the background glimpses into kitchens (ordinary, with crazy colours and funky knick-knacks, no gleaming modern kitchens). It has the best recipe for home-made pizza I've yet encountered, but the worst advice for making self-raising flour I've ever read.

Let me explain. I wanted to make the victoria sponge recipe for afternoon tea, cos I love that kind of cake. The recipe called for self-raising flour, which isn't available here, so I referred to the section on flour in the book, which advised using a heaped teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda and a good pinch of cream of tartar for every 100g of flour. I made the cake, baked it, sandwiched it all together with some yummy home-made strawberry jam, and took it down to the new neighbours for afternoon tea. It looked great - a lovely honey colour, well-risen etc etc BUT...tasted disgusting! The bicarbonate of soda!!!! Every bite had an awful bitter after-taste. Yuck! Bugger! What a shameful waste.
Note to self: take heed of the little voice telling me that surely it should be BAKING SODA, not BICARB SODA...

I haven't delved so much into The Silver Spoon as yet, as it only arrived the other day. But I was a little disappointed by its thin, bleached white pages (I'm such a shallow girl, easily swayed by looks) after the matte gloriousness of the Kitchen Diaries and The River Cafe FC. It's kind of like the difference between a heavy, off-white organic double cream and a bright, white, pasteurised commercial cream. And the typography and design - I don't like it, although they have also done the non-studio photography (must be the latest trend in food  photography).
That said, I think that there is a ginormous store of culinary information and expertise in this book. Again, it's the Edmonds cookbook situation - nothing much to write home about on the outside, but full of great stuff inside, with the potential to become one of my favourite cookbooks.

Spinach-o-rama

I've had a request for the recipe for Max's favourite spinach, but I'm ashamed to say it ain't much of a recipe...I just chucked it together and it tasted good, so hooray!

I don't usually do much with spinach, except sometimes make spinach and feta filo parcels when I come across good filo pastry (hard to find here). I just assumed that the kiddies didn't like it. However, Max ate it for lunch at kindy a couple of weeks ago, and came home declaring that he liked spinach, and when could we have it for dinner?

So, here is the recipe for Max's Favourite Garlicky Buttery Lemony Spinach:

Spinach - thawed, if frozen; wilted and squeezed dry if fresh (I used frozen)
Butter
Milk
Clove of garlic
Lemon juice to taste
Salt and pepper
Sprinkle of nutmeg

How

- Melt a knob of butter in a saucepan. Toss in the spinach and stir to distribute the buttery goodness.
- Continue to cook over a medium heat, then add a little milk, to stop it drying up.
- Add the finely chopped or crushed clove of garlic, and keep stirring for a couple fo minutes to cook the garlic (raw garlic makes me nauseous).
- Add a squeeze or two of lemon juice to taste: the spinach should be buttery and garlicky with just a hint of lemon. Not only does the lemon taste good, the vitamin C in it also helps your body to absorb the iron from the spinach.
- Season well: VERY IMPORTANT. Even if you usually avoid adding salt to your child's food, this is one time when you need to throw that rule out the window if you want your kiddie to eat it. Unseasoned spinach is VERY BORING (even I think so). So, season and taste to your liking.
- Just before serving, add the nutmeg and another nobble of butter to get it all gleaming and rich and delicious.
- Note: don't cook too long - you want the spinach a lovely vivid green, not a limp greenish weedy mess. And, try not to have too much liquid, although you do want it to be moist, not dry. Somewhere in between is perfect. Some toasted pinenuts would be yummy sprinkled on top, too.

I hope this helps to spread the joy of spinach a little further around the world. Long live spinach!


February 06, 2006

My lunch, with Silver Spoon


My lunch, with Silver Spoon, originally uploaded by kitschenette.

This morning Amamzon finally delivered my copy of the Silver Spoon, a staple of Italian kitchens for the last 5 decades. Very exciting!
I especially love how my sandwich is bathed in heavenly rays in this picture - some very welcome sunshine making an appearance after weeks of fog.

Zurich

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