Sunday Lunch

31 01 2010

When I first gave up eating meat on New Year’s Day 1986, standard vegetarian fayre was a nut roast – or if you were eating alone, a nut cutlet. Over the past 20 years or so vegetarian food has come a long way with books such as SImon Hopkinson’s wonderful Vegetarian Option or Terre a Terre’s new book but sometimes, particularly after a long cold weekend when Spurs could only manage a draw away at Birmingham, a nut roast with gravy and all the trimmings does just the trick.

This one was a little experimental, made with items from the bottom of the fridge that had started to look a little beyond their best.

I fried a chopped onion, a grated carrot and 2 grated courgettes in a little sunflower oil. Sometime it’s nice to add a grated apple too but I didn’t have one. Then added finely chopped mushrooms and a dash of soy sauce. After about 20 minutes of cooking most of the liquid should have gone. If not, cook a little longer. The mixture needs to be fairly dryish.

Allow to cool then mix in about 200g of chopped nuts. You can use anything here. I had about 100g cashews, and 50g each of pine nuts and hazelnuts in the cupboard. Take 2-3 slices of white bread and whiz into breadcrumbs in a blender/processor. Add this to the mixture with salt, pepper and an egg. Mix well then put into a prepared 1lb loaf tin, cover with foil and bake at 200C for an hour or so. Remove the foil and return to oven for another 10-15 minutes until browned on top. Then remove from oven, leave for 5 minutes before turning out.

Slice and serve with roast potatoes, beetroot and turnips (yes I had some turnips), something green and gravy. I had some brussel sprouts from the allotment and some runner beans I had perpared and frozen at the end of the Summer.

Left over roast can be sliced and put cold into sandwiches (great with Branston pickle) or fried into nut burgers





Wild Rice and Roasted Aubergine Salad

26 01 2010

A tasty alternative to a sandwich for lunch. Serve with a generous blob of hummus or greek yogurt.

Apologies if the quantities are a little vague. I put this together late on Sunday night without really thinking.

1 handful of wild rice
2 handfuls of brown rice
1 handful of puy lentils

Place these in a saucepan. Cover with water up to about 2cm over the rice then bring to boil. Once peaks start to form, turn the heat off, place a lid over the pan and leave until cool.

½ aubergine – ½ diced about cm in size
½ red pepper – diced
1 small onion – finely chopped
1 clove garlic – finely chopped
olive oil
salt
pepper
balsamic vinegar

Place the diced vegetables on a roasting dish, drizzle with olive oil, add some salt and pepper then roast in a hot oven – 220C or so – for about 20-30 minutes until soft and sizzling. Allow to cool.

Mix the rice and lentil mixture with the roasted vegetables then add more salt and pepper and balsamic vinger (I used white but the dark one will do too) to taste.

Variations:
Add a few toasted seeds or pine nuts
Add a tablespoon of capers





Celeriac Soup with Red Pepper Salsa

10 01 2010

As the cold weather continues, the population continues to panic buy at the shops. Having found the local supermarket shelves empty of fresh vegetables I rummages around the bottom of the fridge and found an old celeriac. Must have been in there about 3-4 weeks I guess, but was still quite firm so thought I would turn it into soup. There isn’t much else you can do with celeriac other than soup or perhaps remoulade.

Having made the soup, it looked a little pale, especially as all my soup bowls are white, so I jazzed it up with a hot and spicy red pepper salsa.

For the soup
Knob butter
1 onion – chopped
1 clove garlic – chopped
2 sticks celery – chopped
1 celeriac – peeled and diced
1 medium potato – peeled and diced
Vegetable stock
Splash of single cream
Salt

For the salsa
2 roasted red peppers – from a jar
2 cloves garlic – from the same jar
2 small dried red chilis – or you could use chopped fresh chili
pinch of salt
black pepper
olive oil

Melt a large knob of butter in a large pan then fry the onion, garlic and celery gently until it starts to soften. Add the celeriac and potato, cover with stock, bring to boil then simmer until all the vegetables are soft. Blitz in a blender or puree with a stick blender then return to pan. Add a generous splash of sibgle cream and season to taste. Heat gently.

To make the salsa, simple put everything in a blender and whiz until smooth – adding olive oil as you go to ensure it isn’t to lumpy.

Serve the soup with a blob of salsa in the middle.





Split Pea Soup with Moroccan Spiced Butter

4 01 2010

My friend Liz shared this with me a a couple of years ago. I think it’s a Nigel Slater recipe. Absolutely delicious….. but not very easy to make it look appetising in a photo. The soup base can be a little grey, but the addition of the spiced butter transforms the soup

For the soup
5 handfuls of split yellow peas
1 onion – roughly chopped
2 sprigs of mint
olive oil

for the butter
2 spring onions – finely chopped
2 cloves garlic – finely chopped or crushed
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon chili powder
handful of mint leaves – chopped
handful of coriander leaves – chopped
50g butter

Soak peas over night, drain the cover with fresh water and bring to boil. Reduce heat and simmer with the onion, mint and a glug of olive oil. After about an hour the peas should be tender enough to squash on the side of the pan. If not, cook for a little longer, adding boiling water if needed. Remove two thirds of the peas and blend until smooth then return to the pot and simmer until thickened.

To make the butter, just mash all the ingredients together with salt. Ladle the soup into bowls and add a generous dollop of butter to each.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 355 other followers