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November 25th, 2010

I have to say that it’s a bit of a fluke that I’ve made this as a christmas gift because the main ingredient, tomatoes, obviously aren’t in season. And because we timed our house move poorly this year we didn’t get to harvest all the tomatoes we’d grown in the garden.
However when I popped into my new favourite local farm shop the other day they had VERY ripe tomatoes on clearance, at £2 per kilo. So I grabbed a kilo, some ginger and chillies and knocked up 5 pots of this lovely savoury jam. The chillies I used were the standard red chillies rather than birds-eye ones so the jam has a nice kick without being too hot. It’s great with cheese sandwiches, potato wedges and goats cheese!
This recipe is based on one from Darina Allens Ballymaloe Cookery Course however I’ve tweaked it slightly as the original recipe used golden caster sugar. I only had soft brown sugar and standard sugar available, so used equal quantities of these instead.
Ingredients
- 1 kg tomatoes
- 8 red chillies
- 2 inches of peeled ginger, roughly chopped
- 8 cloves garlic
- 60ml fish sauce
- 200ml red wine vinegar
- 550g sugar (golden caster, or mix soft brown / granulated)
Method
- Place chillies, garlic, ginger & fish sauce in food processor and process into a paste.
- Put vinegar, sugar, tomatoes and chilli mixture into a saucepan and heat gently until sugar crystals.
- Bring to boil, then reduce heat and simmer for 40 minutes – 1 hour.
- Once cooked, store in sterilised jars. Ready to enjoy immediately!
Tags: home-made christmas, home-made gift, tomato chilli jam Posted in Home-made Gifts, Recipes, Uncategorized | No Comments »
December 19th, 2009
Like most people, I’ve got lots of family to catch up with over Christmas which involves a bit of tact and political manouevering to arrange. This year, we’ll see my parents for Christmas day itself and given that my Mum LOVES christmas and her house is like Santa’s grotto, my kids will have a whale of a time! So this weekend I’m seeing my sis, her partner and stepson on Saturday and on Sunday the outlaws, H’s sis and husband to be and H’s uncle are coming. It will be a hectic weekend but I’ve tried to do as much as possible in advance to avoid last minute panic.
Saturday will be easier as my sis is bringing Spag Bol and I just have to do garlic bread and desserts. 3 desserts mind you as we have to do enough for Sunday too, but luckily (?) H has offered to make a trifle on Saturday morning – and yes, that is pigs you see flying merrily high up into the sky. As he needs lots of egg yolks for his trifle custard, we’ll be doing a Pavlova and choc mousse cake too. Not too calorie laden at all…
On Sunday, we’re doing a full 5 course ’show-off’ menu:
- Pre-starter: Pea Soup Shot & Parmesan Crisp
- Starter: Homemade Gravadlax & Wheaten Bread / Chicken Liver Pate
- Main Course: Duck Crown with Sour Cherry Sauce, Roast Potatoes & Veg
- Pre-Dessert: Mulled Wine Sorbet
- Dessert: Choice of trifle, pavlova or choc fest
Although this sounds like loads of hassle, the pea soup, gravadlax, pate and mulled wine sorbet are already made and frozen, so it’s really only the roast duck that I have to do on Sunday, so it should be straightforward. And thinking about it, I might skip the pre-dessert and just offer the mulled wine sorbet as a dessert option as everyone will be full anyway. Here’s the recipe for those of you who’d like to try it (it needs a good bit of chilling and then freezing time too, so aim to make it the day before you need it).
Ingredients
- 175ml boiling water
- 175g caster sugar
- 1 orange
- 1 1/2 lemons
- 3 cloves
- 5cm piece cinnamon bark
- grating of nutmeg
Method
- Make sugar syrup by adding sugar to boiling water and stirring until dissolved. Refrigerate
- Add red wine, orange zest & juice, lemon zest & juice, cinnamon & nutmeg to a pan. Bring to boiling point
- Refrigerate red wine mix until cold
- Add sugar syrup and red wine mix and then add to ice cream machine, or still freeze (this means putting mix into a plastic box and freezing, taking from freezer twice at hourly intervals to mash up with a fork)
- Add egg white to Ice Cream machine / freezer box and freeze again
This is just lovely, really refreshing, can’t wait to see what everyone else thinks of it!
Tags: home-made christmas Posted in Recipes | No Comments »
December 17th, 2009
It’s still not too late for those of you who haven’t made / bought your christmas presents. Home-made Lemon Curd makes a really lovely pressie and it’s easy to make too. If you’ve never tasted homemade lemon curd, then you should make this immediately as it’s just gorgeous, so different from the plasticky bought stuff.
Unlike the chutneys etc that take a while to mature before they’re ready to eat, this can be made and handed over the next day. It will keep for a few weeks in the fridge but is best eaten within 10 days.
Ingredients
- 4 Lemons (Zest & Juice)
- 4 Large Eggs
- 12 oz Golden Caster Sugar
- 8 oz unsalted butter (softened & chopped)

Method
- Whisk the eggs together with a balloon whisk in a saucepan
- Put pan on medium heat, whisk other ingredients in immediately
- Keep whisking until mixture thickens (about 7 / 8 mins)
- Turn heat to low and simmer for 2 mins
- Pour into sterilised jars (warm from dishwasher, or 5 mins at 180c)
This is great on toast but also makes a fantastic lemon meringue pie (very old-skool, I know!)
Tags: home-made christmas, Home-made Gifts Posted in Home-made Gifts | No Comments »
December 10th, 2009
So, it’s Wednesday evening. My darling husband is out at his 2nd christmas do and I’m home alone with the littl’uns asleep. I decide to watch ‘Kirsties Homemade Christmas’ which I’d Sky +’d from Tuesday. I didn’t watch any of the original series (not sure why) but having seen last nights programme, I’m disappointed that I didn’t.
If you’ve been reading my previous blog posts you’ll know that I’ve been doing a lot of homemade bits and pieces for Christmas. So when I saw Kirsty making salt-dough decorations I switched off the telly and decided to give it a go myself! At that stage, the detail wasn’t online, but it’s very straightforward to make:
- 1 cup salt
- 1 cup water
- 2 cups flour
I just bunged it all into my kitchenaid mixer and let it work for about 5 minutes, then got to work and started rolling the dough out. I found that I had to add extra flour as my dough was too sticky – it definitely got easier to work with as I went on, mainly because I’d added more flour to the worksurface for rolling out.
I tried cutting stars but they were too tricky (again probably because my mixture was a little on the wet side) but had a lot more success with heart shapes. Once I had them cut out, I nuked them in the microwave for about 3 minutes per plate, which was enough to dry some of them out but not others – the last batch went in the oven this morning at 180c for 15 mins.
Once cooled, I sprayed both sides with gold spray paint which I just happened to have to hand (randomly). I then threaded red bias binding material through, but you could use ribbon instead?
I thought about creating a garland, but wasn’t sure what I would actually attach it to, so decided on creating a centerpiece over our table instead. I’m chuffed with the result – they definitely look homemade but isn’t that the point?  Would love to hear what you think.
Tags: home-made christmas Posted in Home-made Gifts | 3 Comments »
December 10th, 2009
I can’t let today go past without sharing my LOVELY piccalilli recipe which I made 6 jars of last week as part of my christmas hampers. Why today? Well, I just sampled some for the first time, with a cheese and ham toastie. It was perfect, good and crunchy, tangy with a bit of a bite to it. The recipe is dead easy but you have to start preparing it the day before.
 Cheeky Wipes: Piccalilli
My recipe is from the fabulous book Preserved, by Nick Sandler & Johnny Acton which is available from Amazon and full of yummy things to make. Preserved lemons are next on my list to make from that book… Anyway, here’s their recipe, which I actually tripled because my cauliflower on it’s own weighed a kilo:
To make 3 x 300ml pots
- 1.2kg (2lb 10oz) mixed veg*, diced in cubes
- 2 tablespoons salt
- 1 tablespoon turmeric powder
- 50g (2ox) mustard powder
- 1 teaspoon ground white pepper
- 2 teaspoons ground ginger
- 50g (2oz) plain flour
- 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
- 5 tablespoons cider vinegar, plus another 150ml (1/4 pint) cider vinegar
- 250ml (9fl oz) malt vinegar
- a dash of water
*The recipe recommends carrot, cauliflower, shallot, turnip, baby corn, parsnip and pickling cucumber. I used red onion instead of shallot which makes it a very pretty colour, sweetcorn for baby corn and courgettes instead of pickling cucumber. I skipped turnips, bleurgh yuck.
- Dice your veg & place in a large bowl.
- Sprinkle salt over and mix well. Leave overnight to draw out the liquid.
- In your biggest saucepan, mix the turmeric, mustard, white pepper, ginger, flour, nutmeg and the 5 tbs of cider vinegar to a smooth paste.
- Whisk in the remaining vinegar, then add the veg, malt vinegar and a little water – enough so that most of the veg are covered but not all.
- Gently heat the mixture until the sauce thickens (about 15 mins). Stir constantly or the flour will stick to the bottom of the pan.
- Store your piccalilli in sterilised jars (straight from dishwasher, or warm after spending 5 mins in oven at 180c)
- Piccalilli will keep for 6 months in cool larder and mature nicely. Once opened refrigerate and eat within 6 weeks.
Tags: home-made christmas, Home-made Gifts Posted in Home-made Gifts | 2 Comments »
December 6th, 2009
I know that I said that this year I was focusing on mostly bathing related pressies, but I couldn’t help myself…I couldn’t let a year go by without making some chutneys. This year however, I made just one batch of chutney on my own (the spiced orange and apricot).
On Monday I got together with a couple of Mum friends of mine who were interested in sharing the workload and the washing up!. We brought our littl’est kids, all 4 of them and met after the school run. Fortified by a loaf of banana bread from my freezer (see previous post) and a cup of coffee each, we got to work on making christmas chutney.
After that, we moved on to the most painful part of the day – harissa paste. My friends had both had better luck than me in growing chillies, to the point of having a glut to use up. However we only had 250 ml jars which we all agreed were much to big to hold this pungent paste. I was dispatched to the local supermarket to buy some tiny jam pots – we decanted the jam into one of our bigger jars and hey presto, problem solved. The pain involved was through the heat of the tiny birds eye chillies – everything we touched stung like mad for about an hour afterwards!
Lastly, we finished off with some Green Tomato chutney. Again this was using up a glut of green tomatoes so it was rewarding to see them turned into something useful and tasty.
Between times we had a rustic lunch. Seeded bread and a couple of big whacks of cheese served with a dollop of the christmas chutney – delicious! It was a lovely morning, well spent and it definitely reminded me of days of old (did anyone else watch ‘little house on the prairie’?) when women got together to ‘put up’ the seasons harvest, preserving and pr eparing for the winter ahead. Although we have no need to do so nowadays, it’s a great excuse to have a bit of a get together with the girls. And do your eco bit for christmas too.
Tags: Green Living, home-made christmas, Home-made Gifts Posted in Home-made Gifts | No Comments »
November 22nd, 2009
Another one of my (bah, humbug) irritants about Christmas is the fact that we’re all feel obliged to stock up on loads of ‘luxury’ treats. For me though, luxury doesn’t necessarily mean cost, but in the case of this gravadlax recipe, it’s time.
Home-made gravadlax is a fantastic, tasty alternative to smoked salmon. It’s scandanavian in origin, hence the use of dill and mustard to give it a lovely flavour. It’s really simple to make, but you need to allow 5 – 8 days for the salmon to cure.
Ingredients
1 side of salmon (fillet, skin removed) about 1-2kg
2-3 large bunches fresh dill
125g/4oz rough sea salt crystals
250g/8oz caster sugar
30g/1oz freshly ground black pepper
For the sauce:
1 tbsp chopped fresh dill
1 tbsp English mustard
1 tsp caster sugar
1 tbsp sunflower oil
2 tbsp crème fraîche
1 tbsp wine vinegar
Method
1. Ask your fishmonger to skin and pinbone your salmon fillets – I’ve used salmon with the skin on in the past, but prefer it without
2. Roughly chop the dill and mix thoroughly in a bowl with the salt, sugar and pepper. Lay out a sheet of cling film about four times the width of a salmon fillet. Spread a quarter of the cure mix over a fillet-size area on one side of the clingfilm with a good 15cm/6in margin for folding over.
3. Place one fillet, on top of the pickle mixture and cover with slightly more than half of what is left. Place the second fillet on top, to make a sandwich. Scatter the remaining cure mixture over the skin.
4. Wrap up the parcel tightly, tucking the ends and edges in underneath the fish.
5. Put the package on the tray and place a similar size tray, or a plank of wood on the top. Weigh it down, with something heavy – I use 6L of milk.Turn the package daily for between 5 & 8 days. Do not discard the liquid that oozes from the package unless it threatens to spill over the side of the tray.
6. At least one hour before serving, combine all the ingredients for the dressing in a jar and shake well together. Leave to stand and shake again before serving.
7. To serve, unwrap the gravadlax and wipe off any excess pickling liquid. There is no need to scrape off the dill pieces. Slice fairly thinly then serve with the sauce and buttered wheaten bread. (Unused gravadlax can be re-wrapped in clean cling film and kept in the fridge for up to five days. It also freezes very successfully.)
I’ve got 2 kg of this in my fridge at the moment which has cost me about £10 in total. There’s enough to do me for my ‘Come Dine with Me’ Extravaganza during the week, plus as a starter for our Christmas dinner. And it’s all done well in advance – so no stressing!
Tags: home-made christmas Posted in Home-made Gifts | No Comments »
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