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Posts Tagged ‘pepper’

  1. Christmas party – menu

    January 5, 2013 by potatoface

    I said recipes were coming soon, but who truly can define ‘soon’.

    In other words I was just being lazy, doing what you should over Christmas – do nothing, eat, drink, and be merry…

    But here it comes, christmas party menu:

    Beetroot soup with mushroom parcels

    For the beetroot soup you need:

    2-3 beetroots (fresh)

    1 carrot

    1 parsnip

    1 onion

    3 pints of water

    salt

    pepper

    dried marjoram

    oregano

    lemon juice from 1 lemon

    1 spoon of olive oil

     

    1. Boil water in a pan. Add olive oil.

    2. Peel all the vegetables , cut them into big chunks (onion in half) and add to boiling water.

    3. Add salt and pepper.

    4. After few minutes add lemon juice. Boil for 15-20 minutes, taste and add more seasoning or lemon juice if you need to.

    5. You can take all the vegetables out of your pot (we need clear beetroot soup) and add herbs and a dash of an olive oil.

    I’m not going to lie, you can make yourself mushroom parcels (like tortellinis with porchini mushrooms). My sister does. But I bought them frozen from a Polish shop (one can only do a few things at a time).

    mushroom parcels

    mushroom parcels

     

    beetroot soup with mushroom parcels

    beetroot soup with mushroom parcels

    Next thing on the menu were Beet and Goat Cheese Terrine with Rocket and Roasted Butternut Squash Salad

    beetroot and goat cheese terrine

    beetroot and goat cheese terrine

     

    beetroot and goat cheese terrine

    beetroot and goat cheese terrine

    You can find the recipe in ‘Fresh’ by Anna Olson

    I served it with Rocket and Roasted Butternut Squash Salad, Ina Garten aka Barefoot Contessa’s recipe:

    You can find it in her book ‘Back to Basics’

    or on the Food Network website here.

    For the main we had Spanakopita (Spinach and Feta in Filo Pastry). I tried different variations of  this Greek dish but my favourite recipe which I used over and over again is Jamie Oliver’s from his ’30 Minute Meals’  book

    There were two deserts. One of them was mince pies in filo pastry, dead easy. You need to cut filo pastry into squares, brush with melted butter and arrange in a muffin tin. If you feel artistic and have time arrange them with corners making a star. Fill them with vegetarian good mince meat, zest of lemon and fresh cranberries, bake till golden and sprinkle with icing sugar and maybe little sugar snowflakes…?

    mince pies in filo pastry

    mince pies in filo pastry

    And there were also Gingerbread Cupcakes.

    Christmas gingerbread cupcakes

    Christmas gingerbread cupcakes

    Christmas gingerbread cupcakes

    Christmas gingerbread cupcakes

    And the recipe you can also find on the Food Network website here.

     


  2. Halloween party – menu

    October 31, 2012 by potatoface

    When people talk about organizing a perfect dinner party or making decorations etc,  there is always one person being mentioned…Martha Stewart. But to me the perfect party queen is Ina Garten also known as Barefoot Contessa.

    If I could choose my dream party I wanted to be invited to, it would be Ina Garten’s party. I mean, hello! There’s no competition.

    For the Halloween party this year I took my inspiration for the menu from Barefoot Contessa’s books.

    Halloween Party menu:

    Starter:

    bruschetta with peppers and gorgonzola

    spiganarda with roasted vegetables

    Main:

    pumpkin risotto

    desert:

    chocolate cupcakes with orange icing

    drinks:

    red wine

    coffee martini

     

    Let’s talk about starters.

    Bruschetta with peppers and gorgonzolla

    I found this recipe in Ina Garten’s book ‘Back to Basics’.

    You will need:

    baguette (or any bread you fancy)

    yellow, green and red pepper

    2 tablespoons of drained capers

    gorgonzola

    salt

    pepper

    olive oil

    fresh basil

    1.Slice baguette or your choice of bread. You can brush your slices with olive oil and toast in the ovcn but I found them too dry, so to make them crusty on the outside and soft inside it’s better to toast them on the grill pan (really hot).

    2. Preheat the oven (180 C)

    3. Cut peppers into thin strips. Arrange them on the baking tray, sprinkle salt and pepper on top, bake them in the oven till they are soft and lightly brown on the edges. Ina Garten sautes them and adds sugar but I think when you roast them in the oven, you don’t need to add sugar because they are slightly carmelized anyway.

    4. Add capers into the peppers. Chop basil and add to peppers. Set aside.

    5. Arrange slices of bruschetta on baking tray lined with foil. Top each one with spoonful of pepper mixture. Crumble gorgonzola on top. Bake in the oven for  few minutes, serve warm.

    bruschetta with peppers and gorgonzola

    bruschetta with peppers and gorgonzola

    Spiganarda with rosted vegetables

    This one comes from Barefoot Contessa’s Parties book. Original recipe was with orzo pasta but my Italian shop run out of orzo so I decided to replace it with spiganarda. I also added olives instead of spring onions because I don’t like spring onions and I love olives.

    1 aubergine

    1 red, yellow and green pepper

    2 garlic cloves, minced or crushed

    250 grams of spiganarda pasta

    salt

    pepper

    olive oil

    lemon juice

    olives

    1/4 cup of toasted pine nuts

    feta cheese diced

    fresh basil chopped

    1. Preheat the oven to 200 C. Dice aubergine and peppers, toss them with garlic, olive oil, salt and pepper on a large baking tray. Roast in the oven till they start turning brown, turning with the spatula a few times.

    2.In the meantime cook pasta. Drain and transfer into a large bowl.

    3. Add vegetables, pine nuts, basil, feta cheese and olives into the pasta. For the dressing mix lemon juice from one lemon with olive oil, salt and pepper, pour over the pasta.

    Now, main dish. I’ve made it before for the halloween, but this time I changed my recipe a bit.

    spiganarda with roasted vegetables

    spiganarda with roasted vegetables

    spiganarda with roasted vegetables

     

    Pumpkin risotto

    arborio rice

    pumpkin or butternut squash

    saffron

    salt

    pepper

    1/2 bottle of white wine (pinot grigio)

    2 pints of vegetable stock

    lemon zest from one lemon

    olive oil

    knob of butter

    cup of grated parmesan

    chopped shallots

    minced garlic

    1. Preheat oven to 180 C. Cut your pumpkin or butternut squash into cubes. Spread on the baking tray, sprinkle with olive oil and salt and pepper and roast till they’re soft and start to get golden brown.

    2. Warm 3-4 tablespoons of olive oil in a pan (the best to use is an ironcast one), add knob of butter. After the butter melts add shallots and fry them until they are soft and translusent. Add garlic and fry for two minutes. Then add arborio rice (1/2 cup for each person). Mix and let it fry for a while till coated with olive oil and warm.

    3. Add a ladle of vegetable stock at the time. Cook on low heat (not too low, if it’s too low the rice grains will stay hard, if the heat is too high it will turn into mash) till rice absorbs the liquid. Keep adding stock and wine (wine needs to be room temperature, stock can be hot, you don’t want to stop the cooking process by adding cold stock).

    4. Add few strings of saffron, salt and pepper.

    5. Add roasted cubed pumpkin and zest of lemon. At the end add grated parmesan. Serve immediately.

    pumpkin risotto

    pumpkin risotto

    pumpkin risotto

    Halloween chocolate cupcakes with orange icing

    The main inspiration for the batter came from…you guessed, Ina Garten again. This time from the book ‘Barefoot Contessa, How Easy Is That?’.

    I changed few ingredients and the icing to make it more suitable for Halloween.

    So here it is:

    2 1/2 cups flour

    1/4 cup cocoa

    1 tablespoon baking powder

    1 tablespoon baking soda

    1 cup buttermilk

    1 tablespoon white vinegar

    1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract

    120 grams of usalted butter, at room temperature

    1 cup sugar

    pinch of salt

    2 eggs, at room temperature

    milk chocolate chips

    1. Preheat oven to 180 C. Line muffin tins with paper liners.

    2. In a small bowl, sift together the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda and pinch of salt.

    3. In a seperate bowl combine buttermilk, vinegar, vanilla.

    4. Beat the butter with sugar on a low speed for a minute, till fluffy and light. Add one egg at a time and beat until combined. Start adding dry ingredients and wet ingredients in 3 parts, mix on low speed till combined.

    5. Add chocolate chips.

    6. Scoop the butter into muffin cups, bake for 25- 30 minutes till a toothpick comes out clean. Cool completely.

    For the icing you will need:

    120 grams of room temperature butter

    120 grams of cream cheese (you can just use cream cheese if you prefer)

    1/2 cup icing sugar

    1 tablespoon orange extract

    orange colouring (I couldn’t find it in any shops, so I mixed red and yellow)

    1. Place all the ingredients in a bowl and combine it well. Pipe it onto your cupcakes.

    Couldn’t be easier!

    halloween cupcakes

    halloween cupcakes

    halloween cupcakes

    halloween cupcakes

    halloween chocolate cupcake with orange icing

    halloween chocolate cupcake with orange icing

    And finally…

    Coffee martini

    1 part of strong coffee

    1 part of tia maria

    1 part of blood orange vodka

    1. Mix with ice in a coctail shaker and serve in martini glasses

    coffee martini

    coffee martini

    coffee martini

    coffee martini


  3. tomato and mozzarella soup

    April 2, 2012 by potatoface

    tomato soup

    tomato soup

     

    I’m addicted to watching food channels. It’s like my equivalent of a porn channel. I can’t wait till I get home so I can watch it, I get overexcited when I watch it, sometimes I get all dreamy and distracted. It’s not like I watch everything, I’m not that addicted, I have my favourites. The only problem is when you watch it, you get hungry and you have to quickly make something nice and full of flavour to eat. Soups are coming to the rescue!

     Tomato and mozzarella soup

     Ingredients:

    2-3 cups of chopped tomatoes (or 2 tins of chopped tomatoes if you are making your soup during a commercial break)

    2 diced carrots

    1 diced parsnip

    1 small chopped leek

    pinch of sugar

    coarse salt

    freshly ground pepper

    2 spoons of olive oil

    knob of butter

    fresh basil (handful)

    mozzarella

    1. Put carrots, parsnip, leek and tomatoes in a pot, add a pinch of sugar. Cover, simmer on a low heat.

    2. When carrots are tender, using blender or food processor purée everything. Bring back to boil, add olive oil, season with salt and pepper, add knob of butter.

    3. Take of the heat, add chopped basil.

    4. Chop or tear mozzarella. Transfer soup into bowls, add mozzarella and serve with grilled ciabatta slices.


  4. Veggi spaghetti bolognese

    February 24, 2012 by potatoface

    spaghetti bolognese

    spaghetti bolognese

     There are always dishes in everyone’s repertoire which are idiot proof. To me one of them is spaghetti bolognese veggi style. You can’t go wrong, people love it and it takes just a few minutes to make.

    spaghetti bolognese

    spaghetti bolognese

     

    Ingredients:

    spaghetti

    2-3 spoons of olive oil

    mince quorn

    1-2 shallots

    2-3 cloves of garlic

    tin of chopped tomatoes

    olives

    fresh basil

    half a glass of red wine

    black olives

    freshly ground pepper

    pinch of sea salt

    1. Boil water for pasta

    2. Chop shallots and garlic. Pour olive oil into a pan and add the shallots and garlic, stir, fry till they are translucent. Add quorn mince. Mix and fry for 30 seconds and then add chopped tomatoes.

    3. Wait until sauce thickens. Season with salt and pepper, add wine.

    4. In the meantime boil pasta.

    5. Wait until alcohol evaporates. Add a handful of black pitted olives and chopped basil.

    6. Drain pasta and add to the sauce. Serve with parmesan sprinkled on top. Buon appetito!


  5. I Want Winter to go Away Lentil and Tomato Soup

    January 14, 2012 by potatoface

    It’s winter. It’s cold and dark outside, quite miserable really, with occasional heavy winds. To cheer yourself up and make yourself feel warm you’ve got two options: 1. start heavily drinking or: 2.have some soup. I know what you are thinking – first option seems somehow very, very tempting. But think about your liver. Think about all the money it would cost you. Soup is so much cheaper.

    So here you go. A recipe for a nice, warming soup. It’s nothing like a glass of wine but trust me, it does the trick.

    lentil and tomato sopu

    Ingredients:

    1 parsnip

    2 carrots

    3-4 potatoes

    1 leek

    can of chopped tomatoes

    cup of red lentils

    pinch of cayenne pepper

    salt

    basil, oregano, thyme, bay leaf

    1 spoon of olive oil

    knob of butter

     

    1. Boil 1.5 litres of water.

    2. Peel, wash and dice parsnip, carrot and potatoes, add to boiling water.

    3. Add salt, olive oil and lentils. Cover and simmer till vegetables and lentils are soft.

    4. Using blender turn everything into a creamy soup but don’t go crazy, it’s nice to have chunks here and there.

    5. Heat up your soup, add chopped tomatoes and simmer for a while. Add herbs and cayenne pepper. At the end add a knob of butter. Serve with some nice bread.

     

     

     

     

     


  6. easy vegetarian shepherd’s pie

    December 17, 2011 by potatoface

    shepherd's pie

     

    I haven’t been here for a while. It was because I was down. And when I’m down I get stressed and worried that my family genes I hoped I didn’t have in me are actually saying hello.

    Luckily it a was  false alarm this time.

    Even when I’m down, I’m still cooking. And what’s better on a cold day than comfort food – nice, hot shepherd’s pie.

    I make a variation of  this recipe with mung beans instead of quorn mince meat.

     

    Vegetarian shepherd’s pie

    Ingredients:

    Quorn vegetarian mince meat

    tin of chopped tomatoes

    2 diced carrots

    3 spoons of olive oil

    3 shallots

    tin of green peas (or 100grams of fresh ones)

    vegetable stock cube

    spoon of basil (fresh or dried)

    freshly ground pepper

     

    4-5 potatoes

    knob of butter

    3-5 spoons of milk

    pinch of nutmeg

    150 grams of grated cheddar

     

    1. Chop shallots. Warm olive oil in a pan and fry shallots on the low heat.

    2. When the shallots start getting golden (but not brown) add quorn mince meat and chopped tomatoes and carrots. Stir, cover and leave it to simmer.

    3. In the meantime boil potatoes in salty water.

    4. Add vegetable cubes to your meat free mince and season with pepper. I don’t use salt, but if you feel like adding some, suit yourself.

    5. When your mince sauce starts to thicken, add herbs and peas (if they are fresh, you have to add them earlier).

    5. Drain your potatoes and mash them with butter, milk and nutmeg.

    6. In an ovenproof dish layer mince sauce. On top spread the potato mash, sprinkle with cheese and bake in the oven ( 180 C) till top starts getting golden.

    Enjoy!

     

     

     

     

     

     


  7. Stuffed peppers

    September 10, 2011 by potatoface

    stuffed peppers

    Apparently stuffed peppers have got less calories than a tic-tac. I don’t know if it’s true but I love them. They are tasty. And it’s always better to stuff peppers then get stuffed.

    So whenever you feel like stuffing your face or simply kicking the stuffing out of someone, stuff peppers instead. Let the force be with you…

    stuffed peppers

    Stuffed peppers

     

    Ingredients

     

    3 peppers

    brown rice (half a cup)

    100 grams of mushrooms

    1 courgette

    100 grams of green peas (fresh or from a tin)

    herbes de provence (or fresh basil, oregano and thyme)

    salt and pepper

    olive oil

    100 – 150 grams of cheddar cheese

     

    1. Cook rice.

    2. Chop mushrooms, fry them in olive oil. Add chopped courgette, add herbs, salt and pepper. Add fresh green peas, if you are using tinned peas, wait till courgettes are soft.

    3. Halve the peppers. Mix vegetables with rice and stuff the peppers. Grate cheese and sprinkle it on top of the peppers.

    4. Bake in the oven (180 C) till peppers are soft and the cheese has melted.

    5. Serve with salad and roasted potatoes.

     


  8. Pasta with any veg you can find in your fridge

    September 1, 2011 by potatoface

    pasta with vegetables

    pasta with vegetables

    This pasta recipe should be dedicated to my friend Marcelina because it reminds me of her. Basically the whole pasta dish is made with what you can find in the fridge – the one I’m posting is with spinach, mushrooms , tomatoes and courgettes because these are vegetables I always have in my fridge, but sometimes I use variations – mushrooms, broccoli and tomatoes or mushrooms, peppers and tomatoes.

    My variations though are in a totally different category than Marcelina’s. She used to add things to her pasta which she found in a cupboard or fridge, but they were totally random, not going together at all. Something like sweetcorn, gurkens and walnuts for example. Her style of cooking was really adventurous and totally bonkers. Such an inspiration she was.

    So here it is – pasta inspired by Marcelina.

    Pasta with any veg you can find in your fridge

     

    Ingredients

     

    gnocchetti pasta (you can use farfalle, pennne or whatever you have in the cupboard)

    tin of chopped tomatoes

    1 courgette

    spinach

    mushrooms (a cup or 2 handfuls)

    olive oil

    fresh basil

    1-2 cloves of garlic

    salt and freshly ground pepper

    parmesan (I use vegetarian one)

     

    1. Chop mushrooms. Warm olive oil in a pan, add crushed garlic, fry for a minute, add mushrooms.

    2. When the mushrooms are fried, add cubed courgette and chopped tomatoes. Cook for a few minutes, add salt and pepper.

    3. When the courgette softens, add spinach gradually, stir.

    4. In the meantime cook pasta.

    5. When vegetables are cooked but not overcooked, add basil, drain your pasta, mix with your sauce.

    6. Serve on a pre-warmed plate with grated parmesan on top and red wine, preferably Montepulciano d’Abruzzo.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


  9. wholemeal pancakes with spinach – no nonsense food

    August 8, 2011 by potatoface

    wholemeal pancakes with spinach - no nonsense food

    There is no story behind pancakes with spinach. I like spinach, I like pancakes, that’s why I have combined the two together. Cheese is nice as well. And that’s basically it. They taste good though, everyone should try them…

     

     

     

     

    Wholemeal pancakes with spinach and cheese

     

    Ingredients for pancakes:

    1 glass of wholemeal flour

    1/2 glass of soya milk (doesn’t have to be soya if you don’t have it)

    2 spoons of olive oil

    2 eggs

    1/2 glass of water if the batter is too thick

    Ingredients for stuffing:

    spinach

    200 grams of cheddar cheese

    2 spoons of olive oil

    salt and pepper

    1. Mix all ingredients for pancakes, if the mixture seems to thick, add some water.

    2. Heat the frying pan. It has to be really hot. Then when the pan is hot and your batter smooth and creamy, using the ladle pour some onto the pan, tilt the pan in a circular motion so that the batter coats the surface evenly, leave until it sets, flip it and put it onto a plate on the side.

    3. To prepare spinach, heat olive oil in a pan, saute spinach (you need to do it on a low heat, add spinach gradually and cover).

    4. Add salt and pepper.

    5. When the spinach is done, spread some butter in an ovenproof dish (you can use a separate dish for each person), grate cheese, spread some spinach in the middle of the pancake, on top of the spinach sprinkle cheese, roll the pancake, put it into an ovenproof dish.

    6. When your ovenproof dish is full of rolled pancakes, sprinkle more cheese on top of them.

    7. Leave them in the hot oven (180C) till cheese melts properly.

    Enjoy!

     


  10. Chili sin carne

    July 23, 2011 by potatoface

    chilli sin carne

    I just came back from a holiday. We went to Poland,I showed Boyfriend the town I was born in, the place I went to uni (and where Copernicus was born), let him fall in love with the area and nag me to move there with him (ha!). This is the irony of life – you dream of living in the UK, move there, start feeling happy and end up with an Englishman who dreams of living in Poland.

     

    We hit the town (towns more like – it was a road trip), got smashed with my professor from uni and expert on Kant’s philosophy; met old and new friends. Boyfriend also got introduced to Fred the dog. And then the holiday was over.

    When you are away for more than a week, after you come back, there is nothing in the fridge. That’s why in case of such emergency you should always keep some tinned beans etc. in your house. You can always produce chilli sin carne out of almost nothing.

    Chilli sin carne

    200grams of quorn meat

    red onion

    2 red chillies

    can of chopped tomatoes

    can of kidney beans

    small can of sweetcorn

    oregano

    salt

    cup of rice (enough for 2 people)

     

    1. Wash rice and boil in twice as much water as you’ve got rice with a pinch of salt

    2. Sauté chopped onion (you can replace red onion with shallots if you feel like it) and chopped chillies.

    3.Add quorn mince meat (or any soya mince meat) and chopped tomatoes. Stir and cook till it gets thicker.

    4. Add some oregano.

    5. When the sauce thickens add kidney beans and sweetcorn.

    6. With 2 chillies it should be hot, but if you need it to be more spicy, add some cayenne pepper (if you want your eyes to pop out).

    Serve with rice.