Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Taste of London 2014

Taste of London is one of my favourite foodie events in the calendar each year.  I look forward to seeing what the crème de la crème of English cuisine has to offer and the new up and coming flavours that will soon make way on to our supermarket shelves over the coming year.

In my previous jobs this festival was a source of inspiration for retailer briefs I was working on, but in recent years has become more of a fact finding mission for myself, to find new ingredients, recipe ideas and hob knob with the chefs!

2014 did not disappoint, being one of my best years yet.  I was exceptionally lucky to meet a few amazing and inspirational chefs, and also spend some time discussing recipes and the dishes that represent their restaurants, which I now cannot wait to cook - watch this space!

with Julian Marshall of the Bleeding Heart
 
with Michel Roux Jnr at La Gavroche
 
with Alfred Prasad of Tamarind
 
with Theo Randall
 
 

Spanish Pigs Cheek

I love to experiment with different cuts of meat and push myself to cook something different.  Pigs cheeks are very cheap, but cooked long and slow they can make the most incredible dish.
This Spanish version is a particular favourite and was inspired by my recent trip to Almeria.
I originally served the dish with wilted spinach, rice and roasted peppers, but would be equally as yummy with cous cous or polenta.


Serves 2
Calories 380

Ingredients

  • olive oil, for frying
  • 2 red onions, diced
  • 600g pigs cheeks
  • 1 tbsp flour, seasoned with salt and pepper
  • 2 crushed garlic cloves
  • 1  tsp ground cumin
  • 2 tsp sweet smoked paprika
  • 150ml medium dry sherry
  • 500ml beef stock
  • handful flat-leaf parsley


  • Method

    1. Heat the olive oil in a large pan and add the onion.
    2. Cook gently for 10 – 15 minutes until softened. Remove from the heat.
    3. Put the cheeks in the seasoned flour.
    4. Add a little more oil to the pan and turn up the heat.
    5. Brown the pig cheek.
    6. Turn the heat down to medium.
    7. Return all the pork and the reserved onions to the pan.
    8. Add the garlic, cumin and paprika and cook for a minute, then pour in the sherry.
    9. Use a spoon to scrape the bottom of the pan and mix in all the flavours.
    10. Pour in the beef stock then bring the pan to a simmer.
    11. Simmer gently for 4 hours or until the cheeks are tender.
    12. Scatter with parsley leaves and serve.


     

    Tuesday, 24 June 2014

    Shin of beef chilli and sticky rice

    • This is a great supper dish when you have time to cook at home, and spend that little bit of extra time in the kitchen.  Perfect for the weekend when you have friends over. Prep it, put the oven on and let the process begin.

      If you do make this tag me on instagram so I can see your pictures @princessrachelscott or use #PrincessChefRachel


      Serves 8
      425 calories per serving 


      Ingredients

      2 red onions
      4 cloves garlic
      2 fresh red chillies
      40g fresh coriander
      Olive oil
      2 tsp ground cumin
      3 tsp smoked paprika
      2 tsp ground cinnamon
      1 bay leaf
      2 x 400g tins of chopped tomatoes
      1.2kg skin of beef (with the bone still in)
      2 x 400g tins of cannelloni beans
      50g dark chocolate
      600g basmati rice



      Method

      1. Preheat the oven to 170°C or gas mark 3.
      2. Peel and dice the onions and garlic with the chillies and coriander stalks, then put into a large casserole pan on a medium heat with some olive oil. 
      3. Add all the spices and the bay leaves and cook for 15 minutes, stirring regularly, and adding a splash of water to stop it sticking
      4. Pour in the tinned tomatoes and one tins' worth of water and bring to the boil. 
      5. Rub the shin of beef all over with salt & pepper.
      6. Place the meat into the sauce, cover with a lid, then transfer to the oven to cook for 6 hours, stirring halfway and adding a splash of water to loosen.
      7. Forty minutes before the end, drain the beans and stir through.
      8. When the meat is falling apart and the chilli is thick, shake the marrow out of the bone and stir it back through the chilli. 
      9. Remove the bay leaf. 
      10. Stir through the dark chocolate until it melts fully. 
      11. Cook the rice as per the instructions on the packet. 
      12. Season the chilli again, if needed, then sprinkle over the remaining coriander leaves and serve with sticky basmati rice.

    Thursday, 12 June 2014

    Pan fried Seabass Fillet with Salsa and Cous Cous

    At 363 calories per serving this is the perfect supper on a weekday, but can also be used to wow friends when they come over.  No one would guess how healthy is actually is, and will just coo over the tasty plate you've put in front of them.  After the first making this dish quickly became a favourite in our household.
    Try swapping the seabass for salmon fillet (approx. 110g) for a change.


    Serves 2

    Ingredients

    Olive oil, for frying
    2 seabass fillets (approx. 150g each)

    for the tomato salsa -
    Olive oil
    200g cherry tomatoes
    60g pitted kalamata olives
    small bunch of coriander
    small bunch of basil
    1 lemon
    Sea salt
    Cracked black pepper

    60g cous cous
    Balsamic glaze

    Method

    1. Firstly make the salsa.  Place the olive oil in a pan and gently heat. 
    2.  Chop the tomatoes in half and add to the oil.
    3.  Add the olives to the pan and season.
    4.  Stir over a low heat for 2-3 minutes then set aside.
    5.  Chop the coriander and basil leaves and add to the salsa.
    6.  Roll the lemon on a chopping board to soften and release the juice, then cut in half and add squeeze into the salsa.  be careful to catch any pips!
    7.  Boil the kettle and in a bowl cover the cous cous with the water.  Cover the bowl with cling film and leave to sit for 10 minutes. 
    8.  In a heavy based frying pan add the frying olive oil and heat on a high heat. 
    9.  Slash the skin of the fillets and when the oil is very hot (almost smoking) add the fillets skin side down.  Hold the fillet down so that the fillet does not curl up.
    10.  When the flesh is opaque two thirds up the fillet (this will take approx. 3 minutes) flip it over and cook the flesh side for 1 minute, basting with the oil.
    11. To serve add some of the cous cous to one side of the plate.  Add the salsa to the other side and top with a seabass fillet.  Drizzle with balsamic glaze and a little basil. 



    Healthy Tea Loaf Recipe

    This is a fantastic little treat for those days when you need something sweet.  At only 231 calories per slice it satisfies those cravings we all have when dieting. 

    The longer you can soak the fruit in the tea the better, as it makes the loaf so much tastier and moist.

    If you do make this tag me on instagram so I can see your pictures @princessrachelscott or use #PrincessChefRachel

    Ingredients

    • 300g sultanas and raisins (mixed)
    • 225ml hot tea
    • juice 1 orange plus zest
    • 50g butter
    • 100g light brown sugar
    • 1 egg
    • 225g self-raising flour
    • 4 tbsp demerara sugar

    Method

    1. Place the dried fruits in a bowl and pour over the hot tea, orange juice and zest.
    2. Cover with cling film, then leave for at least 4 hours, however if I have time I leave them for a whole day.
    3. Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4.
    4. Grease and line the base of a 2lb loaf tin.
    5. Beat together the butter and sugar until creamy, then beat in the egg followed by the flour.
    6. Carefully stir through the fruit mixture and then spoon the mixture into the tin.
    7. Tap the tin down on the surface to release any air and then smooth over the surface with the back of a spoon.
    8. Sprinkle all over with a thick layer of demerara sugar.
    9. Bake for 1 hr or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
    10. Leave to cool in the tin, then turn out, cut into slices and serve.
    11. This cake will keep for a week in an airtight container so its perfect for when friends drop round for a coffee.
     
     

    Wednesday, 11 June 2014

    To eat or not to eat?


    Obesity and the cost on the country is very topical at the moment, filling many of our headlines. We are breeding a nation of fat children, fat adults and fat elderly people. But what is the answer? Wider ambulances and hospital beds? Gastric bands on the NHS? Only eating salad for the rest of our days?

    I've never made any secret of the fact that I've struggled most of my life with my weight and consequently my self image. It was hard growing up in a family where a 'Niles' bum is the norm (basically a large, wobbling bottom which was the trade mark of the whole family) and you get described as clever, not pretty or thin!

    I have literally tired every diet going; weight watchers, slimming world, slim fast (not good when you're allergic to milk), starvation, laxatives, fitness, cabbage soup diet, Hollywood juice diet and a whole lot I can't even remember the names of. What I'm saying is they don't work! Correction, they all work for a short space of time, and then when you're normal life resumes you go back to exactly where you were before.

    Over a year ago my best friend got engaged and asked me to be chief bridesmaid, an amazing honour.  This is something I had the pleasure of doing on 2 other occasions but this time I vowed I'd lose weight and look my best for the photos, therefore I set about devising my own plan (using my cooking addiction) to do it sensibly and keep it off this time.

    The wedding came along in November 2013, and I'd manage to lose 2 stone, which made me feel amazing, and to this day I've lost 3 stone 11lbs, dropping from a size 16 to a size 10 (ish) .  How did I do it; menu planning and healthy eating.

    Since doing my own menu plan, and seeing the results, I've devised a few others for friends and family. My friend Steph needed to eat a low GI diet and her husband Dan wanted to eat healthily too, so I wrote them a plan that combined both. I did a 4 week rotating meal plan which had breakfast, lunch and evening meals covered. It contained the 5 a day, a minimum of 2 fish portions per week and also one vegetarian meal per week, but more importantly it gave them one day off a week to be naughty and enjoy - one thing I learn early on so you're less likely to deviate.

    Have a look in the recipe section for some of my low fat, but packed with flavour suggestions. 

    What is the future for me and my eating plan? Well I'm not going backwards and therefore meal planning will be a part of my day to day, but I'll always make sure I save some of these calories for a yummy bottle of Marlborough sauv blanc!

    A few before and after photos. I'll let you decide which is which! 










    Tuesday, 10 June 2014

    Almeria - Spanish heaven

    My sister, mum and myself recently took a trip to Almeria in Spain, mainly to soak up some sunshine and celebrate my mums 'special' birthday, but also to inspire me to use new flavours and ingredients. I was not disappointed.

    When you think about Almeria forget everything you already know about Spain. There are very few high rise buildings, there are no Irish bars selling Guinness and cocktails at 10am and there are certainly no English cafés selling all day breakfasts. This is traditional, 'I care about what I put in my body' Spain, plus the Rijoca is amazing there too!!!

    Over the five days I was to experience some of the most simplistic but also mouthwatering food I've ever eaten.  Each day I reviewed the restaurants we should eat at and each evening after completing a marathon of tapas I would return back to my room to write my trip advisor reviews (feel free to read my very honest reviews of everywhere we visited).

    One place I particularly enjoyed was the market, mainly the fish section. You can take the girl out of Grimsby! Such a selection of fresh fish, some that I'd never seen before, and so perfectly presented you wanted eat it there and then. I also loved the vegetables and hanging meats.  Nothing perfect but equally appealing. A chefs dream.

    My favourite recipe was a twist on a classic; patatas bravas. At the Cathedral restaurant they use new potatoes, halved with a small hollow cut out of the middle. The bottom I smeared with aioli and the top filled with a spicy tomato bravas sauce. So simple yet so interesting. For a chef to recreate a classic and make it better shows real skill, something I can only one day dream of.

    Most people return from a trip with souvenirs and possibly clothes; not me. My suitcase was packed with delicious goodies I couldn't wait to experiment with and that we did when the following weekend we invited our friends over to sample some of the delights we tasted along our journey (see below).











    Sweet treats

    One of my favourites things to cook are sweet treats.  I don't have a sweet tooth myself, but there is nothing better than seeing someone's face light up when you give them a cake, pudding or biscuit you've made from scratch, and filled with heart & love.

    Sometimes life takes over and all you can manage is 30 mins in the kitchen, which calls for a quick shortbread recipe (see my recipe section for a fail safe result) and other times you can indulge, making a complicated pavlova or a layered chocolate ombré cake.

    My friend and brother in law recently went on a car rally through Europe, and as a little treat to keep them going during the long hours driving I made some yummy goodies to keep their energy levels up. Toffee apple cookies, double chocolate brownies and lemon kisses took a trip from Cleethorpes, via Golders Green, across Europe and finally ended up in the tummies of many hungry men at the top of a mountain in Switzerland. The hours spent cooking make it all worth it when I got that picture message of the recipients, filled with smiling, and very grateful faces!See below for photo evidence!











    Memories and Passion

    I'm Rachel, a normal girl from Grimsby with a massive passion for food and ingredients. I do have some Princess tendencies, hence the name of the blog, but I promise they are kept to a minimum most of the time!

    I've been obsessed with creating recipes and making people smile through the medium of food for some time now and wanted to share my photos, menu ideas and enthusiasm with other people; hence starting my own blog.

    My earliest memories of food are from my childhood. I must have been about 5 or 6 years old, and coming from Grimsby fish was always a big part of our life. The fish van came round every Thursday which meant my sister and I got to pick what we wanted to eat that evening for supper. I have vivid memories of the glistening skin of the fillets, the sparkling ice on which they sat and the sweet, fishy smell of the fish. One of my favourites at this time was skate wings. Simply pan fried in some butter with lemon juice and capers if the perfect way to eat them, where the flesh just falls of the bone and melts in your mouth. Perfect.

    My family always grew their own vegetables on an allotment in the centre of the village, so I was very used to eating seasonally from a young age. This is something I still follow where possible. Too many people are used to having what they want, when they want it. Do you really think this will give you the best ingredients? Forcing strawberries or tomatoes to grow affects your recipe; they have no flavour!

    My background is food manufacturing, and after spending 11 years designing and innovating products for all the premium UK retailers I took a step back to go back to basics, and hone my cooking skills. More recently I have been running a local restaurant, designing menus and crweating recipes, but who knows what the future holds. The only thing I do know is that food will be a massive part of it!

    Some pictures of me and the chefs I've been lucky enlighten to meet over the years #inspiration