This Month
| February 2007 |
| Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
|
Thursday, February 15

Melsy's Chicken Tagine with Preserved Lemons
by
Aitch
on Thu 15 Feb 2007 17:38 GMT
Now as far as I'm aware Melsy hasn't yet tried this on her wee one, but she will soon. In the meantime I think it sounds amazing and am going to make it just as soon as I can get my mitts on some preserved lemons. I saw them in the supermarket the other day and rather wondered what to do with them, Couscous, of course, can be quite messy though so I tend to overcook Babybear's to an inathentic clump.
1tsp oil
30g butter / marg
3lb chicken pieces (8) thighs &/or legs
2 onions grated
1tbsp garlic crushed
1tbsp ginger crushed
Pinch saffron
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1tsp chili flakes (optional if not into heat)
1 pint chicken
season with pepper no salt
55g stoned olives
Handful of dried apricots chopped (optional)
1 preserved lemon sliced
1 tbsp honey - to balance sharpness of lemons
To serve ; couscous made with veg stock and cooked softened onions/ raisins & chopped parsley.
preheat oven 180/ gas mrk 4
heat oil & add butter brown chicken
remove with slotted spoon and lay in a tagine or thick casserole
add onions to pan and fry slow and low till soft
add garlic , ginger, honey , apricots & spices
cook for 2 mins
add stock and bring to boil
season and then pour this over the chicken in the casserole/ tagine
cover and cook for 1 hr
remove from oven add olives , preserved lemons and cook for a further 15-30 depending on how caramelised you like things.
Serve with couscous.
Thursday, February 8

The Quickest Cannelloni in the World
by
Aitch
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 21:02 GMT
Someone on Mumsnet posted this recipe with feta cheese but hot feta makes me heave... Anyway, it reminded me of an ancient WeightWatchers recipe my mum used to make and honest injun, it's really nice. Plus it takes 5 minutes to prepare - hooooo-zah!
Lasagne strips 1 big tub of full-fat cottage cheese One or two tins of chopped tomatoes, dependent on how big your dish Bag of spinach Nutmeg to grate Some more cheese, whatever you've got. Mozzarella would be swish, grated cheddar fine.
The first thing you have to do is work out approximately how many bits of lasagne you'll need. Rather than using bits of cannelloni which are a pain to find and tend to make it home from the supermarket in shards, you'll be rolling up your lasagne pieces lengthways. So work it out, folks. I do mine in a dish that's about 25cm square, so that's 10 bits of lasagne.
Pour some boiling water into a bowl and put in the lasagne. It's better if you drop in a bit of olive oil and fan them out a bit as sometimes they can stick together. Leave for 5 minutes. (Post Script: Bear in mind, as has been demonstrated below in the comments section that the pasta would like to stick together and coagulate into a big old lasagne brick. You must fight against this, hence the oil and the fanning. Or use a shallow dish so that you can give the lasagne a bit of space. Or just keep an eye on it, so that you can give it a swoosh if it looks like it's going to stick. I'm making this sound a lot more complicated than it is, amn't I? [sighs])
Mix the cottage cheese and finely chopped spinach (you'll probably need less than a bag, but it's up to you) and grate some nutmeg in as well. Don't be too horrified if there seems to be tons of spinach and not much cheese, the spinach disappears. I should say that you are also at libery to make this recipe with ricotta cheese, which would be more correct. But I tend to keep cottage cheese in the house and it behaves much the same as ricotta, to be honest.
Here's where it's up to you what to do next... on the Mumsnet recipe they just spread out the mixture onto the pasta and rolled it up like a swiss roll, which is beyond easy. I put a blob at the end then rolled it up to make a tube and then jammed some more in each end.
Whichever method you use, put them in the dish and then cover with a tin of chopped tomatoes. Or two, if you think that you need the extra.
Lob some mozzarella or grated cheese on top and then stick it in the oven for about half-an-hour. I sliced up the cannelloni and put them out for Babybear and she loved stuffing them into her mouth. As did her father into his.

Carrie and Xavier's Lentil Cakes
by
Aitch
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 00:12 GMT
Carrie and Xavier's lentil cakes...
-
1 tbps olive oil
-
1 onion
-
125g red lentils
-
400ml veg stock or bouillon
-
85g bread crumbs (stale or oven dried is possible)
-
Flat leaf parsley to taste (or other herbs - optional)
-
Gently fry onion in olive oil until soft.
-
Add the lentils and stock to the onions and bring to the boil.
-
Simmer for 20-25 minutes.
-
Mix with breadcrumbs and flat leaf parsley (optional).
-
Shape mixture into small patties for little hands to hold. If your mixture
feels a little sticky add more bread crumbs.
-
Brush with oil and place on lightly oiled baking tray - cook for approx 7
to 10 mins on gas mark 6 (I did for about 12 I think)
I freeze
them to keep them fresh and use them as and when I need them - although not as
popular as the fish cakes, Xavier likes them a lot - I think to make them more
interesting you could add different herbs/spices.

Loll's Chicken
by
Aitch
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 00:10 GMT
"This is one I've found handy and is great with spuds, pasta or
rice and any green veggies. Apart from peas. Nice for grown-ups, very popular
with Grizzles and the only way she'll eat chicken.
Cut a chicken breast into finger-friendly size chunks and brown
in some oil or butter until cooked through. Add some crushed or sliced garlic
and cook for a minute. Slosh in some white wine and cook until no smell of
alcohol and syrupy, then add a dollop of creme fraiche. Warm the creme fraiche
then add one of any of the following herbs: parsley, basil, fresh thyme or
tarragon.
Then you can mix with pasta, serve with mash or new potatoes etc.
Especially good with green beans."

Jenn's Quesadillas
by
Aitch
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 00:08 GMT
Think these are technically called Quesadillas....
Per person-
2 tortillas and whatever you fancy left
over.
Spread one tortilla with a tablespoon of guacamole,
a sprinkling of tomato salsa, loads of grated cheese and maybe a tiny bit of
sour cream. If we've run out of that, natural greek yoghurt tastes as
good.
Put the other tortilla on top of the other in a
sandwhich and fry in a VERY lightly oiled frying pan until brown and crisp on
both sides.
Cool a little and cut into wedges.

Fiona's Things To Do With Leftovers
by
Aitch
on Thu 08 Feb 2007 00:06 GMT
"Things to do with leftover roasted veg....
this lunchtime (at soft play hell) my daughter is having chopped up
leftover roast veg mixed (carrots, butternut squash, turnip and parsnip)
with cream cheese and spread on fingers of wholemeal pitta bread. It
looked yum when I made it!
The rest of the roasted veg can be made into:
soup - fry with an onion until soft, add a no-salt stock
cube and boiling water and whizz up - serve with large hunks of bread.
roasted veg pasta - make a simple tomato sauce and heat the
veg in that then add pasta of choice.
fishcakes - add to mashed potato (might have that leftover
too!) stir in tin of tuna or crab then dip in flour egg and crumbs and fry
until golden each side.
Any more ideas?"
Wednesday, February 7

Carrie's Fish Cakes
by
Aitch
on Wed 07 Feb 2007 23:54 GMT
Here it is, posted permanently and searchably for posterity.
"I have recently taken up BLW with my 8 month old and thought I would pass
on my fishcakes recipe for those who would like it - as it has gone
down a storm...
Cook in ovenproof dish white fish (haddock/cod etc) in milk until
turns opaque (check there are no bones) Gas mark 5 approx 10-15 mins
Boil some potatos and mash, no butter /milk needed.
Finely chop some herbs, flat leaf parsley is good - but it is up to you.
Add fish and mash together, beat an egg and add small amount to mash to bind
Flour your hands and take small amounts of the mixture to make small patties.
Dip each patty in the beaten egg and dip in bread crumbs (stale or oven dried if possible).
Place on lightly oiled baking tray and bake in oven gas mark 5 for about 10 minutes or until lightly golden
They have been fantastic, I put them straight in the freezer to keep fresh and take what I need as and when....Enjoy!"
Thursday, January 25

Rowan's (Mum's) Quiche
by
Aitch
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 23:28 GMT
Rowan does appear to be taking the credit but I think if you read through the lines it's perfectly clear who she has ripped off this rather tasty-sounding recipe from.
"My mum was a caterer when I was growing up and always had quiche in the house so I was fed that whenever I was hungry,and as a result hadn't eaten it in 10 years. Unfortunately for me DH loves it and asked his mum to make him some as I refuse to, so I had to rise to the challenge! Munch nicked a load off him when he was eating it and loves it. (Oh, and he says mine is nicer than his mums...ha ha).
Quiche
Butter Flour (wholemeal and plain) Cheese Eggs Milk Random veg for filling
Grate 2 oz butter into 4 oz plain flour (I use half and half wholemeal and plain) and rub until breadcrumbs, mix with a little bit of water until you have a dough. Roll out dough and either make one big one or use a fairy cake tin to make lots of little baby-hand sized bases. prick all over with a fork to stop bubbles and bake GM 6 or 200 degrees until golden (about 15 mins for big, 5-10 for small).
Fill bases with grated cheese mixed with chosen filling. Bacon, or I use chopped ham or chicken for less saltiness, courgette, tomato slices (Iuse cherry toms for little ones, very cute), peas, sweetcorn....whatever really. Beat together 3 eggs and 100 milk and pour over filling until reaches the top.
Put back in oven until golden brown and a knife comes out clean, about 20 mins for a big one and 5-10 again for small.
Little ones are quick to make and freeze well, I tend to make a tray full at the weekend, freeze half and the rest feed Munch for a couple of days (well, what's left after her dad nicks them all)."

Rowan's Eggy Fried Noodles
by
Aitch
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 23:17 GMT
She's not kidding about the flicking, by the way. Take a look at the photo...  "Munch absolutely adores this but it makes a hell of a mess as it is quite good for flicking... Eggy Fried Noodles 1 pack cheapo noodles 1 egg Some frozen veg (peas, sweetcorn, beans etc) Cook noodles according to packet without the season sachet. I boil kettle and put noodles in a bowl with some hot water and then microwave for 2 mins. Heat a pan and break in 1 egg and stir around for a bit until half cooked. Add drained noodles and stir a bit more. Once egg is cooked take off heat, stir in frozen veg and leave to sit for a minute or so while the veg cools the egg and noodles... Tip onto highchair (see pic!)"

Jacky's Chicken Stew with Dumplings
by
Aitch
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 22:49 GMT
Obviously Jacky puts stock, albeit half measures, into this but you could substitute wine of water and herbs if you wanted. It depends how careful you are feeling about salt, obviously. You could use cornflour to thicken the sauce, and I'm assuming that you would casserole it for say 40 mins at 180 in the oven. If you used raw chicken then I'd do it for at least an hour and a bit. "I cheated using frozen veg but fresh will do it just as well.
Gravy granules made at half strength or chicken stock - enough to cover the
amount of veg you have.(Extra can be added later if required)
Potatoes, carrots, leeks, parsnips, peas, sweetcorn (whatever you fancy
really) cut into cubes and placed into a slow cooker or casserole dish.
Whole chicken with meat pulled off and pulled into strings
Dumplings (Aunt Bessies in ours)
Bisto to thicken.
Place veg into your slow cooker and add stock with plenty to cover.
Add the chicken and stir well.
Cook for several hours on auto/low - not so long on high
For soggy dumplings (premade), microwave for 2 minutes and add to stock an
hour before required and remove before thickening (same would apply if making
your own).
For crisp place on top of stew and cook for an hour before required and
remove before thickening.
Mix a small amount of Bisto and use to thicken
If using fresh vegetables then par boil or steam slightly first."

Bat's Sweetcorn Patties
by
Aitch
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 22:35 GMT
Now I hope Bat won't be offended if I express some hesitation about the salsa... Babybear is fairly adventurous but I just can't see a baby eating it. I will be happy to stand corrected, though, as it sounds absolutely lovely to this grown-up. The patties sound cracking, though, don't they? "I have just made these and they are yum. I'm taking them on a picnic, porridge
pancake style, and am quite pleased with myself. You can miss out the salsa if
you are not up to avocado-in-baby's-ears-situation today.
525g sweetcorn kernels, tinned or cut from cob (3
cobs)
1 red onion, chopped
2 eggs
half bunch of coriander
125g plain flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1.Place 2/3 of the sweetcorn and all other
ingredients in food processor and blitz. Stir in the rest of the
corn.
2. Heat a tablespoon of oil in frying pan and heat
to medium-high heat.
3. Drop 2 tablespoons of mixture per cake into pan,
cooking 3 at a time. Cook for 1 minute each side, or until golden.
Avocado salsa:
2 avocadoes, diced
half bunch of coriander
2 tablespoons lime or lemon juice
2 tablespoons chopped spring onions
1. Mix all salsa ingredients together!"
Thursday, January 11

Bunny's Pineapple Flapjacks
by
Aitch
on Thu 11 Jan 2007 16:50 GMT
If Bunny was the person who sent me an hilarious photo of an exploded bowl of porridge then we can take her at her word that she's suffered quite a bit on that front. These alternative flapjacks do sound rather nice, though. "Since I've had nothing but disasters with the porridge pancakes
(entirely my fault!) we've been experimenting. Here's one for you dairy
intolerants!
Stir together one cup of Ready Brek and one cup of pineapple juice until they form a thick paste. Microwave for 90 seconds.
Line a baking tray with greaseproof paper, and pour on the
pineapple mixture. Spread it out into a rectangle, about 5mm thick, and
score the surface into smaller blocks with the back of a knife. Bake in
the oven at 180C for about 20 minutes, then turn off the oven and leave
the mix to dry out and cool. Cut along the score lines and voila!
Slightly chewy fruity flapjacky things!
These went down quite well with the Weeble, but I ate most of them ;-)
"
Update. She was the person. Get a load of this, folks! Spot the deliberate errors? (Answers below) A. Too much porridge B. Clingfilm... oh lordy.
Tuesday, January 9

Cornflaky Chicken
by
Aitch
on Tue 09 Jan 2007 23:22 GMT
These might be good
for any wheat intolerant babies, as there are no breadcrumbs involved. They are
also mega easy - always a big plus in my book ;-)
1 chicken breast,
cut in finger size strips
1
egg
1 bowl crushed
cornflakes
Optional tomato
sauce:
1 can chopped
tomatoes
Tbsp tomato
puree
1/2 onion
chopped
1 clove garlic (if
your baby likes it!)
Heat your oven to
180 C. Dip the strips of chicken in the egg, and then coat in the crushed
cornflakes, pressing firmly. Lay the strips on a rack over a baking tray or
roasting tin, and bake in the oven for 20 minutes.
You can allow the
chicken to cool and serve it as is - I like them this way! However, the
cornflakes can be a bit scratchy, so you could try them with the tomato sauce -
just roll them in the sauce and allow to sit for a couple of minutes and the
cornflakes will go nicely soggy.
To make the
sauce:
If you are using the
garlic, chop finely and put in a cold pan with some oil. Bring to a medium heat
and allow to soften (starting the garlic in the cold oil helps prevent burning).
Add the chopped onion, and continue to saute until nice and soft. Stir in the
can of tomatoes and the tomato puree, and cook to a nice
"mush".
In practice, because
I'm disorganised and lazy, I often just heat up the chopped tomatoes with a
little puree, and the Weeble seems perfectly happy with
that!
Thursday, December 28

Carbonara-ish
by
Aitch
on Thu 28 Dec 2006 01:55 GMT
The Husband and I went to a restaurant in Rome where we had a carbonara-y thing made with roast boar and peas, so I quite often make carbonara with frozen peas now to go some way to alleviating the guilt that I feel from eating a meal made up of 98% pasta with a squidge of protein and fat. And it's authentic-ish.
Pancetta or smoked bacon, about 150g. Or half a packet of the pancetta I buy. Couple of eggs. Some parmesan. About 100g, or as much as you like. A slug of white wine if there's any in the fridge. And a slug of cream if you've any knocking about. Pasta of some description, however much you need for however many you are. These amounts of bacon etc would feed 3-4. Frozen peas, a handful thereof.
Boil the kettle for your pasta, meanwhile grate your parmesan into a jug, crack in your eggs (and fling in your cream if you have any). Put in the pasta. You now have 8-12 mins to get everything else together. Easy.
Cook off your chopped pancetta or bacon in a deep frying pan until it picks up quite a bit of colour. Once it is nice and caramelly, chuck in your wine if you have it so that the alcohol boils off. The peas do in now as well, they only take a couple of minutes.
Your pasta should be ready, hopefully, so you can drain it quickly and put into the frying pan. I tend to keep back a bit of the pasta water in case the sauce needs a bit of loosening. Then put in the cheese and egg mixture, stirring it well. The heat of the pasta cooks the egg in the sauce, but as it happens I always use very fresh lion-marked eggs so I reckon we're alright. If it gets a bit tight just throw in a couple of spoonfuls of pasta water.
Anyway, we like this a lot and as long as we stick to penne or fusilli rather than the more traditional spaghetti then Babybear can eat it until the cows (or indeed boar) come home.
Wednesday, December 27

Bunny's Studenty Toasty Pizza
by
Aitch
on Wed 27 Dec 2006 22:27 GMT
This recipe has reminded me of the fact that when I was at university I thought it was genuinely witty that we had a sign above the toaster in our student flat that bore the legend 'Make Toast, Not War'... <Aitch wipes tears of thirtysomething mirth from eyes>. " Thought you might like this uber easy recipe (using the word loosely!). It
requires no doughmaking, ideal for lazy types like me. This is how we used to
make pizza at uni when we'd spent all our food money on beer
;-)
Toast Pizza (aka
Cheese on toast with vegetables)
1 slice of
bread
Tomato
puree
Cheese of
choice
Lightly toast your
bread so the bottom won't be soggy. Spread a thin layer of tomato puree over the
top (you can make it yourself, but we use Organic Tomato Puree from Waitrose -
no added salt, hurrah). Cover with cheese - The Weeble is partial to mozzarella
and cheddar. Bung under the grill until the cheese is melted and bubbling. ALLOW
TO COOL! Molten cheese has thermonuclear properties!
If you are like me
and a bit slapdash with the cheese, you'll probably have burnt crusts, so cut
those off. Cut your "pizza" into strips (for bubbas; leave whole for older
children and mummies) and serve! Weebs really likes this, especially the way the
mozzarella can be made to stretch for miles when cool and
rubbery.
It occurs to me that
if you substitute another veg puree for the tomato, that would use up some of
that leftover puree we all seem to have... and also sneak in some vegetables
should you need to do so!
We're going to try
it again tomorrow with some small bits of cooked chicken embedded in the
cheese."

Some Bloke Called Andrew's Carrot Muffins
by
Aitch
on Wed 27 Dec 2006 22:16 GMT
Probably noooot really called Andrew, in fact, but this email wasn't signed so Andrew is the only nominative detail I can glean from our correspondence. For the record, I think that if you want to make your own buttermilk you just mix equal amounts of natural yoghurt and semi-skimmed milk. I think...
Says 'Andrew':
"I reckon you could swop carrot for courgette, pepper, onion, etc, though probably fry them a bit first.
Also use any different cheese and herbs, and I'm sure normal milk would work, if you can't get buttermilk.
1 carrot, grated 15 stalks parsley, chopped 60g cheddar, grated 220g self-raising flour 1 egg 3/4 cup buttermilk (about 150ml, I think?) 1/2 cup vegetable oil
1. Preheat oven to 180c. 2. Mix carrot, parsley, cheese and flour. 3. In another bowl, whisk egg, buttermilk and oil. 4. Add this to dry ingredients and mix. 5. Spoon into muffin cases (makes 12) and bake for 20-25 mins."
Saturday, December 2

Chloe and Nigel (Slater)'s Yorkshire Puddings
by
Aitch
on Sat 02 Dec 2006 22:12 GMT
Short and sweet, just how we like a recipe.
2 eggs, 125g plain flour, 150ml milk mixed with
150ml water, 1 level tbsp wholegrain mustard (optional, I haven't
actually tried this with notsotall, but I can't think why she wouldn't
like it), good grinding of black pepper, all mixed up together and left
to stand for 15 mins.
Nice drop of lard/dripping in the pudding tin(s), and 20-25mins at 220C. This makes them really quite crispy on the bottom.
Thursday, November 30

Enid's Minced Chicken Nuggets
by
Aitch
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 14:32 GMT
'Enid' you say? Surely not the same Enid who was recently saying on Mumsnet that life is to short to make a porridge pancake? Yup, the same one, my friends. Seems like her little seven-month-old Pixie has read that thread and been won over by my dazzling debating style and sheer force of argument, and is now refusing spoons. <insert your own smug smile here> Anyway, Enid is nothing if not utterly gracious about Pixie's new finger food-only regime and has sent in this recipe for which we are most grateful.
Enid's Chicken Nuggets
750g minced chicken 175g breadcrumbs
175g grated cheddar 1 tbsp mayo to bind 1 clove garlic salt and
pepper beaten egg and some fine toasted breadcrumbs to coat the nuggets
Preheat oven to 180C. Mix all ingredients up to and including salt and
pepper together. Form into whatever sized nuggets (its up to you, mine are sort
of walnut sized) and roll them in beaten egg and then in toasted breadcrumbs.
You can freeze them now if you want to.
Place on greased baking sheet
and cook for about 20 minutes (45 if frozen). Voila!
Thursday, November 23

Spanish Omelette (with peas, because everything Babybear eats Must Contain Peas)
by
Aitch
on Thu 23 Nov 2006 01:15 GMT
The thing I hate about making A Proper Spanish Omelette is getting the damned potatoes fried without burning the onions. Yes, you should do it separately but honestly, who has the time?
So I stick the potato in the microwave and bake it. Heresy, obviously. (Should I expect the Spanish Omelette Inquisition?)
Meanwhile, cut your onion into attractive segments and fry it gently in olive oil or, as Moomin would say, 'the grease of your choice'. Mix up a couple of eggs. Chop up your cooked potato (who can be bothered peeling it, by the way? Not I.) Throw it in with the onions and fry for a while until the potatoes take on a bit of colour. Shouldn't take more than a few minutes.
Pour over your egg and staunchly resist the temptation to faff around with it. You might have wanted to add a bit more before putting the egg in, by the way. Drop some frozen peas onto the uncooked egg, as popping something green into the recipe will make you feel like A Better Parent. Cook for a few minutes and then flip it or if you are too much of a coward you could finish it under the grill.
This makes enough for Babybear and myself for lunch, she loves it and it's pretty healthy all told, so long as you aren't avoiding eggs for allergy-style reasons.
Wednesday, November 22

Fiona's Fillable Finger Food Patties
by
Aitch
on Wed 22 Nov 2006 01:36 GMT
Always nice to hear from someone who appreciates our efforts (although by the sounds of things it's really Moomin's efforts). Even nicer when she pays it forward with another recipe. Thanks Fiona. "Since I've had so many great ideas from your blog
(I'm about to try the chickpea burgers) I thought I'd share one back. This has
been our favourite 'staple' finger food for going out and about and can be
varied in lots of ways.
Fiona's Finger Food Patties
3 tablespoons plain flour
3 tablespoons milk
1 egg
a little butter for frying
the filling of your choice
- crack the egg into the four and mix well
- add milk a little at a time to form smooth
batter
- add some filling - I've used: mashed banana and
cinammon, green beans and cheese, peas, sweetcorn, leftover sweet potato - you
get the idea
- heat a frying pan with butter then when it is
smoking slightly pour in fritter sized circles of batter (about a dssp each I
reckon). Cook over medium heat and when wee bubbles of air appear at the top,
flip over and cook another couple of mins.
My baby loves these - they can be taken out and
about easily...are nice on their own or spread with soft cheese or whatever else
you fancy."
Thursday, November 16

Hub2dee's Porridge Pancakes
by
Aitch
on Thu 16 Nov 2006 11:38 GMT
 Hub2dee is a chap, although I didn't immediately twig that. He posts on Mumsnet (and he's not even a mum... they are very lax about these sort of things.) Anyway, there had been some discussion on Mumsnet of the Glaswegian tradition of lining a kitchen drawer with baking parchment and pouring leftover porridge into it to be eaten later when it had set. Much of the discussion had centred, most irritatingly, around the 'grossness' of such a practice, to which I should have replied that if you were devastatingly poor, oppressed by slum landlords and working a hard day in a shipyard you maybe weren't so precious about these sorts of things but I didn't cos I was too chicken. Anyway, Hub2dee went away and thought about this recipe in the context of Baby Led Weaning, bless him, and came up with this fantastic 'recipe' for porridge pancakes. There aren't any measurements, it's a bit trial and error-tastic but the babies love them. I've posted a photo of Babybear enjoying some in the Photos folder. Basically, put a thin layer (oh I don't know, 4mm deep) of porridge oats into a round flat bowl (I have a tupperware which fits the bill and has a lid for keeping in the fridge, hurrah.) Then add enough expressed breast milk or water to cover. If you are formula feeding then you can do as I do and add a scoop of formula powder to the mix before adding the water. Give it a wee stir, smooth over and stick it in the microwave for about a minute, sometimes more, sometimes less. Depends on your bowl, your microwave and your baby's personal taste. You should be left with a solid pancake that looks a bit dried-out and flap-jacky on the top. DO NOT touch it or fanny about with it, leave it alone, it needs to cool and set. I tend to make one up at night before I go to bed then stick it in the fridge, so that when we get up I can peel it (well, it really is just the skin of the porridge which I appreciate is un petit peu gross) and cut it into segments and feed it to the baby. Apparently you can add things to the porridge, cheese, fruit etc, but I think I like the simplicity of the original recipe. We made it with cheese once and the baby ate it but I thought it was a bit stinky and it fell apart more easily. Oh, and if I'm making some to go out I don't bother with the milk. As you know I don't yet have much of a clue about allergies (phew) but I believe that although oats do contain gluten it's not the freaky-deaky coeliac disease kind so I use these as a bread substitute. You can spread Philly or hummus on them to your heart's desire. (As a complete aside, you would not BELIEVE what the 'renowned childcare expert Gina Ford' is doing to Mumsnet. She's trying to get them closed down cos some of their members had a pop at her. Have a look at www.mumsnet.com if you don't believe me...) Post ScriptWe have recently discovered that the desirability of the porridge pancake is entirely dependant on the quality and nature of the porridge. We had been using some fancy-schmantzy organic oats from Sainsbury's to make them and they turned out brilliantly, all light and porridgey but still held together well. Cut to the horror of the Scott's Porage Oat... a Jock classic and I'm ashamed to admit absolutely keech for making these pancakes. The oats seem to be five times as large as the ones from Sainsbury's and so they fall apart immediately. They don't even seem to absorb the milk that well, and as for the mess... one porridge pancake can wreak absolute devastation and havoc... they're going back in the cupboard for Anzac biscuits and I'm going back to Sainsbury's as soon as I get a minute.
Post Post Script. Where does it say on the recipe that you should cover the dish with clingfilm? Nowehere, that's where. Yet one of the mothers who most complained that she could not get this recipe to work has just sent me this image as evidence. Can you spot the mistake, pancake fans?

Friday, November 10

Frozen Yoghurt Lollies
by
Morv
on Fri 10 Nov 2006 20:16 GMT
Having got over my irrational fear of frozen yoghurt, I decided to try out some home made lollies. Basically I mixed some natural yoghurt and mashed banana and froze it. I used our ice cube tray but ours has quite large sections i.e. about 2 ½ times normal cubes. I created handles by inserting the small spoon end of the spoon you get with Calpol – I know you know the spoon I mean.
Boomer really enjoyed these – she takes large bites and sooks the lolly. The spoon is great to grab and she plays with it once she has finished the lolly.
Wednesday, November 8

Courgette Fritters
by
Aitch
on Wed 08 Nov 2006 23:06 GMT
See, Moomin makes a good point here... are we intent on full vegetable transparency or will we succumb to the Jamie Oliver-patented method of hiding bits of greenery where'er we can? It's hard to say at the moment, while we have babies who are by and large obedient. I'd say that as a point of principle we should try to encourage children to appreciate veggies for what they are, but what harm can there possibly be in frittering a courgette? Especially if courgettes would otherwise be off the menu... Grate 350g of courgette and squeeze out as much liquid as possible. Add a
grated onion, 60g of gram flour, 1/4tsp of baking powder and 1 tsp of coriander.
(You might think all my recipes involve gram flour. You'd be wrong. I use
rice flour as well.)Fry a good dollop for 2-3 mins each side.Now, I
don't know whether this is allowed in the world of BLW, but Minky doesn't really
eat courgettes. She prefers to dump them over the side of the highchair without
a backwards glance. However, she ate three of these for tea. Are we allowed to
hide vegetables from them?I wasn't particularly keen on these myself.
Perhaps a liberal coasting of salt is required? Wait a sec...yes, salt
helps!

Sandwich Fillings
by
Aitch
on Wed 08 Nov 2006 01:03 GMT
As you may recall Babybear has enjoyed tuna mayonnaise sandwiches in the past, the only downside of which was that she honked rather badly of fish until it came to bath time.
She also likes hummous sandwiches, cheese sandwiches and controversially, hummous and cheese sandwiches. I'd also highly recommend mixing grated carrot with hummous as it holds together nicely. If I'm making these for myself I'd drop some sultanas into it but I haven't done that for Babybear yet as I'm wondering if disguising secret choking hazards in hummous is the way to go. It will probably be fine, really, as Babybear has yet to eat a sandwich without fully dismantling it first, smushing the filling into her face and then addressing the slices of bread. Ham is a trickier option, given her technique as it has a tendency to stick to the bread.
She also enjoys avocado but it's not convenient to take out with us as it goes brown which I personally find aesthetically unappealing. Philadelphia is good, but a little boring I think.
So...anyone else? There must be loads that I'm just not thinking of.

French Toast/Eggy Bread
by
Aitch
on Wed 08 Nov 2006 00:40 GMT
Right, so at nearly eleven months we have finally dived in on the egg eventually (partly in an effort to 'bind' my poor daughter's poo back to some sort of solidity, I admit). We are big fans of French toast in this household, but only, and I mean only, made with Scottish Plain bread. If you think you've tasted white bread before, think again, for they don't some any whiter than a plain loaf, in all its doughy, burnt-crusted gorgeousness. Stupid foofy cotton wool bread tastes weird with egg, I think, so try to get the doughiest loaf you can. Obviously you know how to make it, just crack a couple of eggs into a dish large enough for your bread, fling in the slices and then prick with a fork so that it better absorbs the egg. Once you are satisfied that the bread is suitably eggy, drop it into some warmed olice oil in a frying pan and fry it until golden-ish. Some people eat this with sugar but they are mostly American. I'm strictly savoury myself.
Tuesday, November 7

Rowan's 10-minute pizza recipe
by
Aitch
on Tue 07 Nov 2006 22:11 GMT
Appearently this really does take 10 minutes... which makes it rather a handy little recipe to have at our disposal. I bet it would be good cold as well. This is a really quick pizza, takes literally 10 minutes from entering the kitchen
to putting in oven. Make dough by mixing 4 parts self raising flour with
1 part butter and rubbing until you get breadcrumb type mixture. (it's faster if
you grate the butter straight from the fridge) - 4oz flour to 1 oz butter makes 3
small pizzas.Slowly add about 50 ml milk a splash at a time and stirring
with a spoon each time until you get a dough. You might not need it
all.Knead with hands in bowl (or get handy toddler to help...) and split into
pieces depending on how many pizzas you want. Or leave it as one massive one,
whatever.Put dough on oiled baking tray and smoosh with fingers until it is
the right size, it doesn't have to be even.Spread on some red pesto sauce
straight from the jar.Add veg of choice (the Munch likes thin strips of
courgette (use a potato peeler) or carrot, peas, beans, bits of
broccoli, that sort of thing...)Daintily dump some grated cheddar cheese on top.Put in oven,
Gas Mark 6, for about 10 minutes for hand sized, longer for bigger.Cut into pieces
and eat yours while waiting for the rest to cool.
Sunday, October 29

Moomin's Onion Bhaji recipe
by
Aitch
on Sun 29 Oct 2006 01:39 GMT
Once again, Moomin's struggle to keep her daughter allergy-free bears fruit for all babykind in the form of these easy and delicious bhajis. And parentkind too, by the sound of things.  Grate one medium potato and half an onion. Add 75g gram flour and a splash
of water. Add spices of your choice - I used a bit of cumin and
coriander. Drop one tablespoon into hot oil and fry for 4 mins each
side. This mix made six bhajis, but I don't imagine we'll be freezing that
many as Minky, Mr Moomin and I are polishing them all off! These were a
big hit and will work as another picnic lunch. Hooray!
Monday, October 23

Jenn's Pecan Lentil Burgers
by
Aitch
on Mon 23 Oct 2006 20:52 BST
I've rescued this recipe from the relative obscurity of the comments section of one of Moomin's recipes, it was posted by one of our many Jenns and it really does sound amazing. I'm not completely sure of the temperatures, they sound American to me, but I wouldn't think of doing the pecans at anything over 180degrees in an electric oven (in Scotland. If you're from abroad then you'll have to work things out for yourselves). I'm also wondering if pistachios would substitute for pecans, which are kinda hard to get hold of round my way. However, we've not given Babybear any nuts yet so this might be a strictly adults-only recipe in our house for a while. No bad thing, I should say...
I've got one to share that is a crowd pleaser. I made them for a party and everyone copied the recipe.
Pecan Lentil Burger
3/4 cup uncooked green lentils
3/4 cup pecans
4 cloves garlic
1 1/2 teasppon cumin
1 1/2 teaspoon coriander
1 teaspoon chili flakes
3 tablespoons olive oil
3/4 cup bread crumbs (may use wheatless bread such as spelt, or any kind of wheatless subsitute)
1 egg (optional-I've made it without and they were fine)
Cook lentils according to package directions until tender...approx 25 minutes. Drain.
Roast pecans at 300 - 325 for 10-15 minutes. (Use your own discretion
with temperature and timing because I find the pecans can burn fast)
Set aside.
In food processor, mince garlic;add pecans, mince;add lentils,
spices, bread crumbs and olive oil. Puree until dough-like. Put mixture
into big bowl and work in egg if you choose to. Form into patties and
fry on pan with a bit of oil.
Delicious!
Tuesday, October 17

Moomin's Lamb Tagine (for allergics and non-allergics)
by
Aitch
on Tue 17 Oct 2006 21:36 BST
There's lots to like about this recipe, not least the taste, which I'm sure is fabulous judging by the photo of Minky enjoying her lamb. However, I'm most drawn to it for the phrase 'grease of your choice', which made me splurt my tea all over my keyboard.
Fry one chopped onion in the grease of your choice (we tolerate sunflower oil).
Coat 450g of diced lamb in flour (rice flour for us), add to the onion and
brown. Add two chopped carrots, 400g of chopped tomatoes, 200g of dried apricots
and 50g of sultanas (or raisins - what is the difference?). Chuck in a bit of
water (200ml?) and simmer until the lamb falls apart. I left it for an hour and
a half because I fell asleep. Ahem.
Minky had this with buckwheat pasta
but feel free to choose your own carbohydrate. Couscous might be nice.

How To Put Recipes Onto The Blog
by
Aitch
on Tue 17 Oct 2006 00:43 BST
Post them wherever you like, of course, but if you'd rather they didn't get lost in the scrum of comments then it's a good idea to email them to me and I'll stick them up 'officially' for you. With all due credit, of course... Press on the Aitch above and you'll get my email address, along with a miniscule photo of Babybear and I, you poor creatures.
Thursday, October 12

Blackened peppers with cream cheese
by
Aitch
on Thu 12 Oct 2006 00:55 BST
Babybear really likes these and they are easy to make so I'm happy to oblige.
You can grill the peppers or oven-bake them but I find the easiest thing to do is stick a fork into the bit where the stem is and then lay it onto the gas ring... I mean, I'm not actually recommending that you do that as it's probably some sort of hellish fire risk so I couldn't possibly... but it's certainly what I do. Turn the pepper round when it starts to soften and bubbles of brown/black start appearing. Should smell LOVELY, by the way.
When it's done all over, stick it in a plastic bag and let the skins steam for a while. I tend to wash/rub off the burned bits under a cold running tap which has the advantage of cooling the peppers down. There was some publicity a while back about burned things having a carcinogenic effect so I am always pretty careful to scrape off any bits that are left.
Don't get me wrong, these aren't completely soft peppers, they still have a bit of bounce to them, but the gas ring thing takes about 5 minutes and really takes the edge off the raw taste which I myself amn't that fond of.
Then, you know, slice the three cheeks of the pepper and then you'll probably be left with one longer thinner bit. Oh god, you know how to cut up a pepper. I think I normally cut the bumcheeks in half (ouch!) so I end off with a good few long pieces.
Anyway, spread some Philly or cream cheese on the slices and there you have it. Babybear likes them and you can leave the pepper pieces in the fridge for a couple of days. God knows I've probably totally over-explained this 'recipe' but the point is that at least it's not more bread and cheese...it's peppers and cheese.
Monday, October 9

Franny's Home-made Baked Beans
by
Aitch
on Mon 09 Oct 2006 22:34 BST
We gave Babybear some Heinz baked beans tonight with cheese and toast (what's not to like, you'd think) but actually she wasn't that fussed for them. I must say it did occur to me as I was eating mine that they did taste very salty. So I haven't actually made these before but I've had the recipe for ages. What was holding me up, you ask? Why, the molasses... I've searched high and low, from health food shop to supermarket for it to no avail. However, some Christian soul has finally put me out of my misery and told me that treacle (which I have in the damned cupboard) is the same thing. Durrrr. Anyway, Franny's recipe and her comments are below. Apparently they are very tasty. I'm not 100% sure about the bean soaking bit as I am rarely that organised so I reserve the right to used tinned haricots.
8 oz haricot beans
1 lb toms, skinned and deseeded (I used tinned and it is ok if maybe a little runny)
2 tbsp tomato puree
2 tbsp molasses
2 tsp mustard powder
3/4 pint hot stock (that's three quarters, not 3 or 4 )
Soak
beans overnight in large bowl covered with cold water. Drain well, put
in sauce pan and cover with cold water by at least 2 ins. Bring to
boil, skim surface, cover pan and cook at rolling boil for 30 mins.
Drain well. Preheat oven to GM 2. Put beans in large casserole and stir
in all remaining ingredients. Mix well. Cover casserole and cook for
2.5 hours. Stir gently and cook for another 35 mins or until tender and
sauce thickened. (normally takes up to 4 hours to get really tender and
not too runny IME).
Freezes well and is popular with dads as well as
children. I normally cook at least double and freeze lots. It has been
pointed out to me that with having to cook them for so long, and with
baked beans being so cheap, that it is probably cheaper to buy them,
but I would far rather have this sort with no salt and no artificial
sweeteners. I think baked beans are a truly healthy food but the tinned
sort normally have a lot of rubbish added. These are easy to make and also
make the house smell lovely.
Tuesday, October 3

Moomin's Allergy-friendly Chickpea Burgers and Potato Scones
by
Aitch
on Tue 03 Oct 2006 00:17 BST
Moomin is avoiding dairy and wheat, amongst other things, for her daughter Minky, a fact that forces her to be a bit more inventive when it comes to BLW cooking, I am glad to say. Luckily, she is pretty generous with her findings and we all benefit from her investigations. Seriously, though, my pal was showing me the other day how difficult it is to exclude dairy. You wouldn't believe it, there is milk powder in jars of organic ratatouille...
Recipe for chickpea burgers: Whizz together 1 tin of chickpeas, 110g gram
flour, 1 tsp cumin, 1 tsp coriander, 4 spring onions, 4 garlic cloves and a bit
of water. Shape a bit into a patty and fry on each side for five mins. Makes
about 8, so I freeze the leftovers (7!) and they're good for taking out with us.
I slice them in half lengthways so Minky can get a good grip on them. My husband
reckons they're a bit bland but they do have a pleasant texture.
As I
mentioned, we have a very allergic-y family (name a food group, I'll find someone
that can't have it). I'm avoiding wheat, dairy, citrus, fish, berries, nuts. It
does make life a bit more difficult. However, we are doing okay at finding
alternatives. Have got some recipes for corn tortillas, buckwheat pancakes,
onion bhajis and potato scones. I've only tried potato scones so far and they're
good if you want to get away from the normal potato wedges, boiled potatoes
etc...
Recipe for potato scones: 255g mashed potato, 1tsp baking
powder, 55g rice flour, 1/2 tsp salt (eeek - I guess you could leave this out). Mix together, roll into a ball and
roll out into a 5mm thick circle. I cut bits out of it with a pastry cutter and
then fried until brown. You can add butter and milk to the mashed potato if
you're normal.
I am normal and I love potato scones, so I will go mad and add both. In sunny Scotland, home of the tattie scone, though, what we do is use plain flour (if we aren't avoiding wheat) and rather than using pastry cutters you can just roll out a thin circle of dough on a floured surface to fit the size of a small frying pan. Making sure that there was a good shoogle of flour on the circle I would then dry-fry it, as this makes the trademark dark brown spots appear on the potato scone and they add to the flavour (and they then look spookily like the ones you buy in the shops). Plus, I'm thinking that if you dry-fry them they might keep better. Technically, tattie scones are an excellent way of using up leftover mashed potato but it's academic in our house as such a thing rarely occurs.
And I reckon that some salt sprinkled on mummy and daddy's chickpea burgers will sort out the blandness issue. Gram flour is, of course, just chickpea flour and readily available from Asian stores. Thanks for the recipes, Moomin.
Tuesday, September 19

Moroccan Stew
by
Morv
on Tue 19 Sep 2006 23:30 BST
This stew is absolutely delicious, its really easy to make just chuck it in a pot and leave for a hour or so. The only hard part is chopping all the vegetable, you may want to enlist the help of a friend. You do need a fairly healthy spice cupboard but trust me these combine to make such a lovely fragrant flavour.
The stew is made from chunks of vegetables so its perfect for eating with your baby lead weaning wonderstar.
I serve this with pitta bread and dollops of yoghurt, and also some chopped parsley if you are feeling real posh.
Ingredients
VEG
Chopped onion
2 garlic cloves – chopped
couple of sliced carrots
one sweet potato or butternut squash cut into chunks (or both if you have the biggest pot in the world)
one aubergine cut into chunks
1 green pepper cut into strips
couple of sliced courgette
2 large tomatoes chopped
SPICES
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon turmeric
½ teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon cayenne
½ teaspoon paprika
add last -
1 can of kidney beans or butter beans
½ cup raisins
pinch saffron
Fry the onions in a large stew pot , add in all the spices and garlic and fry for a while, always stirring. Add the vegetables in the order above so that the starchier vegetables cook the longest. Sauté each vegetable so that its colour deepens before adding the next vegetable. Stir in the beans , saffron and the raisins. There should be liquid at the bottom of the pot from the vegetables but if the stew is too dry add some water or the liquid from the beans. Cover the pot and let it simmer until all the veg are tender.
I have been know to leave this on a really low heat while going out for the day – it creates an absolutely wonderful smell to return home to on a cold day.
Tuesday, September 12

Mushroom Risotto
by
Aitch
on Tue 12 Sep 2006 01:54 BST
It's hard to refine my mushroom risotto recipe for publication, really, as I have made it so often over the years that I just tend to fling in whatever I have in the house. Including frozen peas, which I appreciate would technically make it a pea risotto but let's not be picky.
For the three of us, but with plenty for second helpings and a bit left over for the next day to spread hot onto buttered french bread (o-ho yes...)
One medium onion
A couple of cloves of garlic
Butter and olive oil
Half a pack of Arborio or Carnaroli risotto rice, probably about 225g or so.
Home-made chicken stock, if you've got it. Roughly a litre to a litre and a half. If not, some Marigold reduced salt stuff or half of one of those no-salt Kallo cubes which I personally think taste disgusting. Or if you've got the heel of a piece of Parmesan floating around the fridge you can use that as a stock, that's what I often do, to be honest.
A good slug of white wine or Madeira (optional)
One tbsp porcini mushrooms soaked in warm water (also optional)
As many mushrooms as you can get your mitts on. I usually use at least one supermarket pack (if I haven't bought them elsewhere) so that's probably about 250g but often I'm using up scabby old ones so loads more go in. Roughly chop into halves or quarters, so they are easier for the babies to pick up.
A good two tbsp of chopped up Parmesan cheese
Gently fry the chopped onion and garlic in a puddle of olive oil and butter. The butter is for flavour, if you leave it out you will notice I reckon. When the onion is clear, throw in the rice and keep it moving around the pan for a few minutes so it can soak up some oil. I use a wide-based pan for risotto. Put in the mushrooms, and fry them. If you think you need more oil or butter, chuck it in. If you have porcini, rinse them, drain them, shop them and fling them in as well at this stage.
Then spoon in some warmed-up chicken stock bit by bit, until it is all absorbed and the rice is sticky-slidy and cooked through and looks like little white pebbles. Well, that's what recipe books tell you to do. I tend to fling in about three-quarters of the stock or some water and a heel of cheese, along with the Parmesan, cook it for a while until the baby's portion is done. Can't really be doing with all the bit by bit business.
Then I take Babybear's out and whack up the heat, adding the rest of the liquid with the dissolved stock cube, wine, Madeira until it disappears. If this whole thing takes much longer than 20 minutes you are in trouble, as risotto should really be fast food, not taking much longer than the onions and rice to cook.
I put so much Parmesan into the rice that I don't need any more on top, just a grind or two of pepper finishes this off for me. We serve it with salad, or just by itself if we are feeling lazy. Babybear's, having cooled down, can be eaten from a spoon if I can be arsed loading it up, but I generally just give it to her on her tray and she grabs it with her hands, chewing the mushrooms for a while before spitting most of them out. (Honestly, though, try the bread thing the next day. Truly, Babybear thinks this is the best bit.)

DanielMummy's Pizza Recipe
by
Aitch
on Tue 12 Sep 2006 00:30 BST
...requires a breadmaker. Which would be fine chez nous, were it not for the fact we recently gave ours away because we just weren't using it enough. Typical. I think the spinach and cheese topping sounds particulalry delish and may yet find myself experimenting using my old student standby - the tortilla wrap as pizza base. That and 10p noodles kept me going through the lean years, let me tell you. "Here's the recipe. This makes two 11 inch pizzas, which Daniel
(9 months), me and DH all enjoyed. And there's nearly half left still, so
quantities could be reduced.

Dough
225 ml warm water
1 and a half tbsp oil
325g bread flour (I used white, but could
do a 50/50 white/wholemeal mix) 2 tbsp sugar 1 tsp dried yeast
Topping (pizza 1)
Half a tube of tomato puree
Lots of grated cheese (I used cheddar)
Selection of your choice vegetables (I used
2 shallots - chopped and fried, 2 cherry tomatoes - skinned and sliced,
broccoli - finely chopped, sweetcorn)
Topping (pizza 2)
A tub of cream cheese
6 cubes of frozen spinach (defrosted)
1 tsp fried shallot (taken from that
prepared for pizza 1)
A pinch of mixed spice
Small amount of grated cheese
Put water and oil in breadmaker. Cover with the flour. Put sugar in one corner.
Make indentation in flour for yeast and make on dough setting. (Adapt this stage to do by hand, if you
haven't got a breadmaker). Grease two 11inch circular pizza tins and preheat
oven (220 deg for fan oven). Once dough is ready, divide in half between
the 2 tins. Press to a flat round shape to fill tin
(best to cover your hands in flour to avoid dough sticking to your fingers). Cover with oiled clingfilm for 15 mins. Then do the toppings.
Pizza 1 - cover base with tomato puree
nearly to edge. Then distribute the veggies over. Finally, top with loads of grated cheese.
Pizza 2 - cover base with cream cheese
nearly to edge. Mix the spinach, shallot and spice together. Spread the mixture over the cream
cheese. Sprinkle a little grated cheese over the
top.
Put the pizzas in the oven for about 15
minutes until golden and sizzling (probably a little longer if not a fan
oven). Serve immediately for adults, but let it
cool a bit for babies. And cut babies' portions into pieces about 1-2
inches. (I didn't give Daniel any of the crust, but it would be nice and chewy
for teething)."
Friday, September 8

JennT's Long-awaited Polenta Recipe
by
Aitch
on Fri 08 Sep 2006 00:01 BST
Personally, the only way I enjoy polenta is with as much parmesan cheese as it can support without falling apart. It will take years of trial and error on my part to find out exactly how much that is. Be careful as it starts to boil, to give you an idea of how dangerous polenta is just imagine you are cooking with lava straight off the slopes of Mt Etna and you won't go far wrong. Polenta with Herbs
75g (3oz)
polenta Either 1 tsp of dried herbs, say, oregano or thyme, or a fistful of chopped fresh herbs, perhaps parsley or coriander? If using fresh rosemary or thyme, probably best to stick to the teaspoonful. 1 tbsp olive oil or
butter. A whacking amount of parmesan cheese, freshly
grated, say about a fistful again. Or however much you like. Cook the polenta according to packet
instructions, and stir in the butter or olive oil and then the parmesan and herbs as it starts to thicken. Pour into an oiled baking tray and leave to cool, befor cutting into wedges and grilling or frying until golden on both sides.
Post Script We made some polenta the other night but I didn't have any parmesan in and the kind that I bought claimed to have vegetables in it already and therefore didn't need anything extra. Wrong. It really needed cheese. Anyway, I made it, and in it's plain boiled form it was distinctly unimpressive. Likewise when I spread it out onto an oiled tray and grilled it. However, I left it overnight and cut it up and grilled the pieces and we had some more success. It had started, by this time, to look and taste oddly and not unpleasantly like French Toast. Babybear ate a really big piece of it, as did I, but mine was smothered under a layer of salt. Next time, cheese.
Thursday, September 7

Cheesy beefburgers with harissa
by
Aitch
on Thu 07 Sep 2006 23:51 BST
The reason I love these is that they are easy to make with very little faff, and the flavour of the harissa is warming without being too hot, so the baby can eat them too. I don't really know where the recipe came from, we just magicked it up out of our own heads one day, so those of you who have your own tried-and-tested burger recipes just keep doing what you're doing. I don't add breadcrumbs because I can't be bothered making them, likewise egg (actually the combination of raw egg and raw meat makes me feel a bit gruey) so I leave it out and just stick with the beef.
Here goes.
A pack of good-quality lean minced beef, you know, the normal size, whatever that is. Say 500g or so? That should give you four or five good-sized burgers.
One medium onion, finely, finely, finely chopped.
One clove of garlic, but not essential.
A good hunk of cheese, roughly grated. The amount depends how cheesy you want your burgers, how strong the cheese and how much you happen to have in the fridge. I have used half a normal-sized pack in my time.
A teaspoon or so of harissa. I prefer rose harissa, as it isn't so much of a paste, so that's what I use. You can get it in delis and in the Sainsbury's fancy-pants section. It's about £3 but it lasts for ages and a spoonful of it in a bowl of yoghurt or creme fraiche is lovely as a dip for tortilla chips or whatever if people swing by unexpectedly. With regards to the burger, the kind of harissa you buy in the tube would be fine too.
A spritz of olive oil for frying.
Gently, always gently, fry the onion and garlic in oil or butter in a frying pan. When it is transparent, remove from heat and leave to cool briefly while you mix the minced meat and the cheese and harissa, before adding the onions to the mixture. Really get your hands in about it and give it a good squidge.
Then roll into balls and flatten, to whatever size of burger you fancy, and then fry them to as cooked as you wish, roughly five minutes each side (but I like 'em a bit rarer, to be honest.) The cheese keeps them together and it goes crispy and oozes out of the burger as it cooks. We tend to have them in toasted pitta breads, so we make them roughly to fit, with sweet potato chips.
Smaller ones are lovely in mini pittas, and little children love making them and eating them in my experience. I often make double the amounts so I can freeze these between layers of greaseproof paper and then just defrost what I need.
Babybear feasted on a good lump of burger this evening, hence the recipe. I gave her a couple of well-cooked fist-sized bits and she was gorgeous with them. Bit some off and then sucked and slurped at it in a most ignoble manner. When it started to break up she jammed as much as she could into her mouth, so really very little was wasted. Especially when her father scooped up any leftovers and ate them himself, the good boy.
Wednesday, September 6

Beef and Beer Casserole - THE perfect BLW foodstuff
by
Aitch
on Wed 06 Sep 2006 01:56 BST
Not kidding. It's spot-on, if you think about it. A stew of baby-fist-sized meat and chunky veggies bound together by the unifying theme of gravy but each piece utterly recognisable and distinct from the other... it's absolutely ideal. Oh, and apparently the beer is fine so long as you boil the alcohol off. Huzzah, I love winter... bring on the cold weather food I say.  500g lean stewing beef, cubed Butter Olive oil Large onion Plain flour, not much more than a heaped tablespoon is necessary Two carrots 6 or so new potatoes Three-quarters of a pint of beer. If the beer is dark make it half a pint. Water for adding extra liquid Two bayleaves or a bouquet garni Salt and pepper It's really the Husband who is in charge of beef casseroles in our house (I make beautiful ones myself but he showed an aptitude when we first got together and I saw no reason to discourage him). He somewhat pompously insists that the secret to a good casserole comes from drying the meat with kitchen towel before dipping it in seasoned flower. He reckons, and I am inclined to believe him, that if the meat is wet it poaches briefly on contact with the oil and isn't as nice. You might want to leave out the seasoning as it's for the baby, but I know that he puts in only a couple of turns of the salt grinder and most of it gets left behind anyway. So he takes 500g or so of meat (we get ours from the farmer's market, it's actually from Highland cows, the hairy ones with the horns. I was horrified when I realised but they taste soooo nice). He dries it, as mentioned, dips it in a wee bowl of salt and peppered flour and then drops it into some hot oil and butter in the pan. Say four or five cubes at a time, dependant on the size of your frying pan/casserole dish. Sometimes we cook a kilo of meat up and freeze half. Once you've finished with that, leave your browned meat in a dish to the side and crack on with your onions and whatever else you fancy. There will probably be some flour stuck to the bottom of the pan but don't worry, it will come off during the course of the cooking and 'it's all flavour', as my Grandma used to say. Chop your large-ish onion, add some more oil (and a spot of butter for flavour) keep the heat down and slowly cook your onion. We find this takes about eight to ten minutes - it's a source of some confusion to me that recipes seem to suggest that onions cook in a flash. They do if you're burning them, I suppose. We normally just have this with mushrooms in it but in deference to Babybear's new-found ability to eat solids we put in a couple of sliced carrots and a good handful of quartered new potatoes. Fry them off gently, then slowly pour over a bottle of beer, something like an 80 shilling, not too dark not too light and let cook for five minutes to take off the alcohol. Add a couple of bay leaves or a bouquet garni, then return the meat to the pan cover with lid and cook at 325F/170C/Gas Mark 3 for 1 and a half hours, checking it every so often for sticking or extra liquid. Because of the potatoes we served this just with some petits pois, which are a story in themselves. We left her bits and pieces to cool and put them on Babybear's highchair tray while we ate our meal, and she really absolutely adored it. There were some leftovers which, of course, tasted even better the following day.
Thursday, August 31

JennT's Home-made Bread Croutons
by
Aitch
on Thu 31 Aug 2006 23:46 BST
JennT says:
Cut a thick slice of bread into
fingers and brush the bread with honey or marmite diluted 50:50 with water
before baking at gas 4/180C/350F for about 20 minutes. I'm not sure I would use the
marmite ones myself, but I'm assuming that the honey is okay cos it's
cooked.

Mawbroon's Home-made Oatcakes.
by
Aitch
on Thu 31 Aug 2006 20:52 BST
Now, I don't actually know Mawbroon in person as I met her on Mumsnet, but my spider senses suggest to me that she might be Scottish... Here is her recipe, but I intend to quiz her further on the nature of the oatmeal. Pinhead? Porridge Oats? Not sure at this stage, will report back. Anyway, here goes.
8oz oatmeal
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 dessertspoonful of melted fat, (the recipe suggests butter or lard but Mawbroon's natural inclination is to rebelliousness so she uses olive oil)
hot water
a good pinch of salt would be nice but unfortunately it is frowned upon because of the babies' kidneys and all that blah blah blah.
Mix all the dry ingredients together with a well in the middle and pour
in the fat. Blend in enough hot water to make a stiff paste then knead
and roll out as thinly as possible. Cut into triangles and bake on a
floured tin at 200 degrees until the ends curl up and the cakes are
crisp. Alternatively, bake them on a hot girdle or frying pan.
Now, that's what the recipe says, but what Mawbroon does is take little blobs of the
mix and flattens them into fat little oatcakes. So, they are rustic
looking and not thin enough to curl up when cooked. Apparently little
helpers can help because the mix cools very quickly even though you use
hot water. Update. Mawbroon says: "I just use "normal" oatmeal but pinhead would do as well. Porridge oats
could probably be used at a push after a blitz in the food processor,
but I've never tried it, so don't blame me if you try it and the
oatcakes are vile.
I don't know about the availability of oatmeal in England for anyone
reading who lives there. My sister lives in London and stocks up every
time she comes home (to Scotland) for a visit because she claims not to
be able to buy it down south. I would have thought that with the fad
for whole foods at the moment that it would be readily available, but
I'll take her word for it. I do know that Lakeland sell the Alfords
stuff.
Also I forgot to say that the cooking time is somewhere between 20 - 30 mins."Hurrah, I was right, she is a Jock. And good to have a cooking time on a recipe, I always find...
Post Script.
I
made them. They are flipping deeee-licious and really easy. I used
medium oatmeal, as my pinhead oatmeal actually seemed to be less finely
ground than the medium when I pulled it from the cupboard. Mistakenly,
I had thought it would be small, not unlike the head of a pin, but no.
Go figure. Also, for the record it's a straight no on the porridge
oats, apparently if you try this recipe with them you will be sadly
disappointed.
Anyway,
they work great with olive oil I reckon, you can really taste it which
is very pleasant, but thinking about it I probably put in a bit more
than the recipe called for as my hand has a tendency to wobble when
holding any bottle... The no-salt thing isn't a problem if you are an
adult as you are invariably jamming a big wodge of salty cheese on them
anyway.
Like
Mawbroon, I rolled the mixture into little balls about three-quarters
of an inch in diameter, then squashed the little blighters in the palms
of my hands to make discs of about one-and-a-half to two inches across.
I kept them in for about half-an-hour because I like oatcakes a little
golden.
Babybear
has had them with hummus and butter, and her strategy has so far been
to take a nibble off the edge, which she chews a bit but finds a little
dry to be honest. Her next move is to lick the topping off the oatcake
at which point it becomes a bit soggier, before returning to it every
so often as it becomes more wet. She mustn't leave it too long, though,
as it turns into porridge if it sits on her soggy highchair tray (we're
still getting to grips with drinking from a glass). Obviously it
depends how well your baby is doing with gagging and everything, but I
definitely don't think that Babybear would have been able to manage
these until quite recently (she's eight-and-a-half-months). Anyway,
thanks again Mawbroon, I think these will be a real favourite in our
house for many years to come. Well, they will if my husband has
anything to do with it, as he's eaten nothing else all day.

Vnmum's Chicken and Apple Sausages
by
Aitch
on Thu 31 Aug 2006 13:56 BST
VNmum's campaign to get us all eating our apple a day continues... they sound great. I've made kind of sausagey things before but they weren't damp enough for my liking, so maybe the apple will help...
Chicken and Apple Sausages
1 chicken breast, diced
1/2 eating apple grated
1 small onion, finely chopped
1-2 tbsp fresh breadcrumbs
1 clove of garlic, crushed
Seasoning of your choice eg Italian herbs, paprika, chinese 5 spice
plain flour
Whizz the chicken for a few seconds in a food processor then add the
rest of ingredients, except flour, and whizz together for few seconds. If the mixture seems quite sloppy just add more breadcrumb until it
sticks together better.
Take a handful and shape into whatever size sausage shape you want,
this again will make however many sausages you want depending on size.
Roll all the sausages in the flour to seal and fry in vegetable oil.
Can be frozen.
I found that if the mix was slightly wet, they held together for
cooking and then fell apart nicely as DS was chewing. as he gets more
teeth I will probably make them drier as it will be easier for him to
chew.
Both this and the pork buger recipe can be tweaked to your liking with consistency and seasoning, they went down a treat with ds, served with homemade oven chips and salad.

Vnmum's Pork and Apple Burgers
by
Aitch
on Thu 31 Aug 2006 13:49 BST
These sound rather delicious, I must say, and I am very interested in the substitution of olive oil for egg. Does that mean that you use an 'egg-sized' amount of oil or is it just a slug, vnmum?
My poor friend's wee boy who is, I think, about 7 months or so was just rushed to hospital after discovering he had an egg allergy, so I'm sure she'd be interested in any egg allergic substitutions. I am too, by the way, as I have decided to hold off on giving Babybear some French toast (ooooh, I've been dreaming of French toast...) for a good while now after hearing my chum's horror story.
Pork and Apple burgers
250g pork mince
1/2 eating apple, finely chopped or grated
1 small onion, finely chopped
5 - 6 tbsp fresh breadcrumbs
1 - 2 cloves of garlic, crushed
italian herbs to season
One egg ( I use olive oil instead as DS is egg allergic)
Mix all ingredients together in a bowl, until mixture is sticking together nicely.
Make however many burgers you want depending on the size you want them.
Grill or fry
I dont see any reason why these cant be frozen either raw (as long as mince was fresh not frozen) or cooked.
Friday, August 25

Organix Moon Biscuits
by
Aitch
on Fri 25 Aug 2006 23:29 BST
Och, I've just realised that I've thrown the box out. Anyway, they are nice, blah blah organic, blah sweetened with grape juice, no hydrogenated fats etc etc. And what's more, they are shaped like little moons which makes them super-easy to hold onto. Which has got me thinking, my baby led weaning chums, that what we need is a biscuit/rusk recipe that we can bake ourselves (therefore we won't be paying through the nose for them) and shape into crescents. I'm hitting the internet now, expect radio silence until I have come up with something sensational.
Oh, and I know that Organix makes lots of little vegetable puff crisps which are useful if you are trying to hang fire on gluten but here's the thing... if you don't need to eat them, I wouldn't. Because it strikes me that they look just like Wotsits, and I'm quite keen that Babybear does not pick up her father's former crisp habit (he was a ten bag-a-day man, or so he tells me) so I'd rather not teach her that some crisps are okay but some aren't. That's it. Expect radio silence NOW.
Thursday, August 24

Morv’s Crazy Assed Picnic Salad
by
Morv
on Thu 24 Aug 2006 20:53 BST
This was something I made up for a picnic as an accompanying dish to the Breaded Chicken.
Ingredients
Star pumpkin – halved and cored to make bowls
Flageolet Beans – a handful cooked (either from dry or from a tin)
Asparagus – steamed and cut into baby led weaning lengths
Green Beans - steamed and cut into baby led weaning lengths
Pumpkin – chunks from the pumpkin (bowls) boiled/steamed
Chunks of Feta (not sure about allergies and feta, so could be substituted)
Sweet Red Pepper – cut into baby led weaning size chunks
Directions
Mix all the ingredients and dress with a ‘Greek salad’ style dressing i.e. lashings of olive oil and loads of good quality dried oregano. Fill the pumpkin bowls with the salad , wrap in foil and take to the park. Boomer got bits from the bowls and she played with the pumpkin bowl later.
This was something I made up for a picnic as an accompanying dish to the Breaded Chicken.
|
|