Friday 21 December 2012

Broccolette, Black Bean and Coconut with Israeli Couscous


We have furniture, just. After a long wait our sofa finally arrived today so our beds are no longer the sole place for us to park it. Had some heart palpitations when the movers arrived at the building and insisted there was no way it was going to fit in the elevator. They measured and calculated, then measured and calculated some more in the stairwell. Nope, there was no way it was going up to our apartment. I was close to tears at this point as the return policy was not favourable and let's just say this particular sofa is what you might call an investment piece. Anyway they brought it in and what do you know, it fit just fine! So now I have a sleek sexy Italian beauty to snuggle with every evening! Well, daytime too if today is anything to go by, just couldn't pull myself away. Hence today's recipe. This is a combination of what I had in the pantry and fridge (sound familiar) because someone didn't go to the grocery store ( blame the Italian). I must say, it turned out not bad at all.

Recipe

Broccolette, Black Bean and Coconut with Israeli Couscous
serves 4

1 bunch broccolette
1 small or 1/2 medium/large fennel, sliced
1/2 red onion, sliced
1 clove garlic, crushed
1/2 can black beans
1 tbsp olive oil
1/2 can coconut milk, well shaken
1 tsp caraway seeds
salt and pepper

Israeli Couscous
1 cup Israeli couscous
2 cups water

Make the couscous. Bring the water to a boil and add couscous. Simmer gently until soft, approximately 10 minutes. Israeli couscous is actually a pasta, so cook it as you would pasta. Drain and set aside.

Meanwhile heat the olive oil in a large pan and over a low heat gently cook the fennel, onion and garlic, until soft, 5-7 minutes. Trim the broccolette, removing any tough outer layer from the stems. Chop the stems and add to the fennel mixture, keeping the flower heads back. Cook for a further 5 minutes. 
Drain and rinse the black beans and add to the fennel mixture with the broccolette flowers and gently heat through, 3 minutes. Pour over the coconut milk and heat for another 5 minutes until hot.
Season with salt and pepper to taste and sprinkle in the caraway seeds.
Serve over the Israeli couscous.





 The rather pathetic alternative tree is up by the way.  Rather ingeniously and because we are cheap, we fashioned a base for our branch from a laundry hamper. Had a panic moment when we couldn't find Christmas lights for sale anywhere, but we eventually found one beaten up box of rather blueish looking lights after a desperate search around town.  It is quite possibly the weirdest Christmas tree ever!




Tuesday 18 December 2012

Alternative Christmas Tree and Lazy Moussaka





 It's only been a week for us as downtown residents but it may be that's all it takes for me to establish myself as the local nut. Let me explain. There are some rules to condo living it seems, one such rule dictates the installment and removal of Christmas trees. Not one needle can be dropped on communal territory and no trees may be discarded either in the garbage room or left outside the property for pick up. So what are we to do? Well, we could of course wrap the tree well so as to catch all wayward needles and investigate where we might take our tree once the twelfth night is upon us. However, that seems like too much work for us folks. Last year, we took a vacation right after Christmas and decided to go the alternative tree route. Having a house back then, it was easy to haul in a large piece of ply, slap on a coat of blackboard paint and chalk on a simple tree outline, staple gun on the lights and voila. With no one home to vacuum the needles and haul the tree out on pick up day, our alternative tree was perfect. This year I had it in my mind that a branch in a pot would be our alternative. Today, I headed out to the local park to scavenge around for a fallen twig or two. (Here comes the local nut status part.) I didn't find a twig or a stick, I found half a tree! Okay, maybe not half a tree, at least that's not how it started out, but let me tell you, once I left the park and hit the streets and the closer it got to rush hour, the bigger I swear that branch got. What was a 10 minute walk to the park felt like a 10 hour walk home.When a young boy asked his dad what the heck that lady was doing with that stick, I knew things were not looking good for my rep here in town. As I wrestled twisted trunk and long unruly branches between pedestrians, around corners, across streets and ultimately through the apartment front door, wrapping a real tree and driving to a recycling depot didn't seem like too much work after all. I have yet to get the branch up to our apartment, it's hiding out in the back of our enormous truck (seems we don't do things small around here!) Tomorrow I shall enlist the help of Tim and Elliot, more as lookout patrol members, don't need the neighbours thinking I'm nut's too.

As you can imagine, all of today's shenanigans left me quite spent of ..um...pride?...no energy, that's it, so what is a girl to do but take a short cut in the kitchen. Lazy Moussaka was born. It is basically sort of Moussaka ingredients, kind of put together in, well, the laziest way possible. Enjoy.


Recipe

Lazy Moussaka

enough bolognese sauce for 4, use your favourite recipe
1 aubergine, sliced into 1/4 inch rounds
olive oil
2 tsp ground black pepper
2 tsp ground cumin
1 package goat cheese

Turn on your broiler. Place the aubergine slices on a baking sheet and drizzle on some olive oil. Evenly sprinkle on the black pepper and cumin. Place under the broiler and cook until starting to brown slightly. Turn the broiler off and leave the aubergine in the hot oven to continue cooking slightly.
Prepare your bolognese sauce or reheat if you happen to have some lying around(?).
To serve, place one aubergine slice on your plate, top with some sauce and sprinkle on some of the goat cheese. Repeat with two or three more slices of aubergine, layering with the sauce and goat cheese.
Top with some fresh oregano and cracked black pepper.

How lazy was that, I didn't even give you a sauce recipe! Tell you what here's a link to a good one, that's the best I can do tonight, tree wrangling is exhausting work.

Sunday 16 December 2012

Baked Chicken with Roasted Red Peppers and Spinach







I can't believe we've been in our condo for a week already. We are slowly exploring our new neighbourhood and discovering exciting shops and interesting people everyday. We've had drinks, twice, with the lovely Eve from the floor below who I believe will have us pickled in no time. Thank goodness she only lives here on the weekends! Truth is, I'm a lightweight and it doesn't take much more than one gin and tonic to get me giggling at nothing. I managed to drag myself back up the stairs to our floor where my two hungry boys were waiting for dinner. I needed something fast and simple that didn't require any knife skills!

Having a jar of roasted red peppers to use up, I hit up Google for a tasty recipe and the above colourful delight graced our table in no time. It was quick, simple and delicious. The recipe called for basil leaves but having only spinach in the fridge I used them instead.

Recipe

Baked Chicken with Roasted Red Peppers and Spinach
adapted from inspired taste

serves 4

4 chicken breast, cut into smaller pieces
1 jar roasted red peppers, cut into smaller pieces if whole, reserve liquid
2 large handfuls fresh baby spinach leaves, washed and stems removes
1/2 cup orange juice
freshly cracked black pepper

Preheat oven to 400F (200C).
Arrange chicken pieces, roasted red peppers and spinach in your baking dish, starting with spinach, then chicken then peppers repeating until the dish is full.
Pour over the reserved liquid from the jar of red peppers and the 1/2 cup orange juice. Top with black pepper.
Bake in a preheated oven for 30 minutes or until chicken is cooked through.
Serve with mashed potatoes to soak up all the cooking liquid.

This is such a simple, quick and easy supper dish. The basil would give it a whole other flavour and I look forward to trying it that way, however the red peppers are strong enough to flavour the dish on their own and it didn't lack for the substitution.

Thursday 13 December 2012

Peach Cake with Crumble Topping




Hello my name is Claudia and it's been oh all of five minutes since my last piece of cake/cookie/tart/pie/....well you know, anything baked really. It seems I may have a bit of a problem as here I am posting about cake again! This is yet another throw it all together at the last minute with what I had in the fridge, kind of recipe. Hooray for canned fruit. You know you have a problem when dessert takes precedence over dinner. Soggy pasta anyone?

Recipe

Peach Cake with Crumble Topping
serves 12

1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup sugar
1 cup sour cream
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 cups all purpose flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 can peach slices 

Topping
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup butter
1/4 cup sugar

Preheat oven to 325F (170C). Grease a 9x9 inch baking pan.
Cream butter and sugar. Beat in sour cream, eggs and vanilla. Add flour, baking powder and baking soda. Mix until just combined.
Spread half the mixture into prepared pan. Top with drained peach slices. Spread remaining cake mixture on top of fruit.

For the topping, melt the butter then add the flour and sugar. Mix it all together until a crumbly texture is formed. Sprinkle this mixture on top of the cake.

Bake in the preheated oven for 45 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the cake comes out clean.
Serve warm with vanilla ice-cream or vanilla bean infused whipped cream.

 The truth is I only had about 2 tbsp of sour cream left so added natural yoghurt to make up the rest. I also ran out of butter so mine was made with less. They say baking is a science not an art, but you know I often reduce the amount of sugar and fat when I bake (it's necessary considering how much baking we eat!) and have yet to have a problem. Don't be afraid to experiment. This was more cakey than peachy, so if you want it more peachy than cakey, add another 1/2 to 1 can of peaches as I will next time.

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Quinoa and Apple Salad with Curry Dressing


Okay so the truth is I haven't really been cooking much these last few days, despite having a wonderful new kitchen. We seem to be out and about everyday, changing our driver's license from Ontario to BC, as well as health care, moving the trailer from A to B, unpacking and re-arranging oh and home schooling. I will start getting creative soon but until then how about I share another recipe from Martha Stewart . This is one of my favourite salads, quick, simple and oh so delicious. I had to stop myself from posting yet another cake/dessert recipe, it seems I may have a problem as that's all I want to cook and eat these days!

Recipe

Quinoa and Apple Salad with Curry Dressing from Martha Stewart Living
serves 4

1/4 cup raw whole almonds
1 cup white quinoa
1 tsp honey
1 tbsp finely chopped shallot
1 tsp curry powder
1/4 tsp salt
2 tbsp fresh lemon juice
freshly ground black pepper
2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
2 tbsp dried currants
1 small McIntosh apple, cut into 1/8-inch-thick wedges
1/4 cup loosely packed fresh mint leaves, coarsely chopped, plus more for garnish

Preheat oven to 375F (190C). Spread almonds on a rimmed baking sheet; toast in oven until lightly toasted and fragrant, about 7 minutes. Let cool; coarsely chop nuts.

Rinse quinoa thoroughly in a fine sieve; drain. Bring 2 cups  water to a boil in a medium saucepan. Add quinoa; return to a boil. Stir quinoa; cover, and reduce heat. Simmer until quinoa is tender but still chewy, about 15 minutes. Fluff quinoa with a fork; let cool.

Whisk together honey, shallot, curry powder, salt, and lemon juice in a large bowl. Season with pepper. Whisking constantly, pour in oil in a slow, steady stream; whisk until dressing is emulsified. Add quinoa, currants, apple, mint, and nuts; toss well. Garnish with mint.


This is one of those great salads that transports well and tastes even better the next day, although the nuts are more soft than crunchy so you may want to throw in a few more for second day eats.

Tuesday 11 December 2012

The Quick French Tart



 You're picturing a woman running down the road aren't you? Well stop it, this is a food blog.
My french tart is all butter and sugar as only a french tart can be. It's also amazingly simple and incredibly quick to make for those emergency moments when you need a french tart, stat. My friend, Jacques Pepin taught me how and it was one of those 'oh my gosh, that is so clever' moments when he revealed the no effort base, tortilla! Melt a tablespoon of butter on your baking tray, which you have lined with parchment paper, sprinkle on a teaspoon of sugar and rub a flour tortilla in the mixture on both sides. Then top with the fruit of your choice, sprinkle another teaspoon of sugar on top followed by another tablespoon of butter, dotted around the fruit and cook at 400F (200C) for 25-30 minutes. Voila, a quick french tart.

I made an apple tart last night, but you can use any fruit, even canned fruit. Cook the syrup down in a pan and use it as a glaze at the end. For a glaze when using fresh fruit, just warm up a bit of apricot jam and brush that over the top.

Monday 10 December 2012

About Friday, and high energy treats.


Image from My New Roots



So about my absence on Friday, I do have a good reason, although it's slightly embarrassing really as it makes me a bit of a fraud. You see I'm not writing this from my tin can kitchen, I'm actually writing this from my brand spanking new loft. The tin can is not dead however, we're just having a dose of normalcy while we sort out a few things and plan our next step. So if you all agree, I'll keep posting from my not so small kitchen and we'll just pretend everything is the same until we hit the road again. All agreed? Excellent.

Well moving house is hard work, even when you own very little. How we fit five truck loads of belongings in the trailer I'll never know but the weekend was spent schlepping them up from the parkade to the forth floor. All that exertion required reward and energy replacement. Today's recipe is from My New Roots, quite possibly my favourite foody blog. The Raw Brownie is nothing to fear, it is every bit as decadent and gooey and delicious as the real thing but a million miles better for you. Don't be fooled into thinking it's low calorie however as it most definitely is not, but the energy comes to you from whole foods of nutrient rich goodness rather than empty calories that just sit on your hips and remind you why you shouldn't have eaten the whole tin. Whereas the brownie you know is all butter and sugar and flour, the raw brownie is just three things, dates, cacao and walnuts. I'm posting the recipe here, but head over to My New Roots and Sarah will tell you how amazing her Raw Brownies are for you herself.

Recipe

The Raw Brownie from My New Roots

2 cups whole walnuts
2 ½ cups Medjool dates, pitted
1 cup raw cacao
1 cup raw unsalted almonds, roughly chopped
¼ tsp. sea salt

Directions:
1. Place walnuts in food processor and blend on high until the nuts are finely ground.
2. Add the cacao and salt. Pulse to combine.
3. Add the dates one at a time through the feed tube of the food processor while it is running. What you should end up with is a mix that appears rather like cake crumbs, but that when pressed, will easily stick together (if the mixture does not hold together well, add more dates).
4. In a large bowl (or the pan you plan on putting the brownies in), combine the walnut-cacao mix with the chopped almonds. Press into a lined cake pan or mold. Place in freezer or fridge until ready to serve (it is also easier to cut these when they are very cold). Store in an airtight container.



I know right, super good for you and ready in minutes, you could even scoop it right out from the bowl of your food process, which I've never done, honest! Actually, talking of scoops, this is a great recipe for a Christmas gift exchange. Instead of making a flat brownie, you could roll this mixture into little balls and have on your hands the most delicious truffles. Roll then in crushed nuts or coconut, ooh or melted dark chocolate, yum, and you my friends will be the stars of your social circles! I keep mine in the freezer all the time as they don't ever really freeze solid, we just eat them straight from there, sometimes even on a plate while sitting down at the table:)



Thursday 6 December 2012

Braised balsamic leeks with creamy polenta




I have a confession, I am scared of polenta, or rather, I was scared of polenta. All that having to mix hard and fast to prevent lumps had me backed into a corner biting my nails. Plus it boils angrily, big hot volcanic mud pools of bubbling mass ready to send you to the hospital with major burns and a ruined manicure. Oh wait I already ruined the manicure with all that nail biting, see what polenta did to me! Well there must have been some courage added to my morning coffee as I decided to bite the bullet and cook today's recipe and you know what, it turns out polenta was all bubble and no bite. I had that corn meal whipped and tamed into a smooth puddle of creamy loveliness in no time at all. Was it worth it? I think so yes. Polenta only has as much flavour as you add to it so it's versatility is worth the crazy beating, plus I was able to use the leftovers to create a bonus meal with the polenta having taken on a whole other personality.

Recipe

Braised balsamic leeks with creamy polenta adapted from Australian Woman's Weekly Vegi Food cookbook.

serves 4

2 large leeks, trimmed
2 teaspoons olive oil
1 clove garlic crushed
1 red onion, sliced
1 large red capsicum, sliced thinly
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1/3 cup firmly packed fresh flat leaf parsely

Creamy Polenta
2 cups (500ml) water
1 cup (250ml) vegetable stock
1 1/4 cups (310ml) skim milk
1 cup polenta
2 tablespoons finely grated parmesan

Half leeks crossways; cut halves into quarters lengthways.
Heat oil in a large saucepan; cook garlic, stirring until fragrant. Add leek, onion and capsicum; cook, covered, stirring occasionally, about 20 minutes or until leeks softens. Add vinegar, cook, uncovered, stirring occasionally, until almost all liquid has evaporated.
Meanwhile make the polenta. Combine the water, stock and 1 cup of the milk in a medium saucepan; bring to a boil. Gradually add polenta to liquid, whisking like a crazy person. Reduce heat; simmer, stirring, about 10 minutes or until polenta thickens. Stir in cheese and remaining milk just before serving.
Stir parsely into leek mixture. Serve with creamy polenta.

I've given you the recipe as published, except for the addition of the red onion. I found it lacking a bit in oomph though. You know oomph right, that secret ingredient all chefs carry with them wherever they go. Oh no wait, that's salt. Anyway, I solved the oomph problem by adding an extra tablespoon of balsamic to the leeks and some extra cheese and cracked black pepper to the polenta. Feel free to experiment with your own addition of oomph as you see fit:)
Oh and for those who don't know what polenta is, it's yellow cornmeal and you should be able to find it in your grocery store where the dried beans and pulses are, or in the bulk section.

Wednesday 5 December 2012

Spicy sausage, kale and beans




Last nights dinner was one of those staples that you always have in your back pocket. So sorry, nothing exciting to report today, unless of course you want to hear about the time I accidentally caused a bit of an international incident once while flying to.......no? Oh okay then, here's the recipe

Recipe

Spicy sausage, kale and beans
serves 4

4 hot Italian sausages, casing's removed and broken into bite sized pieces
1 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, coarsely chopped
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 large bunch of kale
1 can cannellini beans with liquid
1/2 cup vegetable stock
pinch of red pepper flakes to taste
salt and pepper

Heat olive oil in a large frying pan. Add sausage pieces and cook until brown all over. Add onion and garlic and cook stirring for 1 minute; do not let garlic brown. Add stock and cover; cook for 5 minutes or until sausage is cooked through.
Wash kale, removed tough stems and tear the leaves into bite sized pieces.Place kale directly on sausage mixture. Pour over beans, including the liquid from the can. Cover and cook for another 5 minutes or until kale is wilted. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Sprinkle on red pepper flakes and stir everything together.
Serve immediately with a favourite crusty bread.

Using the liquid from the tin of beans, gives the dish a thicker sauce and adds a starchiness to the taste. Sometimes I like that and sometimes I don't, so you can rinse and drain the beans if you prefer and add a little more stock or water when adding the kale. Even though we're using hot Italian sausages, we like things spicy so the extra pepper flakes are a must for us. The dish works well without to. Finally, if you want you can grate over some parmasan or a good Gruyere would work too.


Tuesday 4 December 2012

How to lose weight






Steps to losing weight.

  1. Discover veteran french chef and former cooking partner of Julia Child, Jacques Pepin
  2. Obsessively watch every cooking show he ever made on YouTube
  3. Go to kitchen and prepare dinner while addressing a fake television audience
  4. Speak in a french accent
  5. With your hours of YouTube coverage, feel a certain bravado and do that one handed flipping thing with your frying pan
  6. Clean half of your planned dinner off the floor
  7. Face the hard glare's of your family as you sheepishly apologize for the tiny portion sizes
Voila, smaller portions, less calories, guaranteed weight loss.

Or cook the above pasta dish inspired by Monsieur Pepin's love of butter and salt and say to hell with weight loss. I made this dish up as we had no food in the house except a bit of pasta, one zucchini in the bottom of the fridge, an onion, some garlic and the last bit before the rind of some parmasan cheese. Oh yes and two hungry boy's wanting to know what was for lunch as it was now 3pm. Time flies when with M. Pepin!

I didn't really make a note of what I was doing as this wasn't something I thought I was going to share, but it was so good and quick, I just had to tell you about it.

Basically I put about 1-2 tbsp of olive oil in my pan and gently sauted the onion, garlic and zucchini. When it looked like it might brown I added about 1/4 cup of vegetable stock and covered the pan. After a few minutes when the vegetables were soft I added cracked black pepper. Removing the lid I let the liquid cook down until almost all gone, to develop the flavours.
Meanwhile I had put the pasta on to cook. When it was done I added about 1/2 cup of the well salted pasta water to the vegetables then poured in the well drained pasta.
Next came a good tbsp of butter and about 1/4 cup of grated parmasan.
Serve immediately with extra parmasan and cracked black pepper.

Simple, non? Let's face it, slip a knob of butter into anything and it's going to be good; (now all I can think about are all the things that a knob of butter wouldn't work with, like a cup of coffee, but you know what I mean).

As Jacques Pepin would say....'appy cooking!

Monday 3 December 2012

Christmas Stollen

Image taken from MarthaStweart.com



 Monday's I usually post something breakfast related, but if you are German and it's Christmas you will probably have Stollen on your breakfast table. I'm posting it today because yesterday was the first Sunday of Advent and we have a little tradition where we always have Stollen that first day with our afternoon tea as we light the first candle on our wreath.
Typically I make Stollen, but I thought it might be pushing my luck to ask the tin can's oven to perform such a feat, seeing as it's incapable of browning anything. The first time I made it was under the careful tutoring of Martha Stewart and her mother and it's the recipe I have used ever since. So here it is for you;


Mrs Kostyra's Stollen Wreath Bread taken directly from MathaStewart.com


  • 1 cup currants
  • 1/4 cup cognac
  • 1 1/4 cups golden raisins
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 5 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • 6 tablespoons sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground mace
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1 cup milk
  • 10 tablespoons unsalted butter, plus 3 tablespoons, melted
  • 1/4 cup warm water (about 110 degrees)
  • 2 packages active dry yeast (5 teaspoons)
  • 3 large eggs, lightly beaten
  • Grated zest of 2 oranges
  • Grated zest of 1 lemon
  • 3/4 cup chopped citron
  • 1/4 cup chopped dried apricots
  • 1 1/4 cups blanched almonds, coarsely chopped
  • Confectioners' sugar, for dusting
 Directions
  1. In two separate bowls, soak currants in cognac and golden raisins in orange juice; set aside. In a large bowl, sift together flour, sugar, salt, mace, and nutmeg; set aside. In a small saucepan, combine 1 cup milk and 10 tablespoons butter over medium-low heat until butter is melted. Let stand until lukewarm, about 5 minutes.
  2. Pour 1/4 cup warm water into a small bowl; sprinkle with yeast, and let stand 2 to 3 minutes. Stir to dissolve yeast completely. Add the dissolved yeast, warm milk mixture, and eggs to the flour mixture. Turn the dough out onto a floured work surface, and knead until fairly smooth. Transfer dough to a large bowl.
  3. Add currants and raisins in their liquid, orange zest, lemon zest, citron, apricots, and almonds, and then work them into the dough with your hands. Transfer dough to work surface, and knead for about 10 minutes. If the dough is sticky, knead in more flour, but be careful not to overwork.
  4. Butter a large bowl with 1 tablespoon melted butter. Place the dough in the bowl, turning to coat. Cover with a kitchen towel, and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours.
  5. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Punch dough down, roll into a rectangle about 16 by 24 inches and 1/4 inch thick. Starting with a long side, roll up tightly, forming a long, thin cylinder. Carefully transfer dough to a Silpat- or parchment-lined baking sheet; join ends together, pinching with fingers if necessary to make it stick, forming a large circle.
  6. Using sharp kitchen scissors, make cuts along outside of circle, in 2-inch intervals, cutting 2/3 of the way through the dough. Twist each segment outward, forming a wreath shape with all the segments overlapping.
  7. Cover dough with a clean kitchen towel; set aside to rise for 30 minutes. Dough will rise only a little bit. Brush dough with remaining 2 tablespoons melted butter. Bake until golden brown and crusty, about 45 minutes, rotating halfway through. Place baking sheet on a wire rack to cool. Dust with confectioners' sugar before serving.
This makes one very large wreath, I usually divide the dough in two and sometimes make two smaller wreaths or sometimes two loaves. One gets eaten over the lead up to Christmas and one gets well wrapped and frozen for another time (okay we eat both within a few weeks of each other, but that's just how good it is!)

Suffering our way through a shop bought stollen.
What's that? A second third slice, oh go on then!



Friday 30 November 2012

Quick Baked Beans and Grilled Cheese with tomato chilli relish



Managed not to set off any alarms today, although did run out of gas half way through cooking! A quick switch-a-roo of the tanks and we were back on track. Sometimes I get into a lunch rut where we alternate between salad and left overs so I thought I had better earn my keep and feed my hungry boys something different. I had two cans of white kidney beans in the pantry and despite Elliot's chilly relationship with pulses, home baked beans seem to get a thumbs up. I'm making my way through the Australian Woman's Weekly cookbook at the moment and this is a mix of two recipes. The beans they served with parmasan polenta and the relish is from a lentil and bean burger dish. I had made the relish a week ago when I whipped up some chickpea burgers and thought it would go well with the grilled cheese. I was right!

Recipe

Quick Baked Beans and Grilled Cheese with tomato chilli relish
adapted from Australian Woman's Weekly
serves 4

For the beans
1 tbsp olive oil
1 large brown onion, finely chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 cans white kidney beans, drained and rinsed
1 can crushed tomatoes
2 tsp dark brown sugar (optional)
1 cup vegetable stock

For the relish
2 medium tomatoes, chopped coarsley
1 small onion, chopped finely
1 clove garlic crushed
1/3 cup sweet chilli sauce
2 tablespoons malt vinegar

8 slices bread of your choosing
sharp cheddar or similar cheese (enough to cover 4 slices of bread)
2 tbsp butter

Preheat oven to 400F (200C).
In an ovenproof pot, heat the oil and gently cook the onion and garlic, stirring until onion softens. Add beans, tomatoes,sugar and stock; bring to a boil. Cook, uncovered, in oven about 40 minutes or until sauce thickens.

Make the relish by cooking the tomatoes, onion and garlic in a small saucepan for about 10 minutes over medium heat or until tomato has softened. Add sauce and vinegar; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally, about 10 minutes or until relish thickens. Cool 15 minutes.

Once beans and relish are cooked, heat 1/2 tbsp of butter in a pan. Spread one slice of bread with relish and place, relish side up in pan, top with cheese and place second slice of bread on top. Cook gently, 7-8 minutes or until underside is golden brown and cheese is starting to melt. Flip the sandwich over and cook the other side until it too is golden. Repeat with the remaining slices of bread.

Serve grilled cheese with beans on the side.

Have a great weekend and don't forget to check your advent calendars Saturday morning, a month of chocolate, oh how I love December!

Thursday 29 November 2012

Adam Sandler, Martha Stewart and plans beyond the tin can's capabilities

 image from Martha Stewart


That picture up there, with the perfect pie, that was going to be a picture of my perfect pie's, not Martha's. I promised the good, bad and ugly so here goes. It's a bit long winded and there's a tangent in there too, so bear with me!

Okay so earlier this week I made cookies, no big deal I make them a lot. I have my go to recipe, a chocolate chip oatmeal that over the years I have stripped of fat and sugar and made sufficiently healthy. This week though I felt we had had a bit of an oat overload in our diet and searched the web for an alternative. Many recipes came up with roughly the same ratio's of fat to sugar and I thought just this once (okay twice if we count the flapjacks) we would have the real thing in all it's high fat, high sugar glory. So I got as far as creaming the half cup of butter and the one cup of brown sugar and one cup of white sugar when I realized I couldn't do it. Now, I have this crazy thing where I think that if I just sub in one healthy thing, it will somehow void all the unhealthy stuff. So I put away the white flour and turned to my trusty whole wheat and for good measure threw in a few tablespoons of ground flax too. (See what I mean, like ground flax and undo all that butter and sugar, but it makes me feel better so there.) This however turned the mixture from light drop cookies to firm cookie dough, again, no big deal. I rolled it up into two long sausages and popped them in the freezer planning to bake some later and have the rest ready when needed.

So the pie's up there in the picture, well I've had a craving for meringue lately and the above pictured recipe came to mind. It was published a long time ago and I had only made it once before but it was delicious. Thinking myself so smart and such a culinary genius I had an ah ha moment. Why not make the bases from the cookie dough instead of pastry. Want to see how that turned out?



Yeh, well, turns out I'm not a culinary genius. It was actually a good thing as the truth is the meringue would have been a disaster too as I don't have a broiler. Honestly, I don't know what I was thinking.

Where does Adam Sandler come into all this? Well to cap my day of kitchen hopelessness off, I made 'The Worlds Greatest Sandwich', introduced to us by Adam Sandlers character in the movie Spanglish. Turns out you can't cook bacon in an rv without smoking out the whole family and setting off the alarm. The world's greatest sandwich rapidly turned into the totally not worth it sandwich (not really) as I ran between the alarm armed with a tea towell  which I flapped desperately at the ceiling, the stove top where the bacon was causing all kinds of trouble, while trying to pry two bread rolls apart that had morphed into one between baking and freezing.

So what does one do when your kitchen turns against you. You call in the Doctor.




At least pudding was good:)


Recipe

The World's Greatest Sandwich  from the movie Spanglish







Wednesday 28 November 2012

Goat Cheese and Chickpea Couscous




Being two meat eaters and a vegetarian, we alternate our days so I'm not making two meals every night. Last night was veggie night and I had a real craving for chickpeas, food enemy number one for my son, he hates those round nuggets! Making matters worse was my addition of walnuts and goat cheese, another two items on his hit list! All in all a terrible food night for the poor boy, only made better by the promise of Pork En Croute tomorrow, one of his favourite meals. Actually, he ate the whole thing up and begrudgingly admitting that it wasn't terrible, high praise indeed!

I love chickpeas, not only is this wonderful pulse versatile but it's nutritional content packs an all round health promoting punch. Chickpeas are high fiber and low glycemic, so great if you're on a diet as they will keep you satisfied for longer. They are also a fat free source of protein as well as being high in calcium (almost like for like with milk). But wait that's not all, chickpeas are also known to help lower bad cholesterol and reduce the risk of heart disease. Other nutrients include iron, manganese, potassium and molydenum a needed mineral for those sensitive to sulfites. Yummy and nutritious, yay chickpeas!

Recipe

Goat Cheese and Chickpea Couscous
serves 4

2/3 cup couscous
1 cup water
1/4 tsp salt
1 tbsp olive oil or butter
zest of 1 lemon
2 tbsp of freshly chopped parsley
1 can chickpeas, drained and rinsed
1 pkg soft goat cheese
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/4 cup pitted and chopped kalamata olives (or favourite olive of your choice)
salt and pepper
1 tbsp chopped mint

In a small saucepan bring water, salt and oil or butter to a boil. Pour in the couscous, remove from heat. Cover the pan with a lid and allow to sit for 5 minutes. Fluff with a fork. Stir in the lemon zest and parsley.

Meanwhile place a small pan over low heat and add chickpeas, walnuts and olives and stir just until warmed through. Season to taste and off the heat stir in the mint and crumbled goat cheese.

Divide the couscous between plates and top with the chickpea mixture. Eat immediately.

This is a light supper or for a lunch on the go either pack in a transportable container or use as a filling for a wholewheat wrap.

Tuesday 27 November 2012

Simple soup


 It's beautiful here at the moment, we've had a nice run of sunny days, but boy is it cold in the evening. You'll find me permanently positioned next to our little table top electric heater once the sun starts sinking (shhh, don't tell the boys I'm hogging all the heat!). The only thing to do when cold seeps in down to your bones of course is make soup and this recipe is from Australian Women"s Weekly Vegetarian Cook Book. It's nothing fancy, just a basic minestrone, but it hit the spot last night.

Recipe

Minestrone from The Australian Women's Weekly Vegie Food Cookbook
serves 6

2 tsp olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped finely
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 trimmed celery stalk, chopped coarsely
1 large carrot, chopped coarsely
4 cups (1 litre) vegetable stock
1 cup (250ml) water
1 28fl oz can crushed tomatoes
1 medium zucchini, chopped coarsely
2 cups finely shredded cabbage
150g small shell pasta
14 fl oz can white beans, rinsed, drained
1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh flat leaf parsely
3/4 cup shaved parmesan

Heat oil in a large saucepan; cook onion and garlic, stirring, until onion softens. Add celery and carrot; cook stirring, 5 minutes.
Stir in stock, the water and undrained tomatoes; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer, covered, about 20 minutes or until veggies are tender.
Add zucchini, cabbage, pasta and beans; cook uncovered, about 15 minutes, or until pasta is tender. Stir in parsely.
Serve soup topped with cheese.

Try and get a really good quality strong parmesan, it takes the soup from' meh, I'm a pretty basic veg and pasta soup' to a veg and pasta soup that's smoky, gritty, nutty and fruity. Of course I could be talking about myself there! Did you know that they test parmesan by having a master grader go round and tap the cheese wheels with a hammer while listening to the sounds created. The master grader or Consorzio, can tell from this if the cheese has undesirable cracks or voids inside. He would then mark the rinds with crosses or lines to signify a lesser quality cheese. Nowadays, they leave  any markings off the rind if it's of a lower quality. So when buying parmesan make such you can see the name of the maker on the rind.

Hope you're staying warm in your part of the world.

Monday 26 November 2012

Be a softy!



Let's face it dipping your soldiers into a hard boiled egg is no fun. Who doesn't love pretending a volcano is erupting on your plate after all. But the most important reason for being a softy is lecithin. Lecithin is a wonderful nutrient found in all living cells. It is a phospholipid, so a fat essentially, but a darn good one!. You remember when eggs were public enemy number one because of the whole cholerteral thing? Well the funny thing about that is that lecithin, although a fat, actually helps prevent fats in the body from accumulating and reduces cholesteral. So it helps break down fats, but what else can it do? you ask. Well it helps brain cells develop and aids in memory retention. Did you know that your brain is comprised of about 1/3 lecithin. Seriously this stuff is in every part of you. Lecithin is also known to help with hyperactivity and depression as it forms part of a protective coating, essentially, that surrounds and insulates nerve fibers, this is also of benefit for those with insomnia. Our bodies do produce lecithin but not enough for the hard lives we live. As with most things if you have a good whole foods diet, you are probably getting enough. The humble egg being one of your sources. However if you scramble, fry or bake those yolks hard, you are losing out. Lecithin, although an incredible nutrient, can't handle the heat and you destroy all that goodness when you cook those yolks. Soft boiling or poaching are your best options.

 So line up your soldiers and be a softy.

Friday 23 November 2012

Tilapia with charred jalapeno salsa verde





There is a road we drive towards downtown Victoria which looks out over the ocean to Washington State and the Olympus Mountains. Most days it is shrouded in cloud but today it was clear and unbelievably breath taking. The mountains are capped in snow and the clouds formed a soft bed at their base. The enormous size of this mountain range across the water is incredible to see in all it's glory. What a day to have left your camera at home! British Columbia proudly calls itself the most beautiful place on earth and I would have to agree based on what I've seen so far. You can't turn your head here without seeing something stunning. Next time I will remember my camera and share some of this scenery with you. For now you will have to put up with my terribly lit and styled photography of dinner.

I tore this recipe out of Canadian House and Home magazine many years ago, because it's a keeper as we say here. A recipe that's versatile and yummy. The salsa verde is served on fish but you could use it with pasta, in an omelet, with chicken or as a side or dip. It's slightly spicy and oh so flavourful.

Recipe

Tilapia with charred jalepeno salsa verde
serves 4

2 fresh jalepeno peppers
1 cup packed coarsely chopped fresh parsley
5 anchovy fillets
2 cloves garlic, minced
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tbsp white wine vinegar
2 tbsp plus 2 tsp drained capers
2 green onions, chopped
4 tilapia fillets (or similar white fish of your choice)
salt and pepper
1/3 cup toasted sliced almonds

To char peppers, place them on a burner grate directly over a gas flame. Cook, turning often as sides blacken, for 5 minutes or until charred all over. (Alternatively, place on baking sheet and broil until blackened.) Let cool slightly. Holding peppers under cool running water, use side of a spoon to scrape away peel; discard peel. Halve, seed, and finely dice. Set aside.



In food processor, blend parsley, anchovies, garlic, oil and vinegar until smooth. Add roasted peppers, 2 tbsp capers and half the chopped green onion; pulse briefly to mix in.

Place fish fillets in a single layer on a greased or parchment-lined baking sheet . Season with salt and pepper. Divide parsley mixture among fillets. Spread over top and sides.

Roast in a preheated 450F (230C) oven for about 10 minutes or until fish is opaque and flakes easily when tested with a fork. Garnish with remaining green onion, 2 tsp capers and almonds.

I hope your weekend is filled with breathtaking moments, (except yours Mummy and Pappi, I hope yours runs perfectly smoothly. Good luck with the move today.)
Have a great weekend everybody.


Thursday 22 November 2012

Apple, Cider and Spice Cake




There is a high end supermarket in England called Waitrose and my dad used to collect their free recipe cards whenever he shopped there and send them to me. Despite the fact I often couldn't find the ingredients they stated as some of them were particularly British, I loved getting them and trying them out with what I could find. My all time favourite was this apple cake, no-where near as good as my mum's, but a fail safe, quick bake when we need something sweet.

I have played with the recipe a bit and substituted oil for the butter and reduced the amount of sugar. I never use the whole amount of sugar called for in cakes and the oil is just because I didn't have any butter. I'll include the real ingredients in brackets and then you can decide. If you don't have self raising flour here's a quick chart to help you make your own no matter what you're baking.

For every cup (8oz) of plain flour, use;
1 level tbsp baking powder for scones (or similar type of baking)
2 level tsp baking powder for a plain cake mixture
1 level tsp for a rich fruit cake mixture

Recipe

Apple, Cider and Spice Cake adapted from Waitrose

1/4 cup cider
1/4 cup vegetable oil ( or 1/4 cup butter)
1/2 cup dark muscovado sugar ( or 3/4 cup dark muscovado sugar)
2 eggs (beaten)
1 cup self-raising flour, sifted
1/2 tsp mixed spice
1/2 tsp cinnamon
3 medium sized Braeburn (or similar) apples
3 tbsp apricot jam

Preheat your oven to 325F (170C).
Grease and line an 8" round cake tin with baking parchment. Peel, core and chop two of the apples into 1/4" cubes. Cook over a low heat with the cider until slightly soft and the cider has been absorbed.

Blend the oil and sugar, then add the eggs and mix well. Fold in the flour, mixed spice, cinnamon and softened apples.

Put the mixture in the prepared tin. Peel core and thinly slice the remaining apple and arrange in a spiral over the top of the cake.

Bake for approximately 1 hour. If the apples brown too quickly, cover the tin loosely with foil and continue to cook until a skewer, inserted into the center of the cake, comes out clean.

Leave the cake to cool in the tin for fifteen minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack. When the cake has cooled brush the whole cake with hot apricot jam.

Using a good cider really makes this cake more than just another apple cake and by cider, my North American friends, I mean the alcoholic kind, not the fresh pressed from the farm kind. However, I don't always have cider to hand when I feel like making this and often sub in apple juice and at a pinch have also just used a splash of water to cook the apples. It's still a good cake without the cider, but better with. I also don't always glaze the cake with the jam as apricot jam is not a staple in our home, so that's optional too. Again, better with, but I would rather eat cake than not because I don't have the ingredients to hand.


Wednesday 21 November 2012

The Clean Team






If you cook, you clean and sometimes the things you need to clean can be a bit burnt on and stubborn no matter how careful you are. I just pulled my head from inside my stove where some cheese from tonight's pizza (homemade and perfect, unlike the last pizza!) had escaped it's confines and deposited itself on the oven floor. This little combo above can clean like nothing else I've ever tried. It's all earth friendly and inexpensive to boot! I don't claim to have come up with this miracle but have been using it for years on so many things and it has never failed me. I wish I could remember where I first heard about it so I can give credit where credit is due, but to whomever shared this, I want you to know I am eternally grateful.

It's a simple paste of baking soda, washing soda and washing up liquid. The little baggie contains coarse salt which you can add if you need a bit of an abrasive to tackle the really hard problems. You can also leave the paste on a stubborn stain for 10 minutes or so and let it do the hard work instead of wasting your precious elbow grease! Simply wipe off after that time and sit back and relax ;)

There was a recipe for how much of each you should use, but I've long since just thrown it all together willy nilly. A bit of this, a bit of that and voila. I guess I mix about equal parts baking soda and washing soda and just enough washing up liquid to form a paste.

This cleaning solution faced it's ultimate match after we had been on the road for about 3 months and finally decided the insect massacre that was the front of our RV really needed dealing with. Baked on high impact bug guts are a real challenge but my friends above made short order of turning our rig from gruesome to awesome.

As with all new products to your cleaning regime, test first on an inconspicuous area to make sure your surface doesn't get damaged. I have never had a problem, but you never know.
I hope this helps you all and cuts down on cleaning time so you can spend more time on you :)

Tuesday 20 November 2012

Erbsensuppe




Dinner last night was a craving that just needed to be mollified. The funny thing is I hated Erbsensuppe or Pea soup growing up. To me it was a big vat of insipid grey green mush with a couple of hairy pigs feet with all their knarly hoofiness adding to the vomit like substance. Hungry yet? Funny how our childish imaginations can turn something so benign into something only Hans Christian Anderson could dream up. Now however Erbsensuppe tastes like home and one spoonful brings back such wonderful memories of growing up in Germany. Sadly it still lacks something in the looks department but those pigs feet where in fact ham hock and gave the soup it's earthy smokiness.

This recipe is from Luisa Weiss a fellow part time German who now calls Berlin her home. Her book 'My Berlin Kitchen' is full of fantastic recipes from the mother land and I spent a wonderful two days being transported back to my childhood in Hamburg reading it. She calls it a love story with recipes and you don't have to have lived in Germany to appreciate her story or the food. You can also follow Luisa on her blog The Wednesday Chef


Recipe

Erbsensuppe (German Pea Soup)  from My Berlin Kitchen by Luisa Weiss
serves 4

3 tbsp olive oil
1 medium yellow onion, minced
1/3 cup minced Speck or lean bacon
1 leek, white and pale green part only, cut in half lengthwise, well rinsed, and then sliced into half-moons
1 medium carrot, diced
1/2 small celery root, diced
1 tbsp fresh marjoram, minced
salt
1 1/2 cups dried split green or yellow peas
5 to 6 cups chicken or vegetable broth
3 medium Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and diced
freshly ground black pepper
4 Wiener Wurstchen or hot dogs

Heat the olive oil in a 4-quart pot. Add the minced onion and bacon. Cook over medium-high heat for about 5 minutes; then add the sliced leek and stir well. Cook for another 7 minutes. Add the carrot and celery root and stir well. Cook for a few minutes. Add the minced marjoram and a pinch of salt, stir well.

Pour in the dried peas and the broth. Stir well and cover. Bring to a boil and then lower the heat to a simmer. Cook for 20 minutes.
Add the diced potatoes and stir well. Cook for another 20 minutes. Taste for salt and add freshly ground black pepper to taste.

Cut the Wurstchen or hot dogs into bite-sized rounds and add to the pot. Warm through (don't let the soup boil once you add the Wurstchen) and serve immediately.

For those not on the meat ladder, you can make this without the bacon and sausage, but as much as I hated those scary 'pigs feet' growing up, they really made the soup, the Wurstchen or hot dogs are a little more friendly and easier to deal with though. It's still a good soup vegetarian style, but sadly not the same.

Guten Appetit!

Monday 19 November 2012

Windy Weather





It's windy here, crazy rocking our little tin can windy. Gale force mother nature is roaring off the ocean and throwing herself at us and to tell you the truth, it's a little bit scary. My neighbour is out in full hazard gear battening down the hatches and I'm just holding on tight to my cup of tea. Granted it's nothing like the terrible storm that hit the east coast a few weeks back, but it sure is an odd feeling to have your home move about while you're sitting in it!

Wild winter weather calls for a good warming breakfast. Today's is a bit of a mash up. I saw a recipe for a breakfast smoothie and not being much of a smoothie drinker, plus not having a blender, it prompted me to turn the idea into a tasty hot porridge. This is a plan ahead breakfast as it needs to soak overnight, a perfect distraction when you're not sure your home is going to be where you left it when you wake up in the morning!

Recipe

Ginger and Cinnamon Oats 
serves 4

1 -2 pears, apples or favourite fruit of your choice ( berries would also work)
1 cup milk
1 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 tbsp syrup (maple, honey, agave etc)
2 tbsp nut butter (almond, peanut, cashew etc)
1 tsp freshly grated ginger
1/8 tsp ground cinnamon

1 cup old fashioned rolled oats (not instant)

Peel and core the pear. Chop into small pieces and put in a blender with the milk, buttermilk, syrup, nut butter, ginger and cinnamon. Blend until well combined and the fruit is well pureed.
Pour into a large container and stir in the oats. Cover and refrigerate for 8 hours or overnight.
When ready to use, stir in any extra milk if needed and heat gently until the oats are tender.
Serve with extra syrup and cinnamon if desired.


If, like me, you don't have a blender and your mini mixer can't handle all of the above. Blend the fruit, milk and nut butter until smooth,  then transfer to your container and stir in the rest. If you don't have any machine to speak of, you can always lightly steam or cook,with a splash of juice or water, the fruit first to soften it, then mash it into the rest of the ingredients in your container. Of course you don't have to soak the oats overnight if you don't want to and you can blend it all together in the morning instead before cooking. Soaking your oats is better though so do try. Why? Well oats contain something called phytic acid which inhibits the absorption of key minerals such as iron contained in the oats. Soaking helps to break down the phytic acid. There is a bit of a twist here where dairy is not the best liquid to use, as calcium can slow down the rate at which the phytic acid is broken down. For maximum phytic acid breakdown use water, but soaking in dairy is better than not soaking at all.

Friday 16 November 2012

Baker's Remorse



 I'm deeply embarrassed by this. In my defense, my heritage is partly to blame. The English side of me is all, Treacle Tart and Jam Rolly Poly, Yorkshire Puddings and battered fish. The German side is cake and more cake followed by bread and lot's of cheese. To cap it all off I fell out of our enormous truck and smacked my right knee hard on the way down, followed by whacking my left knee even harder on the 'kitchen' table yesterday morning. Now I'm not claiming my brain is located in either knee cap, but let's all just agree that it must have had some affect on my decision making.

I hate Rice Crispy Squares. To me they are the most useless treat to make. There is nothing in them that can justify a moment of pleasure from eating something from the 'naughty list'. Yet last night I found myself melting a huge quantity of butter with sugar AND maple syrup and stirring in a bucket load of oats for what is quite possibly the British equivalent of the Rice Krispy square. Flapjacks. Even as I was unwrapping the butter my mind was screaming at me; WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING? PUT THE BUTTER DOWN AND REACH FOR THE YOGHURT, THAT'S ALL YOU NEED TONIGHT! However my body kept going and make flapjacks I did, and I don't even like flapjacks. Knee trauma, it's a serious thing people.

Recipe

Flapjacks (the British kind!) makes 16 squares

300g butter
75g dark brown sugar
6 tablespoons golden syrup (or if you don't have that and you really should try and get it for genuine British    flapjacks, use maple or agave instead.)
200g rolled oats
250g instant oats

Preheat oven to 350F (180C). Line a large 8"x12" or bigger baking pan with parchment paper.

In a large saucepan over medium heat, gently melt the butter. Stir in the sugar and syrup until well blended. 
Measure out your oats and add to the melted butter mixture mixing well to cover all the oats in the syrup. 
Spread in your prepared baking pan and press down with the bottom of a measuring cup until firmly compacted.
Bake in the preheated oven until golden, about 20 -25 minutes. Let cool slightly then cut into 16 squares in pan. Leave to cool completely before removing from pan.

So I'm sorry. I'm sorry these will require you to dig out your elasticated pants and walk an extra block to work every morning for at least a week or two, but I can't undo what happened. They have been made and they must be eaten in all their rich chewy yumminess. Next week we will be healthy I promise.

Have a great weekend:)

Thursday 15 November 2012

Burger Buns


Image from Smitten Kitchen


I know, I know, but sometimes making things yourself is just necessary. Pre Tin Can, I had room in the freezer for all those left over buns, now they just go bad. A pack of 8 might work for a family of 4 carnivores but our little pack of two, just can't eat that many burgers. Sure we could use them for sandwiches or something, but come on, you know those buns just aren't right for that kind of thing.

This recipe comes from Smitten Kitchen who got it from the New York Times  who got it from Comme Ça restaurant in Los Angeles. With that long a pass it on list you know these buns will be good and indeed they are. Not only that, they're a cinch to make. The best thing about these buns is that they are light yet rich with that wonderful taste and texture you get from making an egg bread. I would eat these for breakfast with a thick layer of good English marmalade or dipped in a bowl of creamy tomato soup. They work well no matter how you use them, but your burger will shine between these golden buns!

Recipe

Light Brioche Burger Buns Adapted from Smitten Kitchen

Makes 8 4 to 5-inch burger buns

3 tablespoons warm milk
2 teaspoons active dry yeast
2 1/2 tablespoons sugar
2 large eggs
3 cups bread flour
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
2 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
Sesame seeds (optional)


1. In a glass measuring cup, combine one cup warm water, the milk, yeast and sugar. Let stand until foamy, about five minutes. Meanwhile, beat one egg.

2. In a large bowl, whisk flours with salt. Add butter and rub into flour between your fingers, making crumbs. Using a dough scraper, stir in yeast mixture and beaten egg until a dough forms. Scrape dough onto clean, well-floured counter and knead, scooping dough up, slapping it on counter and turning it, until smooth and elastic, 8 to 10 minutes. The dough will be on the sticky side so it can be a bit messy, but keep in mind that the more flour you knead in, the tougher the buns will get. Try to leave them tackier than you would a round loaf.

3. Shape dough into a ball and return it to bowl. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, one to two hours. (In my freaky, warm apartment this only took an hour.)

4. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Using dough scraper, divide dough into 8 equal parts. Gently roll each into a ball and arrange two to three inches apart on baking sheet. Cover loosely with a piece of plastic wrap lightly coated in nonstick spray and let buns rise in a warm place for one to two hours. (Again, this only took one hour in my apartment and I suspect, you’ll also only need an hour for a second rise.)

5. Set a large shallow pan of water on oven floor. Preheat oven to 400 degrees with rack in center. Beat remaining egg with one tablespoon water and brush some on top of buns. Sprinkle with sesame seeds, if using. Bake, turning sheet halfway through baking, until tops are golden brown, about 15 minutes. Transfer to a rack to cool completely.


I'm pretty sure it's the pan of water on the oven floor that makes these buns so light so don't forget that step. I've also used this basic recipe to make a loaf of bread too, adding a few seeds and swapping in some whole grain flour. These buns are so much better than anything you'll find at the store, I promise.