The 5-2 Challenge. How Apt. Screening in Australia. On My Fast Day. Michael Mosley’s Documentary. Eat, Fast and Live Longer.

Eat Fast Live Longer

For my Australian followers who may be curious about the 5-2 Challenge that I have been blogging about.  Michael Mosley’s excellent documentary Eat, Fast and Live Longer will be screening on SBS One at 8.30 pm this  Monday night, 22nd April.

Here is how SBS describes this documentary in its program guide.

Michael Mosley has set himself a truly ambitious goal: he wants to live longer, stay younger and lose weight.  And he thinks he’s found the answer – the ancient idea of fasting. Could the powerful new science behind this idea lead to a longer, healthier life? Mosley thinks he’s found a way of fasting that still allows him to enjoy his food. It sounds too good to be true. So he decides to take a road trip across the US to investigate how a little hunger can make you younger, and of course, to try out some of this new science for himself. 

How apt. Monday happens to be one  of my weekly fast days. I know I’ll be watching this with interest on the large screen. A very welcome distraction from thinking about what I might be eating the next day. Given that I now have over a month of my personal 5-2 Challenge under my belt I wonder if I will be watching with a different perspective? I’m hoping to absorb from this screening just  a little more information to enhance my personal journey.

Posted in Musings & Inspiration | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Weekend Feasting. A Classic Italian Dessert.Tiramisu.

TiramisuSlice

Tiramisu. An Italian dessert. Literal translation? Pick me up. This layered dessert of coffee and liqueur soaked savoiardi biscuits and mascarpone cream is certainly guaranteed to do just that. It’s a perennial favourite in our house. Often requested and so simple to prepare.  No cooking required. A little whipping and folding of the mascarpone cream. Followed by some dipping and layering of sponge fingers. Assembled it is left to work its magic in the refrigerator. Overnight. It is rumoured to be one of the very first desserts that Italian children are taught to make. I can definitely believe that.

In our house we follow a very traditional Tiramisu recipe.  Luscious and light and very moreish. The perfect dish for a little weekend feasting.

Tiramisu

2 cups strong black coffee
1/2 cup liqueur; marsala, dark rum or kahlua
3 eggs, separated
1/3 cup caster sugar
250g mascarpone
300 ml thickened cream, lightly whipped
1 large packet of sponge fingers (savoiardi)
cocoa or grated chocolate, for dusting

POUR coffee and liqueur into a shallow dish. Set aside.
BEAT egg yolks and sugar in a large bowl with electric beaters until pale and thick. Add the mascarpone and whipped cream, mixing gently until just combined.
BEAT egg whites in a medium bowl with electric beaters until soft peaks form. Using a large metal spoon, gently fold e egg whites into the mascarpone mixture.
DIP enough biscuits into the coffee mixture to cover the base of a 20cm square ceramic dish. Cover the biscuits with one-third of the mascarpone mixture. Repeat layers 2 times, ending with the cream.
COVER with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 8 hours, preferably overnight.
DUST generously with cocoa or a generous grating of dark, bitter chocolate and serve.

Posted in Chocolate, Sweet Treats, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The 5-2 Challenge. In the Groove. Stir-Fried Chicken, Vegetable and Herb Lettuce Cups.

ChickenandLettuceCups

The key to a successful fast day? Healthy meals that pack a flavour punch. After completing a month on the 5-2 Challenge I’m finally in the groove. Recipes that work best? Low on fat and carbohydrate. Jam-packed with vegetables, herbs and spices. The perfect plate? Vibrant and colourful. Full of flavour.

Today’s offering? Stir-fried chicken with vegetables and herbs served in lettuce cups. Inspired by the  Chinese San Choy Bow. Since immersing myself into the 5-2 mode of eating I have discovered chilli and ginger are natural appetite suppressants that help curb cravings for sweets and fatty foods. And there’s more.  Chillies contain a chemical called capsaicin which  not only makes them spicy but helps increase metabolic activity when ingested. My stir fry contains both ginger and chilli. Its full of flavour which helps me stay on track with my healthy eating.

For lunch I prepared a simple vegetable couscous with one of my new favourite ingredients. Harissa. A spicy Moroccan chilli paste. So divine I have been using it in everything. Even toasted sandwiches on my feast days. Craving a  hit this morning I whipped up an easy vegetable couscous using my last 5-2 Challenge post’s chicken couscous recipe as a guide.  I’m absolutely convinced having that small serving of couscous at lunch curbed any hunger pangs throughout the afternoon.

All in all my most successful fast day yet. It really is all about what I choose to put on my plate. I eat with my senses. If my meal looks good and tastes great I can do without large portions. I just savour and enjoy each bite.  That said I have promised my children Tiramisu for dessert tomorrow. Thank heaven for feast days.

Breakfast 2 cups of tea

1 small green apple

4

60

Lunch Vegetable Couscous

195

Mid Afternoon 2 cups of tea

4

Dinner 2 Stir-fried Chicken and Vegetable Lettuce Cups

215

2 cups of tea

4

Total Calories

482

Stir Fried Chicken,Vegetable and Herb Lettuce Cups

Serves 6

215 calories per serve

1 tablespoon peanut oil (120 calories)
2 garlic cloves, crushed (8 calories)
2 cm piece ginger, finely grated (3 calories)
1 long red chilli, finely sliced (4 calories)
4 long green spring onions, thinly sliced (20 calories)
3 celery stalks, finely diced (18 calories)
2 red capsicums, diced (60 calories)
100 g green beans (30 calories)
200 g  baby spinach leaves shredded (23 calories)
100 g mushrooms, diced (22 calories)
2  medium carrots, shredded (50 calories)
500 g chicken breast, finely diced (825 calories)
2 tablespoons oyster sauce (18 calories)
1 tablespoon soy sauce (8 calories)
1 teaspoon sugar (16 calories)
1/2 lemon, juiced (2 calories)
1 cup bean sprouts, trimmed (24 calories)
2 tablespoons mint, finely chopped (2 calories)
2 tablespoons coriander, finely chopped (2 calories)
12 large iceberg or butter lettuce leaves (24 calories)

HEAT wok over high heat until hot. Add peanut oil and swirl to coat.
ADD garlic, ginger and chilli. Cook for one minute until fragrant.
ADD chicken and stir fry for 2 to 3 minutes or until chicken just changes colour.
ADD spring onions, celery, mushrooms, capsicum, spinach and carrot and stir fry for a further 2 minutes.
COMBINE sugar, lemon juice, oyster sauce and soy sauce in a bowl. Add to wok and Stir-fry for 3 minutes or until heated through.
STIR in bean sprouts, mint and coriander.
SPOON  stir fry into lettuce cups. Serve.

Posted in Poultry, Salads, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Mid Week Dinner. Italian Meatballs. Polpette Di Carne. With A Serving of Caponata on the Side.

Polpette

When I was growing up I loved Italian meatballs. In our house polpette were  just fried and eaten without any sauce or topping. Today I decided to treat my children to polpette for dinner. To make them just a little more special I inserted a small cube of fontina cheese into the middle of each meatball before flouring and frying.

What to serve with my polpette?  Tonight it’s Caponata. A gorgeously luscious and chunky Sicilian eggplant, capsicum and tomato relish. Wonderfully sweet and sour it complements my polpette beautifully.

Italian Meatballs.  Polpette  Di Carne.

Makes 12 – 15 medium sized polpette.

500 g not-too-lean minced veal, beef or pork
3/4 cup day-old Italian bread, crust removed,
1/4 cup milk
3/4 cup grated Grana Padano or Parmigiano Reggiano
1 large egg
1 small brown onion, finely chopped and fried until soft and translucent
1 clove of garlic, minced
1 red chilli, deseeded and minced
a small bunch of parsley, minced
sea salt  and freshly ground pepper to taste
75 g Fontina cheese, cubed
1/4 cup olive oil for frying
1/2 cup plain flour for dusting

Prepare the Polpette

SOAK the bread in enough milk so it is thoroughly wet through, 3-5 minutes. Drain it well, squeezing it gently to remove most of the milk — you want the crumbs moist but not dripping.
IN A LARGE bowl, combine mince with soaked bread, fried onion, garlic, chilli, parsley, egg, cheese, salt and pepper. Mix with a wooden spoon or with one hand for faster and better results.
USING wet hands roll heaped tablespoons of the mince mixture into balls. Use your thumb to make a large indent in each ball and push in a cube of  fontina cheese. Mould the meat around the cheese to enclose. Place polpette in the refrigerator  to firm a little for 30 minutes or so.

When ready to fry

HEAT oil in a large heavy based frypan.
DUST each polpette in flour, shaking off any excess.
WHEN oil is hot add polpette in batches being careful not to overcrowd the pan. Cook on medium heat, turning often, until they are browned on all sides and golden.
DRAIN on a paper towel and serve warm with a grating of parmesan cheese with your choice of sauce on the side.

Caponata

Caponata

2 tablespoons olive oil
3 anchovy fillets
2 large eggplants, chopped into chunks
1 heaped tablespoon chopped fresh oregano
2 red onions, peeled and chopped
2 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
2 red capsicums, roasted, deseeded, peeled and chopped into chunks.
1 small bunch fresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped, reserve a handful of picked leaves for presentation
2 tablespoons salted capers, rinsed, soaked and drained
4 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 – 2 teaspoons brown sugar, to balance the acidity
1 can peeled tomatoes, roughly chopped
¼ cup chicken or vegetable stock (optional)
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

POUR olive oil into a large heavy based pan. When the oil is hot melt the anchovy fillets for a few minutes until they disappear into the oil.
ADD the eggplant and oregano. Fry for about fifteen minutes until soft and golden, stirring often to avoid burning.
ADD onions and garlic and cook for a further ten minutes. Add a little chicken or vegetable stock to the pan if the mixture is getting a little dry.
ADD parsley and roasted capsicum. Stir well to combine.
MIX together the sugar, de-salted capers and vinegar. Pour over the vegetables and cook for another 1 or 2 minutes.
WHEN all the vinegar has evaporated, add the tomatoes and simmer for around 15 minutes or until tender.
TASTE before serving and season with sea salt, freshly ground pepper and a little more vinegar. Drizzle with some good olive oil and serve sprinkled with the reserved, picked parsley leaves.

Posted in Beef, Vegetables, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The 5-2 Challenge. A Hearty One Pot Dish. Chicken Couscous with Fresh Harissa, Roasted Capsicum and Green Beans.

chickencouscous

Another Monday. Another fast day. Made that little bit more interesting with school holidays and a full house. I wanted to do something with couscous for dinner tonight. Couscous is filling, hearty and very, very good for you. Whenever  I think of couscous, harissa also springs to mind. A fiery Moroccan spice paste made with chillies, garlic, spices and a little olive oil. It’s long been known that chillies can help suppress appetite and burn calories. To my mind this hearty one pot dish of Chicken Couscous with Fresh Harissa, Roasted Capsicum and Green Beans is a perfect 5-2 challenge meal.

Here is how my day panned out. I went for a long cliff side walk this morning, meandering from beach to beach and rewarded myself with a small freshly squeezed watermelon and pineapple juice. Successfully avoiding the lure of those cappuccinos. My rather late lunch was cobbled together from a few ingredients I was preparing for dinner. Fresh steamed beans and roasted capsicum with a little balsamic vinegar. The Chicken Couscous was the highlight of the day. Lifted by a  fresh and fiercely spicy  homemade harissa paste.

Breakfast 2 cups tea

4

10 am Watermelon and pineapple juice

75

Lunch Green bean and capsicum salad

50

Dinner Chicken Couscous

360

8 pm 2 cups tea

4

Total Calories

493

Chicken and Couscous with Fresh Harissa, Roasted Capsicum and Green Beans

Serves 5 (360 calories per serve)

1 tablespoon  olive oil (120 calories)
1 onion , thinly sliced (30 calories)
500 g chicken breasts, diced (825 calories)
good chunk fresh root ginger ( 3 calories)
1 tablespoon fresh harissa paste (65 calories), recipe follows
2 capsicums, roasted, deseeded, peeled and sliced (60 calories)
100g green beans, sliced (31 calories)
220 g cooked chickpeas , rinsed and drained (210 calories)
1 1/4 cups (200g) couscous (400 calories)
250 ml hot chicken stock (40 calories)
handful coriander , chopped, to serve (2 calories)
freshly squeezed juice of 1 lemon (2 calories)

HEAT olive oil in a large frying pan and cook the onion for 1-2 minutes  until just softened.
ADD chicken and saute for 7-10 mins until cooked through and the onions have turned golden.
GRATE over the ginger, stir through the harissa to coat everything and cook for 1 minute more.
ADD roasted capsicums, beans,chickpeas and couscous. Stir well to combine then pour over the stock and stir once.
REMOVE from heat.  Cover with a lid or tightly cover the pan with foil and leave for about 5 mins until the couscous has soaked up all the stock and is soft.
ADD freshly squeezed lemon juice. Fluff up the couscous with a fork and scatter over the coriander to serve.

Fresh Harissa Paste

Makes 2-3 tablespoons (approximately 65 calories per tablespoon)

4 long fresh red chillies (16 calories)
2 garlic cloves, crushed (8 calories)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground cumin (8 calories)
1 teaspoon ground coriander (8 calories)
1 tablespoon olive oil (120 calories)

HALVE chillies and finely chop.
COMBINE  chilli, garlic, salt, cumin, coriander, and olive oil in a mortar and use a pestle to pound until a smooth paste forms.

Posted in Poultry, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Pure Heaven. Passionfruit Melting Moments With a Roasted Coconut and Passionfruit Butter Cream.

passionfruitmeltingmomentsfloral

I haven’t made Melting Moments in years. Not since my daughters were in kindergarten and I made a lemon curd version. Packaged in cellophane and tied with pretty ribbon for a school fete. My word associations for these delectable treats? The  Country Women’s Association. The Royal Easter Show. Spring fetes and fair. High tea on a Sunday afternoon. Sadly Melting Moments are not readily available commercially. They’re more of a home baked treat.  If I ever do come across them, usually at a  country bakery, farmer’s market or very occasionally  a gourmet city delicatessen, I will always buy them. Delicate, sweet, buttery, rich, crumbly, melt in your mouth bursts of nothingness. Sandwiched with a fruity butter cream. Pure heaven.

Surprisingly, Melting Moments are not all that difficult to make. Cream butter and icing sugar with the flavouring of your choice. Stir in sifted flour and cornflour. Roll the mixture into tiny teaspoon sized balls. Arrange on  baking paper lined oven trays. Flatten with a fork and bake in a slow oven. When cool sandwich with your favourite filling. Any assortment of buttercreams, ganache or curd.

Passionfruit is in season at the moment. Tart and sweet with an exotically tropical aroma. A perfect partner for rich buttery melting moment biscuits. For good measure I used passionfruit in both the biscuit and buttercream filling. And threw in a little roasted coconut for crunch. These beauties were ready for a lazy Sunday afternoon tea. Fragrant. Light as air. Pure Heaven.

passionfruitmeltingmoments

Passionfruit Melting Moments With a Roasted Coconut and Passionfruit Butter Cream.

Makes 20 filled melting moments

For the Biscuits

250g butter, softened
4 passionfruit, pulp and juice
1/2 cup icing sugar, sifted
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 2/3 cups plain flour
3/4 cup corn flour

PREHEAT  oven to 150 C fan-forced and line two trays with baking paper.
IN A LARGE bowl, beat together butter, passionfruit pulp and juice, icing sugar and vanilla extract until light and creamy.
SIFT the flours together and add to the bowl in two batches. Stir with a wooden spoon  until the mixture is smooth.
FLOUR your hands as the dough is soft and sticky. Gently roll the mixture into balls and place them on the tray. I used a level teaspoon for each ball. Leave at least 3 cm between each ball. Use a floured fork to press down the top of each dough ball.
BAKE the biscuits for 15-20 minutes or until they start to turn golden. Rotate trays in the oven half way through.
LEAVE biscuits  to cool on the trays for 10 minutes and then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

For the Roasted Coconut and Passionfruit Butter Cream

75g unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups icing sugar
4 passionfruit;  pulp and juice
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1/4 cup fine coconut, lightly toasted

USE an electric mixer to beat the butter and icing sugar until light and fluffy.
ADD the passionfruit pulp and juice, lemon juice, toasted coconut and beat until well combined.
SPREAD a teaspoonful of  buttercream over the flat side of  half the biscuits and sandwich together with the remaining half.

Posted in Baked, Sweet Treats, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Annabel Langbein’s Crusty Flat Bread Recipe. Mashed Potato Dough.Three Ways. With Rosemary and Salt. Focaccia. Pizza.

AnnabelFlatbread

Last night marked the beginning of school holidays and I promised my children pizza for dinner. Baked at home. Originally I was going to make stone baked pizza on the barbecue but on a whim decided to try something a little different For years my Aunt has been raving about one of her favourite “pizza” dough recipes. Courtesy of one of her favourite cooks. Annabel Langbein. Previously I have also posted Annabel’s superb recipe for  Strawberry Cloud Cake. This airy and delectable iced confection was my Aunt’s very first recommendation. So I knew this would definitely be worth a try.

Annabel’s original recipe is actually for Crusty Flatbread. With a Rosemary and Sea Salt topping. With a secret and rather non conventional ingredient. A generous cup of mashed potato. I think the idea is to use leftover mashed potato. My Aunt tells me that if she doesn’t have  it on hand she substitutes a cup of mash made up with a packet of dehydrated mashed potato readily available from the supermarket. This substitution is quick and easy and works like a dream every time. Proving the point that here’s a time and place for everything.

For my first attempt at this recipe I went the original route. Making up a batch of  freshly mashed potatoes. I wanted to road test the recipe in it original form as flatbread, and also as focaccia and pizza, so I made up a double batch of dough. The addition of mashed potato makes the dough a little sticky but wonderfully soft and supple. The end result? A beautifully fluffy dough. Stretched out thinly it makes impossibly light and incredibly delicious flatbread.

AnnabelFoccacciaTomatoCheese

Patted out into a thicker round and studded with cherry tomatoes and fresh mozzarella. A gorgeous focaccia.

AnnabelPizza

Rolled out a little thinner than the focaccia round and topped with tomato, cheese, ham and sopressa. A wonderful pizza. Light and flavoursome with a substantial crust. This recipe is definitely a keeper. Here is the original flatbread recipe. Courtesy of Annabel Langbein. The Free Range Cook.

Annabel Langbein’s Crusty Flat Bread

Makes 2 loaves

Crusty flat bread dough

1½ cups warm (not hot) water
1½ teaspoons dry yeast granules
1 packed cup cooked mashed potato
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
4½ cups high-grade or baker’s flour, plus extra for kneading
2 teaspoon salt

Rosemary and Sea Salt Topping

1-2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 teaspoons fresh rosemary leaves
½ teaspoon sea salt

PLACE warm water in a large mixing bowl (a bread maker or electric mixer with a dough blade is ideal if you have one). Sprinkle yeast over the water and allow to stand for 2 minutes. Mix in the mashed potato and the ¼ cup olive oil. Stir in the flour and salt and mix until the dough just starts to come away from the sides of the bowl.

TURN the dough onto a lightly floured board and using lightly oiled hands knead about 30 times (or for 3-4 minutes on the dough 
cycle of a bread maker). Place the dough into a lightly oiled bowl. Cover with muslin or a tea towel and leave to rise in a warm place for 3-4 hours or until it has doubled in bulk. You can also leave it in the fridge, covered, to rise slowly overnight.

WHEN you’re ready to cook your bread, place a baking stone on the centre shelf of the oven and preheat oven to 220˚C. Turn the risen dough onto a lightly floured board, divide in half and shape each half into a ball. Roughly flatten one ball onto a tray lined with baking paper, pressing the dough out to an oval shape about 25 x 20cm. Use your fingertips to press dimples into the top of the loaf, then drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with rosemary and sea salt.

SLIDE the baking paper with the dough on it off the tray and onto the preheated baking stone. Bake for about 25 minutes until golden. When cooked the bread will sound hollow when you tap it. Remove from the oven and allow to cool on the baking stone for a few minutes, and then transfer to a rack to cool.

REPEAT with the other ball of dough. If you want to save the second ball of dough to use later, place it in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with 
a clean cloth and place in the fridge for up to 48 hours. It also freezes well. Thaw before pressing out and baking.

Posted in Pizza, Small Bites, To Serve with Drinks, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The 5-2 Challenge. Veering off Course. A Little. Pumpkin, Leek and Spinach Salad with Pine Nuts.

PumpkinSpinachSalad

This week marks the end of school term. Looking at my diary yesterday it became apparent that I would need to reschedule my week. Substitute Thursday for my usual Friday fast day. The beauty of the 5-2 challenge is that it is very adaptable to changing circumstances. Perfectly agreeable to a change of course. All it asks is that two non consecutive days of every week are dedicated to fasting and the consumption of a  restricted 500 calorie limit.  If only my subconscious was as accommodating.

My day started well with my customary cups of tea. My menu plan was sorted. The calories counted in advance. A trip to the greengrocer the previous day meant my larder was well stocked . My carefully constructed eating plan revolved around  gorgeous, small, in season Shephard avocados, and a salad of pumpkin, spinach and leek. I had even incorporated a small, protein hit. My butcher had obligingly sliced lean, beef round steak into thin  minute steaks. Ready to be flash seared  in a griddle pan. My family would have a more substantial meal. Steak sandwiches with a side of the salad. There were even some leftover caramelised onions in the fridge.

The spanner in the works? A back up in my after school carpooling arrangements, an unscheduled catch up with a girl friend mid afternoon  and no less than two extraneous skim milk cappuccinos. It’s not the first time my 5-2 resolve has been scuttled by a cappuccino. My obvious Achilles heel. I recall a previous post with a note to myself right there in the title. Avoid Cappuccinos. I will definitely have to  make a bigger effort to heed my own advice.

That said veering off course put me over my 500 calorie limit by a mere 75 calories. Not too bad in the scheme of things. My saving grace? A very tasty and filling Pumpkin,Leek and Spinach Salad.

Breakfast 2 cups of tea

4

Lunch 1 small avocado 75g pitted

125

3 pm 2 skim cappuccinos

140

Dinner Pumpkin, Leek and Spinach Salad

166

75 g lean grilled minute steak

140

Total Calories

575

Pumpkin, Leek and Spinach Salad with Pine Nuts

Serves 5 (166 calories per serve)

5 cups butternut pumpkin, deseeded, peeled, cut into wedges (150 calories)
1 leek, white part only, sliced (38 calories)
2 teaspoons olive oil (60 calories)
2 teaspoons honey (42 calories)
4 unpeeled garlic cloves  (16 calories)
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1 tablespoon honey, extra  (63 calories)
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil (240 calories)
2 teaspoon wholegrain mustard (10 calories)
1 x 150g packet baby spinach leaves (34 calories)
3 tablespoons toasted pine nuts  (174 calories)

PREHEAT oven to 200 C. Line a baking tray with non-stick baking paper.
PLACE the pumpkin, leek and garlic cloves in a large bowl. Drizzle with oil and honey. Season with sea salt and freshly ground pepper. Gently toss until the pumpkin and leek are well coated. Place in a single layer on the lined tray.
BAKE, turning once during cooking, for about 30 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from oven and sprinkle evenly with the sesame seeds. Return to oven and bake for 5 minutes or until the seeds are lightly toasted. Remove from oven and set aside for 30 minutes to cool.
COMBINE lemon juice, extra virgin olive oil, mustard, peeled oven roasted garlic and extra honey in a screw-top jar and shake until well combined. Season with sea salt and freshly ground pepper.
PLACE the pumpkin, spinach and pine nuts in a large bowl. Drizzle with the dressing and gently toss until just combined. Serve immediately.

Posted in Salads, Vegetarian, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Packing A Flavour Punch. My Pantry Essentials. Caramelised Onions.

caramelisedonions

Caramelised onions. Rich, sweet, buttery and soft. Their flavour intensified with  a hint of acid from the addition of red wine or balsamic vinegar. I could eat them by the spoonful. Fabulous on their own they also  pack an incredible  flavour punch to any meal.

Marry them with a sharp creamy goats cheese and crisp tart shell for an elegant hors d’oeuvre.  Or pile them onto bruschetta for a more robust and rustic starter. Other ideas? A delicious relish for sandwiches. An addition to a  winter salad. A topping for pizza, flatbread and tarts. They are the basis for that gorgeous French classic pissaldiere. To my mind caramelised onions have unlimited uses and are an undisputed  pantry essential in my kitchen.

Its wet and rainy today.  The perfect opportunity to prepare a big, luscious batch. Their aroma fills the house. Warm and inviting. We’re  having good old sausages and mash for dinner. Fancied up a little with the addition of those caramelised onions to the gravy.

This pantry essential is so very easy to make at home. All that is required is a little  slow cooking of  the onions in a heavy based pan to caramelise their natural sugars. I like to add a little brown sugar and red wine vinegar into the pot once the onions are sticky and brown to intensify the flavours and  help the process along. I also find it is easiest to make a big batch. The onions are less likely to burn and I am rewarded with a much larger yield for just a little more investment in time. Once cool I  pile any surplus  into sterilised jars. They will keep for about three weeks in the refrigerator but sadly never seem to hang around that long.

This post is focussing not on sausages and mash but my pantry staple – the caramelised onions.  I can tell you, however, that for a decadent mashed potato recipe I will be looking no further than  Stephane’s excellent post  The most perfect of all comfort foods – Le plat le plus réconfortant qui soit… over at My French Heaven. That’s the recipe I will be using tonight and I have referenced it here for safekeeping.  Caramelised onions and mashed potatoes all on one plate. That is my idea of the ultimate comfort food. Who needs the sausages? Probably my children but I certainly don’t.

Caramelised Onions

The  entire process will take 30-45 minutes. Continue cooking over a low heat until the onions have reached the colour, flavour and texture you want.

Makes about two cups

2 kg brown onions
100g unsalted butter
A dash of extra virgin olive oil
a sprig or two of thyme
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1/2 cup red wine vinegar

SLICE  brown onions thinly by hand or in a food processor.
MELT  butter with a dash of olive oil on medium heat in a large heavy based saucepan.
ADD  the onions and toss  for a minute or so to coat in butter.
TURN down the heat to low, add  the thyme and a pinch of salt.  Stir periodically with a wooden spoon, allowing the onions to darken, but not burn. It’s perfectly acceptable if the onions catch a little on the bottom of the pan.  This helps the colour develop.
WHEN nicely brown add the brown sugar and cook for 10 minutes. Deglaze with red wine vinegar.
USE immediately, or store in the fridge, in a sterilised jar, and use as required.

Posted in Vegetables, Vegetarian, What I Love to Cook | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The 5-2 Challenge. My Mantra. Eat Mindfully. Seared Tuna Nicoise Salad.

TunaNicoise

Following last week’s experience I was determined to start today’s  fast day organised. My mantra? Eat mindfully. Extremely important on fast days when I am restricted to a mere 500 calories, The 5-2 challenge works best for me if I know well in advance what I’m going to be eating on my fast days.

Generally I’m not too hungry in the morning. So that means something small at lunch and  a more substantial dinner at night. Seafood of any description works extremely well with this eating plan.Its low in calories and easy to prepare. Fortunately for me, on the weekend  Ana over at How It All Started In The Kitchen posted a divine recipe for a  Nicoise Salad.  The inspiration for today’s post.

I will say at the outset that Ana’s recipe is infinitely more decadent than mine. It includes crisp prosciutto, anchovies and lashings more dressing that sadly couldn’t be accommodated in my low calorie rendition. Nevertheless my fast day recipe for Seared Tuna Nicoise Salad is incredibly moreish. At only 340 calories per serve it’s the perfect meal solution. Balanced. Healthy. Delicious. Who said fasting has to be boring and uninspiring. Eating mindfully I’m certainly savouring each and every mouthful and discovering new ways to pack a flavour punch into my meals. As for Ana’s Nicoise recipe. I  know I will be trying it on one feast day soon. Here is how my latest fast day panned out.

Breakfast 2 cups  tea

4

Lunch 1 Tuna and Avocado Sushi Roll

140

Mid Afternoon 2 cups  tea

4

Dinner 1 serving Seared Tuna Nicoise Salad
2 cups tea

340

4

Total Calories

492

Seared Tuna Nicoise Salad

Serves 4 (340 calories per serve)

500 g fresh tuna steaks (540 calories)
250g green beans, trimmed, sliced on the diagonal into bite size pieces, steamed and refreshed (78 calories)
4 chat potatoes, cooked whole, peeled and sliced (210 calories)
2 eggs, soft or hard boiled to your liking, sliced  into eighths (150 calories)
2 green shallots, sliced on the diagonal (4 calories)
4 cups (or about 200 g) mixed cos or romaine lettuce and rocket leaves, washed (32 calories)
1/2 punnet (1 cup) cherry tomatoes (27 calories)
8 kalamata olives (50 calories)

For the dressing

2 tablespoons olive oil (240 calories)
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar (5 calories)
1 clove garlic, minced (4 calories)
1 teaspoon seeded mustard (15 calories)
sea salt and freshly ground pepper

IN A  LARGE bowl add the washed salad leaves, green beans, sliced potatoes, tomatoes, sliced shallots, and olives.
IN A JUG whisk together the olive oil, vinegar, mustard, garlic and a little salt and pepper for the dressing. Set aside.
BRING a large heavy based non stick pan to a very high heat.  Sear the tuna steaks into the hot pan and cook to your liking. I like to sear each steak for about a minute each side, depending on the thickness of the steak. Set aside for a few minutes to rest.

To Assemble the Salad

TEAR cooked tuna into chunks.
POUR most of the dressing over the prepared bowl of  salad ingredients.
TOSS to coat. Arrange on a large platter or on individual plates.
SCATTER tuna chunks and  sliced egg over the plated salad. Serve.

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