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All you need is love. But a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt.
03/10/2022

All you need is love. But a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt.

IngredientsLEVAIN STARTER50 g mature sourdough starter50 g strong white bread flourFINAL DOUGH100 g levain starter400 g ...
11/26/2021

Ingredients
LEVAIN STARTER
50 g mature sourdough starter
50 g strong white bread flour
FINAL DOUGH
100 g levain starter
400 g organic strong white bread flour
100 g organic whole wheat flour
½ tablespoon fine salt
fine semolina flour , for dusting
semolina , for dusting

Method
The night before you want to bake, make the levain starter. Pour 50ml of tepid water into a large mixing bowl. Use your fingers to gently stir in the mature sourdough starter until fully dissolved, then repeat with the flour until smooth and combined.
Leave, covered, in a warm place for at least 8 hours – it’s ready when lots of bubbles appear on the surface and the dough has a milky-sweet aroma.
The next day, to make the final dough, pour 325ml of tepid water into a large mixing bowl and add 100g of the levain, which should float (the remaining levain can be fed and used as a new sourdough starter, or gifted to a friend). Use your fingers to gently stir it into the water until fully dissolved, then repeat with both flours. Cover with a damp cloth and rest in a warm place for 1 hour.
Now add the salt and 25ml of tepid water, scrunching them into the dough until fully combined. Set aside, covered, in a warm place for 30 minutes.
Wet your hand slightly and give the dough four folds in the bowl, one at each ‘corner’. This is one turn. Repeat this process another three times at 30-minute intervals, turning the dough four times in total across 2 hours. After the last turn, cover and leave to rise in a warm place for another 2 hours.
To shape the loaf, tip the dough onto a clean surface and gently dust the top with a handful of semolina flour. Roughly shape into a round, being careful to keep as much air in the dough as possible. Rest, covered, for 30 minutes.
Dust a basket or cane banneton with semolina flour (or you can simply use a medium bowl lined with a clean, floured tea towel). Lightly flour the dough again and flip it over, so the flour side is on the worktop. Set the dough in front of you and gently shape into a round. Turn the dough over, then place it in your floured basket, banneton or tea towel-lined bowl.
Cover the dough with a shower cap (or oiled cling film) and allow to rest for 1 to 2 hours, or until increased in size by a quarter and looking bubbly. Transfer your dough, in its basket or bowl, to the fridge to rise for another 12 to 16 hours, or until bubbly and risen by another quarter.
Place a heavy lidded casserole pot on the bottom shelf of the oven, then preheat to full whack (240ºC/464ºF/gas 9).
Bring your loaf out of the fridge and scatter semolina over the top. Working carefully, remove the hot pot from the oven, take off the lid and gently tip your dough out into the pot, so now the pattern should be the right way up. Score it with a sharp knife, holding it at a 40 degree angle to the surface of the dough for the best slashes, then carefully cover and return to the oven.
Reduce the temperature to 230ºC/446ºF/gas 8 and bake for 30 minutes. Carefully remove the lid and bake for a final 20 minutes, or until a malted golden brown. Remove to a wire rack to cool.

Ingredients2 shallots4 cloves of garlic350 g mixed wild mushrooms400 g closed cup or chestnut mushrooms½ a bunch of fres...
11/14/2021

Ingredients
2 shallots
4 cloves of garlic
350 g mixed wild mushrooms
400 g closed cup or chestnut mushrooms
½ a bunch of fresh thyme
350 g stale bread
100 g pecans or hazelnuts
1 bunch of fresh flat-leaf parsley
25 g dried porcini
80 ml olive oil
2 fresh bay leaves

Method
Peel and finely chop the shallots and garlic, and roughly chop all the fresh mushrooms. Pick the thyme leaves and tear the stale bread into small chunks.
Lightly toast the nuts in a dry frying pan, then roughly chop. Pick and roughly chop the parsley.
Cover the porcini with 300ml of boiling water and leave aside to rehydrate.
Heat the oil in a large, wide pan and add the shallot and garlic. Cook over a medium heat, stirring occasionally, for 5 to 8 minutes or until the shallot is softened but not coloured.
Drain the soaked porcini over a bowl, reserving the liquid. Add these and the rest of the mushrooms to the pan along with the bay and thyme leaves and cook until all the mushrooms are well softened. If they release a lot of liquid, pour it onto the diced bread and carry on cooking.
When the mushrooms are tender and browned, tip the mixture into a large bowl and leave to cool completely.
Preheat the oven to 190ºC/375ºF/gas 5.
Once the cooked mushroom mixture has cooled, add the chunks of bread, a good pinch of sea salt and black pepper, the pecans or hazelnuts and about half of the porcini’s reserved soaking liquid (make sure you pour it through a sieve first to stop any grit getting through). Combine well.
If the stuffing seems too dry, just add a little more of the reserved porcini liquid.
Add most of the parsley and stir it through then tip the stuffing into a lightly greased baking dish of approximately 20cm x 25cm and cover with foil.
Place in the oven and bake for 35 minutes, then remove the foil and cook for a further 10 minutes. Scatter over the rest of the chopped parsley before serving.

Ingredients3 kg topside of beefolive oil½ a head of celery2 carrots1 onion1 bulb of garlic3 fresh bay leaves3 sprigs of ...
10/22/2021

Ingredients
3 kg topside of beef
olive oil
½ a head of celery
2 carrots
1 onion
1 bulb of garlic
3 fresh bay leaves
3 sprigs of fresh rosemary
GRAVY
1 heaped tablespoon plain flour
1 heaped tablespoon blackberry or blackcurrant jam
125 ml red wine
1 litre organic beef stock

Method
Take the beef out of the fridge 1 hour before you want to cook it, to let it come up to room temperature. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4.
Drizzle the beef with 1½ tablespoons of oil, season with a pinch of sea salt and a good pinch of black pepper, then rub all over the meat.
Place a 25cm x 35cm roasting tray on the hob over a high heat, drizzle in 1 tablespoon of oil, then sear the beef for a few minutes, until browned all over.
For the trivet, roughly chop the celery and carrots into big chunks, peel and chop the onion into wedges and break up the garlic bulb into cloves.
Throw the trivet of vegetables into the tray with the bay and rosemary, jiggling the tray to coat the veg in any juices, then roast for 1 hour and 15 minutes for medium and blushing, or cook to your liking. Baste the beef halfway through and if the veg looks dry, add a splash of water to the tray to stop them from burning.
Remove the beef to a platter, cover with tin foil and leave to rest while you make the gravy.
For the gravy, place the tray on the hob over a medium heat. Sprinkle in the flour, then mash everything with a potato masher, scraping up all the goodness from the base of the tray.
Stir in the jam, then pour over the wine and let it bubble away for a minute or two, before pouring in the stock. Bring to the boil, then turn the heat down low and simmer for around 30 minutes, or until thickened and reduced, stirring occasionally.
When the gravy is the consistency of your liking, pour it through a sieve into a pan, pushing all the goodness through with the back of a spoon. Keep warm over a low heat until ready to serve, skimming away any excess fat that comes to the surface, then pour into a gravy boat.
Carve the beef into lovely thin slices, and serve with all the usual trimmings – delicious with Yorkshire puddings, roast potatoes, watercress and a dollop of horseradish

Ingredients250 g unsalted butter (at room temperature) , plus extra for greasing250 g self-raising flour , plus extra fo...
09/23/2021

Ingredients
250 g unsalted butter (at room temperature) , plus extra for greasing
250 g self-raising flour , plus extra for dusting
250 g golden caster sugar
4 large free-range eggs
1 orange
a few drops of rosewater
4 tablespoons quality raspberry jam
150 g fresh raspberries
icing sugar , for dusting
CRYSTALLIZED ROSE PETALS
1 large free-range egg white
1 handful of rose petals
white caster sugar
VANILLA CREAM
150 ml Jersey double cream
½ a vanilla pod
2 teaspoons caster sugar

Method
Preheat the oven to 190°C/375°F/gas 5. Grease two 20cm sandwich tins and line the bases with greaseproof paper circles, then dust lightly with flour.
Beat the butter and sugar together until very light and fluffy.
Add the eggs one by one, making sure you beat each one in well before you add the next, then finely grate the orange zest and fold with the flour.
Divide the cake mix between the prepared tins. Spread it out well with a spatula and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until golden, risen and an inserted skewer comes out clean.
Allow to cool in the tins, then carefully turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Mix a few drops of rosewater into the jam, but don’t go crazy with it – it’s very strong!
For the crystallized petals, turn the oven right down to 110°C/225°F/gas 1. Whisk the egg white to stiff peaks. Use a pastry brush to coat the rose petals on both sides with a very thin layer of the egg white, then sprinkle over some caster sugar.
Shake off the excess sugar and lay the petals on a baking tray lined with greaseproof paper. Bake for 3 to 4 minutes in the oven, or until the petals are firm to the touch.
For the vanilla cream, split the vanilla pod lengthways and scrape out the seeds, then whip the cream with the vanilla seeds and sugar until you get soft peaks.
Spread the jam and then the vanilla cream over one of the cakes and scatter the raspberries on top. Place the second cake on top.
Dust with icing sugar and decorate with the crystallized rose petals. Serve on a beautiful cake stand to really show off your creation, and enjoy

Ingredients200 g quality dark chocolate , (70%)1 x 400 g tin of black pitted cherries in syrup200 ml double cream4 large...
09/17/2021

Ingredients
200 g quality dark chocolate , (70%)
1 x 400 g tin of black pitted cherries in syrup
200 ml double cream
4 large free-range eggs
2 tablespoons golden caster sugar

Method
Melt the chocolate in a heatproof bowl over a pan of gently simmering water, then remove to cool for 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, simmer the cherries and their syrup in a non-stick frying pan on a medium heat until thick, then remove.
Whip the cream to very soft peaks.
Separate the eggs, add the yolks to the cream with the sugar, and whisk to combine.
Add a pinch of sea salt to the whites and, with a clean whisk, beat until super-stiff.
Fold the cooled chocolate into the cream, then very gently fold that through the egg whites with a spatula.
Divvy up the mousse between six glasses or bowls, interspersing the cherries and syrup throughout, and finishing with a few nice cherries on top.

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