Sunday 4 November 2012

Duck Confit and Duck Liver and Orange Pate on Toast with Watercress and Orange Salad

Toast is spread with duck liver pate, topped with duck confit and served with an orange and watercress salad

A few nights ago, I made a very simple duck confit for dinner and deliberately prepared extra that I would have leftovers for lunch the next day. This is the dish I thereafter prepared - quick, easy and delicious.  This recipe is perfect for lunch when time is short but you are looking for something a little bit different and possibly hoping to impress family or guests with an interesting and tasty dish.

Duck confit

Ingredients per Person

1 confit duck leg
1 slice of wheat, spelt and rye bread (or bread of choice)
2oz duck liver and orange pate
Handful of fresh watercress
Skinned segments of half an orange
Teaspoon of pine nuts
Salt and black pepper
Chopped parsley to garnish

Slice of wheat, spelt and rye bread for toasting

Directions

Cut the slice of wheat, spelt and rye bread and put it on to to toast. Pick the flesh from the confit of duck leg in large clumps.

Confit duck meat removed from bones

Sit the toasted bread on a chopping board.

Wheat, spelt and rye toast

Spread the hot toast with the duck liver and orange pate.

Duck liver and orange pate is spread on toast

Toss the watercress, orange segments and pine nuts together with some seasoning. Lay on one side of a serving plate.

Watercress, orange and pine nuts salad

Sit the toast and pate beside the salad. Lay the pieces of duck confit in an even layer over the pate. Garnish with the chopped parsley.

Duck confit and pate on toast is plated with watercress and orange salad

Wednesday 3 October 2012

Sausages, Bacon and Black Pudding with a Fried Duck Egg and Baked Beans

A classic fried breakfast slightly adapted makes a wonderful lunch

The plate pictured above may be one you would expect to see on a breakfast table rather than a lunch table. The truth is, however, that the full English breakfast or full Scottish breakfast can be enjoyed every bit as much at any other time of day and above all makes the perfect brunch. A little tweak here and there - like using a duck egg in this instance rather than a chicken egg - can really freshen it up. Even taking a little time to vary the presentation and use a dish for the beans can make it seem like a completely different meal.

Pork sausages, black pudding and Ayrshire middle bacon

Ingredients per Person

2 pork sausages
1 slice of black pudding
2 slices of Ayrshire middle bacon (or 3 or 4 of ordinary bacon)
1 medium tomato
1 large closed cup mushroom
Vegetable oil for frying
1 duck egg
2 tbsp baked beans in tomato sauce
Freshly sliced basil leaves to garnish
HP Sauce (optional)

Any rind should be removed from the black pudding before it is fried

Directions

You will need two frying pans to prepare this recipe. Add a little oil to the larger pan and begin frying the sausages over a low to medium heat, turning them frequently. They will take about twenty minutes in total. After ten minutes, remove any remaining rind and add the black pudding to fry for five minutes each side, as well as the halved tomato and the mushroom.

Frying sausages, black pudding, tomato and mushroom

Very lightly wipe some oil over the surface of a small, non-stick frying pan and bring up to a medium heat while you transfer the sausages, black pudding, tomato and mushroom to a heated plate. Cover them with foil to keep them warm.

Break the duck egg in to a small bowl and gently pour it in to the pan. Leave it to fry for four to five minutes.

Frying the duck egg in a separate frying pan

Add the bacon to the pan the sausage was taken from to fry on a fairly high heat for a couple of minutes each side. The beans should be gently heated in a small saucepan.

Frying Ayrshire middle bacon

Plate the sausages, bacon and black pudding. Pour the beans in to a small round dish and lay on the same plate.

Sausages, bacon, black pudding and beans are plated first
Lay the tomato and mushroom on the bacon and carefully sit the fried duck egg on the beans. Garnish the egg with the basil and add HP Sauce if required.

Fried breakfast/lunch is ready for final garnish and sauce

Saturday 1 September 2012

Pan Fried Mackerel Fillets with Pink Grapefruit Salad

Simply fried mackerel fillets are laid on a bed of pink grapefruit and peashoots

The arrival of the month of September always saddens me in one very specific way: it represents the beginning of the end of another prime mackerel fishing season. Soon, although mackerel will still of course be available in supermarkets and fishmongers, the super fresh stuff to which I have grown accustomed to catching and eating will not be available until mid-Spring 2013. Mackerel - even more so than most other species - is a fish which really has to be eaten as fresh as possible in order to be enjoyed at its very best and this incredibly quick and simple recipe is perfect for a lunch for one person.

Pink grapefruit is carefully peeled

Ingredients

1 whole fresh mackerel
1/2 pink grapefruit, separated in to segments
Handful of peashoots or green salad leaves of choice
Flour for dusting mackerel
Salt and pepper
Olive oil for frying
Chopped basil leaves to garnish
Granary bread and butter to serve

Pink grapefruit segments are mixed with peashoots to form salad bed for mackerel

Directions

Peel the grapefruit and carefully cut out the segments. Mix with the peashoots and lay on the bed of a serving plate.

Preparing to fillet a whole mackerel

Filleting mackerel is a very quick and easy procedure. Simply lay the fish on one side on a chopping board and cut in to it behind the fin at the side of its head. Slice off the first fillet, turn the fish over and simply repeat the process for the second fillet.

Fillets are removed from mackerel

Cut out the bone down the centre of each fillet by making a v-shaped cut. Wash the fillets in a bowl of cold water and gently pat them dry with kitchen paper.

Washed and boned mackerel fillets

Scatter the flour on a plate and season it with salt and pepper. Pour some olive oil in to a non-stick frying pan and put it on a medium heat. Pat the skin sides only of the mackerel fillets in the flour and gently shake to remove the excess. Lay them in the pan, skin sides down to fry and lightly season the flesh sides.

Pan frying mackerel fillets

After about three minutes, you should see that the fillets are almost cooked. At this stage, reduce the heat to minmum and carefully turn the fillets over with a fish slice or spatula. They will be ready after a further minute's cooking.

Lay the fillets on top of the salad as shown, scatter with the chopped/sliced basil and serve with fresh bread and butter.

Buttered granary bread makes the perfect accompaniment to this mackerel salad

Thursday 9 August 2012

Chicken and Chive Butter on Toast with Simple Summer Salad

Chicken and chive butter on hot toast can be served with any salad of choice

This simple yet delicious lunch idea came about when I decided to take the herb butter I frequently make at home one step further. I had been making duck confit one night (a way of cooking and preserving the meat) when the adaptation occured to me and I decided that the next time I had some leftover chicken, I would give this idea a go.

Note that it is necessary to prepare the butter the night before to give it time to set overnight in the fridge.

Ingredients (Serves Two)

3oz leftover cooked chicken (approximately)
1 tsp freshly chopped chives
3oz butter (approximately)
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
6 diagonal slices from bread stick
2 handfuls peashoots
1 medium tomato
3" piece cucumber

Leftover chicken is mixed with chopped chives and seasoning

Directions

Carefully shred the chicken with your hands in to fairly small pieces. Mix it with the chopped chives and season with salt and pepper. (Omit the salt if you are using salted butter.) Arrange the combination in a small ramekin that the dish is around two-thirds full. Do not pack it down too tightly, as the melted butter needs to penetrate through the chicken and set it in place.

Chicken and chives should two-thirds fill a ramekin

Gently melt the butter in a small saucepan. When it is almost but not fully melted, remove the pan from the heat and simply swirl it to complete the process. This prevents the butter from overheating and perhaps starting to split. Pour the butter in to the ramekin to fill it level with the top. Cover and leave to cool and partially set. After a couple of hours, the butter should be partly solidified. Wrap the ramekin in clingfilm and place it in the fridge overnight.

Melted butter is carefully poured in to the ramekin to fill level with the top
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On the following day, try to remove the ramekin from the fridge a couple of hours before you intend eating lunch to let the butter become spreadable. If this is not practical (or you forget!) all you have to do is half fill a cup with boiling water, sit your knife in it for a few seconds, quickly dry the knife with kitchen paper and employ the hot knife through butter technique. It works very well.

Dipping your knife in to boiling water makes the butter easier to spread

Cut your bread and get it on to toast while you assemble your salad. The peashoots in this instance were laid on the plates and the segmented tomato and cucumber laid on top. Season with salt and pepper.

Spreading the chicken and chive butter on the hot toast

Spread the butter evenly over the hot toast and plate beside the salad. I like a little bit extra black pepper before service but this is of course entirely optional.

Toast is spread with the butter and ready to be plated and served

Tuesday 7 August 2012

Quick and Easy Guacamole and Tomato on Farmhouse Toast

Homemade guacamole is spread on toast and topped with sliced tomato and chopped herbs

Lunch is a meal that we often have considerably less time to prepare than dinner. When we can find a recipe idea, therefore, that takes no more than ten minutes to prepare from start to finish, yet is both nutritious and delicious, it is surely worth giving it a try. This incredibly simple idea meets all of these requirements and these quantities will provide two people with a light but tasty lunch.

Ingredients

1 hass avocado
1 medium tomato
Juice of half a lemon
1 clove of garlic
1 tsp dried chilli flakes
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 thick slices of farmhouse (or similar) bread
Chopped coriander leaf/cilantro to garnish

The stone actually fell out of this perfectly ripened hass avocado

Directions

Guacamole in a literal sense means simply, "Avocado sauce." That is why the recipes for it can be and are so varied. If you have a particular guacamole recipe that you wish to substitute for this one, by all means do so. The overall dish will work just as well.

The first step is to peel and stone the avocado. If you are very lucky (as I was in this instance) and your avocado is at that perfect state of ripeness, the stone will simply fall out when you make the required cut around the circumference. Use a teaspoon to scoop out the flesh from both halves and add it to a small glass or stone bowl.

Avocado flesh is scooped in to a bowl for mashing

Add the lemon juice to the avocado only before you mash it to a smooth consistency with a fork. Afterwards, add the chilli flakes, the peeled and grated garlic cloves and seasoning of salt and pepper. Stir well and set aside.

Mashed avocado is seasoned

Cut the bread slices nice and thick, round about an inch. You can use any kind of bread but this farmhouse loaf works extremely well.

Slicing the bread thickly for toast

Toast the slices of bread until golden on both sides. There is no need to butter them as the guacamole will add all the moisture you need.

Bread is toasted until golden on both sides

Divide the guacamole between the two slices of toast and spread it out evenly with a knife.

Guacamole is spread thickly on the hot toast

Slice the tomato fairly thinly and lay on top of the guacamole. Season with a little more salt and pepper. Very roughly chop the coriander/cilantro and scatter as a final garnish before immediate service.

Tomato slices are laid on the guacamole

Tuesday 31 July 2012

Healthy Turkey Breast Fillet Burger with Cranberry and Port Sauce

Turkey breast fillet is laid on a toasted bread roll and topped with cranberry and port sauce

Burgers are of course normally made from minced or ground meat of one type or another but there is nothing to say that a whole piece of meat, as in this instance, can not be used instead. Using a whole piece of meat means that you know your burger is 100% meat with no additives and a fresh bread roll is much healthier than the more traditional salt and sugar saturated burger bun. Cranberry sauce is a traditional accompaniment to turkey and the port definitely gives it an extra edge, while the salad accompaniment can be of any composition of your choice.

Ingredients per Person

1 4oz turkey breast fillet
1 tbsp plain/all purpose flour
Salt and pepper
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1oz unsalted butter
2 or 3 large lettuce leaves
1/4 red onion
1 soft bread roll
1 tsp cranberry and port sauce

Pan frying the floured and seasoned turkey breast

Directions
Put the vegetable oil and the butter in to a small, non-stick frying pan and gently melt the butter over a medium heat. Scatter the flour on a plate and season with salt and pepper. Pat the turkey breast in the flour on both sides and lay it in the pan to fry for three to four minutes each side or until done.

Lettuce and red onion is sliced for simple salad

Wash and dry the lettuce and roll in to a cigar shape before slicing. Slice the onion. Season the lettuce and onion, mix together and lay on one half of your serving plate.

Bread roll is halved for toasting

When the turkey breast is cooked, turn off the heat and push the pan off the heat to let it rest for a few minutes. Cut the bread roll in half and lightly toast the halves on both sides.

Toasted roll and salad are plated

Lay the toasted roll on the plate beside the salad and the turkey breast on the bottom half. Spoon on the cranberry and port sauce.

Turkey breast fillet is laid on toasted bread roll

The burger can either be served open or the top can be laid in place.

Top is placed on roll and turkey burger and salad is ready to serve

Sunday 29 July 2012

Dolcelatte Cheese Salad with Wheat, Spelt and Rye Bread

Dolcelatte cheese is served on fresh wheat, spelt and rye bread with a simple salad

Dolcelatte is a sweetish, creamy Italian cheese, very different to most everyday cheeses and well worth trying if you are unfamiliar with it. It is served here on a slice of wheat, spelt and rye bread, which I would normally toast to serve with a dish of this type. The bread was so fresh, however (still warm when I bought it) that it would have seemed almost criminal not to serve it as it was. The salad leaves are a combination of spinach, rocket (arugula) and chard but you can of course buy and serve the salad of your choice.

Dolcelatte cheese salad ingredients

Ingredients (Serves Two)

2 slices of fresh wheat, spelt and rye bread
2 generous handfuls of salad leaves of choice
3" piece of cucumber, cut in to segments
1 medium tomato, cut in to segments
4 to 6 slices of dolcelatte cheese (approx 4oz)
Salt and pepper
6 to 8 pitted black olives, halved
2 tsp freshly chopped chives to garnish

Salad leaves are carefully rinsed under running cold water

The salad leaves should always be washed under running cold water, even where the packet tells you they have been prewashed. Don't take any unnecessary risks. Shake them dry and lay them on a serving plate with the slice of bread alongside.

Wheat, spelt and rye bread and salad leaves are plated

The tomato and cucumber could be sliced if you prefer but in this instance both have been cut in to segments.

Cucumber and tomato are roughly chopped for salad

Lay the tomato and cucumber on top of the salad leaves and the slices of cheese on top of the wheat, spelt and rye bread.

Dolcelatte cheese is laid on wheat, spelt and rye bread

Season the salad with salt and pepper and lay the olive halves on top of the cheese. Scatter with the chopped chives and serve.

Halved black olives are laid on dolcelatte cheese