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Cooking in the colder months often means more casseroles, stews, roasts and pasta dishes. As I am quite certain that most of you are more than adept at the roast dinner and the old spag bol or lasagna I shall bypass them and go straight to a few of our other family favourites. If you want something spicy and special go back to my Special Occasion recipes (e.g. Raan). All year round I cook a curry once a week (lamb or chicken), home cooked fish and chips and various prawn dishes but in winter I am rather fond of one or two pot cooking.
CROCK POT ROAST BEEF
They call them slow cookers these days but I still have my 1976 crock pot in working order. It has three temperatures, low, medium and high – I don’t know what the new ones have so forgive me if it doesn’t all translate.
I usually start cooking on High and once the process begins (after about 1 hour) I turn down to Medium and cook for about 4 hours and then down to Low until we are ready to eat. (You can of course cook it on low all day while you go fishing but it does need to be turned at least once in my experience.)
First, place an even size piece of topside (1.5 to 2 kgs) on to a bed of quartered potatoes, put more potatoes pieces around the meat plus carrot and parsnip pieces, sprinkle with a generous amount of salt, pepper and a teaspoon or two of beef stock powder, a few sloshes of tomato sauce and a cup of water. Put lid on and cook as above. At each change of temperature turn the meat and vegetables to ensure they are cooking evenly. Taste liquid to check for seasoning.
Cook your cauliflower, sprouts or peas to accompany in the usual way. In another small saucepan, prepare to make the best gravy ever. Make a small roux with butter and wholemeal flour. Tilt your cock pot to enable you to get a ladle in and remove a cup or more of the broth. Gradually add this to the roux and stir to make your gravy.
To serve, slice the meat thickly. It will seem to have shrunk a fair bit but don’t worry about that as all the juices are there to be enjoyed in your gravy. It will be well cooked but still moist. Offer horseradish sauce at the table. Serves 4 or 5 people.
STIPHADO (a Greek ragout – modified from Elizabeth David’s recipe)
To serve 4 you need a kilo of boned leg of lamb. Cut meat into approx. 1 ½ inch chunks and brown them in a little olive oil, add about 12 whole shallots (if large, cut in half) and three finely chopped cloves of garlic. Stir and then add 140g tub of tomato paste and a glass of good red wine (say a shiraz or cab/sav) and half a teaspoon of salt and some black pepper. Stir and as soon as it starts to boil turn right down low, put lid on pot and let bloop bloop for at least two hours. (During this time do check it and you might need to add just a little water.) Serve with creamy mashed potatoes and your choice of greens (beans would be best).
THE POSSIBILITIES OF WHITE SAUCE (also called Béchamel)
I always make my white sauce using wholemeal flour and butter – make a roux with one tablespoon of each, take off heat and add quarter teaspoon salt, a few shakes of cayenne pepper and a few pinches of mustard powder. Gradually add a little milk to blend the roux, return to heat and continue adding milk (about one cup)and then keep cooking and stirring till thickened and flour is properly cooked through. (Note: to make it gluten free use rice flour instead but you may need a little more.)
From this you can then make a Cheese Sauce simply by adding a large handful of grated tasty cheese (Bega is good).
Or, you can make it a Cream Sauce by using 2/3 milk and 1/3 cream.
Or, a Parsley Sauce, by simply adding a tablespoon or more to taste of freshly chopped parsley. This goes well with poached cod which should simply be poached in plain water and changed twice more before serving with the sauce.
With the Cheese Sauce you can make a simple one pot meal as follows.
ASPARAGUS AND CORN MORNAY
Use a small casserole dish about 3 inches deep. This will be plenty for two people. You will need a cup of Cheese Sauce, a tin of creamed corn, a tin of asparagus spears, a roughly chopped rasher of bacon or ham, 3 hard boiled eggs.
Place all the corn in the bottom, drain the asparagus very well (for at least 15 minutes) and cut spears into three or four pieces and layer over the corn, add the bacon or ham and then the eggs which you have sliced up with an egg slicer, and lastly pour over the sauce. Cook in moderate pre-heated oven for ¾ hour or until it is just starting to bubble. Serve in bowls.
CREAMED EGGS with CURRIED RICE
Allow three eggs per person. This will serve two people or simply double quantities for four etc.
Hard boil 6 eggs and cut into quarters. Make about a cup and a half of Cream Sauce and gently add eggs and heat through.
Earlier in the day, cook a cup of long grain rice (salted) and allow to cool. In a shallow fry pan add a tablespoon of ghee and gently fry one large sliced onion (halve it and then slice), then add:
- 2 teaspoons of ground coriander
- 1 teaspoon of ground cummin
- ½ teaspoon of ground ginger
- ¼ teaspoon of ground cardamom
- ½ teaspoon of turmeric
- ¼ teaspoon of chilli powder
- ¼ teaspoon of salt
- ¼ teaspoon of pepper
Add a little more ghee to ensure there is some moisture there. Then gradually fork in the rice, mix and heat gently for at least 15 minutes till the rice is just slightly dried or vaguely crisp.
Serve on plates by making a circle of the rice and spoon in the egg mixture into the centre.
PS to this dish – instead of eggs you can use scallops – you will need half a kilo of scallops which you should slightly pre-cook and drain well on a paper towel before adding to the cream sauce.
TWO EASY AND ECONOMICAL DISHES
Bubble and Squeak – my grandmother made this using left-over (not really, she always cooked more vegetables than needed) roast potatoes, carrots, pumpkin and parsnips and cauliflour or cabbage. Chop up and add to large frypan with plenty of butter. Keep cooking and flattening till it gradually blends together into a lovely smelling squeak. If you don’t have such leftovers, simply boil up a large pot of various vegetables, drain well and cook the same way. Plenty of salt and pepper and usually additional blobs of butter along the way. Serve with any left over roast beef, lamb or even corned silverside.
Old fashioned Irish Stew – a big one pot dinner. Two or three lamb shoulder chops (cut off excess fat) per person, simmered just in well salted and peppered water till just done. Add chunks of potato, carrot and parsnip. Cook till done. Thicken with real cornflour and water paste. Cook another 15 minutes and eat. So simple and tasty (it defies logic). Note: the meat should be basically overcooked, starting to fall off the bone. It is not necessary to remove the so-called impurities in the early stages, just stir and they will absorb back into the resulting broth.




Mmmmmm! That roast beef looks sooooooooooooo tasty!
🙂
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Winter comfort food.
It starts tonight with Neck Chop Stew. I just love neck chop stew.
But I’d walk a long way to sit down to that crock pot “Rosty Biff”.
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Oh, it’s gone now??
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Your comments got caught in the spam filter for some reason??
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Amazing – I never eat that. Is there an exotic lamb filter?
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Different sort of spam Viv 🙂
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You took me seriously! Got one at last!
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Always take you serious Viv. How would you do a slow cook chicken?
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Well, hard to say as I don’t do slow cooked chooks and I don’t crock pot them either. I don’t think chook lends itself to really slow cooking. Probably suitable for older home killed stock. If I did crock pot cook a chook I would recommend that all the vegetables be cut smaller than usual as the spuds etc actually take longer to cook than meat and I would do it on the low temperature all day. I would probably add some wine and herbs al la Ato. You really couldn’t go wrong or bugger it up – the chook would be a fall apart dish and the broth would be yum.
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What’s this ‘your comment is awaiting moderation’ new fangled stuff? I didn’t say that? Hmmmmmmm
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All lovely yummy stuff, Vivie!
I often wondered…
I know that a teacher and a nurse make a good couple but how would a couple of chefs -or good cooks- manage? Do you think that neither would do any cooking -ever- and always go out?
With the stifado, it’s mostly done for rabbit, or hare, and its done with huge quantities of onions; “huge quantities” being the central theme for the dish: Huge quantities of rabbits (at least in the Greece of old), huge game smell on the part of the rabbit and huge quantities of onions available. The onions are to camouflage the potency of the rabbit’s aromas. I’ve only had a couple of goes at eating rabbit in Oz. I don’t know if I had that many more in Greece prior to my arrival here, but I simply didn’t like the meat. Even when I cooked it!
With the bechamel, I put the lot: the cheese (usually parmigiana), parsley, a wee bit of lemon mint, and Lad’s suggestion, a pinch of cinnamon. No cream.
I’ve been declared the official Moussaka/lasagna and apple strudle man and today I shall begin the kitchen storm for tomorrow’s mother’s day even at my sister’s. Moussaka and apple strudle for all the lovely mothers, present and future!
I love meat cooked slowly in crock pots. Nothing fancy. Just a big crock pot which I clog with meat and veg, tomato pure and sauce, wine, garlic, onions, parsley, oregano, some olives. Into the slow oven (as per your suggestion) for most of the day (or night) and then, when everyone is good and starving, bring out the… garlic bread (with a pinch of white pepper-so they won’t discern the source of the flavour) and THEN, when their tongues are hanging out, you bring out the pot, put it in the centre of the table and lift off the lid. Then, in a very serious tone, you exhort the words, “let us pray!”
Ta muchly, Vivie!
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“mother’s day event…”
Happy mother’s day all you mummies! (Even if you’re not descendants of Cleopatra!)
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Glad it all hit the right note with you Ato. Yes, I know the Greeks use rabbit and I LOVE RABBIT. Since they changed the rules about butchers selling wild rabbits it has become very difficult to get them in NSW unless you catch your own. The farmed rabbit (I bought one once) are expensive and tasteless. Wild rabbit doesn’t smell any worse or better than roast chicken – it can be cooked many ways. I grew up on roast rabbit in Melbourne – we only had chicken once a year for Christmas. I don’t actually like cinnamon in the sauce – just a personal preference, hence the mustard and cayenne.
I have friends who were both excellent cooks (since divorced for reasons which had nothing to do with food) – they shared the cooking and didn’t eat out much. They weren’t chefs but at some stage did do a bit of catering.
And… to all, the pics are the doing of our skilled editor and are more symbolic of the recipes (i.e. not actual representations).
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Yikes, I meant nutmeg, Vivie. I love cinnamon but for the bechamel it’s nutmeg. Just a pinch. Loverly aroma.
Just shoved the strudel in the oven. Shall begin with the moussaka now. Mince: two parts beef one part pork. Yummy!
Haven’t had chook for a long time. I had some in Greece in ‘2005 (aunt killed a rooster for us: poor roosters always get it in the neck when important visitors arrive) and it was scrumptious. When we got back, I think we might have had a chook once or twice but they were so bland and dry -no matter how we did them that we’ve lost our appetite for them. Lucky chooks!
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Yep! I did too atomou.
I thought about that when I was up at the tip with my trailer. Early onset alzheimer’s is a plague.
I’ve been putting cinnamon in everything since I read that it is good to handle diabetes and cancer, none of which I have.
WELL SPOTTED ATO, 10/10
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I’m not keen on nutmeg in the sauce either and I knew you probably meant nutmeg. I don’t want to sound picky. Ato – re chooks and their taste and I agree that is a problem. I have only been buying L’ionica (can’t remember how to spell it) chooks for the last 4 years and won’t buy anything else ever. They are basically organic and plump and very tasty and moist. My butcher reckons it is my cooking but I know it depends on the quality of the chook and my chicken dishes have never been better. I’ll post the correct name of the brand early next week. They are something like $12 for a no.16 which actually seems more like a no.20.
I think you ought to share your moussaka recipe with us Ato as it sounds like it is off to a wonderful start. Please.
PS – just between you and me – I test tasted one of my olives (2 weeks in the buckets now) and I can detect a lessening of the bitterness – just a little. All looking good.
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All good stuff Viv. I will have to try the asparagus recipe next time I have people over.
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Good easy winter food, we too often go for one pot style a cooking, Risotto, Curries, Drunken Chicken (Master Chef recipe, roughly followed), stews, thick soups with nice bread, I also love making and eating different kinds of Frittata (with salad, and bread for me)… Once a week we have salmon, usually with hot potato salad , Dill and other herbs fresh from the garden, pasta with bacon…
Often we have enough for two days, unless there are family or friends, of course then we also prepare something a bit more fancy 🙂 and/or kid-friendly.
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If you put all that in one pot Helvi, you’ll soon run out of both family and friends.
Mmmm, parsnip is wonderful in B&S.
Don’t forget to use dry vegies in the frittata Helvi. In fact onions & good potatoes are really the ultimate.
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*Of course any fresh garden herbs are great for aroma, fragrance and colour.
* Asparagus is great for producing asparagus urine. One wonders what it is the first time.
* A hint of cinnamon goes well in Bechamel, whether it’s for Lasagne or just sauce IMHO.
* Ditto, mashed potato.
Yes good recipes and excellent pics.
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Yes, but Vectis, I is poor and I only has one big pot…
You found my compliment on the Drum by looks of it JL 🙂
Potatoes in Frittata are good, makes it into a dinner!
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Drunken chicken? How does one do that?
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Not as startling as beetroot pee VL. It lasts and lasts!
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Never had before I tried a pack of beetroot chips, amazing
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Helvi – I nearly included a frittata! I didn’t do any soup as we had a fair discussion on the subject of soup making on the Dot – Ato had some very firm opinions and I think we went into French Onion soup in detail.
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By hook or by crook, I’ll be first in this book. Then I’ll send VL along to read it.
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By egg and by bacon I think your mistaken
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Poetry Hung, Poetry.
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All those years of nursing wasted 🙂
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Oh good, enemas all round!
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Yes sister 🙂
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