Cooking tips and wonderful flavour combinations

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
Soup time!

Lentil/bacon/onion/bay/thyme/dried lime/cream

Broccoli/potato/onion/mustard seed/cumin/fennel

Sweet potato/tamarind/soy/coconut/cumin/star anise etc.

Green pea/tarragon/onion/potato etc
 
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grizzleb

Well-known member
funny cos i was ranting last night about just how much i hate soup.
Fucking loony. Soup is amazing. Especially in the winter months. Big chunk of bread. Yes. Going to make some at the weekend when I've got some time I think. Any recipes baboon?
 

luka

Well-known member
i dont like it cos it makes food soggy. or maybe its just cos im (a lifelong-never-eaten-meat) vegetarian so dont do the beef broths and so on.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
Luka, you can't hate all soup - that's mental. Loads of good vegetarian ones too, tho you can't beat a bit of homemade chicken stock (obv you can if you're veggie).

I think most of the soups are pretty much the same recipe - fry onions/garlic/potato/spices etc, then add the liquid (wine or stock usually) and all the other ingredients, boil til done and then liquidise, add cream
 

grizzleb

Well-known member
There's something pretty good about a nice thin, clear vegetable based soup though... I have to admit nice thick broths are quality too.
 

grizzleb

Well-known member
Luka, you can't hate all soup - that's mental. Loads of good vegetarian ones too, tho you can't beat a bit of homemade chicken stock (obv you can if you're veggie).

I think most of the soups are pretty much the same recipe - fry onions/garlic/potato/spices etc, then add the liquid (wine or stock usually) and all the other ingredients, boil til done and then liquidise
Wish I could justify the purchase of a liquidiser. Would be really handy (homemade humous!) but unless you buy a reasonably expensive one (I imagine) there's probably not much point.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
We've got one at home which is a bit shit but works in the end. I'd get one of those handheld whisk ones if you're on a strict budget - under £10 in Sainsburys, I think
 

luka

Well-known member
as someone who got a cheap one a few months back i am able to say grizzle b you are correct, there is no point getting a cheap one. it wouldn't even pulverise the chickpeas and i ended up using a potato masher on them. which you can do, the hummus was good. i make foul a lot too with the potato masher. that would be a cheap meal if you lived in an olive grove and made your own oil.
 

grizzleb

Well-known member
as someone who got a cheap one a few months back i am able to say grizzle b you are correct, there is no point getting a cheap one. it wouldn't even pulverise the chickpeas and i ended up using a potato masher on them. which you can do, the hummus was good. i make foul a lot too with the potato masher. that would be a cheap meal if you lived in an olive grove and made your own oil.
Ahh this is what I suspected. Might just sell one of my technics and get a 150 quid nailer. Probably not.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
Maybe not so good for chickpeas then.

Foul is brilliant - much underrated compared to ubiquitous hummus. Get some great foul at Eritrean restaurants too.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
I'm torn - luka is so right about raisins but so wrong about soup...

My favourite soup at the moment is leek and sweet potato, jazzed up with bay and lime leaves. Just so, so good. Better with whole chunks of veg rather than liquidised, I think. I make it with chicken stock but you could easily use veg boullion instead. It needs lots of really coarse black pepper and some strong cheddar, splash of cream is good too.

Edit: I bought a liquidiser for about four quid from Tesco a few years ago and it is invincible. You could probably liquidise diamonds with it.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
mmmm.... diamonds...

Will try that recipe if I have any lime leaves at home. Cheddar def works tho? Wouldn't usually put it in that recipe but I may be completely wrong not to do so.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
Yeah, the cheddar is just grated and then sprinkled on top, it's not part of the 'recipe' as such. I think melting cheese into a soup before serving it would be a bit weird, like a sort of soup-fondue.
 

baboon2004

Darned cockwombles.
That would definitely be mental, although might work with goat's cheese or feta in some cases.

Reminds me (may have posted it before) - yellow pepper, green chili, roast both and use the flesh mixed with feta to make the best dip known to mankind.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
The other day I chopped up a jar of those roasted red peppers (you know, the long tapered ones that are ever so slightly spicy, but still sweet like a bell pepper) and mixed with bits of fried halloumi. A simple, but perfect, combination.
 
S

simon silverdollar

Guest
today i made a curry using a simon hopkinson recipe 'masala paste'. really nice and easy to make (although there's quite a few ingredients to the curry paste). fry some onions, add the masala paste, add some tomatoes, and simmer with your meat / veg of choice. lovely. here's the recipe:

"
4tbsp cumin seeds
2 tbsp coriander seeds
2 tsp fennel seeds
2 tsp brown mustard seeds
2 tsp whole cloves
2 tsp small, dried red chillies, or a little more if you like it hot
1 small handful curry leaves, slightly less if dried (optional)
300g onions, peeled and chopped
125g garlic cloves, peeled and chopped
150g fresh ginger, peeled and chopped
2 tbsp tamarind paste
2 tsp turmeric
2 tbsp red-wine vinegar
100g creamed coconut
2 tsp Maldon salt
2 tsp caster sugar

Using a non-stick frying pan, lightly toast the whole spices – cumin, coriander, fennel and mustard seeds, cloves and chillies – until they are smelling quite wonderful and pungent, but be careful not to burn them. Tip into a small bowl to cool. Once the spices are cool, process them in a coffee grinder, or similar, until powdered.

Place the curry leaves, onions, garlic, ginger, tamarind paste, turmeric, vinegar, coconut, salt and sugar in a food processor. Add the freshly ground spices and process everything until it is as smooth as possible; this will depend on the sharpness of your blade and the power of the machine. (Do not be tempted to add the spices whole, as they will remain "bitty" if not previously powdered.)

There is enough here to fill 2 small Le Parfait jars of 350ml capacity. Cover with a film of oil and store in the fridge."
 

benjybars

village elder.
The other day I chopped up a jar of those roasted red peppers (you know, the long tapered ones that are ever so slightly spicy, but still sweet like a bell pepper) and mixed with bits of fried halloumi. A simple, but perfect, combination.

anything with fried halloumi is going to be amazing.

halloumi is hands-down the greatest food in the world
 
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