Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Monte Enebro Goat's Cheese and Sun Dried Tomato Tart

From the time to time Andrew's like to try new cheeses and offer our customer's something a little different. These last two week's we have started selling a new goat's milk cheese, Monte Enebro, which has been incredibly popular. Perhaps you'll understand how good it is when I tell you that I, who previously avoided all goat's cheese like the plague, am absolutely in love with it. So much so, I made this super easy, but delicious, goat's cheese and sun dried tomato tart. Monte Enebro is an artisanal  Spanish cheese with a unique black rind that is at the same time creamy in texture and complex in flavour. Only 7000 are made a year, so we're extremely lucky to be selling it in our shop!

You will need:
1 sheet of puff pastry, already rolled
100g Andrew's sun dried tomatoes
200g Monte Enebro Cheese
Some olive oil
Black pepper and salt
Thyme leaves, or other herbs.


 1  Preheat your oven to 200C.  2  Dust your pastry sheet with flour and place in a baking tray.  3  Chop sun dried tomatoes and arrange in the middle of the pastry so that there is enough room for the pastry to rise around it at the edges.  4  Slice and chop your Monte Enebro cheese into smaller pieces and arrange on top of the sun dried tomatoes.  5  Drizzle with some olive oil, some fresh herb leaves, and season with salt and pepper.  6  Place in the oven for 15 minutes, cooking until golden brown. Give a few more minutes if necessary.  7  Serve hot and enjoy!















The amount this tart serves is largely dependent on how you want to serve it. As a rectangle, you could slice it into bite size pieces suitable for a party or serve it in four slices, as I have done, to serve four for lunch or a starter.

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Pork Chops with Sage on Roasted Potatoes with Bacon Pieces

I haven't done a Jamie Oliver recipe for a while so thought I would cook my version of his Italian pork chops from his book, Jamie's Italy. It's one of my favourites to do as everything is cooked in the one roasting dish, apart from browning off the pork chops at the beginning, and the meat juices from our delicious Dingley Dell pork chops give the potatoes the most amazing flavour! We've been using Dingley Dell pork from their Suffolk farm for many years now and are happy to have such a great supplier so close to us! For more information on how they raise their fabulous pork click here.

Ingredients: 
Andrew's Dingley Dell pork chops on the bone
Roasting potatoes peeled and diced
A bunch of sage leaves
2-3 rashers of smoked streaky bacon roughly chopped
2-3 garlic cloves cut in half
Sunflower oil
Salt and pepper 

1  Preheat your oven to 180C. 2  Bring the potatoes to the boil, and par boil for 3-4 minutes. Drain and shake in the saucepan to make your edges fluffy. 3  Meanwhile add 4 good tablespoons of sunflower oil to the roasting dish and heat in the oven for ten minutes. 5  Remove and add your potatoes with the garlic cloves and chopped bacon pieces. 6  Heat up a frying pan with a splash of oil and brown off your seasoned pork chops each side.  7  After your potatoes have been cooking for about 15 minutes, place the pork chops and sage leaves on top.


8. This lets the potatoes cook in the meat juices, yet it will also make them quite soft. So if you want them a little crispier, after another 15 minutes take out the roasting dish and move everything around so that the potatoes are on top. 9  The dish should take a further 15 minutes to finish. Serve with veg and gravy as desired. 

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Lamb Schawarma

I enjoyed last week's beautiful weather on a course in Shepherd's Bush, a multicultural area of London with lots of middle eastern and Mediterranean cafés. With holidays and hot weather in mind, I decided to cook this delicious middle eastern dish that a friend suggested to me, using Andrew's extremely local Bridge Farm Lamb. The name Schawarma simply refers to meat that has been marinaded in spices, grilled, then sliced to be served as a kebab in a pitta. It tastes delicious and is perfect cooked on a traditional Weber barbecue that gives the meat a unique, slightly smokey flavour. Most recipes use leg of lamb but I chose shoulder, as it is less money per kilo than the leg, and because of the marbling has slightly more flavour. The whole shoulder you see below was later boned out (which the butchers will be happy to do for you!) so that it laid flat on the BBQ and was easier to carve.


Ingredients: 
1 Whole Boned Lamb Shoulder (Serves 4-6) 
2 Garlic Cloves Crushed 
100 ml Olive Oil  
Handful of Fresh Coriander Finely Chopped 
Tsp Ground Paprika 
Tsp Ground Cumin
Tsp Ground Allspice
Tsp Dried Oregano 
Juice and Zest of One Lemon 
Salt and Pepper 

NB: I kept my spice mix quite simple, but you could add some ground ginger, ground cinnamon, cayenne pepper or turmeric as you wish, to enrich the flavour. The key to this dish is also in the amount of time you leave the meat to marinate. Overnight is optimum although the morning before you eat is ok too. 


To make the marinade simply add the coriander and garlic to the lemon juice and olive oil in a bowl and mix until the garlic starts to turn the mixture slightly cloudy. Then add your spices and seasoning and mix. On the skin side of the lamb make some incisions all over with a sharp knife. Pour over your boned out lamb shoulder and massage the marinade into the meat making sure it is thoroughly covered. Leave in a covered bowl in the fridge until you are ready to cook. 


Once your barbecue is hot, place the lamb on the grill leaving the lid on to keep the heat in (but with the vents open). Boned out, the lamb should take 45 minutes, and should be turned over mid way through. You could of course cook this in the oven but it tastes so much better on the barbecue!!! Serve with lettuce, tzatsiki and warmed pittas to remain traditional or any other accompaniments that you would prefer. For example, my dad has to have a gluten-free diet so I also made up a lovely rice dish with red pepper, red onion, sweetcorn and herbs for him to have instead of the pitta breads. If there are only four of you, the lamb is also amazing cold the next day, I am eating some now as I write this! 


Monday, 8 July 2013

Barbecue Economy

When the sun starts to shine, as we have been blessed with this week, us Brits tend to go a bit mad with our money, with all sensible saving going out the window. This can often be the case when barbecuing: as we do it so little it can be hard to figure amounts and costs per person, but with a little BBQ know how, it doesn't have to be expensive. This weekend we had our neighbours and family round to enjoy the sunshine and to enjoy some good barbecue meats! Keeping things simple we kept away from the marinated steaks that are delicious for small numbers of people and instead turned to whole joints of meat, that we marinated for the barbecue.


For example, last week my brother and I showed you how easy it is to cook a spatchcocked chicken: as it is laid out flat it cooks much more evenly. It is also much more economical than individual portions. The same can be said for a shoulder or leg of lamb which the boys in the shop will happily debone and open out so that it cooks through evenly and quickly. Whats more, if the sun does decide to hide away, which is more than likely, these joints can always be easily roasted.

As marinades and flavours go we sell some delicious barbecue and oriental flavoured sauces from Cottage Delight which keep the meat succulent and are ridiculously easy to apply to the meat and leave. For the lamb however I often mix olive oil, lemon juice, crushed garlic cloves and whichever herbs happen to be in the garden and massage into the meat.

My final money saving tip for the barbecue is Andrew's chicken wings in barbecue sauce, which my brother, cousins and I have practically grown up on and without them, would not consider a barbecue to be a decent barbecue! They are currently £3.20 per kilo and you really do get a lot for a kilo so they are great if you want to supplement a more expensive meat or if you are feeding a big party of children. I am 21 and still adore them, I could eat a plate of them by myself so they are definitely a winner!