Main course

Eat Out, In: Easter | Fantastic foolproof recipes for a relaxed Easter lunch

Foolproof recipes for Easter lunch

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Eat Out, In: Easter 

 

Foolproof recipes for a relaxed Easter lunch

 

After a morning of Easter egg hunting, enjoy a relaxed Easter lunch at home with succulent roast lamb followed with a delicious trifle.

If you can squeeze in a small slice of something, here’s a recipe for an exquisite Simnel Cake too.

 


Simple Roast LambSimple Roast Lamb

Serves 6
Time 2½–3 hrs plus resting
Calories 625
Fat 34g of which 13g is saturated

Half leg of lamb weighing about 1.8kg (4lb)
Garlic 4 cloves, peeled and chopped
Fresh rosemary 4 sprigs, leaves plucked and chopped
Olive oil 6 tbsp
Small new potatoes 750g (1lb 10oz), scrubbed
Chantenay carrots 500g (1lb 2oz), trimmed and scrubbed
Asparagus 2 bundles weighing about 500g (1lb 2oz), trimmed

1 Preheat oven to 190ºC/Gas 5. Place lamb in a roasting tin. Mix together garlic, rosemary and 2 tablespoons of olive oil with freshly ground black pepper. Spread all over lamb. Roast for 2–2½ hours, depending on how you like your meat cooked.

2 When lamb has an hour left to cook, bring potatoes (cut any big ones in half) and carrots up to boil in pan of water and simmer for 5 minutes. Meanwhile, put remaining oil in a roasting tin in the oven above lamb to heat up. Drain vegetables, add to hot oil and roast for 30 minutes. Remove from oven and add asparagus. Stir well and cook for a further 15 minutes or until vegetables are tender.

3 Leave lamb to rest for 10 minutes before carving. Serve with gravy made from juices.

 

Rhubarb Syllabub TrifleRhubarb Syllabub Trifle

6 servings
1 hour preparation time
2 hours or overnight chilling time
580 Kcal per portion
23.4g fat per portion of which 14.4g is saturated
Suitable for vegetarians

Lemon 1 large, a little grated rind to garnish and the rest finely pared and strained juice
Caster sugar 250g (9oz)
White wine 150ml (1⁄4 pint)
Rhubarb 900g (2lb), washed, trimmed and cut into 2.5cm (1in) pieces
Trifle sponge cakes 1 packet of 8
Raspberry jam approximately 175g (6oz)
Double cream 284ml carton
Finely sliced pistachio nuts optional

1 Place the pared lemon rind and juice and 75g (3oz) of the sugar in a bowl. Add the white wine and stir until dissolved. Cover and chill.

2 Put the rhubarb into a wide, stainless steel, lidded frying pan or flameproof casserole. Sprinkle with the remaining sugar and add 2–3 tbsp of cold water. Cover and cook over a moderate heat until the rhubarb juices flow, and the fruit is softened but not broken up. Remove from the heat, carefully drain and reserve the juice.

3 Slice each sponge cake in half horizontally. Spread jam over half of the slices, then cover with the remaining slices and place, in a single layer, in six individual glasses, trimming the sponge to fit. Spread any remaining jam over the top of the sponge cakes.

4 Spoon approximately two-thirds of the rhubarb juice over the sponge cakes. Use enough to moisten them well, but not to saturate. (Any left-over juice can be chilled and diluted with soda or tonic water to make a refreshing drink.)

5 Spoon the cooked rhubarb over the sponge cakes, cover and refrigerate until cold.

6 To make the topping, remove the lemon rind from the wine and discard. Then pour the cream into the

wine and whisk until it is thick enough to hold a trail – but take care not to over-whisk or the mixture will curdle.

7 Pour the syllabub on top of the chilled rhubarb and mark with a deep swirl. Cover the glasses and put in the refrigerator to chill for at least 2 hours, or even overnight. Serve scattered with pistachio nuts, if using, and grated lemon rind.

Cook’s tip
Preferably choose younger stalks of rhubarb and those with the reddest colour. Younger stalks are more tender, whereas older ones can be stringy and drier. Redder stalks also give the trifle a better colour.

 

Simnel CakeSimnel Cake

Preparation time – 30 minutes
Cooking time – 2¼ hours
Calories per slice – 722 Kcal
Fat per slice – 30g
of which saturated – 13.2g
Makes – 11 slices
Suitable for vegetarians

Butter 250g (9oz), softened
Light muscovado sugar 250g (9oz)
Eggs 4
Plain flour 300g (11oz)
Baking powder 1 tsp
Ground mixed spice 2 tsp
Ground almonds 50g (2oz)
Luxury dried mixed fruit 500g (1lb 2oz)
Lemon 1, finely grated zest and 2 tbsp juice
White marzipan 500g (1lb 2oz)
Apricot glaze or sieved apricot jam 2 tbsp

1 Preheat the oven to 150°C/300°F/Gas 2 and line a 20cm (8in) cake tin with baking parchment.

2 Cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time, adding a spoonful of the flour along with each egg. Sift in the remaining flour, baking powder and spice and fold the almonds, dried fruit and lemon zest and juice into the mixture. Spoon half into the cake tin and smooth the surface level.

3 Roll out one third of the marzipan until it’s a circle, just smaller than the cake tin, and lay it on top of the mixture in the tin. Spoon the remaining mixture over the top and level the surface.

4 Bake the cake in the centre of the oven for 2–2¼ hours, or until a skewer comes out clean after being inserted into the cake. Cover with a sheet of baking parchment if it starts to brown. When cooked, remove the cake from the oven and leave to cool.

5 Remove the cake from the tin and peel away the lining paper. Spread the apricot glaze or jam over the top. Roll out half of the remaining marzipan to fit the top of the cake. Place it on the cake and smooth down, taking care not to trap any air pockets underneath. Pinch around the edges.

6 Divide the remaining marzipan into 11 pieces and roll each into a ball. Brush a little apricot glaze or jam onto the base of each and evenly space around the top of the cake. Place under a hot grill to brown the marzipan lightly. Remove from the grill and leave to cool before serving.

Cook’s tips
• The cake will keep in an airtight container for up to a week.
• If you have a choice of marzipan, choose white marzipan, which has a more natural flavour than golden marzipan.

 

 

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Spring lamb recipe | Roast Lamb with Apricots

Roast Lamb with Apricots

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Spring has sprung!
Celebrate with
tender spring lamb.

Inspired by the Herdwick sheep grazing on the Lakeland hills, this recipe using saddle of lamb was devised for a country house hotel in Cumbria as their signature dish. This is a modern, simplified version of that dish.

Roast Lamb with Apricots

Cooking time – 13⁄4 hours plus standing
Calories per portion – 499 Kcal
Fat per portion – 24g of which saturated – 11.3g
Serves – 8

Leg of lamb 1.8kg (4lb), or shoulder, boned out
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Spinach leaves 110g (4oz)
Ready-to-eat dried apricots 175g (6oz), chopped
Onion 1, peeled and finely chopped
Breadcrumbs 75g (3oz)
Chopped mint 2 tbsp fresh or 1–2 tsp dried
Egg 1, beaten
Olive oil
Lamb or vegetable stock 300ml (½ pint)
Port 150ml (¼ pint)
Cornflour or gravy granules
Mint sprigs to garnish

1 Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/Gas 6. Flatten the lamb as best you can, check for tough tendons or bones and remove them. Season well. Wash the spinach leaves and then put them in a large pan over a fairly high heat and let them wilt down for a minute. Cut out thick stalks. Arrange half the leaves to cover the inside of the lamb.

2 To make the stuffing, in a bowl mix the chopped apricots, onion, breadcrumbs, mint and just enough egg to make a light stuffing. Spread the mixture over the spinach layer on the lamb then cover with the rest of the spinach leaves. Roll it up, securing with string.

3 Put the stuffed lamb in a roasting tin, sprinkle with a little oil and seasoning. Cover with foil and cook for 90 minutes. Remove the foil and cook another 15 minutes to brown the meat. Leave to stand, wrapped in the foil, for 10 minutes before carving.

4 Bring the lamb stock and port to the boil in a saucepan and reduce it by a third. Add any meat juices from the roasting tin without adding too much fat. Thicken with cornflour or gravy granules. Serve with roast potatoes and parsnips together with some green vegetables and mint sprigs to garnish.

Recipe taken from Around Britain.

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Rack of Lamb with Garlic Mash and Spinach

Rack of Lamb with Garlic Mash

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Rack of Lamb with Garlic Mash and Spinach

Preparation time 20 minutes
Cooking time 30 minutes
Calories per portion 757 Kcal
Fat per portion 52g of which saturated 21.9g
Serves 2

Rack of lamb 1x 6
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Redcurrant jelly 1 tbsp
Dried rosemary 1 tsp
Potatoes 2 large, peeled and roughly chopped
Garlic 1–2 cloves
Olive oil 2–3 tbsp
Baby spinach 180g pack, washed and trimmed

For the gravy
Redcurrant jelly 2 tsp
Lamb stock 150ml (¼ pint)

1 Preheat the oven to 200ºC/400ºF/Gas 6. Season the rack of lamb with salt and pepper and place in a roasting tin. Spoon the redcurrant jelly and rosemary into a bowl and heat in the microwave on full power for about 30 seconds or until the mixture has melted.

2 Brush the redcurrant jelly mix over the fat side of the rack of lamb and cook in the preheated oven for 25–30 minutes. The time the lamb takes to cook will depend on how pink you like your lamb and how much meat is on the rack. See the table on page 9.

3 Meanwhile, cook the potatoes in a saucepan of boiling water until tender. Drain well. Put the garlic cloves and 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a processor and whiz to chop the garlic. Add the hot potatoes and plenty of pepper and, using the pulse button, whiz the potatoes to a smooth mash. Add the extra oil if needed.

4 Remove the lamb from the oven and transfer to warmed plates. Make the gravy by adding the redcurrant jelly to the pan juices and add the lamb stock. Boil for 2 minutes, stirring and scraping up bits from the base of the pan.

5 Pierce the spinach in the bag and cook on high in the microwave for 2½ minutes or according to the pack’s instructions. Carefully open the bag, drain the spinach and stir into the mash. Carve the lamb and serve the cutlets with a pile of the spinach mash together with the gravy.

Cook’s tip. 
To cook spinach on a hob, pop it in a non-stick frying pan with a knob of butter and cook, tossing with a spoon until the spinach is just wilted.

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Easy Recipes for Chinese New Year | Spiced Chicken & Noodle Soup, Oriental Pork with Sweet Potato, Coconut Ice Cream

Chinese New Year recipes

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Easy Recipes for Chinese New Year

My parents are very conservative eaters, and so the first time I tried Chinese food was as an adult when a friend took me to Chinatown in Manchester – what a revelation!

I have been a fan ever since. It’s Chinese New Year on Friday (the year of the horse), which gives me a great excuse to indulge.

It’s not easy to recreate genuinely authentic
Chinese food, but we can enjoy some
delicious anglicised versions – from the
Dairy Diary of course – that are pretty
close to the real thing.

Here’s my menu for Chinese New Year on Friday. I can’t wait.

Chinese New Year Menu

Spiced Chicken & Noodle Soup

Oriental Pork with Sweet Potato

Coconut Ice Cream

Dairy Diary 2014

The best 2014 diary

If you’re struggling to get
organised this year, don’t panic!

The 2014 Dairy Diary is still available.

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How to save money and still have lots of fun! | Stress-free cooking for friends part one

Stress-free cooking for friends

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How to save money and still have lots of fun!

One of my ‘unofficial’ New Year’s resolutions is to entertain at home once a month. I’m afraid I am one of those irritating people who always tries to look on the bright side and find a solution to someone’s problem; so one evening when my other half and I were having a moan about our lack of social life (due to lack of babysitters and lack of money) I struck upon to idea of eating out, in, once every month.

At the start of each month we are going to sit down and plan out Night Out In. We will pick a couple of friends’ names out of a hat and plan a cosy informal meal – which isn’t going to stress us or cost lots of cash.

So for the price of a few scented tealights
– my current obsession –   some great-value
fresh ingredients and a bottle of wine we
will have a fantastic night in the company
of good friends, without the worry of
finding a babysitter.

Here is my first stress-free menu.

Everything is affordable and easy to make in advance, so it does not intrude on our social time.

Stress-free cooking for friends - recipes part one

Stress-free cooking for friends part one

Starter: Chorizo & Kale Soup

Main: Roasted Cod Loin wrapped in Pancetta

Dessert: Ginger & Marmalade Steamed Pudding

 

Clever One Pot cookbook

 

All of these recipes are taken from
Clever One Pot cookbook, which is
still available to buy online for
just £7.99.

buy bow

 

 

 

 

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Favourite Christmas Recipes

How to make the perfect traditional turkey roast for Christmas

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Favourite Christmas Recipes

As you can imagine, I have tested and tasted a fair few recipes over the past fifteen (is it really that long?) years.

There have been many scrummy delights but, of course, like all our Dairy Diary aficionados I have my firm favourites, particularly for Christmas lunch.

This is my definitive selection
of recipes, which I think make
the perfect Christmas dinner.

I also like to serve steamed green vegetables, creamy mash and Yorkshire puddings. Not traditional I know but we all love them!

Have a delicious Christmas lunch everyone. Here are the three recipes…

Traditional Turkey Roast

Preparation time – 2 hours
Cooking time – 2 hours
Calories per portion – 1100 Kcal
Fat per portion – 50g of which saturated – 19.2g
Serves – 8 Suitable for freezing

Bronze turkey 6kg (12lb) oven-ready bird
Butter 25g (1 oz) softened

For the stock
Giblets from turkey, well washed
Onion 1 large, peeled and quartered
Carrot 1 large, peeled and sliced
Parsley 1 large sprig
Bay leaves 3
Rosemary 1 large sprig
Black peppercorns 1 tsp
Chicken stock or water 900ml (11⁄2 pints)

For the stuffing
Frozen peeled chestnuts 225g (8oz)
Chicken stock 300ml (1⁄2 pint)
Butter 50g (2oz)
Olive oil 1 tbsp
Smoked rindless streaky bacon rashers 225g (8oz), cut into thin strips widthways
Onion 1 large, peeled and finely chopped
Lean, good quality pork sausages 400g (14oz), skinned
Chopped parsley 4 tbsp
White breadcrumbs 110g (4oz)
Mixed dried herbs 1 tbsp
Lemon 1, finely grated rind only Egg 1 large, beaten
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the cranberry sauce
Cranberries 250g (9oz), washed, any stalks removed
Orange 1 large, finely pared rind and strained juice
Caster sugar 175g (6oz)
Mixed ground spice 1⁄2–1 tsp

For the gravy
Roasting juices from turkey see method
White or red wine 2–3 tbsp, optional
Plain flour 2–3 tbsp
Chicken stock 500ml (1 pint)

1 On Christmas Eve, prepare the stock. Place all the giblets except the liver in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat and skim off the scum that has risen to the surface. Add all the remaining ingredients, cover and cook gently for 11⁄2 hours. Strain through a sieve, allow to cool, cover and refrigerate.

2 To make the stuffing, place the chestnuts in a saucepan, add the stock, partially cover and cook gently for 25 minutes, or until softened and most of the stock has been absorbed. Pour the nuts into a sieve placed over a bowl to drain, and leave until cold.

3 Meanwhile, chop the turkey liver and put into a large bowl. Heat the butter and oil in a frying pan, add the bacon and cook until browned and crispy. Add to the turkey liver.

4 Add the onion to the fat and cook gently until softened, then add to the liver and bacon and cool. Add the chestnuts and all the remaining ingredients, season well and mix together.

5 To make cranberry sauce, place all the ingredients in a stainless steel saucepan, partially cover and cook gently until the cranberries are softened and the juices are reduced by half. Transfer to a serving bowl, allow to cool, cover and refrigerate.

6 To prepare the turkey, wipe the inside clean with kitchen paper. Stuff the neck end only with the stuffing, but not too tightly. Make any excess stuffing into balls and cook separately.

7 Smooth the neck skin evenly over the stuffing and secure with fine skewers. Smear the turkey all over with the softened butter. Put onto a large plate, loosely cover with foil and refrigerate.

8 On Christmas Day, remove the turkey from the refrigerator early in the morning to allow it to come to room temperature. Preheat the oven to 220°C/425°F/Gas 7. Place a roasting trivet or wire rack in the roasting tin and put the prepared turkey on top.

9 Cooking times for turkeys will vary according to their size, and also their type. Generally, cook for 40 minutes, then reduce the oven temperature to 180°C/350°F/Gas 4 and continue cooking for 11⁄2–2 hours, basting frequently until cooked. To test it’s done, pierce the thigh at the thickest part – the juices should run clear yellow.

10 Carefully remove it from the roasting tin onto a serving plate, loosely cover with foil and leave to stand. Cook the stuffing balls while preparing the gravy and attending to the vegetables.

11 To make gravy, skim the fat from the roasting juices into a bowl, strain through a sieve and set aside. Pour the wine into the roasting tin, and bring to the boil, scraping the browned residue from the pan’s bottom. Then strain into the bowl of juices.

12 Pour 3–4 tbsp of the turkey fat into a saucepan and stir in the flour. Add the stock and strained juices and bring to the boil, stirring. Reduce the heat and allow to boil gently for 3–4 minutes, until reduced. Pour into a gravy boat for serving. Garnish the turkey with sprigs of rosemary and serve.

Cook’s tip
Grilled chipolata sausages and bacon rolls are a delicious and traditional accompaniment for a roast turkey. Cook with the stuffing balls: 35–45 minutes.

 

Treacle-Glazed Red Cabbage

Serve this wonderful Treacle-Glazed Red Cabbage with traditional roast turkey to make the perfect Christmas dinner. This recipe is easy and one-pan, to ease a little of that Christmas Day cooking pressure! A Dairy Diary recipe. For more delicious recipes visit the Dairy Diary Recipe Collection.

CLICK HERE FOR RECIPE

Roast Potatoes

Serves 4
Preparation 20 mins
Cooking 55 mins
Per portion 194 kcals, 8g fat (2.5g saturated)

680g (1½lb) potatoes, peeled
2 tbsp goose fat

1 Cut potatoes into quarters or leave whole if new.

2 Cook in boiling water for 5–7 minutes. Drain. Shake in saucepan to roughen surface.

3 Heat goose fat in a roasting tin. Add potatoes and turn in tin until well coated.

4 Roast at 200°C (400°F) Mark 6 for 45 minutes or until crisp and golden, basting at least twice during that time.

Have a very merry Christmas.

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