Introduction
From scrumptious soups to sizzling lemon sole, cheeky cheesecakes and perfect peppermint creams, here are a hundred of my favourite recipes for relaxed home cooking.
I love nothing more than collecting recipes, testing them and sharing them with people – well, actually, I have to confess that eating the delicious results does give me a bit more pleasure…
Recently I’ve been like a mad food scientist in the kitchen; conducting culinary experiments using everyday ingredients and putting a wicked spin on some familiar traditional recipes. I’ve also drawn inspiration from my travels to Barcelona, Sri Lanka, Corsica and chilled-out Byron Bay, so be ready for a few surprises!
In this book are the kind of recipes that I like to cook on autumnal afternoons and cosy winter evenings. You’ll find comfort in duvet day chicken noodle soup when the dark skies seem just a little too foreboding, and braised lamb shanks with Rioja and chorizo will bring the warmth and passion of an Iberian summer into the nippiest of seasons.
At one in the morning, standing in the kitchen covered in flour, I came up with another of the recipes that I’ve included here. While making a sugar syrup for toffee apples, I rifled through the cupboards and found some red food colouring. As I dropped a few beads of the scarlet liquor into the sugar syrup the mixture fizzled a bit. I swizzled it around in a heatproof glass jug and through the fog of a sugary fatigue I started drizzling crazy shapes on a sheet of baking parchment. When I lifted the band of now warm and hardening sugar and wrapped it around a freshly iced sponge cake sitting forlornly in a corner of the kitchen, graffiti cake was born!
For me, cooking can provide pure escapism into an aromatic realm of flavours, zests, glazes and textures. Sometimes this inspires me to reinvent recipes drawn from childhood memories, such as my sausage roll’s big night out, which reminds me of the salami sticks my mum used to put in my school lunchbox.
It’s important to me that I use ingredients that don’t require a trip to an exotic foods store, and to include recipes that even the most inexperienced or reluctant cook can have a go at. Both my busy thirtysomething sister and my retired seventy-year-old dad have successfully cooked some of the recipes in this book.
I hope that there’s something for everybody here. Whether you like an old-fashioned English muffin spread with lashings of butter, a not-so-Cornish pasty to take on those long winter walks, an oat couture granola bar for a quick-grab anytime snack, or the wonderfully retro and revamped caramelised pineapple and rum upside down cake to finish off the day.
In this book you’ll also find recipes for homebaked breads, cakes, cookies, muffins and bars; soups, starters and canapés when you feel like making that extra effort and easy main meals for lunch or dinner that can cook slow or be rustled up super fast. If you’re vegetarian or fancy a meat-free day, there are also some ideas for new slants on serving up your favourite veg. Not forgetting the sweet stuff; desserts such as my steamed chocolate pudding with warm Mars bar sauce that I could eat all by myself in one sitting, and a few of my favourite little extras – chutneys, sweets and other fine stuff.
Cooking at home, whether for family and friends or just for yourself, is one of life’s great pleasures, and hopefully with these recipes I can show you that it can be relaxed and easy, too.
Starters, Soups, Canapés & Snacks
It’s not every day that I serve starters and canapés, but when I do it’s usually something quick, easy and super tasty. Bacon and mature Cheddar twisties have become a firm favourite in my house, so much so that I often make a large batch and store them in a plastic container for people to grab on the go. Needless to say, they don’t usually last very long. My sausage rolls have a special twist, and the herbed Scotch eggs have a special place in my heart! On those I-don’t-feel-like-going outside days, my duvet day chicken noodle soup gives edible relief, while roasted butternut squash soup with chilli and ginger is real food for the soul.
‘One cannot think well, love well and sleep well, if one has not dined well.’
Virginia Woolf
Bacon & mature Cheddar cheese twisties
When I made a batch of these they were gone before they were even cool! These are in my top ten all-time favourite foods and are fantastically easy to make. For a little extra spice, sprinkle on some paprika or cayenne.
Makes 14 twisties
1 x 375g puff pastry
Plain flour, for dusting
1 tbsp English mustard
100g mature Cheddar cheese, grated
Freshly ground black pepper
14 or so slices of really good-quality thin bacon (sadly, the regular stuff is just too salty) or 14 slices of prosciutto or pancetta
1 egg, lightly beaten, for the eggwash
Line a large baking tray with baking parchment and set aside.
Roll out the pastry on a lightly floured work surface to a large rectangle that is as long (when I say ‘long’ I mean the height from top to bottom) as one of the slices of bacon and as wide as you can roll it. The pastry should be about 5mm thick. Turn the pastry so that the longest side is facing you and spread the mustard over, then sprinkle with the cheese and black pepper. Lay the pieces of bacon down side by side as if they were all lying in bed together, leaving a 2mm gap between each piece. Then use a sharp knife to cut between each piece. Pick up one piece and twist it about 4–5 times so it looks like a curly straw, then put it on the prepared baking tray and repeat with the rest of the twisties, arranging them spaced apart, as they will spread a little during baking.
Put the trays in the fridge for 15–20 minutes to firm up, or in the freezer for 10 minutes. Preheat the oven to 220°C (425°F), Gas Mark 7. Remove the twisties from the fridge and brush the pastry with the eggwash. Put the baking trays into the oven, turn the oven down to 200°C (400°F), Gas Mark 6 and cook for about 20 minutes, or until the pastry is well risen and looks golden brown. Preheating the oven at a higher temperature compensates for any lost hot air when the oven is opened to put the twisties in. Otherwise, the oven temperature may drop to 180°C (350°F), Gas Mark 4 and it would not be hot enough to give the twisties that big blast of heat they need.
When they are cooked, remove them from the oven and leave to cool.
Sausage roll’s big night out
I don’t have people over for dinner too much these days, as there do not seem to be enough hours in the day. The few times a year I do, however, these sausage rolls make a regular appearance. I know salami sticks are not everyone’s cup of tea, but all tucked up in puff pastry then lightly cooked they remind me of my youth, when Mum would put one in my lunch box along with egg-and-salad-cream sandwiches, prawn cocktail crisps and a carton of my favourite blackcurrant cordial.
Makes 6
1 x 375g packet of puff pastry
Flour, for dusting
6 skinny regular-sized salami sticks, cut in half
1 egg, lightly beaten, for the eggwash
Preheat the oven to 220°C (425°F), Gas Mark 7. Cut the pastry in half and roll one half out on a lightly floured surface to a rectangle about 42cm wide and 9cm high (or the height of half the salami stick). Trim the edges with a sharp knife to neaten them a little if necessary. Lay a salami stick half on the pastry about 1cm from the left-hand side edge, then take another one and lay it 4cm away from that one. Repeat until