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Contents
| Useful Information |
Oven Temperatures
Properties of Cooking Oils & Fats
Weights and Measures
Cooking Tips and Ingredients |
| Snacks & Starters |
"Special Occasions" have
been a regular feature of our Italian family and whenever we get
together, for Christmas, Easter, birthdays, anniversaries and,
these days, whenever we all just happen to actually get
together, it is rare that we do not open a bottle of bubbly or
two to go with our Antipasti Misti. It's an easy appetiser to
prepare with as many or as few different components as you like
or, for that matter, have to hand. Smoked salmon and crispy
things will almost always be added to the medley as well as one
or two other delectably nibbly finger foods ... |
| Stocks & Soups |
As a child
I watched open-mouthed and fearful as daddy opened the center of
the hottest cooking ring of mummy's Aga with a long hooked
poker, revealing a glowing furnace into which he would pour the
black egg-shaped balls of black fuel that kept the beast going
night and day. Long, slow, simmering is what is required to
make good stock and the warming plate of mummy's coke fired Aga
was often enough to keep the stock pot gently ticking over
through the night ... |
| Pasta, Rice & Pizza |
One of my earliest memories
involving pasta is of sitting around a table under the pine
trees of the Gargano, enjoying an alfresco meal. The spaghetti
were served, as of old, in the center of the table in a huge
dish from which we all ate. It took a long time for the penny
to drop but I eventually realised why Italians eat so hastily -
this way of serving food meant that the fastest ate the most,
and old habits die hard .... |
| Fish Dishes |
Ian and I have always loved
fish but like many people we never really ate very much of it.
Until, that is, Ian, who apart from cooking the occasional
Sunday lunch didn't spend much time in the kitchen, discovered a
simple little recipe for halibut cooked in cider in a cookbook
written by the Two Fat Ladies. It was just about the time that
Rick Stein became a famous TV chef and so, from then on, with
the help of a few of Rick's wonderful cookbooks, there was no
stopping him; Ian became our "chef de poissons" ... |
| Meaty Mains |
I have
never been a big fan of the main meat course of any meal and
have never really enjoyed the Great British "Sunday roast" or
"meat and two veg" type of meal. My preferred meat is chicken.
Therefore, not surprisingly, more or less one third of all my
meat recipes involve chicken, and I am not ashamed to say that I
enjoy the moist leg meat much more than the breast ... |
| Vegetables & Salads |
What can I say about this
section - not the most inspiring dishes on the menu and I think,
if you exclude the potato recipes, it shows in the sheer brevity
of the list compared to, say the list of Sweet Things. However,
there are some lovely dishes to be made that are not only good
accompaniments but also meals in themselves. And the list is
growing - as I discover more and more ways of serving these
amazing ingredients that are perhaps considered second class
citizens on most menus ... |
| Sweet Things |
Desserts,
these days, are always a rare treat as, with the advancing of
years and the slowing of the metabolism, large numbers of
calories are no longer so easily shrugged off. Steamed puddings
are a special winter indulgence, served with lashings of custard
or, my favourite, thick double cream, and bring back memories of
younger days when we used to have them often. As I said,
nowadays, being more sensitive in the weight department, I serve
these only on special occasions ... |
| Tipples For Nibbles |
Baros was a Maldivian island
we visited 3 times in the 1990's - it was on Baros that I first
discovered the delights of the Rusty Nail. Perfectly heavenly
in every way, we finished a hard day of sun, sea, sand and
snorkelling with a few pre-prandial cocktails at the open air
bar. A post-prandial nightcap or two was then followed by a
barefoot stroll through the gently lapping fluorescently
phosphorescent surf back to our cottage ... |
| Pickles & Preseves |
There are many ways of
preserving olives and here I have given three simple methods -
our favourites of course. Passed on to me by three old ladies
from Vico del Gargano, they are a little taste of the Gargano
and of Puglia. Extra special for us as we own a little piece of
it and grow our own olives, some of which I preserve to be
enjoyed by family and friends throughout the year and the rest,
about 10,000 kilos, we turn into about 2,000 liters of first
class Extra Virgin Olive Oil ... |
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