Sunday, 8 September 2013

Gary Mehigan's really sexy Beef onion and Guinness pies




Makes 6 pies

Filling:
100ml normal olive oil, plus extra for greasing
5 onions, sliced
4 cloves garlic, smashed and peeled
4 sprigs thyme
3 fresh bay leaves (or about 1-2 dried bay leaves)
2 tablespoons plain flour
1.5kg trimmed chuck steak, cut into 5cm pieces
Salt flakes and freshly ground white pepper
1 carrot, cut into large chunks
440ml can Guinness
2L home-made beef stock (I used store bought!)
1 egg, beaten

Maggie Beer’s Sour-Cream Pastry:
200g chilled unsalted butter, chopped
250g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
½ cup sour cream

Equipment:
1 jumbo 6-cup muffin tray


1. Preheat your oven to 180°C fan-forced or 200°C conventional.

2. To make the filling, add 40ml olive oil to an enamelled cast-iron casserole, then add the onion, garlic and thyme and cook over low heat (use a simmer mat, if necessary) for 40 minutes or until the onion is soft and translucent. Stir occasionally. Increase the heat to medium-high, add bay leaves and cook until the onion is  caramelised. Add the flour and cook stirring often for 3-4 minutes.

3. Season the beef generously with salt flakes and ground white pepper. Heat remaining 60ml of the olive oil in a large frying pan over high heat, then cook the beef in 2 batches until browned on all sides. Add the carrot and cook for 5-6 minutes. Add ¾ of the Guinness and cook for 5 minutes. Tip beef and Guinness into onions. Use remaining Guinness to deglaze the beef pan, scraping all the brown bits from the bottom, add to the onions.

4. Pour enough beef stock to cover the beef and vegetables and bring to the boil. Cover with a tight fitting lid, then transfer to the oven and cook for 2-2.5 hours or until tender. Leave to cool to room temperature. Remove the chunks of beef and carrot to a board and chop into 1cm pieces, then return them to the onion gravy. Refrigerate until cold.

5. While it's refrigerating, make the sour cream pastry. Place the butter and flour and a pinch of salt in the bowl of an electric mixer with a paddle or food processor, then blend until the mixture resembles large breadcrumbs. Gradually add the sour cream, mixing until the pastry just comes together. Shape into a disc, then wrap in plastic wrap then chill for at least 20 minutes.

6. Grease 6 holes of a muffin pan with a little olive oil. Roll out the pastry to 3-5mm thick, using a little extra flour for dusting. Cut out six rounds about 4cm bigger than the muffin holes for the pie bases and six rounds 2cm bigger than the muffin holes for the pie lids. Place a pie base in each hole, then press in in lightly with your fingers, and draw the pastry up the mould a little so the pastry is 1cm above the mould. Fill each hole with some of the beef mixture, brush edges with water, then top each with a pastry lid and crimp the edges to seal in the filling.

7. Brush the pastry tops with beaten egg, cut a small hole in the centre of each pie for steam to escape. Bake for 25 minutes or until pastry is golden. Remove from the oven and leave to stand for 5 minutes. Turn out and serve with tomato sauce, if desired.

* This recipe was taken from the Masterchef Australia website. What an awesome show! 

Maggie Beer's Sour Cream pastry is pretty good. However, I think the amount is slightly too little. I'd make a little extra just in case. Especially if you pie is really dense and heavy, you'll need more pastry to hold it up. 

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Spicy corndogs from SortedFood



I want to try making these. The first time I had a corndog it was made from a frozen packet from Jason's supermarket. It was super gross.

The SortedFood boys make it look good! Their my favourite YouTube channel other than the Pixiwoo girls (make up tutorials), and Epic Meal Time (bacon on top of bacon!).

Check out SortedFood's YouTube video here, or the full recipe on their website here.

I also found another corndog recipe from Hilah Johnson. She uses shortening to fry her corndogs. Hello, how can that not be good!


Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Home made ricotta cheese



Makes 1 cup

3 1/2 cups milk (the full fat kind)
1/2 cup heavy cream/ thickened cream (35-36% fat)
1/2 teaspoon coarse sea salt
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice


1. Pour the milk, cream and salt into a 3 litre nonreactive saucepan (stainless steel, glass) Attach a candy or deep-fry thermometer. Heat the milk to 87 degrees Celsius. Stir it occasionally to keep it from scorching on the bottom.

2. Remove from heat and add the lemon juice, then stir it once or twice, gently and slowly. Let the pot sit undisturbed for 5 minutes.

3. Line a colander or sieve with a few layers of cheesecloth or paper towels or other non-terrycloth kitchen towels and place it over a large bowl to catch the whey.

4. Pour the curds and whey into the colander and let the curds strain for an hour. If your ricotta looks a little dry for your tastes, stir back in some of the whey.

5. Discard the remainder whey. Eat straight  right away or transfer it to an airtight container and refrigerate until ready to use.

* I got this recipe from Dishing the Divine. For the photo above I experimented a little and pressed the cheese with some cans in the fridge . I'm not professional and don't own any pro equipment and I'm guessing you don't either. So, just MacGyver it! Then I cut it into pieces like paneer. It won't form clean slices but it's still good anyway! 

Is it cheaper than buying a tub of ricotta from the supermarket? No. Not in Singapore anyway where dairy is expensive and carton of milk costs $3+, and a small tub of cream is about that price too. 

Is it fun to make? Definitely yes! 

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Eating odd bits

I love eating the weird parts of an animal. As kids and even till now, my twin sister Caryn and I fight over the odd parts of the Singaporean local dish, kway chap - a dish of braised pork, offal, beancurd, and hard-boiled eggs, served with a bowl of flat lasagna-like rice pasta in steaming brown broth. The sweet intestines and large intestines were the main items to claim over with your chopsticks.

We also still fight over the chicken feet my mother uses in her soups. I still use chicken feet in my stocks. Heston Blumenthal has this recipe for a very chickeny chicken stock which uses milk powder and chicken wings. Forget it. Just use as many chicken feet as you can get your hands on - it's way cheaper! When you're done boiling, take them out and dip in soy sauce and pepper. I have my own chicken stock recipe here.

I try to add as many odd bits to my food as possible. The other day we had a BBQ at ours and I couldn't resist buying some beef heart and lungs. I made them satay style on skewers and served them up.



I bought this book called Odd Bits and I'm now reading it. There's also a little bit about the history of eating these parts. They're nothing to be afraid of. Not too long ago, we thought they were as normal as boneless skinless chicken breast wrapped in cling film in a supermarket.

The odd bits are not only nutritious, they're also cheap and good for budget meals. In honour of this book, I'm adding a new tab to by blog. It's called "Odd".

Seriously, try it.


You can learn more about the author, Jennifer McLagan, here.


Chicken & duck liver pate



Serve 4-6

(Makes approx. 500g)

2 knobs of butter
1 large white onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped
250g duck livers, cleaned and trimmed, patted dry
250g chicken livers, cleaned and trimmed, patted dry
2 tablespoons sherry, wine, brandy or cognac (or any alcohol you have in the house!  I've used white wine , Chinese cooking wine and whiskey before. Chinese cooking wine, tsao tsing, I think is the best. It's got a sweet flavour and masks a bit of the livery taste)
50mls thickened cream
Another knob of butter
handful of chopped parsley
Salt & pepper

For the topping:
About 50 - 100g butter
2-3 springs rosemary
Approx 10 black peppercorns

1. In a pan or skillet, heat one knob of butter and fry the onions and garlic till it's tender. Remove and set aside.

2. Season the livers with salt and pepper.

3. Add another knob of butter to the pan and fry the livers in two batches. Do not crowd the pan and make sure the butter is very hot, or else the livers will not brown. Fry about 1-2 minutes on each side, until the livers are slightly firm.

4. Put the onions back into pan with the livers and add the alcohol till it's evaporated. Then transfer them to your food processor.

5. Pour in the cream and knob of butter and blitz till it's smooth. If it's too thick, you might need to add a little more cream.

6. Add the chopped parsley, and give it some salt and pepper for seasoning.

7. Transfer to a bowl or serving dish.

8. Melt some butter and throw in the peppercorns and rosemary at the last minute. Remove from heat and allow to cool.

9. Pour over the pate and leave it in the fridge to set for a few hours.

10. Serve with sliced bread or toast.

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

How I make my chicken stock

One large pot of water
2 chicken carcasses
10 chickens' feet
2 chicken leg quarters
2 onions, cut into large wedges
5-6 cloves garlic, bruised and skin removed
2 carrots, cut into chunks

1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil.

2. Immerse all ingredients. Water should just cover all the ingredients.

3. Bring to a boil again and skim off all the scum.

4. Lower the heat to as low as you can (you should still see a bit of bubbling) and lightly simmer, covered, for 2 hours.

5. Strain and take out the carcasses and legs. When it's cooled, pick out all the meat and use it for chicken mayonnaise sandwiches. Discard the rest.

6. Season with salt and pepper if you wish.

7. To make a clearer stock, freeze the stock in freezer bags. Once it's frozen, remove the iced stock and place it on top of a strainer lined with a cheesecloth. You can use kitchen paper but you may need to change it a few times.

8. Let it drip into a bowl - this may take a few hours.

* Can be used in hotpots, soups, sauces... or whenever you feel you want to substitute water.

Pigs organ soup



Serves 2

2 handfuls of small intestines, washed and cut into 3 inch pieces
As much pig's liver as you like, sliced
1/2 tablespoon black peppercorns, lightly smashed
1/2 teaspoon white vinegar
finely ground white pepper
tsao tsing wine
1 tablespoon sugar
pinch of salt
Coriander leaves or spring onions to garnish
Optional: pickled vegetables or Chinese cabbage

1. Marinade the intestines with pinch of white pepper and tsao tsing wine.

2. In a small - medium pot, bring water to a boil with black peppercorns and vinegar.

3. Add the intestines to the boiling water and skim off as much scum as you can.

4. Lower the heat to a simmer and boil for 1.5 to 2 hours.

5. After boiling for 1.5-2 hours, season with salt and sugar and more ground white pepper.

6. Boil the liver till it's fully cooked and garnish with coriander leaves or spring onions.

* I know a lot of people get squeamish about the odd bits of an animal. I love them. In fact there's probably nothing I wouldn't eat, and I dislike nothing that can be put in my mouth. As kids, my siblings and I never had that stage of hating foods like broccoli, other vegetables. We ate what Mum and Dad ate, and that was that. 

In Singapore the odd bits are prized - pigs tails, pigs organs, chicken livers, hearts, bones, heads, - what a butcher would give you for free in Western countries, we have to pay for here. They are cheap but it's not free! I believe when some people say if you kill an animal, then respect it by using every part of it.

Organs were once so prized they were on the tables of kings and queens! I urge you to try it out - what's the worst that can happen to you!?