Categories
Bakes Desserts Recipes

Baked Blueberry, Lemon & Mascarpone Cheesecake

Heard the one about the new Italian toy craze loved by foodies? It’s called My Little Mascarpone.

I recently found myself with a tub of the silky rich cheese left over after making Cherry, Mascarpone & Biscotti Dessert, and wondered what else I could come up with. I spotted some unused blueberries in the fridge and there are usually some lemons in the ADK fruitbowl. Hey presto, the idea for a baked cheesecake was born.

I was introduced to baked cheesecake a few years ago in a New York deli, and loved it. I like how baking makes the taste and texture more intense, while browning and caramelising the top.

Servings

8 good sized slices.

Timings

10 mins to make the pastry, and 10 mins to make the filling, while the pastry base is chilling and the oven is warming up. Up to 50 mins to bake.

You Will Need

  • 225g plain flour
  • 100g butter
  • pinch of salt
  • a few tsp tap water
  • 50g caster sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 250g mascarpone cheese
  • 1 tbsp lemon curd
  • zest and juice of a lemon
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 125g blueberries

Method

  1. Sieve the flour into a food processor with blade fitted. Add in the butter in chopped cubes and whirl till you have the texture of breadcrumbs. Drop in enough water and swirl again, till it makes a ball of dough.
  2. Roll out on a floured surface and line a pastry dish. Mine shown in the main photo is 21cm diameter. Place in the fridge to chill, and turn on the oven to 180C.
  3. When the oven has reached temperature, line the pastry with scrunched up baking paper filled with ceramic baking beans, and put in the oven for 10mins. This will part bake the pastry base before adding the filling.
  4. While the pastry base is cooking, make the filling by mixing the sugar and egg in a bowl. Add in the mascarpone, lemon curd, zest, juice and vanilla and mix it all with an electric whisk.
  5. Remove the base from the oven, and take out the baking paper and beans, leaving them in another bowl to cool. Pour the filling into the pastry base, and stud all over the surface with the blueberries. Press the blueberries down just enough so that they adhere to the filling but can still be seen from above.
  6. Bake in the oven for around 50 mins. Check on it after 35 mins – if a skewer inserted in the middle is coming out with no wet mixture on it, the cake will be cooked. I like to leave mine for the fuller 50 mins, as I like how this gives the filling a dense and richer texture, and the top to be browned and caramelised.
  7. Leave the baked cake to cool before serving.

Customise It!

I used blueberries as I had a pack unused in the fridge. You could just as easily use raspberries or other berries. Also, if you don’t like making pastry, or don’t have ceramic baking beans, you can use a shop-bought base. You could also use a pack of ready made shortcrust pastry, if you wish.

New York is also the inspiration for the latest track to add to the ADK Spotify Playlist. There really are so many great bands I could choose from here: the Velvet Underground, New York Dolls, Talking Heads, Sonic Youth, Interpol… and of course these lads from Queens. Here are The Ramones, with Rockaway Beach.

Categories
Mains Recipes

Guinness and Honey-Glazed Roast Pork

With all my Irish Potato Bread now eaten, I’m moving on to the next round of Irish-influenced good food and great music, in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day Weekend.

This dish is a great way to incorporate A Drop of the Black Stuff in a dark, sweet glaze and sauce to enjoy with roast pork. As you can see from my main photo, I served this with creamy potato mash over a bed of shredded savoy cabbage. The garnish of scallions (spring onions) adds another taste, and contributes to the shamrock green colour palette.

It both looks and tastes great. What’s more, once you’ve opened the bottle of Guinness for the glaze, the rest can be poured into a glass as a well-earned appetiser for the hard working cook. So what’s not to like?

Servings

My carving of the pork loin produced 11 slices, so at 2 slices per person this will comfortably feed 4 -5.

Timings

15 mins to make the glaze. The pork takes an initial 20 mins in the oven at 180C, then a further 50 mins to slow cook at a lower setting of 150C.

You Will Need

  • 1kg good quality pork loin, skinless and boneless (I bought mine from a local independent butcher)
  • 200ml Guinness
  • 50ml runny honey
  • 120g light brown sugar
  • seasalt and black pepper

Method

  1. Combine the Guinness, honey and sugar in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Then turn down to a simmer and allow to reduce by about half. Remove the saucepan to a cool place. Don’t be too concerned if it still looks too liquidy for a glaze – as it starts to cool it will thicken.
  2. Turn on the oven at 180C.
  3. Lay the pork loin on a chopping board, fat side up. With a sharp knife, score lines in the layer of fat at 1cm intervals. Grind over some seasalt and black pepper, then rub it in to the fat layer with your fingers.
  4. Place the pork on a roasting dish and put in the oven when it has reached temperature. Leave for 20mins.
  5. Remove the pork from the oven and turn the temperature down to 150C. Brush the pork all over with most of the Guinness and honey glaze, and put it back in the oven for a further 50 mins.
  6. Take the dish from the oven at 10 – 15 min intervals and baste with the liquid gathering in the bottom of the roasting dish. These will be a mixture of the Guinness and honey glaze and the juices from the pork as it cooks.
  7. Remove the cooked pork after 50 mins and let it rest on a chopping board for 5 mins, then carve into slices. See my photos below.
  8. Tip the juices from the roasting dish into the saucepan along with the remaining Guinness and honey glaze. Stir to combine as you warm it through, then pour into a jug.
  9. Serve slices of the pork with your choice of veg, and drizzle over the Guinness and honey sauce (see my main photo at the top of this post). My veg is boiled potatoes mashed with butter, steamed shredded savoy cabbage, and a garnish of chopped scallions.

Customise It!

You have scope to vary the veg accompaniments, though I would keep to a potatoes and greens theme for a St Patrick’s celebration. Add the chopped scallions directly into the mash, to make champ. You could also replace the cabbage with kale or cavolo nero.

No prizes for guessing the suggested choice of drink to enjoy with your meal!

My St. Patrick’s Playlist has been prominent in the ADK kitchen this weekend, and here is another track. This one is something of a timeless classic from Belfast’s own Van the Man: Jackie Wilson Said (I’m in Heaven When You Smile).

Categories
Recipes Sides

Irish Potato Bread

Today is St. Patrick’s Day, so what better time to share an old family recipe for potato bread!

For many years, boiled, mashed potatoes have been a staple accompaniment to meals in Northern Ireland. The traditional way of preparing potato bread is by throwing a few extra spuds in the boiling water when you’re cooking. You then have some left over to make into potato bread, following this recipe.

Servings

This will make 8 rounds of potato bread.

Timings

15 mins to boil the potatoes, 5 mins to turn into mash, then 10 mins to cool. Another 15 mins to make the bread.

You Will Need

  • 250g potatoes (weight is after peeling)
  • 30g butter
  • half tsp salt
  • 70g plain flour
  • butter and granulated sugar to serve (optional)

Method

  1. Peel and cut the potatoes into chunky pieces. Pour over boiling water from the kettle, and simmer for 15 mins.
  2. Drain, then add the butter and salt. Mash to a creamy consistency, then set aside to cool in the saucepan.
  3. Sieve in the plain flour, and mix together with your hands, while still in the saucepan, to form a dough.
  4. Transfer to a lightly floured surface and roll out to a thickness of half to 1cm (see photos below).
  5. Use a cookie cutter (mine is 78mm diameter) to cut rounds from the dough. You should get about 4 rounds initially, then another 4 by combining and re-rolling the remaining dough.
  6. Lightly grease a heavy-bottomed frying pan with butter. Warm it on the hob, then put in the rounds, 4 at a time.
  7. Fry lightly on each side for about 5 mins, till dappled and golden brown (see my photos). Remove to a warm plate.

The potato bread can then be served as a savoury, along with bacon, eggs, sausages, or grilled tomatoes as part of a fry.

My favourite, however, is to serve it sweetened. Melt a sliver of butter on it while warm, and sprinkle with a spoonful of granulated sugar – see below. Serve with a pot of strong tea. Delicious!

I actually have a separate St. Patrick’s Day Playlist on Spotify, curated over a number of years, so there are many tracks I could choose from for today’s musical accompaniment. Let’s settle on this one from Dundalk’s famous musical family, The Corrs – So Young.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Categories
Blog

Celebration!

Today I am slipping in an additional post to share with you a milestone that I feel ought to be celebrated…

This week, A Different Kitchen has passed a total of 1,000 followers across my 3 interconnected platforms of WordPress, Twitter and Spotify. Woo hoo!

In all honesty, I wasn’t sure what to expect when I decided to start this blog last July. The concept was to post about my twin loves of good food and great music: Twitter (@differentkitch) providing quick, bite-sized content akin to snacks and appetisers, with WordPress serving up the mains – recipes and longer pieces that take a little more time to chew over and digest. Spotify would host an ongoing, personally curated soundtrack of great background music to it all.

Broadly speaking, this is how it has all panned out. It’s been a lot of fun, and I’ve enjoyed making connections with bloggers and foodies from all over the world.

There isn’t much I’m planning to change, though I may now upgrade my WordPress plan to go ad-free (which will probably come as a relief) with a domain name. Other than that, expect more photos and stories about what’s cooking in my kitchen, and yet more tracks from the Arctic Monkeys.

So, to everyone who has read, followed, commented, liked, pingbacked (pinged back?), retweeted, baked, barbecued, slow-cooked, bopped or pogo-ed…….

Thank You!

Categories
Bakes Blog

Bread Maker Pizza

Bread making machines have had something of a topsy turvy existence. Invented in the ’80s, they became widespread in homes in the ’90s and ’00s, as the smell and taste of freshly baked bread, at little more than the push of a button, became the next domestic ‘must have’ appliance.

Then, they rather fell out of favour. With growing awareness of the need to manage one’s carb intake, I know a few people who placed theirs in car boot sales, or simply gave them away.

There was then something of a resurgence in the pandemic. A combination of boredom in isolation, wish to avoid busy shops and some food shortages prompted people to dig their bread maker out from under the stairs, and bring it back into use.

While the pandemic is now well in decline, today’s cost of living crisis is once again reviving interest in home baking.

My experience is that it is very easy to slip into a rut with bread making – we find one of the pre-programmes that works for us reliably, and make the same loaf over and over again. It’s useful to remind ourselves that they are actually quite versatile and sophisticated machines. Mine is a Panasonic 2500, and the programmes enable dough preparation for ciabatta, focaccia and various fruited and seeded breads.

My photos show how I’ve used it recently to make a pizza base. I have had some mixed results in the past when making yeast dough by hand, as there are a number of variables, and things can easily go wrong. However, I find the bread maker version much more reliable.

Following the instructions in my manual, I tipped some fast action dried yeast powder, strong white bread flour, olive oil, salt and water into the tin. The machine then mixed, swirled and kneaded it all automatically for 45 minutes as per the set programme.

I left it covered in a warm place till ready to use. The soft and pliable dough came away easily from the tin, didn’t stick to my fingers, and was easy to stretch out with my hands on a floured surface.

I added some tomato and onion sauce I’d made, with fresh torn basil leaves, then topped it with soft fried chopped mushrooms, peppers, black olives and grated mozzarella cheese. Here it is ready to go in the oven at 180C.

12 minutes later, it looks like this and tasted delicious! The base had baked evenly from the edges all the way to the centre. It is also a fraction of the cost of a Domino’s. You can vary the ingredients if you wish, to incorporate your favourite toppings.

So if you have a bread maker somewhere gathering dust, why not look it out and try some new styles of bread? Never mind if you’ve lost the instruction manual, they are usually still available online. With fresh ingredients, and some fast action dried yeast you should, like this classy track from Gabrielle, be ready to Rise again.

Categories
Mains Recipes

Super Sunday Pasta Bake

Sunday teatime in my household presents something of a challenge: I like to have a home-cooked dinner for the family, but also enjoy watching the live football on Sky Sports’ Super Sunday. Especially so this week just gone, when the featured match is a big one, between Liverpool and Man United.

So I have developed a solution: Super Sunday Pasta Bake. All of the chopping and prep can be done in 15 minutes, at half-time. Then, when the final whistle is blown, it is just a case of throwing the ingredients together and into the oven. Twenty five minutes later, we have a Sunday dinner, and I haven’t missed any of the live action.

Granted, if you are a Man U fan, you may have wanted to slip out to the kitchen early on Sunday during the second half, to escape witnessing that 7 – 0 mauling by Liverpool.

Anyway, if you’re ready to pay attention, I’ll begin the tactics talk….

Servings

This will serve 4 people.

Timings

As indicated, 15 mins at half-time to prep, then 10 mins to combine at full time. The dish then goes in the oven for 15 mins to bake at 180C.

You Will Need

  • 1 cauliflower
  • 200g pasta penne
  • olive oil
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 4 rashers streaky bacon
  • 1 onion
  • 5 – 6 mushrooms
  • 1 green pepper
  • 60g butter
  • 75g plain flour
  • 500ml semi-skimmed milk
  • 100g mature cheddar cheese

Method

Half-Time

  1. Break the head of cauliflower into even-sized florets, and place in a bowl of water.
  2. Weigh out the penne and add to the bowl. Set aside.
  3. Chop the bacon, onion, pepper and mushrooms and place on a covered plate. Top and tail the garlic clove so it’s ready for crushing.

Full-Time

  1. Boil a kettle. Drain the cauli and penne, and place in a sauce pan covered in the boiling water. Bring to the boil again, then simmer for 10 mins.
  2. Switch on the oven at 180C. Lightly grease a baking dish with a swig of the oil.
  3. Put the rest of the oil in a wok or frying pan, and warm it on the hob. Add the crushed garlic clove, and when the oil sizzles, tip in the bacon and the veg.
  4. Melt the butter in the microwave, then stir in the flour to make a paste. Add in the milk, and return to the microwave on high for 2 mins. Keep checking it every 30 seconds or so to make sure it isn’t boiling over. It will soon begin to thicken, and should be lump-free.
  5. Stir the sauce with a hand whisk and give it further 30 second bursts as necessary in the microwave to thicken. Remove from the microwave, grate in all but a handful of the cheddar, and stir to combine.
  6. By this stage, the cauli and penne should have had 10 mins to simmer, and the bacon and veg softened in the pan. As if by magic, the oven should be coming up to temperature.
  7. Drain the cauli and penne and spread out in the baking dish. Spread the bacon and veg on top, then cover in the cheese sauce. Sprinkle the reserved handful of grated cheese over the top, and put into the oven for 15 mins.
  8. If you wish, go back for 15 mins and see what pundits, Jamie and Gary are making of the match just gone!
  9. It should then look like the photo below. Spoon into bowls, which should look like the picture at the top of this post.

Customise it!

Within the basic structure of the dish, there is lots of scope to play around with the ingredients. Vary up the veg by replacing the cauli with broccoli, and leek in place of the onion. Add more colour with a different pepper, or go vegetarian by adding chopped nuts in place of the bacon. Blue cheese will go well in the sauce.

More new music now for the ADK Playlist, courtesy of Leftfield. The massively influential dance band are back with a new album, This Is What We Do, which is definitely worth a listen. Here is one of my favourite tracks from it, Full Way Round.

Categories
Mains Recipes

Cassoulet

This week, positive scenes in the news have inspired me to come up with a dish that brings together some British and European ingredients. It looks like we may now be getting back to being on (at least) speaking terms with our lovely neighbours across the Channel in Brussels.

My take on Cassoulet, the classic French stew, combines British seasonal winter veg, German Bratwurst, and French white wine. It’s a fine taste of cross-border goodwill and co-operation – Rishi and Ursula would love it!

There are many different cassoulet recipes, and most contain garlic, poultry (usually chicken or duck), sausages, a ham or bacon, a pulse (e.g. cannellini or haricot beans), stock and white wine. Outside of these, there is scope to use your imagination, what is in season or (erm, a consideration in some parts of Britain at the moment) what is actually in stock in the shops.

Servings

There should be enough here for 6 generous servings.

Timings

About 20 -25 mins to prepare. It then simmers away on its own for 2 – 3 hours.

You Will Need

  • 4 chicken breasts
  • 6 Bratwurst (or any other good pork sausages)
  • 12 rashers streaky bacon
  • 1 onion
  • 2 celery sticks
  • 1 carrot
  • 100g button mushrooms
  • 400g can of chopped tomatoes
  • 400g can of cannellini beans
  • 300ml chicken stock
  • 200ml white wine
  • torn basil leaves
  • 1 bayleaf
  • 2 tbsp cornflour
  • 2 tbsp cold water

Method

  1. Prepare a large casserole dish or slow cooker to cook the cassoulet in.
  2. Cut each chicken breast in half, then shallow fry each in a frying pan or wok until browned. Transfer to the cassoulet dish.
  3. Chop the bacon and fry with the sausages till browned. Add to the cassoulet dish.
  4. Chop the onion, celery, carrot and mushrooms and add to the frying pan. Let the veg soften for a few minutes, then transfer to the cassoulet dish.
  5. In the warm frying pan, tip in the tomatoes, stock, wine and beans. Give them a stir and, when warm and combined (you guessed it) transfer to the cassoulet dish.
  6. Tear in the basil leaves and add a few twists of salt and black pepper. Dunk the bayleaf in the middle.
  7. Let it stew for 2 – 3 hours. I used an electric slow cooker, which sits simmering away in the corner of the kitchen. If you use a casserole dish, put it in the oven at 180C.
  8. When the cassoulet is cooked, combine the cornflour and water in a ramekin until fully dissolved. Pour into the cassoulet and stir to combine. You should see the sauce start to thicken straight away. It is then ready to serve.

Customise It!

As suggested above, provided you have the core elements that every cassoulet should have, you can feel free to play around. Slices of garlic sausage from the deli can take the place of the bacon, for example, and you can vary up the veg if you wish.

I served this with boiled waxy potatoes and steamed shredded cabbage – both of which are good at soaking up the sauce. Boiled rice is another good call.

Turning to the next track for the ADK Playlist, all this talk about European relations brings me to Kraftwerk. I saw them play a few years ago, in the Royal Albert Hall in London. There aren’t many bands who can go off stage half way through for a nice cup of tea, leaving four robots to play their instruments in their absence. The machines performed We Are the Robots, without any dip in quality.

This is one of my favourite tracks of theirs, taking us on an atmospheric journey from Paris, through Vienna to Berlin, on the Trans-Europe Express.

Categories
Bakes Recipes

Double Choc Cherry Muffins

Sometimes the unplanned, spur of the moment dishes can turn out to be the best!

I had half a pack of fresh black cherries left over from my Cherry, Mascarpone & Biscotti Dessert, and was looking for ideas on how to use them up. Spotting just over half a 100g bar of Lindt 70% dark chocolate in the kitchen cupboard, I soon had the answer.

Dark chocolate and cherries is a timeless combination that never ceases to please. This recipe delivers a double hit of chocolate, through the sponge mixture and the broken-up chunks.

The other ingredients involved here are all ones I usually have in the fridge or store cupboard. After about an hour, the family was tucking into fresh double choc cherry muffins, still warm from the oven.

Fancy some of that action? Read on…

Servings

This will make 12 muffins.

Timings

10 -15 mins to prepare while the oven is warming up, then 25 mins in the oven at 180C.

You Will Need

  • 255g plain flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • half tsp bicarb of soda
  • half tsp salt
  • 110g sugar (caster or granulated)
  • 4 tbsp cocoa powder
  • 1 egg
  • 250ml milk
  • 90ml vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 60g dark chocolate broken into chunks
  • 60g black cherries, stones removed and cut into quarters

Method

  1. Switch on the oven and heat to 180C. Lay out a muffin tin or mould.
  2. While the oven is getting up to temperature, prepare the mixture.
  3. In a bowl, sieve together the flour, baking powder, bicarb, salt and sugar.
  4. Add in the cherries and choc chunks. Give it all a good stir so that the cherries and choc are coated in the dry mix.
  5. Break the egg into a separate bowl, and stir in the milk, oil and vanilla. Add to the dry ingredients and stir to incorporate, so that there are no dry ingredients visible.
  6. Spoon into the muffin tin/mould and put in the oven for 25 mins at 180C.
  7. Remove from the oven when done and leave to cool on a wire rack, before enjoying. They are great when still a little warm, and just as good when cool. They will keep for a couple of days in an airtight container (though they will probably all be gone before then!)

Customise it!

For an even smoother taste, replace the 90ml veg oil with 90g of butter, melted in a microwave. You could also introduce some chopped nuts along with the cherries and choc – go for 40g and reduce the cherries and choc chunks to 40g also.

The next track for the ADK Spotify Playlist is bang on theme, requiring no further explanation. This is Goldfrapp with Black Cherry.

Categories
Breakfast Mains Recipes

Bacon and Blueberry Pancake Stacks

A feast for Pancake Day that’s flippin’ marvellous!

I have made this a few times, having used the recipe in my Sunday Brunch Cookbook, from the makers of the Channel 4 show featuring Simon Rimmer and Tim Lovejoy (so a big ADK shout out to Simon and Tim!).

Fancy sweet blueberry pancakes interlaced with rashers of bacon and melted butter, topped with a soft poached egg and drizzle of maple syrup, with a few twists of black pepper? Read on…

Servings

There are 3 pancakes in a stack, and this will make 6 pancakes i.e. 2 servings

Timings

15 mins to prepare the pancake batter (which can be done in advance), and then 15 mins to cook.

You Will Need

  • 1 egg for the batter
  • 25g butter
  • 125ml semi-skimmed milk
  • 60g cottage cheese
  • 100g self-raising flour
  • 1tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 25g caster sugar
  • 120g fresh blueberries
  • oil
  • 2 eggs for poaching
  • 6 rashers of streaky bacon
  • maple syrup to drizzle
  • black pepper
  • some slivers of butter

Method

  1. Begin by making the pancake batter: combine the egg, milk, and cottage cheese in a bowl. Melt the butter ( I give it 12 – 15 seconds in a small bowl in the microwave) and add it in.
  2. In a separate bowl combine the flour, bicarb and sugar, the sieve it into the egg mixture. Give it a good stir, and feel free to use a mixer or hand blender to remove any lumps, if you wish.
  3. Add in most (about 100g) of the blueberries. Make sure you do this after using your mixer or hand blender, as you want them to stay whole! Give it another good stir and set aside.
  4. Warm an oven to around 100C and put in a plate that you can use to keep the pancakes warm as you cook them.
  5. Rub the base of a frying pan with a piece of kitchen paper dipped in oil, so that it has a light coating all over. Put it on the hob to heat up.
  6. Ladle in around 2 heaped tbsp of the batter. It will spread out to form a pancake about 1cm deep and 10cm in diameter, though don’t expect it to be a perfect circle (and this doesn’t matter). See the first of my photos below.
  7. After a few minutes, when it’s looking like it’s firming up, insert a spatula underneath and carefully flip it over to cook on the other side. See the second of my photos below.
  8. When both sides are cooked to a golden brown, remove and set on the warming plate in the oven.
  9. Repeat steps 6 – 8 to make 6 pancakes in total.
  10. With all 6 pancakes made, lay out the rashers of bacon in the pan and cook till crisp and golden.
  11. While the bacon is frying, soft poach the eggs. I find about 4 mins, once the water has reached boiling point, is the right length of time for large size eggs.
  12. Remove the bacon to the warming plate when done.
  13. Take the poached eggs off the boil when done.
  14. On two plates, you can then assemble the stacks. Begin with one pancake, then lay a rasher of bacon on top. Add a sliver of butter, which will soon melt. Repeat with another two layers, placing the rasher of bacon at 90 degrees to the one below. This will help the top stay flat(tish), which assists when adding the egg topping.
  15. Carefully place a poached egg on top. Drizzle with maple syrup and give it a few twists of black pepper from a mill. Scatter the remaining blueberries around the plates. Hopefully it will resemble my main photo at the top of the post.
  16. Serve!

Customise it!

I wouldn’t change the core ingredients of sweetened blueberry pancakes, bacon and soft poached egg. However, you could drizzle honey rather than maple if you wish, and also sprinkle some chilli flakes.

Next track for the ADK Spotify Playlist is from The Snuts, a young indie band who hail from West Lothian in Scotland. I like their sound and think the vocalist, Jack Cochrane, has a great voice. These boys can go far! This is Hallelujah Moment.

Categories
Mains Recipes

Sweet Roasted Veg in Qatari Spices

This week I’ve had fun using the Qatari Spices mix I brought back from the Souq Waqif in Doha, which I visited on my travels there in November. For this recipe, however, you can use any good mix of curry powder.

By way of background, I visited Doha in November and enjoyed the football and party atmosphere of the World Cup. It was quite some experience, with people from 32 nations all over the globe rubbing shoulders together in one city, in friendship and harmony.

In a previous blogpost, I explained the bewildering range of spices I came across on sale at Doha’s old traditional market, the Souq Waqif. The mix I chose is a blend of 9 different spices, including red chilli, cumin, cardamom, ginger, turmeric and coriander, all ground into a beautiful yellow/orange powder. See my photo below, taken at the Souq.

In this dish, I decided to make a paste and combine it with seasonal vegetables that become sweeter when roasted, namely butternut squash, parsnip and green pepper.

Normally I would like to retain control over the individual spices I am using. However, when you have a good quality ready made blend put together by an expert that knows their spice combinations, it provides a basis for a reliably good meal, and is also a time saver.

Servings

This will make 4 servings.

Timings

25 – 30 mins to roast the veg, and then 10 mins to combine in the sauce. The rest you can do while the veg are in the oven.

You Will Need

  • a large roasting tray’s worth of chopped and deseeded butternut squash, chopped parsnip and chopped green pepper, spread out on one shallow layer and coated in 1tbsp oil
  • 1 tbsp oil for the wok
  • 2 – 3 tsp of Qatari Spices mix, or other curry powder
  • 1 onion
  • 1 garlic clove, crushed
  • a 5cm piece of root ginger, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 400g can of chopped tomatoes
  • 1 400ml can of coconut milk
  • any other veg you have to hand for using up – I threw in a half-can of sweet corn, chopped scallions and some button mushrooms
  • boiled basmati rice for 4 people – for me this means around 200g

Method

  1. Heat the oven to 180C and put in the roasting tray with the veg for around 25 – 30 mins.
  2. Put the oil in a wok. When hot, add in the onion, garlic and ginger.
  3. After a minute, add in the spice mix, with a few drops of the tomatoes and the coconut milk. Stir it around in the wok to make a lovely spicy paste.
  4. If you are using button mushrooms like me, add them at this stage and let them sizzle for a minute or two.
  5. Pour in the rest of the tomatoes and coconut milk and stir. Turn up the heat so that it thickens and reduces.
  6. While the sauce is maturing, put the rice in a saucepan with boiling water and simmer for 10 mins or so, until the grains are just soft enough to bite through.
  7. When the veg is roasted, tip it all in to the wok, and stir so that it gets coated in the thick sauce.
  8. Drain the rice, and divide between 4 plates. Serve a few spoonfuls of the spicy veg curry alongside. See my main photo at the top of this post.

Customise it

The core ingredients are the sweet roast veg, and the spicy tomato/coconut curry sauce. As I’ve indicated, you can add in any other veg you have to hand and wish to use up – it all helps make your curry unique. You could also swap the rice for a pillau, home-made or ready-made, or some Naan or flatbread. Flat breads were especially popular in Qatar.

For the next track on our ADK Spotify Playlist, I’ve chosen another of the great new bands that are coming through just now. They’ve been deservedly lauded recently at the Grammys and the Brits. Here’s the Isle of Wight’s own Wet Leg, with Chaise Longue.