friederike's Profile

From: Berlin,

Joined: September 25th, 2009

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November 11th, 2018

Keralan Veggie Curry with Poppadoms, Rice & Minty Yoghurt from Jamie's 15-Minute Meals

The dish itself, the flavours, at least how I made it, that's a solid four star rating - it was delicious! Everything else - the time management, the style of writing, the layout, - oh, and did I mention... read more >


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friederike's Reviews


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2 recipe(s) reviewed. Showing 1 to 2Sort by: Title | Date | Rating

Dutch Food and Cooking: Traditions, Ingredients, Tastes, Techniques and Over 75 Classic Recipes

By Janny de Moor
Aquamarine - 2007

24th April 2010 (edited: 4th June 2013)

Asparagus Dutch Style : page 80

It's very difficult to rate this recipe as the dish consists of a couple of a few ingredients cooked seperately (if at all) and then served together - anyone can do, possibly even without instructions. You definitely won't win Masterchef with it, and yet it is so delicious that every year I know that this will be one of the best dishes in that year.

But perhaps it's a good way of illuminating a few cultural differences across Europe. Asparagus in Britain, and in most other English-speaking countries, I assume, is normally the green kind. In Holland and Germany, the slightly thicker white kind is standard. It's usually eaten with either melted, clarified butter or sauce hollandaise, smoked (Germany) or cooked (Holland) ham, new potatoes, and sometimes an egg (hard-boiled, poached, omelette, whatever; mainly Holland, I believe). And honestly, what else do you need? You won't need the parsley and nutmeg De Moor recommends. You could do smoked fish, eg. smoked salmon or smoked herring, although that is a less classic combination.

We got the timing slightly wrong - our asparagus was too soft; I'm not sure whether the fault lies with the cooking instructions or that it just took too long to bring the water to a boil (I anticipated that point slightly too early). Remember to take the ham out of the fridge early enough to bring it to room temperature. Other than that, I believe there is little that can go wrong.

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4th June 2013

Poffertjes : page 123

They rose nicely, but they were too crunchy (not very crunchy, just not as soft as they should be) and tasted a little boring. DH thought they could have used more salt, and also some sugar, though we later found out that poffertjes never contain sugar. Instead, you're supposed to cover them with loads of icing sugar to make them sweet from the outside, not the inside.

Nonetheless, DH had his plate clean in no time. When I asked him how he could insist on such a low rating (he was even lobbying for just 2 stars!), he looked at me and said "Well, I haven't had any in the past 20 years..."

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