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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3 recipe(s) reviewed. Showing 1 to 3Sort by: Title | Date | Rating

Website: Delicious Magazine (UK)

www.deliciousmagazine.co.uk
 

15th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

Caramelised Chicory and Onion Tarte Tatin

Very delicious! It was an unusual dish, beautifully presented and very nice in taste, although for my taste it might have been a little sweeter to counteract the chicories’ bitterness.

The only problem we had was with caramelizing the bottom (or top, depends on how you see it): You’re instructed to melt butter in an oven proof pan, sprinkle sugar into the pan in an even layer and let it melt, without stirring, on low heat; then increase heat until caramelized.
For our first try, we used our old spring form baking tin due to a lack of any other suitable pan. The sugar in the centre melted and burnt, the sugar at the edges didn’t even melt. So we decided to melt the sugar in a normal pan and then transfer it. BF insisted on cooking it on a very, very low temperature (electric level 1) – the butter coloured, but again the sugar didn’t even melt. Then it was my turn again. I used a higher temperature (level 3-4), but the caramel began to agglutinate – ah, there was some reasoning to the instructions! In the end, we poured the caramel into the dish as quickly as possible (albeit not with the expected success of spreading it) and then broke it into shivers, which worked well.

We only managed to fit three chicories in our 23cm square baking pan (no, not the spring form one) – just about enough for four not too hungry people. Add extra onions and sugar/caramel, and take care that the caramel doesn’t turn too dark to get a slightly sweeter flavour.

See also my Chicory and Goat’s Cheese Puff Pastry Pie.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Delicious Magazine, March 2010 edition.

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15th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

Chickpea, Goat's Cheese and Rocket Salad

Delicious and nourishing salad. Go easy on the lemon juice, though.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Delicious Magazine, May 2009 edition.

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15th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

Classic Moussaka

In a way you could call this the Greek version of Lasagna - a casserole with minced meat, tomatoes and white sauce, only that it contained aubergines and no pasta (I have seen many different recipes though – some included potatoes instead, others used feta in the white sauce. I have no idea what would be closest to the original, though).

This version was basically very nice, although it contained far too much unseasoned white sauce. If I’d do it again, I’d season the white sauce, possibly use less of it overall, and add more cheese instead. The spices in the rest of the Moussaka were nice although I found the cumin a little strange occasionally – but then again, it was nice to have these different spices because otherwise it would have been to close to a normal lasagna. And of course, as with any comparable dish, it’s very work-intensive. All in all, I liked it a lot but I think I prefer the Roasted Vegetable Lasagna we made a few weeks ago.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Delicious Magazine, March 2010 edition.

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