friederike's Profile

From: Berlin,

Joined: September 25th, 2009

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Latest review:

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 >


recipe reviews (1113)
book reviews (121)
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friederike's Reviews


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1109 recipes reviewed. Showing 951 to 1000Sort by: Book Title | Date | Rating | Recipe Title

Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

16th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

Spiced Prawn and Coconut Pilaf

Slight disappointment. I had expected something as good as the Vegetable Pilau I hade made a few months ago, but this dish tasted quite disbalanced. BF compared it to an orchestra that made sufficient noise (read: was tasty/aromatic enough), but that noise wasn't guided properly as to produce a nice harmonic tune.

Granted, we had to use tomato purée instead of real tomatoes because BF had secretly eaten them up (all of them!), and then (whisper) he actually used the whole double-sized tin (140g)!! Consequently, the dish tasted too much of tomato purée, a slightly sour taste, but also the taste of the curry (we used mild madras) or perhaps the tumeric was too strong. Halfway through the meal we had the idea to add some rasped coconut to balance the spices a little more, which worked a little.

Next time we´ll definitely use fresh tomatoes, even if that means going out to the store again, and cut the curry and tumeric by half, and then see how it goes. I do believe that the basic idea is very nice.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food magazine, July 2009 edition.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

16th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

Leek, Cheese and Bacon Tart

Basically this is a variation on my usual recipe of very basic Leek Tart, except that it features soft cheese with garlic and herbs and foregoes the egg-milk-cream mix. On the one hand I like the addition, on the other this might have been the reason why the crust didn’t become crisp at all (BF suggested a rating of only 3 stars at this point) – then again, an egg-milk-cream mix contains even more liquid, so we probably just didn’t give it enough time. It wasn’t quite enough for four, though.

We made this tart with (defrosted) mussels and shrimps instead of bacon, and the combination worked well, too.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food magazine, Oct. 2009 edition.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

16th April 2010 (edited: 20th April 2010)

One-pan baked Chicken with Squash, Sage and Walnuts

The good news: it's incredibly easy to prepare (just throw everything into a roasting tin and you're nearly done), it's beautiful and distinctly autumnal (it's the cover dish, for that matter), and BF and my guests last night loved it.

The bad news: I didn't. I was a bit disappointed because the flavours of the ingredients didn’t come together. What the sense of that? I thought cooking was the art of combining ingredients and creating something new. Instead, the chicken tasted like chicken (like a very tender chicken, though), the squash tasted like squash, the walnuts tasted like walnuts, and the sage, well, the sage was burnt and didn’t give off any flavour at all.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food magazine, Oct. 2009 edition.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

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

Pea, Prawn and Lemon Linguine

BF prepared it and ate it while I only managed to get hold of the leftovers the next day (and believe me, reheated pasta with a cream sauce deteriorates enormously), so I'll have rely a bit on his judgement.

He liked it a lot, but he thought that it was just a little too creamy and not really moist enough; it's probably a good idea to save some pasta water next time, just in case. He also regretted that he couldn't do anything with the prawn shell, but then again most frozen prawns come without shells anyway. It definitely wasn't enough for 4 servings, it was rather 3 very light servings, or just a main dish for 2 (either that or he must have had a huge portion yesterday...).

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food series cookbook, 101 Store-cupboard Suppers.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

21st April 2010 (edited: 21st April 2010)

Chicken, Fennel and Tomato Ragout

This one was just okay. I wasn’t exactly wild about it (but then I’m not that much of a fan of fennel), and it didn’t help that the chicken ended up being a little dry.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in Olive magazine, August 2009 edition. And in the BBC Good Food magazine, July 2007 edition, apparently. Sneaky!

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

21st April 2010 (edited: 1st April 2011)

Refreshing Lychee and Lime Sorbet

Soooo delicious! In fact, this sorbet would have easily gained a 5 star rating if the consistency had been more like that of a true sorbet than that of slightly thawed snow. Still, the flavours nearly made you forget which is even more impressive as I was sceptic that cheap tinned fruit could be turned into anything delicious at all… Let me tell you, it can!

Edited to add:
We made the sorbet again, stirred it several times, and added an extra egg white - it was absolutely great! The extra egg white made the texture much finer. Definitely worth a 5-star rating!
I would recommend grating the zest as fine as you can instead of adding it in stripes - use a nutmeg grater for best results! Biting on a distinct piece of zest definitely isn't what you'd want in a sorbet.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food series cookbook, 101 Store-cupboard Suppers.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

21st April 2010

Sesame Noodles with Tofu

Just okay. It was quite bland, so the following day we doubled up the amount of ginger and garlic and marinated the tofu a little longer and yet it was somewhat bland. Roasting the sesames probably would have helped, too.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food series cookbook, 101 Store-cupboard Suppers.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

21st April 2010

Lemon Mousse

Quickly prepared and very delicious, but I don’t think all went entirely well with the preparation. You’re supposed to mix the cream, sugar and lemon zest until it starts to thicken, then add the lemon juice and continue whisking the mixture until it thickens further but not too much or else you won’t be able to add the whipped egg whites – only that my mixture never became thick at all. Next time I’ll try whipping the cream first until semi-stiff before adding the sugar, lemon zest and juice.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Olive: 101 Quick-fix Dishes cookbook.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

21st April 2010 (edited: 21st April 2010)

Grilled Salmon with Lemon Courgettes

Ah, another variant on the 'grilled salmon steak with vegetables and potato'-theme; see my Grilled Salmon with Watercress Cream Sauce for more on that. This one was extremely delicious - the best one so far!

It did have two deficits, though - you won't need 2 courgettes for 2 people, 1 or 1 1/2 are enough, and it took us more than 3 minutes to cook the courgettes, 20 minutes or so was more realistic. That's not really a problem, though, as long as you know it. The moment you've set the potatoes to cook, begin with slicing the courgettes and start frying them immediately. Then you'll have a great dinner ready in 20-25 min total cooking time.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Olive: 101 Quick-fix Dishes cookbook.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

This dish was perfectly okay, just not very exciting. It did bother me a little that they cheated: anyone can make a one-pot pasta-dish with cooked penne (especially if you assume, like they did, that the pasta won't need reheating)!

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food series cookbook, 101 Store-cupboard Suppers.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

24th April 2010 (edited: 13th April 2018)

Garden Vegetable and Goat's Cheese Quiche

It all started with a weird cultural problem. One of the ingredients are runner beans. I looked up runner beans on Wikipedia and found an entry on runner beans - brilliant! The only problem was that although it stated that this article covered the runner bean, also known as the scarlet runner bean, it said nowhere that there was also the common Green bean, known as runner bean in British English. I searched the whole city for scarlet runner beans, only to find out, once at home, that the BBC means green beans, haricots verts. Is that a problem of the BBC or of Wikipedia, or just my own? I bit of all of the above, I suppose.

So, what about the quiche, then? I must admit that I forgot to add the courgettes - blame it on the runner beans. And I was very sceptic about that bit of adding 300 ml milk (far too much!) and 25 g flour (ugh, don't want a floury tasting quiche) to the filling. But surprisingly, the filling was neither too liquid nor did it taste floury, on the contrary: it tasted surprisingly light. Do take care that you don't overcook the peas though - try adding them a few minutes later than the other veggies. And there's no need to use cherry tomatoes, normal tomatoes cut into eight pieces do just as well.

I made a Pâte Brisée, a French Shortcrust Pastry as a base, and it went together very well.

Edited 9 June 2015:
Restaurant quantities. I mean, really, 85 g each of courgette, beans and peas? Peas is easy, as are beans if you're able to buy them loose, but courgette? I therefore used a whole courgette (about 320 g), one package of green beans (200 g), two normal onions and 200 g cocktail tomatoes. To make up for that, I used 30 g flour, 350 ml milk and 3 eggs instead of 2. In other words: in terms of quantities, I didn't stick to the recipe at all.

The result did have a few flaws, which I'm afraid might be connected to what I just stated. The beans were slightly undercooked, and DH thought the eggs were still too liquid (I didn't). Because I used more vegetables than indicated, I also fried them for ten instead of five minutes, but that may not have been enough (I'll admit that they weren't soft yet at that stage, I thought that'd come while baking).

Still, I actually do enjoy this dish, and I suspect you can use it to throw in all your vegetable leftovers (broccoli would probably work really well). I also think you could probably combine it well with the Courgette, Chilli and Mint Pizzas, as you'll need less than a whole courgette for either of them, and the dishes are so different that it won't even be boring to eat courgette several days in a row.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

30th April 2010 (edited: 30th April 2010)

Roasted Tomato and Parmesan Tart

We didn't follow the recipe to the letter. We made it with the shortcrust pastry from Gary Rhodes' New Classics instead of the block puff pastry - don't. Use block puff pastry, or try a different recipe for shortcrust pastry, if you must.

Then, while I was struggling with the pastry, my dear BF began preparing the filling, and before I knew what was going on he had added his 'special touch'. He thought 2 tablespoons of mascarpone and one of mustard couldn't be enough, so he just threw in an egg, and, as we wouldn't be able to fold the parmesan into the puff pastry he just threw that into the mix as well.

The result was quite nice, but slightly tasteless (where did the garlic go?), and it was definitely not enough. Between the two of us we finished up three quart of the tart (although admittedly we were really hungry), but I just can't see this as a main dish for 6. Made with puff pastry, the best tomatoes you can get and more garlic and thyme I expect that it can become a nice appetizer, but that's still a small way to go.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

8th May 2010 (edited: 9th May 2010)

Salmon Cakes with Lemon Mayo

Basically, it is quite a nice dish and coud have received a 4 star rating, but it needed more seasoning as well as that special extra to make it a little more interesting tastewise, and some of the instructions just weren't quite right.

First of all, I've never come across a recipe for two persons that instructs you to use half an egg for one thing and half an egg for another - why just not double all the ingredients (should not be a problem technically in this case) and write the recipe for four servings?

Second, it's quite difficult to get the fish cakes right. Making four cakes from ca. 450g of mass will make you run the risk of getting too large fish cakes that are mushy on the inside and/or burnt on the outside. Make six to eight smaller, thinner cakes and you'll be fine. Also, fry them on a relatively low temperature, e.g. medium or medium-low, for at least several minutes, preferably without turning and tossing them the whole time.

Season them well, but most importantly, add something extra to the mayonnaise - a tiny bit of chilli, for example, or perhaps some coriander, to give it some extra zing. Something like the Chilli-Lime Mayo from this recipe (online version here) would work quite well.

And finally, serve it with extra vegetables, it'll be boring otherwise - good quality cherry tomatoes worked quite well for us.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Olive: 101 Quick-fix Dishes cookbook.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

The fish (we used tilapia as we couldn't get any rainbow trout) was slightly dry, and continued losing water even after we had placed it on the plate, making the rest of the food swim constantly in a layer of water. Bleh. Additionally, the fish itself tasted had hardly any taste and couldn't stand up to the very aromatic watercress sauce at all, so that was quite a mismatch.

I would suggest using a fish with a stronger proprietary taste, such as salmon (here we go again with the apparently classic combination of salmon and watercress: see also my Watercress Crème Fraîche Tart and Grilled Salmon with Watercress Cream Sauce). I would also try out adding some herbs or perhaps one or two lemon slices to the fish before steaming as described in the Trout with Ginger, Lime and Coriander or the Fish en Papillote, and open the parcels as soon as you take them out of the oven, don't allow condensate to develop.

Also, serve with a different side dish, shivers of iceberg salad without a proper salad dressing will be too bland.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the Olive: 101 Quick-fix Dishes cookbook.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

Basically it was pretty nice - if there had not been the lemon. BF and I were sceptic from the start, not because we do not like the taste of lemons, but because the juice of a whole lemon seemed like far too much for that little bit of other ingredients. We started with the juice of only half a lemon - and oh boy, we tasted nothing but lemon in the end! Even worse: the combination of the saltiness and texture of the parmesan invoked some extremely unpleasant associations.

Nevertheless, I believe this recipe has potential and could even reach a 4 star rating - just limit the lemon juice to a few drops only, or even omit it completely. If necessary, you can replace it by oil and/or cooking water, both should be fine. Most of the lemon flavour should come from the zest, which has a stronger lemon taste anyway with the added benefit of not being sour.

Also, we used half the amount of pasta and shared the sauce between the two of us - just about enough. If you want to serve this dish to four persons, remember to double all ingredients except for the amount of pasta.

Crosspost. Exact the same recipe was also published in the BBC Good Food series cookbook, 101 Healthy Eats.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

28th June 2010 (edited: 4th July 2011)

Ham and Ricotta Pizzas with Pesto

Well, it's not really a recipe, is it? You stuff a ready-made pizza base in the oven, throw some ingredients on top and that's it. Nothing special about it, is there?

Unless you change it. Purposely, or by accident, as we did. We exchanged the ricotta (sold out) for cottage cheese and pizza bases (didn't know where they hid) for pita breads. Preheat the oven to 250°C, cut the pita breads into halves, scatter and spread all the ingredients on top in one go, grill for just five minutes and you're meal is done, and quite crispy and delicious, too. Great idea for parties, though in that case you should cut the each pita bread in eight pieces to get real fingerfood.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

1st July 2010 (edited: 9th January 2015)

Vegetable Tagine with Chickpeas and Raisins

Nice but not particularly mind-blowing. It needs a lot more spices than specified (try using the double amount), and I felt that the sauce was too much liquid too - either cut back on the amount of liquid added, or try to make the sauce thicker one way or other.

Edited to add:
It also tastes nice cold, especially on such hot days as these. Definitely double the amount of spices and add some salt.

Edited 7 January 2015:
I made this again and used the double amount of spices - much better already, but still not particularly impressive. But even so, it is so easy to make that I guess it will end up being a standard on our weekday dinner menu. I forgot to add less liquid, but solved that by using the cooking liquid to cook the couscous, which works quite nicely.

I would also suggest changing the ratio of the vegetables - I don't think courgette/zucchini works particularly well in this dish, though I'm not quite sure substituting an aubergine for one of the courgettes would make it any better. Definitely add more raisins, perhaps one or two bell peppers, and possibly more chickpeas?

Upgraded from a 3 to a 4 star rating.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

Very delicious, and the apricots are definitely a eye-catcher, BUT there were a few slight issues and one major fail.

As so often, the recipe calls for the juice of one lemon to be added. I added the juice of a quart lemon (approximately), and it ended up being sour. My advice would be to add no lemon at all but to wait right until the end and then taste it - and if you then think you could do with a little lemon, add some, carefully.

Other points to watch out for: the freshly grated ginger might burn, add extra oil and stir to prevent that, and the chicken is prone to become dry, as so often with similar recipes, so don't cook it longer than absolutely necessary.

But what I really didn't understand: First, you need to add ten ready-to-eat apricots. Next, you're asked to serve it with a handful of pomegranate seeds. Now in which country are apricots and pomegranates available in the same season? Really, they should have known better than this!

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BBC Good Food
(July, 2010)

 

14th July 2010 (edited: 26th July 2012)

Baked Sea Bream with Tomatoes and Coriander

The potatoes were undercooked, the herbs and spices hardly noticeable, and the whole thing just didn't combine together well. A very ill conceived recipe.

Let's start with the potatoes. I was aware that this could happen, and sliced them very very thinly - ca. 2mm. Additionally, I boiled them for several minutes instead of draining them immedeately. You can probably cook them for 8-10 minutes without worrying. However, even if they had been cooked well, it would have been a shame that they were wet, being covered in white wine. I would have wished them to become crisp chips, baked in olive with sea salt and rosemary!

Then the spices. As I said, you hardly tasted them. A tiny bit of garlic here, one bite with a hint of saffron there... not what I would have expected. But had they been stronger it probably wouldn't have helped as the combination of flavours was just too much. Fish with white wine and saffron - yes, I get that. Fish with lime and coriander - good idea too. Tomatoes with saffron, fish/seafood and, err, rice - Paella. But fish with all of the above? And then I'm not yet even mentioning the pine nuts (which I omitted anyway). And if this weren't bad enough - even if the ingredients would have worked together, if they had been strong enough to be tasted then the sheer mass of them would have eliminated any taste of fish.

The fish in itself was fairly nice (though slightly bland if a fish can ever be bland), but I'm afraid that was a happy coincidence.

PS: Oh, and the pancetta... white wine, coriander, tomatoes, saffron, pancetta, lime, pine nuts... hmm...

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23rd July 2010 (edited: 7th August 2012)

Chicken Masala Skewers

Very delicious! A very mild flavour, mainly due to the yoghurt, and very tender. Just perfect for poultry. We used masala spices instead of Masala paste, and it worked very well.

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23rd July 2010 (edited: 7th August 2012)

Roasted Veg and Couscous Salad

Reminded me very very much of the Baked Vegetables with an Aubergine Sauce from Nigel Slater's Tender, though neither as delicious nor as well-thought through.

Both recipes instruct you to bake vegetables in the oven and add harissa, cumin and nuts half-way through. Slater accompanied this with a wonderful aubergine dip that would have been a good addition to this recipe, too.

Furthermore, in this recipe they suggested bite-sized pices of butternut squash and red and yellow peppers for the same amount of time - of course the butternut squash wasn't ready yet when the peppers were. Additionally, they didn't mention anything about splashing a bit of oil on top, something that I've noticed makes the veggies cook much better.

On the other hand I have to admit that I couldn't find any harissa and I didn't have the time nor the recipe at hand to make harissa myself, like I did the last time. So we just followed a recipe found on the internet and used the main ingredients without really making harissa - the real harissa last time was much better.

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20th August 2010 (edited: 16th June 2016)

Fennel and Roast Tomato Lasagne

Very delicious, though it could have been better. First of all, cooking time is more something like 1 hour 20 minutes instead of 40 minutes. We replaced doubled creme (not available here) with a mix of single cream and mascarpone. I worried about the pasta not cooking because it wasn't covered in sauce, but this turned out fine (though we added extra cream).

There were no instructions on how to cut the fennel (if it was supposed to be cut at all), so we just sliced it. In the end, fennel proved to be the weak point. Although the dish was delicious, the fennel was still a bit too hard for my liking, and I would suggest cutting up the fennel into small cubes or stripes to make it cook faster and to be able to spread it easier. Furthermore, there was too much of it too - or rather not enough of everything else, as it didn't feed four persons anyway.

On the positive side, although cooking time is fairly long, relatively little time is needed for preparation, especially for a lasagna. And, as I said, it was delicious, and with the above changes it could make a great dish.

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BBC Good Food
(August, 2009)

 

6th October 2010 (edited: 10th February 2012)

Smoked Salmon Tagliatelle with Parmesan Cream

This may look like your usual pasta-with-salmon-wednesday-night dish, but I learnt a few lessons from it. One, for some reason I never used Parmesan (though I fried chopped onions instead), and I loved the idea of melting the parmesan in the cream to make a really cheesy sauce. Two, often I don't used fresh herbs as it's simply too expensive to buy them and then use them just as garnish. In this recipe, the basil is so much more than just garnish, it really adds something to it.

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BBC Good Food
(January, 2010)

 

11th February 2011 (edited: 27th February 2014)

Pumpkin, Cranberry and Red Onion Tagine

Very delicious, very spicy, and very easy to prepare, once you have your harissa paste ready (I used a home made one).

I used less tomato passata, for the simple reason that I only had 500ml containers and it seemed silly to open a second container for just another 200ml - and I'm glad I didn't. The consistency was nice, not too dry, and the taste of the tomatoes would have overpowered everything else (well, perhaps it wasn't a good quality passata, it smelled slightly artificial). For some more texture you could add the pumpkin a little later and make sure it doesn't get too soft.

Edited 6 March 2013:
We made this dish again last night, and it was such a difference! We used the full amount of tomato passata asked for; we used two cans of chickpeas instead of one (we weren't sure if '400g can chickpeas' refers to the weight of the can including liquid or just the chickpeas alone), we used a small pumpkin whereas normally I often use a butternut squash instead, and I might have forgotten to add the ground cumin.

The result was a mediocre, throw-random-ingredients-together dish, and I was very surprised to see we had originally given it 5 stars! I hope we will be able to try this again soon.

Edited 26 February 2014:
We made this again, this time using the quantities I used the first time. The resulting dish was rather mediocre - not too bad, except for the tomato sauce that I think was too thick and concentrated, and had turned into a kind of ketchup - not very pleasant. Other than that it was okay; I liked that it was actually quite easy to prepare. I wonder if things were different if you used fresh tomatoes instead of passata.

Quite similar to this dish of Indian Pumpkin and Chickpeas with Raisins and Almonds.

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14th June 2011 (edited: 12th October 2012)

Slow-roast Persian Lamb with Pomegranate Salad

Really delicious! We slightly adapted the recipe as we had bought lamb joint instead of shoulder, and therefore followed the instructions of our butcher regarding the cooking instructions. Also, we ran out of ground cumin, and as cumin is difficult to grind we just used whole cumin instead. Everything worked well, the meat was really tender and the sauce very delicious!
We ended up serving the pomegranates scattered on top of the meat, not on the salad, that seemed to work bettter. We served the lamb with a slightly adapted version of Pilau from Noshe Djan, an excellent combination!

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BBC Good Food
(July, 2010)

 

24th July 2011 (edited: 25th October 2013)

Chicken Wings with Cumin, Lemon and Garlic

Really, really delicious! Real comfort food too, and really easy! What's not to love about it?

You can also barbecue these wings, or grill them in a grill pan, which is what we might do tomorrow. Also, we only let them marinate for one hour, so another reason to leave part of the wings in the marinade for as long as possible and prepare them tomorrow.

We served this with Beetroot with Yoghurt, a good combination and a good choice for a Middle Eastern side dish!

Edited 10 Sept. 2012:
We made this again and served it as part of a mezze platter together with Beetroot with Yoghurt, Saffron Cauliflower, Coconut Prawn Skewers and some Turkish flatbread, and it was great!

The chicken wings tasted very different this time, though - we should have used more honey, more salt, less lemon juice, and more cumin. Nevertheless, it was a great and relaxed meal.

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24th July 2011 (edited: 5th May 2013)

Rosewater Martinis

Nice. I'm not entirely sure the sugar (syrup) was necessary. In any case, don't just add sugar, won't work.

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Website: BBC Good Food

www.bbcgoodfood.com
 

24th August 2011 (edited: 4th April 2013)

Puy Lentil Salad with Soy Beans, Sugar Snap Peas & Broccoli

DB enjoyed this salad very much! He had a few minor points of critique, such as that the ginger wasn’t strong enough (I might not have added the whole amount because I thought it would be too much – it’s not, go for it!), and that it tasted slightly watery – try to let the veggies dry as much as possible.

We were both surprised that the combination of lentils and the other veggies worked so well with this Asian-inspired dressing of garlic, soy sauce and sesame oil, but it did, especially with the lentils and the sugar snaps. We substituted the soy beans for broad beans which worked very well.

I had my difficulties with getting the timing right for cooking the veggies – if you’re unsure about, cook them separately, much of the success of this salad will depend on whether the veggies are still crisp and al dente.

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BBC Good Food
(September, 2011)

 

24th September 2011 (edited: 9th April 2013)

Caramelised Lemon Cake

I only made part of this recipe, the (very impressive looking) topping, and used the recipe of a friend for the rest of the cake. And as I had quite some problems with the instructions for the topping, I was actually quite glad I could rely on my recipe for the rest of the cake.

The biggest problem was that you're supposed to heat 200g sugar and juice of one lemon in a saucepan until the sugar just begins to caramelise. However, given the quantities, in reality the sugar will never caramelise, only dissolve in the juice. I ended up doing the whole thing again, only this time adding only a few drops every now and then, adding the rest of the juice only once the sugar did begin to caramelise, and this worked so much better!

However, if, as instructed, you start out with this step and only after that begin to peel and slice the lemons, you might run into trouble again, as you will be busy for a while and the caramel will cool down and harden; luckily not too much in my case, but why risk it? It's so easy to just turn around the order in which you're doing things.

Then the caramel started leaking out of the springform tin I was using; not so bad while I was preparing the batter, but a lot worse while it was in the oven - I was glad I had placed a baking tray below, just in case. Just something you should realise, use another type of tin if you can.

Last, in the end I wasn't able to see the lemon slices at all - which for me had been the whole reason to make the topping. Perhaps it would help to not let the sugar caramelise at all (mine was a light brown before and after baking), but it would probably work even better if you used oranges (or clementines for size) or blood oranges instead. That said, even if invisible the topping was very delicious on top of an excellent cake, which is whyI'll give it 3 stars.

I had to use double the recipe my friend gave me to be able to fill the 23cm springform tin, but apart from longer baking times this wasn't a problem at all.

Served together with Nigels Slater's Chocolate Brownies, a perfect combination of sweet and sweet-sour, chocolate and fruit.

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29th September 2011 (edited: 29th September 2011)

Maple Pecan Beans

Very simple. I actually quite liked it, though it wasn't really special, but DB thought it was too sweet, and didn't like the sweetness with the beans. Both of us also agreed that the sauce was too liquid, and that it was difficult to eat the pecans together with the beans. However, I liked the crunch of the nuts with the beans.

We served this with Roast Pork with Apples and Mustard, which was a good choice in a way because I just imagined that maple being part of the pork dish - in that sense, it complemented one another very well. It probaly would have been maple-overkill in combination with my favourite pork-apple-dish, Sticky Maple Pork with Apples, but you still could just add some pecans, perhaps with a bit of butter and salt.

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29th September 2011 (edited: 12th October 2012)

Roast Pork with Apples and Mustard

It's not exactly the first dish with Pork and Apples (and Mustard!) I've been making; and of all four, this one included, three are from the BBC (surprise, surprise!). And it's really not that different.

One important difference was the quantity of liquid added in relation to what it should be as a result - you don't need the 200ml stock at all. It's probably enough to just add the mustard and crème fraîche, carefully heating both (be careful with the crème fraîche to prevent it from shifting!), perhaps add a few spoonfuls of water and that's it. Additionally, if you use that much iquid, you tend to overcook the pork because you might hope that the sauce will thicken if you cook it just a bit longer - nope, it won't.

Of all previous versions (Pork and Apple Braise, Normandic Skewers and Sticky Maple Pork with Apples), I definitely most enjoyed the Sticky Maple Pork.

We served this with Maple Pecan Beans - a good combination, in a way, because the maple combined very well with the combination of apples, pork, mustard and sage (and pecans), but less so with the beans.

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7th October 2011 (edited: 10th August 2012)

Crunchy Cauliflower, Apple and Blue Cheese Salad

DB had this as a lunch box salad this week, and he didn't really get the idea behind it. On one hand you had the crunchy, uncooked cauliflower, on the other the strong blue cheese; neither of the two combined with the other nor took up any of the dressing.

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16th November 2012 (edited: 18th November 2012)

Chocolate Fondant

Hmm. I wasn't really convinced. I'll admit I'm not a fan of chocolate fondants - I'd rather have chocolate mousse, chocolate ice cream or a brownie. But apart from that - the dessert tasted very heavy, but it wasn't very rich in flavour. Even though we had used a good quality chocolate, it tasted like pretty cheap stuff.

Additionally, we noticed too late that the recipe yields 9 fondants (why 9?) - by then, we had prepared half a recipe and filled 2 1/2 moulds with the resulting mixture. This resulted in much longer baking times (15 minutes +), which, again, is something we only figured out later. Not the best premises.

We served it with cranberry sauce, which was a good choice. Caramel sauce and sweet ice cream only would have added even more sugar.

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18th November 2012

Classic Cheese Souffle

I was worried the souffle would turn out dry, but it was really, nice, very cheesy and not dry at all.

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Nice, but not particularly impressive. We substituted watercress with rocket, and added a little less avocado than required. It was interesting in that it combined all kinds of different flavours/textures, sharp and bitter and sour and creamy flavours (rocket/watercress and chicory and lime and avocado), but that also meant that you were constantly switching between these flavours, as opposed to them having melted into one another.

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We only made the panna cotta (to go with this Mango Sorbet), and it was very good! Very creamy and with a distinct coconut flavour. DH thought the coconut flavour could have been a little stronger, which I don't think is really necessary. We both agreed however that it contained too much gelatine, though that isn't this recipe's fault as we followed the package instructions.

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5th November 2013 (edited: 8th November 2013)

Vodka-flamed Chorizo

Very nice, though to be honest you didn't taste the vodka - you might just as well just fry the chorizo before serving them.

Served with Pears in Parma Ham as an appetizer.

Edited 8 November 2013:
We had the rest of the chorizo today and only fried it - it ended up being hard and crisp, as opposed to the softer chorizo from a few days ago. So apparently even if the vodka does not impart a lot of flavour, it does help in keeping the chorizo soft, if that's what you like.

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5th November 2013 (edited: 7th November 2013)

Quince Crumble Tart

Hmm. The shortcrust pastry was very weird, very wet and sticky - no wonder, it contained not only a whole egg but also an additional egg yolk. That made it really difficult to handle, even after cooling it in the fridge for several hours. In the end, I used a trick: I often roll out pastry between two sheets of parchment paper. I did that, removed one sheet, lined the tart tin with the pastry and left the other sheet in place - after all, it had to be blind baked with parchment paper and baking beans, right?

Unfortunately, though, the pastry baked well at the edges but stayed moist in the middle; because I didn't want to end up with an undercooked pastry, I pre-baked the pastry a lot longer than instructed, and once I baked the tart with quince filling, crumble and all, I ended up with burnt edges.

Also, it didn't help that I used a different crumble. I had forgotten to buy rolled oats, and I happened to have a one third quantity of Ottolenghi's crumble (which I of course used thawed). The problem is that this crumble needs an hour to be baked; I don't know how much time the crumble from this recipe would have needed (probably less, given the short baking time in this recipe), but that in any case didn't help.

Looking back, it would have been better remove the second sheet as well, flour it again and then return it, so that the pastry would stick less and hopefully bake more evenly. Also, given that the quince filling is already cooked anyway, it's a lot easier to just fully bake the pastry, have your quince filling ready, bake the crumble on a baking tray and then just assemble while everything is hot. Yes, that might be cheating, but who cares (and who would notice)? Additionally, the crust won't get soggy either!

The flavour of the pastry, once it was baked, was really nice, so I was hopeful it would all be worth the hassle. Unfortunately, though, I didn't actually taste the pastry at all once the quince filling was added. The quince filling was very nice and is something I might consider making again. I didn't add the cornstarch, but I will probably do that next time as the filling ended up being just a tad too liquid. DH even suggested poaching the quinces like in this recipe (with or without the rose water) and using them like apples in apple pie. I think the quince does need some strong flavours, so ground nuts or wholemeal flour will be a good idea (hmm, what if you omit the eggs or at least the egg yolk, and replace the ground almonds with ground hazelnuts?).

Also, as nice as this tart was, but be warned that you will spend a long time in the kitchen.

Served for tea with Scones and Walnut Cake with Coffee Syrup - all of them very nice, but the Quince Crumble Tart actually felt more like a dessert than a tea time treat.

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5th November 2013 (edited: 17th May 2014)

Quince and Rosewater Jelly

Very nice recipe! I used 2:1 preserving sugar, meaning I used 1 part sugar and 2.2 parts quince juice; I also made one half with a little rosewater, and the other half without. I really enjoyed the addition of the rosewater, I will do that again.

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5th November 2013 (edited: 15th November 2014)

Membrillo (Quince Paste)

Very nice! As with the Quince and Rosewater Jelly, I used 2:1 preserving sugar, meaning I used 1 part sugar and 2.2 parts quince pulp. I cooked it for the whole 45 min on low heat, stirring constantly, but yet it ended up being burnt at the bottom of the pan - luckily not something you notice in the membrillo (be careful not to scrape the bottom).

I thought the instructions on how long you really need to cook the membrillo (what I like to call 'the Moses test' - it even looked like a red sea!) were still relatively vague. My membrillo ended up being relatively soft, compared to that of my MIL, but apparently mine is more like the membrillo you can buy at shops (not that I would know). Also, my MIL used more sugar, which made her membrillo sweeter (obviously), but I think that also influences how hard the membrillo will get (or how long it takes to get there).

Last, be careful: hot membrillo is hostile and will hiss and spit at you, I have several blisters to attest to that.

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5th January 2015

Chunky Fish Chowder

I was about to make the Smoked Haddock Chowder, when I realised it was an awful lot like Cullen Skink, which we had dubbed 'liquid fish pie'. So I chose to make this chowder instead. This chowder, then again, is a lot like Salmon Chowder with Whisky - I guess at some point every dish will remind you of some other dish you once had, right?

It's a very, pretty basic chowder, one you can whip up quick enough for a midweek dinner and doesn't require any excursions to the fish monger. DH actually prefers the Salmon Chowder, as he thinks that one has a little more flavour (probably the addition of the tomato), but what I enjoy about this one is the lemony flavour and the fact that it contains two kinds of fish (salmon and, in our case, pangasius), and that the fish didn't end up being dry, which it always does in the Salmon Chowder.

However, it actually took about 10-12 min until the fish was cooked instead of the 3-4 minutes mentioned in the recipe - I guess this really depends on how large your chunks of fish are. The recipe also doesn't mention what type of potato you should use - I used floury ones.

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16th January 2016

Ultimate Fish Cakes

These held together well (in contrast to our last attempt at fish cakes), but the portion sizes were quite small - it looked more like a large appetizer or a small lunch than a main dish. It also could use a bit more potato - fish cakes with that much fish are of course a treat, but if that's all you serve, it's a lot of fish and little else (you could, of course, also just serve it with potatoes on the side). All in all, though, I'm beginning to think that making fish cakes is a small art in itself, and that it doesn't consist of adding I don't know how many special ingredients, but of getting the consistency right, and being able to fry without them falling apart, or getting burnt, or both.

The sauce, by the way, wasn't really necessary, and even if, a simpler sauce would have done as well.

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27th January 2016

20-Minute Seafood Pasta

It wasn't too bad, but it wasn't particularly impressive either. And what else can you expect of pasta, a can of tomatoes and some flavouring?

I didn't dare cook the pasta in the sauce directly - I cannot see how that would work, as you'd need to add a whole litre of stock to the sauce - and then you'll end up with what, tomato soup? So I omitted the stock and cooked the pasta seperately.

Fine for a weekday dinner in a really busy week, but otherwise I wouldn't bother.

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31st January 2016 (edited: 24th July 2016)

Spanish Tortilla

Very nice! I've made tortilla once before, years ago, and it didn't work out that well. It was different this time, it simply worked well. I did my best, however, to slice the potatoes very thin, and I guess that covering them helps as well. We didn't serve it with the bread with tomato and garlic, as suggested (we simply made oven-roast tomatoes instead), so the tortilla itself could have used a bit more garlic - maybe not necessary if you do add the bread.

I though it was a bit on the small side for four persons as a main dish - add an extra side dish, or make a little more. I also thought that the potato-to-egg-ratio could have been a little more favourable towards the potatoes - using, say, 600g potatoes probably solves both problems in one go.

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31st January 2016 (edited: 20th March 2016)

Orange Cranachan

Similar to the (original) Cranachan we made a year and a half ago, and about just as good.

Again, you need to be really careful with the oats - I let them burn on my first attempt, but luckily it's easy to just toss them out and start again. Remembering the other recipe, I didn't use the cheap clear, runny honey we had, but our good-quality heather honey, and that really made a difference (we used a cheap whisly, however - now I'm curious how it'd taste with a, say, earthy Tallisker).

I was surprised to see that you were supposed to mix the oatmeal through the cream, as I remembered that the other recipe differed in this respect - in the end that didn't matter, both versions are nice. And I noticed that this version used a mixture of single cream and Greek yoghurt (which we substituted with Quark), not solely double cream.

We actually used 2 oranges and 2 blood oranges (would have used 4 blood oranges if we had had them). I could actually see this recipe work with quite a number of fruits. For some reason, pomegranate is the very first that comes to my mind; mango would probably work as well.

Edited 20 March 2016:
I made this again, though this time I mixed all ingredients (except for the oranges and some of the oats) a few hours in advance instead of just moments before serving - and the flavours just disappeared! I could hardly taste any whisky, nor honey nor anything else! I think they used their time to meld into one big flavour, while I prefer to taste them seperately. So whip the cream beforehand, but assemble everything a la minute.

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20th March 2016 (edited: 22nd March 2016)

Lamb and Apricot Stew

Very nice, and quite simple! Easy enough to make it a weeknight staple, but tasty enough for guests, too! My only quibbles are that I think that 5 dried apricots is a little stingy, and that all in all, the dish itself isn't really generous either - we used 600g instead of 500g lamb and served it with Zahlouk and couscous, and it was just barely enough! Make sure you make about 1.5-2x the amount if you expect hungry eaters.

Also, I am considering trying this with beef instead of lamb - lamb is just too expensive around here. Will probably work, even though it'll need to braise a little longer.

Edited the next day:
Good god, I'm such an idiot! The recipe serves two only, so no wonder it was a little meager. The thing is - I knew, which is why I bought 600 g of lamb, as opposed to just 250 g, but apparently, I forgot that immediately again!

That said, for four servings, I'd definitely double or even double-and-a-half the amount of meat and apricots, but I'm not sure the rest of the ingredients need to be doubled - we quite liked it the way it was.

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22nd March 2016 (edited: 30th July 2017)

Chickpea, Tomato & Spinach Curry

WHY didn't I read the comments? The finished dish itself was good and definitely has potential, but the recipe just didn't work! The thing is - you don't add any proper liquid. None. At all. Granted, the puréed tomatoes are slightly liquid, but other than that? Not at all enough to either cook the lentils nor the broccoli. I had the recipe printed (without comments, of course) and at a certain point I started adding glugs of water. Once I read the comments, I added whole glasses of water.

If making again (and I'm planning on making this again), I will probably indeed double the spices (it tastes very spicy in the beginning, but definitely mellows down once you add the broccoli, chickpeas and spinach!), use coconut cream and a can of coconut milk (with another one as backup), and I might actually also use sweet potatoes, I like the idea. Pumpkin would probably also work. Or add both (broccoli and pumpkin)!

Edited 18 July 2017:
I've made this a few times since, and with the changes described above (excl. the sweet potato/pumpkin), it makes a decent weeknight dinner.

I used two large sweet potatoes this time, pressure-steamed and added at the very end; at the very last moment I realized that it would probably be best to use them as a substitute for the chickpeas. As usual, I forgot to add the sesame and cashew; I also forgot the spinach. DH thought something was missing, and it might well have been the cashews.

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22nd April 2016 (edited: 17th May 2016)

Potato and Leek Gratin

Very, very nice in taste, BUT:

- we made half a recipe as a side dish for the two of us (three including baby, but normally that doesn't really matter), and it wasn't enough at all! How is a whole recipe supposed to be enough for 4 persons as a main?

- we omitted the ham, and thought the gratin (other than the cheese crust) wasn't salty enough. Next time I'd either add salt or bacon.

- I only remembered to add the cheese once I took off the aluminium foil; which was useful, in a way, as I was able to spoon the stock mixture over the potatoes one last time. Once I had added the cheese, spooning liquid over the potatoes doesn't really work as you'd destroy your cheese crust.

- the online recipe only requires a 'carton double cream', without specifying which size carton. I image-googled a carton double cream and assumed that they meant a 300 ml carton; I only now read in the comments that the original printed recipes calls for a 142/150 ml carton. I might try it with less cream next time, but there is a danger that the potatoes will then not be submerged in liquid and therefore not cook as well as they should (see point above re: spooning over liquid).

- next time I'd definitely use double the amount of leeks and garlic

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22nd May 2016 (edited: 1st December 2016)

No-fuss Shepherd's Pie

We used beef mince instead of lamb (does that make it a Milkmaid's Pie?), and about 2/3 of a can of tomatoes, as I had run out of tomato concentrate. We also served it as 'Deconstructed Shepherd's Pie' tonight, as I was in a rush and didn't have the time to bake it in the oven - as all ingredients were already cooked through, why not?

The result was delicious, but a little flat - unsurprisingly, if you've read the comments below the recipe. We ate half today and will eat the other half tomorrow, properly baked as it should be, with lots of cheese added, we'll see if that makes a difference.

Edited later on:
Yes, it does.

Edited sometime in autumn 2016:
Don't make the potato purée according to that recipe - it uses way too much butter! Just make it the way you always make it.

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I made this a couple of weeks ago and never really had the time to review it properly, so my memory is a little hazy. I think I omitted the stock cube, as tomato purée and Worcestershire sauce already contains more than enough salt, and added a few more carrots and celery sticks - though next time I'd only add more carrots, not also celery sticks (other additional root vegetables might work well, though). The result was fine, although you should remember to stir it once a while to make sure everything is evenly covered.

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