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248 results found for "original recipe"
- Spiced Grapefruit and Rum Marmalade
As I mentioned in the Tangerine Marmalade recipe, I want to take advantage of the citrus season to make
- Broccoli and Cheese Scones
I tried tweaking the recipe a few times to fix the issue and then just stopped making them. soda and baking powder recently though for a refresher (good things to know when you experiment with recipes
- Rosehip and Apple Muffins
Rosehips are ripening, and I decided to use some rosehip purée to trial a new muffin recipe. Hurray for a new rosehip recipe! I also decided to try something new with this recipe and baked these in the air fryer.
- Fenugreek Pancakes
Looking into fenugreek a while back, I came across a description of it comparing fenugreek's taste to that of maple and the fact that fenugreek is sometimes used as a maple substitute. That gave me an idea. What about if I used fenugreek in something that often has maple syrup added to it, like pancakes. The idea niggled for a while until I finally tried it. The pancakes worked really well. They were missing a little richness to the maple flavour, but with butter or yogurt they were really tasty! Less sweet obviously, than adding maple syrup to a dish, and the flavour was more delicate, but very tasty. Ingredients: 1 1/2 c flour 2 1/2 tsp baking powder 1 tsp fenugreek powder 3 tbsp sugar 3 tbsp melted butter 2 eggs 3/4c milk 1) Combine dry ingredients, then gradually add wet ingredients. Add an additional splash of milk if necessary for the batter to be just thin enough to pour. 2) Melt butter in a skillet then cook the pancakes in two-tablespoon-dollops (or bigger if you want) over medium heat until bubbles appear and pop on the surface and it goes from shiny to matte, then flip. Serve hot with butter, jam, syrup or fruits. Or anything else you fancy. I really enjoyed these. They had a definite maple flavour but without added sugar. I enjoyed mine plain with butter, which gave them an extra richness that brought out the maple flavour. These are definitely coming back out! The only aspect I wasn't delighted with was the texture. They were a little heavier than usual, and I don't know if fenugreek requires a little additional liquid or rising agent, or if there was a mix-up somewhere. To be tried again I guess, and I will see. If you try them, let me know what you think!
- Ricotta and Courgette Tart
I know, I know. I post a lot of tarts. That is because we genuinely eat a lot of tarts though. They are quick and easy to assemble, (especially if you use store-bought crust, although I rarely do), endlessly versatile, and make a great light lunch or side for something... and I like them. This one was a case of "what do we have in the fridge?" and taking as little time out from decorating the Christmas tree with the family as possible. I also liked that, completely by accident, the colours were Christmasy. For the crust, I used some of my home-made lemon vinegar instead of water as the liquid, feeling that the flavour would go well with the courgette. Ingredients: 1 1/4 c whole wheat flour 1/2 c butter, cold 1/4 c vinegar 1 tsp zaatar 1/2 leek, cut in rounds 1 courgette, sliced 1 red pepper, sliced 1 1/2 - 2 c ricotta 2 tsp sumac 1 tsp thyme salt and pepper to taste 1) Place flour in a large mixing bowl and cut the butter into it. Rub the flour and butter together with fingertips until a crumby consistency is achieved. Add vinegar and mix, without kneading, to form a dough. Chill for about a half hour. 2) Roll out the crust and line a pie plate with it. Spread with a layer of ricotta and sprinkle with half the sumac. Lay rounds of leek over the ricotta, then arrange courgette and pepper over that. Spoon the remaining ricotta over the whole, and sprinkle the remaining sumac, thyme, salt and pepper over the tart. 3) Bake at 180°C for about a half hour. This made an excellent, easy and tasty lunch. I didn't have as long as I would have liked to drain the ricotta, and was worried that the tart would come out too wet as a result, but it didn't. It was lovely and light, with beautiful distinct flavours, all playing nice together. Definitely a keeper!
- Lemon Jelly with Chilli and Ginger
As things are beginning to settle down again though, I have some exciting recipes to share from the last It ended up being a different colour than I had originally pictured, both because of the pectin and because
- Cherry Brownie Recipe Three Ways
These Cherry Brownie recipes three ways- two cherry and almond white chocolate blondies and one cherry missing ingredients for successive recipe variations that I had originally set out to make - passion Two are blondie recipes, and one is for dark chocolate brownies. The original brownie recipe I grew up with, for dark espresso brownies, is my dad's, and he was teetering Try adding 1 TBSP of cream or milk to make the recipes squidgier.
- Roast Ham with a Ginger and Apple Compote, and a Bacon Duvet
We modified our standard cornbread stuffing recipe by adding a little orange zest to it, then bedded
- Roast Chestnut Cookies
I will still keep the other recipe too, but this is a nice alternative to have up my sleeve!
- Crackers 3 ways
I checked a few of my cookbooks, hoping to find a recipe to start me off, but there didn't seem to be anything even in cookbooks I thought might have a cracker recipe (the Tolkein cookbook, as I thought homemade crackers might do for a Lembas reference, the Food DIY book, as it seemed inline with other recipes Here is the result: Ingredients: Base recipe: 1 c barley flour 1 c wheat flour 1/2 c + 2 tbsp butter









