Showing posts with label The Good Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Good Life. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Dinner Direct!

Our spinach went mental in the garden so we harvested the lot and Ryan turned it into a scrummy pan of soup... a little bit of slowly fried garlic and onions, along with stock, salt and pepper and it was a simple and delicious dinner with some toast on the side!

Mmm!

Abigail@abigail*ryan

Thursday, 22 July 2010

Tasty treats Korean style!

Following a lovely long-lie, Ryan woke me up the other morning with the smell of these delicious Korean morsels wafting up the stairs. He had been slaving away for a couple of hours making these for breakfast and I have to say - they were delicious! So... we wanted to share the YUM with you all too...

Adapted from a traditional Korean recipe for hoddeoks found at the awesome Maangchi.

To make these little babies, you want to start with 3/4 cup of warm water. Into this, you stir one tablespoon of a light oil (olive, veg, ground nut etc), 2 tablespoons of sugar, a teaspoon of salt (few big pinches etc) and one sachet of fast acting yeast. Combine this liquid mix together well...

Now stir in 2 cups of strong bread flour - and, once mixed, you will end up with a very sticky dough. With very well floured hands, bring the dough to a ball in the bowl... put cling film over it, and leave to rise at room temp for an hour to an hour and a half until it looks bubbly and has approx doubled in size!

When you return to the dough after it's hour or so, knock the air out of it - it will be too sticky to use your hands so use a knife or a spoon to do this, and then roughly pull the dough back into ball and leave for another half hour.

In that half hour, make your filling!!

The filling will do 2 batches of dough, so keep the rest in a bowl or tupperware for the next time you make them (we kept ours for 3 days, and it was fine!). Combine 2/3 cup brown sugar, half a cup of ground almonds, half a cup of sultanas and a teaspoon of mixed spice... mix well together until you have a sandy, sweet, crumbly mixture.

When your half hour is up, and with very well floured hands and surface (we cannot stress this enough - keep flouring your hands through this process!) dump out the dough onto your surface: cut or break it into 14 - 18 pieces... flatten and form each wee ball into a rough thin circle-like pancake in the palm of your hand, then, in the centre of this wee pancake, put a teaspoon or so of your filling. Now work to pull the edges of your dough up around the filling like a pouch, sealing and twisting your bundle together to trap the filling safely inside the dough-ball.

Set aside each one until you have worked through the batch on a FLOURED surface ;)

Heat a frying pan to medium and put about tablespoon of the same flavourless oil in to heat. Watching them carefully, and in small batches of about 3-5 depending on your frying pans' size, fry each patty on the first side for about 2-3 minutes and until golden brown. Now, flip them over and squish them down with your spatula to make them more like pancakes again as they will have risen to something more like a little dumpling shape with the heat... (you want them flatter, like a tea-cake)... turn your pan down once you have flipped them (turning up again for the first side of each batch you cook), put a lid on the pan and fry for another 2-3 minutes until equally golden on the other side.

As you are cooking in small batches, and want to keep them soft and steamy, place them on a plate with a tea-towel over them to keep the heat in...

Serve warm and enjoy!!

p.s. you can also try a savory filling like mozzarella or tuna and sweetcorn - so you would want to reduce the sugar in the dough right down at the start! We're also going to try marzipan as a filling next as we think it would be tres tasty indeed... :) You can try anything you like inside...

p.p.s. We love that these are dairy-free for those who are Lactose Intolerant and are thinking of trying them with Rice Flour to see if they would work well Gluten-free too! :)

Have fun!!

Abigail & Ryan

Monday, 7 June 2010

Dig down deep...

We've been out and about in the garden... working hard and planting some tasty eats for the coming summer - spinach, jalapeno peppers, baby carrots, a herb garden, mange tout peas (we already have tomatoes and strawberries coming along a treat!) and, having been in now for a couple of days, they are all coming on brilliantly with a little water every evening and some tending with our lovely Joseph Bentley garden tools...lettuces and beets still to go in.

My back has been badly out, so Ryan has been doing all the heavy lifting to help me loads - but still, all this nice sunshine leaves me itching to get on!! We took out our chairs and stools so we could enjoy the sunshine and relax a little under the pretense of work... deckchairs would have been like admitting we were just going to sun ourselves. ;)

We will be sharing a few of the little visitors we had in the garden shortly...one of them, in particular, was rather surprising!

Enjoy the sun!

Abigail@abigail*ryan


Wednesday, 2 June 2010

The good life {part1}...

he looked very handsome whilst baking....
We baked a lovely cake the other day. A strawberry upside-down cake to be exact.
And... it was awesome...

So, we thought we would share the recipe with you. We also made one with apples, too (which you can try - 2 big Bramely's, if you want to know), but thought the strawberry was even MORE special.

She is not the best looking cake on the block when turned out, but hey, this girl tries real hard to be extra tasty and sure makes up for it with her personality! ;)

We wanted to make this as close to dairy free as possible (as R is lactose intolerant, but can take a tiny little milk if cooked into a cake) and as low-sugar as we could, while making a caramel, as my Dad is Diabetic...really pleased with the results over-all!

INGREDIENTS and METHOD (adapted and tweaked from Rachel Allen's Cranberry Upside down cake in Bake):

400g punnet of Strawberries (approx)

For the Caramel...

100g of Sweet Freedom Syrup

For the Batter:

DRY

200g Plain Flour
100g of Caster Sugar
tsp Baking Powder
half tsp Bicarb
good pinch of Salt

WET

2 large eggs
200 ml skimmed milk soured with a splash of vinegar (or buttermilk if you have it)
75 ml of ground nut oil

Hull your strawberries and cut them in to halves or quarters as you like... while doing this, on a low heat, melt together your sugar, margarine and syrup in a pan to form the caramel. Once the caramel is melted, bubbling and golden, pop your fruit into the pan and stir to coat each and every one...

Carefully measure out your dry ingredients into a big mixing bowl, and your wet ingredients in a mixing jug - whisk these two together, wet in to dry, until you have a good, thick batter.

Pour your caramelly strawb's into a non-stick 10" oiled Spring-Form cake-tin and even out - onto this, pour your cake batter. Smooth out and immediately transfer into your pre-heated oven (180 C or 350 F) for baking 'till golden, raised and oozingly good (we did ours for 35 mins, or until the cake tester comes out almost clean).

Turn out, cool just a little...then... indulge! :)

You'll thank us later!

abigail*ryan