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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Jambalaya

This day last year I posted up my recipe for Jambalaya. It's a great dish for a cold day - a day like today - so I thought I'd post it again.

1 large chicken. Take the skin off and cut the flesh from the bone (if you live in Glasgow if you go to an Asian buthcher they will take the skin off for you). Stick the carcase in a pot, cover with water and boil for 1 hour to make some stock. Take the chicken flesh and cut into inch cubes.

once your stock is ready, pour into another bowl and give the pot you've just used a wipe. This is the pot in which your going to cook your jambalaya.

put 1/4 cup of cooking oil into the pan, gently heat and then add your chicken flesh. You don't want the flesh to break up so don't stir frantically, but gently. Brown the chicken till it starts to turn golden then remove from the pot and set aside.

while your stock was boiling you could prepare the veggies.

3 medium white onions - I chop them coarsely, but if you prefer cut them fine.

2 garlic cloves - crush

1 red pepper - chopped 1cm cubes

1 green pepper - as the red pepper

2 long sticks of celery - chopped fine

1 bunch of spring onions - chopped fine.

In the pot from which you've just removed the chicken you've browned add the white onions [you could do a mix of white and red onion] and brown these. Put chicken back in the pot with the onions and add cayenne pepper, 2 teaspoons of granulated garlic, 1 tbsp of black pepper and 1 tsp of Tabasco sauce.. I don't measure this, I just add a dusting that covers everything in the pot. Add 300g of choorizo sausage that you've cut up. Mix together and let this sweat for a couple of mins. Add all the other veg and gently fold. Put the lid on and let this sweat for a couple of mins.

depending on how good your chicken stock is add 1 or two chicken stock cubes to it. Add your stock to the pot so it covers everything in it by a couple of inches. Add 2 tbsp of salt.

Bring to a gentle boil and let it simmer for 20 mins.

I use the coloured kids plastic drinking cups from Ikea to measure my rice. Add three cups this size of american long grain rice. Do not stir but gently fold the rice in. Cover and simmer for 15mins. Taste the liquid and decide if you want to add more Tabasco.

Remove lid and see if the rice is ready - let it cook for the remainder of the time with the lid off so the liquid that has not been absorbed by the rice reduces. Once the rice is ready, put the lid back on and remove from the heat for 10 mins before serving.

Enjoy!

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Chicken Out

Hey if we can do it on a student budget, then most people can!

Monday, April 30, 2007

Jambalaya

Went to a party on Friday. Took a big pot of jambalaya which went down well. So here's my recipe.

1 large chicken. Take the skin off and cut the flesh from the bone (if you live in Glasgow if you go to an Asian buthcher they will take the skin off for you). Stick the carcase in a pot, cover with water and boil for 1 hour to make some stock. Take the chicken flesh and cut into inch cubes.

once your stock is ready, pour into another bowl and give the pot you've just used a wipe. This is the pot in which your going to cook your jambalaya.

put 1/4 cup of cooking oil into the pan, gently heat and then add your chicken flesh. You don't want the flesh to break up so don't stir frantically, but gently. Brown the chicken till it starts to turn golden then remove from the pot and set aside.

while your stock was boiling you could prepare the veggies.

3 medium white onions - I chop them coarsely, but if you prefer cut them fine.

2 garlic cloves - crush

1 red pepper - chopped 1cm cubes

1 green pepper - as the red pepper

2 long sticks of celery - chopped fine

1 bunch of spring onions - chopped fine.

In the pot from which you've just removed the chicken you've browned add the white onions [you could do a mix of white and red onion] and brown these. Put chicken back in the pot with the onions and add cayenne pepper, 2 teaspoons of granulated garlic, 1 tbsp of black pepper and 1 tsp of Tabasco sauce.. I don't measure this, I just add a dusting that covers everything in the pot. Add 300g of choorizo sausage that you've cut up. Mix together and let this sweat for a couple of mins. Add all the other veg and gently fold. Put the lid on and let this sweat for a couple of mins.

depending on how good your chicken stock is add 1 or two chicken stock cubes to it. Add your stock to the pot so it covers everything in it by a couple of inches. Add 2 tbsp of salt.

Bring to a gentle boil and let it simmer for 20 mins.

I use the coloured kids plastic drinking cups from Ikea to measure my rice. Add three cups this size of american long grain rice. Do not stir but gently fold the rice in. Cover and simmer for 15mins. Taste the liquid and decide if you want to add more Tabasco.

Remove lid and see if the rice is ready - let it cook for the remainder of the time with the lid off so the liquid that has not been absorbed by the rice reduces. Once the rice is ready, put the lid back on and remove from the heat for 10 mins before serving.

Enjoy!

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Pumkin Soup

234839128_8dda0a4c82 Dougie asks in my post on exciting shopping if I can share my recipe for pumpkin soup. If you know anything about me then you'll know that I love food and love spending time in the kitchen cooking up different things.

I tried a different recipe for pumpkin soup last night and as it's simpler than the one I normally do this is the one I'll post up here.

Boil up a fresh chicken carcase to make some good chicken stock. I normally leave it on arolling boil for 1 hour with a lid on.

while the stock is boiling away you can prep your veg.

Take 3 small / medium onions and chop up. take the hard skin off a small pumpkin and dice up the flesh. peel and chop some potatoes. I don't weigh things when making soup, I go by visual quantities, so you want twice as much pumpkin as potatoes.

put a couple of ladles of the stock in a pot on a low heat and add the onions. It's important that it's on a low heat as you want the onions to soften slowly. Put a lid on the pot to keep all the juice and flavour in. Once the onion has softened (approx 5 mins) add the pumpkin and potato. Mix this in with your wooden spoon, and put the lid back on. Add plenty of freshly ground black pepper and a little salt. While the veg is sweating, ladle 1 pint of your chicken stock in to a jug. Add one chicken stock cube to boost the flavour. Add this stock to the veg and then add 1 pint of milk (I prefer full fat). Turn the heat up and bring to the boil then simmer for 45 minutes stirring frequently. After the 45 minuets remove this from the heat and let it cool.

get a new pot and put three cups of long grain rice in it. I use plastic drinking cups from IKEA to measure this. Add 6 cups of chicken stock. Bring this to the boil. when all the stock has been absorbed by the rice take it off the heat and cover it with a lid.

Blend the soup in a liquidizer then return to the pot. Add your rice and then gently reheat.

the soup is now read to serve.

you can vary this recipe by doing 50 / 50 onion and leek. you can also add a tub of natural yoghurt at the same time you add the rice to give it that extra creamy taste.

Enjoy.