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May 25, 2006
Bibliocook à Maroc
Bibliocook is on tour! The Boyfriend and I travelled to Casablanca last weekend to meet with a friend - the Australian - and spend a couple of weeks travelling around the country. It's a good opportunity to practise the languages that we've been learning, French for me and Arabic in the Boyfriend's case, as well as doing a thorough investigation of the food and flavours of Morocco. Not to mention continuous stops to feed the BF's addiction to the refreshing, sweet mint tea available on every corner. Unfortunately, the lack of internet cafès in the Sahara and absence of QWERTY keyboards may mean less frequent updates for the moment but I'll remedy that as soon as I get back to Ireland. Now, time for tonight's tagine...
Posted by Caroline at 7:13 PM | Comments (0)
May 18, 2006
Táim ag blagadóireacht
A wee while ago, Sinéad over at Sigla sent me a link to a piece on Irish language podcast blog An tImeall on Cócaireacht agus Filíocht (Cooking and Poetry). My prowess as gaeilge not being what it should be, I had to get a friend to translate it for me - many thanks to the Schoolteacher - and am finally able to appreciate Conn's kind words. There's a link to the page here or, for my non-Irish readers, a couple of paragraphs translated below. Isn't the Irish word for blogging - ag blagadóireacht - absolutely gorgeous? Compliments like these just might be the way to encourage me to improve my Irish.
...Seod-bhlag atá sa tsuíomh bibliocook.com. Éireannach mná atá ina bhun, Caroline Hennessy, agus mar a shílfeá ón dteideal, cuireann sí suim ar leith, ní amháin sa chócaireacht, ach i leabhair chócaireachta ach go h-áirithe. Tá sí ag blagadóireacht le bliain anois, agus chaith sí leath na tréimhse sin ina cónaí sa Nua-Shéalainn.
Bibliocook is a gem of a site. An Irish woman, Caroline Hennessy, founded it, and as can be seen from the title, she has a lot of interest not only in cooking, but in cookery books especially. She is blogging for a year now and she spent half of this time living in New Zealand.
Mar aon leis na blaganna is fearr ar ábhar ar bith, tá eolas cuimsitheach agus paisean aici don ábhar, ach cuireann sí leis an méid sin lena pearsantacht agus lena tuairimí féin. Is cúntas pearsanta é blag ar bith, is cuma cén t-ábhar, agus is cúntas taistil é cuid mhaith de Bibliocook chomh maith, ina dtugann an t-údar dúinn léargas, ní amháin ar bhia na Nua-Shéalainne agus na hÉireann ach ar chultúr agus ar nósanna na dtíortha agus ar an gcodarsnacht eatarthu. Insíonn sí na h-eachtraí beaga a bhaineann le gach scéal, agus tugann sí comhtheács don mbia...
As with any of the best blogs on any subject, she has expert knowledge and a passion for the subject, but she adds to this with her personality and her own ideas. Any blog is a personal account, no matter what subject, and a good part of Bibliocook is a travel diary as well, where the author gives us a description, not only of the food of New Zealand and Ireland but on the culture and customs of the countries and the comparisons between them. She tells the little events that go with each story, and she gives a context for the food.
Read more here.
Posted by Caroline at 7:47 AM | Comments (0)
May 16, 2006
Monica's Kitchen by Monica Sheridan ****
Cookbook sections in secondhand bookshops can be a little hit or miss. There's always a pile of microwave cookbooks - no one, for some reason wants to hang onto these dodgy and dated texts - a scattering of horrible diet books and often lots of ancient Family Circle publications, with their "triple-tested in the test kitchens" claim, but, rarely something that you actually want to cook from, let alone buy. Still, I live in hope, so a recent trip to Athlone had to include a browse in the local secondhand bookshop (I still haven't discovered its name) which turned out to be a most amazing example of its kind.
Just a couple of shelves were devoted to cookbooks but what was on offer was enough to have me standing there, leafing through the pages, for quite a while. My eye was taken by a red hardbacked book from the 1960s, the gold letters on its spine saying "Monica's Kitchen". Opening it, I was so entertained by Monica Sheridan's humorous prose that I had to read it out loud to the Boyfriend - something that I continued to do through the weekend's café interludes, car journeys and meals in the tent.
Apart from her unfortunate love of unsweetened condensed milk in soups and the like, Monica's Kitchen is actually a breath of fresh air. Well travelled, she carelessly mentions dishes from France and the continent (she once spent months learning the foie gras business, "with the intention of setting myself up as a Goose Girl in the West of Ireland") alongside the plain, simple Irish recipes. Her roast chicken, unstuffed and dressed with the pan juices, would be appreciated by Nigel Slater and there are definite French influences to many of her vegetable recipes which are, fortunately, a long way from the traditional Irish boil-it-until-it-turns-grey method.
Some of her opinions are laugh-out-loud hilarious. I particularly liked her take the things necessary to make a cook:
"Another essential to good cooking is a husband or son with an adventurous palate. Women do not cook for other women, or for themselves. If they are cooking for other women, it is to annoy them or dazzle them..."
A few of her recipe asides veer towards the demented - ideas on dye in pea soup ("Any fool can make pea soup, but here are the refinements that give it an air. You should add a good spoon of green vegetable dye to the soup just before you serve it. That will take the anaemic look off it."), boned chicken ("Frankly, I wouldn't recommend it, but, if you want to see green in the eyes of the women and hear the praise of gluttonous men ringing in your ears, well, here goes."), brown bread ("The longevity of the men and women of rural Ireland may be directly attributed to their simple diet of porridge, wholemeal bread and stews - together with their uncompromising refusal to fraternise with Income Tax Collectors.") - but Monica's Kitchen is chock-full of useful suggestions and recipes as well as being a complete treat to read. Well worth looking out for.
Monica's Kitchen by Monica Sheridan is published by Castle Publications Ltd.
Posted by Caroline at 8:41 PM | Comments (6)
May 14, 2006
Couscous to accompany a Moroccan-style meal
The Boyfriend and I are about to head off to Morocco in a week's time so I thought I should use up my last year's supply of Moroccan spice blend ras el hanout on a meal for the Writer - who brought me my first taste of spices from Morocco - and her husband. I decided to make my favourite Moroccan Lamb Tagine and, to accompany it, thought that I'd jazz up my usual plain couscous a little.
A lonely-looking squash in the fridge from the tail end of last season's shopping, tossed with some olive oil and spices (I used Ras al hanout but you could easily substitute a mixture of ground cumin, coriander and chilli powder) happily roasted in the oven alongside the tagine. While it tenderised and caramelised, I prepared the couscous, adding in some thinly sliced red onion (for tang), toasted pine nuts (for crunch) and dried cranberries or "craisins" (for sweet tartness). Inspired by an idea from New Zealand cook Allyson Gofton, I grabbed a couple of oranges from the fruit bowl, threw the zest on top of the couscous and used the juice for a dressing. Living in a first floor flat without window sills means that there's a dearth of fresh herbs these days, unlike last summer in NZ, but I had a little bunch of chives which I added to the salad although, I have to say, parsley (as suggested below) would have been much better.
Spiced Squash and Couscous Salad is good with a tagine but nearly even better in a lunchbox the following day, with a dollop of natural yoghurt, so you get to appreciate all the tastes and textures. This is also a very good salad for stuffing in pita breads or rolling up in a flatbread but do make sure that you serve it at room temperature - the flavour is very much dulled when it is refridgerator-cold.
Spiced Squash and Couscous Salad
Squash - 1, small
Ras al hanout - 1½ teaspoons OR
Ground cumin - ½ teaspoon and
Ground coriander - ½ teaspoon
Chilli powder - ½ teaspoon
Olive oil
Couscous - 2 cups
Boiling water - 3 cups
Sea salt, freshly ground black pepper
Pine nuts - 50g, roasted
Red onion - 1, finely sliced
Dried cranberries - 50g
Oranges - 2, rind and juice
Fresh parsley - 1 small bunch, finely chopped
Preheat the oven to 180°C.
Peel, core and chop the squash into pieces about 2cm square. Place in an ovenproof dish, sprinkle with the ras al hanout or cumin, coriander and chilli and a little olive oil and mix well. Roast for 40-50 minutes until tender and starting to caramelise.
Put the couscous into a microwave-proof bowl and season well. Pour the boiling water over, cover the bowl and leave to stand for 5 minutes or until the liquid has been absorbed. Fluff with a fork, microwave for 2 minutes on high, and then re-fluff. Heat an empty heavy-based frying pan over a medium heat, throw in the pine nuts and cook until browned.
Add the pine nuts, red onion, parsley, orange rind and juice to the couscous, season well and toss with enough olive oil to moisten. Lay the spiced roast squash on top of the salad and toss again, gently.
Serve at room temperature. Serves 4.
Posted by Caroline at 10:11 PM | Comments (4)
May 12, 2006
Sugar High Friday: Ginger
I've often intended to but never quite got round to getting involved in Sugar High Friday. It's a reoccurring blog event that was originally, once-upon-a-long-time-ago, started by Domestic Goddess Jennifer. This round is being hosted by Ruth, who is physically situated in Toronto - virtually at Once Upon A Feast and the theme she has picked for this month is ginger. I love this spice in all its incarnations, ground and used in a delicious little Ginger Gem, chunks of crystallised ginger studing a moist, sticky slab of Gingerbread or - at the other end of the spectrum - slices of the fresh root simmered in a savory chicken stock for soup.
Ginger is well loved in New Zealand and that's very evident in any café or bakery that you go into. One of the (many) things that I love about NZ is the easy availability of great sweet treats to have with a cup of coffee - things like Tan Slice, shortbread, Millionaire Squares, countless oaty slices, amazing looking cookies and, one of my all time favourites, Ginger Crunch. Six months back in Ireland and suffering from a Ginger Crunch deficit, I decided that this was going to be my contribution to the latest round of SHF.
I'm not sure where this recipe for Ginger Crunch came from as it is an amalgamation of several different versions - I'm sure it has its roots somewhere, at some stage, in the New Zealand classic Edmonds Cookery Book. Wanting to to make it particularly gingery I added at two teaspoons of ground ginger to the base, along with some chopped crystallised ginger. Just perfect with a cup of coffee on a Sugar High Friday afternoon.
Ginger Crunch
Base:
Butter - 225g, melted
Brown muscovado sugar - 225g
Ground ginger - 1 or 2 teaspoons
Salt - a pinch
Plain flour - 425g
Baking powder - ½ teaspoon
Crystallised ginger - 50g, chopped
Icing:
Butter - 75g
Golden syrup - 4 tablespoons
Icing sugar - 125g
Ground ginger - 2 teaspoons
Preheat the oven to 160°C and use a little butter to grease a 30cm x 20cm baking tray.
Mix the brown muscovado sugar, ground ginger, salt, plain flour, baking powder and crystallised ginger together in a bowl. Add the melted butter, mix well, then press the mixture firmly into a baking tray. Bake in the preheated oven for 15 minutes.
For the icing, melt the butter and golden syrup together. Add the icing sugar and ginger and stir well. Pour over base while it is still warm and spread evenly. Cut into pieces immediately.
Makes about 24 small pieces.
Posted by Caroline at 6:04 PM | Comments (6)
May 9, 2006
Food and music: Alex Kapranos
Watch out for the idiosyncratic food columns by Franz Ferdinand frontman Alex Kapranos in The Guardian newspaper. After tip-off from my workmate about Kapranos being about to publish a collection of the columns, I went searching for them online. They're pieces about the foods that former Glaswegian sous-chef Kapranos encounters while on tour with the band - a burger at Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles, blowfish in Osaka, the best New York donuts, street food in Singapore. Here are a few links to his most recent articles:
05.05.06 Alex Kapranos: The Formosa cafe
28.04.06 Alex Kapranos: The kluski pasta
21.04.06 Alex Kapranos: It came from the east
31.03.06 Alex Kapranos: Eating habits
24.03.06 Alex Kapranos: Guilty pleasures
17.03.06 Alex Kapranos: Donut delights
10.03.06 Alex Kapranos: Carnivore's corner
03.03.06 Alex Kapranos: Big fat pig
24.02.06 Alex Kapranos: Fast food revenge
17.02.06 Soundbites
Posted by Caroline at 10:06 PM | Comments (0)
May 7, 2006
Salad lunches for work: Puy Lentil Salad with Balsamic Dressing
When the days get brighter and longer, a girl's thoughts turn to salad lunches. Based about 15 minutes walk away from any shops or cafés and blessed/cursed with a sloppy canteen, I bring my lunch to work year-round. Brown Bread and a fridge in the office are my lifesavers - the bread for toasting in the canteen and the fridge to store endless blocks of cheese for my normal lunch. Sometimes food bloggers eat boring food too! With the arrival of the summer, however, I start wanting a little more variety, particularly as the canteen is closed at the moment so I have no access to my toaster.
At one stage in my life I lived in a little hobbit-hole of a basement flat with other two girls and, for a brief time, we took it in turns to make lunches for each other - pasta salads, bean salads, couscous salads - that kind of thing. It had to be a dish that was happy to be made the night beforehand and sit around in the fridge. One of my favourite lunches then, and now, is a simple Puy Lentil Salad with Balsamic Dressing. There aren't very many ingredients needed here but what few there are should be very good. I always use the small, speckled blue-green Puy lentils in preference to the normal plain brown or green varieties (there's a very good page on the different sorts of lentils with pictures here). The Puy lentils are better at keeping their shape - always a useful trait in a salad, otherwise it can be very sludgy - and they have a lovely deep, almost peppery, flavour. They're also slightly more expensive than the others but they're definitely worth it.
Quality control should also follow through to the salad dressing which is nothing more complex than an amalgam of several of my store-cupboard favourites - a fruity extra virgin olive oil, richly intense balsamic, pungent wholegrain mustard, freshly ground pepper and Maldon sea salt. The basics mastered, there are many different ingredients that you can add to the salad. The one in the photo, along with the ever-present chopped red onion and garlic clove, has a diced red pepper and handful of snipped chives. I often add cheese, either chunks of mature cheddar or cubes of feta. Goat's cheese is also good but, between the Boyfriend and myself unable to leave it be, it rarely sticks around long enough to see the inside of a salad bowl. The small rice-like pasta shapes called orzo are also good in the lentils as are fresh soft herbs, tomatoes, olives, rocket or anything that you like. Just show some good judgment and don't add them all together.
A quick look round at other people's blogs for a few ideas throws up a myriad of great Puy lentil salad recipes. There's a fabulous looking Puy Lentil Salad with Feta Cheese on Moira's Who Wants Seconds blog and, to travel to the home of Puy lentils, you could try Salade de Lentilles Pomme et Cumin from Clotilde's Chocolate & Zucchini in Paris. Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg has a Lentil Salad with Tomatoes, Dill & Basil or you could try Julie's Aromatic Lentils and Orzo at A Finger in Every Pie. Check out Albion Cooks' Lentils Du Puy cooked in White Wine with Goat Cheese or, for another taste combination, try Jules's warm green lentil, chorizo & cavolo nero salad at stone soup.
Puy Lentil Salad with Balsamic Dressing
Puy lentils - 250g
Onion - ½, peeled
bay leaves - 2
Carrot - 1, peeled and halved
Extra-virgin olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
Wholegrain mustard
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Red onion - 1, chopped
Garlic - 1 clove, halved
Wash the lentils thoroughly and put in a saucepan with the onion, bay leaves and carrot. Cover with cold water and bring to the boil. Cover and simmer for 30-40 minutes or until they're tender. The best way of telling this is to fish a lentil out and bite into it to check.
Meanwhile, pour a pool of extra-virgin olive oil (about 6 tablespoons) into a large serving bowl then add a small amount of Balsamic vinegar (approximately 2 tablespoons) and a dollop of wholegrain mustard (around 1 teaspoon). Season well, whisk thoroughly and taste. Adjust to your own preferences.
Drain the lentils and, while they're still hot, empty them into the dressing. Add the chopped onion and garlic then toss well. Taste again and add more oil, vinegar, mustard or seasonings if necessary.
Serve with plenty of bread for mopping - crusty French bread, focaccia, ciabatta or even thin slices of buttered Irish Brown Soda Bread.
Serves 4 or 2 x lunches by 2 x days.
Posted by Caroline at 10:41 AM | Comments (2)
May 4, 2006
Tasty Dublin
Watch out next month for Taste of Dublin 2006, running from 22 June to 25 June in the gardens at Dublin Castle and described in the press release as Dublin's "first outdoor gourmet food and drink festival". Ha! There's a reason why there aren't more outdoor events in Ireland - talk to the shivering, drenched stallholders at any of the markets around the country and see why. Anyway, festival visitors can expect signature dishes from a selection of the city's restaurants, including a few of my favourites - the lovely Silk Road Café in the Chester Beatty Library and the more sophisticated Cellar Restaurant at The Merrion.
Other restaurants participating are Bang Café, Chapter One, Diep Le Shaker, Jaipur, King Sitric, La Stampa, L'Ecrivain, Peploes, Town Bar & Grill, Unicorn, Yo Thai and Chai Yo. I've eaten a few times, years ago, in Bang Café and always enjoyed the experience while Town Bar & Grill was the setting for our work Christmas dinner (never a good time to assess a restaurant - I will draw a veil over the rather inebriated proceedings!) so I look forward to browsing and tasting.
The big draw for me will be the Chef's Theatre with demonstrations from the ever-interesting Richard Corrigan of London's Lindsay House and Bentley's Oyster Bar and Grill along with Irish kitchen heroine Darina Allen. And, for those of you who are fans of her daughter-in-law, Rachel Allen is also one of the chefs lined up to demonstrate. Of course, as the event is ticketed according to time (two sessions daily, 12pm to 4pm and 5.30pm to 9.30pm), getting to see Richard and Darina in the same session is going to prove a challenge. Think I'll pass on Rachel!
The tickets, priced from €25 to €75, depending on how many florins - the currency to be used in paying for your Taste(s) of Dublin - you want to buy in advance. Apparently the exchange rate is one florin to one euro and dishes will be priced from €5 to €8. Fair enough, but the Ticketmaster booking fee is pricy at best (€2.95 on the €25 tickets), rising fairly sharply to something nasty (€5.95 for the €75 tickets). For my money, the best deal looks like the €35 option which works out at €15 entrance fee plus €20-worth of florins. Now, I just wonder what's the best way around around that €4.38 booking fee?
Posted by Caroline at 9:11 PM | Comments (0)
May 2, 2006
A wander round the west
Our first weekend of the year under canvas couldn't exactly be called an unqualified success. We did actually remember to pack the sleeping bags (and Anzac Biscuit morale) but, despite such forethought, it wasn't exactly the weather for camping in the west of Ireland. The heavens opened early on Sunday morning, raining us off Achill Island and we had to retreat to an old-school bed & breakfast in Westport back on mainland Mayo. At least we managed to have a cold, but fine, Friday night breaking our journey at the ever-reliable Lough Ree campsite in Ballykerran, near Athlone before moving on to the beautiful-on-a-fine-evening Seal Caves Park in Dugort on the north side of Achill Island. We cooked dinner outdoors on our little gas burner - a typical simple one-pot camping meal of Clonakilty Black Pudding, roughly chopped mushrooms and baked beans - and drank red wine in the still-warm late evening sunshine, feeling like summer had finally arrived.
When we went to bed on Saturday it was a glorious night, clear skies and stars overhead. Alas, after about six hours rain on Sunday, it was time to abandon our damp and wind-buffeted tent. Still, bad weather allows for some investigation of local hostelries and eateries and there was surprisingly good pickings on our ramblings.
Saturday: The Left Bank Bistro, Athlone
The Left Bank has the good fortune to be a stones throw from a quirky and really rather wonderful secondhand bookshop in Athlone where I was fortunate enough to pick up a copy of Monica's Kitchen by Monica Sheridan as well as a first edition of Maura Laverty's nostalgic Full and Plenty. That business completed, the Boyfriend and I had only a little time for a light, but tasty, lunch in The Left Bank Bistro. Still cold after the night's camping, I chose Leek and Mushroom Soup, accompanied with homemade brown bread (€4.50), and kept stealing little balls of delicious Boilie Goat's Cheese from the Boyfriend's open focaccia sanwich (€7.50). A pair of quality coffees and we were on the road, in early summer sun which, although we weren't to know it, was not to last.
Sunday: The Beehive, Keel, Achill Island
After packing up the tent in the rain on Sunday morning, the calm, relaxed interior of The Beehive was balm to a pair of bedraggled ex-campers. Soup was the unanimous decision, this time a bowl of rich Roasted Red Pepper and Tomato alongside a pair of hearty brown scones (€4.50 apiece). A range of salads looked good but didn't tempt as the rain continued to pour outside and we remained warm and dry, finishing up with an intensely chocolaty Black Forest Gateau (for him) and, for this crumble lover, a very more-ish Blackberry and Apple Crumble (€4 each).
Sunday night: The Wyatt Hotel, Westport
With hostels everywhere booked up, we knocked on the door of a B&B near Westport railway in desperation - neither of us being fans of the quirky Irish B&B - and managed to snaffle ourselves one of the last remaining rooms in town. The rain continued to fall in biblical proportions as we dried ourselves out, all the better to get drowned again while roaming the town looking for dinner. A chance glance at the bar menu posted outside The Wyatt Hotel in the centre of town and the Boyfriend was immediately drawn to the Irish beefburger (€9.95) while my attention was taken with the braised lamb shank on offer (€12.95). The bar was considerably more comfortable than many restaurants, the staff - unusually - was both Irish and friendly and house wine was on offer for €17. I'm not sure what exactly it was but it sure beat the hell out of those ¼ bottles that are normally the only wine on offer in bars throughout Ireland. Both dishes were very much a cut above standard pub grub and, as we finished our meal, a semi-traditional session started off at the end of the room. We didn't move for the night. It's not often that you get such good food, drink and entertainment all in the one spot.
Even an over-cooked, very solid cooked B&B breakfast the following morning couldn't dent our good impressions of eating in the West. And when the meal was accompanied by our voluble landlady discussing May Day traditions and piseogs (customs), sure you couldn't fault it too much!
Places to eat en route to or in the West of Ireland:
The Left Bank Bistro - Fry Place, Athlone, County Westmeath
The Beehive - Keel, Achill Island, County Mayo
Wyatt Hotel, The Octagon, Westport, County Mayo
Places to camp:
Lough Ree (East) Caravan & Camping Park - Ballykerran, Athlone, County Westmeath
Seal Caves Caravan & Camping Park - The Strand, Dugort, Achill, County Mayo
Posted by Caroline at 10:33 PM | Comments (3)
May 1, 2006
A new shopping experience: Fallon & Byrne
A new arrival on the Dublin grocery scene is the gorgeous-looking Fallon & Byrne, a classy supermarket along the lines of Donnybrook Fair, on Exchequer Street in the city centre. They've been renovating the building for a while and, seeing it opened at last, I just popped in for a few minutes last Saturday week. A former telephone exchange, it's an airy, echo-y space, all parquet floors and food everywhere. Right inside the door is a juice bar and, dotted around the periphery of the vast floor space, were also an in-store butchers, a long deli counter filled with take-home dishes, a coffee bar, complete with high stools and tables, and a well-stocked cheese and charcuterie counter which I could have spent the rest of the afternoon poring over.
One row was filled with piles of unusual vegetables and fruit - I was sorely tempted by the heads of perky looking chicory or Belgian endive, having enjoyed a dish in Paris where they were rolled in slices of ham and baked in a béchamel sauce. But I was already late to meet with friends so I had to leave with nothing but a little packet of saffron from the intriguing spice range, a lot of it sourced from London's The Spice Shop, across from Books for Cooks on Blenheim Crescent. Although my brief visit was only to the ground floor, apparently Fallon & Byrne encompasses another two levels - a wine bar and cellar downstairs and there's going to be a restaurant on the first floor.
It's definitely a place that I'm going to want to explore more. Meanwhile, there's an interview with F&B food hall manager, Rachel Firth, on new Irish foodie website Greatfood.ie (another place well worth taking a - virtual - look around) which explains more about the ethos behind and aims of the store.
Fallon & Byrne, Exchequer Building, 11-17 Exchequer Street, Dublin 2.
Posted by Caroline at 9:05 PM | Comments (3)
