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Feast-ing: I want the lot

I’m celebrating my love of the food columns and supplements in The Guardian by trying to cook at least one recipe from each issue of Guardian Feast in 2021. Find out a bit more about that here.

From Guardian Feast issue No.157 on Saturday 16 January 2021, my take on three dishes no less! Ravinder Bhogal’s pineapple, kale and red cabbage salad, Meerha Sodha’s vegan Hoppin’ John and Tamal Ray’s sweet spot lemon crumble cookies. Links to all original recipes at the end of the post.

First off, I had to try Tamal Ray’s lemon crumble cookies. What better way to start a Saturday than a fresh baked cookie with your mid-morning coffee and a sit down with the paper?

As Tamal says, these are a ‘cinch’ to make, requiring pleasingly few ingredients – all in most people’s store cupboards. In our house we have a bit of a citrus mountain: all those lemons destined for G&Ts and limes for margaritas have languished in our fruit bowl in the wake of Dry January. So, it’s good to find a different outlet for the little beauties. One friend has taken to making dried limes from her lime mountain a la Ottolenghi – more of that later.

I’ve never made cookies by piling the crumbed mix up on the tray for the heat of the oven to fuse into crumbly delights – I used an upside-down pastry cutter for a regular size and shape, which worked well. Unusually for me, I managed to get the precise number of cookies (16) Tamal said I should.

Just one beef here, Tamal: January’s hard enough without more restraint. The mere idea that these crumbly citrus beauties should be ‘sealed in an airtight container, something to be enjoyed over a couple of weeks’… er, no, not in our household.

Tamal Ray’s lemon crumble cookies. Not a crumb left after two days in our household. Sorry.

On the Sunday we went for a long walk out of Berwick to Spittal, along a very waterlogged section of the Coastal Path to Cocklawburn Beach and back home through the fields and woods of Scremerston.

Views from our pre Hoppin’ John walk – a reminder of Scremerston’s mining history sandwiched between two views of Cocklawburn Beach. North Northumberland is a very delightful spot.

We were all knackered after our walk and by the time I turned to Meera Sodha’s take on all-American south dish Hoppin’ John, it was dark. Thing is, when a recipe says ‘1 1/2 tbsps Tabasco’, you start salivating and you can’t stop until you’ve scratched the itch. Hence, at about 7pm last Sunday I headed, torch in hand, down our garden, to snip cavolo nero off stalks that look as leggy as winter palms in the South of France. Meera uses spring greens but when you’ve grown something, you’re keen to use every last scrap. I didn’t have celery (and my daughters aren’t keen, anyway) so I threw in a couple of bay leaves for that earthier taste. I scraped all the shrivelling carrots, offcuts of fennel and onions off the floor of the fridge into a pan and brewed up some veg stock.

This is a seriously simple, biryani, pilau, paella type dish – perfect for a quick (ish) vegan supper. I didn’t have vegan mayonnaise in the cupboard. Those of us who worry about completism on the vegan front did not help ourselves to the bowl of Hellman’s and crushed garlic I provided.

We enjoyed Hoppin’ John so much that I made almost exactly the same meal again two nights’ later but, this time (sorry Meera and all vegans) with chicken.

Week two of my year cooking with Guardian Feast - Meera Sodha's take on Hoppin' John
We’re hoppin’ mad for Meera Sodha’s vegan Hoppin’ John in our fam

We’ve all become big red cabbage fans during lockdown – particularly in the form of Asian slaw. So, Ravinder Bhogal’s pineapple, kale and red cabbage salad was not just up our street, it was parked in our drive. We had a half cabbage in the fridge along with a bunch of coriander – and, of course, my cavolo nero from the garden instead of kale.

There’s something marvellously profligate about a recipe that has four ingredients for the main event and 13 for the dressing – bring it on! Weirdly, this very straightforward (apart, perhaps from the number of ingredients) recipe was my most eventful of the week.

First challenge: tricky allergic daughter can’t eat raw pineapple. I googled replacements for pineapple and, bingo!, apricots were an option (we had some going a bit depressed in the fruit bowl). ‘You can replace pineapple with apricot!’ I announced to my two daughters. They both looked stunned, glancing uncomfortably at me and The Husband. Then giggling. Turns out eating pineapple is supposed to make semen taste nicer. How do my daughters know such things? Not from me. Cut a long story short, I also had a rather unripe mango which proved perfect for the job! The salad, that is.

For the dressing, I only had crunchy peanut butter, so I whizzed it as smooth as I could in a blender. Makrut lime leaves are not something that feature in my cupboard. Hallelujah! for my friend’s homemade dried lime powder. A healthy spoonful of that gave the dressing a good citrus kick, so I’m calling it the perfect sub.

I also discovered that the bag of open peanuts I was finally going to knock on the head for Ravinder’s nutty garnish went out of date in June 2020. Hey-ho time to use them up. They were fine! My biggest error was misreading the recipe and putting a full 400ml can (should have been 200ml) of coconut milk into the pan for the dressing. Actually, it was fine although I’m sure it diluted the powerful kick of the dressing. It did mean that the whole sliced red chilli garnish worked well with its fierce pops of heat and flavour. On the upside, we are also still enjoying the dressing’s umami deliciousness on a range of meals.

Ravinder Bhogal's pineapple, kale and red cabbage salad from Guardian Feast
Ravinder Bhogal’s salad is tasty, filling and, with all its umami flavour sensations, something you want to just keep eating – even with mango instead of pineapple!

Lemon crumble cookies, Tamal Ray

Hoppin’ John, Meera Sodha

Pineapple, kale and red cabbage, Ravinder Bhogal

Next time from Guardian Feast Issue No. 158: Rachel Roddy’s budini di riso fiorentini (little rice pudding tarts) and possibly either Thomasina Miers’ savoy cabbage and fennel sausage ‘lasagne’ (if I can get a savoy cabbage without going to the supermarket (it’s not supermarket week!) or Yotam Ottolenghi’s macaroni with yoghurt and spicy lamb. We shall see.

Feast: New vegan cake on the block

I’m celebrating my love of the food columns and supplements in The Guardian by trying to cook at least one recipe from each issue of Guardian Feast in 2021. Find out a bit more about that here.

First up for my 2021 odyssey with Guardian Feast is Meerha Sodha’s apple pudding cake from Issue No.156 on Saturday 9 January.

My eldest daughter is allergic to raw apples (bloody awkward!) but is fine with cooked ones. That’s one of the reasons why apple cake is a big ‘yes!’ at our table – particularly as allergic daughter has been lockdowning here in Berwick with us. You’d actually need more than two hands to list the raw fruit and veg she’s allergic to. So, finding interesting, tasty recipes with the ingredients that send her for the anti-allergy pills cooked rather than raw is a bit of a mission.

I have a dog-eared page torn from The Guardian Weekend January 24 2004 with our absolute favourite apple cake recipe – I don’t even know whose recipe it is, the name’s not on the page and, try as I might, I can’t find the author in the online archives. The cake itself is crammed with eggs, butter and almonds as well as apples. I can’t count how many times I’ve cooked it. We love it.

And here is that scruffy page kept for so many years for the delicious apple cake.

Nigel Slater was writing for The Observer back then and I’ve found a link to the crossword from that issue of The Guardian, but the apple cake creator remains a mystery. I’m sure somebody out there might tell me eventually. I do know it must have been an outdoorsy Weekend as it has a pull quote at the top of the page which sounds very school marm-y:

There’s pudding too. Don’t abandon decent principles just because this is a picnic.

The Guardian Weekend January 24 2004

Picnic? In January! What kind of madness is this?

Come to think of it we did have a picnic on a walk in the foothills of the Cheviots earlier this month. Watched by wild Cheviot goats, we munched cheese and pickle sarnies and slabs of pork pie slathered in Coleman’s English mustard. We didn’t hang about – it was blooming chilly – we also didn’t think to take the cake – but enjoyed it when we got home.

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January picnic with a view. No decent principles were employed in our picnic: Cheese and pickle sarnies and a slab of pork pie slathered in English mustard. We ate the cake at home!

Meera Sodha is, of course, ‘The new vegan’ in Feast and author of East. So, how will her apple pudding cake match up to our juicy treasured trusty friend from 2004? I enjoy vegan cakes but do find that they can sometimes feel a bit, shall we say ‘worthy’ or sometimes a bit dry. But, I love the look of Meera’s apple pudding cake and am desperate to try.

First off, I only have pears in the house and, you know, lockdown… pears, then, instead of the four granny smiths used in Meera’s recipe (allergic daughter can’t eat raw pears either). I chop one and a half conference pears into cubes to go in the cake mix and slice the other one and half to go on top. I don’t bother to peel any of them. We have almond milk in stock, and that’s what I use for the non-dairy, otherwise I stick to the recipe which is super-easy. It’s quite a sloppy load but I scrape it into the well-greased and lined tin and top it with my pear slices.

As the cake bakes, I message one of my Berwick vegan friends to let her know that I’ll drop off a slice for her later. She replies: ‘Ooh yes please!! I’ve actually saved that recipe to make one day’. Meera says to bake for 50-60 minutes – I go the full time and should maybe have left it a little bit more. Although perhaps it sinks a bit because pears are juicier than apples.

Who cares! The end result is absolutely delicious. A chewy almost caramelised crumb balanced with a moist, fruity interior. Delicious with a dollop of crème fraiche. Pear pudding cake’s a winner and a new favourite cake on our block – vegan or not. I mean, you could also use apples! You’ll find Meera’s original recipe here.

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Harking back to my previous post and hymn to Delia Smith, I found myself making her rich bread and butter pudding two nights ago. One of our family aims for the past few years and specifically during lockdown has been to waste as little food as possible. What better vessel for the remains of a manky white sliced loaf stuck to the freezer ceiling (sourced from fab local waste food initiative Northern Soul Kitchen for bread sauce at Christmas), a rapidly firming slab of home-baked sourdough and tail ends of jars of home-made mincemeat than a rib-sticking, lip-smacking slab of Delia’s stodge sensation?

Coronary on a plate? Delia Smith’s rich bread and butter pudding in the making. All gone now. Sorry.

Next up: I want to create everything from Feast Issue No. 157 but settle for Ravinder Bhogal’s pineapple, kale and red cabbage salad, Meerha Sodha’s vegan Hoppin’ John and Tamal Ray’s sweet spot lemon crumble cookies.

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