Posts Tagged With: grapes

Schiacciata con l’uva

This recipe was a great hit last week – at school and at home! We rarely cook sweet dishes but when we do, the children obviously love it…  I changed the original recipe calling for plain flour and butter to gluten-free flour and olive oil so that our coeliac and lactose-intolerant friends could also enjoy some baked goodies for a change. I hope you enjoy it too… happy baking!

Schiacciata con l’uva (sweet grape focaccia)

Fresh from the garden: grapes, eggs

Recipe source: adapted from a recipe by Jill Dupleix

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‘This is part shortbread & part cake, and is a very rustic, simple way to enjoy the last grapes of the season.’ And is also dairy and gluten-free!

Equipment:

  • Scales
  • Small saucepan
  • Sieve or sifter
  • Bowl – large, small
  • Table knife & fork
  • Plastic wrap & baking paper
  • Baking sheet
  • Measures – tablespoon
  • Rolling pin
  • Chopping board & small knife
  • Skewer
  • Serving plates
Ingredients:

  • 250g gluten-free plain flour
  • 1 teaspoon gluten-free baking powder
  • 125g caster sugar, plus 2 tablespoons for topping
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • 75ml extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 medium eggs
  • 160g mixed green and red grapes

What to do:

  • Sift flour and baking powder into a large bowl and mix in 125g caster sugar and a pinch of salt.
  • Make a well in the centre and add the olive oil, stirring with the knife to gradually draw in the flour.
  • Lightly beat one egg at a time and add to dough, stirring until mixed. Shape into a ball (if too soft, add an extra tablespoon of sifted flour), wrap in plastic film and refrigerate for one hour to help firm it up.

At the start of the lesson:

  • Pre-heat the oven to 180C.
  • Use a floured rolling pin to lightly roll out the dough or just pat it out with floured hands into a rough oval shape on a sheet of baking paper, then transfer, on the paper, to a baking tray.
  • Wash and de-stem the grapes and cut in half lengthways. Scatter the grapes on top, half of them cut-side up, half cut-side down, pressing in lightly.
  • Scatter with remaining sugar and bake for 15 minutes until golden, and a thin skewer inserted into the middle should come out clean.
  • Turn out onto a wooden chopping board and cut into small squares or slices and place on serving plates.
  • While the schiacciata is cooking you can make the dough for the next class before cleaning up!

Notes: How many different procedures are there in this recipe? What other foreign language recipe names can you think of? Why do we use a knife to mix the dough?

Categories: Kitchen Garden, Recipe | Tags: , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Spring, shoots, Sydney and blossoms

Now, suddenly it’s as if winter never existed (except of course in the $400 electricity bill of heating and clothes-drying that landed yesterday) as the clocks jumped forward an hour last weekend, and the onset of lush late afternoons of brilliant sunshine, dinners eaten in broad daylight, and little children wondering why they have to go to bed while it’s still playtime…

We gave a mostly rainy welcome to Daylight Savings, but it was a warm, moist and muggy one, followed by some gorgeous sunny, heat prickling days – the perfect recipe for explosions of garden-green, the trees and plants and flowers and bugs all bursting with life and joy (well perhaps not the snails, alas they burst underfoot on my late-night trip out to find Charlie… less life and joy, more death and snot). Everything has exploded into life, so beautiful! Our trusty lemon tree has bloomed – it’s such a pity to be so far away at the back of the garden as the blossoms are so amazingly aromatic and Jasmine-like: exquisitely perfumed, heady and tropical.

Just driving along next to the racecourse yesterday I was hit with such verdant brilliance it felt like I was on some crazy hallucinogenic drugs (which I wasn’t),  the scene of trees, grass and sunshine was so bright and crystal-clear… Centennial Park was jumping with joggers, walkers, horse-riders, dog-walkers, stroller-runners – it really does feel great to be alive when everything around you is teeming with life and pulsating heart-beat, and joy!

When I open the kitchen door in the early-morning haze of sleep, the waking dawn smell of Sydney is one that hits me full in the face and takes me right back to being a kid at my grandparents in Carlingford, … although their house was right on the busiest road in the area, the block was deep and surrounded by mature trees, thriving banana palms and passionfruit vines… the particular smell is of sun warming dew-wet leaves, the sub-tropical Sydney flowers awaking, the hungover humid air… and then it goes, replaced by cut lawns, truck fumes, tradies’ smokes, burning toast.

Yet again this year I’ve neglected to prepare the nectarines from fruit-fly onslaught… The boughs of the tree are now beginning their slow sag, weighed down with the promising fruit. Last year we had hundreds and hundreds of juicy nectarines ripen beautifully: unsuspectingly I went to bit into one freshly picked from the tree, then at the last minute thought better to wash it – and cutting it in half was freaked to find two fresh halves of squirming maggot… luckily we had the chooks to enjoy the fruit & buggie bounty but this year will have to dispose of all the nectarines lest the maggot eggs infest the soil. Bugger!

I miss the chickens – discarding all the uneaten bowls of lovingly prepared children’s meals into the compost just isn’t the same… and as well as the wormy nectarines I think we let them run wild in the crab apples & bitter, mean persimmons too… In reality though, the stress of keeping safe someone else’s livestock is something I can live without, with the landlord’s advice ringing in our ears, “Whatever you do, do NOT leave the chickens unlocked at night, or they will DIE!!!”

So now to throw down some more snail bait, pick the seeding tops from the rocket, and hide the ripening strawberries from impatient fingers… and of course breathe in the juicy morning spring air, stretch arms out wide and look ahead to summer, beachy days & sizzled sausages… aaaah Sydney!

Categories: Garden | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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