Posts Tagged With: winter

Bush tucker: Barilla bower spinach and sweetcorn soup

This is a wonderful soup, full of gingery goodness! We were lucky enough to get some fresh organic turmeric that added quite a savoury aspect to the soup, and stained everything bright yellow, including fingers!

ourkitchengarden.net

Foraged bush tucker food: Barilla bower spinach
Recipe source: adapted from a Javanese recipe on riverford.co.uk
Serves: 6 or 24 tastes

Equipment:

  • Kettle
  • Chopping boards & knives
  • Peelers
  • Garlic press
  • Microplane
  • Mixing bowls
  • Colander
  • Stockpot
  • Measures: jug, tablespoon, teaspoon
  • Serving bowls
Ingredients:

  • 1.5 litres water
  • 1.5 tablespoons bouillon
  • 2 onions
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 2cm piece of galangal
  • 2cm piece of ginger
  • 2 fresh corn cobs
  • 2 large handfuls Barilla spinach
  • 1cm piece of fresh turmeric
  • Rice Bran oil
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 teaspoon brown sugar
  • Flaked salt & pepper

What to do:

  • Fill the kettle and set it to boil. Peel and finely chop the onions. Peel and mince the garlic.
  • Peel the galangal, turmeric and ginger and carefully grate using the microplane.
  • Peel the silks from the corn cobs and wash the cobs. Cut in half across the middle and then, keeping the flat side on the chopping board, carefully slice off the kernels with a small sharp knife.
  • Wash the Barilla spinach in a big bowl and several changes of cold water, drain in the colander then roughly chop.
  • Drizzle roughly 2 tablespoons of oil into the stockpot and heat on medium. Fry off the onion gently for 3 minutes, stirring, then add the garlic, ginger and turmeric and cook for 30 seconds.
  • Add the hot water and bouillon, turmeric, bay leaf and brown sugar and simmer for 5 minutes, covered.
  • Add the corn and simmer for 5 minutes, partially covered, until the corn is tender.
  • Add the spinach and taste to check if you need any more seasoning.
  • Ladle into bowls and serve.

Notes: What is Barilla bower spinach like and where does it grow? What is turmeric and what does it look like?

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Green leaves and potato soup

These sunny-but-cool days & lengthening nights sing to me of soup, soup and more soup – and this is a great way to use up any bolting rocket or snaily kale!

Fresh from the garden: rocket, silverbeet, kale, potatoes, basil
Recipe source: Melissa
Serves: 6 or 24 tastes

ourkitchengarden.net

Equipment:

  • Kettle
  • Scales
  • Chopping boards & knives, scissors
  • Peelers, garlic press
  • Bowls – big
  • Salad spinner
  • Large stockpot
  • Wooden spoon
  • Measures –jug, tablespoon
  • Stick blender/ handheld mixer
  • Ladle
  • Serving bowls
Ingredients:

  • 500g waxy potatoes like Kipflers
  • A small bunch of spring onions
  • A small bunch of rocket
  • A handful silverbeet
  • A handful kale
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 50g unsalted butter
  • 1 litre water
  • 1 tablespoon bouillon
  • Black pepper
  • A bunch of basil

What to do:

  • Fill the kettle and, making sure you have dry hands, set it to boil.
  • Scrub the potatoes under running cold water (do not peel!) & cut into 2cm cubes.
  • Peel the garlic cloves and squeeze them through the garlic press. Wash & trim the spring onions and slice into finger-width pieces.
  • Melt butter in the large stockpot over medium heat and sauté the spring onion and garlic for a minute, and then add the potato cubes and turn so that the potato cubes sweat in the butter.
  • Meanwhile wash the rocket in several changes of water and spin dry. Roll up and slice into thin ribbons. Wash the silverbeet in several changes of water and shake dry. Slice or cut the leaves up the middle to remove the stems, then chop them into 1cm pieces. Roll up the leaves and finely slice them into ribbons.
  • Wash the kale leaves and shake dry. Cut or tear the leaves from the stalks, chop the stalks into half-finger-width pieces, and slice up the leaves into ribbons.
  • Carefully measure the boiling water and the bouillon into the pot of potatoes and stir. Bring it to a boil, then turn down to a simmer, cover and cook gently over low heat for 10 minutes, then add the silverbeet and kale stalks.
  • Cook for 2 minutes – check that the potato is tender, then stir in rocket, silverbeet and kale leaves. Increase heat to medium and simmer for another 2 minutes. If it’s really thick you may need to add another cup of hot water and pinch of salt.
  • Wash the basil and pick the leaves from the stalks, spin dry.
  • With dry hands, plug in the stick blender and carefully blitz the soup until it is silky smooth. Add the basil leaves and blitz again.
  • Taste for correct seasoning and ladle into bowls to serve.

Notes: How many different procedures are there here? Why do we want the potato to ‘sweat’?

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Roasted turnips and pears with rosemary honey drizzle

The colder weather brings us turnips, parsnips and swedes but they’re a tricky bunch to convince kids to eat… Unless they’re swaddled in buttery honeyed goodness! Serve this with roast pork.

Fresh from the garden: turnips, pears, rosemary
Recipe source: adapted from a recipe by Susie Middleton in Fast, Fresh & Green (seen on marthastewart.com)
Serves: 4 as a side dish or 24 tastes

ourkitchengarden.net

Equipment:

  • Large rimmed baking tray
  • Baking paper
  • Paper towel
  • Chopping boards and knives
  • Mixing bowls
  • Spatula
  • Mezzaluna
  • Scales
  • Measures: ¼ cup, tablespoon, teaspoon
  • Small saucepan
  • Serving bowls
Ingredients:

  • 4 medium purple-topped turnips
  • 2 firm ripe Bosc pears
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1½ teaspoons coarse salt
  • 25g unsalted butter
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 1 sprig fresh rosemary

 

What to do:

  • Preheat oven to 220C. Line a large rimmed baking sheet with baking paper and set aside.
  • Scrub the turnips under running water and wipe dry. Without peeling, chop them into 2cm cubes by cutting into slices first, then rods, then cubes.
  • Wash and dry the pears and prepare in the same way as the turnips, discarding the cores.
  • In a large bowl, toss together turnips and pears with oil and salt until well combined. Place in an even layer on prepared baking sheet.
  • Transfer to oven and roast, turning with a spatula once or twice during cooking, until browned and turnips are easily pierced with a paring knife, 25 to 30 minutes, rotating baking sheet halfway through baking.
  • Meanwhile, wash the rosemary sprig and wipe dry with paper towel. Strip the needles from the stalk and finely chop using the mezzaluna. We will need about a tablespoon’s worth.
  • Melt the butter in a small saucepan over medium heat. Add honey and rosemary; let simmer for a few seconds and remove from heat.
  • Transfer turnips and pears to serving bowls and drizzle with butter mixture. Toss to combine and serve.

Notes: What other classic fruit and vegetable combinations can you think of? What does a turnip smell like?

 

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Cauliflower and nutmeg soup

Silky and spiced, creamy and smooth – we love cauliflower soup! And with a little crunchy addition of speedy croutons, we’re in heaven!

ourkitchengarden.net

Fresh from the garden: cauliflower, leeks, onion, potato, garlic
Recipe source: Melissa
Serves: 6 or 24 tastes

Equipment:

  • Kettle
  • Garlic press, peeler
  • Chopping board & knife
  • Stockpot
  • Measures – tablespoon, jug
  • Wooden spoon
  • Large & med bowls
  • Stick blender
  • Mouli
  • Microplane grater
  • Ladle
  • Serving bowls
Ingredients:

  • 1 leek
  • 1 brown onion
  • 4 cloves of garlic
  • 1 large potato
  • A large head of cauliflower
  • Extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1.5 lt water & 1.5 tablespoons bouillon (or 1.5 litres stock)
  • White pepper & flaked salt
  • A whole nutmeg

 What to do:

  • Fill the kettle and set to boil.
  • Wash the leek, scoring and peeling the outer layers off to look for hidden dirt, and then finely chop the leek.
  • Peel and finely chop the onion. Peel the potato under running water and chop into 1cm cubes.
  • Peel and squeeze the garlic cloves through the press.
  • Wash, shake dry and cut or tear the cauliflower into small florets.
  • Heat the 2 tablespoons of olive oil in the stockpot. Add the leek and onion and fry gently for 5 minutes.
  • Carefully measure the boiling water into the jug and add the bouillon. Stir.
  • Add the cauliflower, the potato and the garlic and sweat for a minute, then add the hot stock.
  • Simmer for 20 minutes until the cauliflower is tender. Season with salt and ground white pepper and puree with the stick blender until very smooth.
  • You may need to pass the soup through the mouli into another bowl to achieve an even smoother texture.
  • Just before serving, grate in about half a nutmeg using the microplane grater, the ladle out into your bowls.

 Notes: What other vegetables can be used for soup? Why do we sweat the veggies out?

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Cannellini bean, kale and rainbow chard soup

Our kids love soup – blended and smooth or chunky and funky – and this one makes the most of our winter garden veg. At home please add some toasted buttery sourdough rubbed with garlic!

ourkitchengarden.net

Fresh from the garden: celery, carrots, onion, garlic, potatoes, kale, rainbow chard
Recipe source: Melissa
Serves: 8 or 24 tastes

ourkitchengarden.net

Equipment:

  • Bowls – glass, large, small
  • Kettle
  • Measures: cup, tablespoon
  • Colander, sieve
  • 2 saucepans, med and large
  • Chopping boards and knives
  • Peelers & garlic press
  • Wooden spoon
  • Ladle
  • Serving bowls

 

 

Ingredients:

  • 150g dried cannellini beans
  • 1 teaspoon bicarb soda
  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 stalks celery
  • 2 carrots
  • 1 brown onion
  • 5 cloves garlic
  • 1.5 litres boiling water & 1.5 tablespoons bouillon (or 1.5 litres vegetable stock)
  • 2 Desiree or other red potatoes
  • One large bunch kale
  • A couple of stalks of rainbow chard
  • Flaked salt and black pepper

What to do:

  • The night before, soak the cannellini beans in plenty of cold water with a teaspoon of bicarb.
  • At the beginning of the lesson, drain and rinse the beans. Add them to the smaller saucepan with plenty of water to cover and the bay leaves. Peel 2 of the garlic cloves and add them whole to the pan. Heat on high to boil and cook for about 20 minutes, stirring every now and then.
  • Fill the kettle and set it to boil.
  • Wash and shake the celery dry and chop into small pieces. Wash and peel the carrots and chop into small pieces.
  • Wash and chop the potatoes into 2cm cubes, leaving the skin on.
  • Peel and finely dice the onion. Peel and squeeze the remaining 3 cloves of garlic through the press.
  • Wash the kale and chard in several changes of water, and then shake dry. Trim the stalks from the kale and discard. Trim the stalks from the chard and chop into 5mm pieces, keeping separate. Roll up the kale and chard leaves and slice or tear into 1cm strips.
  • In the larger saucepan over medium heat, heat the olive oil until shimmering.
  • Add the celery, carrots, and onion, and cook, until the onions are softened, about 5 minutes.
  • Add the garlic and cook, stirring constantly, for another minute or so, and then add the potatoes and stir to coat.
  • Using caution, measure the litre of boiling water into the jug and stir the bouillon in. Add to the vegetables and simmer for about 15 minutes.
  • Strain the beans & garlic and add to the vegetables with the kale and chard stalks and simmer for another 10 minutes, then add the chopped chard and cook for another 5 minutes.
  • Check for correct seasoning, then ladle out into serving bowls.
  • ourkitchengarden.net
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Greek slow-roasted leg of lamb

On a day like today when the rain is pelting down outside, all I can think of is popping the oven on and cooking something hearty and absolutely delicious for a few hours…  the original recipes calls for roasting potatoes on high in the lamb fat once the meat is done – so of course that is what we did – but I also made some pitta to roll around the juicy lamb, along with some tzatziki, some crunchy rocket, and also a fresh tomato, cucumber and onion salad to squash in too. Sounds like a lot of work but not really… and so worth it! Do it, do it!

So here follows the recipe for the lamb, the potatoes, the tomato salad and the tzatziki. The pitta bread recipe has been posted separately!

ourkitchengarden.net

Recipe source: kalofagas.ca (many thanks for this recipe, it was truly scrumptious)
Serves: 8-10 (or 4 with loads left over for the next day!)

1 leg of lamb (bone in) 2½ kg to 3½ kg
1 head of garlic
fine sea salt
fresh black pepper
2 teaspoons sweet paprika
2 medium onions, peeled & quartered
1 cup dry white wine
2-3 sprigs of fresh rosemary
10 sprigs of fresh thyme
2-3 teaspoons dried Greek oregano
2-3 bay leaves
Juice of 2 lemons
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
hot water or stock
salt and pepper to taste

  1. Peel the skins off the garlic clove and slice them into slivers. Stick a paring knife into the lamb and make a hole, then slip a sliver of garlic. Repeat and insert as many slivers of garlic as you can.
  2. Pre-heat your oven to the highest possible temperature and place the rack in the middle position. Drizzle your lamb with some olive oil and season with salt, pepper and paprika. Place the leg of lamb in a roasting pan that just fits the leg. Place in your pre-heated oven and roast uncovered for about 10-15 minutes or until browned, then flip the leg and roast for another 10-15 minutes.
  3. Remove the lamb from the oven and reduce the heat to 180C. Place the quartered onions around the lamb, add any remaining slivers of garlic, add the herbs (thyme, bay, rosemary, oregano) and squeeze in the lemon juice and pour the wine into the pan. Add the olive oil and enough hot water or stock to cover a third of the lamb.
  4. Cover and place the lamb back in the oven for 2 hours (add more hot water or stock if needed), baste the lamb once an hour. After two hours, flip the leg of lamb (add more water if necessary and adjust seasoning of liquid with salt and pepper).
  5. After 3 hours, the leg of lamb should be a deep brown and the bones will be exposed and the meat will be falling off the bone.
  6. Remove the lamb from the oven, baste with liquid and allow to rest. Serve with roast potatoes tossed in lamb drippings* & with pita bread & tomato salad!

ourkitchengarden.net

Roast potatoes: Have some peeled & quartered potatoes to roast in another roasting pan and drizzle with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Pour enough pan juices from the lamb leg to come up a third of the way on the potatoes and toss to coat. Taste, adjust seasoning and crank your oven up to 220C and place the potatoes in the oven to roast for 35-40 minutes or until fork-tender (the lamb will stay warm covered in the roasting pan on the stove-top).

ourkitchengarden.net

Tomato, cucumber and onion salad: Chunky-chop 2 or 3 vine-ripe tomatoes into a bowl and add a similar amount of chopped cucumber (peeled if you like or not!). Add half a finely chopped red onion, a bunch of washed and finely chopped coriander stalks and stems, a squeeze of fresh lime, a sprinkle of flaked salt, grind of pepper and half a teaspoon of chilli flakes (if you like some heat). Toss and serve.

ourkitchjengarden.net

Tzatziki: Peel and finely chop half a cucumber and add to a bowl with a small tub of Greek-style yoghurt. Add a clove of garlic, very finely chopped, and a sprinkle of flaked salt and stir well. This can keep for a few days so make beforehand if you need.

ourkitchengarden.net

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Kitchen garden news – 28th June 2013

So here we are the end of Term 2 with winter well and truly upon us.  At least winter solstice has been and gone so the days are getting ever-so-slightly longer now…. I do love this time of year though: the oven on and slow-cooking anything in my path, and parking spaces to be found readily around Bondi, and with an almost leisurely commute to school in the mornings!

This week we’ve taken a break from the usual routine to welcome the Year 1 classes to the Kitchen Garden program… it has been lovely to see the wee ones down here and also to say hi to the new wave of Future Volunteers (!) We made some delicious crusty bocconcini and garden herb pizza and slurped some creamy green soup: landcress, potato, rocket and leek this time… I think we all had a great time… And the little aprons looked very cute indeed!

ourkitchengarden.net

And with a tear in my eye I farewell lovely Ella and her family for the time being… Have fun in New York – I can’t wait to see your photos and to hear all about it!

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Bye bye lovely Ella!

For loads of great photos from the week and recipes updated fortnightly, subscribe here to this blog by clicking the Sign Me Up button on the right!
Cheers all & happy hols! Melissa x

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Creamy rocket, potato and leek soup

This soup just morphs every time we have a new garden veg to use… as long as the base includes aromatic veggies like onions, garlic and leek, along with something to thicken like potato (or barley, or rice) and some fabulous vegetables – you can pretty much add anything you like! I served it to the year 1 students to have with their pizza – a taste of soupy things to come!

And if you prefer to have no dairy, then simply substitute the butter with olive oil and omit the creme fraiche… still delish.

ourkitchengarden.net

From the garden: rocket, landcress, leeks, onion, potatoes, chives, garlic, bay
Recipe source: Melissa
Serves: 8 or 24 tastes

Equipment:

  • Chopping board & knife
  • Scales
  • Small paring knife& scissors
  • Potato peelers
  • Kitchen paper
  • 1 heavy-based stockpot & lid
  • Measuring jug, tablespoon
  • Wooden spoon
  • Stick blender
  • 2 teaspoons
  • Serving bowls
Ingredients:

  • 3 large bunches landcress
  • A small bunch rocket
  • 1 brown onion
  • 2 leeks
  • 4 medium potatoes
  • 4 garlic cloves
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Small bunch chives
  • 100g butter
  • 1½ litres vegetable or chicken stock (or 1½ litres water and a tablespoon and a half of bouillon)
  • 150ml crème fraîche
  • Flaked salt and black pepper

What to do:

  • Fill up the kettle and set it to boil.
  • Wash the landcress & rocket well and shake dry. Trim any brittle stalks and chop the leaves.
  • Peel and finely chop the onion.
  • Wash the leeks well, inserting a slit down the middle of each and rinsing out any dirt. Trim and chop finely.
  • Peel the potatoes over the sink and wash thoroughly. Chop into 2cm cubes.
  • Wash the chives, carefully shake dry & roll up in a piece of kitchen paper to dry. Snip or chop finely.
  • Melt the butter in the large thick-based saucepan, then add the onion, prepared leeks, potato, garlic and bay leaves and stir them around so that they’re coated with the melted butter. Next sprinkle in some salt then cover with a lid and let the vegetables sweat over a very gentle heat for about 15 minutes, giving the mixture a good stir about halfway through.
  • Meanwhile prepare the stock: Measure 1½ tablespoons of bouillon into the measuring jug and then carefully add a litre and a half of boiling water into it, and stir. You may need to do this in two lots.
  • After that, add the stock, bring everything up to simmering point and simmer, covered, for about 10-15 minutes or until the potatoes are quite tender.
  • Add the landcress and rocket and simmer for a further 3 or 4 minutes.
  • Then remove the pan from the heat and when it’s cooled a little liquidise the soup with the stick blender and season to taste.
  • When ready to serve, swirl in three tablespoons of crème fraîche. Then pour in to bowls and garnish each one with a little extra crème fraîche and some snipped chives.

Notes: What is crème fraîche? What is the difference between landcress and watercress? What is bouillon?

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Kitchen garden news – 13th June 2013

ourkitchengarden.net

Lemongrass, cumquat peel and apple thyme for the tisane

Ha ha! Winter has finally hit but we’re safe and secure down here in the Cottage of the Steamy Windows with ovens baking, soups stirring, eggs poaching and herbal teas brewing… the garden has been flooded with rain this week: great for our broad beans and other spring crops already planted. We still have the odd summer plant yet to give up the ghost – every time Ligia plans to pull them out they throw up another handful of delicious veggies – zucchini and their flowers, snap & snow-peas, basil… they’re hanging on for dear life!

So to our menu this week: a hearty Cabbage, barley and coriander soup, an unblended soup this time & left in all its chunky glory; Pizza with broccoli, garlic and anchovies – amazing how so many children say they don’t eat fish ‘cos they don’t like it – but then scoff this pizza in fistfuls as it comes to the table!

We are mixing the aforementioned cross-seasonal veggies in our Ragout of (winter) vegetables, and serving this alongside Creamy polenta with poached eggs & sage – I beg you to try this recipe if you haven’t already made friends with polenta! And to finish, some Lemon butter biscuits (thanks Shelley for the lemons, I must get some bikkies up to you!) & Herbal tisane: our ‘tea’ of lemongrass, cumquat peel and apple mint. Yum yum, all of it!

I will do my best to get the recipes posted by the weekend – if you’re keen to receive the recipes straight to your inbox then subscribe to this site (there is a button on the right of main screen) for all new posts – updated fortnightly!

And one last thing: next term we want to start a weekly Fruit & Veggie Box Scheme for BPS families – seasonally sourced from the Sydney area to avoid road & air miles and mainly organic with a little conventional added in (PS this is NOT our Kitchen Garden produce!).

A-one-size-fits-all-box: Fifty bucks, pick up from the Cottage on a Monday arvo, proceeds going directly to the SAKGP! Who’s in? We should be able to do up to 40 boxes – first in etc. Speak to Grace or me at school if you’re interested and we will let you know deets once we have more info.

Cheers all! Melissa

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Ragout of (winter) vegetables

Half veggie stew, half side-of-mixed-veg, this dish can be added to or subtracted as the fancy takes you… we’re clearing the beds of the last summer and autumn crops at the mo – hence zucchini, beans etc – but otherwise pop in some tasty cauliflower & cabbage?

ourkitchengarden.net

Fresh from the garden: bok choy, pencil leeks, zucchini, beans, snap peas, lemons, tarragon, parsley
Recipe source: Melissa from an idea by Stephanie Alexander
Serves: 8 or 24 tastes

Equipment:

  • Colander
  • Chopping board & knife
  • Bowls – large, med
  • Salad spinner
  • A small saucepan
  • A medium frying pan with lid
  • Scales
  • Measures – jug, ½ cup
  • Wooden spoon
  • Serving plates
Ingredients:

  • 1 or 2 heads of bok choy
  • A small handful pencil leeks
  • 1 or 2 zucchini
  • A handful of beans & snap peas
  • 8 garlic cloves
  • 30g unsalted butter
  • 1 lemon
  • ½ cup light stock (or ½ cup boiling water and a teaspoon of bouillon)
  • Small bunch French tarragon
  • Small bunch parsley
  • Flaked salt & black pepper

What to do:

  • Separate out the leaves of the bok choy and wash thoroughly to remove the dirt. Leaving small stems whole, chop the remaining stalks & leaves into large bite-sized pieces.
  • Cut the roots & the very tops from the leeks and strip back the top layer to remove any dirt. Leave whole.
  • Wash and chop the zucchini into large bite-sized pieces.
  • Wash & dry the herbs, pick from the stalks and finely chop.
  • Place the garlic cloves (in their skin) into a small saucepan and just cover with water. Bring to the boil on low-medium heat. Drain then repeat. Slip the garlic skins off & set aside.
  • Melt half the butter in the frying pan on medium heat.
  • Once frothing add the leeks and the whole cooked garlic cloves & sauté until the leeks are golden flecked.
  • Then add the 1/2 cup stock & the zucchini, the beans and snap peas and cook, covered, for about 3 minutes.
  • Uncover the pan, scatter over the bok choy pieces & cook for another minute, shaking the pan gently. Using the microplane, zest the lemon and add to the pan.
  • Should be very little liquid now, if so turn up the heat to high & continue shaking gently.
  • Add the remaining butter in cubes and the herbs and then grind over pepper and a sprinkle of salt and divide among serving bowls.

Notes: Why do we cook the garlic twice? What is bouillon? What does ragout mean? Why do we need to use French tarragon?

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