Friday’s Favourite Five

It’s turned freezing cold in Wellington this week! Definitely soup season from now on.

Difficult choices this week! So many delicious blog posts. All locals on the list… enjoy!

At Down Under – A Fall Picnic. You must visit this post – Viviane has outdone herself with this picnic and photography!

Baking = Love – How you like them apples? Apple & Olive Oil Cupcakes with Maple Cream Cheese Frosting. Nessie always has the most amazing baking treats – don’t these look incredible?

Heartbreak Pie – bathe in feijoas, bathe in glory. I’m loving feijoas at the moment – I feel they help with the transition into colder weather! Love feijoas, love little mini-loaves, love ginger, love cream cheese… it’s a deal.

Grace Cakes – Pretty in Pinterest – Movie Cakes. Check these cakes out that Lydia found on Pinterest. I’m still trying to work out how the ‘Up’ cake works…??

Pease Pudding – Turkish Silverbeet & Feta Gozleme. This really is the most mouth-watering post. I’m going to make it this weekend.

Have a tasty weekend everyone!

Casserole for Dossy

Let me introduce you to Dossy. Dossy has been a much-loved member of our family since we adopted her in 1996, when she looked like this:

Mum and Dad live in the country, and Dossy’s always loved the rural life – coming and going as she pleases, and bringing home all sorts of impressive hunting trophies (well, impressive to her, anyway). She’s a haughty old girl – while she’s cuddly and affectionate, you’re somehow left with the feeling that she sees you as a member of her staff, rather than a respected equal.

Sadly, Dossy’s age caught up with her this year, and she had to be put to sleep a couple of weeks ago. We all wanted to end her suffering, but I have to say it was devastating! Pets like Dossy truly become members of the family and it’s very hard to say goodbye, even long after you’ve “grown up” and left home.

It may seem odd to create a dish in honour of a pet, but hey, this is a cooking blog, and anyway, there are weirder things than this on the interweb. And venison was Dossy’s favourite food.

My dad and brother are hunter-gatherer types so we occasionally get treated to wild venison, and Dossy used to go bananas for it. Even if Dossy was fast asleep in another part of the house, she’d know when Mum was cooking it or even defrosting it in the microwave and nearly have her paws up at the microwave door trying to get to it. So Dossy, this one is for you!

Pets aside, this is the tastiest way of cooking venison I’ve come across. The dark beer makes for a bitter, almost chocolate-y casserole, and the venison cooks to a tender, tasty filling. Dumplings make a nice addition, although they’re still new to me (and they make me think of eating chicken and dumplings when she – of she’ll be coming ’round the mountain – comes).

Venison Casserole with Herb & Mustard Dumplings
loosely based on a recipe from Country Living

800g venison, cut into casserole-size pieces
fresh thyme, if you’ve got it
1 bay leaf
500ml dark ale or stout
1 Tbsp olive oil
1 medium onion, finely sliced
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2 Tbsp plain flour
1 tsp dried oregano
½ tsp ground coriander
250ml beef stock
sprig rosemary
100g  plain flour
1½ tsp baking powder
large pinch English mustard powder
pinch salt
1 tsp horseradish cream (or more to your taste)
30g low fat spread
¼-½ cup trim milk

If you’re reading this the day before you want to make this casserole, good news! You can get a head start by marinating your venison in a non-metallic bowl with the thyme, bay leaf and ale in the fridge overnight (or for up to two days).

If you want to eat it tonight, good news! You don’t need the thyme or bay leaf after all.

Whichever way… on the day you want to eat the casserole, start by preheating the oven to 170°(C). If your venison’s been marinating, drain off the marinade, reserving the ale but discarding the herbs. Get a stove-top-proof casserole dish ready.

Pat the meat dry with paper towels, and season well by rubbing with salt and pepper. Heat a dash of oil in the casserole dish and quickly fry the venison in batches to brown it nicely. Remove from the pan and set aside.

Heat another small dash of oil in the casserole and gently cook the onion and garlic for a few minutes, until softened. Stir in the flour, oregano and coriander, and cook for 1 minute, coating the onion. Gradually add the hot stock and then the ale, ½-1 cup at a time, stirring until it’s thickened before you add the next lot. Do this over med-high heat (not so hot it sizzles and evaporates as soon as you pour it in!). Once all the liquid’s aboard, return the venison to the pan with the rosemary. Season well, cover and bring to the boil. Once it’s at a simmer, move the casserole dish to the preheated oven and cook for 1½ hours.

To make the dumplings, sift the flour, baking powder and mustard powder into a bowl. Add the salt and horseradish cream. Melt the spread and pour this over the top. Mix with a knife, and add just enough milk to make a soft but not-too-sticky dough. You can add more flour if you find you’ve put too much milk in. Using floured hands, shape 10-12 dumplings – I make mine slightly smaller than golf balls. Add these to the casserole, put the lid back on and return to the oven for 15-20 minutes. Take the lid off and cook for a further 5 minutes.

Serve the casserole with simple steamed veges like carrots and green beans.

Time for a Little Something presents Sweet New Zealand

Time for a Little Something is hosting Sweet New Zealand this month, so get your entries ready! Alessandra Zecchini started this monthly event in 2011. Sweet New Zealand is about New Zealand food bloggers getting to know each other, finding new blogs, and of course, sharing sweet recipes!

If you’d like to enter, follow the details below. I’ll do a round-up of all entries at the end of May. Looking forward to seeing everyone’s creations!

Sweet New Zealand

1 This blogging event is open to all bloggers living in New Zealand and Kiwis living and/or blogging overseas. This is not a competition and there are no prizes or winners: it is just a way for Kiwi bloggers to connect and share recipes.

2 You can take part with anything sweet: cakes, fruit salads, biscuits, slices, desserts, ice creams, drinks…You can write a new recipe or send the link for an old recipe, up to you. Multiple entries are also accepted and welcomed.

3 Make sure your entry contains the phrase Sweet New Zealand, the banner (choose your own size, just right click on the badge above and download the image to your computer), a link to the host (my homepage, Time for a Little Something), and to this post (so please update your old posts, if necessary).
4 Send your entry to timeforalittlesomething@hotmail.co.nz by 31 May and please include:
• Your Name
• Your Blog Name and URL
• Your Post URL (and name of the recipe if it isn’t in the post title)
• A photo (not too large)
I look forward to hearing from y’all!

Mushroom & Barley Soup

Well, well, well. The last weekend of April already. Two thirds of autumn already gone!

It’s really only started to feel autumnal in the last week or two, I think. We now leave home in the dark and come home in the dark. I put thick black tights on in the morning without worrying that I’m going to look like a dork if the day turns out to be a blaze of glorious and fiercely hot sunshine. Because now I know it’s not going to. It might end up sunny but it will not be warm. Reassuring on one hand, if a little depressing on the other.

The onset of autumn and winter means soup for lunch on Sundays for us. A few months ago, I started making an effort to cook a proper-ish meal for lunch on Sundays, and it’s becoming a nice little tradition. It’s usually soup or quiche or something, but it’s lovely to have something hot, and to sit down at the table with the Sunday paper’s crossword. Wow. I sound old. I mean, it’s great to sit down and listen to my new One Direction CD. That’s better, right?

I made this soup a couple of weeks ago. It really looks from the ingredients like it would be the blandest soup on earth, without any herbs etc, but it’s really tasty – and perfect for autumn. I’ve been putting pearl barley or soup mix in most of my soups lately -super cheap, super healthy, and makes the soup souper filling. If you haven’t come across it before, soup mix is a packet mix of split peas and pearl barley; it’s with the stock and soup stuff at the supermarket.

Enjoy your Sunday… and know it will be improved by soup.

Mushroom & Barley Soup
adapted from a recipe in Mindfood magazine

1 Tbsp olive oil
400g mushrooms, roughly chopped
2 onions, finely chopped
2 carrots, finely chopped
2 stalks celery, finely chopped
1 potato, diced
5-6 cups chicken stock
½ cup white wine
½-¾ cup pearl barley or soup mix

Heat the oil in a large pot, and gently cook the mushrooms, onion, carrot, celery and potato until the onion softens. Add the stock and wine and bring to the boil. Add the pearl barley and simmer until the barley is tender (about 25 minutes). Season well and serve with crusty bread, and a dollop of unsweetened yoghurt.

Friday’s Favourite Five

Another week come and gone… this week has felt like two oddly short weeks, hasn’t it?

Anyway I don’t have much to report this week… other than these lovely blog posts awaiting your perusal:

Toast – Brown Buttered Apple and Rosemary Cake. Since I saw this Mairi’s also put up a rather amazing looking risotto…

Couscous & Consciousness – Slow Roasted Quince with Cinnamon & Orange. I hardly ever find quince to cook, but next time I do I’ll be slow roasting them like these… yum!

KitchenMaid – Ginger Kiss-off. I was reminded of ginger kisses which I haven’t had in years! But, having read this, I may now make a totally inconvenient and unnecessary trip to the supermarket tomorrow to get some.

Millie Mirepoix – Chicken & Barley Soup. Perfect autumnal dish. I love soups with barley or lentils in them (in fact, I have one coming up for you this weekend). This one looks so good.

Pease Pudding – Boysenberry Honey Yoghurt Cake. Sweet treat to round out this week’s favourites! Gorgeous delicate cake just waiting to be made.

Have fun this weekend! I hope the weather’s fine… we are having a working bee in our garden to get the whole section turned around. And when I say “we”, I of course don’t include myself in the gardening work. Can’t imagine anything worse. So I’m going to be inside making lunch! At least I know my place ;)

Vintage Cooking: Scott’s Farewell Square

Several weeks ago I was reading about the centenary memorials for Captain Robert Falcon Scott and his crew, who died returning from the South Pole in 1912.

Scott’s is a remarkable story. His led his second expedition to Antartica, the Terra Nova Expedition, with the express objective of being the first to reach the South Pole. The mission would be a race, with Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen also planning an expedition.

No way home: All members of Scott's expedition, from left Laurence Oates, H R Bowers, Scott, Edward Wilson and Edgar Evans perished on the return journey from the South Pole

Scott and his crew; from left: Oates, Bowers, Scott, Wilson and Evans (photo credit here)

Scott’s expedition was plagued with misfortune, but Scott and his colleagues Edward Wilson, Henry Bowers, Lawrence Oates and Edgar Evans finally reached the South Pole on 17 January 1912. Unfortunately, they arrived to the heartbreaking news that Amundsen’s team had beaten them by 33 days.

Doomed mission: Scott, right, and his team attempted to be the first to reach the South Pole but on arrival found Roald Amundsen's tent and a record showing he'd discovered the pole two months previously

photo credit here

Scott and his colleagues started the march back to base, but all five perished on the way. Edgar Evans was lost following falls on a glacier. A month later, Oates was barely able to walk, and left the tent voluntarily, famously saying “I am just going outside and may be some time.” The three remaining men marched a further 20 miles and set up camp 11 miles away from their base depot. A blizzard then prevented further progress. Supplies ran out and the men eventually succumbed to cold, starvation and exhaustion.

Why is this on my blog?

The centenary of Scott’s death reminded me of a recipe I spotted in Alexa Johnston’s book Ladies, A Plate. The recipe had originally caught my eye because Alexa had found the recipe in an old book that was produced by St Mark’s Presbyterian Church in Pine Hill, Dunedin – that happens to be the neighbourhood church where I grew up; I was christened there in fact! It would appear the recipe was invented as a farewell when Scott had departed Port Chalmers, Dunedin for the Antarctic in 1910 – Dunedin had been given a half-day’s holiday and thousands turned out to farewell the party. As Alexa says, the square has plenty to sustain a man on a long cold journey.

I must admit I didn’t have huge expectations for the slice – looking through the recipe, it has the hallmark ingredients of any common vintage NZ slice recipe – Weet Bix, coconut, dates… yawn, I thought. But I was wrong.

It turned out far more delicious than I had expected – I think the huge quantity of dates keeps the base really moist, and the chunks of interesting bits makes it perilously addictive. I was supposed to send the batch with my husband to work the next day, but not that much made it there.

I highly recommend making this square in honour of Scott and his team. It’s also my entry for this month’s Sweet NZ, hosted by Frances at Bake Club.

Scott’s Farewell Square
Recipe from St Mark’s Presbyterian Church, Pine Hill, Dunedin
Reproduced in Ladies, A Plate by Alexa Johnston

4oz butter
6 oz brown sugar
1 dsp golden syrup
1 egg
6oz flour
pinch salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 Tbsp cocoa
3oz coconut
2oz walnuts
4 Weet Bix
4oz dates
2oz raisins

Icing:
1 cup icing sugar
2 Tbsp cocoa
1 Tbsp butter
extra coconut, for sprinkling

Preheat the oven to 190°C. Line a  shallow tin with baking paper.

Cream the butter and sugar until light, then mix in the golden syrup and the egg, combining everything well. Sift in the flour, salt, baking powder and cocoa and mix to combine, then add the remaining ingredients. Stir everything thoroughly together. Tip the mixture into the prepared tin, spread it out evenly, and bake for 15-20 minutes. Remove from the oven and put on a wire rack to cool.

Make a thin chocolate icing from icing sugar sifted with cocoa and mixed to a spreading consistency with melted butter and little hot water. Spread over the cake, sprinkle with coconut and cut into squares when the icing has set.

Note: if golden syrup isn’t available where you are: firstly, that’s very sad. Secondly, try using maple syrup instead.

(References for this article come from Wikipedia, and news articles here, here and here, as well as Ladies, A Plate).

Friday’s Favourite Five

Oh god. I’ve had a terrible sweet tooth tonight and we have no treats in the house. So I raided the baking supplies and put a handful of dark choc chips and a couple of pieces of crystallised ginger in my mouth at once. And then I did it again. And again.

Some days are days for indulgence.

A few favourite posts for Friday…

David Lebovitz: French Appetizers: Dukkah and & Feta Wrapped with Prosciutto. I went for the title and stayed for the first photo. This looks so good!

Cupcakes & Cashmere – Chocolate-dipped Biscotti. Something about the simplicity of this got me. So elegant and beautiful.

De la Casa – Tiramisu Cake. This blog is now following Christina’s adventures in Canada, and I love the look of this cake. Had me seriously considering baking one entirely for myself. Actually, I’m not sure that that internal argument’s quite over yet. It may still happen.

Hungry & Frozen – like a week that’s only mondays, only ice cream never sundaes. I find Hungry & Frozen has the best ice cream posts of any blog. Although I am worried that she’ll run out of musical quotes for the titles. Anyway, check out this lovely looking feijoa ice cream.

Sugar & Spice – (Orange & Honey) Sunny Muffins. A cheerful post with equally cheerful muffins. Yum!

Have a lovely weekend everyone, I’m going to spend some time updating my blog and snapping a few new piccies to give it a bit of an autumnal makeover. See you Sunday!