This weekend's food has been lovely. I had a nostalgic yearning for 'savoury rice' - remember that. I used to love it as a kid and thought I'd try and recreate a good version of it. My mum was a good cook but with 5 kids to feed we would often have food like Frey Bentos pies, crispy pancakes and goblin hamburgers in gravy. I used to love them and I have the occassional crispy pancake now and again for old time's sake!
My version of savoury rice had a spanish flavour with chorizo and red pepper. All I did was fry 50g diced chorizo with half a diced onion, half a diced red pepper and a crushed clove of garlic in a little oil. Add 1 cupful of rice and 2 cups of stock (made up with marigold powder) and simmer with a lid on until the liquid is absorbed and the rice cooked. Oh I also threw in a handful of peas 2 minutes before the end.
Today's lunch was more suited to autumn but it is cold, wet and windy out and it calls for comfort food. Chicken, mushrooms and cream are wonderful bedfellows and this is such a simple lunch to cook for Sunday. I rarely cook a traditional Sunday lunch anymore but feel it is important to have a good lunch with everyone around the table. It doesn't have to mean a roast 'with all the trimmings'. I think that concept is a bit of a tyranny for the poor cook. Slaving over 8 pots and pans with an afternoon's washing up to look forward to is not how I want to spend my Sunday. If you want a roast then great but why not have a pot roast style lunch or this lovely dish that I made today.
Chicken with porcini mushrooms and triple cooked chips
1 chicken, cut into saute (8 pieces)
4 - 5 button mushrooms, chopped
1/2 a diced onion
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 tbsp marigold veg stock powder
125ml double cream
thyme leaves, chopped
4 baking potatoes, cut into thick chips
oil for frying
2) When the chicken is cooked remove it from the pan and add the cream and let it reduce until the sauce is thick. Place the chicken back in the pan and coat with the sauce.
3) While the chicken is simmering you can make the chips. I now have a deep fat fryer and cooked them on a low heat (140) until almost cooked. I then gave them a second fry on a moderate heat (160) until they coloured slightly and finally finished them off on a high heat (190), drained them and sprinkled them with sea salt.
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