150g dark chocolate
100g double cream
Splash of some spirit (Quattro, whisky, whatever)
Lots of chopped fruit.
Heat the cream in a pan, don’t boil. Add the chocolate and stir until melted.
Put in to the fondue pan
150g dark chocolate
100g double cream
Splash of some spirit (Quattro, whisky, whatever)
Lots of chopped fruit.
Heat the cream in a pan, don’t boil. Add the chocolate and stir until melted.
Put in to the fondue pan
I followed a youtube by Outdoor Allie, really helpful!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=HP43Zm1-Jrg
400ml pigs blood (I used dried 80g dried blood 400ml cold water)
200g of diced pork back fat (or belly pork or sausage meat or lardons)
100g pearl barley (dry weight)
100g rusks (or bread crumbs)
½ large onion – finely diced
(you can vary the spices as you wish but you need salt, pepper, cayenne and nutmeg/mace as a minimum in my opinion)
1tsp ground pepper
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp ground coriander
2tsp salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp nutmeg
2 ground up cloves
2lb loaf tin or 3 x 500ml foil trays
Making some cushions and curtains for the Samoens apartment.
Exciting to have the overlocker out.
Filling - lamb/lamb lung and offal/Veggies 1kg (this is the cooked weight, so when using meat 1.25kg raw meat)
Fat - 200g butter (or vegan alternative) + 50g flour (cornflour if wanting gluten free) or 250g suet
Pinhead Oats (also called steel cut oats) 350g
Onion - 2 medium approx 400g
Liquid 600ml - veg or meat stock. When making veggie I used the cooking water from the lentils and some marmite, some veg stock and maybe worcester sauce. For meat ideally use the liquid you cooked the meat in
Spice - eg
2tsp salt approx, you need to taste the mix. Salted butter or marmite will also add salt
3 tsp ground pepper (or 1tsp pepper and 2 cayenne pepper)
1 tsp ground coriander seed
1 tsp nutmeg (or mace)
1 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 tbsp vinegar (but not needed when you use olives in the veggie version)
For the vegetarian option you can use anything you fancy for the filler, but consider how much flavour lamb has, you need to add this somehow.
Popular flavour enhancers are marmite, worcester sauce or soya paste, consider the volume of liquid if you use worcester sauce.
250g black beans (cooked - I used Cassegrain tinned haricot noire with Lemon grass and combava leaves)
100g mushrooms
180g carrot (2 largish carrots)
250g cooked green lentils (125g dried lentils)
150 g cooked black lentils (75g dried)
30g peanut butter
40g olives
Cook the lentils (reserve the liquid to use with the stock), grate the carrot, chop the mushrooms and olives small and mash the black beans
Mix everything together all these ‘filling’ ingredients
Fry the onions gently in the butter until soft not brown
Mix with the veg mixture and add the liquid, flour and pin head oats.
Add all the spices.
Mix well
Should now be sloppy but not wet.
Put in to foil trays or loaf tins and cover with foil and cook in a 140°C oven for 2 hours (or steam in a pan)
When cooked the pinhead oats will be soft and have grown a lot in size (maybe 3 or 4 times the size they started off) and the mix will no longer be sloppy, it may be lightly browned.
Let cool and can be frozen at this point.
To reheat cook in oven at 150 for about an hour mins. I like to leave the foil off for half that time so it goes a bit crispy, but this may not be highly traditional.
Serve with mashed potato and mashed turnip - or any veg you want!
Ready to out in the trays and cook
1 egg plus warm water to make 150g of liquid
1 tsp active dry yeast
250 g bread flour
15 g sugar
1 tsp salt
25 g soft butter
Knead everything together for 10 mins or whatever you normally do for bread
Put in a bowl and rise until doubled in size. Approx an hour.
Divide in to 4 rolls in an oiled oven tray and let double in size again
Cook in the tray for about 20 mins until lightly browned
Sweetpeas and runner beans
We are loving the head holder so we can shear them standing up (them not us - although we do think about making a bench for them to stand on one day). The sheep much prefer it this way too - it seems they didn’t read the ‘How to be a sheep’ handbook where it mentions going floppy when lying on your back…
Shearing a bit later than usual this year, partially due to the work on the house and partially because the cool wet weather has taken away the urgency…
So much work!
We need to rerender the front wall now the new windows are in (it is cement and doesn’t breath). To do that we need to take up the old path, so we are replacing it with a bit of a better one with a little patio in it for some outside lounge chairs and umbrella.
Will be fab when done, but painful now!
I just bought a breadmaker, because although I enjoy making bread I hardly ever manage to fit it in around the house building schedule, or when I try to I fail to make it back in time for the next step and it goes wrong…
190ml warm water (warm enough to warm the milk to room temp) + 60ml milk
(or 240ml water + 4tsp powdered milk)
1.5tsp salt
1.5tsp sugar
25g butter
400g bread flour
1.25tsp yeast
Program 1 (though I did 3 by mistake!)
Browning 1 if you want to use in sandwich maker
Weight 500g
With people coming to render the front wall with lime (it has cement based render at the moment which doesn’t breath and also it is a mess with the new windows), we need to add an outside tap so they can get water.
It took a bit more excavation than we had hoped to find the pipe!
I grow veg far more than flowers, because you can eat them, plus I think they are easier!
Some friends gave us some flowers from their garden and they are amazing, food for thought!
It always looks it’s neatest at this time of year, then it gets horrifically overgrown with some parched bits as the weather gets too hot to do so much!
We were suffering from covid when the window guy announced he was coming a month earlier than expected. This wall needed to go before we could clear stuff out of his way to install all the windows. It was a bit of a trial tbh! But so glad to have it gone. There is another one the same the other side of the stairs still to go. Boo hoo hoo.