Veganuary

#leftovereatarian       #leftovereateverything

I am not a great follower of culinary trends. In fact I am not a follower of any trends I do prefer the classics executed well with a touch of flair. That said Vegans are everywhere in January and never one to waste an opportunity I threw myself in to learning a few new recipes. I love vegetables, I don’t think there is a vegetable that I don’t approve of and some I am positively in love with. Thinking ahead in December I rifled through lots of books in my local Waterstone’s as I was working there as a Christmas temp (as you know I am an avid reader so couldn’t pass up the opportunity to return to the bookface) I also went to a couple of Pop up Events in a restaurant run by an committed Vegan. The food was creative, in parts, but with the odd chunk of something processed thrown in. I learnt some alternatives to pastry that don’t pretend to be pastry and ate a lot of vegan cheese which, I think, would taste better if I had not thought for one minute that it was going to resemble cheese.

The thing I like about Vegetarian and Vegan cooking is just that…The Cooking. I see no point in using highly processed packaged ingredients but then that is not different from how I feel about cooking with meat. If there is plastic and instructions anywhere near the food stuff then you are not the one doing the cooking, someone else is. Usually in a factory and you have abnegated your responsibility and choices.

For me it’s simply that I like to know what I am eating.

Vegan Pop Up in Peel

Some of the great new eye openers included a Dauphinoise that I made with cashew cream. I soaked the cashews and hand blended them to achieve the right consistency. I warmed the ‘cream’ through and added onions and herbs etc to give it some extra flavour. I let that infuse overnight and made the Dauphy in the usual way. It tasted delicious.

Chick pea water is a marvelous substitute for eggs. I never seem to have eggs in the house but always have a tin of chickpeas so knocking up a mayonnaise is easy. Hollandaise too although, for me. a hollandaise without butter is a day without sunshine. Meringues are the most wondrous use of aqafaba. This has to be the easiest dessert to make for a vegan and so close to the original that I suspect factory prodeuced meringues will be made like this soon as it’s much cheaper.

In January I taught vegan and Vegetarian Cookery at the Cookshack in Bride. The Menu included the usuals like Hommous, Baba Ganuj, Artichoke & Spinach Dip along with a Béchamel made with coconut milk, a pie crust made of ground nuts and seeds. Remoulade, my favourite, made with celeriac and preserved lemons for that extra kick. The star of the show was a recipe I learnt from a boat Captain in Burgundy. A traditional Bourginion made with Chestnuts or Marron instead of the Beouf. I added dried as well as fresh mushrooms, to give it some extra earthiness. and a pinch of paprika to add smokiness that you usually get from the bacon. Lots of garlic and wine (Vegan) by the bucket load. To be honest I was eating it thinking that I had accidentally put meat in to it!. The sauce was fabulous, unctuous and dark. A great meal for people trying to keep Carni’s and Vegi’s happy as you can just add a steak on the side for that red meat kick.

I am on the fence when it comes to all this. I think my label would be Flexitarian. ( I still bemoan the days before labels) My Grandfather was a Farmer who never ate meat unless he knew where it came from i.e. how it was raised and we were brought up in the same way. I love cooking in France as all the meat has provenance, a name, a birth date, the name of the farm, a death date. Personally, from a nutritional stand point and having been anaemic (sickle cell trait) all my life I function badly without supplements and the odd bit of pate. It’s hard to find the energy to do anything when you are lacking in iron and chefing is a physically demanding job.

I dislike processed food, packaging is my call to arms but I believe that what people eat is up to them. My Bedouin friends would simply not survive without eating goat. The dessert is not a home for farming and without meat and camel milk there would be no Nomadic tribes. Interestingly if you ever wish to disprove the five a day theory go live with the Bedou. Some of the healthiest, most active people in the world never see a Vegetable until it’s Tomato season and they find themselves in the city.

I think it is great that people are veering away from eating battery chickens seven nights a week and Veganuary is a good way to get people to try something new. Even old Dinosaur Chefs like me!

The only think that I believe is shameful concerning food is waste.

You can label me a “leftovereatarian” Hashtag that if you like it could be a new trend!

 

 

 

Teaching at the Cookshack

Late in 2019 I arrived on the Isle of Man for my third winter. Usually I don’t work when I am here having spent all summer running around I like to chill for a few months. That way I can begin again with renewed vigour in Spring. It’s a time for painting, catching up on the piles of books I have acquired on my travels and eating simple food. This winter looked different though, I had received a five year work permit from the Isle of Man government and I fancied getting out and about more.  Before I left in spring I met the unrivalled Mrs Revill, owner of the Cookshack cookery school, macron maker extraordinaire and general all round enthusiast of all things foodie. Fair to say we hit it off immediately and were both disappointed that we hadn’t met earlier. So when I arrived in September she was my first port of call.

Georgie began cooking at home in her kitchen near Bride, she went on to run a successful catering company before  making the natural move in to teaching. The Cookshack was purpose built four years ago. It is light and airy full of state of the art equipment, a brand new Esse and superlative views out to the Point of Ayre and across the sea to Scotland and Ireland.

I sat in on a few of her courses in October. It was the lead up to Halloween and we had plenty of spooky pasta colours, witches fingers and macabre macarons. Within a few weeks I had become part of the Cookshack family. I began by teaching children’s courses, though I think they taught me more than I taught them, how to laugh and not take cooking too seriously being the main lessons. I laughed until I cried at the sheer joy of pasta in technicolour. I learnt how to put tagliatelle through the machine so many times that it ended up as one two metre stripe and took four kids to hold it. It was inedibley hilarious as you can imagine. We made bread and cookies but mostly we made a mess. It took Janice a lot of work getting the black food dye off Georgie’s lovely white surfaces. Thank you Janice!

On the run up to Christmas there were corporate events, hangovers, more laughter and molto, molto prosecco. We were all put through our Christmas paces with a visit from Manx Radio. With thanks to Georgie, Janice, Ruth and family I ended 2019 on a culinary high.

Teaching and cooking, speaking and stirring has its challenges. On a normal course we demonstrate and cook seven dishes. It’s a bit like being a circus performer there is an incredible amount of work that goes on before the big top goes up. Menu planning; taking in to account the theme of the day and any dietary requirements. The shopping is done by Georgie who goes out of her way, literally, to ensure that the produce used is the finest that she can buy and is a local as we can get. She is committed, unashamedly, to promoting Manx produce not just because it is the best but because it’s environmentally sensible to do so. All the recipes are written up and sent out . Canapes are made, the Cookshack is set to ‘welcome’ mode, tall glasses are filled with fizz and the show goes on.

 

It’s exhausting obviously and I was often asked how I could talk and cook without burning things… generally it works but I did learn to weigh my dessert ingredients before the guests arrived after a bit of a disaster with a clafoutis.

In January I held Vegan, Vegi and French classes all of which were fully booked almost instantly. My French course was one of my favourites. Georgie had managed to source everything from my, quite particular, ingredients list. It made me nostalgic for France and in particular Burgundy. I made a Boeuf Bourguinon and the guests were astounded at how much wine went into it. Some recipes have the ability to transport you to another place. Food, for me, is like a cupboard full of memories. Our sense of smell is so closely linked to reminiscences that cooking can feel like a conjuring trick at times. Try not thinking of Venice when you stir a risotto?

The words company and companion comes from the Latin meaning “One who breaks bread with another” I broke bread, baked bread and shared bread with such a range of companions this winter at the Cookshack. To sit at a table with a group of strangers and to share food is a gift, conversations are formed friendships are developed. I sincerely hope that when I am back on the island for winter I can work with Georgie on other ideas for bringing people together. Watch this space

Thank you to everyone who came on one of my courses and to my new culinary friends Georgie, Janice and Ruth. I look forward to seeing you all later in 2020

For more information about Georgie Revill and the Cookshack please follow the link below

Cookshack Cookery School

Flavours of Petra

I had travelled to Petra three or four times before moving there in the spring of 2008

Initially my work involved setting up and running a hotel in Wadi Musa but it was inevitable that I would become more involved in cooking. I had already spent most of my adult life living on hommus and baba ganuj so the transition to Jordanian food was effortless. The only taste I missed was tea. Friends sent me food packages of Earl Grey and I sent them spices and jasmine flowers in return.

All recipes alter as they travel, they absorb local flavours and incorporate new ingredients replacing the exotic regional foods. In some cases a dish can become unrecognisable as it travels hundreds of miles. Most Chefs, including myself, look to the original, the classic, as a starting point. My Art teacher is fond of saying “nothing bad ever came from a good drawing” and, I feel the same way about having a solid understanding of a classic dish. Nothing inedible will ever come of it. It is advisable, I think, to never try to deconstruct something unless you first know how to put it together!

Homous means pea in Arabic and in case you are wondering it can be spelt in a variety of ways. Translations only work for pedants when they use a common alphabet if not then the word is translated phonetically. Therefore it rather depends on the dialect as to how you, personally chose to spell it. Humus has endless variations in the west which usually involve adding extra flavours. In Arabia the differences tend to me more about texture. My favourite is Umsubaha; a smooth puree which most people would recognise as hommous with the addition of chunky cooked chickpeas. I love the satisfying pop of a whole chickpea. It is usually served with lots of olive oil or zay zaytuna and sumaq which is taken from the fruit of the tree and adds a lemony zing. In all my time in Jordan I never saw garlic or tahini added to houmous. But this maybe because I was living amongst partly settled Bedou and Howeitat tribes who are never more than a suggestion away from a journey. Simple is good and complicated unnecessary in the desert. Nomadic hommus is chickpeas, oil, salt and lemon if you have it.

Ful medame is served at breakfast, it is cooked and mashed fava beans sometimes chopped tomatoes are added at the end. It is served with boiled eggs and shraq bread. In that sense it equals the western world’s beans and egg start to the day. There really is nothing new under the sun and I always find that travel highlights similarities rather than differences.

I attended a few cookery classes in Wadi Musa but I always felt that I learnt more from watching friends and their families cook. I was lucky enough to be involved in the Wadi Rhum marathon, horses from all over the Arabic peninsular compete in a two day endurance and speed competition. We followed in a 4×4 carrying water and dibs for the horses and riders. On the first night we camped at the base of the Seven Pillars of Wisdom waiting to begin the race at sunrise. After the horses were fed and watered we collected sticks from dry dessert bushes for a fire. Tomatoes and onions were chopped and added to a large pot. It takes an age to cook Galayat bandura with twigs. The onions need to dissolve to nothing, various friends would taste the dish and declare that the onions could still be discerned and so the cooking went on. It was my first lesson in the fussiness of cooks. Food in the dessert takes as long as it takes and when you only have a couple of ingredients how they taste is all about the quality of the cooking. We chomped on fustuk and sedera until after midnight when this simple stew was ready. Jordan is famous for its elaborate whole goat meals buried in hot sand and cooked for hours or days but I have always found more pleasure in simple food with lots of love attention poured over it.

Wadi Araba is the barren valley that sits between Jordan and Israel. It is separated by the slither of water that is the biblical River Jordan. It is not far from the Mountains of Wadi Musa and with its proximity to the Dead Sea it was my favourite location on a day off. I had begun at sunrise and visited the stones salt pillars of Lot and his wife so that I could be heading down from the high place well before the tourist coaches turned up. I scrambled my way in to the valley and out on a to miraged plain with nothing to discern but sand and the odd scratch of a juniper tree. It takes a long time for your eyes to acclimatise to the dessert. At around midday I was aware I needed to look for a tree to rest under until the heat passed. I realised that what I had thought were the shadows of a tree were in fact two ladies in black dishdashs. The wreaths of smoke from their fire mixed with the trembling layer of heat as it left the sand The Qu’ran advises that a stranger who passes you should be offered water and food, bread at the very least. It is a bargain of hospitality which goes both ways. The obligation for the traveller is to be sociable, maybe to tell a story or at least wile away a few hours in company. I have seen people, usually those who do not know the culture, take this hospitality as a free buffet and it greatly annoys me to witness this. Muhammed PBUH did not foresee thousands of affluent tourists generously being offered food by proud people with little money. With this always in mind I sit on the half shadowed sand and take a small sip of water.  The branches of tree are festooned with what few possessions the ladies own. Two handbags, a packet of cigarettes, and a leather pouch made of a camel’s stomach. Around the fire is a low circle of stones and resting on it a pan which resembles an upturned wok. Both ladies are dressed in plain black. I realise that they are mother and daughter. Uma’s face is a relief map of lines etched as deeply as the valley itself. Her small deep-set eyes, lost beneath the folds of her eyelids, are at the same time intimidating and kind. She shows the beneficent scrutiny of someone far too old to be concerned with superficiality. Her Daughter has the bright orange hair of a woman stubbornly attached to henna and I should know. Henna gives a luscious red tone to dark hair but as it goes grey it becomes the vibrant orange of a clowns wig. Her name is Maha and we chat in basic Arabic as she mixes the dough, adding water to her hands to make a sloppy mess in a round brass coloured platter. It is like wallpaper paste she adds more flour from a sack beside her,  bringing it together before moulding it into balls and passing it to her mother. Uma makes a shape similar to that of a pizza maker. She has the dexterity of a young woman. She throws the thin dough on the metal dome and it instantly begins to crackle and blister. After half a minute she picks up one end and turns it over in the air before throwing it back down on to the hot metal. This is shraq. In my opinion the best bread in the world. It’s rare to find in Jordan now. There is a shop in Amman where people queue around the block from sunrise and walk out with shraq rolled in brown paper the same size and shape as six baguettes. Hubus is usual bread that you will find everywhere and it is much thicker and leavened like a  focaccia. There is also Bedouin bread which is the colour of old leather and so large you could saddle a horse with it.

I have never found it difficult to converse with people who don’t speak the same language even though I have little Arabic and they have no English we understand so much from tone and signs. The basic questions on meeting strangers are as carved in stone as the Decalogue. Where do you come from, where are you going, how old are you, are you married, do you have children?. In the West the first question is “What do you do? That question never crosses my mind in the desert.

We sit the on the sand until the midday begins to develop colour and gives way to afternoon. The only inhabitants of a vast beach lower than all the seas of the world. “Half as old as time” is the saying synonymous with Petra but could easily apply to us three. Time feels as though it has become redefined below this black tree garlanded bejewelled with handbags and packets of Marlborough lights

 

Malfoof dwalhi is another favourite memory. I was invited to Bukr’s house where his sisters and mother, aunts and grandmothers had all gathered to meet the lady who wanted to learn to cook dwhali. They lived on the road from Wadi Musa to Aqaba down a dirt track with views over Mount Aaron.

Dwlali is something that we have in the west, usually in tins, and is made with vine leaves, in that sense we think of it as a Greek or Lebanese dish. Malfoof is a huge white cabbage, a flattened circle the size of a bedside table. The leaves open out easily and are often so tender that they do not require blanching. The filling consists mainly of rice, sometimes meat, with onions and spices. The rice is part cooked initially and this trick enables the cabbage rolls to become tight as the rice takes up liquid and expands when cooked for the second time in a tomato and herb stock. The resulting cigar shaped cabbage farcies hold their shape together beautifully.  Sometimes vine leaf dwali is added for a contrast to the white cabbage. Traditionally it is cooked and layered in a large pan of a hundred or so rolls. When it was cooked we all sit outside on half built concrete walls overlooking Petra . A small goat eyes me from a nearby tree as the sun  goes down over the red sandstone.

I think of all the dishes I have lived on my favourite to cook, share and eat was and still is Magloubah. It means upside down in Arabic and is a one pot rice and meat dish which is served on the largest silver platter that you can find. I have seen Magloubahs on platters the size of a double bed. It is a family staple along with Mensaf, the national dish, though I was never too keen on Mensaf as it usually came with camel milk which could lead to unexpected results!. Magloubah etiquette is very particular, you imagine a pie chart and you stick to your own section of food, Good natured arguments can prevail if a favourite morsel sits between yours and your neighbours imaginary line. Trade offs are made. Aubergine is often bargained for roasted cauliflower. Magloubah can be made with lamb, chicken or left meatless. If there is chicken, it leads to more bargaining as everyone has their particular fondness for a leg or a thigh. A neck or a breast. The neck is rightly a delicacy and it is a mark of respect to give it to to the head of the household or an important guest. It is a lovely thing to sit crosslegged around a Magloubah and watch as husbands quietly pass their wives a favourite morsel or a child playfully steals from a relative.  It is served with labneh, a yoghurt and a salad of cubed and salted cucumber, tomato and lemon. Magloubah is a dish which, for me, has the same resonance as religious wafer or the Japanese tea ceremony but with more fun, laughter and mischief which is so indicative of Arabic culture

Many years ago when I lived in Hay on Wye I met Yotam Ottolengi at the festival. I asked him what his favourite food was and he replied without hesitation “Magloubah”. His interviewer asked where they could find the recipe and he said that he would not publish one as he had too many memories of his partners family and his mother cooking it. I don’t know if that has changed but I feel the same way about Magloubah for me is the closest food has ever got to spirituality.

 

 

 

Gourmet Foraging at Fat Hen

April saw a weekend of Gourmet Foraging at Fat Hen in Penwith, I’ve known of Caroline since she began her business in 2009. Back then she taught from her farmhouse kitchen, these days we all pile in to a lovely converted barn which caters for groups of up to 16. The aim is to source as much as possible from the hedgerows and seashore around her home in St Buryan.

Fat Hen Family

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This year I will be teaching at two Gourmet Weekends along with Top T.V. Mark Devonshire.

I’ve narrowly avoided meeting Mark for years. He was Rick Stein’s Development Chef for years and taught at the Cookery School in Padstow where I have spent many a day. I have also done some stages at the Seafood Restaurant in Padstow so it’s amazing that we haven’t met until now. Upon meeting it was Chefy love at first sight and along with Jill and Poppy we ploughed on with then extensive Mise list for the weekend.

 

Watership down massacre

Caroline takes our keen foragers out for the morning where they scour the leafy Penwith lanes for salads before heading to the beach. Back at Fat Hen Mark and I prep our “Here’s one I made early” assortment of goodies. My Favourites this year have been Potato Cakes with Dulse, Venison Carpaccio with burnt Hazelnuts and Orange and Carragheen Pannacotta. The group return at lunchtime for a sit down meal of Soup, Breads, Crackers, Potato Cakes and Salads before embarking on an afternoon of skill based tasks like filleting fish, preparing crab and skinning rabbits. Later Mark demonstrates the art of pasta making avec green colouring from the luminous tips of nettles. I prep the basics for the Rabbit Stew.

Brown Crab

On Saturday evening we cook a celebratory meal for our amateur foragers and their partners, everyone relaxes with a Buckthorn Fizz and canapes followed by all the best from our stunning Penwith Pennisular.

The course ends after lunch on Sunday. It’s tremendously hard work and there have been injuries, notably the black eye and cuts that I sustained after tripping in the garden when hunting for the Rosemary bush at dusk, but, I always learn so much on Caro’s courses

Mark and I have become firm friends and I was delighted when he invited me to help judge at the 18th International Pasty Championships at the Eden Project. He and his partner run a catering company in Cornwall www.markdevonshire.co.uk

Poppy runs a highly regarded Supper club in London and Caroline continues to wander the verdant lanes of Cornwall thinking up new and exciting recipes.

www.fathen.org

www.facebook.com/troughsupperclub

Fat Hen Foragers

 

Sushi with Al Matias in Stanley

I’ve been helping out a Bittersweet in Stanley.  Firstly I began on the Tapas Menu whilst Head Chef Al worked flat out on Pizzas. We soon began to talk about our favourite food, countries we wanted to visit and the wonders of local produce. All this lead to us planning a new menu for the restaurant. The owner Julie was delighted with our ideas and gave us carte blanche. I reinvented the brunch menu to include freshly made hollandaise with all the usual trimmings like smoked salmon, bagels, spinach and poached ggs. Al worked on some gorgeous toothfish recipes for lunch. After a few weeks we formulated the idea of a sushi night. I was mad keen to learn all Al’s secrets as he had worked on several prestigious cruise ships as Sushi Chef.

Al Matias Sushi Chef

He set about making Furikake known as the salt and pepper of Japan. He spent a week drying fish and picking it apart into tiny flakes. We added toasted sesame seeds, seaweed, salt and sugar. It is truly gorgeous when you make it yourself and a superb addition to most dishes.

Al carefully separates the strands of dried fish. Part of the intense process of making your own Furikake

We all had a fabulous evening although it was such hard work making all the rolls, homemade wasabi, pickles and garnish. Proud to say that I think it was one of the events that we held at Bittersweet that lead us to being awarded the Taste of the Falklands Award.

I adored working with Julie, Al. Michelle and Baron. Thank you so much. I do hope our paths cross again on our culinary wanderings.

Look out for some of the recipes on my page coming in March.

Sushi
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