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Cannoli Siciliani, with Love on Mother’s Day

May 9, 2013 in Baking, Biscuit recipes, Christmas Recipes, Cooking with Fruit, Desserts, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi, Meatfree Mondays, Pasta Recipes, Valentined Day Food for Love

Cannoli Siciliani

Cannoli Siciliani made with lots and lots of love for Mother’s Day xx

This is a time that makes me reflect on the many ‘mothers’ I have known.  And I use the word ‘mother’ in a very broad sense.  One does not have to give birth to be a mother.  I have been ‘mothered’ by so many incredible women over the years.  I think of the many ‘nannies’ who have cleaned my scraped knees, whoshared a bowl of porridge on the back step and shown me how to embroider on a Sunday afternoon.

I think of my friends mothers who have enveloped me with big mamma hugs, offered me tissues and helped me through the heartache of loves lost.  I think of my dearest mum whose lap I long for so often.  Even as an adult and a mother myself I would sometimes phone my mum to come over so I could lay with my head in her warm lap.  She could take a headache away with a single caress and she really did understand me.

I think of my dear mother in law whose generosity of spirit and very special thirst for life never ceased to inspire me.  She spent hours in her tiny little kitchen with me teaching me to cook.  How I must have frustrated her with my never ending questions.  As we cooked she taught me to speak Italian and we laughed a lot at my clumsy ways.

I remember taking my Mum, Granny Annie and Mum-in-law, Nonna Lily to dinner at the Roma Revolving and then on to watch the Bolshoi Ballet dance Swan lake at the Playhouse.  My mum was a ballet dancer in her youth and as a consequence of spending half of her life in point shoes she could hardly even walk; Nonna with her two bionic hips needed the aid of a walking stick; Mum could not speak a word of Italian and Nonna, no English.  I had to enlist the aid of my friend Karmie to manage them both.  Traffic had to be stopped outside the Playhouse, for these two Diva’s were not going to walk all the way from the Parkade.  They sat through the performance chatting away, Nonna in Italian and my mum, in English and for some reason seemed to understand each other perfectly!  Oh, what a special night we had.

At this time of the year  I remember those days when Max and Daniele were little dudes and would arrive in my bedroom, faces beaming with pride, clutching a tray of ‘Scambled Eggs Mum!” and hand made cards with precious words of love and affection scribbled in multi coloured crayon.  I miss that beautiful smell of freshly shampooed hair and their flannel jamies as they huddled with me in my bed and proudly ate the ‘scambled’ eggs with me.  I can honestly say that my children are my greatest achievement of my life and I am deeply grateful for the honour of being their mum.

Both my mum and Nonna Lilly have passed on but if they were here today I would get into my kitchen and with lots of love in my heart I would make them a beautiful tray of these Cannoli to celebrate Mother’s Day.

These crunchy tubes of fried sweet pasta filled with a ricotta cream that oozes with the flavours and aromas of Christmas make me sigh with satisfaction.  Cannoli are most definitely Italy’s answer to the mighty macaroon of France and can be filled with both sweet and savoury fillings.  The Cannolo is native to Sicily and must surely be closely related to the arrival of the Arabs in the South of Italy.    Whereas daily food in Sicily reflects the ‘cucina povera’ fashion, Cannoli put on their high heels, red lipstick and parade down the promenade.  No expense is spared when it come to pastries in Italy and every pasticceria sells its own special Cannoli filled with their signature filling.

I like this particular recipe as it has no lard in the pastry, which means its a bit lighter and easier on the hips.  I get 20 cannoli out of this quantity but this can vary dependant on the size of your cannoli.  In Italy you can buy metal tubes to roll your cannoli around for the frying stage.  Seeing as I don’t have any of these tubes I went the ‘really ancient’ route of using wood.  I purchased an unpainted wooden broom stick from our local hardware store and cut it up into 10cm lengths.  They work just fine and can be used again and again!  You can also use cannoli pasta shells as moulds.

My cannoli moulds - a broomstick cut into 10 x 12 cm sections.
My cannoli moulds – a broomstick cut into 10 x 12 cm sections.

I make all 20 cannoli shells but have only ever filled 12 at a time.  The shells keep perfectly well in a air tight container for use up to 2 weeks later.  Once the cannoli are filled with the Ricotta – you need to eat them as the pastry will go soft after about 10 hours.  So I only use 500g of ricotta to fill 12 but keep the rest of the filling ingredients as per the recipe.

Ingredients

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For the Pastry

3 cups SASKO flour

3 egg yolks

1 egg

1tsp grated lemon rind

3Tbs Marsala – this can be substituted with port

1 egg white

sunflower or oil for deep frying

I always use Sasko Self Raising Flour for extra light and crunchy pastry.
I always use Sasko Self Raising Flour for extra light and crunchy pastry.

For the Cannoli Filling

1kg ricotta cheese

1 1/2 cups icing sugar

6 x 5cm cm cinnamon sticks/ quills

2 vanilla pods – split open and the seeds removed with the back of a knife

1tsp grated lemon rind – I used the rind of a whole small lemon

1/4 cup mixed peel

1/4 cup chopped glacee cherries

1 ring of glacee pineapple

icing sugar for coating

60g grated dark hazel nut chocolate – or just plain dark chocolate grated, you could even use crushed nuts instead if you don’t fancy chocolate

Method

Sieve 1 cup of  Sasko’s always soft and fluffy flour into your mixer bowl, add the egg yolks and mix for 30 seconds to achieve a crumb like texture

cover the bowl with plastic wrap and regrigerate this mixture for 2 hours

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Mix the dough to a crumb like texture, cover and place in your refrigerator for 2 hours to rest.
Mix the dough to a crumb like texture, cover and place in your refrigerator for 2 hours to rest.

Remove from the fridge and add the ramaining sifted flour, lightly beaten egg, lemon rind and marsala.

The recipe calls for 1tsp of grated lemon zest - I added the zest of a whole small lemon ... 1 just love the flavour it adds!
The recipe calls for 1tsp of grated lemon zest – I added the zest of a whole small lemon … 1 just love the flavour it adds!

Mix well

Turn the mixture out onto a floured surface, bring it together and knead it for 10 to 15 minutes

Cover in cling wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.

(I refrigerated my dough over night …. and it was fine, in fact it was beautifully relaxed)

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Cut the dough into 4 pieces , roll out the dough into paper thin sheets.  It is really important to roll the dough very thinly as you want thin crunchy cannoli.  If the dough is too thick it doesn’t crisp up nicely.

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I roll each piece through the machine on the largest setting three times, folding it it on itself twice and repeating three times

then I continue to roll each piece through to setting No 7 which is paper thin

Roll the dough through your pasta machine on the largest setting 3 times, in between each roll fold the dough in on itself twice like above and dust with a little extra flour to prevent it from sticking in the machine.
Roll the dough through your pasta machine on the largest setting 3 times, in between each roll fold the dough in on itself twice like above and dust with a little extra flour to prevent it from sticking in the machine.

Using a cookie cutter, or a cup cut circles of the dough and wrap each circle around a wooden mould overlapping the ends and glue it closed with a little egg white.

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Overlap the ends and glue the cannoli closed by brushing a little egg white between them. Be careful not to get egg white on the stick or mould.

Make sure not to get the egg white on your mould otherwise it will stick and be difficult to remove.

Heat a pot of sunflower oil to boiling point, and fry four cannoli at a time.

Turn the cannoli in the oil so that they cook evenly all round.

The cannoli start to puff up and bubble - this is EXACTLY what you want, light and fluffy!
The cannoli start to puff up and bubble – this is EXACTLY what you want, light and fluffy!

Fry until they are golden brown then remove onto kitchen paper to drain off the oil.

While the cannoli are still hot gently pull them off the wooden mould and place onto kitchen paper to cool.

Ready and waiting for their filling.
Ready and waiting for their filling.

Once you have cooked all of the cannoli – return them to the oil and fry them again for 1 minute – this ensures that the pastry has the required crunch when you bit into it.

For the Filling

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Place the ricotta cheese into your mixer bowl, add the sifted icing sugar and beat on high for at least 5 minutes.  It’s quite amazing as the curdy cheese turn silken and smooth.

Using either a grinder or a blender – place the cinammon sticks in your blender and crush them to a powder.  This will take no longer than two minutes.

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Add the ground cinammon, lemon zest, vanilla beans, chopped cherries, chopped glacee pineapple and mixed fruit to the ricotta cheese and mix again, at high speed for 4 minutes.

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Spoon the filling into a piping bag and pipe into each cannolo.

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Roll each cannolo in sifted icing sugar and dip each end into the grated dark chocolate.

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Place each cannolo in a cupcake cup.

Serve with an ice cold glass of Asti Spumante or maybe even a nice Viognier

or an espresso caffe.

A plate of heaven ... made with lots of love xxx
A plate of heaven … made with lots of love xxx

And lots of love!

Cannoli making is a labour of love, but so worth the effort, especially for someone you really love.
Cannoli making is a labour of love, but so worth the effort, especially for someone you really love.

Happy Mother’s Day to you all.

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May your day be filled with lots of love

….. and Cannoli Siciliani!

xxx

As always

Buon Appetito

xxx

jan

Diva Chocolate Truffles

October 12, 2012 in Cooking with Fruit, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Janice Tripepi, Valentined Day Food for Love

Diva Chocolate Truffles.  I have such a story to tell.  How do I capture the essence of Dinner Divas?  On the 21st August this year I packed up my bags, knives, Parmesan cheese, pots and pans, fresh asparagus, a bottle of Marsala wine and some sensible shoes and boarded an aeroplane bound for Cape Town.  TrickyRicky was away in Mozambique on that day so my son Max helped me squash all of the above, plus a laptop, an iPad, hair iron, medical kit and pretty much the kitchen sink into my big orange suitcase.  I was setting off on and adventure all on my own.   These are the moments in life that inspire me.  At 51 I am still having adventures, still ready to take on the world and still able to give life a good run for its money.  I am so incredibly grateful.  No matter what the outcome of this mammoth task, I already feel like a winner.

I have drummed certain mantras into my son’s heads.  Firstly, I have always sought to empower them with the words, “you are the master of your destiny” and secondly to encourage them to seize opportunity with the words, “It’s not the things that we do in life we regret, it’s the things that we don’t do” and lastly I have always given them permission to fail.  It’s the giving that we do in life, that enables us to receive and I could not shake the feeling that, in the light of my unconditional parenting I was being gifted exactly the same by the Universe.

It’s not easy being a food blogger.  You work alone in your kitchen just doing the best that you can and constantly try to do better.  The generosity of spirit that is shared in the blogging community is so very inspiring.  I first started blogging three years ago, and from my very first post I have received unconditional love and encouragement from my fellow bloggers.  When you start blogging all that you know is that you want to share your food, and you really don’t know if anyone is actually going to read your posts but soon enough, you find your own individual blog voice and start developing a composite identity.

On the whole, we don’t compete with one another; rather we understand and respect each other’s passion and love of absolutely everything that food affects.  My family is Italian, and food is our language.  It’s through food that we show each other support and love, it’s how we silently affirm who we are and it’s how we express our cultural identity.  When a baby is born, we cook big pots of pasta and when, at the end of the day we say goodbye to our loved ones, we cook even more pots of pasta and between those two momentous occasions we punctuate our lives with yet more pots of pasta.

So, when I say that I set off to Cape Town to compete in a cooking competition called Dinner Divas what I really mean to say is, “I set off to Cape Town to go and cook with my blog family, to learn from them, to share my food with them.

Of course we all want to win!  There would be absolutely no point in competing if we didn’t all want to win, but, oh the fun and the drama of it all!  This has been a life changing event I tell you and I will surely never be the same person ever again. I loved every single moment of it, from the laughing to the crying and the swearing and the fun.  I can’t wait to share my moments and thoughts with you all.  My knees wobbled and my resolve was shaking but through it all I have discovered exactly who I am and exactly how important food is to me and just how much love and support my family gift me when I need it.

The going got tough, it got very tough!  Thank heavens for the endless cups of coffee, the amazing crew, and the make-up girls, for they seemed able to work miracles and patch us up, cover the bruised egos and slap on a bit of colour, rendering us able to fight another day!  Thank heavens for the sponsors, for without their support there would have been no Dinner Divas and thank heavens for that Tiara, for we ALL set our sights firmly on it! And it carried us through.

So cheers to Dinner Divas, I raise my glass to you and what better way to welcome this diamond studded affair in than some rather glamorous and indulgent Truffles and a glass of Bubbly.

Chocolate Truffles

click on the picture for the recipe.

Don’t forget Dinner Divas on SABC2

08.30am tomorrow!

I salute all the Dinner Divas, and Div-ou

Viva Dinner Diva/ou’s Viva!

As always

Buon Appetito

Xxx

jan

A Fun Filled Savoury Birthday Cake

October 2, 2012 in Bread Recipes, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Janice Tripepi

TrickyRicky’s birthday was spent lazing under the thorny acacia trees, next to the cool waters of Shongweni Dam just outside Durban.  The Dam is situated inside the Shongweni nature reserve that is just 30 minutes from Durban and one does catch glimpses of animals such as pretty impala grazing on the juicy new green grass shoots but the reserve  is famed to boast the presence of rhino, buffalo, giraffe, waterbuck, wildebeest, warthog, and a variety of birds!  I have only ever seen various buck varietals and plenty of bird species.

KwaZulu Natal has been washed sparkly clean and blow dried by the winds and rain that are common at this time of the year.  We are on the slippery slope to summer but can still go outside and picnic without factoring the potential for skin cancer into the equation.

Max phoned the entire family, and those who were still in town on the long weekend joined us for a picnic at the damn.  A ridiculous amount of food all but bought the picnic table to its knees, which is par for the course.  TrickyRicky would offer up an appendage for Pasticceria (pastries) but is not too keen on traditional cake which means that birthdays are usually celebrated with some form of Italian pudding.

So, with this in mind, and a bucket of inspiration from Chantelle of http://blogs.food24.com/members/justchef/  I decided to have a bit of fun and make a savoury birthday cake for TrickyRicky’s birthday.  This idea can be interpreted in so many different ways and is basically a blank canvas for having fun in the kitchen.

TrickyRicky’s Savoury Birthday Cake

Click on this picture to get the recipe for this cake.

As always Buon Appetito

jan

xx

TrickyRicky loved this Savoury Birthday Cake

Bruschetta topped with Braai’d Veggies for National Braai Day

September 21, 2012 in Antipasti, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Italian Classics, Janice Tripepi

Bruschetta topped with Braai’d Tomatoes, Peppers and Brinjals in an Olive Oil and Lemon Dressing.

Click on any of the pics to be taken to the recipe.

 Have you heard the one about Italians braaing?  No? So, why don’t Italians braai? Italians don’t braai because the spaghetti falls through the grill!  Ha ha ha!  With a plethora of beautiful and inspiring meaty dishes already hitting the blogosphere I thought that I would add my Italian flavour to our very

 South African National Braai Day.

Bruschetta or Crostini is a great way to keep your guests happy while the meat is being grilled on the fire on Monday and this is the perfect opportunity to get out that extra special bottle of expensive olive oil you’ve been saving for a special occasion.  You really get to enjoy all the flavour notes of a bottle of the best when it comes to bruschetta. This has to be the simplest starter in the world but I guarantee your guests will really enjoy these with a nice cold glass of vino before they tuck into their lunch.

 

You can vary your ingredients to suit your liking – add in onion or zucchini!

This is when I haul out my little terracotta brazier that I bought from a potter in the Natal Midlands.  It’s perfect for this job.  Make a small fire and let the coals burn until they are white.  If you can get your hands on some nice special wood such as oak, that would be even better.

This is a great starter for your lunch on Monday – just click on any of these pics to access the recipe.

As each side blackens turn the veggies.

I heartily recommend a glass of vino to accompany these.  There will be much oooo-ing and ahhh-ing at the simple joy of really great veggies on toast, for that is all this is.  It’s ridiculously simple, but my heavens …… it’s good.

And that’s it for today!  I wish you all a ‘long-weekend favoloso’,  a great National Braai day that is filled with family, friends, lots of laughter and even more fun.

 As always

Buon Appetito

Xx

jan

Cough and Cold Decoctions From Your Kitchen

August 16, 2012 in Gifts From Your Kitchen, Healing Foods

A Barrel of Goodness

From the moment that Julie Andrews burst into that infamous song, “A Spoonful of sugar” I was hooked and much of my early childhood was spent in the woods around our home desperately trying to make healing remedies and scented waters.  As it turned out Grasse was quite safe as all I remember making was bottles and jars of rotten petals and muddy mixtures of leaves and pretty stones!  My fascination for crystals and gems blossomed with the resurgence of a universal understanding of their healing properties in the 90’s and my library of books on the subject of metaphysics grew.

About ten years ago I ripped out my entire ‘tropical’ garden, which is pretty much the standard here in KZN and with the guidance of Trish Swanepoel, who very kindly swapped her gardening skills and knowledge for art lessons at my studio we transformed my garden into an insect and butterfly haven.  Together
we installed an exclusively indigenous organic garden complete with fire pit and healing plants.  Sipho, my housekeepers husband, was fascinated by all this and asked me if I was intending to become an Inyanga (the Zulu word for a herbalist).  To say that I was tickled pink by his enquiry is such an nderstatement.  He would often arrive at home after a visit to the local shabeen (a local informal drinking tavern), weaving his way up the road with a handful of plants to add to our garden.  It was Sipho that introduced me to the subtle flavour and beautiful colour of wild garlic (Tulbaghia) in stir fries!

Kirlian photography illustrated to the world that food made with love intention is bursting with energy and highly nutritious.  My kitchen is the beating heart of our home and on occasion my very own laboratory where I make either food that will heal, or like today, cough and cold decoctions that will heal.  I have a very special lady in mind, Alicia works in the food section of my local Woolies and no request or enquiry is too much trouble for this dear lady.  As is the case with so many working women she cannot take enough time off work to recover properly from her latest bout of crippling flu, and yet she still greets everyone with a smile and has to be one of the kindest people I know.  Travelling to and from work in taxi’s exposes her to more and more germs and she needs a little love and pampering to help her regain full strength.

So what is a decoction?  A decoction is made by simmering herbal ingredients in water.  It is often used for roots and barks, which need cooking to extract their vital properties. (The Home Apothecary – Growing and using traditional remedies by Jessica Houdret, Lorenz Books)

Beautiful Borage leaves and flowers

Ginger and LemonDecoction for Sore Throats

Ginger is warming and
stimulating and encourages sweating to eliminate toxins and dispel mucus and catarrh.

Ingredients

115g fresh root ginger

600ml water

Juice and rind of 1 lemon

Pinch of cayenne pepper

Method

Slice the ginger root and put into a pan with the water lemon rind and cayenne pepper.

Bring to the boil, cover the pan and simmer for 20 minutes.
Remove from the heat and add the lemon juice.

Drink a small steaming cupful at a time, sweetened with honey to taste.

Ginger & Lemon Decoction for Sore Throats

This decoction will keep for 2 – 3 days in the fridge.

Thyme and BorageCough Linctus

Borage was traditionally used in cough syrup recipes, and thyme has antiseptic properties.

Ingredients

25g fresh thyme

25g fresh borage leaves and flowers

2 x 5cm sticks of cinnamon

600ml water

The juice of 1 small lemon

100g honey

Method

Put the herbs into a pan with the cinnamon and water.   Bring to the boil, cover with a lid and simmer for 20 minutes.

Strain off the herbs and return the liquid to the pan.

Simmer, uncovered until reduced by half.

Add the lemon juice and honey and simmer gently for 5 minutes.
Bottle and store in a cool place.

Bottled, it will keep for at least 2 months.

Take 5ml as required.

Feel well soon Alicia

Salute

Xxx

Jan

 

 

Take it with a Pinch of Salt, 3 Special Flavoured Salts For Your Kitchen.

April 16, 2012 in Flavoured Finishing Salts, Gifts From Your Kitchen, Janice Tripepi

Rosemary & Lenongrass Fleur du Sel, Dried Porcini & Truffle Oil Pink Salt & Smoked Paprika, dried Chilli and Curry Leaf Himalayan Salt.

Ask most cooks or chefs what the one ingredient is that they cannot do without, and most of them will answer salt.  Now I know that nature provides this in her usual abundant way but I really do cherish this snowy bounty.  Finishing any dish off with a sprinkling of homemade flavoured salts guarantees that extra little trinity of flavour, colour and aroma.

Salt is figuratively, and was once literally, worth its weight in gold.  A mere dash of a few grains of salt lifts a dish out of a drab Victorian Sepia photograph devoid of all colour into a mighty mega pixilation of resplendent beauty and mouth tingling flavour.

Salt was the currency in which Roman soldiers were paid.  The Italian word for salt is sale, ergo Salarium, a Roman Soldiers monthly stipend and we have all had a ‘salacious’ thought or two!  Since 2000BC we have been preserving our food with it and we continue to bath in it.  Let’s face it; we actually can’t live without it.

These three Finishing Salts are motivated mostly by what’s currently growing in my garden, ie. Rosemary, lemongrass and curry leaves.  Don’t make enormous quantities at any time, unless you intend to spread the joy around in the form of gifts from your kitchen.   These three finishing salts are just the ticket for winter roasts, soups and stews. 

Bubbles checking out our bounty!

It’s a real pity that these blogs don’t have a ‘scratch-and-sniff’ function.  Trickyricky got all excited when he got a hit of the Rosemary & Lemongrass fleur du Sel Salts in the lounge, thinking that I was making fresh focaccia in the kitchen. 

These aromatic grains are perfect to add a final flourish to your food and only your imagination can limit the number of tasty combinations lurking in your grocery cupboard.  At the risk of going all Martha on the crowd, they are a great way to use up old jam jars or spice bottles.

Bubbles and I had a great time picking herbs together.  She is on of those dogs who eats most of the plants in my garden most days.  Her favourite is definately lemon grass!

Lemongrass, curry leaves and rosemary for our salts.

Rosemary & Lemongrass Fleur du Sel

Fleur du Sel from Die Winkel in Paternoster.

I bought this little bag of Fleur du Sel from Die Winkel in Paternoster.  This is the culinary laboratory of our dear blogger Kobus, known to us as Sardines on Toast and I both admire and adore his passion and creativity in the kitchen.  I have travelled all the way from Durban on a few occasions in search of a plate of his extraordinary food!

Rosemary & Lemongrass Fleur du Sel

Process the salt, lemongrass & rosemary for about 3 minutes.

Ingredients

3 sprigs of Rosemary

2 stalks of lemongrass

1 cup of fleur du Sel (or any other salt)

1 jar

 

Method

This is a perfect way to use old jars up – and an old spice bottle of this makes an excellent little gift for a visitor to your kitchen.  Don’t throw away glass jars, repurpose them.

Remove all of the needles off the sprigs of rosemary.  Clean the tough outer layers of the lemongrass of until you are left with a pencil thin soft shaft of lemon heaven. Chop the lemongrass finely and combine all three ingredients in your food processor for 3 minutes.

Store in a glass jar or salt box

Perfect sprinkled on Focaccia, Grilled Fish or braai’d fish, Thai Soups and curries, and any lamb dish especially as a finishing for a rack of lamb, or braai’d lamb chops.

 

 

 

 

 

Porcini & Shitake Mushroom & Truffle Oil Himalayan Pink Salt

 

Salt of the Earth.

 

 

Dried Porcini and Shitake Mushrooms and Truffle oil - you can use any dried edible mushrooms in place of these two.

 

Ingredients

1Tbs dried Porcini Mushrooms

Finely chop the mushrooms.

1Tbs dried Shitake Mushrooms

1/2Tbs Truffle Oil

1 cup of pink Himalayan Salt

 

Method

This take a bit of muscle power but finely chop the dried mushrooms and combine them in with the salt and 1Tbs of Truffle oil in your food processor for 3 minutes.

 

Pop a few extra dried mushrooms on top and store in a glass jar.

 

Store in a glass jar or salt box

Perfect on Cauliflower soup, Mushroom Omelette, Mushroom Risotto, Butternut Risotto, Fillet Steak, Dippy soft boiled eggs (sublime) we had it for breakfast this morning,  and again any bread or Focaccia.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Soft boiled eggs with Toast Soldiers dipped in Porcini Mushroom & Truffle Oil Salt ....

Smoked Paprika, Dried Red Chilli and Curry Leaf Rock Salt

My curry leaf bush or should I say tree!

 

In my garden I have a beautiful curry leaf bush.  These leaves are used in all of my Indian curries and have the most magnificent perfume and flavour.

 

Wars have been fought over this precious bounty.

 

Ingredients

Chopped dried Chilli & Fresh Curry Leaf

2 dried red chillies

1Tbs of smoked paprika

1 cup of rock salt – you can substitue with any other type of salt.

 

Process the salt, dried chilli and chopped curry leaves for about 3 minutes.

 Finely chop your dried chillies and combine all three ingredients in your food processor for 3 minutes.

Store in a glass jar or salt box

Fabulous over pork chops, stuffed fillet of pork, roasted tomato soup, ribs, and serve in a little dish to accompany meatballs or falafel.

 

 

Remember that you can use any salt with any number of other ingredients in your store cupboard and herb garden.  How about dried olive and rosemary salt or Lemon & thyme salt or or or …. the combinations really are endless.  Have fun – there are no rules!

 

 

I wish you a wonderful week filled with opportunity, peace and

Lashings of laughter.

 

These salts have just so many uses.

As always

Buon appetito

Xx

jan

 

 

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