Favourite Winter Recipes

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  • simonr
    Transitionator
    • Jun 2004
    • 8796

    Favourite Winter Recipes

    I know we have the odd foodie on here.

    Now the nights are drawing in and winters closer (apart from for the likes of Dzone and F-Kharma that enjoy the Dubai sunshine) what sort of food do you like to eat and are there any recipes to share ?

    One of my favs is:

    Moroccan Lamb Tagine:



    Serves 4-6

    I prefer mutton to lamb tagine as the meat stands up better to the spices. The heady fragrance is from Ras el-hanout, a Moroccan spice blend. If you can’t find it, make your own by mixing a teaspoon each of ground cinnamon, ground cardamom, ground cumin, mild chilli powder and garam masala with a pinch of saffron.

    2 tbsp plain flour
    Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
    600-800g Lamb (neck or shoulder), cut into smaller chunks
    4 tbsp olive oil
    1 large onion, finely sliced
    2 crushed garlic cloves
    1 tbsp grated fresh root ginger
    11/2 tbsp Ras el-hanout
    1 tbsp tomato purée
    500-600ml lamb stock
    100g dried apricots, chopped
    1 preserved lemon, chopped, or a few
    squeezes of lemon juice
    1 tsp clear honey

    Parsley
    Couscous, for serving

    Method

    1 Season the flour with salt and pepper and coat the lamb pieces in the mixture. Heat half the oil in a large heavy-bottomed pan or a cast-iron casserole and cook the meat until browned all over.


    2 Add the onion and a little more oil, if necessary, and cook for 5 minutes until it starts to soften. Add the garlic, ginger, spice blend and purée and fry for a few minutes until fragrant and the mutton is coated in the mixture.


    3 Pour in enough stock to cover and bring to the boil, then reduce to a simmer. Cover the pan with a lid and gently cook, stirring occasionally, for 1.5 hours.


    4 Remove the lid and stir in the apricots, preserved lemon and honey. Simmer uncovered for another 30-40 minutes, stirring frequently, until the Lamb is tender.


    Take off the heat and add chopped parsley - let it cool a little then taste and adjust the seasoning adding more honey if needed.

    Serve with couscous or rice (some steamed greens are nice too if you want to hit your 5 a day).

    This tastes even better on day 2 when the flavours develop chilled overnight in the fridge.

    Oh and a nice glass of red goes nicely with this - an Italian Amarone if you're flush with cash (hey this is cheaper than eating out !)
    sigpicSimonR

    This release was mastered direct from vinyl at the request of the DJ and as such features natural sound characteristics of this medium such as record surface noise.
  • clintlove
    Hey girl, ya Hungry?
    • Jun 2004
    • 3264

    #2
    Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

    egg nog and whiskey with a christmas tree shaped Reese's Peanut Butter Cup

    Music is the answer, to your problems. Keep on movin', till you solve them.

    sigpic

    Comment

    • toasty
      Sir Toastiness
      • Jun 2004
      • 6585

      #3
      Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

      Two things I love this time of year:

      -Hot Mulled Apple Cider: simmer mulling spices in cider for 20-30 minutes or so. Tastes great, and makes your house smell incredible.

      -Shepherd's Pie: in a cast iron skillet, start cooking up some onion and carrots in butter. Once that's going, brown a couple of pounds of bison in the same skillet. When you're about 5 minutes out from being fully browned, add some corn and peas to the mixture. Once the bison is fully cooked, add salt, pepper, dried herbs of your choice and worcesterchire sauce to taste, and follow that up with enough beef broth to keep it moist while it simmers for about 10 minutes. Reseason/sauce if necessary.

      While that's happening, prepare mashed potatoes per your favorite recipe.

      Cover the meat and veggie mixture with the mashed potatoes (don't smooth it out, let it stay rough). Cook at 400 for about 30 minutes, and then finish it off under the broiler for a couple of minutes (watch it closely!) to brown the peaks of the mashed potatoes.

      Obviously, this is a foundational recipe, and it can be tweaked to fit your taste, but there is nothing more satisfying on a cold winter's day than shepherd's pie.

      Oh, did I mention red wine? Also a big fan of red wine this time of year. Actually, I like red wine pretty much any time of year, but even more so now.

      Comment

      • simonr
        Transitionator
        • Jun 2004
        • 8796

        #4
        Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

        ^^ sounds good Toasty.

        Bison meat sounds interesting - is it very strong and gamey (like venison) ?
        sigpicSimonR

        This release was mastered direct from vinyl at the request of the DJ and as such features natural sound characteristics of this medium such as record surface noise.

        Comment

        • toasty
          Sir Toastiness
          • Jun 2004
          • 6585

          #5
          Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

          No, not gamey at all, surprisingly. It tastes very similar to ground beef -- in fact, most recipes call for ground beef or lamb, I think -- but there's a subtle different that I really like with the bison. It also happens to be quite a bit healthier than beef, but I prefer bison regardless.

          Comment

          • demonAfro
            Are you Kidding me??
            • Jun 2004
            • 3488

            #6
            Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

            Just like a hearty soup and crusty bread.

            These make plenty quick and easy

            Code:
            Spicy tomato and lentil soup
            
            Categories: Soups
            Yields: 6 bowls
            
            2 tbsp olive oil
            2 cloves garlic; minced
            2 red chilli; chopped
            5 carrots; finely diced
            2 tins chopped tomato
            1 tsp cumin
            1 1/2 L vegetable stock
            200 g red lentils
            
            1. Gently cook the garlic and chilli in the oil until soft.
            2. Add the carrots and cook until starting to soften.
            3. Add all the other ingredients and simmer for as long as possible (~1 hour)
            Code:
            Sweet potato and coconut soup
            
            Categories: Soups
            Yields: 6 bowls
            
            1 tbsp groundnut oil
            1 clove garlic; crushed
            1/2 inch ginger; peeled
            675 g sweet potato; diced
            1 tbsp lemongrass; chopped
            1 pt vegetable stock
            1 pt coconut cream
            2 limes; zest and juice
            
            1. Heat the oil in a large saucepan and gently fry the onion, garlic 
            and ginger for about 5 minutes until tender. Add the sweet potatoes 
            and lemongrass and cook for a further 3 minutes.
            2. Add the stock and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat and simmer, 
            covered, for 20 minutes until the vegetables are tender. 
            3. Cool the soup slightly, then liquidise with half of the coconut cream 
            and process until smooth. 
            4. Return the soup to the saucepan, add the remaining coconut cream. 
            Season with salt and pepper. Heat through without allowing the soup 
            to boil, and add the lime juice. 
            5. Ladle the soup into bowls and garnish with the lime zest.

            Comment

            • lilsensa
              DUDERZ get a life!!!
              • Jun 2004
              • 6675

              #7
              Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

              Originally posted by toasty

              -Shepherd's Pie: in a cast iron skillet, start cooking up some onion and carrots in butter. Once that's going, brown a couple of pounds of bison in the same skillet. When you're about 5 minutes out from being fully browned, add some corn and peas to the mixture. Once the bison is fully cooked, add salt, pepper, dried herbs of your choice and worcesterchire sauce to taste, and follow that up with enough beef broth to keep it moist while it simmers for about 10 minutes. Reseason/sauce if necessary.
              Shepherds Pie is the bomb. My mom used to make this.
              RIP ~ Steve James







              Comment

              • JonQPublik
                Gold Gabber
                • Apr 2006
                • 636

                #8
                Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                I make a kick ass Shepherd's Pie, but I'm not sharing the recipe!

                I always tend to cook more this time of year– here's some of the things I love to make:

                Pork Stew (using white wine and vegetable stock as a base, fresh rosemary as the signature spice)
                Squash Bisque
                Stuffed Shells
                Chicken and Dumplings
                Bread Pudding (again, secret)


                Cripes, my brain is freezing! I know there's others...
                http://soundcloud.com/jonqpublik/sets/love-and-other-stories

                Comment

                • diegoff
                  Are you Kidding me??
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 3864

                  #9
                  Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                  ^ all of those, but with some (a lot) malbec wine
                  It´s a spiritual thing!

                  feb 2021 https://soundcloud.com/diegoarv/pand...os-inflamables
                  Sept 26th https://soundcloud.com/diegoarv/earthling-vibes
                  May 1st 2020 https://soundcloud.com/diegoarv/current

                  Comment

                  • Jenks
                    I'm kind of a big deal.
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 10250

                    #10
                    Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                    I'm a braising and roasting machine in the wintertime. My favorite is roasting chicken. So simple, so fucking delicious.

                    Get a free range bird, no hormones (no tyson chicken or any of that supermarket shit- there's a huge difference.)

                    i like @ 4lb birds.

                    Rinse the bird inside and out and pat dry inside and out and let it sit and dry a bit. Dryness is very important in roast chicken, which is why you won't see any butter or oil or any crap shoved in the cavity in my roasted chicken. Putting stuff in the cavity, like a lemon, adds moisture, which = soggy skin. Dry chicken + high heat = crispy skin awesomeness.

                    Once your bird is dry, start making it fucking RAIN with kosher salt all over all parts of your bird. 3 tbsp or so, dunno, never measured it. Crack some fresh pepper all over the bird as well, giving the whole thing a good patting down, a good smacking all over. (you know you love it)

                    Now truss your bird. If you don't know how to do this, you should, google/youtube it.

                    Preheat oven to 450.
                    Place trussed, salted and peppered bird tits up in a roasting pan/broiling pan (basically anything that keeps the bird from sitting in it's own juices.)
                    Roast at 450 for 50 mins without checking the bird- don't open the door, don't baste the bird, don't do fucking ANYTHING! Let it roast!
                    At 50 mins, insert a meat thermometer into the thigh a couple of inches without touching the bone, (every serious cook should have a nice quality instant read meat thermometer, it's science, don't try to be the nonthermometer hero.) You're looking for 165ish and not a cunt hair over 170. Once you've got 165ish, remove it from the roasting pan and let it sit for 10 mins on a carving board. The bird will eventually get to 175 sitting on your countertop cooking from the inside out.

                    While the bird is resting- guess what: the beautiful little bird that it is has left you a little present, a roasting pan full of win and awesome- ie the juices.

                    Finely dice a shallot, some garlic, some thyme, whatever and add a cup or so of good white wine (important, don't use bottom feeder wine, drink and cook with the same bottle) and bring to a boil. reduce reduce reduce, until you've got a nice thick consistency that's still able to pour <this is for dipping, the bird, or whatever you've made to go with this bird (garlic mashed potatos anyone?) However, i don't pour this reduction on my bird, because that makes the skin soggy which is exactly the opposite of what this high heat roasting technique is all about. Dip, don't pour.

                    Carve your bird. Again, learn how to do it properly, google/youtube. Nothing says fail like perfectly roasting a free range bird only to hack it up like O.J. did Nicole.

                    Open a bottle of Willamatte Valley Pinot Noir. Drink and start snarfing down that delicious succulent roasted bird. Enjoy.

                    WAIT!! Don't throw away that carcass you dumbass!!!...make a stock or a soup out of it. NO WASTE!

                    I <3 winter cooking. Take a grill away from a man and put him in the kitchen and we'll see if he's a real cook.

                    Comment

                    • simonr
                      Transitionator
                      • Jun 2004
                      • 8796

                      #11
                      Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                      Originally posted by Jenks
                      Place trussed, salted and peppered bird tits up in a roasting pan/broiling pan
                      assume we're still talking about cooking free-range chickens !

                      Great cooking tips Jenks ... like a decent bottle of wine it's worth spending a few more £ or $ on decent free-range and using the full carcass to make stock (which you can freeze and use later in risottos).

                      Tonight I'm doing roasted pork chops w. cider/onions/apples/mushrooms and throwing in some dijon mustard and creme fraiche at the end to make a nice sauce.
                      sigpicSimonR

                      This release was mastered direct from vinyl at the request of the DJ and as such features natural sound characteristics of this medium such as record surface noise.

                      Comment

                      • danielRR
                        Getting Somewhere
                        • May 2008
                        • 214

                        #12
                        Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                        My family is part Cornish, so we often break out the Pasty recipe in Winter. Just had one last night for dinner. All inclusive man-meal. Gotta love it.
                        http://soundcloud.com/lexajune

                        Comment

                        • Nusystem
                          Getting Somewhere
                          • Oct 2005
                          • 109

                          #13
                          Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                          Is that your recipe SRoss, it looks yummy???

                          Comment

                          • DreamGirlie
                            Platinum Poster
                            • Jun 2004
                            • 2137

                            #14
                            Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                            Originally posted by simonr

                            Tonight I'm doing roasted pork chops w. cider/onions/apples/mushrooms and throwing in some dijon mustard and creme fraiche at the end to make a nice sauce.
                            This sounds yummy! I have pork chops for dinner tonight, care to share your recipe
                            "Welcome to Hezbollah phone line, for terrorist supplies press 1."

                            Comment

                            • liquidsky
                              Getting Somewhere
                              • Jun 2004
                              • 217

                              #15
                              Re: Favourite Winter Recipes

                              Cranberry-Apple French Toast Casserole

                              2 tablespoons butter
                              2 cups diced Granny Smith apple (about 2 apples)
                              1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
                              Dash of ground cloves
                              1/4 cup packed brown sugar, divided
                              1 pound dinner rolls, quartered
                              Cooking spray
                              1/2 cup sweetened dried cranberries
                              1 1/4 cups apple juice
                              1 1/4 cups 1% low-fat milk
                              3/4 cup whole-berry cranberry sauce
                              1/2 teaspoon grated lemon rind
                              1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
                              6 large eggs, lightly beaten
                              1/4 cup sliced almonds, toasted


                              Preheat oven to 250°.

                              Melt butter in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add apple, cinnamon, and cloves to pan; cook 10 minutes or until lightly browned, stirring frequently. Stir in 2 tablespoons brown sugar; cook 2 minutes or until sugar melts. Remove from heat.

                              Place quartered rolls on a jelly-roll pan; bake at 250° for 15 minutes. Arrange rolls in a 13 x 9-inch baking dish coated with cooking spray. Sprinkle cranberries evenly over rolls; top with apple mixture. Combine apple juice and the next 5 ingredients (through eggs) in a large bowl, stirring with a whisk. Pour egg mixture over roll mixture; sprinkle with remaining 2 tablespoons sugar. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

                              Preheat oven to 350°.

                              Uncover dish, and sprinkle with almonds. Bake at 350° for 55 minutes or until golden.

                              Yield: 12 servings

                              -------------------

                              Applesauce Spice Cake

                              2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for the pan
                              2 teaspoons baking soda
                              1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
                              1 stick unsalted butter, plus more for the pan
                              1 cup granulated sugar
                              1 2/3 cups jarred chunky applesauce
                              2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
                              1 teaspoon ground ginger
                              Pinch ground nutmeg
                              1 teaspoon vanilla extract
                              2 large eggs
                              1 cup dark or golden raisins
                              2 tablespoons confectioners' sugar
                              2 pints vanilla ice cream


                              Heat oven to 350° F. Butter and flour a 9-inch springform or round cake pan.

                              In a small bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt. In a large saucepan, over medium heat, melt the butter. Remove from heat and stir in the granulated sugar, applesauce, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, vanilla, and eggs. Add the flour mixture and stir just until combined. Stir in the raisins. Pour into the prepared pan. Bake the cake until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean, 35 to 40 minutes.

                              Transfer pan to a wire rack to cool for 10 minutes. Using a knife, loosen the cake from pan. Invert it onto the rack. Turn it over again onto a serving plate. Sprinkle the cake with the confectioners' sugar, slice into wedges, and serve with the ice cream.

                              In Advance: Bake the cake and let it cool. Set aside at room temperature for up to 24 hours. Cover with foil and warm in a 250° F oven for 30 minutes.

                              To Freeze: Cool the cake in the pan. Cover the pan tightly with two layers of aluminum foil. Store for up to 3 months.

                              To Reheat: Refrigerate the cake overnight. Warm in a 250° oven for 30 minutes.


                              Yield: Makes 8 to 12 servings

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