Wednesday, December 26, 2012

#blog12daysxmas Day 2 Pomegranate Chicken




For my #blog12daysxmas challenge I am going to be jumping around amongst my blogs as the fancy takes me.  For day 2 as food seems to have been uppermost in my mind for the last few days I am going to blog the recipe of the Pomegranate Chicken which I cooked last week. I love playing around with recipes and food and being on holidays gives me the opportunity to do more of it than when I am working in a full-time busy job.

So why pomegranate chicken? As always a number of triggers led to this dish. I had some chicken breasts that I wanted to cook and a friend sent me a recipe of a chicken salad she had made with pomegranate molasses.  What could I do with my chicken breasts that would have a pomegranate touch?  I read a bit of Claudia Roden for some Middle Eastern ideas and then I just started playing around with foods that I had in the kitchen.  If I may say so myself, the result was very yummy.  Well, it certainly was to me as it included so many of my favourite foods!



Ingredients

2 cups pomegranate & cranberry juice
1/2 cup baby lentils (French lentils)
4 chicken breasts
Flour
Olive oil
1 can chickpeas
Handful walnuts
1 green pepper
1 tsp Sumac
1 bunch coriander

Mode

Place the pomegranate and cranberry juice in a pan on the stove
Add lentils
Cover and bring to the boil
Reduce heat and leave simmering
Meanwhile roughly chop the chicken breasts
Flour the chicken pieces
Heat olive oil in frying pan
Quickly seal the chicken pieces in the oil and add to the simmering juice and lentils
Break up the walnuts and add
Add chickpeas and Sumac  and combine
Thinly slice the green pepper and add to the pan
Bring to the boil again and then reduce the heat and simmer for a couple of hours until all the flavours are absorbed and everything is tender
Roughly chop the bunch of coriander
Add half of it to the mixture about 10 minutes before serving and mix well
Sprinkle the rest of the fresh coriander on the chicken dish on serving.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Spanakopitta




One of my very favourite dishes of all time is spanakopitta.  I have had it in many places and in many shapes and forms.  But the one I love most is the one(s) that has evolved in my kitchen over time.  Of course, it isn't the same every time as I might use silver beet instead of spinach, or frozen spinach instead of fresh.  Or I sprinkle the top with sesame seeds instead of poppy seeds or I leave the top plain.

Spanakopitta is delicious fresh from the oven, but is still yummy heated in the microwave the day after and is fine cold too. I have used the mixture here to make a large spanakopitta but, of course, the filling can be used to make individual spanakopittes for each person or spanakopitakia for nibbles.

I cooked spanakopitta for a friend the other night and she described it as "refreshing."  I hadn't really thought of it in conjunction with that word before but it certainly is so when served with a fresh tomato and cucumber salad dressed simply with olive oil and torn basil leaves. Hmmm, heaven on a stick, she might also have said!

 

Ingredients

375 gr ricotta
200gr fetta
Parmesan or other yellow cheese
1 egg
1/2 tsp Sambal oelek
1 garlic clove
4 spring onions
1 packet of frozen spinach or 1 bunch fresh spinach
Phyllo pastry
Olive oil
Poppy seeds

Mode

Preheat the oven to 180c
Place the spinach in a microwavable bowl
Chop the spring onions roughly and add on top
Crush the garlic and add to the vegetables
Add Sambal oelek
Cover the bowl with greaseproof paper and cook in the microwave on high for about 5 minutes
Alternatively this can be cooked on the stovetop in the upper part of a steamer until the vegetables are tender
Meanwhile place the ricotta in a bowl
Crumble the fetta by hand on top and add a handful of grated Parmesan (or to taste)
Add the egg and stir to combine
When the vegetables are cooked add to the mixture and combine well
Using a pastry brush and olive oil line the bottom of a baking dish with about six layers of phyllo taking care to oil well between each layer
Add the cheese and spinach to the phyllo
Fold the phyllo over the mixture and cover with several layers of phyllo brushing with oil between each layer
Fold in the edges and oil the top layer
Sprinkle with poppy seeds
With a sharp knife cut the top of the pie into desired portions. DO NOT cut hrough the bottom of the pie
Cook for 45 minutes in 180c oven until top is crisp and golden
Leave to rest for 2-3 minutes after cooking
Then with a sharp knife cut the portions through to the bottom of the pie
Serve with salad.

Yummy Ricotta and Dill Nibbles

 

I have been making these ricotta and dill nibbles (or variants of same) for years.  It has been so long that I have no idea where I got the idea for them from. When I was trying to think of a savoury snack to take last night to the Collingwood Historical Society AGM, these suddenly came to mind.




Ingredients

375 gr ricotta
20 gr dill
1 egg
18 slices prosciutto
9 cherry tomatoes



Mode

Preheat oven to 180c
Chop dill roughly, discarding large stems
Place ricotta in bowl and add dill and egg
Stir to combine thoroughly
Cut each slice of prosciutto in half and use to line 18 small muffin tins by placing each half in the tin across each other
Add a heaped dessertspoon of the ricotta mixture to each muffin tin
Quarter the cherry tomatoes and place two quarters on top of the ricotta mixture in each tin
Cook in 180c oven for approximately 30 minutes
Makes 18 nibbles.



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