After making ravioli today, I had some pasta dough left over so I turned it into tagliatelle.
Dried it and bagged it up for another day when I would need a quick meal.
Coming back from the allotment with a handful of courgettes, I wondered what to do with them.
Then the doorbell rang and my youngest son, paid us a surprise visit.
So out came the tagliatelle and found Nigella's recipe which was quick and extremely tasty.
Definitively one to do again, especially in courgette season.
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Saturday 25 July 2020
Thursday 16 July 2020
Gnocchi, Sage, carrot top pesto
A few years ago Simone showed us how to make gnocchi. Ever since, I made it many times, if I had left over baked potatoes, as I had today. I once saw Gordon Ramsey, fry these beauties which turned them into delicious crispy on the outside but airy on the inside bite sized gems. So today I find his recipe and made it for lunch. As I had thyme in the garden and still my garden peas in the freezer, a perfect lunch in the making.
From Spade to Plate 25/9/2018
As the last few weeks we have asked our international guests to give an idea to use our garden grown vegetables and herbs into some international dishes like Sushi and Samosas, this week we will use our potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, flowers, sage, and carrots to make Gnocchi with a batch of various sauces.
Simone came armed with some notes and showed us how her family used to make Gnocchi.
With the 1 kg of desirée potatoes, 300 gr of flour and 1 egg and a little salt, we managed to make a lovely light batch of Gnocchi.
We made two sauces to go with the gnocchi.
One of which is a carrot and walnut pesto
The other was creamy tomato sauce
Gnocchi with sage and parmesan butter
This post was first made on 25/9/2018
From Spade to Plate 25/9/2018
As the last few weeks we have asked our international guests to give an idea to use our garden grown vegetables and herbs into some international dishes like Sushi and Samosas, this week we will use our potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, flowers, sage, and carrots to make Gnocchi with a batch of various sauces.
Simone came armed with some notes and showed us how her family used to make Gnocchi.
With the 1 kg of desirée potatoes, 300 gr of flour and 1 egg and a little salt, we managed to make a lovely light batch of Gnocchi.
Wash and boil the potatoes whole in salted water.
Peel them when they're still warm, mash them and then mix them with flour and salt.
Shape the mixture like a mound on a floured surface, make a hole in the middle and add the egg inside. Knead well and divide the potato dough into tennis-ball size portions.
Sprinkle some flour onto the worktop and on your hands and roll the portions into long sausages. Cut segments of 3-4cm. Lightly press each segment onto a fork and roll it off the fork onto a plate to obtain the characteristic ridged shape.
Tip: Double the ingredients and freeze what you don't need. You can freeze a ball of dough and then defrost it at room temperature on in the fridge overnight (microwave it at your peril!). If you want to freeze gnocchi, first place them onto a tray inside the freezer. When they are hard, bag them, this way they won’t stick together. Frozen gnocchi don't need to be defrosted. Just tip them into a saucepan full of hot, salted water.
*The best potatoes for gnocchi are floury ones with minimum water content - the red-skinned variety is also great.
Cook gnocchi into a saucepan full of salted, boiling water. Gnocchi need to be cooked only for a few minutes, when they rise to the surface they are ready! Drain carefully not to mash them and serve.
We made two sauces to go with the gnocchi.
One of which is a carrot and walnut pesto
The other was creamy tomato sauce
Gnocchi with sage and parmesan butter
For the sauce:
Labels:
Angeles,
Asako,
gnocchi,
June,
Monday,
Rozenn,
sage butter,
Simone,
tomato and marscapone sauce
Wednesday 15 July 2020
Apple cider and blackberry balsamic vinegar
This post was first posted on 11/9/2017
Today I found a bucket full of windfall apples so decided to turn them into apple cider vinegar.
Gillie's blackberries were already ripe and felt like turning them into blackberry balsamic vinegar
In September 2017 our From Spade to Plate group harvested apples for eating, storing, pressing and turning into vinegar.
Autumn is here, fresh mornings but when the sun breaks through it is glorious.
We started off by sorting the apples. The best ones were used for storing and eating, the slightly blemished ones were turned into vinegar and used for pressing the pears and apples to make some lovely juice. Then the rain came and we went inside to make the main meal.
The summer vegetables are starting to show signs of wanting to be harvested. I have decided to harvest the french beans Faraday ( that we sowed on 19th June) they were lovely and tender.
and harvest the new potatoes (put the sprouting charlotte potatoes from Aldi in the ground in June after I had eaten the lettuces) to make space for the winter onions and garlic (later next month).
Served with a tomato, mozarella and basil salad.
This went down very well.
.
Today I found a bucket full of windfall apples so decided to turn them into apple cider vinegar.
Gillie's blackberries were already ripe and felt like turning them into blackberry balsamic vinegar
In September 2017 our From Spade to Plate group harvested apples for eating, storing, pressing and turning into vinegar.
Autumn is here, fresh mornings but when the sun breaks through it is glorious.
We started off by sorting the apples. The best ones were used for storing and eating, the slightly blemished ones were turned into vinegar and used for pressing the pears and apples to make some lovely juice. Then the rain came and we went inside to make the main meal.
The summer vegetables are starting to show signs of wanting to be harvested. I have decided to harvest the french beans Faraday ( that we sowed on 19th June) they were lovely and tender.
and harvest the new potatoes (put the sprouting charlotte potatoes from Aldi in the ground in June after I had eaten the lettuces) to make space for the winter onions and garlic (later next month).
Served with a tomato, mozarella and basil salad.
This went down very well.
.
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