May – The Wrap Up

May was a good month for produce.  The capsicums finally ripened, the pumpkin continued on, as did the eggplants and chillies.  I have plenty of herbs around and the celery, lettuce and chard all look and taste great.

Having said that I still bought in a fair amount of veg, I was a long way from self sufficiency in carrots, potatoes, onions (although I don’t intend to be), coriander (which I am working very hard to fix), cauliflower and tomatoes.  Of these my priorities will be potatoes and tomatoes and coriander.  On a more positive note I am still using home grown garlic and I had no need to buy: pumpkin, capsicums, chillies, eggplant, most herbs, lettuce or beans.  Most excitingly I harvested my first ginger.   YAY!!!!! I will post seperately on my efforts to grow Ginger, Turmeric and Galangal.  All in all May was a good month, few major pests about and some joy with plants that have struggled a bit in a particularly mild summer and cool autumn.

The following link shows exactly what I did in and ate from my kitchen garden in
May: May 2011

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Eggplant – Eggplant Masala

Eggplant – What I use it for:

With this year’s crop coming to an end I thought I should use the last few eggplants for my favourite dish – a silky smooth eggplant masala.

Eggplant Masala

In this recipe the eggplant doesn’t really look like eggplant which is a considerable advantage if your 4 year has an avowed dislike of eggplants (referring to it as Brinjal curry also helps in this respect).

  • 4 tablespoons canola (or similar light cooking) oil
  • 2 onions – chopped
  • 3 garlic cloves – chopped
  • A knob of ginger (about 2cm in length) – chopped
  • ¼  tspn chilli powder or 2 red chillies finely chopped.  (This will make it mild as I cook for young children, double (or more) the quantity if you like things hot.)
  • ½ teaspoon of turmeric
  • 2 large tomatoes finely chopped
  • A small bunch of coriander – chopped
  • About 600 – 700 gram of eggplant (you do not need to be exact over or under will be fine)
  • 1 teaspoon garam masala*
  • Juice of half a small lemon
  • Salt

Prick the eggplants and place on a baking sheet in an oven set to 210 degrees.  Cook until the skin collapses when touched.  (For a smokier version you can cook the eggplants over a gas flame or BBQ but using the oven works fine and is far less time consuming than cooking them over a gas flame. )  Puree the onion with the garlic and ginger.  I find I don’t have to add water when pureeing Australian onions, however if you have a drier variety you may need to add to splash of water into the food processor get a puree.

Heat the oil and fry the onion mixture with the turmeric over a medium heat.  Fry until the colour of the mixture deepens and becomes a rich golden colour.  Add tomatoes and coriander and chilli.  Cook until the tomatoes collapse and merge with the onion mixture to become a sauce.  Add the eggplant.  Season with salt.  Cook for another 10 minutes.  Add garam masala and lemon juice.  Garnish with additional coriander.  Serve

*To make Garam Masala:

I like my garam masala with a bit of cumin and coriander in it – I find it easier to use than the stronger versions which tend to omit these ingredients (and are a lot heavier on the black pepper).  You can choose to omit the cumin and coriander from this recipe if you prefer.

  • 1 tblspn cumin seeds.
  • 1 tblspn coriander seeds
  • 1 stick cinnamon
  • 1 tspn cloves
  • ¼ of a whole nutmeg grated
  • 2 black cardamom pods
  • 1 tablespoon seed from green cardamom pods
  • 1 tspn black peppercorns

Heat a frypan on the top of the stove and add all the spices except the nutmeg and cloves.  Dry fry the spices until fragrant.  Allow them to cool.  Grind all spices together in a spice grinder.

This mixture will keep its flavour for about 3 months (although the fresher the better).

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Onions – Onion Bhaji’s with a Mint Chutney

How I use Onions:

I lived in London for a number of years and during that time I did a short course on Indian cookery.  Our mantra was: “its all in the onions”, signifying the crucial part the cutting and cooking of the onions played in the flavour and texture of our finished curries.  When making curries it was usual to finely cut (as fine as you can) the onions and then fry until a deep golden brown before other ingredients are added.  Onions used in this manner added flavour and colour to the dish as well as acting as a thickening agent for the sauce as they broke down and were incorporated into it.  In most curries the onions are crucial but hidden, in onion bhaji’s though they are the star of the show.

My teacher at curry school was of Gujarati background via Kenya and her cooking was influenced by that history.   During the course we played with a number of different core pakora and bhaji  ingredients (cauliflower was good, pumpkin less so) but onion was always my favourite.  There are probably as many slight variations to bhaji recipes as there are cooks in India or indeed people cooking Indian style food the world over.  This is my version, cooked in Australia – which owes a lot to a recipe which began in Gujarat, travelling via Kenya and the UK to get here.

Onion Bhaji’s

I like to make Onion Bhaji’s by feel so be prepared to get your hands dirty.

  • 100g besam (otherwise known as Gram or Chickpea Flour)
  • Salt
  • 1tsp garam masala*
  • ½ tsp chilli powder or 2 hot chillies (vary according to taste)
  • 2 large onions sliced (I slice mine down the onion rather than into rings)
  • About 100mls of water.
  • Oil for deep frying (Canola oil is great or any other neutral oil suitable for deep frying).

Place the onions , garam masala, chilli and salt (about ½ tsp or more to taste) into a mixing bowl.  Sift in the flour and mix with your hand until the onions are coated.  Gradually add the water mixing as you go until the onions are thoroughly coated in a soft thick batter.

Heat the oil and test it by dropping a small amount of batter in to see if it floats without browning.  You don’t want the oil to be too hot as you want the onion to cook before the bhaji’s are too brown.

Pick up clumps of the bhaji mixture and place into the oil.  Cook until golden.  I serve mine with a mint chutney which is simply mint, salt and yoghurt blitzed together.

*To make Garam Masala:

I like my garam masala with a bit of cumin and coriander in it – I find it easier to use than the stronger versions which tend to omit these ingredients (and are a lot heavier on the black pepper).  You can choose to omit the cumin and coriander from this recipe if you prefer.

  • 1 tblspn cumin seeds.
  • 1 tblspn coriander seeds
  • 1 stick cinnamon
  • 1 tspn cloves
  • ¼ of a whole nutmeg grated
  • 2 black cardamom pods
  • 1 tablespoon seed from green cardamom pods
  • 1 tspn black peppercorns

Heat a frypan on the top of the stove and add all the spices except the nutmeg and cloves.  Dry fry the spices until fragrant.  Allow them to cool.  Grind all spices together in a spice grinder.

This mixture will keep its flavour for about 3 months (although the fresher the better).

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Herbs – Potato Salad with Smoked Trout & a Salsa Verde Dressing

Chervil – How I use it:

Chervil, along with parsley, chives and tarragon is a component of the classic French fines herbes, and it is in combination with other herbs that I tend to use it most.  Most frequently I use chervil in in omlettes or in Salsa Verde.

I love Salsa Verde (translated to English- Green Sauce); I serve it with fish, occasionally with chicken but also as a dressing for this potato salad with smoked trout.

Potato Salad with Smoked Trout and a Salsa Verde dressing.

Potato Salad with Smoked Trout & Salsa Verde dressing

  • 1kg salad potatoes (eg pink fir apple, kipler, chat), boiled in their skins
  • 4 spring onions chopped
  • A handful of leaves, for example lettuce, watercress, rocket
  • 1 Smoked Trout

For dressing:

  • Juice of one lemon
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 anchovy fillets
  • 1 teaspoon capers (more if you particularly enjoy capers)*
  • 50grms chopped soft herbs (my favourite combination is 2/3
    parlsey, 1/3 mix of dill, chervil & basil)

Make dressing by blitzing all the dressing ingredients in a food processor, adding extra oil if necessary.  Shred the flesh of trout taking care to ensure that all the
skin and bones are removed.  Mix salad leaves and spring onions and arrange onto a
serving plate.  Slice potatoes into bite sized pieces whilst they are still warm.  Dress immediately.  Arrange potatoes on top of salad leaves and sprinkle the smoked trout over the top.  Serve warm or cold.

* I always use salted capers as I prefer them to the vinegary ones.   I wash off the excess salt and then soak my salted capers in water to disgorge some of their salt prior to use.

Note:  The potatoes in this picture are Pink Fir Apple which I highly recommend as a fabulous salad potato.  I do have to admit though that I bought these at the Farmers Market at Collingwood Childrens Farm but I do plan to grow them this year.

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Capsicums – Spiced Chicken with Capsicums

Capsicums – How I use them:

I think some of the best capsicum users in the world are Spanish and this recipe is from the north of the country.   This recipe has been adapted from a lovely book by Elisabeth Luard called the Food of Spain and Portugal and is always a big hit with all my family.  In Spanish it is called: pollo chilindron and in English; spiced chicken with capsicum.

Spiced Chicken with Capsicum

  • 1 smallish chicken (about 1.2kg is ideal) cut into serving
    pieces with fat removed
  • 5 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 rashers very lean bacon, or 2 tablespoons leg ham on the
    bone (or serrano ham if you have it) chopped
  • 1 large onion sliced
  • 4 cloves garlic peeled and thinly sliced
  • 3 red capsicums sliced
  • 500g tomatoes chopped (skin them if you can be bothered), or
    the equivalent of tinned tomatoes.
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 3 cloves
  • 1 stick of cinnamon
  • 2 medium heat chillies finely chopped

Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan or frypan and fry the chicken in it until lightly browned.  Remove the chicken and set aside.  Add the chopped bacon/ham, onions, capsicums, chilli and garlic.  Sauté until the vegetables have softened.  Add the tomatoes, bay leaves, cloves and cinnamon, stir until the tomatoes just start to break down (a minute
or 2) and then reintroduce the chicken.  Cover and simmer until the chicken has cooked through and the sauce has thickened nicely (about 45 mins).  Serve either hot or at room temperature with lots of crusty bread.

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