Thursday, July 30, 2009

Salmon with mango salsa

My mom sent me this recipe which she got from the weight watchers website, so enjoy (in moderation) as it probably means it is less fattening! (The potato wedges aren't from weight watchers, but at least they were oven baked!)

For the marinade:
- 2 T red curry paste
- 4 T plain yoghurt
- Pepper
Mix together and place fish in marinade for at least half an hour.

For the salsa:
- 1 Small mango
- 1 Red onion
- 1/4 Gherkin
- Chili to taste
- 4 T Fresh mint
- 1 t Lemon juice
Finely chop all the ingredients for the salsa and mix.

Grill salmon 6-8 min, turning once. Serve with salsa and a wedge of fresh lemon. Don't be like me and only remember about the already cut lemon wedges still lying on the counter when we've just about finished the fish!! I always forget something!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Chicken Pot Pie



I've been wanting to make a chicken pie for a while now. Then I came across this recipe for a chicken pot pie on this website and thought I'll give it a try as I like trying out new recipes.

Prep time 25 min
Cook time 30 min
Difficulty easy

Ingredients
6 T butter
1/8 t thyme
1/4 t pepper
6 T flour
1 1/2 C chicken broth
1 1/2 C half-and-half (half cream)
2 C chicken breast, cubed
1 whole carrot, diced
1/2 C peas
6 whole new potatoes (I used one big potato), cubed
1 box Double crust pastry shell (Not sure exactly what this is, but I used puff pastry)

Cook chicken in some butter until brown. Remove from pan.
Boil vegetables until soft.
Cook butter, thyme, flour and pepper (add salt to taste) on low until bubbly.
Remove from heat and add chicken broth and cream. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly till think.
Fold together sauce with chicken and vegetables.
Pour into uncooked pastry shell. Cover with pastry.


Bake in preheated oven at 220 C for 30 min.

Wash the dishes while the pie is in the oven.

While your husband has a beer after he helped with the cooking.

Keep an eye on the pie! Make sure it doesn't burn in the oven. I turned the oven down to 150 C when it started getting a bit too brown on top.

Then enjoy your pie with a glass of wine!

PS Next time I will fry some onion and garlic too and add some mushrooms.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Milk tart - first attempt

Before I tell you about the milk tart I just have to show you what I bought today. I'm so excited about it. My baking has been limited here in Switzerland until now without this. Look.

Don't you love the color? I do! And it happens to go with my kitchen which has some touches of red. And look what it can do, frothed milk! Pretty, hey?

Ok, so I wanted to bake something this morning after buying this and I asked André what he'd like me to bake. It needs to be something he likes, otherwise I end up eating it all. He doesn't eat much sweet stuff, so I might just end up having to eat it all myself anyway... But I really wanted to bake something and from the list I gave André to choose from, he chose milk tart.

I have two recipes. One is my grandma's recipe which my mom made in Melkbos some time ago. It turned out really good. But the other recipe I have, one without a crust, sounded way easier so of course I chose the easy way out. Perhaps not the best choice! I will give you both recipes in a minute. If you look at the picture you can see the two layers and it feels as though something separated which shouldn't have. The bottom is too dense and the top too foamy. I looked up other recipes on the internet afterwards and the first one I found is exactly this recipe I used today and the reviews say that it is supposed to form a sort of crust with the bottom layer. So maybe it's supposed to be like this. Just not the way I know milk tart. And I like a pastry crust so next time I'll try the other one and let you know how that turns out.

But here's both recipes so you can choose and let me know what you think if you do try it.

Today's recipe: Crustless Milk Tart

4 C milk
1 C sugar
1 t baking powder
1 C flour
2 T butter
1 t vanilla
3 eggs, separated
pinch of salt

Beat the egg whites until stiff.
Melt butter and add sugar, salt and egg yolks. Mix.
Add baking powder and flour. Gradually add milk and vanilla.
Fold in the egg whites.

Pour into an oven dish. Bake at 180C for 30-40 min. (I baked mine for 50 min today. It musn't be too wobbly when you take it out. It will be a little wobbly, but if too much it won't set properly.)
Sprinkle with cinnamon while still hot. Leave to cool and set.

And here's my Ouma's recipe:
Melktert

500 ml milk
30 ml butter
1 cinnamon stick
pinch of salt
2 extra large eggs, separated
100 ml milk
15 ml flour
30 ml maizena (cornflour)
125 ml sugar
Puff pastry
cinnamon

Heat milk, cinnamon stick, salt and butter.
Heat until just before boiling point.
Beat egg yolks, sugar, 100 ml milk, flour and cornflour.
Add a little bit of the warm milk to the egg mixture and beat well. (This is important, don't ask me why but you have to do it this way!)
Now add the egg mixture to the rest of the warm milk. Keep stirring until it starts thickening.
It will start looking like custard.
Let the mixture cool completely.

Line dish with puff pastry.
When the mixture has cooled completely, beat the egg whites until stiff and fold in.
Pour into dish and bake at 180C for about 35 min. (Would probably be longer.)
As with the first recipe, it mustn't be too wobbly when you take it out the oven.

Allow to cool and sprinkle with cinnamon.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Risotto

I took these pictures such a long time ago and thought I'd posted this already, but it seems not. I made risotto again tonight. Here's how:

1. Fry onion and garlic in some olive oil.

2. Add chicken pieces. You don't have to, you can leave this out and do a vegetarian risotto.

3. When the chicken pieces are nice and brown, add 1 cup Arborio rice (special risotto rice available in most grocery stores) to serve 2 people. To serve 4, double the rice and the liquid. It makes more than enough. Fry the rice in the pan for about 1 minute or so.

4. Then add the liquid: 1/2 cup white wine (or red if you don't have white- it will change the color a bit but still tastes good) + 2 cups water. With the liquid add either vegetable stock or half a packet mushroom soup powder. The soup powder makes it nice and creamy.

5. Add your vegetables. You can really add ANYTHING you like!! We usually add mushrooms, one tomato, green/ red pepper. Other things to add are zucchini, butternut/ pumpkin, broccoli, really any veg.

6. Simmer until liquid is absorbed. Taste the rice. It might not be soft yet, then add a little more water to just cover everything and simmer some more until rice is soft and creamy.

7. Before serving you can stir through some grated cheese!

This dish will not score high on presentation, but it will on taste!

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Zucchini salad


I found this recipe on another blog quite a while ago and I would add a link to that blog but now I really can't remember where I found it... I know zucchini salad sounds a bit strange and that is the reason why I took so long to try it but don't be scared, this tastes amazing! I just made it and wanted to eat it straight away after having a small taste, but the rest of the dinner is still in the oven so I have to wait.

For the two of us I grated only one big zucchini, the zucchini here are seriously big so you'll have to grate and see how much your zucchini gives you. Then add some lemon juice, salt, pepper, olive oil and grated parmesan cheese and mix well. Sorry, no measurements, you'll have to taste! I liked the taste of the parmesan so added quite a bit.

My mother in law's Rusk recipe

These rusks are so good! Obviously I wont post anything not good! We spoke to my mother in law on skype last night and she had these rusks drying in the oven. I could almost smell them! But I won't bake them. Simply because they're too good and I won't be able to leave them alone. I will be sitting here at my laptop trying to work but won't be able to think about anything else but the rusks in the kitchen. But if you have better willpower than me, here's the recipe.

Health rusks

500 g margarine
1 1/2 cups brown sugar
1 kg self-raising flour
3 t baking powder
2 ml salt
2 eggs
3 cups All Bran (crushed slightly)
2 cups digestive bran
200 ml sunflower seeds
1/2 cup raisins
500 ml buttermilk

Melt margarine and sugar.
Sift self-raising flour, baking powder and salt.
Add All Bran, digestive bran, sunflower seeds and raisins to flour mixture.
Beat eggs and buttermilk and add to flour mixture.
Add melted margarine and sugar mixture and mix well.

Bake at 180 C for 50-60 min.
Remove from bread pans and allow to cool.
Cut/ break into pieces and dry overnight in oven at 80 C.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Lasagne, my absolute favourite!

Hold on. I'm going to tell you about lasagne in a minute. Thinking about lasagne just reminded me there's still some in the fridge from last night and even though we had such a good lunch and LOTS of dessert this afternoon, I just have to have a small bite. Drool over the picture while you wait... Watch out, don't get any on your keyboard!

Mmm... that was good. Do you see the croutons in the salad? I've always wanted to make my own croutons. Last night there wasn't anything else to add to the salad so I made croutons for the first time! Turned out good.

Ok, back to the lasagne. I hope you can make lasagne. If you've never tried then today is the day to start. It's really not difficult. I don't know why some people think or say it is. It's actually very simple. And if it's the béchamel sauce (white sauce) you're worried about - which is also not hard to do- I do have an easy way out for you.

I looked up the spelling of lasagne because my spell check is telling me it should be with an a at the end. According to Wikipedia lasagna is singular for the pasta sheets used and lasagne is plural and also the way it's spelled in Italy. You need more than one sheet to make lasagne.

Lasagne has always been my favourite dish and when I became interested in cooking and wanted to learn to cook I didn't want to start with boiling an egg as my mom tried to convince me. I wanted to make lasagne. So as far as I can remember that's the first thing I learnt to cook and still my favourite. I do it without a recipe now.

Whenever I make a mince dish I cook extra mince, like double or three times what I need and freeze it in smaller containers. Ready to be converted into a quick lasagne, cottage pie, spaghetti Bolognese or whatever.

Ok, I'm going to give you my recipe which I've been making for years and years. I wish I can remember how old I was. This is so good, I never order lasagne in a restaurant because it's never as good as this one. Along the way I'll give you some optional extras which I add depending what I have in the fridge.

Oh I just noticed my recipe is in Afrikaans! I will translate.

Lasagne (This makes quite a big dish, could probably serve 6)
5 ml olive oil
500 g mince
1 packet minestrone soup powder (or a few teaspoons vegetable stock powder - Ina Paarman if you're in SA)
1 tin tomatoes
30 ml red wine or water
lasagne sheets (I like the green spinach ones)
50 g (60 ml) margarine
50 g (100 ml) sifted flour - I never sift it
570 ml milk
5 ml salt
pepper
100 g grated cheese of your choice

Cook the mince.
Add the soup powder (or veg stock), tomatoes and wine/ water.

Melt the margarine in a separate pot.
Stir in flour.
Gradually add the milk and bring to a boil, stirring constantly.
Add salt and pepper.

*Now for years I used to make the béchamel sauce like this on the stove. Then I learnt a much easier way from my mother in law - use the microwave! So you melt the margarine, stir in the flour and then I add about 1 c milk and mix well. In the micro for 1 min and then stir again. Do 1 min at a time and take out to stir otherwise it will boil over = BIG mess in your microwave. You don't want to have to clean that too. When that one cup starts to thicken add some more milk and carry on until you have enough sauce and it's thick enough. I don't measure the marg, flour and milk anymore but do if you're not sure. Otherwise it might not thicken and you will end up frustrated and never want to make lasagne again and I don't want that.

Now you are ready to layer in your oven dish. The order of layers vary and I can never remember so this is the one thing I still until recently got the recipe book out for! Right at the end I have to find the lasagne page to see which layer goes first! Now I'm not that bothered and just put whatever first. As long as you end with a sauce layer and cheese.

So this recipe I have here says lasagne sheets first, then half of your bolognese, and half white sauce. Then repeat pasta, mince and sauce and top with cheese.

Bake 30 min at 200 C (without a lid.)

*I add the without a lid part because after my mom moved to Germany years ago I had to phone her to ask if I need to put the lid on the dish or not? They should tell me that in a recipe!

*Some extras to add when you're cooking the mince (bolognese sauce): chopped chilli, green pepper, mushrooms (we always add these three). Also when available in the fridge some kind of veg like finely chopped carrot. Be creative and make it colourful! You can also add some tomato paste if you like it more red. I do. And a fresh tomato too if you like it tomato-y. I do. Mmmm.... what else... I think that's it. Oh garlic and onion!! How can I forget those two! I can't believe this recipe doesn't add that. It's a must.

*By the way, you know you don't have to cook the lasagne sheets? You just place them in the dish and make sure they don't overlap.

Ok, so that was my original trusted recipe. Then another recipe my sister sent me which is supposed to be a healthier (read less fattening) version is what we tried last night and this is the one in the photo - although the above recipe turns out looking the same. You know the top layer of lasagne will always be cheese so will look the same :-)

Now I still have to ask her how all this cheese is better than the milk in the white sauce, but here it is. I call it the:

Easy-way-out Lasagne!

500 g ricotta
4 egg yolks
500 g mozarella
1 c freshly grated parmasan
lasagne sheets
2 cups Bolognese sauce

Mix ricotta with egg yolks and season with salt and pepper. Layer as above, ending with the cheese and bake as above.

*NB I halved the ricotta (250g) and egg yolks (2) and it was enough for 4 portions of lasagne. And it looked rich and cheesy enough without the parmesan so didn't add that.

The ricotta gives it a different taste. I'd say a bit richer and creamier but not too heavy. It was really really good too. I just need to find out which one is less fattening now and that's the one I will continue making. This last one is definitely quicker. Last night I had the mince ready made from earlier in the week so I just had to mix the ricotta and egg yolks and in the oven it went!

Ok, now go make some lasagne for your family!!

Friday, July 10, 2009

Banana-Oatmeal-Choc Chip Cookies



As I've mentioned before, my sister has been so kind to help me get rid of a few too many Swiss chocolates I ate and sent me a meal plan with lots of healthy tips. Even which fruit are safe (sugar wise) to eat and which to stay far away from -e.g. bananas :-( She's also been sending me some healthy recipes including this one for cookies. Okay so maybe cookies aren't exactly healthy, but it's a healthier alternative if you're going to eat cookies. I baked them today and they turned out so yummy. I left a few spoonfuls in the bowl on purpose to eat while their baking ( don't tell my sister!)

I'll first give you her recipe and then I'll tell you what I did.

Banana-Oatmeal-Chocolate Chip Cookies


Prep: 10 minutes; Cook: 25 minutes.


Ingredients


1 cup oat flour

3/4 cup old-fashioned rolled oats

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/3 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup raw sugar

1/3 cup canola oil

1/3 cup plain soy milk

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 ripe banana, cut into small pieces

1/4 cup chopped walnuts or other favorite nut

1/3 cup semisweet vegan chocolate chips (such as Tropical Source)


Preparation


1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Combine first 6 ingredients (through sugar) in a bowl. Whisk together oil, soy milk, and vanilla in a separate bowl. Add wet mixture to dry ingredients; stir to combine. Fold in banana, walnuts, and chocolate chips.


2. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Scoop dough onto pan with a small ice-cream scoop. Bake 25 minutes or until golden brown, turning baking sheet halfway through. Let cool on a wire rack.

________________________________


Now in America-land you get all weird and wonderful stuff in the grocery store. Like vegan choc chips? Semisweet?? What is that? Okay, maybe I'm just jealous because you get ANYTHING and everything in the grocery stores there and it's even labeled in English. (But seriously, I don't know what that is.) Anyway. Since I live in Switzerland and I'm not going to buy soy milk no matter where I live she helped me adapt the recipe a bit. Then I adapted it a bit more myself. (After translating the ingredients into German before going shopping.)

Instead of oat flour I used 1 1/4 c whole wheat flour.
Instead of raw sugar I used 1 1/2 c brown sugar.
Instead of the oil I used 1 c butter.
I couldn't find baking soda so only used the baking powder.
I added 2 eggs.
I didn't use any milk.
I didn't add any nuts.
I had a choice between chocolate choc chips or caramel and chocolate chips mixed. No vegan... I used the caramel and choc mix. Really good. Use whatever you find or like.
I just noticed that the recipe says 3/4 c oats, but in the revised recipe she told me to use 3 c oats. Don't know if that was a typing error she made, but I used 3 c and it worked fine. I think only 3/4 c would be too little. Is this getting too confusing? Yes I agree, let me type up exactly what I did and then you can decide which one to follow.

Combine: 1 c butter + 1 1/2 c sugar
Add: 2 eggs + 1 t vanilla
Add: 1/2 t baking powder + 1 1/4 c flour + 1/2 t salt
Add: 3 c oats + 1 c choc chips + 1/2 banana

Then some extras which sister adds, but I didn't. Might try it next time.
-1 c raisins (might try this instead of choc chips for a less kj version)
-2 t cinnamon (I forgot to buy..)

For those of you not baking in the US: 350F = 190C
This recipe says bake for 25 min. In one email my sister said bake for 12 min and in another bake for 9-10 min so I guess it's really up to you!! I started with the 9-10 min then took it out. The next batch I tried for 25 min. Luckily I checked on them after about 15 min and I saved them just in time! I put the first batch back in again after food critic André said he liked the longer baked ones better. I agree.

Simóne says she freezes hers and eats them straight from the freezer. Oh and I forgot to mention, the rule is one biscuit as your sweet treat per day ONLY. I will try that. The freezer part, I can't promise anything about the one per day part. I can imagine it will make them nice and crunchy.

Hey I just noticed on this original recipe it says 1/3 c choc chips but on the revised one she sent me she said 1 c! I guess she decided there's no hope getting this sister into canola oil, soy milk and vegan chocolates. Might as well give her the full fat version. So if you're not bothered then go ahead and add those choc chips!!

I'm not sure if this really was what I know as vanilla essence. I'm used to it being a very dark colour and this didn't smell as good. I love the smell of vanilla essence. But it tasted good. I added one whole little bottle. It wasn't as much as the recipe said though.
Oh here are those caramel-choc chips I told you about!
These were some really good choc chips!
Mix it up!
Yummy cookies in the making
Go on try them, I know you'll like it!
By the way, they make a nice home made gift too!


Monday, July 6, 2009

Poached salmon

Tonight I cooked salmon for the very first time! And it turned out great :-) I never cook fish. Mainly because I don't know what to do with it. The only fish we ever eat is tuna from a can and the smoked salmon my mom brought us a few weekends ago which I loved!

When one of the dinners on my sister's healthy menu she set up for me said salmon I started thinking I should give it a try. Then last week André came home from work (and I always ask him what he had for lunch because they get the most delicious sounding lunches at work) and he told me about the salmon he had which was so good. One of his co-workers actually told him how they just cook it in some veggie stock. That didn't sound to hard.

So here's what I did tonight: I bought two salmon fillets in a weight watchers package because it looked like a good size, it looked clean and neat and not like a fish or a used-to-be fish. And an added bonus - it's from weight watchers so it should be even less fattening!

Once in the kitchen with the frying pan out, I started feeling a bit more creative. I got the veggie stock to a boil and then added chopped onion, garlic, red pepper and broccoli.

I let that simmer for a bit, then moved it to the sides of the pan and added the salmon. 6 min on one side then about another 3 min on the other side and it was done.

André wanted some oven baked fries so I had that going in the oven as well as a sweet potato which I wrapped in foil and baked for an hour. Delicious! I love sweet potato.

And here it is! (This is Andre's plate, his looked better with all those fries!)

Now I plan to do salmon once a week and try a different recipe each time.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Salmon & Avo salad

When my mom came to visit a few weekends ago she brought me some smoked salmon and also an Afrikaans magazine from South Africa, rooi rose. This recipe is from this magazine. I was again too hungry to think of taking a picture of my delicious salad but here is the picture from the magazine:

And here's what you need for this salad:

Avocado
Smoked salmon
1 tin Mandarin slices, drained. (I couldn't find this, then found it last week but I've finished the salmon..)
1 tin grapefruit slices, drained. (I used a fresh grapefruit.)
Chopped pistachio nuts
Fresh watercress

Arrange on serving plate.

For the dressing, mix:
20 ml (4t) orange juice
60 ml (1/4 c) olive oil
5 ml (1t) Dijon mustard
2.5 ml (1/2t) ground ginger
Grated rind of one orange
5 ml (1t) fresh thyme

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Warm Chicken Salad

For the past two weeks I've been eating a lot of salad. And I've been trying to be creative with it to keep it interesting. Most days by lunch time I was so hungry that I forgot to take a picture of each salad before eating it, but I remembered this one time!

You need some Thai red curry paste for this one. The recipe says to mix the chicken pieces and curry paste and refrigerate overnight. If you plan ahead and can do this, great, but I've made it many times by just mixing the paste and cooking the chicken straight away. This time though I did plan ahead! I planned so well, I planned for us to have chicken for dinner the night before so I could keep some of the chicken separate for my salad. But then had a change of plan the next day and had a salmon salad instead. So this time the chicken was WELL marinated for two days!

I didn't have lemon grass so just left that out. Same with the red onion and the mint. Also sadly didn't have the fish sauce this time so just made a little dressing with oil and lemon juice. But do try the fish sauce, it's delicious.

Oh and I don't heat the tomato and mint. So I cook the chicken and then just add it over a normal salad with whatever you like in it.

Try it!

WARM CHICKEN SALAD


500 g chicken breast

2 t Thai red curry paste

1 t chopped chilli

garlic

1 stem fresh lemon grass, white part only

1 red onion, chopped

2 tomatoes, cut into wedges

1/2 c chopped fresh mint

1/4 c chopped fresh coriander

400 g mixed salad leaves


Dressing:

1 1/2 T soft brown sugar

2 T fish sauce

2 T lime juice

2 t oil


  1. Cut chicken. Mix with curry paste, chilli, garlic and lemon grass. Refrigerate overnight.
  2. Spray pan. Cook chicken. Remove form pan. Cook onion. Return chicken and any juices and tomato, mint and coriander. Stir until heated and set aside.
  3. Dressing: Mix all ingredients.
  4. Toss all together.



Wednesday, June 10, 2009

PizzaPizzaPizza

I love pizza! I can eat pizza all the time! Especially home made pizza and I found this recipe for a thin pizza crust on another blog and thought I'll give it a try. The first time I tried it I thought it's not going to work... but it did and we made it again last night. I could have it again right now!!

So here's what you do. (It makes one pizza by the way.)
Combine:
120g flour
1/2 t instant yeast
1/2 t sugar
1/2 t salt

Stir in: 1/3 cup water (at room temperature). You might need to add some more water. Just at very little bits at a time.

It will be rough looking, not smooth and don't over mix.

In a small bowl poor 4 tsp olive oil.
Add the dough and turn to coat with oil.
Leave for 1 hour. It should double in size, but I don't think mine did...

Then remove the dough from the bowl and press it into a circle. Leave for 15 min. The first time I did this on some flour on the counter top and I had to scrape it off to get it on the oven pan. So last night I just pressed it straight onto the oven pan. Much easier and less to clean up afterwards.

After 15 min, press dough further into a circle. Cover with plastic (cling wrap) and leave 30-45 min.

Pre-heat oven: 220 C
Bake without toppings: 5 min.
Add toppings and bake another 5 min.

I almost forgot to take a picture of the finished pizza! Remembered just in time before we finished it all!

Enjoy!!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Mac & Cheese

I wasn't going to do a post about macaroni & cheese, but then I thought maybe like me, you also sometimes can't think what to make for dinner and we forget about these simple things like mac & cheese. I was reminded about this when someone posted on facebook that they're making this for dinner. So perhaps you're scrolling through blogs looking for ideas for dinner (like I do) and then I might just be able to help!

I don't know if it's common to add mince to this dish. I grew up with it only being macaroni and cheese sauce with some tomato. But we now add some mince too. Whenever I cook mince I usually make extra to freeze. To spice up the mince I add a can of tomatoes of course and then whatever I have in the fridge like mushrooms, green pepper, and sometimes carrots or zucchini or peas. Finely chopped of course except for the peas.. You can add some fresh tomatoes too and vegetable stock gives great flavour. (Try Ina Paarman vegetable stock if you're in SA.) And don't forget the herbs and red wine!

So you've cooked your pasta (I actually used penne instead of macaroni here), add your cooked mince and cheese sauce. Mix, grate some cheese over the top and bake.

I made this a while ago and I'm actually making it again tonight. We'll be home late so I'll be preparing the cheese sauce and pasta before we go out and the mince is ready anyway. When we get home all I'll need to do is stick it in the oven for about 25 min.


Sunday, June 7, 2009

Roast beef - another one by André

We haven't had red meat since arriving here in der Schweiz. That's almost 2 months ago now. Well, André has some good lunches at work so he probably has had some, but we haven't bought any. It's only been chicken and veg and lots of pizza and pasta.

So yesterday we went to Sihlcity, a shopping mall in Zurich and the COOP there is huge! At first I got excited about seeing such a big grocery store, but then it got a bit overwhelming. I'm not used to so many choices anymore! And it took a long time. But then shopping with André usually takes a long time and we end up buying lots more than what's
on the grocery list. So that's how we ended up buying this great piece of meat. Sorry to the vegetarians.. We don't eat meat often but once in a while a good piece of meat is sooo good!

Doing a roast is not my specialty so I'm not even going to go into details about what Andre did. I enjoy cooking and I actually want to be busy doing something. Making a roast you just put the meat in the oven and wait. Ok, with some spices etc, but still, there's not much going on.

But it was oh so good! I'm already looking forward to having the left overs for lunch!


Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Andre's invention

When we came back from our weekend away at Engelberg André volunteered to cook dinner. I was his assistant. We had some potatoes that needed to be eaten and quite a variety of veggies in the fridge. So André put it all together and made us a delicious meal. He's quite good at cooking and his food is always delicious :-) Here's what he did:

He fried an onion and some garlic (always onion and garlic!) then added one chopped chicken breast. When the chicken was cooked he added some zucchini, chilli and mushrooms. I boiled the peeled potatoes. Made a mushroom sauce using half a packet of mushroom soup powder, mixed with milk and white wine. Poured this over the ingredients in the pan. It got quite thick so we added some water to get the right consistency. André is quite particular about how thick a sauce should be...


When the ingredients in the pan had done enough bubbling in the sauce, André arranged the sliced potatoes in the bottom of an oven dish.

Poured the veggie-chicken-mushroom sauce over the potatoes and arranged the rest of the potatoes over the top.

He added some salami and grated cheese.

In the oven until the cheese starts turning golden brown.

Mmmm... a good invention! I just had the left overs for lunch!