Sunday 12 October 2014

Bhuna Gosht ('Bhuna' Lamb or Beef Curry)

Unlike many curries, this one isn't surrounded by lakes of sauce, rather a great aromatic, thick and punchy sauce. The recipe works great with beef or lamb, and I often like to use a beef off the bone, and lamb bones to enhance the flavour. Serves 4-6, and serve with chapatis or rice, and an onion relish of tomatoes, cucumber, onion, mint and coriander with a squeeze of lemon.

 Ingredients

Spice Mix
2tsp Whole Cumin Seeds
4tsp Whole Coriander Seeds
2tsp Whole Mustard Seeds
4 Whole, Dried Chillies
1tsp whole Caraway Seeds
2tsp Whole Fenugreek Seeds

Curry Ingredients
5tbsp Corn or Peanut Oil
140g Shallots, peeled and very finely chopped
4cm Fresh Ginger, peeled and very finely chopped
5-6 Cloves Garlic, peeled and very finely chopped
13 Curry Leaves, fresh if possible
2 Medium Tomatoes
900g Boneless Lamb or Stewing Beef, cut into 3cm pieces
1.5kg Lamb bones (just ask at the butcher; I often get them with a bit of meat on them) - optional
1.5tsp Salt

Method
1. Place a medium frying pan or skillet on a medium-high heat. When hot, add the spice mix, and stir on the heat until lightly browned and toasted. 

2. Using a mortar and pestle or a spice grinder, grind the spices to a powder, and set aside.

3. Before you start the curry, score an 'x' in the bottom of the tomatoes, and place in boiling water for about 30 seconds, and then remove, peel and chop.

4. Pour the oil into quite a large saucepan with a lid, and set over medium-high heat. Once heated, add the shallots, ginger and garlic and fry, stirring as you go along, for about 5 minutes or until the mix goes golden-brown. Add the curry leaves and tomatoes and cook on a lower heat until the tomatoes are reduced to a paste, stirring to make sure nothing sticks.

5. Stir in the spice mix, and cook for another minute before adding the meat, bones and salt, and cook on a medium-high heat to sear the meat. Add 250ml water, and bring to the boil, then turn down to a low heat to simmer. Cover the pan and cook for about 1.5 hours, or until the meat is tender (Lamb might take 1 hour 20 minutes, depending on preference).

6. Remove the lid, increase the heat to high, and stir continuously to reduce the sauce until the point where it's thick and clings to the meat. 

Enjoy :)


Friday 3 October 2014

Lemon Meringue Pie Cupcakes

A nice twist on a classic dessert; these zesty cupcakes should blow your taste buds away. It's comprised of lemon cupcake, lemon curd, swiss meringue and a little biscuit. If you're lucky enough to have a blowtorch, then you can use it to finish the cupcakes, otherwise they will need to go under the grill. Makes 12 Cupcakes or 24 mini cupcakes.

 Ingredients

For the Lemon Cupcakes
100g Butter, Softened
200g Caster Sugar
4 tsp Lemon Zest
2 Eggs, Beaten and at Room Temperature
225g Self-Raising Flour
125ml Milk

For the Biscuits
112g Plain Flour
55g Butter, Cubed
40g Sugar
1/2 a Large Egg, Beaten
2 tsp Lemon Zest

For the Swiss Meringue
2 Egg Whites
125g Caster Sugar

Lemon Curd, Store-bought or homemade

Method
1.Start with the biscuits. Heat the oven to 180C/160C fan/350F, and line a baking tray. Place the flour, butter and sugar into a mixing bowl, and rub the butter in with your fingertips until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.

2. Mix in the lemon zest and the egg to form a dough, and wrap in clingfilm and chill for 20 minutes. After chilling, roll dough on a floured surface to about 1cm thickness, and using small cookie cutters or a knife (depending on the size of cupcakes you're making), cut out the biscuits, and place on the baking tray. 

3. Place the baking tray in the fridge for about 10 minutes to ensure the biscuits hold their shape, and then place in the oven for about 15 minutes, or until lightly browned. Take out and cool on a wire rack, and keep the oven on.

4. For the cakes; grease/line cupcake trays, and cream the butter, sugar and lemon zest together in a freestanding or hand mixer until cream in colour, and then gradually add the beaten egg, mixing well after each addition, being careful not to add too much to make the mix curdle. 

5. Sieve 1/4 of the flour into the mix, and fold in with a large spoon. Add in 1/4 of the milk and do the same. Alternate between folding in flour and milk until finished, and then divide between cupcake holes. Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean (beware - they are lighter than normal cupcakes, so be careful not to overbake). Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

6. In each of the cupcakes, cut a small cylinder out of the centre with a sharp knife, and cut of some of the bottom of the cylinder you have just cut out, to form almost a lid for the hole. Fill a piping bag with lemon curd, and using a fine nozzle, or a cut a small hole, and pipe the lemon curd into the cupcakes and cover with the 'lids'. 

7. For the meringue, set up a bain-marie by putting water in a saucepan, and keeping it at a temperature where it's not bubbling on the surface at all, but steaming. Place the egg whites and sugar in a plastic bowl, and place on top of the pan. Using an electric hand mixer, whisk, making sure to touch the bottom of the bowl. Once you start to see pretty defined waves created by the mixer, mix for about 2-3 minutes more, where you should have a pretty thick consistency that holds a peak. Take the bowl off the saucepan and leave to cool.

8. Using a piping bag with a star nozzle, or even a round one, pipe the meringue onto the cupcakes in any design you want. If you have a blowtorch, heat around the top of the cupcakes until browned as much as you want, otherwise place the cupcakes under the grill, keeping an eye on how brown they are getting. Once done, place a biscuit on top.

Enjoy :)