Tuesday, 16 November 2010

Homemade honey and walnut granola with Activia pouring yogurt

I've had a really busy few weeks with not much time to cook any real food, I've been grabbing bits and pieces here an there as I and when I can. I'm sure you know the feeling.

Well, In my current state of having no time to do anything I was extremely happy to be sent some of Activia's new pouring yogurt to try, they even sent me a recipe for some delicious homemade granola to go with it.Pouring yogurt is a relatively new concept in the UK, I think I've seen it once before but it disappeared from the shelves pretty quickly. The taste is as good as the best yogurt you can buy, it's smooth and creamy and has that yogurty tang that I love. What makes this yogurt special is that it has a thinner consistency which makes it perfect for pouring over you breakfast cereal or it would be great for making smoothies or pouring over summer fruits for a snack.

The new Activia yogurt comes in three flavours, plain, vanilla and strawberry all of which are really tasty. My personal favourite is the plain, it sounds boring but what I really like about it is that it's so versatile, I can add all manner of lovely things like nuts fruit or honey.The granola recipe they sent me used maple syrup which I didn't have so I modified it to use honey instead, I also added some walnuts and seeds. Even if you can't get the yogurt you should definitely try this, it takes 5 minutes to put together, tastes great and makes a perfect breakfast. I've been eating mine with pouring yogurt and honey...

Homemade honey, walnut and seeds granola

Ingredients:
  • 200ml honey
  • 45g butter
  • 300g rolled oats (not the quick cook kind)
  • 1/2 tsp sea salt
  • 75g each of walnut peices, sunflower seeds and pumpkin seeds (or use whatever nuts and seeds you like)
  • 1 or 2 handfuls of sultanas or raisins
Method:
  • Preheat your oven to gas mark 4 and line a large baking tray with baking parchment.
  • In a small pan melt the butter and the honey together, meanwhile in a large bowl mix the oats, salt and nuts and seeds.
  • Once the butter and honey mixture has melted pour it into the bowl with the oats and mix everything well.
  • Pour the mix out onto the baking tray and bake for 15-20 minutes until golden brown. You may need to turn the mixture once or twice during cooking to ensure it cooks evenly.
  • Once cooked leave to cool then mix in the sultanas.
  • Store in an airtight container and enjoy!

Tuesday, 2 November 2010

Lamb tagine with apricots and chickpeas

I always struggle to answer when people ask me what my favourite food is, there are just so many delicious things out there that I couldn't possibly narrow it down to one. If I had to pick my top ten I think I could just about do it, although even then my list would probably have changed by the next week. There are a few things I just couldn't be without and they would definitely be on the list, pasta, cake, bread and tagine.Tagine is probably Morocco's best known dish and most famous export, it is a combination of meat (usually lamb but sometimes chicken), fruit, sweet spices, hot spices and often aromatic flavours like rose petals. I can't remember exactly when I first tried tagine but I do vividly remember how the melt in the mouth tender meat, sweet and spicy flavour and the amazing smell simply blew me away, it was as they say love at first bite and I've been hooked ever since.If you're going to make tagine yourself it well worth trying to get hold of a spice blend called ras-el-hanout (I really like this one). Ras-el-hanout roughly translates as top of the shop, so called because the spice sellers in the souks of Morocco blend their very best spices to make it. There are no rules as to what goes in to ras-el-hanout, it can contain up to and over twenty ingredients but there is almost always cinnamon, cumin, coriander, and chili, the blend I'm using contains all manner of good things including rose petals, lavender, cloves and ginger, it smells amazing!

This is my recipe for tagine, it is highly adaptable and I change it depending on what I have in the cupboard, you could add black olives, preserved lemon and you just have to have some kind of dried fruit, I really like dried apricots in this but prunes are delicious too.
Lamb Tagine (Serves 4)
Ingredients:
  • Olive oil
  • 2-3 medium onions roughly chopped
  • 4 cloves of garlic peeled and crushed to a paste
  • 3 tsp Ras-el-hanout or 1 tsp each of ground cinnamon, cumin and coriander
  • 1 small red chilli chopped (add more or less depending on how hot you want it)
  • 1 tin (400g) of chickpeas drained
  • 1 pint of stock (any kind)
  • 1 tin (400g) of chopped tomatoes
  • Half a shoulder of lamb on the bone
  • 3 medium carrots peeled and chopped into large chunks (you could use squash or sweet potato)
  • A good handful of dried apricots
  • Salt and pepper
  • A large handful of chopped fresh coriander
Method:
  • In a large pan over a gentle heat soften the onions in a little olive oil.
  • Add the garlic, chilli and spices to the pan and cook for a minute more.
  • Add the chickpeas, stock and tomatoes, mix well and bring to a simmer.
  • Add the lamb, carrots and apricots, season to taste and put in a low oven for 3-4 hours until the lamb falls off the bone.
  • Stir in the coriander just before serving and serve with cous cous or flatbread.