Netherton Foundry Shropshire

Netherton Foundry Shropshire
Classic cookware, made in England

Tuesday, 22 March 2022

An inauthentic Asian style dinner

Cultural appropriation is quite the hot potato these days and we are making no claims whatsover about this recipe, but we will thank all the writers and compilers of Asian recipes for their inspiration.

This is not claiming to be anything other than a jumble of some of our favourite flavours.


Serves 2

Marinade

15ml soy sauce
15ml sesame oil
3 tsp brown sugar
15ml rice wine (or dry sherry)
2 fat cloves of garlic, crushed
2cm ginger, grated

150g tofu

125g pak choi
40g spring onions
50g mushrooms - Shiitake for preference

200g ramen noodles

Mix together all the marinade ingredients, ensure the sugar dissolves.
Cut the tofu into 2cm cubes and add to the marinade.  Stir to coat each cube.
Leave aside for a couple of hours to let the tofu soak up those flavours.  In warm weather pop the dish in the fridge.

Warm a wok on a medium heat.  I used one of our prospector woks, so I could serve straight to the table and save on washing up!
Then add 2 tablespoons rapeseed or sunflower oil.

When the oil is hot, add the tofu and marinade andd cook for 5 minutes.
Throw  in the vegetable and cook for a further 2 minutes.
Stir in the noodles nad cook just long enough to heat them thoroughly.

Take the wok to the table and tuck in.

Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2022 ©
www.netherton-foundry.co.uk



Friday, 11 February 2022

Carrot and feta fritters

 Not much to say about these other than they are easy, quick and delicious.


First make a batter:
1tsp nigella seeds (kalonji)
20g Hodemedods pea flour
80g gram (chickpea flour)
If you haven't got pea flour, just use 100g chickpea flour
1tsp salt
150ml cocnut milk
50ml water
1tsp paprika 

Whisk all of these together and leave to stand for 30 minutes.
Then add 
90g coarsely grated carrot
100g crumbled feta (use tofu if you want a vegan version)
70g sweetcorn

Mix thoroughly.

Heat 2 tblsp of rapeseed oil over a medium heat in a frying pan - I used my biggest, but you can do this in batches, keeping the cooked ones warm as you finish of the rest.
Drop tablespoons of the batter into the hot oil and cook for 2 - 3 minutes on each side until crisp and golden.



We ate these with potatoes and peas in a spicy tomato sauce, with yogurt, flecked with chopped parsley and spiky with lemon zest.

Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2022 ©

Thursday, 20 January 2022

Fit for a Queen

We were inspired to make this by the Fortnum and Mason Platinum Pudding competition, in recognition of Queen Elizabeth's 70 year reign and the Jubilee celebrations planned throughout 2022.

Taking the quintessentially English Queen of Puddings, and, in recognition of Her Majesty's German roots, marrying it with the classic flavours of a Black Forest gateau, we have created what we think is a pudding fit for a Queen.



60g butter
50g sugar
100ml double (heavy) cream
400ml full fat milk
50g dark chocolate
125g fresh breadcrumbs
2 eggs, separated
50g sugar
3 tblsp good cherry jam.

Heat the oven to 180ºC
Place the cream, milk and chocolate in a saucepan. As befits a recipe for a queen, I used a pan fit for a palace kitchen 

Heat gently, stirring regularly until the chocolate has melted.

In a mixing bowl, beat the butter and sugar together until well blended and then stir in the breadcrumbs. It is well worth saving up bags of breadcrumbs in the freezer, rather than sacrificing a fresh loaf.
Stir in the chocolate milk and then beat in the egg yolks.
Pour the mixture into a greased 1lb loaf tin.
And yes, I used our "Sunday best" tin, but our standard iron tin would work just as well.

Leave to stand while the oven heats up to 180ºC
Then slip the tin into the oven and cook for 40 minutes, until the custardy filling is just set.


Remove the tin from the oven and set aside to cool.  Turn the oven down to 120ºC
While the custard cools, add 1 tablespoon of the remaining sugar to the egg whites and whisk until they form stiff peaks, then add the remainder of the sugar and contiune beating until they take on the lustre of a princess's pearl necklace.
Once the chocoalte custard base is cool, spread the top carefully with the jam and then top with the meringue.

  

Put the tin back in the oven for around 25 minutes, until a light golden brown.
Serve warm, rather than piping hot!


Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2022 ©

Thursday, 9 December 2021

A surfeit of dates

 It's that time of year, isn't it? When we buy dates, nuts, satsumas and Quality Street, regardless of whether anyone in the house likes them or not.

At least one person in the Netherton household will eat and enjoy at least one of the above, so none of it goes to waste.

That being said, we find ourselves with a surfeit of dates (don't ask!).

Inevitably there has been a sticky toffee pudding, with a generous studding of dates, there have been dates stuffed with marzipan to enjoy with coffee, dates stuffed with ricotta, orange zest and thyme, aubergine with saffron, black cardamom and date butter from Diana Henry's From The Oven To The Table




But then I was reading about treacle tarts - if you slip down that rabbit hole on Google you could be lost for days - and an idea took shape.
Treacle tart with dates and nuts.




Start with a basic shortcrust pastry using 110g plain flour to 55g fat (I used butter) with the zest of an orange and water to bind.
Roll out the pastry and line a greased 8½" cake tin (pictured) for a deep pie or a 10" pie dish
Chill the pie case while you make the filling.

100g dates, chopped and soaked for an hour in the juice of the orange you zested for the pastry (waste not, want not)
50g chopped nuts
45g black treacle
120g golden syrup
40g butter
50g double (heavy) cream
2 eggs, lightly beaten

Set the oven to 170ºC 

Place the treacle, syrup and butter in a saucepan - I am lucky, I get to use one of our copper milkpans and warm over a gentle heat until the butter melts.
Stir in all the other ingredients.
Blind bake the pastry case for 15 minutes, then pour in the treacle mixture nad return the tart to the oven.
bake for a further 30 minutes.

Allow to cool before serving with clotted cream or custard.

Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2021 ©
www.netherton-foundry.co.uk


Friday, 20 August 2021

Spicy, sticky pork

Cooked long and slow over a charcoal fire, this pork is absolutely delicious served with a crunchy slaw and a cold cider.

This was cooked in our outdoor hob slow cooker, which combines a charcoal barbeque; ideal for those places where an open fire is not permitted and way, way better than a disposable barbeque, for reasons many and varied, with one of our deep casseroles, so that you can stew, roast and bake on the barbie too. And of course, the casserole is handy indoors too, for those of us who are fair weather barbeque fans.

We have been sent some fabulous BBQ rubs by our friends at Cut to the Smoke and a sunny day seemed like the ideal opportunity to try them out.

1.5 - 2kg pork shoulder
1 heaped dessertspoon espresso and ancho chilli rub
100g marmalade - for sweetness and stickiness
150 ml orange juice
2 large potatoes, cubed (optional)


Mix the marmalade, spice rub and orange juice and rub liberally into the pork.
Leave to marinade for at least an hour.

Place the potatoes, if using in the base of the casserole bowl and sit the pork on top.
Pour over the marinade and put the lid on.

Cook over the outdoor hob for 4 - 5 hours.  


I guess this would work in a Big Green Egg too, but I am no expert, so cannot tell you how long!
Alternatively cook in the oven at 170ºC for about 2 hours.

We accompanied this with a slaw of red and white cabbage, fresh oranges, salted peanuts and red pepper, with an orange and mustard dressing.



Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2021 ©

www.netherton-foundry.co.uk

Tuesday, 20 July 2021

HERB, by Mark Diacono

 A book review


Whilst I have never been a smoker, I can understand instinctively the reference to the importance of a cigarette paper on page 64, describing the hair's breadth separation between oregano and marjoram.  Reminscences about rollups in bus shelters rarely figure in food writing.  

This is a book, not about bad habits and memories, dried leaves and paper, but about herbs, vibrant, verdant, fresh and yes, dried. It is about their place in the garden, the window box, the back step or the window sill and their role in the kitchen; but it is so much more.  Mark's writing is sublime, this book ranks as a good read whether or not you are a gardener or a cook.  Anything we write about it will pale in comparison, but try we must!

I wrote this review, sitting on a hotel terrace, surrounded by four strategically placed bay trees.  It was earlier this summer in Scotland, so although there was sun, the heat was far from Mediterranean, unlike now, but the waft of lavender and the persistent buzz of the bees echo the opening lines of HERB; "I'm sitting within an incomplete ring of pots, each full of herbs, their flowers alive with pollinators, the sun flashing bright as I scribe".


As a gardener and cook, as well as a writer, Mark is well qualified to take you from plot, or pot, to plate and whilst it may amount to less than a single page, to my mind one of the most useful entries in the book is the section on "Choosing what to grow".  With an ever increasing range of fresh and dried herbs available in the supermarket and farm shop, even in rural Shropshire, the frankly mind numbing selection of plants on specialist websites* and limited growing space at home, advice and guidance on the best options to maximise herbal gratification and minimise horticultural disaaster are more than welcome.

"if you were expecting to see lemon balm: NO"

Once these fundamental decisions have been made, Mark guides the reader through two distinct sets of herb skills; firstly describing garden skills, such as sowing from seed and propagation, through to picking the end result.

And then, logically enough, into the kitchen; there are more ways to chop and store your herbs than you have hitherto considered, I'll wager.

Moving on, the excitement grows - sorry about the pun, with a comprehensive directory of herbs to grow and eat.  More than a simple list, each description paints a picture, effervesces with enthusiasm and quite frankly, is less than helpful in restricting your choice - I want them all.

"Anise hyssop (ours is just coming into flower) looks like the offspring of a one night stand mint had with a nettle". Sadly there is no back story about how mint and nettle got it on, but it was an intriguing enough introduction to make me read on.

By now, you should have your herb patch planned out and you can step into the recipe section. 

Disclaimer: this review is in no way coloured by the appearance of Mark's Netherton pan in some of these recipes, page 155 for example😊

Green is now my favourite colour, leaping out of every shot, as refreshing as a cold beer on a hot summer evening.

Among our favourites, and it is very hard to choose, is the dill, lemon and green bean pilaf.  The description of it being "crazily moreish", is if anything, an understatement.  The only way I can justify my greedy approach to this dish is to convince myself that is is good for me!.

There is so much to love about this book, but the love does not reside solely between the covers.

Mark is "offering HERB at four prices. We want to ensure that those who might benefit most from the book are able to get their hands on it, so you can pay whichever suits you." 

If you have wanted more from your herbs than a parsley garnish, then anything you spend on this book, will be a true investment.

* is "herbporn" a thing?


Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2021 ©

www.netherton-foundry.co.uk

Friday, 9 July 2021

The Tramshed Project

 There were, still are, many down sides to the pandemic; from the serious to the trivial.

But as with all clouds there have been silver linings.  The upsides may not have outweighed, or come even close to the down sides, but it would be wrong not to celebrate them.

 Deliveroo has just announced an increase in sales of 99%+ over the last year, highlighting the rise in takeaways and eating in necessitated by the closure of pubs, cafes and restaurants during lockdown.

But the whole notion of takeaways got a makeover last year, as innovative and embattled chefs and restaurateurs looked at ways of surviving the crisis.

Sure, Deliveroo kept delivering kebabs, pizza fried chicken, but the new kids on the block were gastro pubs and high end restaurants, offering a range of Dine at Home options to fill the space of eating out in style.

For those of us who live beyond the M25 this has been an even bigger benefit, as we can now get to try “London food” without a bank account emptying train trip.  And by London food, we are not being entirely capital centric, we are talking about a range of top flight restaurants suddenly becoming more accessible.

These offers are never going to replace the restaurant experience, with waiter service, posh glasses, fancy cutlery and most importantly of all, someone else to do the washing up, but they are a welcome addition to the choice of dining experiences and as rural dwellers, we hope they remain a viable option.

At least some of you, I am sure, will have seen our interview with Andrew Clarke, latterly of St Leonards and now working with the team at the Tramshed in London.



If so you will have heard how he is a great pan of his Netherton pans - you can see him proudly photographing his collectionn.
And you might also have noticed us mention the treat that he sent to us.  I hope that the following description tempts you give the Tramshed Project at Home a try too.  This may have been a gift, but we have been back since and paid our way.


Starter
Burrata with blood orange and salsa macha

Burrata is, to my mind, a challenge.  Silky, rich, indulgent, yes, but it can be a bit of a dairy mugging.  The blood arange tamed it considerably, reining in its excess and highlighting its indulgent creaminess.  Salsa macha was a first for us - to be honest, I had to look it up!.  This will not be the last time, however.  A definite winner.

Main
Butternut schnitzel, heritage carrots and cauliflower cream, pink fir potatoes.




The squash has been lightly steamed and then coated in breadcrumbs, oats and seeds to create a vegan take on a classic Schnitzel.  All we had to do was brush it oil and bake in the oven.
It may not sound much, in and of itself, but add in the seasonal greens with butter, (the schnitzel may have been vegan, but we are not), pumpkin miso sauce and a grnish of blood orange, redcurrants, pickeld shallots and capers and woohoo, the whole thing is elevated to a new level.  In our expereince the butternut has newer been bettered!


A side order of heritage carrots was served with cauliflower cream and sprinkled liberally with dukkah and pistachio, with a carb hit of Pink Fir potatoes to complete the meal.
To say that this was generous was an understatement - there was enough for 4 of us, not 2.

Dessert
Salted caramel tart

There may well have been enough of our mains to share, but there was no way this was going anywhere other than down my throat - absolute bliss.

Restaurants have had a hard time of it over the last 15 months and opening up is still presenting them with challenges nad struggles that we mainly do not see.

Please do what you can to support them, so that when all of this is over, they will still be there to feed us.

Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2021 ©

www.netherton-foundry.co.uk