Netherton Foundry Shropshire

Netherton Foundry Shropshire
Classic cookware, made in England
Showing posts with label prospector pan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prospector pan. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 March 2020

SY23 - a restaurant in Aberystwyth

It was quite a journey to get there, even more of a journey home through sleet, hail and snow, across the Welsh hills to avoid the floods in the valleys below.
But it was well worth it to be the first to talk about SY23; named after Aberystwyth's post code and home of Nathan Davies' new restaurant, which opened just over 2 months ago.







And whilst I refuse to use the word journey in anything other than a travelling context, this has been quite an experience for Nathan too.  After 4 years of working at the acclaimed, Michelin starred restaurant Ynyshir, under the tour de force that is Gareth Ward and surviving the razor sharp scrutiny of Grace Dent, he has moved down the road and stepped up to the challenge of running his own place.

A big jump into a small place, but a place that can genuinely be described as having Nathan's DNA all over it.
SY23 is small, but, as the saying goes, perfectly formed; a cosy downstairs bar, the dark blue paint creating an intimate atmosphere, redolent of a prohibition speakeasy, but with the class and styling of velvet chairs, highly polished, dark wood tables and fresh flowers, leads out to a twisting staircase, illuminated by the sexiest of chandeliers to a dining space made by Nathan, with a little help from his friends.
And when I say "made", I do mean "made", not feng shui'd from purchased parts!
As Nathan himself said, "lots of people open restaurants, I built mine".

Take a closer look at the open cooking area, everything is on view, where you can see your meal being cooked.  All of that open fire set up was made, from scratch, by Nathan; in his words, he is better than the average welder.



Two of the tabletops have been converted by one of his friends, from the seasoned wood of a fallen oak, the hollow centre artfully filled with resin.  As ever, it's not what you know, but who you know; in this case it happens to be Steve McFall, aka Bespoke Mcbloke. These fabulous pieces of timber are supported on metal legs made by, guess who, yes, that man Nathan.  The rest of the tables are made from reclaimed wood atop Nathan's legs, so to speak, and will eventually be replaced by more bespoke tops.



Look even closer at that open cooking area and last week you would have seen that he is running a restaurant, with 24 covers, with only 2 frying pans and had you looked closer you would have seen that they are both  Netherton Foundry frying pans.  His stock has now increased by 50% with the addition of one of our prospector pans!  Just goes to show that it's all about having just the right amount of exactly the right kit.



The money saved by making his own fire pit and tables meant that he was able to buy seriously comfy chairs.  That may sound like a no-brainer, but how often have you fidgetted through dinner on a hard chair or read Jay Rayner or his readers complaining about the seating and how it detracted from the food? 
Seats are important, this is what Mr Rayner he wrote in one review, where thankfully his nether regions were as well catered for as his stomach.  

"The seats are comfortable. Going from some of the comments online on these reviews, that is a matter of serious concern to a certain portion of the readership."

And this is all part of the restaurant's core ethos - to give people a good night out.  Truly great wines are offered at accessible prices; this is by no means a cheap restaurant, but it does offer true value for the money you pay.  At the time of writing the set menu of seven perfectly judged courses  is priced at £48.  Don't write to us, shout at the restaurant or whine on review sites and social media if that's not the price when you visit.  



The menu has been conceived to give you a great dinner, with the price reflecting the quality of the ingredients and the cooking.  
The wines have been priced competitively, so that your drinks bill doesn't leave a nasty taste in your mouth.

And let's talk about the food.
Over the course of an entertaining conversation, we learned that the only thing Nathan doesn't enjoy is raw oysters; it used to be all raw fish, but he is coming round to some of it, just not the oysters - cook them first!  
But fish has paid a large part in his life, with fond memories of a teenage life lived on the coast, with access to a small boat and fishing lines, he spent many an hour out on the water bringing home a catch.  And now he buys his fish direct from the boats.  If they haven't got what he'd planned to cook, he will change the menu, rather than buy elsewhere.

He can still recall, I don't know why I say still, he's not that old even now, the first meal he cooked.  As a teenager he served his family fresh tomato soup with pesto, a boiled ham with vegetables and a chocolate tart, recipe from Jamie Oliver's Naked Chef, which despite his conviction of having followed the recipe exactly, didn't set.    
As an aside, Jamie Oliver was "discovered" when working at the River Cafe in London and it is rumoured that no-one has ever managed to make their Chocolate Nemesis recipe successfully - perhaps there is a link.

Nathan is trying to source all the ingredients as locally as possible; he makes bread from wheat grown and milled down the road, has a number of local, organic fruit and veg suppliers, is working on dairy supplies, Wales is better known for its sheep than its cows, and relationships are being forged with local farmers and butchers for high quality meat.
Then, of course, there is the abundance of food to be foraged from forest, field and hedgerow.  Birch trees are tapped for birch water, which will be simmered down to create birch syrup; a complex, rich almost curranty taste, which we got to sample neat. Soon the wild garlic will be harvested and pickled, fermented and added to oil.  It will be a full year of seasons and harvests before Nathan has accumulated the larder filled with the jars that he wants to enhance his dishes.  These are not things you can ring up the wholesaler and order on a next day delivery.  Time is the key ingredient here.

The menus are changed every two weeks and are not advertised on line.  It is a set menu, although with advance notice, they can take dietary restrictions into account.  Learning from Gareth, and confident in his ability to create delicious food, Nathan presents a succession of dishes designed to fit together like a jigsaw, so that when the last piece is finally in place, there is a feeling of satisfaction.  If you start tinkering withe the pieces, the picture is going to be skewed. 

If you got to SY23, and we think you should, let us know what you think.  If you send us a review, we may even publish it!


Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2020 ©





Tuesday, 14 January 2020

Lime and ginger chicken

The Netherton freezer is accumulating pack ice faster than the Arctic is losing it and is in serious need of a de-frost.  We have been waiting for a cold spell, so we can store the contents outside the back door while the freezer sheds more tears than a love struck teenager.
But that seems unlikely, so we are eating our way through the contents.
This can lead to surprises, when unlabelled packages are unearthed and "oh I'd forgotten all about that" boxes resurface.

The latest plundering gave us a pack of chicken thighs and drumsticks, which were enlivened with one of our favourite cocktail combinations  - ginger and lime....... a Dark and Stormy, anyone?
Check out our recipe for lime and ginger in cake form too 



1 kg chicken pieces
2 tblsp lime marmalade
1 tblsp soy sauce
2½cm root ginger, peeled and grated
1 tsp crushed fennel seed
Salt and pepper

Mix all of the marinade ingredients and place in a dish.  Add the chicken pieces and ensure they are all well coated.  Leave to marinade for about an hour, turning from time to time.
Heat the oven to 190ºC.

Tip the chicken and the marinade into a prospector pan ( I used a 10" one) and place in the oven.

Cook for 30 minutes, checking to ensure that the juices run clear.
Serve with rice, to soak up all the lovely sauce and a forest of greens.

Netherton Foundry Shropshire © 2020


Monday, 2 September 2019

Plum cake

I promised you plum cake and here it is.
No, not the plum pudding of Victorian novels and Christmas past, but a light sponge, studded with pistachios and topped with yellow mirabelles, foraged from a Shropshire hedgerow, as a counterbalance to the sweet cake.


125g butter
125g sugar
2 eggs
1 tblsp plum jam - last year's egg plum jam here!
1 tblsp Greek or natural yogurt
50g shelled pistachios
350 g stewed, sweetened plums - add sugar to suit your own palate.


Gently poach 350g plums and sweeten to taste (Don't overdo it, the tart contrast with the sweet cake is a joy).



Pre-heat the oven to 170ºC and lightly grease a 10" prospector pan.
Cream 125g butter with 125g sugar until light and fluffy.
Beat in 2 eggs and then stir in 1 tablespoon of Greek yogurt and another one of plum jam (we used some of the jam from last year's plum harvest), with 50g of chopped pistachios.
Fold in 125g self raising flour.
Spoon the mixture into the prospector pans and level off with a knife. Spread the cooked plums over the top of the mixture and place into the oven.
Cook for 25-30 minutes, until it passes the skewer test.



Serve warm with cream or yogurt.


Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2019 ©

Friday, 3 May 2019

Sunshine on a cloudy day

I've got sunshine on a cloudy day
When it's cold outside, I've got  

........... the sunshine colours of squash, red pepper and sweetcorn, with the warmth of some La Rossa spice blend from Mr Wolf's Spices

1 tblsp rapeseed oil
2 tsp La Rossa spice blend
4 chicken thighs
320g squash or sweet potato
1 red pepper
150g sweetcorn, fresh, tinned or frozen

Mix the oil and spice together and massage into the chicken thighs.
Peel and de-seed the squash and cut into hearty chunks. Cut the pepper into similar sized pieces.
Throw the chunks and the sweetcorn decorously into a 10" prospector pan and sit the chicken thighs on top.
Place in a pre-heated oven at 180ºC for 25 minutes.
Serve with green salad on the side and bread for mopping up the juices.



Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2019 ©




Sunday, 21 October 2018

Mushroom and goat's cheese risotto

Funny stuff, fungus; not an animal, nor a vegetable, almost other worldly, alien.
And a bundle of contradictions too, the prettiest are often poisonous, such as fly agaric,  whilst the ugly or unprepossessing are delicious, bordering, in some cases, on divine - think ugly shaggy ink caps and unprepossessing truffle, neither would win prizes for their looks.
They are also very much of the moment, a true reckoning of the changing seasons, brought to life by the damp of early autumn, as seasonal as pumpkins and quince.  There are wood blewits to be found in the Wyre Forest, well worth a detour on the way home and a bank of shaggy ink caps just outside the workshops, their briefest of peaks to be watched for between shy emergence and ebony liquefaction. Fascinating fungus indeed.
Instagram has been full of envy evoking baskets of foraged ceps and chanterelles this year.  Sadly we have found neither and have had to resort to handing over our hard earned cash for a little mushroom magic.
Fortunately a small amount of mushrooms can be transformed into a delicious dinner and this is what I did with our humble haul from the farm shop.




For 2 of us
130g Arborio rice
Approx 300ml of chicken or vegetable stock
1 onion, finely chopped
80g butter
4 - 5 sprigs of tarragon
Grated rind of 2 lemons
Juice of 1 lemon
75g soft goat's cheese
A handful of wild mushrooms (use chestnut mushrooms if there is nothing more exotic available)

Keep the stock simmering (not boiling fiercely) in a saucepan
Melt 50g of the butter in a frying pan or prospector pan  over a low heat.
Add the onion and cook gently until translucent.  Add the rice and cook until it turns white and opaque.  
Gradually add the stock, one ladle full at a time, stirring all the time.  
When almost all the stock has been added, stir in the chopped tarragon, lemon rind and goat's cheese.  
Adjust the seasoning to taste. 
Stir in the final stock and then cover with a lid and set aside while you cook the mushrooms.
Heat the remaining butter in a frying pan and when it foams, throw in the mushrooms.  
Cook until the mushrooms are golden and there is no liquid in the pan. Season with white pepper and add the lemon juice.
Place the mushrooms on top of the risotto and serve immediately, ideally with a glass of chilled white wine.


www.netherton-foundry.co.uk
Netherton Foundry Shropshire © 2018




Sunday, 8 April 2018

In and out of the kitchen

It has been a week of dipping in and out of the kitchen, with no time for leisurely cooking and experimentation.  To be honest, it's been one of those weeks when I seem to have been constantly busy, with no evidence of what I have achieved.  I have had innumerable forms to fill in for all sorts of bureaucratic reasons; quarter end figures to pull together for the tax man; the last of the washing and shopping for our two student offspring to take back to university at the end of their all too brief Easter holiday and a fair bit of pan assembly and packing as we have been short handed in the workshops.  We operate a policy of never asking someone to do a job we would not be prepared to do ourselves, so when necessary, I will roll up my sleeves, don my Netherton apron and start oiling pans, waxing handles, screwing on lid knobs and wrapping, boxing and labelling orders.

Whilst the order book is still never quite as full as we would like it to be, things are picking up, thanks, in part, to you lot, who help us spread the word.  And we have been talking to two exciting restaurants in London - more of which soon, I hope.
But I still need to be selling, selling, selling; finding potential new stockists and the time to talk to our existing stockists.  We know we need to grow to survive, but we do not want to turn into some sort of anonymous corporation, out of touch with those who make us what we are.

Last night, the cupboards cleared by the locust raid of the students, I was scratting about for something for dinner.
We started with leek and Halloumi fritters, with a dish of potatoes layered in a loaf tin with a mixture of yogurt, chopped wild garlic and melted butter and baked in the oven. And then I noticed we had some slightly wrinkly apples in the fruit bowl, bought in expectation and abandonned when their taste did not match their looks.





So with the brevity of Damien Trench in the Radio 4 classic, "In and Out of the Kitchen"; recipe:

Pour 250ml full fat milk into a saucepan and add 4 cloves.  Bring to the boil, turn off the heat and leave for an hour for the flavour of the cloves to infuse into the milk.

Take 4 apples, peel core and quarter.
Melt 50g butter in a 10" prospector pan over a low heat and then add 120g sugar.
Cook continuously until it turns golden brown.
Add the apple slices, cover and cook for 10 minutes until the apples have softened and taken on some of the caramel colour.
Remove the lid and increase the heat.  Cook until the caramel has turned a rich mahogany and most of the juice has evaporated.

Pre-heat the oven to 170ºC

Remove the cloves from the milk and return the pan to the hob.  Heat gently.
Beat in 50g buckwheat flour, a teaspoon of vanilla extract and 100g sugar.  Add 2 beaten eggs and mix vigorously.
Pour over the apples and pop it into the oven.  Cook for 20 - 25 minutes until the top is firm.



Remove from the oven and leave to stand for 10 minutes.
Invert on to a serving plate and serve with clotted cream.



NB because I have used buckwheat flour, this pudding is gluten free.


Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2018 ©
www.netherton-foundry.co.uk

Wednesday, 21 February 2018

A taste of the Middle East

I am guessing that a lot of you have been watching Nigel Slater's Middle East and along with me are hoping that there is a book in the writing.
Here at Netherton HQ, we are very fond of Claudia Rosen's A New Book of Middle Eastern Food - an interesting title, as our copy was published in 1986.  But the recipes are timeless and classic and it was intriguing to compare her recipes with those being created in the homes that Nigel visited.  

This is not authentic, it is just a delicious combination of ingredients, inspired by the tastes of the Middle East, which I hope you will enjoy as much as we did.
We ate this with slices of bread, drizzled with Bennett and Dunn rapeseed oil, sprinkled with home made za'atar and then baked until crisp on our griddle plate in a hot oven.
It would be equally good with a flatbread and of course, whilst it makes a great vegetarian main dish, it would also be good with lamb chops!





150g butter beans, soaked overnight, simmered until soft in fresh water.
100g green beans, chopped
2 tblsp rapeseed or olive oil
1 red onions, sliced
2 fat cloves of garlic, sliced
1 aubergine, cut into ½" cubes
2 tsp salt
½ tin chopped tomatoes
1 cinnamon stick
Juice of half a lemon
1 tblsp chopped mint

Heat the oil over a medium heat in a Prospector pan and add the onion, garlic and aubergine.
Cover with a lid and cook slowly until the whole lot is soft.  This should take around 20 minutes.
Add the beans, tomatoes, cinnamon and salt, pop the lid back on and cook for 30 minutes.  
Remove from the heat and stir in the lemon juice and mint.
Either serve immediately or allow to cool to room temperature. 

Serves 2
Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2018 ©



Sunday, 1 October 2017

Apples




Having been held responsible for the downfall of womankind, when Eve tempted Adam; hailed as the first superfood, an apple a day keeps the doctor away;  the ultimate scholarly bribe, an apple for the teacher and despite not being a native to these shores, the apple has a long and cherished place in our culture and is an intriguing indicator of how our relationship with food evolves.


The National Fruit Collection at Brogdale in Kent has over 2000 cultivars of fruit trees, many of which the majority of us will never have heard of, seen, let alone tasted.
There are cookers, eating apples and cider apples, each with their own characteristics and uses.  We have 3 old apple trees in the garden and I think they are Howgate Wonders, but I can't honestly say I am 100% sure of that.

There was a time, not too long ago, when the choice of apple available to the consumer shrank and shrank and those of you of a certain age will remember when English varieties were completely overwhelmed by the demand for the insipid French Golden Delicious apples.  The supermarkets' desire for uniform, pristine fruits led to a triumph of appearance over taste and our senses became dulled as a consequence.
Fortunately we have seen a revival in interest in flavour over looks and a genuine desire to protect, preserve and promote old varieties.  
Our stockist in Dulwich, Franklins Farm Shop has the best selection of apple varieties I have ever seen on sale in one place.  Well worth a visit if you are in that part of London, a taste of the countryside in town.
If you want a fascinating read about how a new/old variety of apple was found in a hedgerow not far from us, please take a look at this lovely read from a fascinating man, Ivan Rendall, who sadly died last year.  The Wychenford Wonder lives on in the hedgerow.

So many apples, so many recipes. Just a quick reference to my recently inherited copy of Mrs Beeton came up with several pages of recipes, including 3 for apple water and there have been countless recipes written since.  What's more it is the perfect partner for blackberries, plums, oranges, dried fruit, almonds, pork, sausages, cheese .....................


I have concluded that it is impossible to come up with a completely new recipe using apples, for me at least.




And what I am going to share with you is not even a recipe, as I haven't weighed out the ingredients, so you, clever reader, will just have to take this as it is intended; an inspiration to make your apple pies a bit differently once in a while.




Cook 2 large cooking apples in just enough water to stop them burning and carefully dry off as much liquid as you can.  You want a smooth puree.
Make enough sweet pastry to line a 10" prospector pan or a pie dish;  I use 8 ounces of flour, 4 ounces of butter, 2 ounces of icing sugar, 1 egg yolk (you will be using the white for the filling) and enough cold water to bind it together.
Any leftovers can be rolled out and baked as biscuits, then iced when cold.

Grease the prospector pan and line it with around ⅔ of the pastry and set the rest aside.

Blind bake for about 10 minutes at 180ºC and then remove from the oven.  Allow to cool and then spread the base with a thin layer of raspberry or damson jam.
Sprinkle over a thick layer of ground almonds.
Whisk the egg white with 2 ounces of sugar until it forms soft peaks.  Carefully fold this into your apple puree and spread this over the almonds.
Roll out the remaining ⅓ of the pastry and carefully lay this over the apple meringue mix.  Seal the edges.
Bake at 180ºC for 20 minutes.
Serve at room temperature.



Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2017 ©



Saturday, 29 July 2017

The tyranny of Twitter

This is what I cooked for dessert last night, a bit of a treat after a busy, busy week.  Staff holidays and a full order book meant we all had to roll up our sleeves and get stuck in in the workshops.  A bit of baking was a great way to relax.


I was inordinately pleased with the result, this was some of the crispest, tastiest pastry I have ever made, so I could not resist posting a picture on our Twitter feed.

I am always (still) surprised and gratified by the response we get to our social media posts, after all, our food shots are quite simply what we eat at home.
The problem (ahem excuse me, don't pretend you're not flattered.  Oh, alright, the nice thing about this is....), is that when the photos turn out well, I frequently get asked for the recipe.
This is only a real problem when I have chucked together a few ingredients from the fridge or the cupboard, more in hope than expectation, and haven't measured anything.

However, this was based on classic recipes, so it's not too difficult to share with you, but I can claim no credit for originality.

Pre heat the oven to 180ºc

Grease a 10" prospector pan or a 10" pie dish

For the pastry shell

4 oz plain flour
2 oz butter
Water

Cut the butter into small dice and toss into the flour.  Rub together until it resembles fine breadcrumbs.

Add just enough water to bring it together into a stiff dough.

Roll out and carefully place into the prospector pan or pie dish, making sure there are no air bubbles trapped under the pastry.

I simply pricked it all over with a fork, but you can use baking beans if you prefer.
Pop into the oven for around 10 minutes, until it has dried out and is just turning colour.

Remove from the oven and lower the temperature to 150ºC


While the pastry cools, prepare the filling


10 fl oz single cream
2 eggs
3 dessertspoon sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract 
4 oz raspberries

Place the cream into a saucepan and heat gently, until just coming up to the boil.
Whisk the eggs, sugar and vanilla extract together.
Pour the hot cream on to the egg mixture and continue whisking to dissolve the sugar.
Scatter the raspberries over the pastry base (it's OK to use frozen fruit and you do not need to thaw it first)
Pour over the custard and return to the oven for approx 25 minutes, until the custard is just set.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool to room temperature before serving.

© Netherton Foundry 2017




Monday, 12 June 2017

White chocolate and raspberry cake

No rambling, no proselytising, just a fab new recipe, of which I am extremely proud.



120g sugar

2 eggs, separated
1/2 tsp vanilla paste
120g rice flour
100g white chocolate, melted and cooled
120g stracciatella yogurt, you can get big tubs of this in Lidl 
120g raspberries

Pre heat the oven to 180ºC
Whisk the egg yolks, sugar and vanilla extract until very pale.
Add the yogurt (use plain, vanilla, lemon or coconut if you can't get/don't like stracciatella)
Whisk thoroughly.
Add the cooled, melted chocolate and whisk again - it will feel a little stiffer now as the chocolate cools.
Whisk the egg whites until they form peaks.
Fold the rice flour and the whisked egg whites into the chocolate batter.

Pour into a greased 10" prospector pan or one of our new cake tins
Arrange the raspberries in concentric circles on top of the batter..... or if you are feeling anarchic, just scatter them where they fall!



Bake for 30 minutes until golden and a skewer comes out clean.
Leave to cool, then turn out of the pan.

Serve just warm either on its own or with creme fraiche, Greek yogurt, clotted cream or raspberry sorbet/ raspberry ripple ice cream.




© Netherton Foundry 2017
www.netherton-foundry.co.uk






Saturday, 11 March 2017

Cooking for a food writer

So what do you do when a Leith trained food writer comes to see you? 

1. Offer to cook them lunch.

2. Panic.
3. Lie down in a dark room, waiting for the rush of blood to pass and figure out what you are going to prepare.  Let's face it, a sandwich is not going to cut the mustard.

On Thursday, we had a visit from Xanthe Clay, to talk to us and find out more about what she described as our "famous pans".  You may already have seen some of the pictures she posted on Instagram.

As she was due to arrive, with photographer, at around noon, it would have been churlish to offer no more than a cup of tea and a biscuit, so I took the sound advice offered up by Bill Clinton in his 1992 campaign KISS, Keep It Simple, Stupid.

The weather being somewhat unpredictable at present, soup seemed like a good option; warming if the wind blew in from the North East, but full of Spring vegetables.


This is what I made and I am pleased to say everyone present had 2 helpings.  What more could I ask for?   The onion and olive focaccia was baked in a 10" Prospector pan and the photo is courtesy of Xanthe.


2 Tblsp rapeseed oil, we always use Bennett and Dunn 
1 large onion
3 carrots
1 potato
1 can cannellini beans
1 x 400g tin chopped tomatoes
750ml water 
4 sprigs fresh thyme
2 handfuls kale
1 handful wild garlic
1 tsp sugar
2tsp salt

Finely chop the onion.  Cut the carrot and potato into 5 - 10mm dice, trust me, this is the hardest part of the whole recipe.
Pour the oil into a casserole or large pan and warm gently.
Add the onion, carrot and potato and cook over a low heat for 10 minutes. You do not want the vegetables to brown, just soften.
Add the drained beans, tomatoes, thyme, sugar, salt and water. Cover with a lid.
Simmer for 30 minutes.
Roughly chop the kale and throw into the soup.


Cook for another 10 minutes, then add the chopped wild garlic (omit this if it is out of season, when you can substitute spinach if you wish).
Let the garlic wilt into the soup and serve immediately.




© Netherton Foundry 2017

Monday, 24 October 2016

Sticky fig cake

For reasons that are too tedious to go into, I have been faced with the challenge of creating a vegan menu recently - not something that comes easily in this household, with its love of all things dairy and a passion for fresh eggs.
But I have never been shy of meeting a challenge, be it rock climbing or motorbike riding, so vegan cooking was simply going to go on the list.

Vegan main courses were fairly straightforward, admittedly I haven't come up with a decent cauliflower cheese, but we have had a number of vegan dishes which didn't even register as being of "special dietary interest".

It was puddings that proved the hardest...... you will already have seen a number of puddings on this blog and without checking, I can be pretty sure that every single one contains at least one prohibited ingredient.
It has to be admitted that some experiments are best glossed over, suffice to say that it's lucky some of our garden birds aren't fussy.
However, we did enjoy a treacle tart, with a pastry made from vegetable suet and filo tarts filled with cashew and pistachio cream and topped with poached apricots and, for the purists, maple syrup and the less pure, honey.

That said, the weather is getting colder and we were craving a proper autumnal pud, so the big challenge was to come up with a variation of sticky toffee pudding and this is the result. And for those of you who are not following a vegan diet, I have included the non-vegan alternative ingredients too.

I didn't tell all my testers that this was vegan, just to gauge the response and I am pleased to report that it got an all round thumbs up and surprise when it was revealed to have no animal products in it.



CAKE

4oz vegan margarine (or butter if you don't want a vegan version)
4 oz sugar
1 banana
2 oz soft dried figs
4 tblsp soaked chia seed jelly (or 2 eggs if you don't want a vegan version)
4 oz self rising flour
1 tsp baking powder
6 dried figs for decoration

Preheat the oven to 170ºC

Put the margarine/butter, sugar, banana and figs into a food processor and mix until smooth and fluffy.
Add the chia/eggs and beat again.
Fold in the flour, mixed with the baking powder.

Spoon into a greased 10" Prospector pan or 8½" cake tin

Split open the reserved figs and put them on top of the cake batter
Place into the oven and bake for approx 30 minutes, until the top springs back when pressed with your finger.
Set aside while you make the sauce.

SAUCE
4 oz sugar
Juice of 1 orange
2oz dried figs soaked for 30 min in 6 fl oz hot water. 

Put the sugar into a saucepan over a medium heat.

Cook gently until the sugar has melted and turned a rich brown.
CAREFULLY pour in the orange juice and continue to cook until the caramel has completely dissolved in the juice.
Add the fig purée and simmer for 5 - 10 minutes until it is a consistency to your liking.
Slice the cake and pour over the sauce.  This can served as it is or with cream, (vegan) yogurt or cashew cream.





© Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2016


Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Toad in the Hole


Do you remember our trip to Finnebrogue and the rucksack full of sausages that we brought back with us?
Well this is what happened to another pack of them; a simple addition to an old favourite.

The key to a good Toad in the Hole is the temperature of the oven and of the oil when you add the batter.  Our Prospector pans are great for really hot cooking, but please remember that if you are using them on induction, you need to start them on a very low heat and increase the power gradually.

As they are made of 99% pure iron, you will struggle to find anything with better performance on induction stoves.

Good Little Company pork sausages, 2 per person
1 tart apple, I used a Granny Smith
150g plain flour
2 eggs
Milk, approx 200ml
Salt and pepper

Pre-heat the oven to 220ºC

Put the flour into a large mixing bowl, season with salt and pepper
Add the eggs and half the milk.  Whisk together.
Add more milk until you have a batter with the consistency of double cream.

Heat 1 dessertspoon of oil in a Prospector pan over a medium heat.
Place the sausages in the pan and brown on all sides.
Quarter the apple and remove the core, there is no need to peel it.
Add to the pan and continue cooking for another 2 minutes.

Turn up the heat and when the oil is smoking hot, pour the batter over the sausage and apples.

Place the pan immediately into the hot oven and cook for 20 minutes until well risen and golden.



Ours was accompanied with carrots, peas and cider gravy.

© Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2016

Wednesday, 21 September 2016

Not exactly a Jaffa cake

Like millions of other people, I take time out from domestic chores to watch Great British Bake Off, although whether it will be the same when it leaves the BBC remains to be seen.

I thoroughly enjoyed watching the contestants' efforts to create Jaffa cakes and revelled in a reverie of having 1½ hours to myself to do nothing other than bake and then have someone else come along and clear up after me. Well, one can dream................

It was only when I wandered back in to the kitchen that I realised that it was a school  night and there was no cake to put in OH and kids' lunchboxes for the next day.

Sadly the prospect of rustling up a batch of perfect Jaffa cakes was about as likely as Mary Berry turning up dressed as my kitchen fairy godmother, but the classic combination of cake, chocolate and orange was not to be ignored.





This recipe combines all three into a super simple cake, that any baker could make.

Pre heat the oven to 170ºC


Weigh out 2 eggs and then measure out the same weight of butter, orange marmalade and self raising flour.

I used homemade marmalade, but whatever you choose it needs a good strong Seville orange "bite" - Dundee marmalade would be ideal.
Roughly chop around 50g of dark chocolate - I used up the end of a bar I found in the cupboard.

Cream the butter and marmalade until well mixed and fluffy.

Beat in the eggs and then fold in the flour and the chocolate.

Put the mixture into a greased 10" prospector pan or 8½" cake tin and place in the centre of the oven.

Cook for approximately 20 minutes until a skewer inserted in the centre of the cake comes out clean.

Cool in the tin for 10 minutes before turning out onto a rack.


We ate it unadorned, but I reckon a coating of orange glace icing or a simple drizzle of melted chocolate wouldn't go amiss.


© Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2016