Monday, 30 November 2009

For those cold winter days/nights....

As we all know, given that it's beyond cold at the moment, winter has arrived. Meaning christmas is near. Meaning the weather, particularly in the UK, has become even more unpredictable with the sun and clouds going more in-out than the hokey kokey. So here is something quick, cheap and, more importantly, that heats you up all over.

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Soup, for me, is one of those dishes that remind me of home when I am away from home and remind me I am at home when I am around the table with my family. I still have to listen to my mum fuss over slurping (Cant be helped with soup...I heard in Japan it is rude not to slurp as it shows you enjoy the meal so there go mum!), and not to rush the food down your throat, again, this cant be helped, especially if its freezing and you are hungry (oddly enough both seem to go hand in hand). Also, in my opinion, soup, along with stews and salads, are the best way to eat vegetables especially (and this is a pure assumption) as I can imagine, if you either:

1) hate vegetables in general,

2) hate them overcooked, (im part of that group! )

3) prefer them differently to how your mum/dad/boyfriend/girlfriend, etc...cooks them...

I have fond memories growing up with hearty soups on winter days so much so that I have come to conclusion, having had a go at cooking a couple, that the best soups have the freshest ingredients (which isnt necessarily the most expensive so dont be forced to buy organic!, just go for quality ahead of quantity) which often means that a visit to your local market is needed if you want the freshest veg as well as the cheapest!

Vegetable soup: Serves 4+ (depending on how greedy you are!)

What you will need is:

3 tablespoons of Olive Oil (cheap olive oil is best here as all you are using it for is frying)

1 onion (chopped, not too fine as it will lose the flavour)

3 cloves of garlic (a clove being an individual piece of garlic) (chopped)

4 carrots

2 Parsnips ( If you are not sure-white carrot look-a-likes)

1-2 Leeks (If you are not sure-looks like a big spring onion!)

1 Sweet Potato

Half of a Butternut Squash (If you are not sure-Smaller version of a Pumpkin, pear shaped!) (*optional)

Salt and pepper (enough to suit your taste)

1 Litre of Vegetable stock (or my cheat, get a vegetable stock cube mix it with boiling water in a jug)

Equipment: (not to make you feel stupid, its there as a guide ¬¬!)

  1. Big Pot/ Relatively large saucepan
  2. Sharp Knife to cut
  3. Peeler
  4. Chopping board
  5. Blender/Hand Blender/Potato Masher

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Recipe:

Preparation should take 20 mins max: (peeling and chopping, etc...)

Cooking time is roughly about 15-20 mins max...(including the blending/mashing)

    1. Wash all your vegetables thouroughly under a running tap of cold water.
    2. On a medium heat, put in your olive oil into your pot and chuck in your chopped onion and chopped garlic , cook until the colour starts to go a tad golden. (Should take 2 to 5 mins)
    3. As that cooks, Peel all your vegetables (the Butternut Squash will need to be cut in half before peeling!) and chop into decent size chunks (too thin and your veg will cook super quick and too thick it will take longer! so about 1-2cm thickness approx, this is not strict!).
    4. Once chopped, add all your vegetables to your pot, where onion and garlic have been cooking, and cook until they are starting to become tender (so until they are halfway cooked, should take about 10 mins, check and stir every couple of minutes to prevent them burning).
    5. At this point, with a fork, prod some of the vegetables to see if they are tender (the veg should feel a tad raw in the middle), if so, add the 1 litre of Vegetable stock to the cooked vegetables and raise to a high heat so it boils.
    6. Boil for about 2 minutes then lower back to medium heat and cover with the pot with a lid and allow to cook until ALL veg is FULLY TENDER. (Should take about 10-15 mins max, check and stir every 3 to 5 minutes.)
    7. After 10-15mins, the vegetables should be tender so your soup is more or less done!

At this point, you have 3 options:

    1. i) You pour all of your soup into a blender and blitz it until its smooth (should have a puree-type texture) or using a hand blender, blitz the soup in the pot until smooth. (my preferred method, hand blender cost me £20 in Argos...well worth it)
    2. ii) OR You mash the vegetable soup in the pot using a potato masher until its smooth (I have tried this and it's tough, and guaranteed, unless you are mashing for hours, to have the odd bit un-mashed vegetable and it will have a chunky texture)
    3. iii) OR you can leave the vegetable soup as it is, and serve it as a broth!

Which ever way you choose, serve it hot in a massive bowl, topped with some salt and pepper, bread (sliced or baguette, does not really matter!) and some Parsley (to be a fancy!)

Now, put your feet up and tuck in!

*To conclude, don't be put off by the length of this...it is a quick and easy recipe, i have just added some tips and guides that have helped me, hope they are of use to you!

My advice to you, for this recipe, assuming you are busy all the time and you are short of money:

  • Use your local fruit and veg market, as there you get the freshest veg and its cheaper..if not, buy loose veg from the supermarket to use on the day as vegetables 'die' (thought it would be a better choice of words instead of 'they go off') pretty quickly.
  • This soup is better the next day or cooked overnight as the flavour stands out more but it will only last for 2 days max.
  • If you are cooking in advanced for later on the week, Soup can be frozen.
  • If you are, or if you become a fan, of making soups I recommend you invest in a hand blender, if you dont have a blender already, which can be used for baking and making smoothies etc...

My worst kept secret!

First of all...welcome! (*sighs*, glad we got that out of the way!)
I am assuming you were intrigued by my title...well, sadly it is not a major secret, hope I have not put you off already!
Now, you may wonder why would someone would want to write about food and how to make delicious meals when you can get a cook book, or look on the internet or go to local chinese and order your usual 'grease in a container' chow mein!
Well until recently, I would wonder the same! I have noticed, well it's more of an assumption more than anything, that everyone has an affinity to something that really they don't really share with everyone else, like collecting stamps and shiny things or being part of a particular club or team...well I would like to think you know where I am going with this! No?
What I mean is you must have something that you like but are too embarrassed to share with everyone else, like your friends, or even something that interests you that you prefer to keep to yourself. Well to me that something is food.
Oh by the way, I am Tom, i am a 21 year old, recently graduated from university, currently working part time and preparing myself both mentally and emotionally to life without that nice student loan.
I work as a football coach for Chelsea FC, and as part of my job I encourage (or attempt to!) kids indirectly to lead a healthy lifestyle (well some are as young as 5, so confiscating and secretly munching their illegal contraband, such as sweets and any type of tempting confectionary, are more or less the same right?
Well lets get to the point...I love food, i love watching cookery shows, I love watching people cook and experiment with the weird and wonderful as well as the most common and available ingredients. I have no shame in admiting this, although mostly everyone I know I either discovered this at our local pub quiz a while back or at my 'tasty' regular Facebook posts!
I have had this affinity since I was very young because cooking just seemed...fun i guess. A particular memory is first watching Ready, Steady, Cook and seeing Ainsley Harriott dancing around with his pan and showing off his skills, and such scenes sort of had me hooked on the notion of how fun cooking can be!
(Although, I know many of you view cooking and making simple food as an EFFORT OR CHORE !) I partially agree with this...cooking can seem tiresome when you have spent the day working or doing something!
But, I have been inspired by growing up with my mum's and my abuela's (Spanish for nan, I am spanish afterall!...well you werent to know!) food...which can be easily described as hearty, homely and comfy food...that may leave you feeling more full-boardering-on-falling-asleep instead of that bloated-feeling! (We have all felt like this...Sunday roasts ring a bell!...Best solution for insomnia in my opinion!)
So this blog, in essence, is to, encourage, more than inspire, you to give cooking in general a go,try out some of the things I try out at home (I don't really like labouring over meals that take over an hour to cook, so really what I put on here does take too long!) as well as to help you scour around for cheap but quality ingredients (as I know that most of us are broke most of the time!...especially whilst being a student!)
With each post/ recipe I will try (emphasis on TRY!! as I do have a life outside of this and I do not like my food to get cold, sorry!) and put an pic of my own finished attempt (so you have something to work with)...Also before I go, just so you know all these recipes are inspired from watching others and recipes that have been tried and tested so they aren't completly original (copyright reasons...can a recipe be copywritten? Not entirely sure, I have seen weirder things happen!) But please, contrary of what they say on tv,
'What you read here has been done by a professional (home) cook so try this at home! (Bit of humour there, deliberate comedy is not my strong point)
Until next time, as they say in Spain, 'Que aproveches!'