Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

New Year Means New Recipe

Hello and Happy New Year to all Bloggers!

Did you miss us? Well here is your belated Christmas present. To kick off the new year we will be providing you with some fresh and exciting smoothie recipes.
Detox Smoothie
What you need:
                              4 raw beetroot's, peeled (messy but essential)
4 apples, cored if preferred
1 pomegranate, seeds only
2cm of raw ginger (fresh is best)
1/2 lemon, peeled
1 banana, peeled ;)
                              1 tsp honey (add more if required down to your taste-buds)

Really easy to do in 2 steps:
1)  place the beetroot's, apples, pomegranate seeds, lemon and ginger through a juicer
2) put the juice into a blender, add banana and honey then blitz it all together till smooth.


And that's it in a couple of minutes you have a tasty breakfast or snack that will BEET away the post festive blues!

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

What's Christmas Without Chocolate?

Hello!

Lets face it Christmas wouldn't be Christmas with out chocolate, lots of chocolate! selection boxes, tins of chocolate, hot chocolate the list is long. So here at Lindley again with the help of the former double Michelin starred chef Paul Heathcote we offer our chocolate treat for the festive period.

Heathcotes at Home - Simple Chocolate Pots

What You Need:

100g Dark Chocolate
250ml Double Cream
40g Muscovado Sugar
1 Vanilla Pod
1 Egg
Fresh Raspberries
Icing Sugar
Mint

What To Do:


  • Place the chocolate in a food processor and whizz into small pieces.



While this is whizzing away grab your vanilla pod, you need to get the seeds out. Take a knife and slice the pod down the middle



Next you need to use the flat part of the knife to run down the vanilla pod on each of the two halves to scrape out the seeds.






When you have scraped all the seeds out you should be left with something that looks like this.




  • Now that you have your seeds you can pop them in a pan with the cream and sugar and bring this mixture to the boil.
  • Once boiling pour this into the food processor and leave for one minute. Switch the processor on and while that is mixing add in the egg. Mix this together for around 20 seconds to make sure the mixture is fully combined.
  • When combined pour into ramekins or espresso cups and chill for at least two hours, or preferably overnight. 
  • Finally dust with a little icing sugar and decorate with the raspberries and mint. 


Its as easy as that!


Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Christmas Starts Here


Ho Ho Ho Bloggers! 

We hope you are all well and full of festive cheer. Today we want to share with you a few ideas for the perfect starter to any meal not just at Christmas. With the help of Paul Heathcotes and his acclaimed Heathcotes at Home recipe book we at Lindley love to share great recipes. So get your oven gloves on and enjoy!



Warm baked brie with toasted herb 
& almond crust


What you need:
1 individual Brie (approx 125g-200g)
3 tbsp bread crumbs 
2 tbsp fresh herbs (parsley, rosemary and thyme work wonderfully)
1 clove of garlic
1 tsp olive oil
1 tbsp flaked almonds

Lets get baking
  • Toast the almonds on a metal baking tray under a hot grill until golden brown; set aside.
  • Meanwhile put the dried bread, herbs, almonds and garlic in a food processor and blitz to a green crumb. Slowly drizzle in the olive oil to bind the crumbs together a little.
  • Put the brie back in its wooden box (leaving the lid off), or in an ovenproof dish, and prick the skin with the tip of a sharp knife. Lightly season the cheese with freshly milled pepper and liberally scatter the herb crumbs over.
  • Place the brie in a pre-heated moderate oven (180°C/gas mark 7) and bake until the crumbs are golden brown and the cheese is soft and runny in the middle.
  • Serve with bread sticks or crusty bread hot from the oven, or just serve with teaspoons and let your guests help themselves.
Chef’s tip: This dish is ideal for sharing and can easily be served for four or six people by using several smaller cheeses or one larger cheese, your local cheese shop or delicatessen will be able to help you with this.


Tuesday, 13 December 2011

What Is In Your Larder?

Hello my little Blogger buddies! 

I hope you are all well this cold festive afternoon. Hows the Christmas preparations going? you got all your presents wrapped? no? me neither!

We have provided you all with some great Christmas treats and recipes now we thought we would let you into a  few little secrets and tips about what to keep in your larder and what to look for when buying your food all thanks to Heathcotes Outsides. When it comes to food, Heathcotes Outside is the master. The man behind the culinary music is the former double-starred Michelin chef, Paul Heathcote, who loves nothing more than creating delicious flavours from the finest ingredients, cooked to perfection and served in style.

So grab a drink, sit back and enjoy!

Your Larder

Sea Salt
Flavour is everything. The quality of your seasoning is essential. Wet the tip of your finger and dip it in ordinary table salt; the offensive taste is additives. Now do the same with pure sea salt and taste the difference.

Freshly milled pepper
Pepper straight from the grinder is worlds away from ground. ideally have two mills: white peppercorns in one and black in the other. Use white on light coloured food such as fish, potatoes and cream based dishes, and black for meat, tomatoes and more robust ingredients.

Virgin Olive Oil
Heating oil changes its flavour, so its a waste to cook  with good oil. use the cheaper olive oil or vegetable oil to cook with, and keep the expensive stuff for dressings.

Vegetable Oil
Vegetable oil is a neutral flavour and has a much higher heat resistance so it is great fro frying and also good for light dressings. If olive oil isn't your taste, use it in the same quantities. Experiment with walnut, peanut & grapeseed oils too.

Butter
All butter in recipes is unsalted unless stipulated. Salted butter is very obvious in desserts and butter based sauces

Milk & Cream
Generally we recommend using whole milk in cooking; skimmed and semi-skimmed don't heat well and split easily. You cant whip or boil single cream, there is not enough fat in it; use whipping and double cream.

Chocolate
The better the chocolate, the better the taste. Buy a good quality couveture (dark chocolate) with 70% cocoa solids. 

Eggs
Use eggs at room temperature (straight from the fridge will take longer to start cooking). Buy free-range or organic, not 'farm' or 'barn' eggs.

Lemons
Great for sauce making, when the sauce still lacks just a little something, a few drops of lemon juice can make all the difference. With a dash of olive oil, the best salad dressing.

Vanilla
Use pods, not bottled essence where possible. Scrape the seeds for recipes. Keep pods, stick them in the sugar pot for wonderful flavour; and boil them for five mins in syrup for fruit salads.

Garlic
Tip for peeling: cut of the root and squash the bulb a bit - lean on it with the flat of the knife. The skin almost drops off.



Herbs
Keep pots int eh kitchen windowsill: parsley, chives, coriander, basil. When picking, leave one or two heads on each stem to let them grow back. Thyme, mint, rosemary, bay are hardy and better grown outside.


Mustard
French (mild), Dijon (medium), English (hot). So many brands and flavours to choose from - pick good quality. any mustard will work to cook with - have fun experimenting.

Greek Yoghurt
Full fat - instead of cream or sour cream. Good to mix with mayonnaise for sharper flavour. Cook with strained cow's milk Greek yoghurt, which doesn't separate so easily. 

For more tips and treats why not see our facebook page.