Tuesday, 12 May 2009
Spring lunch

Poilaine sourdough bread
Asparagus
Rindless goat’s cheese, such as a Childwickbury from Neal’s Yard Dairy
Black pepper
Extra virgin olive oil
Maldon salt
Cut the crusts from the bread and dice into neat, small cubes. Slosh some of the oil into a frying pan and gently fry the bread to golden crispness. Tip onto a plate covered in kitchen paper and set aside.
Meanwhile bring a wide but shallow pan of salted water to the boil (barely enough to cover the asparagus). Lower the spears into the pan and partly cover with a lid. Allow to boil for about 4 mins. Drain well and tip out onto a large, flat platter. Drizzle liberally with oil, and then crumble over the goat’s cheese and croutons. Season with pepper and salt.
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Recipe
Monday, 11 May 2009
Pudding for Archie and Oliver

Pear, ricotta, walnuts, chestnut honey
Peel, core and slice into half-moon-shaped chunks one very ripe Comice pear per person. Arrange on a plate and top with a scoop of organic ricotta. Scatter with some shelled walnuts (I think they look prettier in halves, rather than crushed), and then drizzle and swirl liberally with chestnut honey. Eat immediately.
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Recipe
Wednesday, 8 April 2009
My book of the moment

For the lamb:
6 garlic cloves, crushed to a paste with salt
4 sprigs rosemary, finely chopped
1 tin anchovies
4 tablespoons olive oil
3 racks of lamb (about 18 cutlets) – ask for French trim but leave off the white hats
salt and black pepper
For the potatoes:
6 large or 12 medium potatoes, cut into 1cm cubes
4–6 garlic cloves, unpeeled
2 or 3 sprigs rosemary
2 tablespoons olive oil
For the beans:
2 x 400g tins cannellini beans, drained with a few tablespoons of liquid reserved
* Mash together the garlic, rosemary, anchovies and olive oil, and season with salt and pepper.
* Rub three-quarters of the mixture generously in and around the lamb racks, getting into any crevices between the meat and bone that you can find or would like to make. Leave to marinate for as long as you can.
* Preheat the oven to 220C/430F/gas mark 7.
* In a large roasting pan, toss the potato cubes, garlic cloves and rosemary sprigs thoroughly in olive oil and sprinkle with salt. Make space in the middle to stand the lamb, bones pointing up.
* About 45 minutes before you want to eat, roast for 22–26 minutes depending on how well done you like the lamb (22 will be a deep rose, 26 the medium side of rare. I like mine on the nose of 24).
* Take out the lamb and wrap it with foil, making a baggy but firmly sealed packet, and leave to stand somewhere warm (such as on top of the oven or hob) for 20 minutes. * Give the potatoes a good shake and return them to the oven for a further 20 minutes, checking and turning once more during cooking.
* Meanwhile, in a saucepan, gently fry the remaining garlic-rosemary-anchovy mixture for a couple of minutes until it softens and tempers.
* Add the drained beans and reserved liquid and warm through, stirring and mashing so that some of the beans break up.
* Add a little extra olive oil if you’d like to. Turn off the heat (the beans can be served warm or at room temperature).
* After 20 minutes, the potatoes should be golden all over. Divide them between serving plates, or empty into a bowl for people to help themselves.
* Unwrap the lamb and carve into individual cutlets, which should be a perfect pink inside.
* Serve with the cannellini beans, redcurrant jelly and mint sauce, and a soft green salad or vegetable.
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Recipe
Monday, 6 April 2009
Nygårds Anna


I love Swedish things - pickled herring on ryebread, lingonberry jam, wooden cabins on lakes, of course - but particularly their clothes. They go for a type of chic-comfty-feminine-frumpiness that it right up my street. I'm going to have to hunt down a shop in London that sells Nygårds Anna http://www.nygardsanna.se/
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Fashion
Wishbone hoarding

Labels:
Jewellery
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