In the Kitchen: Cheat Couscous with Six Vegetables

Finding it hard to cook after a long day’s work? Eating out while convenient can often be hard on the wallet and ineffective in the long run. Instant noodles will only get you so far, plus you gotta keep healthy! Recently tried this recipe for a quick and easy meal: all in one pot, nutritious and incredibly tasty. Thanks to K for suggesting we cook this.

Cheat Couscous with Six Vegetables
Source: SBS / Food Safari

Ingredients
Vegetables – swede, parsnip, carrot, zucchini and pumpkin
4 cups rich homemade stock
4 Roma tomatoes
1 tbsp each ground coriander, ginger, cumin and paprika
Handful of fresh coriander
Handful of fresh parsley
500g packet couscous
2-3 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tsp salt
150g light blue vein cheese (like Castello)

Method
1. Cut vegetables into large pieces. Leave skin on pumpkin as it will help to hold it together. Place into base of a large steamer pot with stock and tomatoes. Add 1 tablespoon each of ground coriander, ginger, cumin and paprika and add the coriander and parsley. Bring to the boil and meanwhile prepare couscous.

2. Empty couscous into a bowl. Add 2-3 tbsp vegetable oil and stir to coat. Add 1 tsp salt and small amounts of water and stir with the hands until grains are saturated. Transfer to the steamer basket and sit over the vegetables. Cover.

3. Once it begins to steam, remove from pot and empty into a bowl. Traditionally a type of rancid butter (smen) would be added for flavour, but a good substitute is a light blue vein cheese to add the same little kick. Crumble cheese over couscous while still warm and stir so that it melts through. Sprinkle with a little more water but don’t drown.

4. Return steamer to pot over the vegetables. Cover with lid and leave until steaming. When steaming, remove lid and turn couscous out onto a large platter. Spoon over vegetables and a little stock and serve.

Notes:

1. The original recipe is for seven vegetables, which included broad beans. I took it out because I’m allergic to them.
2. I cooked 2 of each of the vegetables listed.
3. Using the quantities above, we came up with enough to serve 8 generous or 10 average serves.
4. To watch a video of the cooking process, visit SBS Food

Happy Cooking!

Recipe: Baked Chicken with Chorizo Sausages – explosions of flavour!

I will always remember this dish with much fondness. I was suffering from cook’s block, my usual cooking companion far away in Melbourne, and the lack of food blogger’s activities meant a very distinct lack of inspiration. I was getting to the point where I rather not eat as I was just dying from the lack of inspired cooking. Then I stumbled upon this recipe in one of my most-loved blogs and it revived my desire to eat and interest to cook. It was heaven on a plate, a much needed drop of water in a dry and cracked desert of inspiration. That is why I urge you to try this recipe even if you are not suffering from cook’s block like I was. It’s incredible.

Baked Chicken with Chorizo Sausages

Serves 4 – prep a salad!

Ingredients
4 chicken maryland, excess fat removed
1 hot chorizo sausage, thinly sliced
1 hot chorizo sausage, cut into chunks
1 head of garlic
1 lemon, cut into chunks
olive oil

Method

1. Loosen the chicken skin by inserting a finger between the skin and flesh. Stuff sliced chorizo under the skin, repeat the rest.
2. Place chicken in an oven proof dish, scatter garlic, chorizo and lemon chunks over. Drizzle with a little olive oil and season well with salt and pepper.
3. Bake in the preheated oven for 20 to 25 minutes.
4. Serve immediately with some of the pan juice and a side salad of your choice.

How simple is that? The recipe belongs to 3 hungry tummies and I urge you to click through to the blog as they have pretty step by step pictures which I don’t have. Plus, their photo of the dish actually looks better too. But I can assure you that mine tasted amazing.

The best part of this is that I can prepare as much as I like, keep it away for separate lunches or dinner and always have an amazing meal. Not too shabby for something so simple!


salt and pepper to taste

**I used all chicken drumsticks as that’s my favourite part of the chicken!

I should make this again tomorrow. Yum.

Meal to share: Pub Food

Meal to share: Pub Food

Hooray, it’s time for another Meal to share. This is technically last month’s as we are running slightly behind schedule but that’s alright. That means you’ll get two this month. Exciting, no?

This month’s theme was pub food and I had to admit that I was scratching my head for awhile because I had been allocated the position of a starter for this theme. I knew what the local pub served for mains and desserts, but starters?

I could do… chicken nuggets? Uh…

Well, here’s what I ended up with in the end. A very sad looking attempt next to the other two girl’s amazing contributions. Why do I always do this to myself….


Starter: Shallow Fried Calamari Rings in Garlic Breadcrumb by me.

Main: Pub Stout Braised Ox Cheeks with Cheese and Mushroom Dumplings by Penny.

Dessert: Sticky Date Pudding by Agnes.

*pokes sadly at her lame photo* that’s what I get for taking photos at night! Need to dig my light box out again. Sigh.

And yes, I did burn them somewhat. I really don’t like frying things, shallow or deep fry alike. I find it so hard to balance the heat of a hot plate and while I’m busy doing something else, the oil is burning or the rings are burning. Something’s always burning. Just like my patience.

But I have to say tho, burnt or not, they tasted amazing. I devoured them all because they were just too amazing. Plus easy to make! When my deep fryer comes, I’m going to make them again and hopefully this time, not burn them.

There is a dip. I forgot to picture it. Whoops.

And don’t judge me on the Cascade. We can only get cheap local beers out here in the country, and amongst the sea of melbourne bitters and carlton draught, I think cascade light is one of the better ones there is.

Shallow Fried Calamari Rings in Garlic Breadcrumb

Ingredients

Calamari Rings
Garlic Breadcrumbs
Flour
1 egg, whipped

Method

1. Coat Calamari Rings in flour then coat it with the whipped egg.
2. Coat rings in garlic breadcrumb and pop it into the hot oil.
3. If you are lucky and fail less at frying, your garlic rings won’t burn like mine!
4. Fry till golden brown. Drain on paper towels and eat!

To be honest, they hardly needed a dip. They were amazing on their own. So good. So, so very good.

Okay, off you go now to check out our main and dessert. Have a good meal, everybody!

Recipe: Fresh Fig Jam – a trip into my childhood.

Recipe: Fresh Fig Jam – a trip into my childhood.


Once upon a time, there was a little girl named Celeste. She loved to read books and was quite the bookworm. Celeste lived in a very modern city with big and shiny supermarkets. She could buy everything and anything very easily but Celeste wasn’t happy. There was nothing more Celeste wanted than to live the country life that she read about so often in her books: to hear the birds chirping outside her window, to pick fruits and revel in their freshness; but most of all, to make jam and preserves like the families in her storybooks often do.

As time flew by, Celeste grew up and moved away from the big city. She worked her way through uni and forgot about her childhood dreams and fantasies. But then the day came when the opportunity turned up at her doorstep and Celeste opened the door only to find her dreams were still very much alive and ready to be turned into reality.

So she moved to the country and started learning how to adapt to the simple but fulfilling lifestyle. It was a really big change but it was all very worth it. She had birds chirping outside her window as she baked in the kitchen and beautiful sunsets to gaze at every evening. And most important of all, Celeste managed to fulfill her childhood dream of making Jam from fruits that had still been on trees just hours before.



Fresh Fig Jam

Recipe by Anhsfoodblog

Ingredients

Lemon
Figs
Caster Sugar

Method

1. Cut off the stem from the figs and weigh the figs
2. To determine how much sugar to use, use half the weight of the figs. (I have 1.2kg, so I use around 550-600g sugar)
3. Put the sugar and fruit together in a big bowl. Stir well , then refrigerate the whole thing overnight.
4. The next day, boil the sugar and the figs together in a heavy sauce-pan.
5. Once the sugar is boiled, gently remove the fruits with a slotted spoon.
6. Continue to boil the sugar syrup until it reaches 110C (hard-ball stage).
7. Return the fruit to the sugar mixture.
8. Break up the fruits with a wooden spoon. Continue to boil the whole thing with gentle heat until the jam thickens. Stir occasionally.
9. Squeeze in some juice of 1-2 lemons. Continue to boil off until everything is set.
10. Pour the hot jam into sterilised jars. Seal, cool and refrigerate.


A Saturday morning of French Toast and Fresh Fig Jam : Priceless.

Recipe & advertorial : BPAY Short and Sweet in the form of Pumpkin Rice!

Recipe & advertorial : BPAY Short and Sweet in the form of Pumpkin Rice!

Sponsored by Nuffnang

When you are working full time (as many of us are), you tend to find that coming home and cooking up a big meal isn’t always possible. You kinda want to come home, collapse in a pile and not really worry too much about cooking (and cleaning the kitchen!) I remember not too long ago when I lived in the city and on the days where I felt like even walking that extra step was too much effort – takeaway and delivery always sounded so enticing! And that would often be the fallback.

But living out here in the middle of nowhere, takeaway isn’t really possible. There is one cafe in town but the prices are hardly everyday prices and the food isn’t all that great (sorry!) So you end up turning to simple recipes that require as little time to cook up and as little dishes to wash up as possible. Something short and sweet!

And that’s how I remembered that one of mum’s favourite dishes to cook on a Friday night when she was just so incredibly tired out was to cook up a whole pot of pumpkin rice. It was always so incredibly tasty yet so simple and easy to cook up. And possibly, the longest thing that needs prepping is the pumpkin!


Pumpkin Rice

Ingredients

Rice (don’t cook it yet!)
Pumpkin
Peas
Chorizo
Dried shrimps
Prawns
Ginger

Method

1. Prepare all meat and vegetables.
2. Fry up everything in the pan including the uncooked rice grains.
3. Pop everything into the rice cooker, add water and cook!
4. Done!

The beauty of this recipe is that other than the pumpkin and rice, everything else is up to you! Instead of chorizo, you could use lap chung (which is what mum uses), and instead of prawns you could use chicken. A lot of it is instinct cooking, and you season everything accordingly to your taste. Mum likes to use dark sauce to give it a nice overall dark colour, but I left my dark sauce in Melbourne so I’ll have to do without.


Do try it – it’s an absolute no brainer – and so easy to make! Short and sweet… made even more sweet by the pumpkin in the dish!

And much like the recipe above (which is going in for a competition!), BPAY (who is hosting the competition) makes paying bills short and sweet. I’ve been using BPAY for quite a few years now and I have to say that without it, I’d have so many bills left unpaid as I have no time to get to the post office at all! I didn’t realise that over 19,000 different billers offer BPAY payment. To be honest, I thought everybody did. Whoops. But in my world, 19,000 might well be everybody. God knows I hope I never have to pay 19,000 different bills.

You should try out for the competition too!

Here’s how:

BPAY created the Short & Sweet competition to celebrate condensing all that is long and arduous into delicious bite sized pieces. To enter, they’d like people to write either:
1. A recipe
2. Give a film synopsis,
3. Pen a love poem
4. Write a short fiction
… all in 120 characters or less.

You can enter via the following options:

1) Online, visit www.bpayshortandsweet.com.au and follow the prompts.

2) Via SMS, text your name, category and your 120 character entry to 0427 777 743

3) Via Twitter, tweet the category and your 120 character entry to @BPAYSS

Category names:
Love Poem = POEM, Recipe = RECIPE, Short story = STORY, Film and Book synopsis = SYNOPSIS.