Thursday, 16 June 2011

sad farewells; lamb skewers & mediterranean vegetable gratin

Devon has suffered a deluge and high winds which have served to curb our enthusiasm for outdoor cooking over recent times and alas and alack, the oven is off on its travels in a few days. Not being one to admit defeat I thought it only fit to bow out of the blog with a colourful contribution - food fit for summer (even if it isn't here). This is Mediterranean food, packed with flavour - and just a little contribution of tabbouleh salad from the indoor kitchen to round things off. The main course gratin served with focaccia being my vegetarian wood fired offering. And I was proud to make use of heaps of mint, parsley, rosemary, thyme and oregano from the garden (the mint is taking over...)

First up, simple lamb skewers... the grill trivet I used to cook the fish last time has proved useful and makes all barbecue food possible. Bearing in mind that the heat in the oven is very fierce, the skewers take very little time (these took around 8-10 minutes to get a good colour) it is essential to soak wooden skewers well or watch them go up in smoke, (or, as I did, play it safe and stick to steel ones). Remember also to make a marinade and set some of it aside to apply to the meat as it comes off the grill as the marinade that is on the meat will have succumbed by the time they are cooked. I boned and diced lamb shoulder meat as it has a lovely fat content that keeps the kebabs juicy, and marinated it for an hour in olive oil, crushed garlic, lemon juice, fresh rosemary, oregano and seasoning - together with some chunks of red pepper.

For tabbouleh salad, cook 200g of bulgar wheat with 400ml of water (follow the packet instructions), drain and allow to cool completely. Add to this diced tomato, diced cucumber, crushed and finely chopped garlic, lashings of lemon juice, and lots of finely chopped parsley and fresh mint and follow with olive oil and salt and pepper to
taste. The salad should be very green with herbs so we're talking large bunches of parsley and mint.

It's great served with crisp leaves of sweet romaine which you can spoon the salad into and eat outdoors as finger food - kebab in one hand, salad in t'other...


And now for the vegetarian gratin. Taking all the ingredients of a classic ratatouille it is assembled in a gratin
dish and looks the biz. I have an ancient black iron gratin which works a treat in the outdoor oven. The heat had subsided a little after the kebabs but was still probably around 220°C - and that's ideal to give the uncooked layer of tomato, courgette and Parmesan crumb a gloriously golden roasting. To Make, you will need:

Ingredients


1 large onion, peeled & finely chopped

2 cloves garlic, crushed & finely chopped
1 aubergine, trimmed & cut into 2cm dice
2 red peppers, trimmed & diced into 2cm chunks
2 large courgettes cut into
thin, diagonal slices
4-6 firm but ripe tomatoes, thinly sliced
1tbsp thyme leaves
olive oil
salt, pepper
50g grated Parmesan
25g fresh breadcrumbs
a handful of fresh oregano leaves

and a 28cm gratin dish


The first stage (cooking the first layer of ingredients) is better done inside on the stove, or you will be lifting a dish in and out repeatedly to stir fry the vegetables.


Method:


1 Heat a couple of tablespoons of olive oil in a large frying pan and sauté the chopped onion and garlic for a few minutes to soften. Now add the diced aubergine and increase the heat to brown. Once colouring, add the diced red pepper and chilli flakes and cook a further few minutes until the vegetables are tender. Season to taste and spoon into the awaiting gratin dish. Level the vegetables with a spatula.

2 Starting at one end, patiently arrange the courgette and tomato slices in overlapping rows as per 'before' image, then drizzle with olive oil and scatter with thyme leaves. Season with salt and pepper and transfer to the wood fired oven. Bake for 15 minutes or so, until the surface vegetables are shrinking and colouring. Now toss the fresh breadcumbs with a little olive oil until glistening and remove the gratin and spread the crumbs and Parmesan liberally over the surface. Bake for a further 10-15 minutes until crisp and golden. Add the fresh oregano as you bring the gratin from the oven and serve with rosemary focaccia.

And on that delicious note I say farewell to this lovely oven. I'm without doubt that its next recipient will be as impressed as I, and will have their own memorable wood fired winners to blog about. I give big thanks to Ben and Celine for giving me the opportunity to get to know, and love, it for 2 months, and wish them every success. We, as a family, have had a good deal of pleasure from this beast and though it will be gone, it will not be forgotten.

Sandra Tate



Sunday, 5 June 2011

sensational sea bass with asparagus & mint salad

Alas my time with my wood fired oven is finite and Celine and Ben are planning to move it along to another lucky cook in a couple of weeks time. We can only hope for good weather so that we can enjoy it to the last!

One thing I have found is that I've improvised with my own kitchen equipment to get the best out of the oven and maybe Bluestone can address these issues by offering suitable oven accessories in the future. For example, we like our pizzas to be large.
So large that they are unwilling to slide off the peel to cook directly on the floor of the oven (as I would like), so a pizza pan came out first. Since then I have invested in a gorgeous Colombian terracotta pan, which will happily withstand the highest of heats that the oven can throw, and that has been invaluable for roasting and baking. It's not only versatile, it looks the biz on the table too. Last weekend I introduced a steel grill rack into the oven as we wanted to cook whole fish and needed all round heat - it's also great for my pieces of tandoori chicken and for kebabs. Why the grill? Well for starters fish are fragile and stick easily. You really don't want to have to turn them if you can help it (or you'll find they've left half of their skin and flesh behind and are fast becoming an unsightly mess). As it was, we only needed to lift the grill out and turn it once as the fish closest to the heat source turned gloriously tinged with colour much quicker than the one nearest the door.

What I cooked were whole sea bass (about 350g each - perfect individual servings) t
hat I had gutted but left whole. To keep the fish moist during cooking, I stuffed slices of lemon and torn parsley and fresh mint into the cavity of each. I then slashed the skin diagonally 3-4 times on each side before brushing liberally with olive oil and seasoning with Maldon sea salt crystals. The fish were then arranged side by side (but not touching) onto the steel grill.

How long it will take for them to cook depends on how hot the oven is and how large the fish are - mine took about 12 minutes. I am a good, experienced cook and know by sight when something is as cooked as I would like it to be. It strikes me that because your food is for the most part visible, and you can also smell it, that the wood fired oven is excellent for educating the less experienced in how to judge how well done things are.

As you can see, these babies (Jamie moment...) were crisp skinned, perfectly moist, and opaque fleshed - now sitting snuggly in Colombian terracotta and ready for the table.

In hindsight I should have also grilled the asparagus for the salad in the oven, but the focaccia was in there instead, and perfect for the occasion it was too.
Asparagus is with us for but a short period of time, our own English asparagus will be around for a few more weeks if we are lucky. I cooked some briefly in salted water, drained and cooled it, and added it to a bowl of locally grown salad leaves, rich in robust mustard flavour (as opposed to supermarket bland salad leaf selection
s). Grilled sea bass goes extremely well with a hint of fresh mint and I often make a bowl of pungently minty dressing to spoon over the fish, instead I added tender, young mint tips to the salad leaves and dressed them with a thick emulsion of Dijon mustard, white balsamic vinegar and grapeseed oil. If you want to add texture and more flavours I recommend a scattering of toasted mixed seeds (like pumpkin, sesame, sunflower and poppy seeds) to add a nutty crunch to the salad.

For the focaccia? Go back to my first blog and use the pizza dough recipe. Let it relax after first knock down and then roll out as for pizza. Press knuckles into the dough repeatedly to leave indentations then drizzle liberally with olive oil before strewing the surface with sea salt crystals and torn rosemary. Bake directly on the oven floor to golden brown and risen and tear apart at the table while it's still hot. I think you'll find that the focaccia and the fish both have that faintly smoky, sealed in taste that is so beautiful, and so very much the signature flavour, of this wonderful oven.

Sandra Tate