Posts Tagged food

Asparagus Fettuccine

“This fettuccine is only on the menu the short while asparagus is in season. I think that makes eating it even more special”

  • Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1 small Onion, Finely Chopped
  • 1 small Celery Stick, Diced
  • 1 medium Courgette, Finely Diced
  • 1 small Leek, White Part Only, Diced
  • 16 Asparagus Stalks, Tips Reserved, Stalks Thinly Sliced
  • 1 handful Basil Leaves
  • 300 ml Vegetable Stock
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 400 g Fettuccine
  • 50 g Parmesan, Finely Grated
  • Pea shoots, To Serve
Add 4 tsp olive oil to a heavy-based pan over a low heat and sweat onion and celery until soft. Add courgette, leek and asparagus stalks and sweat for a further 2–3 minutes. Add most of the basil leaves and when they wilt, add the stock, then simmer until veg are tender. Remove from the heat and, using a hand blender or food processor, blend till creamy. In another frying pan over a low heat, add a little oil and cook garlic till soft, then add the asparagus sauce and simmer for 2 minutes.
Boil a pan of salted water. Cook fettuccine, and 3 minutes before it’s done, add the asparagus tips. When fettuccine is al dente, drain, reserving a little cooking water, and add to the asparagus sauce. Loosen the pasta and sauce with cooking water, as needed. Stir in remaining basil, and serve with parmesan and pea shoots.

Source : Jamie Magazine : Issue 3

Servings/Yield : 4 Servings

Difficulty : Moderately Easy

Course : Main

Preparation Times : Prep 40 min, Cook 10 min

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Malta’s traditional food: healthly or not

Two events this week prompt my post about Maltese traditional food. The Malta Standards Authority (MSA) announced it is carrying out a survey over the next two months to ‘clearly establish the eating habits of the Maltese’. Then, my son told me that he needed to dress up like a Maltese villager of yesteryear (flat cap & waistcoat) and serve traditional hobz biz zejt (Maltese bread smeared with tomato paste, olives, onions, tuna and capers) at his end-of-term open day.

The common theme that links the two is a feeling that in Malta we need to return to our roots when it comes to our diet if we are to pass on the dubious honour of our current high rankings in the world’s obesity indices.

Undoubtedly, the Maltese diet has changed drastically in the past 50 years, and now includes all the fast, convenience, additive-laden, pre-packed foods found across the western world. So much for the Mediterranean diet. But, the hobz biz-zejt lives on strongly in snack bars along with qassata and pastizzi (ricotta and pea-filled pastry turnovers) with their interesting blend of healthy filling and carb-laden pastry.

While even the old-style Maltese diet would have included (‘bad’) refined carbs in bread and pasta, it would have been off-set by a larger proportion of fresh fish, meat and vegetables. If you add reasonable amounts of fresh meat or fish to your weekly shop here, the total bill shoots up. We may be surrounded by sea, but its fruits are costly. Perhaps in days gone by, people caught or bred more of the protein themselves and kept the costs down that way.

If there’s one thing we need public health campaigns to do, it’s to show the regular Maltese family how to eat cheaply, cooking fresh meat and fish and leaving out the majority of refined carbs and processed foods. A glance at the list of traditional dishes below, shows that we must have had this knack here once upon a time! As in most of the Mediterranean, meat would have been eked out padded with vegetables and with its juices moped up with crusty bread.

All the recipes below required cooking from scratch with fresh ingredients – that is a good start to eating healthier! Bear in mind, that in the past, the Maltese diet would have included desserts and pastries as a treat on high days, feasts and Sundays only, and not as a regular snack with a cafe pit stop.

Here’s a selection of some traditional recipes, but whether they are cooked at home much? We’ll await the findings of that food diary survey:

Savoury dishes

Lampuki pie – late summer to autumn’s seasonal fish – lampuka (dolphin fish). Also served as shallow fried steaks.

Bragioli – beef olives (thin strips of beef rolled and filled with bacon, bread crumbs, parsley all bound together with an egg), served in red wine and tomato sauce.

Stuffed squid

Octopus stew

Spaghetti with Sea Urchins (Rizzi)

Ricotta Pie – goats cheese and ricotta mixed with some broad beans and parsley on pastry base.

Rabbit stew – with olives, red wine, bay leaves, onion, garlic, tomato puree.

Spinach and Tuna Pie – onion, garlic, anchovy, pastry base, olives, tuna, chopped spinach

Pumpkin soup

Stuffed marrow – mince beef filled marrow rings, baked

‘Widow’s Soup‘ (soppa ta’ l’armla) – this vegetable soup and other minestre are a mainstay of the Maltese kitchen. They are still cooked here big time; I smell various soups or broths in my village street most days.

Bigilla – fava bean paste. A homely dip you find ready-made in supermarkets, and which features also on wine bar menus today.

Timpana – baked macaroni (kind of lasagna using mince beef (sometimes lamb), but with pastry top.

Rice balls (arancini)- chicken or beef mince mixed in with rice to form ball coated in bread crumbs and then deep fried.

Desserts & Pastries

Most desserts and sweets you find in Malta, now as in the past, are directly inherited from our neighbour Sicily. Read about them and their history in our dedicated post on Maltese sweets.

Kannoli – deep-fried sweet pastry tubes filled with sweetened ricotta, and sometimes candied peel.

Cassata – cakes made with almond paste and filled with sweet ricotta

Mqaret – small packages of sweet pastry filled with a date mixture and served mouth blisteringly hot!

Photo: Peter Grima (Know Malta) – he has the recipe for honey rings here!

Source: Maltainsideout.com by Elizabeth Ayling

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The Cost of Living in Perspective ‘Groceries’

There has been many an argument about the cost of living in Malta, and how high food prices are these days, I’ve heard the comments on the situation, that we are now paying the lowest we have ever paid for food in history, now these statements can ring true when you take in certain factors, such as cost of living in comparison to years ago when milk, bread, and other staples were half the price as it is now.

The reality of the situation is that it has gotten cheaper

The reality of the situation is that it has gotten cheaper.  The difference is that we have a wider variety now which is due to certain business factors, such as ‘supply and demand’, and the dreaded ‘competition’. If we went and purchased ‘like for like’ as we bought 20 years ago, you would probably notice a reduction in the cost, without exaggerating at how cheap things used to be, as we are in a habit of making up crap such as “my weekly shopping only cost Lm1 back then”.

My point is that the variety is there because retailers can no longer compete on a carton of milk, or a loaf of bread, in fact they can no longer compete on a frozen pizza Margherita, having to offer you a different product to hide their margin.  You can compare a frozen pizza funghi from Goodfellas to the same pizza from McCains, but can you compare a frozen Pizza funghi to a Frozen Pizza Funghi ‘Stone Baked’ like for like? probably not, justifying a price hike on the ‘stone baked’ pizza.

This is nothing to complain about, as retailers constantly have to innovate to compete, and to offer more ‘value’ to you the consumer.  This is why we find it easy to say that our weekly shopping was expensive, look at that ‘Austrian bourbon and Honey Glazed canned ham’ that you really had to have because it looked so tasty, or that ready made pizza that costs a quarter of the price to make it yourself.  Being more intelligent about your shopping habits, is not about being frugal, it’s about budgeting yourself.  I’ve seen so many people with deep cupboards containing remnants of that luxury porcini whole wheat pasta that “I’m going to make someday, as soon as I find a good recipe to make it with”.

To get to my second point about groceries and the cost of living, let’s get things into perspective.  The above picture is a pile of groceries that I picked up from the local grocer in Sliema.  This is NOT my weekly shopping, or my monthly shopping, these are just a few things to throw into soups, pastas, pies and whatever floats my boat that week.  Even though this won’t be all the ingredients I require, it’s just an example.  Stuff for sandwiches, pastas, and some fruit in the evening, I can squeeze out around 3-4 dinners out of all of this; with a good imagination, and if I really planned it, I could squeeze out a weeks worth.  The value… 11.38 Euro (Lm4.89)  I’m not breaking the bank, nor am I starving myself, and I’m certainly not a gourmet chef that can turn an onion into a soup that would wow patrons across europe.  I’m just giving you food for thought (pardon the pun).

Looking at this picture, one thing comes to mind, “@%&£!!! I forgot the eggs again”.

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Sell-by dates past their sell-by date?

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As part of the publicity surrounding yesterday’s launch of the DEFRA report and public consultation on food security, Hilary Benn suprised (and no doubt outraged) a lot of people by suggesting that shoppers should ignore “best before” dates on food to reduce the amount thrown away,

Checking the original DEFRA announcement (July) on its food labelling review (being conducted with the FSA and WRAP), these statistics caught my attention in particular:

“consumers often lack confidence in date labelling: 53% of consumers would never eat fresh fruit and vegetables past the “best before” date; 56% would never eat bread and cakes past the “best before” date; and almost 10% leave a day’s ‘buffer’ before any date. 21% would never “take a risk” with any food close to its date, even if it appeared fine.”

It appears that a lot of us get confused between best-before dates, use-by dates, sell-by dates and display-until dates. And so we throw away food, which goes into landfill and generates harmful methane, and also puts pressure on farmers to produce more than is actually required (and that’s before you start taking over-eating into consideration).

With the world looking ahead to serious food security issues created by climate change and population explosion, the last thing we need is needless waste increasing the amount our food producers need to provide.

“Use by” dates indicate time during which food is safe to eat. “Best before” dates indicate a period in which food is of optimum quality and after which it is may still perfectly edible but may decline in quality. These are mandated by law. Sell-by and Display-until are stock control dates used by retailers and are not mandated by law.

So should the Government insist on labelling changes? Not according to Stephen Robertson of the British Retail Consortium, who said “Scrapping best-before dates won’t reduce food waste. Customer education will.”

via Sell-by dates past their sell-by date? by VegBox Recipes – ooffoo.com .

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Beef Strogonoff

“This classic Russian dish was named after the Strogonov Family”

  • 700 g Fillet Steak
  • 3 tbsp. plain flour
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 1 tbsp. Paprika
  • 50 g Butter
  • 1 large Onion, Thinly Sliced
  • 225 g Chestnut Mushrooms, Sliced
  • 300 ml Soured Cream or Greek Yogurt
  • 1 tbsp. French Mustard
  • Lemon Juice

Thinly Slice the steak into 5cm Strips. Season the flour with salt, pepper, and paprika then coat the beef strips in the flour.

Heat a deep frying pan, put in half the butter (or Olive Oil), add the onion, and fry over a low heat for 8-10 minutes, or until soft and golden.

Add the mushrooms and fry for a few minutes, or until just soft.

Remove the onions and mushrooms and keep warm. Increase the heat and, when the pan is hot, add the remaining butter (or Olive Oil), put in the beef strips, and fry briskly, stirring, for 3-4 minutes.

Return the Onions and Mushrooms to the pan and season to taste with salt and pepper. Shake the pan over the heat for 1 minute.

Lower the heat, stir in the cream and mustard, and cook gently for 1 minute; do not allow the cream to come to the boil.

Add Lemon Juice to taste and serve immediately.

Notes : Good with Rice or Tagliatelle. Butter can be substituted with 4tbsp of Olive Oil. We used Greek Yogurt instead and rump steak cut into thicker shorter strips. Very Very Filling

Source1000 Recipes : Page 323

Servings/Yield : 4 servings

Rating : 5 out of 5

Cuisine : European : Eastern : Russian

Course : Main

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