Comforting recipes from Nicola Millbank AKA Milly Cookbook: Swedish Potato Waffles

swedishpotatoewafflesrecipefour-comforting-recipes-from-nicola-millbank-aka-milly-cookbookSwedish potato waffles

Makes 4

Channel your inner hygee with these simple potato waffles, decked with traditional creme fraiche, onion, roe and dill. If you don’t have a waffle machine, turn the mix into patties and cook in a frying pan.

Ingredients:

For the waffles:

– 2 cups of mashed potato

– 2 tbsp. of plain flour

– 1 free range egg

– 1/2 a red onion, finely chopped

– 1 tbsp. of chopped dill

– A pinch of salt and pepper

To top:

– 4 tsp. of roe

– 4 tbsp. creme fraiche

– 4 tsp. of finely chopped red onion

– A few sprigs of fresh dill.

Method:

– Preheat your waffle iron to the highest setting.

– In a bowl, mix the potato, flour, egg, red onion and dill into a smooth and sticky batter. Season with salt and pepper.

– Dollop a ladle full into each section of the waffle machine and close, cooking for a few minutes until golden brown on either side.

– Top with a tablespoon of creme fraiche, a teaspoon of roe and red onion. Scatter with fresh dill and serve immediately.

 

Recipe by Nicola Millbank AKA Milly Cookbook. Milly’s debut book, Milly’s Real Food will be published BY Harper Collins in hardback, priced at £20 and released on 4th May 2017. For more information and additional recipes see: http://millycookbook.com/

 

 

Caprera: New Online Artisan Food and Beverages Marketplace Brings The Goods

megscottagehandmadefudgeFrost are foodies. Anyone who has ever come across this magazine will know that. So when we got sent some Meg’s Cottage homemade fudge via Caprera, a new online artisan food and beverages marketplace, we decided to check it out. Frankly, our bellies rumbled and our mouth was watering. Take a look for yourself. The fudge they sent was delicious.

The website features high-end products made in small batches by independent producers. Customers will be able to order from an assortment of over 200 artisan products from around the UK.

Caprera aims to let people reconnect with nature, remember their roots and the origins of food by enhancing interactions between artisan food lovers and small independent producers.

At present, 15 artisan producers have joined this growing marketplace. The company expects rapid growth as the platform develops toward its official launch later this year.

Solving the logistics challenge of food delivery has been famously difficult. Other companies attempting to create a marketplace for producers have struggled to consolidate delivery or work with small batch producers. Caprera fixes this by creating a complete end-to-end ordering experience, where customers can shop from any of the listed producers and receive their order in a single delivery in the following week.

“This could be a game changer for food lovers everywhere. Broadening access to craft foods made by artisan producers across the country means we don’t have to settle for second best anymore.” – Jeremy Hibbert-Garibaldi, Co-Founder

Caprera espouses full transparency in the supply chain and strongly highlights the story behind each product and producer. They have produced several mini-documentaries of producers sharing how they make great food.

Caprera has also published an online food lifestyle magazine with original content about artisan food culture.

 

Move Over Beans Asparagus for Breakfast: Toasted Sour dough, Bacon, Eggs and Asparagus Recipe

Is there any other seasonal vegetable that attracts your attention, and then tickles taste buds like fresh, tender asparagus spears? We are slap bang, right in the middle of the all too short, English asparagus season* and now is the time to sing the praises of this versatile vegetable. Char-grilled over the dying embers of a barbecue, baked wrapped in Parma ham or dipped in a luxurious duck egg, I simply cannot get enough of the stuff. Asparagus is grown and eaten pretty much worldwide, and because of the year long availability of imports it is no longer the quite the once sought out delicacy it was in English and European kitchens. But I am not talking about the bunches of stuff in your supermarket from Peru or South Africa, I mean the fresh, fine stems available for a limited time, if your are lucky enough from your garden or if not from your neighborhood Farmers Market or local Green Grocers.

*The English asparagus season traditionally begins on 23 April and ends on Midsummer Day.

Asparagus has been prized since Greek and Roman times as a culinary delight, for considered medicinal properties and was even used as a offering to their deities. Asparagus has also been considered to be an aphrodisiac , the sixteenth century erotic writer Shayk al Nefzawi, claimed a daily dish of asparagus, first boiled, then fried in fat with egg yolks and condiments, has ‘great erotic effects.’ I cannot go so far as to confirm his claims but asparagus is packed full of vitamins and minerals, is low in calories and sodium and is an excellent source of dietary fiber.

Before the recipe I better answer a couple of frequently asked questions. First is white asparagus different to green? The asparagus eaten in continental Europe is almost exclusively white, and you can see it regularly in jars on the shelves of good delicatessens. The lack of colour comes from obscuring the growing asparagus tips from day light by piling earth around the shoots. This ‘blanching’ of the stems as they grow results in white or ivory asparagus which is considered to be both less bitter and more tender than green asparagus. The stems however tend to be thicker and need peeling before cooking.

The second question is a little more delicate, does Asparagus make our urine smell funny? The problem is that not everyone can smell if in fact, if this is true. Some of the great minds of the past wrote about the subject, the American polymath ,Benjamin Franklin, in a letter to the Royal Academy of Brussels commented,”A few Stems of Asparagus eaten, shall give our Urine a disagreeable Odour…” Asparagus contains a protein that does alter the smell but it was not until 2010 that was it discovered that only about 22 per cent of the population have the necessary genes required to appreciate the result.

 

Storing, Preparing and Cooking

If you are not able to harvest your own asparagus bed and drop straight into a pan of boiling water, then when you buy your bunch and bring it home simply wrap in damp kitchen paper, put in a paper bag and place in the salad drawer of the fridge. You can also store it in a glass or jug of cold water in the fridge.

New season asparagus spears only require you to cut off the bottom centimeter and then a good wash under the cold tap to remove any grit. For larger older asparagus, which will have more pronounced flavour, grip the spear in both hands and bend until it snaps. Keep the top for eating and freeze the thicker woody end for making soup. If the end of the spear still feels a little tough, you can shave away the skin using a vegetable peeler.

Traditionally asparagus is boiled or steamed, for about three to five minutes, depending on thickness, until the stems are just drooping, but not totally soft and floppy. You then dip in hot melted butter or Hollandaise sauce. Alternatively the spears can be brushed with good quality olive oil, sprinkled with sea salt, then roasted or grilled, then served with freshly grated black pepper, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice and a few Parmesan shavings.

When you have collected a good quantity of frozen woody stems you can defrost and then simmer in a nice home made chicken stock with a couple of large, peeled potatoes. Blitz in a food processor then pass through a sieve. This will remove any stringy pieces but can be a little time intensive. You can finish this soup with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice, a little double cream or crème fraiche, a good amount of seasoning and garnish with a few fresh asparagus spears.

 

Toasted Sour dough, Bacon, Eggs and Asparagus

This is a delicious late Sunday breakfast or midweek lunch and the great thing is you can prepare most of it in advance, and there really is no recipe just some guidelines on times and quantities. A good supermarket or farmers market should provide all of the viands, don’t skimp one the quality of the bacon good, thick, fatty slices are best. I have included a ‘glug’ of olive oil, the amount is not particularly important, more than a drizzle less than a pour. I regularly use a glug at cooking demonstrations and everyone seems happier with that, than with metric or imperial amounts.

Sour Dough Brunch-001

A generous slice of Sour dough bread per per person

One free range egg per person

Approximately four slices of streaky bacon per person

Six to eight asparagus spears per person

A handful of cherry tomatoes per person

Two cloves of garlic, peeled and thinly sliced

A couple of good glugs of quality olive oil

A generous sprig of fresh thyme

½ teaspoon caster sugar

Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Preparation

Halve the cherry tomatoes and place in a baking tray. Sprinkle with the sugar and very generously season. Spread over the garlic and thyme and drizzle with some of the oil. Place in a very low oven, Gas Mark 1 / 140 C / 275 F ( you can make these when you are preparing meringues if you are that organised), and leave for three to four hours. The resulting tomatoes should semi-dried intensifying and enriching the flavours and sweetness. You can keep the tomatoes in the remaining olive oil, in a sealed plastic container, in your refrigerator for up to a week and use on salads, in pasta dishes and sauces.

Bring a pan of water to the boil and add room temperature eggs, this stops the eggs from cracking and blowing in the pan. Boil for five minutes then refresh by plunging immediately in plenty of ice cold water to stop the cooking process. Peel the eggs carefully.

To Serve

Line a baking tray with foil to catch any drips and top with a baking rack. Lay out the bacon and place under a moderately hot grill to cook and crisp, turning occasionally. Wash the asparagus carefully and trim any thicker stems. Once the bacon is cooked remove from the grill and keep warm. Start to toast the bread. Heat a second pan of water and add a quarter teaspoon of salt. Poach the asparagus for three minutes the add the eggs and simmer for a further to minutes. Assemble the dish by buttering the toast and placing on the bacon and asparagus. Dress the asparagus with a little olive oil and a sprinkle of salt and pepper. Carefully halve the eggs and place on the plates with a few tomatoes and there we have it. Enjoy.

 

Gillray’s Steakhouse and Bar Review

Gillray’s Steakhouse and Bar is one of London’s gems. Not only is it the perfect place to have one of their amazing cocktails, it also has a stunning location. Right near the London Eye, the view while you eat is something to behold. Which brings us to the food.

When you sit down you will be treated to one of Gillray’s famous Yorkshire Puddings. They are huge, delicious and come with perfect horseradish sauce. They also have cheese in them. My mouth is watering just writing this.

Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar scallops Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar mocktail Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar soup Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar wine

To start I have the Pan fried scallops with brussel tops, crispy ham and cauliflower purée. My colleague has the soup of the day: Cauliflower and truffle. The scallops are perfectly cooked, the crispy ham is just that and the purée gives a very different touch. I am unsure at first but it works. My colleagues soup is also delicious. I have a great mocktail, proving that Gillray’s can still deliver without alcohol and my colleague has a glass of wine that she really enjoys.

Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar burger chips Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar lemon sole Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar cauliflower cheese Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar sauce Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar view London Eye

For our mains I have the Gillray’s Steak Burger. It comes with chips and a wonderful marmalade. The tomato sauce and brown sauce is made especially for Gillray’s, it tasted great and comes in very cute jars. My colleague has the South Coast Lemon Sole with Parsley Butter. On the side she has the Cauliflower Cheese. All is superb.

For dessert my colleague has the Gillray’s classic Traditional Sherry Trifle: layered sponge fingers and red fruit soaked in sherry, covered with custard and topped with whipped cream. It is different, fun, mouth wateringly tasty and you even get the recipe to take away with you. I have the Chef’s Ice Cream. You get three scoops and I choose mint chocolate chip, valrbona dark chocolate and raspberry ripple. The ice cream is yummy. Just as I expected.

 

sherry trifle Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar gillrays ice cream Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar teapot Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar tea Gillray's Steakhouse and Bar view London Eye

 

We finish with an English Breakfast tea for me and an Espresso for my colleague. They go down perfectly after our superb meal. I will definitely be returning to Gillray’s again. I think I will try their afternoon tea next.

Gillray’s Steakhouse and Bar

Gillrays’ Steakhouse & Bar,
London Marriott Hotel County Hall,
Westminster Bridge Road,
SE1 7PB

020 7902 8000, email enquiry@gillrays.com

 

 

 

Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Review

Parts and Labour is the new restaurant that has just opened in Whitechapel within the Qbic London City Hotel. Parts & Labour serves modern British food and offers all day dining within a cool and vibrant space. The decor is fresh and funky, featuring Scandinavian design influences. Channelling the Jewish heritage of the Whitechapel area, Parts & Labour also serves an array of traditional Jewish dishes such as Toasted Rueben (a hot salt beef sandwich, with sauerkraut and Swiss cheese), Chicken soup with dumplings and Sabich (flat bread topped with egg, aubergine and salad).

Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Review liverpate Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Review Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Reviewqbic

My colleague, Paloma, and I take our seats and I order a coke. Paloma goes for a Spanish Rioja which smells amazing. She likes it. The menu looks great and it takes us a while to decide. In the end I go for something traditional: Ham & Cheddar Croquettes with Herb Mayonnaise and Paloma has the Chicken Liver Pate, Apple Chutney and Brioche. The chicken liver is creamy and soft with a delicate hint of metallic flavours. It has little chunks of onion and spread over the sweet, sticky and toasted brioche, with a lick of chutney combined gives all the right textures and tastes. My croquettes are delicious, the filling is perfect and they are just the right size. The herb mayonnaise is gorgeous and goes perfectly with the croquettes.

Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant ReviewburgerParts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Reviewcute Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Review salmon

For our mains I have the 6oz Cheeseburger, Onion Marmalade and Chips and Paloma has the Salmon Fishcake, Buttered Spinach and Brown Shrimp Butter Sauce. My burger is AMAZING. Really good. The onion marmalade goes perfectly and you can’t go wrong with chips. The tomato ketchup comes in a cool, retro tomato. The salmon fishcake was beautifully browned and fluffy inside. The sauce was delicious, salty butter fused with spinach.

Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Reviewapplecrumble Parts & Labour Whitechapel Restaurant Reviewdessert

For dessert we have the Apple & Rhubarb Crumble with Custard and Chocolate Marquise with Prunes, Pistachio and Meringue. The crumble is crispy and sweet which complimented the sour taste of the rhubarb. It is tasty indeed. The Chocolate Marquise is something to behold: I don’t normally order anything with prunes or pistachio but this dish is amazing. The Chocolate Marquise is divine, the pistachio mousse is mouth-watering, the meringue is perfect and the prune sauce is good. It works well together and is a really wonderful desert. I want to eat it again.

The food is great, the hotel is quirky and cool, and the service is excellent. We loved Parts & Labour. I might even go again despite living on the opposite side of London.

 

 https://london.qbichotels.com/en/enjoy-our-bar-and-restaurant.html

 For reservations 0203 021 3300 or email: reservations@partsandlabour.london

 

Qbic London City Hotel
42 Adler Street,
London,
E1 1EE

Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review

The Mayfair Pizza Co is in a truly beautiful part of Mayfair, Lancashire Court. One of those little hidden gems of London. I arrived on a sunny day with a friend to review. The restaurant is beautiful, refined and classy. It is a happy and relaxing setting. I order a coke and my friend has some water and we order some olives to get us going. The olives are delicious and fresh and come with salted almonds.

To start I have the Dorset Crab Salad with Apple, Avocado and my friend has the Salt & Pepper Squid with Saffron Aioli. My crab salad is very unique and comes in a crab shell. It has lots of different textures and ingredients that go together wonderfully. It is unique and tastes great. My friend, Lynn, is a fan of her squid and says it is good. She would have liked a plate however. Overall presentation is great and the service is first-class.

 Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review, London, pizza, restaurant, review , pizza,  squid, crabs, food, food porn, Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review crab

What we don’t have for our mains is the hottest pizza in town. The Mayfair Pizza Co have the spiciest pizza going at the moment. I didn’t try it as I am heavily pregnant and didn’t want to go into labour but it sure looked good. Read all about it via the above link. Executive Chef Michael Lecouter’s latest creation is must-try for any discerning pizza connoisseur.

For our mains I have the Chicken Milanese with Rosemary Potatoes, Red Onion Jam & Tender Stem Broccoli. Lynn has the

Fiorentina pizza which comes with Mascarpone, Spinach, Soft Boiled Egg, Parmesan, Ex Virgin Olive Oil. My chicken is good, the rosemary potatoes are perfect and so yummy, the red onion jam goes well with everything and is delicious, as is the tender stem broccoli which is perfectly cooked. Lynn loves her pizza. The soft boiled egg, rather than the traditional fried egg on top throws us initially, especially as it is cold. The pizza is good however and the soft boiled egg gives a different touch.

Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review pizza Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review chicken milanese

For dessert I have a Trio of Gelato. The ice cream is delicious. It tastes home made and if I wasn’t so full I could have had seconds and thirds. Lynn wimps out and doesn’t have dessert. In her defence she is going swimming later and I have eaten so much I would sink.

Mayfair Pizza Co Restaurant Review dessert gelato

The Mayfair Co is a wonderful place to eat. Beautiful, classy and relaxing. Even the loos are beautiful. The food is top-notch and the service is impeccable. Go and see for yourself.

 

Mayfair Pizza Co.

4 Lancashire Court, New Bond Street,

London W1S 1EY

www.mayfairpizzaco.com

@mayfairpizzaco

Are You Brave Enough To Try The Hottest Pizza At Mayfair Pizza Co?

pizza, mayfair, hot, spicy, spicy pizza First came Sweet Dessert Pizzas. Then came Bloody Mary Pizzas. And now posh parlour Mayfair Pizza Co. is once again lighting a fire under London with its latest slice: the Hottest Pizza. 

Spiked with spice for Scoville-shattering levels of searing heat, the Hottest Pizza is made using hot sauces from cult street food favourite The Rib Man and comes adorned with an arsenal of fiery toppings sure to burn down the house.

The Hottest Pizza, priced at £14 and available from now until the end of April, is made with fresh tomato and ‘Christ On A Bike’ sauce spread on a homemade base and topped with ’Nduja Italian sausage and spicy pork rib. A generous sprinkle of dried chilli flakes and smoked jalapeño powder are added alongside mozzarella and fresh scotch bonnets before being blasted at 500°C. Finally, the punchy pizza is finished with creamy burrata, peppery rocket and a drizzle of ‘For The Love Of God’ hot sauce, sure to make your eyes water and your cheeks flush.

Executive Chef Michael Lecouter’s latest creation is must-try for any discerning pizza connoisseur.

The only question is: are you brave enough? 

Mayfair Pizza Co.

4 Lancashire Court, New Bond Street,

London W1S 1EY

www.mayfairpizzaco.com

@mayfairpizzaco

Hakkasan Chinese New Year Menu Review | The Best of London

We have reviewed Hakkasan before and are never disappointed. This michelin-starred restaurant feels like the centre of everything. People talk about Hakkasan in hushed tones in office, they pull happy faces when you say you have been, talking about how delicious the food is. Hakkasan on Hanway Place, the original Hakkasan, is the place to see and be seen. That doesn’t mean you won’t be able to relax however. There is no pretension for all its class and the staff are very friendly and know their stuff. Hakkasan is, without doubt, the best of London. Hakkasan is where to go for traditional Cantonese cuisine.

For Chinese New Year, the year of the sheep, Hakkasan will be honouring the Chinese “Wishing Tree” tradition by collecting wishes from around the world as well as offering a nine dish festive feast perfect for family and friends. The wish collection and signature menu will be available to guests from Sunday 8th February to Sunday 1st March.

This nine dish menu starts with small eats to start.

Dim Sum, Spicy lamb lupin wrap and Golden fried soft shell crab with red chili and curry leaf.

Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #dimsum Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review spicy lam lupin Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #crab #curry #curryleaf Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review sauce Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #cocktails

The starters are stunning. The Dim Sum is always brilliant. Scallops, crab meat, prawn: they are just heavenly. The spicy lamb lupin wrap is perfect, there is a good heat from the sauce and the lamb is expertly cooked. It has a delicious soft texture. The fried soft crab with red chilli and curry leaf is superb. The crab is amazing and the curry leaf goes well, a wonderful and original dish.

To go with our food we have a Kumquatcha, a specialty cocktail representing good fortune, prosperity and happiness, I have a virgin one and my colleague has the real deal. Both taste amazing. A brilliant combination of Germana cachaça, Campari, Kumquat and lime.

The mains include a number of signature Hakkasan items like their Spicy prawn, Stir-fry black pepper rib eye beef with Merlot and Grilled Chilean sea bass in honey, We also have Stir-fry Lily bulb and garlic shoot and Abalone and dry scallop fried rice,

Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #beef Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #lilybulb Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #rice Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #seabass Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #curried #prawns Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review rice

The spicy prawn has generous and delicious prawns in a yummy sauce, the Stir-fry black pepper rib eye beef with Merlot is just perfect and Grilled Chilean sea bass in honey is definitely one of the best sea bass dishes I have ever had. The Stir-fry Lily bulb and garlic shoot is as tasty as it is original and the Abalone and dry scallop fried rice is the best rice ever. I still have dreams about it. There is no bum note in this menu: all of this food is just one mouth-watering dish after another.

Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #wishingtree Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review kumquat tree Hakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #cocktail Hakkasan Celebrates Chinese New YearHakkasan Hanway Place Chinese New Year Menu Review #dessert #wishingtree

The desserts are as amazing as the other dishes. Stunning in their originality, a Kumquat Wishing Tree: chocolate, caramelised macadamia and cocoa rocks, and delicious chocolate treats hanging off a Kumquat tree end the meal. The dishes are out of this world. Not all Asian restaurants do dessert well. I am glad to say that Hakkasan is definitely an exception.

I also have another mocktail. Hakkasan do mocktails very well. Perfect if you don’t want to drink. If you eat from the Chinese New Year signature menu you will receive a red envelope with special gift of a complimentary cocktail or mocktail. More reason to indulge.

Hakkasan’s limited edition menu created by Michelin-starred Executive Head Chef Tong Chee Hwee includes a selection of its acclaimed signature dishes as well as a contemporary interpretation on authentic Chinese New Year fare.The Chinese New Year menu is available for £88.88 per person. A la carte items will be individually priced, starting at £12.88.

For more information on Chinese New Year at Hakkasan, please visit hakkasan.com.