Showing posts with label kumara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kumara. Show all posts

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Mushroom and Chestnut Ragoût with Potato and Celeriac Mash



Mushrooms are big around here. Well, actually, they're fairly small, the main type grown is the Paris white, known in NZ as the button mushroom. This isn't Paris so I don't know how they got that name (though I'm sure I will once I finally visit the mushroom museum) but I do know that this town /area produces 90% of France's button mushrooms.  
And are there button mushrooms in this recipe? Only if you want there to be. The recipe calls for portobello and dried porcini mushrooms but I used a mix of varieties I don't even know the names of. I just buy them at the market from the mushroom lady. So feel free, as ever, to adapt this recipe to your tastes. I reduced the cream (it called for 5 T, I felt that was too much and I think it could be lovely without any, too). Also, I had no sherry so used balsamic vinegar which I added a tiny bit at a time, tasting until I got it right. The other thing I didn't have was sweet potatoes / kumara so I made a mash using potatoes and celeriac, an idea I'd got from my husband's guy friends who cooked delicious dishes for their New Year's Party - to my surprise as I think a bunch of mates from an agricultural college in NZ probably wouldn't be so gourmet - at least not cooking for each other at a party. But that's the French for you. And of course their mash had heaps of butter. So you could follow suit and go crazy with the butter if you hold back on the cream in the ragout. But the ragout is very rich so don't over-do both!
I'm not sure what you could replace chestnuts with if you can't find any. In Australia I found them for sale in cans. Chestnuts are lovely with their distinct sweet and savoury taste and firm and sort of buttery texture. Perhaps soaked cashews could work? Other ideas?




Mushroom and Chestnut Ragoût Potato and Celeriac Mash

Recipe comes from the 'Simmer' section (so DO, don't rush it!) of the cookbook 'New Vegetarian Kitchen' by Nicola Graimes (UK book).

Serves 4

40g / 1¼ oz dried porcini mushrooms
3 T olive oil
40g / 1½ oz butter
350g / 12 oz shallots, peeled and halved with the base intact, or quartered if large
500g / 1 lb 2 oz portobello mushrooms, thickly sliced
2 tsp dried thyme
125ml / 4fl oz / ½ cup dry sherry (or an alternative. I used 2+ T balsamic vinegar)
250g / 9 oz cooked chestnuts, thickly sliced
2 Tbsp light soy sauce
a few splashes of hot pepper sauce
2-5 Tbsp double cream
leaves from a few parsley sprigs, chopped
salt and freshly ground black pepper

500 g potatoes, peeled and chopped into chunks
400 g celeriac, peeled and chopped into large chunks
(or replace potatoes and celeriac with 900g of kumara / sweet potato)
2 large garlic cloves
150 ml / 5 fl oz / scant c milk
30 g / 1 oz butter

1 Soak the porcini mushrooms in 150 ml / 5 fl oz / scant c boiled water for 20 mins until softened.
2 Heat the olive oil and butter in a large, heavy-based saucepan over a medium-low heat and cook the shallots for 12 minutes, stirring regularly, until softened and golden in places. Add the portobello mushrooms and cook for another 4-5 minutes until tender.
3 Strain the porcini mushrooms, reserving the soaking liquid, and add them to the pan, along with the thyme and sherry. Bring to the boil then reduce the heat to low and simmer until the liquid has reduced by half and there is no aroma of alcohol.
4 Add the prcini soaking liquid, chestnuts, soy sauce and hot pepper sauce and simmer for 10-15 minutes until reduced by half. Stir in the cream and heat through gently, then season with salt and pepper.
5 Meanwhile, make the mash. Cook the vegetables (potato and celeriac, or sweet potato) and garlic in boiling salted water for 10 minutes or until tender, then drain and return to the pan. Add the milk and butter, season well with salt and pepper and warm through (or better yet, warm milk and butter before adding - but this makes more dishes). Mash until smooth, then cover with a lid to keep warm.

6 Sprinkle the ragout with parsley and serve with the mash/puree

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Gazpacho risotto/paella thing



This is a real 'waste not, want not' meal to use up left overs plus whatever vegetables I had in the fridge. In this case, it was leftover rice, purple carrots and the fibre that remained when I sieved the gazpacho - there was so much of it, I wasn't throwing that away!


1 cup drained gazpacho fibre (see gazpacho recipe in recipe page)
1 & 1/2 cups day-old cooked rice
pinch saffron (optional)
10 pitted kalamata olives
1-2 ripe tomatoes
1 green capsicum
1 red capsicum
1 small orange-flesh sweet potato
1 purple carrot
1 bunch of asparagus
spray cooking oil
2-3 freerange boiled eggs, halved


Heat gazpacho paste in frying pan with a pinch of saffron. Crumble in rice and mix through. Stir in olives.

Halve capsicums, slice sweet potato and carrots into rounds. Spray with oil and grill in oven (fan grill if doing in trays on different racks). When almost done, add the asparagus (tough ends removed).

Serve rice on plates. Decorate with other ingredients as you like.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Roast Tamarillo and Kumara (Sweet potato)



My dinner - and your next recipe idea, comes thanks to reading through my new cookbook: Nirmala's Edible Diary (South American recipes!) This was supposed to be made with Purple potatoes but I only had orange kumara (sweet potato), which means I got 1/4 of the ingredients wrong!

Ingredients

6 whole tamarillos
1 lb small purple poatoes (I used just one huge kumara)
freshly ground black pepper and sea salt
2 T extra-virgin olive oil

Preheat the oven to 200 degrees celsius. cover baking dish with a sheet of baking paper.

Put the whole tamarillos in a saucepan and just cover with water. Bring to the boil and cook for about 5 minutes on medium heat. Drain and let cool.

While these are cooking, slice the kumara into 1" /2cm rounds and arrange on baking paper. sprinkle with salt and pepper, drizzle over the olive oil and rub or turn to coat each piece.

When tamarillos are cool enough, peel away the skin by slitting with a knife at the bottom and peel upwards to the stem. Leave stem on but throw away the skin. Toss just once in the oil with kumara (as they are fragile).

Put the tray in the oven - when kumara is soft, turn each peice over and move to the top of te oven to create a bit of a crisy outside. Keep an eye on them so they will look like mine and not like shrivelled burnt things.

I served mine with an omlette, black beans and pureed greens. Nirmala suggests they are a great side dish for any South American main and she likes to pair it with catfish. I prefer my catfish as a documentary (about facebook weirdness, not that scary one about all the killer catfish in the Amazon - I'm never going swimming in that river now! I won't tell you about those eat-y fishes as it might put you off your South American food which you should enjoy).