About ME!
HELLO!!
I'm Christine. I'm a busy mum to 5 year old twins, Robin and Evie and wife to Ian. I also run a property management company. We live in a small village in beautiful, rural Northumberland. I love spending time at home with my family, running and exercising and socialising with my fabulous friends.
When I'm not busy with work, family or friends, my favourite pastimes are cooking and eating (often a combination of family/friends and food). I particularly get so much (too much?!) pleasure from making healthy, nutritious meals from nothing (well, whatever I've got in the house!), making leftovers exciting and not wasting a thing. I HATE waste. I've wanted to start a blog for a few years but time just hasn't allowed it. But I'm very excited about getting it going now and sharing my passion for food with the world!!
I'm very health conscious and want to feed my family good food, on a budget. As you can imagine, time is not something that I have a lot of so my cooking has to fit in with my busy life. Weekday cooking has to be fuss-free and speedy but I still want it to feel indulgent.
I am also a keen vegetable gardener. There is little better than creating a whole meal from produce that you raised with your own fair hands. And in the British weather, it's not always easy. It makes you appreciate it even more though! I would urge anyone to have a go at growing their own. Even if it's just a few of your favourites in pots or some herbs on the windowsill. Do it!
I'm going to try and share some of the recipes that I create and any tips that I have along with general ramblings about food and the good life!
Don't expect fine dining, just homemade, tasty, healthy and wholesome food. Always on a budget! Maybe with the odd flashy, entertaining number thrown in for good measure. The budget won't go out the window though.
I'm very new to this so please bear with me until I find my feet!!
I hope you enjoy it. All feedback very much appreciated!!
Thanks y'all!
Monday, 1 December 2014
Northumberland Gazette Article - 20th November 2014
Northumberland Gazette Article - 20th November 2014
I've had a lovely month since I last wrote. We've enjoyed Halloween, with the kids revelling in trying to scare the neighbours, and bonfire night which ended up with no bonfire (well, a very flame retardant, damp one) but lots of fun with friends and neighbours and fireworks! Of course, the best thing about both of these occasions is always the food. The leftover (on purpose) pumpkin that makes it's way into soups, cakes, pasta and pies, and the traditional delights that we have to enjoy on bonfire night - for me it has to be tinned tomato soup, from a flask, and hot sausage sandwiches. It's the law. It makes me feel so nostalgic about lovely bonfire nights on the farm, as a child. Frugal or not, sometimes nostalgia has to reign.
I have been incredibly frugal this month, actually. I am always, of course, but this month was such a busy one that I didn't make it to the shops until today. And that was under duress. I had a few cherry tomatoes, some mushrooms, half an onion and a few spinach leaves in the fridge (not another veg to be seen. Oops) and I'd even run out of my staple tinned tomatoes in my store cupboard. Regular readers may be able to feel my panic. I found some pork mince and decided to concoct a recipe. It had to be something that the kids would eat as well so I decided to base it around pancakes. I've always got flour, milk and eggs so that's easy enough. Although even my flour ran out so my batter was rather runny! I added a little grated cheese so that we could have cheesy pancakes and decided to use these to layer up the mince.
I created a sort of pancake lasagne with mushrooms and pork mince! It was not bad at all. I cooked the onion and mushrooms in butter, oil and garlic and then added the mince. I turned the heat up to brown it and added lots of thyme, a splash of white wine vinegar, a squirt of tomato ketchup, a crumbled beef stock cube and some salt and pepper. I found some soft cheese with herbs that needed used and I mixed that in.
I had some natural yoghurt so I mixed in a beaten egg, salt and pepper, and a grating of nutmeg. I would have loved to have made a proper bechamel sauce but a) time was against me, b) I wanted to make it healthy and c) even though I'd have overridden points a) and b), I couldn't override the fact that i had run out of flour. So, healthy version it was! It worked pretty well, really!
In a buttered oven dish, I started with a layer of the mince, a sprinkling of tomatoes and spinach then added a layer of cheesy pancakes. I poured some of the yoghurt mix on top of this and then repeated the same steps, ending with a final layer of yoghurt and the best pancake that I'd made (obviously the last one. Why is that always the way?) on the top and a sprinkling of cheese for good measure. I baked it for 20 minutes (longer would have been better but my kids were ready for bed. I served it with some green beans I found in the freezer.
If I was to make this again I'd add some breadcrumbs to the mix to soak up some of the juices.
Whether you want to admit it or not, Christmas is almost upon us. Homemade Christmas cake, pudding and mincemeat just can't be beaten. It might feel like an initial outlay getting the dried fruit etc but it's so worth it when you're enjoying your own fare. And you can be enjoying mincemeat for months and months (or years! I’m still using mincemeat from 2 years ago!) to come and it makes a lovely gift too. Before you hit the shops, make sure you’ve delved right to the back of your cupboards as you might just find some of the ingredients there and they last for so long that I can almost guarantee they’ll be fine!
I'd especially encourage you to make your own mincemeat. I have to force myself not to eat it directly from the jar. It really is that good.
I make mince pies throughout the festive season but I also use it to jazz up ice cream or to make desserts out of apparently nothing. Try making a mincemeat sponge pudding - it gives a real wow factor yet fabulously frugal off-the-cuff pudd - or use it as a lovely addition to bread and butter pudding. Create little mincemeat sandwiches when you're assembling it.
I sometimes make individual sundaes as a sweet treat during the winter. It is rare that I wouldn't have ice cream and some frozen fruit in the freezer. Frozen cherries are great to have in the house for delicious impromptu puddings.
This is my go-to mincemeat recipe. I've made this for far too many years to mention. It's Delia Smith's and it's still the best. I'd encourage everyone to make this or to get children to make it. It's a fun and easy recipe to make as it's really just assembly and stirring, whilst surrounding yourself in the most amazing Christmassy smells imaginable.
The Best Mincemeat Ever (thanks Delia)
450g cooking apples, peeled, cored and finely chopped.
225g shredded suet
350g raisins
225g sultanas
225g currants
225g mixed candied peel
350g soft dark brown sugar
Grated rind and juice of 2 oranges
Grated rind and juice of 2 lemons
50g sliced almonds
4 teaspoons ground mixed spice
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ nutmeg, grated
6 tablespoons brandy
Just mix all the ingredients, except for the brandy (although I sometimes add a little here too), together in a large bowl very thoroughly. Then cover with a cloth and leave for 12 hours. Place the mincemeat, loosely covered with foil, in a cool oven, 120c or gas ¼, for 3 hours. This process slowly melts the suet which coats the rest of the ingredients and prevents fermentation taking place if too much juice seeps from the apples during storage. Then allow it to cool, stir in the brandy and spoon into sterilised jars. Cover with waxed discs and seal.
Leave it for as long as possible before using but if you can actually stick to this, you’ve got more will power than I have!
Mincemeat Sundae
This usually comes about when I'm desperate for pudding but haven't got anything in or the time (or inclination) to create something from scratch.
As I mentioned earlier, frozen cherries are very handy and they form a base for this. They go nicely with the orangey, brandy flavours that come from the mincemeat.
I melt a knob of butter in a saucepan over a low heat, add about a tablespoon of honey and a couple of teaspoons of sugar. Stir until it’s a smooth consistency and add a handful of the frozen cherries. Stir frequently. I also add an extra squirt of orange (or Satsuma as they’re always in my kitchen at this time of the year).
Put a spoonful of the mixture in the bottom of a glass, add a scoop of vanilla ice cream, a spoonful of mincemeat, another scoop of ice cream and then I mix about a teaspoon of mincemeat with the remaining cherry sauce and pour it over the ice cream. If I had some amaretti biscuits I would have crumbled some through the layers or on the top with some toasted almonds but, alas, I had neither! It was still delicious though!
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