Showing posts with label Canapé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canapé. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 December 2023

Spreads – to buy ready-made or not to …

...that is the question!

Do whatever suits you – there are some great quality tapenade and pesto products out there. If you're going to use ready-made buy as good a quality as you can afford.

Here are recipes for both :


Tapenade


100g black olives, pitted

4/5 cloves of garlic (or equivalent tsps of paste)

1 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil

black pepper

lemon juice – try a dessert spoon – you can always add more

4 finely chopped anchovies, drained

75g chopped capers


Blitz the olives, then add the garlic, capers and anchovies and blitz again, briefly – you want a rustic paste, not mush. Tip into a bowl and add the oil, lemon juice and black pepper to taste – remember to taste as you go you can't take it back!

Pesto is vibrantly green! It's made from crushed basil leaves, toasted pine nuts, garlic, Parmesan and olive oil.

The following recipe serves 4, is easy and takes 10 minutes to make.


Pesto


1 small garlic clove or equivalent roasted

pinch of sea salt

25g pine nuts, lightly toasted

50g fresh basil leaves

juice of half a lemon

125ml extra virgin olive oil


Use a small food processor. Put the garlic and salt in the bowl and pulse, then add the pine nuts and repeat until roughly chopped – don't overwork. Add the basil and pulse gently until well mixed but still retains texture. Turn into a serving bowl and add the Parmesan and lemon juice. Pour in the olive oil and mix to a paste. Season to taste.

You could make the pesto ahead and transfer to a jar with a tight lid (sterilised of course) – drizzle a layer of olive oil over the top of the pesto. It will keep in the fridge for up to a week.


If I had to choose one to make from scratch it would be tapenade every time – it really is scrumptious.

Tomato paste is a bit strong for my taste - if it's not cooked it has a bitter taste but preparing some of each will cater for everyone. A tip – a thin scrape of paste is all that's required!

One might say the Crostini is fiddly, but, almost all of it can be done in advance and you can take short cuts for example, you can buy sliced pitted olives, ready to blitz after draining.

It really is whatever is most convenient for you, I know time is at a premium!

Or you could pipe paté onto the crostini ...

Sunday, 19 December 2021

Editors December Picks #12 - Crostini Spreads

Editor's note: And now for something completely different in the middle of the darker months! Pesto is not just for the summertime, it's a wonderful flavour that should be enjoyed all year round. Good pesto doesn't cost the earth but why wouldn't you want to give such a straight-forward recipe a whirl? Absolutely essential to serve with the drinks!


Crostini spreads – to buy ready-made or not to …

...that is the question!

Do whatever suits you – there are some great quality tapenade and pesto products out there. If you're going to use ready-made buy as good a quality as you can afford.

Here are recipes for both :


Tapenade


100g black olives, pitted

4/5 cloves of garlic (or equivalent tsps of paste)

1 tbsp of extra virgin olive oil

black pepper

lemon juice – try a dessert spoon – you can always add more

4 finely chopped anchovies, drained

75g chopped capers


Blitz the olives, then add the garlic, capers and anchovies and blitz again, briefly – you want a rustic paste, not mush. Tip into a bowl and add the oil, lemon juice and black pepper to taste – remember to taste as you go you can't take it back!

Pesto is vibrantly green! It's made from crushed basil leaves, toasted pine nuts, garlic, Parmesan and olive oil.

The following recipe serves 4, is easy and takes 10 minutes to make.


1 small garlic clove or equivalent roasted

pinch of sea salt

25g pine nuts, lightly toasted

50g fresh basil leaves

juice of half a lemon

125ml extra virgin olive oil

Parmesan to taste


Use a small food processor. Put the garlic and salt in the bowl and pulse, then add the pine nuts and repeat until roughly chopped – don't overwork. Add the basil and pulse gently until well mixed but still retains texture. Turn into a serving bowl and add the Parmesan and lemon juice. Pour in the olive oil and mix to a paste. Season to taste.

You could make the pesto ahead and transfer to a jar with a tight lid (sterilised of course) – drizzle a layer of olive oil over the top of the pesto. It will keep in the fridge for up to a week.

If I had to choose one to make from scratch it would be tapenade every time – it really is scrumptious.

Tomato paste is a bit strong for my taste - if it's not cooked it has a bitter taste but preparing some of each will cater for everyone. A tip – a thin scrape of paste is all that's required!

One might say the Crostini is fiddly, but, almost all of it can be done in advance and you can take short cuts for example, you can buy sliced pitted olives, ready to blitz after draining.

Coming up – the risotto “spin-off” dishes

Saturday, 21 August 2021

Late lunch or a snack

Here's the recipe as promised :


Smoked Trout Mousse


400g smoked trout

2 tsp creamed horseradish (optional)

3 tbsp double cream

1 squeeze lemon juice

pinch of black pepper


Serves 4-6


Flake the trout and place in a mixing bowl with the horseradish and the double cream. Mash with a fork until well mixed, add a squeeze of lemon juice and season with black pepper – salt if required.

Will keep in the fridge for 2 days.

This mousse would also make an excellent canapé topping.

If you want to try a canapé idea, blinis are great! They are easily available – I got mine from M&S – 16 Cocktail Blinis for £2.50.

Here they are :

For those not in the know – a blini is a small, thin Russian pancake and in Russia served – if you can afford it – with caviar! There are variations on the theme sweet or savoury – a very useful addition to your canapé collection. Smoked salmon and cream cheese probably being one of the most popular.

You could be forgiven for thinking I am digressing. For once it's entirely deliberate, one recipe leads to another idea, which you might find even more useful, if you get my drift!

Coming up – Saturday evening meal ...



Saturday, 15 August 2020

The back catalogue – something different


Most of us only eat dates when hidden in a sticky toffee pudding – in other words when they don't resemble dates.

This next recipe is another cicchetti choice – it's “outside the box” - there's no avoiding the dates but it's worth the risk - the combination of sweet, salty and savoury works like a charm and is a perfect addition to your fusion mezze menu.

Dates wrapped in Parma ham

for 20 canapés

1 tsp of vegetable oil for greasing
20 dried dates – stones removed
20 small cubes of Parmesan or other hard cheese
10 slice of Parma ham, halved


Pre-heat the oven to 170fan/190c/Gas 5. Lightly grease a baking tray, large enough to fit all the dates. Remove the stone from the dates and replace it with a little cube of cheese.

Wrap each date in half a slice of Parma ham and fix each one closed with a wooden cocktail stick. Lay the dates on the lightly greased baking tray.

Bake for about 10 minutes or until the ham begins to crisp.

Serve hot.

Prep ahead, cover and fridge until you're ready to bake.

The fact that this morsel contains dates lends itself very much to Middle Eastern cuisine too and so, despite Italian in origin, it's the epitome of fusion and perfect for your mezze spread.

Up next … a Lebanese salad

Saturday, 1 December 2018

What to serve with …


the canapé, the lunch or the supper? Easy – beetroot – salmon and beetroot is a marriage made in heaven.

Earlier this year I made a relish to go with burgers – it's perfect with the spiced salmon. For ease, here's the recipe again.

Bazzin' beetroot relish

300g vac pack of organic cooked beetroot
drained and cut into small cubes
1 sharp eating apple, peeled, cored and cut
into small cubes
1 medium onion, finely chopped
75g soft dark brown sugar
1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
1 tbsp olive oil
salt and black pepper

Don't forget to use gloves when prepping your beetroot!

Mix well and place all the ingredients in a medium saucepan – 16cms in diameter. Simmer on a low heat, uncovered, for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally until all the liquid has been absorbed.

Take the pan off the heat and allow to cool. Box up and fridge until ready to use.

This relish is “your flexible culinary friend”, to coin a phrase – a topping for a canapé, as a cold side for a lunch or warmed to serve with a supper.