Here they are :
Two bites – gone!
Happy picnicking!
Three Cheese Pastizzi
If you don't want to go to the trouble of making the Pea Pastizzi, there's a simpler Three Cheese Pastizzi version – here it is :
Three Cheese Pastizzi
for 20 pastries
2 x 320g puff pastry sheets – 10 per sheet
10cm/4” cutter
300g/12oz ricotta cheese
70g/2oz grated Mozzarella
40g/1oz Parmesan, finely grated
½ tsp of Dijon mustard
celery salt and black pepper
1 egg, beaten – half to add to the mixture
half to seal and egg wash
Mash the ricotta in a medium mixing bowl until it's smooth – use a fork. Season with the mustard, salt and black pepper, stir and add half the beaten egg – mix well. Cover and fridge until ready for use.
Take your sheets out of the fridge and allow them to warm up – you'll get a cracked and split sheet if you try to unroll straight away.
Roll out the sheet – initially you should get six circles – gather the remnants and re-roll for a further four.
Place a level tablespoon of mixture in the middle of each circle. Brush half the circle with the beaten egg and fold up to seal. Edge the seal with a pastry fork and then egg wash.
Pre-heat your oven 200fan/220c/Gas 7.
Bake the pastizzi for 20 minutes.
If you'd prefer to make ahead and freeze, place the uncooked pastizzi on a tray lined with baking paper. Freeze for 2/3 hours or until firm and then transfer to a strong freezer bag – store for up to a month.
To cook – Pre-heat your oven as above. Flour two baking trays and place the frozen pastizzi, egg wash and then bake for 20 minutes or until golden and cooked through.
The method of assembly is exactly as for the pea pastizzi so I'm not going to repeat it. Photos of the mixture et al that you haven't seen are up next.
... and the method
Heat the oil in a large frying pan until hot. Cook the onion and garlic for 5 minutes or until soft. Add the curry powder, celery salt and black pepper and fry for a further 30 seconds. Place in a container with a lid, cool and then fridge until ready for use.
The photos so far :
Take your pastry sheets out of the fridge and allow them to get to room temperature – you'll get a cracked and split sheet if you try to unroll straight away.
You will need two baking trays, floured and a round straight sided cutter 10cms/4” in diameter. Unroll the sheet – initially you should get six circles – gather the remnants and re-roll for a further four - a total of 10 pastizzi per sheet.
Place a level tablespoon of mixture in the middle of each circle. Brush half the circle with the beaten egg and fold up to seal. Edge the seal with a pastry fork and then egg wash. Do not overfill – use your pastry fork to flatten the filling, it will make it easier to fold and seal – follow the instructions and photos given in “The pastry fork and the dainty” and “The “dew” and the dainty bake” if you'd like to see a step by step photo guide.
The beauty of using a sheet is that it's already flat
– I'd give it a quick once over with a rolling pin just
for the fun of it
Ready for the oven!
Pre-heat your oven 200fan/220c/Gas 7.
Bake the pastizzi for 20 minutes.
Here they are, fresh out of the oven and then cut in half – let them cool!
You'll need 20 of these perfect little pastries – they'll disappear very quickly or you could freeze half the batch for another day!
Alternatively if you're not a lover of peas or taking the time, try the Three Cheese version ...
Serves 2
2 medium sized baked jacket potatoes
approximately 400g – peeled and cut into cubes
measuring 1.5cms/½”
1 medium onion, finely diced and
sautéed with a knob of unsalted butter and
a drop of rapeseed oil until softened – 5 minutes
add 1 teaspoon of Dijon mustard to the onion
150g of grated cheeses – 50g each of Mature
Cheddar, Red Leicester and Gruyere
Black pepper
1 amount of Fast Flaky Pastry
1 egg, beaten for egg wash
1 circular foil pie dish – 18cms/7” in diameter and
4cms/1½” deep
Using a large mixing bowl add the potatoes and onions and mustard – season with black pepper. Fold in the cheeses.
On a lightly floured surface roll out your pastry – dust your rolling pin too. Roll out as evenly as you can turning the pastry as it takes shape – always roll backwards and forwards and quarter turns so that it keeps to a circle. If you roll side to side you'll stretch the pastry and it will shrink when cooking!
Tip the filling into the pie dish – it will seem like a lot – pack down firmly. Egg wash the rim of the dish and then gently lift the pastry lid on top of the filling. The egg wash will glue the pastry in place and you can press the lid onto the filling gently. You can use a sharp knife to remove any excess pastry then, using a pastry fork edge the pie. Egg wash the pastry and add two cuts in the centre of the pastry to vent the pie.
Bake in a pre-heated oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6 for 35 minutes.
Here are the final fotos :
the pastry lid, taken from the freezer
the filling in the portable foil tray
the pastry lid – rolled out, edged, vented
and egg washed
the pie straight from the oven
inside the pie
Scrumdiddlyumptious!
Nearly there – it's a really easy recipe and very tasty – for meat eaters and vegetarians alike.
There's nothing like a crisp, cooked bottom!
You will achieve 530g of filling approximately – if you have leftovers freeze and then fold through pasta for a speedy supper.
You may not want six morsels – if you don't – bag and freeze the cooked pastry bottoms and lids too - as well as boxing and freezing the filling for another day.
When it comes to kitchen kit, the tartlet tins used were a great investment. They have loose bottoms, are a good weight and non stick.
It's the ultimate snack - ticks all the boxes and is definitely a “cheap and cheerful” recipe.
Mushroom and Walnut Morsels
There are lots of photos, it's just to show you how easy this recipe is!
Doesn't look much at the moment does it? Have a look at the final photo guide – I hope you'll change your mind.
It makes sense to me to begin with lining your tartlet tins and blind baking which means you can prep your filling whilst they are in the oven – sounds like a plan – I hate wasting time!
Method :
The pastry
Pre-heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6.
Make sure your pastry has been allowed to come to room temperature – it's easier to handle and it won't break. Dust your tartlet tins with flour – on a non stick tin it's an extra “insurance” to prevent sticking. Cut out your six large circles and ease gently into the tins. Press a square of foil into each tin and then add rice to each to weigh down. You'll also need six smaller “lids” using the smaller cutter, then egg wash and sprinkle with Nigella seeds. Bake both the bottoms and the tops for 20 minutes and check. You may need an extra 5 minutes depending on your oven. Remove the foil and rice and discard. Allow to cool.
The filling
Whilst your pastry is cooking you can prep your filling.
Melt the butter and rapeseed oil in a large saucepan (I used 20cms in diameter) add the onions and soften for 2/3 minutes. Set aside in a bowl, leaving behind the residue of butter and oil. Add the chopped mushrooms, season with salt and black pepper and cook for 2/3 minutes. Add a glug of sherry (or red wine) and then let the mushrooms cook, absorbing the liquid. You don't have to add the alcohol but what is certain is that it brings out the flavour of the mushrooms. Add the onions and walnuts, check your seasoning and adjust to your taste. Add the parsley and then the cream and heat gently stirring, then add the cornflour a little at a time until you get a rich thick filling.
Cool and then fridge – leave in the pan if you intend to serve that day.
When you're ready to assemble place your tart base on a baking sheet, add a scoop of filling and then gently add your lid. I used a heaped ice cream scoop, measuring 5cm in diameter for portion control. Bake in a pre-heated oven as above for 15 minutes and then serve.
Photo-guide up next ...
Retro buffets – do you remember them? An integral part of any buffet back in the day was a mushroom vol au vent. The puff pastry case was true to it's name - “fly in the wind”, they were so light.
Here's another use for that puff pastry sheet stashed in your freezer. Each element can be made when you've time and then all that is required is the assembly.
Mushroom and Walnut Morsels
Makes 6 individual tarts
320g puff pastry sheet
250g chestnut mushrooms, chopped
glug of dry sherry (or red wine) optional
half a sweet onion, finely chopped
100g walnuts, finely chopped
15g unsalted butter
drop of rapeseed oil
salt and black pepper
parsley – 1 tbsp flat leaf chopped finely
or less if you want to use dried
200ml double cream
1 tsp cornflour, slaked
Nigella seeds
1 egg, beaten
Kit required
6 tartlet tins - 10cm diameter
2 cutters – 10cm and 6.5cm
foil squares and rice for blind baking
Method next ...
4-500g mashed potato
1 tsp Dijon mustard
3 generous handfuls of grated
Gruyere, Red Leicester and Mature Cheddar Cheese
black pepper
sprinkle of dried parsley
This is perfect for leftover mash or perhaps a good reason to cook more than you would use!
Mix the Dijon mustard and black pepper into the mash, add the cheeses, cover and fridge until you're ready to use.
Remove the bagged tartlets from the freezer and fridge on the morning of the day you want them.
Fill each tartlet with the mash mixture and top with a sprinkle of parsley, it should be generous and irregular.
Pre-heat oven to 200c/180fan/Gas 6 and a baking sheet.
Cook for 20/25 minutes until the tips of the mash are golden brown.
Serve with the Sharing Plates.
Any leftover cheesy mash can be frozen for another day.
It's providence – I must have known how useful they'd be – they were a huge hit and I'll definitely be making the tartlet cases for stashing in my freezer!
Coming up … ideas for the Tartlet cases
Have a look at the results :
These are large pasties – they measure 22cms/8½” x 12cms/4½” over the middle. Cut in half or leave whole if you're feeding hungry hoards or have a very large appetite!
The bonus – you can make a batch of the pastry, divide, weigh and wrap and treat the filling in the same way. I took my own advice and made two pasties and popped the remaining portioned pastry and filling into the freezer, ready for when I needed a comfort food fix.
I should also say that authentic Cornish pasties are cooked with raw ingredients – I've “borrowed” the pastry, used my own filling and am very pleased that I did!
A small tip - pasties will keep warm for a long time - wrap them straight from the oven in either greaseproof or baking paper and then a clean tea towel. It does work and the pasty will stay warm – it definitely saves burning your mouth when you're itching to devour.
Ta dah – and economical too!
Cheese, potato and onion pie filling
gives generous filling enough
for four large pasties
700g of Maris Piper (or similar variety)
potatoes, boiled and then mashed
2 medium onions, finely diced and
sautéed with a knob of unsalted butter and
a drop of rapeseed oil until softened – 5 minutes
2 teaspoons of Dijon mustard
150g of Mature Cheddar cheese, grated
75g each of Red Leicester and Gruyere cheese, grated
Black pepper
1 egg, beaten for egg wash
Baking sheet, lined with baking parchment
Boil the potatoes until cooked – test by using a paring knife which will pass through easily. Drain and then mash roughly, add the Mature Cheddar cheese, mustard and black pepper. Add the sautéed onion and remaining grated cheese, mix well. Set aside to cool.
The advantage of using a rough mash and adding the cheddar cheese before the onion and remaining cheeses gives you a stiff filling and one that is easy to control which is essential when assembling and completing your pasty. You are able to mould the filling easily – it remains firm and doesn't spill all over your worktop.
Just in case you might be tempted – do not add any “liquid” i.e. milk or an egg – to the mash, it needs to be firm, adding liquid will turn your filling into mush!
Be patient, it's important to let the filling cool completely, you'll be pleased with the result.
Assembly and crimpinology ...