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A Verstile Parsley Oil

Parsley Oil

  • 100g parsley
  • 8 Anchovy Fillets
  • 2 Cloves of Garlic
  • A couple of peppercorns
  • A tsp of Sherry Vinegar
  • 200ml Olive Oil
  • A pinch of salt

Pound together in a pestle and mortar or blend in a food processor. I use it to bast fish for the BBQ.

Originally printed in Times.

Lamb Mechoui

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From the Casa Moro Cookbook, I made a cumin and paprika salt to make Lamb Mechoui tonight. The recipe was easy.

The seasoning was freshly ground cumin, sweet paprika, hot paprika and sea salt in a 12:2:1:6 ratio. The lamb is only dipped in melted butter and lightly sprinkled with the salt before being grilled.

What I like about the recipe is that it tastes great off the BBQ but is so quick to prepare. I have started to keep extra cumin and paprika salt in my spice drawer to make it faster still to prepare.

Pesto Technique from Jamie Oliver

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I used Jamie's Italy for guidance on my pesto last night.

The ingredient list was nothing special: Pine nuts, basil and Parmesan cheese in a 1:3:1 ratio with a clove of garlic and some olive oil. The technique was good, though. It recommends a three-step process:

Polish BBQ: Beetroot on the Grill

I have been peeling beetroot, wrapping them in foil and placing them directly the heating element of my BBQ.

I am still trying to work out the cooking times but the results are nice. I might try to wrap the beetroots in wet newspaper to see if that improves the results.

Corn on the BBQ

Try wrapping corn on the cob in aluminum foil with a dash of olive oil and tabasco sauce before grilling it on the top shelf of my BBQ.

Somehow, the tabasco seems to make the corn sweeter.

Geng gwio warn gai: Thai Green Chicken Curry

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I finally got time to make a new recipe from David Thompson's Thai Food book. I have had this cookbook for year but it is not an easy book to use. All the recipes require some exotic ingredients and careful preparation. It's not a cookbook that you take off your shelf on a whim for a quick dinner.

Malai Chicken Tikka: The cooking technique was a revelation

From the Food from Fire Cookbook.

Malai Chicken Tikka had several interesting aspects. First, the recipe has two marinades:

  • The pineapple marinade: Combine a pineapple, 8 cardomam pods, 3 tbsp of olive oil in a blender. Season with salt and pepper. Marinade the chicken in the resulting mush for 30 minutes.
  • The creamy marinade: Blend together 50g of ginger, a garlic clove and some chillies. Mix together with 60ml of double cream, 50g of cream cheese and 120ml of yoghurt. Use 1 tbsp of cornflour to thicken if required. Put the tikkas on skewers and pour the creamy marinade over the top. Marinade for 6 hours.

The second interesting part of the recipe was the cooking technique.

BBQ leftovers: grilled eggplant and sopressata calabrese sandwiches

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A couple days ago, I made a grilled eggplant on the BBQ from The Silver Spoon.
The recipe is pretty easy:

  • Thickly slice the eggplant and grill on the BBQ
  • Once grilled, layer the eggplant in a dish while rubbing crushed garlic, sprinkle with basil leaves and drizzle with olive oil

Kefta mkawra tagine

I just found the recipe section of the BBC website (maybe the best non-US website in the world) and tried this interesting tagine recipe.

I substituted pork for the beef and served with a salad. Worth a try - I'll be cooking it again.

A Salad Experiment

Something that worked quite well as a BBQ side dish.

  1. Finely dice the following ingredients:
    • Kohlrabi
    • Radishes
    • Spring Onions
    • Cucumber
  2. Mix diced ingredients with a vinaigrette of your choosing
  3. Place a bed of lettuce on every plate and top with the diced vegetable mixture

The resulting salad should be crunchy and fresh tasting next to a attractive but of meat from the BBQ.

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