Hot Paprika Pork with Fondant Potato, Chorizo and Sun dried tomato
I made this a couple of weeks ago, It turned out a lot better than I expected so I’ve decided to share the recipe on here.
If you want to make the pork really round, wrap it tightly with cling film and leave in the fridge over night before cooking.
To make the balsamic reduction, add 200mls of balsamic vinegar to a pan and reduce by 50% until it’s nice and sticky, you can do this well in advance or buy it ready made.
I served my pork with spinach, green beans and carrots, all cooked in my electric steamer.
Serves 2
Ingredients
- 300g pork fillet/tenderloin
- 1 large Maris Piper potato
- 1 chicken stock cube
- 400ml Boiling water
- knob of butter
- pinch of dried thyme
- 6 saffron strands
- Picante chorizo
- 6 pieces of sun dried tomato
- Salt
- Pepper
- Hot/Smoked Paprika
- Olive oil
- Balsamic reduction
Method
- Pre heat your oven to 180 degrees c
- Trim any fat off your pork, season with salt and pepper then sprinkle with a table spoon or so of your paprika, rub the seasoning in and set aside.
- Peel your potato and slice in half, then use a cookie cutter to cook 2 round pucks of potato.
- Melt a knob of butter in a saucepan, then add your 2 potatoes to the pan, let them cook until crisp and golden brown then carefully flip them over and cook until crispy and golden brown. Dissolve the stock cube in the boiling water and gently pour into the sauce pan, add a pinch of thyme, salt and pepper along with the saffron. Bring to the boil then reduce to a gentle simmer, cook until the potato is soft and cooked through. It should take about 20 minutes depending on your potato.
- While the potato cooks, brush a frying pan with a little olive oil and then brown sear the pork for a couple of minutes on each side. Once the pork is browned on all sides, remove from the pan, place on a baking tray and cook for 14 minutes.
- Remove the pork from the oven and leave to rest
- In the frying pan you used for your pork, add 3 slices of chorizo per person, and fry until the oil starts to release, at this point add the sun dried tomato.
- Plate your vegetables up along with your potato, slice the pork into two nice big chunks and add to your plate.
- Stack the chorizo and sun dried tomato on each plate.
- Drizzle the plate with the balsamic reduction and some of the oil that came out of the chorizo.
- Enjoy.
Slate Works Chilli Cheese Board with Lewis and Cooper Chilli Pepper Jam
Some friends bought me a brilliant cheese board/serving platter that’s made out of slate and comes with little chilli shaped handles but they also gave me a jar of Lewis and Cooper’s Chilli Jam. It has to be one of the best presents ever.
The cheese board is made by the slate works and is a really good size for both using as a cheese board and as a severing platter for things like Arancini, it’s really east to clean and looks he the business, I’ve found my self doing cheese boards a lot more since I got it just because I want to use the board.
The chilli jam is top notch too, its really sticky so if you’ve kept it in the fridge you might want to remove it for a few minutes before trying to spread it on your crackers. It’s sweet but not too sweet, there’s plenty of chilli pepper flavour but then a lovely little tingle with just a bit of throat burn.
Like most things I’ve tested the jam on loads of different things, from cheese and crackers, ham sandwiches and toasties to dropping a dollop in soup and chilli con carne. I even mixed some with some creme fraiche to make a dip for nachos. Next time I make my Roasted red pepper and chorizo soup I might even drop some in that.
Chipotle Tabasco and Prawn Sandwich
It’s not often I’d post a recipe for a sandwich but I’ve just enjoyed this one for my lunch. It’s so simple yet so delicious.
- 50g cooked king prawns
- 1 tsp Tabasco Chipotle
- 1 tbsp Light mayo
- 2 slices of thick white bread.
- Mixed salad leaf.
Method
- Put the mayo and Tabasco in a small bowl, mix well.
- Add the prawns and gently mix so that all the prawns are coated in the mayo.
- Place the prawns on one slice of bread, top with mixed salad leaf then top with the other slice of bread.
- Slice and enjoy.
Domino’s Gourmet Pizza Range
Domino’s recently launched their new Gourmet range of pizzas and asked me if I wanted to try them, not being one to turn down a free meal I rounded up a few friends and ordered online.
The Gourmet range features a new thin crust, hand stretched base and is made up of the following 3 pizza toppings:
Firenze: A firey combination of Ventricina salami, pepperoni and Peruvian roquito peppers
Rustica: Juicy chicken breast strips, naturally smoked bacon rashers, baby spinach and SunBlush baby plum tomatoes
Florentine: Delicious Greek feta cheese, baby spinach and SunBlush baby plum tomatoes.
We also ordered the Beef Mexicana pizza which is topped with Ground Beef, chorizo, red & green chillies, tomatoes, onions and sour cream drizzle along wtih some sides (Boneless pork bites, Mozerella sticks, chicken kickers and some wedges) a couple of bottles of pop and some delicious Ben & Jerry’s ice cream.
All 4 pizza’s went down a treat, I think I prefer the thinner base to the regular one, it’s crispier and leaves more room for the toppings. Out of the 4 pizzas the Rustica came out top for me, I loved the smokiness of the bacon with the sweetness of the red and yellow tomato. The Roquito peppers on the Firenze were great too, with a great balance of sweet pepper flavour and chilli heat. Also loved the sour cream on the Mexicano..I’ve not thought of drizzling a pizza with sour cream before, although the pizza could have done with a bit more heat as it was just lacking a little oomph!
The sides were all tasty too although everyone thought the pork bites were too chewy and a bit fatty so I don’t think we’d order those again any time soon.
Price wise at £14.99 for 2 large pizzas including delivery it’s not too bad, although if they weren’t on BOGOF a penny shy of £15 seems a bit steep for a single pizza. Domino’s is still the best option we have for local pizza delivery
The order process was fast and simple, although I couldn’t pay by Paypal as we’d apparently gone over the maximum order value for Paypal, this let us track our order online so we knew when it would arrive…quite handy when you’ve got a house full of hungry people. One thing I will say is remember to check the deals tab before adding items to your cart as it didn’t flag up that it was BOGOF on the pizzas so I had to remove them from my basked and re add them from the deals section.
The only hiccup was our pop didn’t arrive with our order but after a quick phone call the delivery driver was back with the bottles, so no problems there.
If you want to give them a go then you can order pizza online from the Domino’s website.
Hairy Dieters Meat and Potato Pies
Those of you who read my other blog or follow me on twitter will know i’ve been cooking lots of food out of the Hairy Dieters Cookbook, one of the best things about the book is that in order to get flavour into a lot of the low calorie food they use a lot of spice so chilli features quite a lot throughout the book.
One of the recipes I was most intregued to try was their meat and potato pies, firstly because I wasn’t convinced you could make pies using ready mix pizza dough (I don’t even use that for pizzas) and secondly because the meat was spiced up with a good helping of chilli powder and chilli flakes.
As it happens I was really impressed with the pies. the dough worked really well, it crisped up nicely and didn’t taste doughy like I thought it might. The filling had a nice spice kick and could certainly be tweaked to include a bit more heat. I will definitley be making them again and may even use the dough mix to make some other types of pie, I might even try my own pizza base mix as the pie casings.
I did struggle to get pie dishes so ended up using pudding ones and folding the sides down.
I’ve taken the recipe straight from here which also has a video. It makes 6 pies, we ate 2 and froze the rest after i’d cooked them.
Ingredients
- 1 medium onion, finely diced
- 2 small carrots, peeled and diced
- 2 celery sticks, trimmed and finely sliced
- 250g/9oz lean minced beef (less than 10% fat)
- 1 tbsp tomato ketchup
- 1 tbsp brown sauce
- ½ tbsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tbsp plain flour
- ½ tsp hot chilli powder
- ½ tsp dried chilli flakes (optional)
- ½ tsp freshly ground black pepper
- 200g/7oz floury potatoes, preferably King Edwards or Maris Pipers, peeled and cut into 1.5cm/¾in cubes
- 300ml/½ pint beef stock, made with 1 beef stock cube
- 75g/3oz frozen peas
For the pastry
- 2 x 145g/5¼oz packets pizza base mix
- about 200ml/7fl oz lukewarm water
- plain flour, for kneading and rolling
- 1–2 tbsp semi-skimmed milk
Method
- Put the onion, carrots, celery and beef together in a large non-stick saucepan and dry-fry over a high heat for 2–3 minutes, until the beef is no longer pink. Keep stirring with a couple of wooden spoons to break up the mince.
- Reduce the heat and add the ketchup, brown sauce, Worcestershire sauce, flour, chilli powder and chilli flakes (if using) and black pepper.
- Cook for a minute, then add the potatoes and stock.
- Bring to the boil, reduce the heat and cover loosely. Simmer for 25 minutes until the potatoes are tender, stirring occasionally. If necessary, remove the lid for the last five minutes and stir more regularly until the mixture is thick.
- Remove from the heat, stir in the frozen peas and leave to cool completely.
- To make the pastry, put the pizza base mixes in a large bowl and mix with lukewarm water according to the packet instructions.
- Turn out on to a lightly floured surface and knead for five minutes until the dough is smooth and elastic.
- Preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas 6.
- Using scales, divide the dough into six even portions – each will be about 80g/3oz.
- From each portion, take off 35g/1¼ oz of the dough to use for the pie lids.
- Roll out the larger piece of each portion on a lightly floured surface until it is about 3mm/ 1/8in thick and large enough to line your foil pie dish, leaving a little overhanging the sides.
- Lift into a pie dish and press down well into the base and sides. This can be a little tricky first time round, but the dough is very forgiving, so take it slowly until you’ve got the hang of the method.
- Spoon a sixth of the mince and potato mixture into the pie case. Brush the overhanging edges with a little milk.
- Roll out the smaller portion of pastry until it is large enough to cover the pie dish. Lift it on top of the pie and pinch the pastry firmly together. Trim with kitchen scissors – using scissors will stop the dough stretching.
- Repeat exactly the same process to make the other five pies and place them on a baking tray.
- Snip once in the centre of each pastry lid with scissors to create a large hole for steam to escape. Brush the pies generously with more milk.
- Bake the pies for 15 minutes, then remove them from the oven and cover each one fairly tightly with foil.
- Put them back in the oven for a further 15 minutes or until the pies are pale golden brown and the filling is piping hot.
- Remove the pies from the oven and leave to stand for five minutes before removing the foil, then tuck in!
Eat17 Chilli Bacon Jam
A couple of weeks ago while on a whistle stop visit to mmm Newcastle I bought a jar of Eat17’s Chilli Bacon Jam, that’s right you read it correctly…chilli bacon jam.
In a nutshell it’s jam made with real smoked bacon, chipotle morita chilli, maple syrup and bourbon. It’s sticky yet crunchy, slightly sweet, smoky and has a lovely chilli kick.
It’s stupidly addictive once you pop that lid and tuck in it’s quite hard to stop eating you’ll soon be trying to put it on and in everything. Chilli Bacon Jam works brilliantly with cheese, cheese on toast, ham, burgers, steak, sausages and even scrambled eggs. I’m thinking it might work quite well spread on cod loin and roasted.
I really do love the flavours and textures, I’m almost tempted to try and make a batch my self but to be honest It’s easier and probably tastier to just buy it from the shop.
It’s not cheap at around £4 for the 110g jar but it really is worth it, so what are you waiting for… check out their website here
Chillis 2012
I’ts been a bit of a crazy year this year, first a something wiped out all of my seedlings then the weather has been changeable to say the least. As a result I didn’t end up with as many plants or varieties as I thought I would.
The plants I did end up with were doing well but then I got a huge white fly infestation which has only just subsided, leaving a few of the chilli plants a little worse for wear.
Still I have plenty of fruit on the plants, especially my Scotch Bonnet plants, the Hungarian hot wax are tiny despite the plants looking healthy, the jalapeno are also a bit on the small side but at least now all they need is some sun to get them to ripen.
Baked vegetable and chilli frittata
I’ve been cooking a lot from the Hairy Dieters book lately and have also been trying to make my own healthier recipes like the spicy 300 calorie pasta I cooked last week.
This is a slightly slimmed down and adapted version of my picante tortilla recipe that i blogged about here, but without the meat and being baked instead of fried.
I worked out it contains about 360 calories per half a loaf, I served it with a nice big salad and was completely stuffed by the end, I think next time i’d maybe only eat 1/4 of it but it was just so delicious we ate the lot between us. It would also be really tasty cold on a picnic or in your lunch box the next day.
Afterwards I thought it might work well with some sweetcorn in and maybe some sun dried tomatoes so I’ll try that next time.
I also cooked mine in a loaf tin lined with greaseproof paper, if you haven’t got a loaf tin use an oven proof dish or bowl.
Serves 2/3/4 depending on how hungry you are.
Ingredients
- 6 large, fresh, free range eggs.
- 1/2 red pepper, sliced
- Handful of peas
- 2 large chestnut mushrooms, sliced
- 1/2 courgette, diced
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 50g feta cheese, broken up into chunks
- 16g Parmesan, grated
- zest of a lemon
- 1 green chilli, de seeded and finely sliced
- 3 spring onions, finely sliced
- small bunch of flat leaf parsley, chopped
- Salt
- Pepper
- 1 tsp dried oregano
Method
- Pre heat oven to 200 degrees c
- Heat the olive oil in a frying pan and fry the peppers for 2 minutes, add the mushrooms and courgettes, fry for another 2, add the chilli and spring onions and peas and fry for another minute.
- Line a loaf tin with greaseproof paper, tip in the vegetables.
- Gently beat the eggs in a bowl, add the Parmesan, chopped parsley, lemon zest, season with a little salt and lots of black pepper, mix well.
- Tip the egg’s over the vegetables
- Sprinkle the feta and dried oregano over the eggs.
- Place in the oven and bake for 30-40 mins, until the eggs have cooked through and are no longer runny in the middle, leave to cool for 5 minutes then tuck in.
Yorkshire Biltong
Last week I was very kindly sent some Biltong and droewors made in Yorkshire to traditional South African recipes, from the lovely people at Yorkshire Biltong, I’ve just started munching my way through so watch this space.
You can buy some online here
Spicy 300 Calorie Pasta
This is one of my favourite pasta dishes, its packed full of flavour and comes in at under 300 calories for a huge bowl that will keep you full for ages. If you don’t want to griddle the vegetables you can fry them but I really think griddling them adds something extra.
I used purple basil when making this last time and it added a really funky colour to the pasta.
If you want to add a bit of meat (and a few extra calories) it works really well with thick cut smoked bacon, spicy sausages, chicken and even thin strips of rare steak.
Serves 2
- 80g of dried pasta
- 1 small red onion
- 1/2 red pepper
- 1/2 yellow pepper
- 1/2 green pepper
- 1/2 small courgette
- 4 medium chestnut mushrooms
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 300g carton chopped tomatoes with herbs
- 2 tbsp parmesan
- Small handful of basil
- 1 tsp dried oregano
- 1 tsp hot paprika
- Tabasco Sauce.
- Few slices of pickled Jalapeño
- Salt
- Pepper
Method
- Cut all your vegetables into chunks, place into a bowl and add the olive oil,
- Heat your griddle pan up so its nice and hot then place your vegetables (apart from the Jalapeño) on, turn frequently so they don’t char too much.
- Place your pasta in a pan of salted boiling water and cook until al dente.
- Drain the pasta in a sieve and set aside.
- Add the chopped tomatoes to the empty pan, warm through for 2 minutes, add as much Tabasco as you can handle along with the oregano, basil and paprika.
- Tip the pasta and the vegetables into the tomato, stir well.
- Taste and season.
- Serve topped with Parmesan, Jalapeño slices and black pepper.
Archives
- July 2015
- June 2015
- April 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- August 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
Calendar
M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |
14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 |
21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 |
28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Categories
- Bottom of the garden
- Chilli Announcements
- Chilli competition
- Chilli diary
- Chilli Drinks
- Chilli Gallery
- Chilli Growing
- Chilli Growing Equipment and Supplies
- Chilli Jams, Sauces and chutneys
- Chilli Main Courses
- Chilli News
- Chilli Products
- Chilli Puddings
- Chilli Recipes
- Chilli Snacks & Bites
- Chilli Starters
- Non Chilli Stuff
- Other Vegetables
- Using Chillis