March Top Picks: Rhubarb Gin, Mesa Sunrise, Books & Beard Oil

Springtime at Cherry Tree Cottage Cathy WoodmanMesa Sunrise Gluten Free Cereal

Mesa Sunrise is a gluten free cereal. It is crispy multigrain cereal flakes made with organic corn, flax, quinoa and amaranth. It is also wheat free. I thought this cereal would taste healthy. Not good healthy like avocado but, bad healthy. How wrong I was. At a loss for what to have for lunch because I had not gone shopping, I grabbed the cereal and: it’s delicious. I would definitely buy it again. It is crispy and filling too. A win.

The Great British Grooming Company Beard Oil.

Smooths and softens beards, it has Argan oil which helps to alleviate a dry, coarse beard. The bearded men of Frost thought it was great.

The Book: Springtime at Cherry Tree Cottage.

A fun and enjoyable read from bestselling author Cathy Woodman. If you love animals and horses this book will definitely be a hit.

After years of training, horse-mad Flick has finally achieved her dream of becoming one of the few female blacksmiths in the country.

Her first job is in Talyton St George. The little cottage on the green where she is staying is idyllic, and it feels like the fresh start she needs. But she soon finds she is having to work overtime to prove her abilities to the not-so-welcoming locals.

One person very much on her side though is Robbie Salterton. He’s a bit of a local celebrity – a handsome stunt rider who does charity work in his spare time – and he seems to be going out of his way to look out for Flick. But is he just being friendly or does he see Flick as something more?

Despite swearing off men, Flick can’t help wanting to find out . . .

Springtime at Cherry Tree Cottage is available here.

Warner Edward’s Victoria’s Rhubarb Gin Review & Cocktail Recipe

This comes in a gorgeous pink bottle. Warner Edward’s Victoria’s Rhubarb Gin is made using ingredients from the Warner Edwards farm, real rhubarb. It is a tangy gin. It tastes great and is just that little bit different.

 

Rhubarb Gin Cocktail recipe, give it a try….

 

Rhubarb Fizz

 

Classic flavours go into this cocktail and they all work perfectly together.  The ginger adds a zing to the drink whilst the lemon balances the sweetness.  We tried quite a few variations of this one which were all amazing but this recipe stood out as the best.  Another great drink for a celebration.

 

Ingredients:

 

  • 50ml WarnerEdwards Victoria’s Rhubarb Gin
  • 10ml Lemon juice
  • 1 Teaspoon grated ginger
  • 10ml Sugar syrup
  • Prosecco

 

Garnish: Sage leaves

Glassware: Martini

Method: Shake all ingredients (excluding the Prosecco) together and pour into champagne flute then top up with prosecco

Warner Edwards Distillery Victoria’s Rhubarb Gin is available here.

 

 

中国新的一年快乐 ( I hope this wishes everyone a happy Chinese New Year )

The next couple of weeks is a busy time in my kitchen, Pancake Day, Valentines, I have to cook soul food for Mardis Gras, a rocking Jambalaya, Buffalo Wings for when I watch the Super Bowl and most definitely celebrate the Chinese New Year. I hasten to add I am not American but they would kind of have this month’s events sewn in the bag if not for Chinese New Year. Now everyone has most likely had at one time in their life a Sweet and Sour or Cantonese Pork or Chicken from the local take away. You know the big deep fried doughy balls of slightly tough meat in a sharp Day-Glo orange sauce. It is about as close to being authentic Chinese as my mother is.

I can only hope to cap Sweet and Sour by giving you a version of a totally bastardised American Chinese dish. Again sweet, a little spicy and altogether created for the palates of mid-twentieth century America a dish called General Tso’s Chicken. The dish is named after General Tso Tsung-tang, a Qing dynasty general and statesman, however, any connection is very tenuous. The origins of the dishes invention are in the 1950’s influx of Chinese to the United States.

General Tso ChickenThe dish is reported to have been introduced to New York City in the early 1970s as an example of Hunan cooking though it is not typical of Hunanese cuisine, which is traditionally very spicy and rarely sweet. Fuchsia Dunlop, in the New York Times, identified the claim of a Taiwan-based chef Peng Chang-Kuei. Peng was the Nationalist government banquets’ chef and fled to Taiwan during the Chinese Civil War. In 1973, he moved to New York to open a restaurant and experimented and developed Hunanese-style cuisine adopting it for western tastes.

Other chefs claim that they created the dish or variations which include vegetables, meat other than chicken in a sweetened sauce. Later the chicken was deep fried before being added to the sauce, now almost every American Chinese restaurant has General Tso’s Chicken on the menu. Where the dish is cooked outside of the United States the dish is less sweet with more vinegar or rice wine vinegar and soy sauce in the ingredients. This is more to my taste and I have an admission I’m really rather partial to it, so here is my version.

General Tso’s Chicken      serves 4
As always a general note of caution
BE VERY CAREFUL WHEN FRYING IN HOT OIL.

 

1 Carrot, peeled and cut into fine strips

100 gr Button Mushrooms, wiped and quartered
1 Red Pepper, diced
A small bunch of Spring Onions, washed and sliced into 2 cm pieces
1 small Red Chilli, finely sliced
3 Cloves of Garlic, peeled and crushed
3 cm piece of Ginger, peeled and finely chopped
100 ml quality Chicken Stock
2 tablespoons of Oil
2 tablespoons Soft Brown Sugar
1 tablespoon Tomato Paste
2 tablespoon Sherry Vinegar
2 tablespoons Rice Wine or Dry Sherry
1 tablespoon Corn Flour
2 Cloves
A good pinch of Chinese Five Spice

for the fried chicken
2 skinned chicken breasts, washed and diced
2 egg whites
Juice of 1 lemon
50 gr Corn Flour
Sea Salt and Cayenne Pepper
2 pints Vegetable Oil

For the sauce heat the vegetable oil in a wok and stir-fry the carrots, mushrooms, garlic and ginger for two to three minutes then add the peppers. In a small pan, heat the chicken stock, vinegar, rice wine, sugar, cloves and Chinese five spice and bring to the boil. Simmer for twenty minutes then thicken with the corn flour mixed with a little water and the tomato puree. After another five minutes simmering, strain into the wok and set on a very low heat.

For the chicken, sieve the corn flour into a large bowl and add a generous amount of salt and cayenne pepper. In a separate bowl whisk the egg whites and lemon juice. Then dip the chicken pieces into the corn flour, the egg whites and back into the corn flour. In your wok or a large heavy bottom, pan heat the oil to 160°C / 320 F using a thermometer to check. If you do not have a thermometer have a few cubes of stale white bread to hand. Place a bread cube in the oil if it rises to the surface and cooks to a golden brown in a couple of minutes the oil is hot enough.

Fry the chicken in batches carefully lowering into the hot oil, for around six to eight minutes or until the batter is crisp and golden, turning from time to time with a large slotted spoon. When the chicken is cooked using the slotted spoon remove from the hot oil, drain on kitchen paper and place into the hot sauce. Add the Spring onions and simmer for a couple more minutes and then serve with steamed rice and garnish with a few extra, finely sliced spring onion tops.

Tanqueray London Dry Gin Review & Cocktail Recipes

tanquerayginWe are quite particle to a Gin & Tonic at Frost. In fact, we love cocktails with gin in them, it is the perfect spirit for cocktails. We are quite fussy about quality but Tanqueray London Dry passed our taste test. It is a vibrant gin which is both sweet and savoury. It has a blend of four of the finest botanicals: juniper, coriander, angelica root and liquorice. It is a superior and high-quality gin. Frost loves.

Tantalise your taste buds with adventurous umami cocktails

When you think cocktail, do you think of a fruity and sweet concoction? Well think again with three delicious, yet savoury cocktails from Tanqueray London Dry Gin.

Over the last year, any cocktail bar worth its salt has featured savoury cocktails on the menu, allowing adventurous drinkers to enjoy the flavour sensation is known as umami – translated from Japanese as a ‘pleasant savoury taste’, which is actually one of the five basic tastes (along with sweetness, sourness, bitterness and saltiness).

Tanqueray London Dry Gin (70cl £21.50, stockist suggestion Waitrose.com) has an elegance and versatility of flavour that makes it the perfect spirit for cocktails – both sweet and savoury, as well as vibrant gin and tonics. The sophisticated flavour profile is achieved by the blend of four of the finest botanicals: juniper, coriander, angelica root and liquorice.
Impress your friends and join trend-setting mixologists with these piquant potions that you can make at home.

Beetroot Shocker
Beetroot Shocker

Ingredients:
50mls Tanqueray® London Dry Gin
15mls Lemon Juice
50mls Beetroot Juice
Pinch of Celery Salt
Top with tonic water

Method – shake first four ingredients with cubed ice and strain over cubed ice in a hiball glass, top with tonic water and garnish with a Lemon wedge and a mint sprig
Units – 2.1

Peppered Apple Martini

Peppered Apple Martini

Ingredients:
35ml Tanqueray® London Dry Gin
15ml Apple liqueur
30ml cloudy apple juice
3 x fresh basil leaves
5ml lemon juice & 5ml sugar

Method – add all ingredients to shaker and shake with cubed ice, double strain into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with a floating basil leaf and fresh cracked black pepper
Units: 1.5

Tanqueray Snapper

Tanqueray Snapper

Ingredients:
35ml Tanqueray® London Dry Gin
2 dashes Worcestershire sauce
Dash Tabasco sauce
4 dashes red pepper sauce
Pinch salt and pepper
Pinch white pepper
Squeeze half fresh lemon
100ml tomato juice

Method:
Combine all ingredients in a mixing glass, add ice, then roll back and forth to mix. Strain over fresh ice into a Collins glass. Garnish with a lemon wheel and celery stalk.
Units: 1.3

 

 

Summer Cocktail Recipe Ideas

Want some great summer cocktail recipe ideas? You are in luck, read on….

Gallo Family Vineyards Wimbledon Apple-scato

applecocktail

Ingredients:
2 ounces of Gallo Moscato
2 ounces of Apple Juice
1Ž4 ounce of Honey
1 1Ž2 ounce of ginger beer
Candied ginger
Sliced apples to garnish

Directions:
1.Combine liquids in cocktail shaker with ice.
2.Shake to blend and chill.
3.Strain into tumbler
4.Garnish with sliced apple and candied ginger

benedictinecocktailworldcup

Celebrate the World Cup with a Monks Maracana created for Bénédictine by Shaker BarSchool. Enjoy a delicious mix of both spicy yet fruity flavours, inspired by the lively and exciting lifestyle of host city of Rio de Janeiro!

Samba down to muddled limes, fresh passion fruit and the herbal notes of Bénédictine, to create a cocktail that is exciting and passionate, perfect to indulge in during the football madness.

Ingredients:
50ml Bénédictine
3 Lime wedges
1 large fresh ripe passion fruit
1 spoon castor sugar
Ice: Crushed or cracked ice
Garnish: Lime twist and passion fruit half
Glass: 12oz Rocks

Method: Muddle limes, squeeze in passion fruit pulp, pour Bénédictine, add crushed ice, churn, top with more ice and garnish!

cocktails

If you’re having a party this weekend and need inspiration for the most fabulous cocktails then read below for Dewintons latest recipes. Their in-house mixologist spends all day mixing, shaking and pouring cocktails, either straight into a Martini glass or served on the rocks with a twist of orange or for a little more flamboyance add a Maraschino cherry!

Sloe Gin Fizz

Delicious Sloe gin shaken with gin, fresh lemon and sugar syrup and topped with Soda

Served in tall over lots of ice!

Bramble

Fresh blackberries shaken with a large measure of gin, fresh lemon juice, sugar syrup and served over crushed ice laced with creme de mure

Tranquility

Fresh raspberries and raspberry liqueur shaken with a slightly smokey whisky

Served straight up and sprayed with a large lemon twist

Honey & Lime Daiquiri

Sumptuous honey shaken with fresh lime juice and rum

Served straight up

Zanzibar

Fresh lime crushed and combined with a chilli & ginger syrup topped with a large measure of rum and ginger beer

Served tall over lots of crushed ice

 

 

Baked Figs with Honey and Balsamic Reduction

For many people of my parents generation their experience of figs used to come baked in a small sweet pastry case the ubiquitous ‘ fig roll ‘. Now I am all for a fig roll, they are quite moreish with a hot cuppa, but today most people have access to the fresh fruit. The fresh fig is far from as humble as our little biscuit, throughout history the fig has been worshipped as a powerful aphrodisiac. In pictorial representation Adam and Eve are clothed in the fig’s leaves, it is said to haven been Cleopatra’s favourite fruit and heavens above I don’t even want to go into the symbolism that runs through the D.H Lawrence poem. They are a particularly high source of iron and potassium but I don’t know if that has any causal link with their supposed qualities.

So how does one tackle a fig ? Some people find the texture can be a little off-putting ( maybe they read D.H.Lawrence ), so I would stew them down to a sticky, sweet compote with a little orange zest and a Star Anise pod. The result is delicious stirred into thick Greek style yogurt, if you have a sweet tooth you can grill them, drizzled with honey, then spoon in some chilled Mascarpone and sprinkle with chopped nuts and chocolate shavings for the easiest of desserts . For the more savoury minded why not settle down to a plate of figs, Manchego cheese, fine Iberico ham and a chilled glass of Fino sherry or simply figs and Prosciutto.

Perhaps the most popular fig dish you will see on high street bistros and restaurant menus is the classic combination baked with Goats cheese. So here is my simple take with a little tomato and olive oil salsa style dressing and a Balsamic reduction. Use two figs as a rich, indulgent starter or three for a filling lunchtime snack. The Balsamic quantities are rather generous but it is easier to make in larger quantities, smaller amounts tend to burn, it is great to have around as a simple salad dressing, to accompany grilled lamb cutlets or just a splash or two on ripe strawberries. The size of the cup is not important just use the same measure each time.

Figs Baked with Goats Cheese and a Honey Balsamic ReductionBaked Figs with Honey and Balsamic Reduction serves 4 for lunch

8 Ripe Figs

3 Soft Crottin de Chavignol

2 Handfuls of mixed Salad Leaves, washed and thoroughly dried

( Rocket, Baby Spinach, Lamb’s Tongue, Curly Endive )

12 Mixed Baby Tomatoes, Cherry, Plum and Yellow

1 Very small Red Onion, peeled and very finely diced

2 tablespoons of the best quality Extra Virgin Olive Oil

½ teaspoon Caster Sugar

Sea Salt and freshly ground Black Pepper

For the Balsamic Reduction

1 Cup of good Balsamic Vinegar

1 Cup Honey

½ Cup Oloroso ( Nutty ) Sherry

To make the dressing place the ingredients into a small, heavy bottomed pan and gently heat. Stir until the honey dissolves then bring up to a gentle simmer. Reduce by half and leave aside to thoroughly cool. The result should be a dark, glossy syrup which you can store in the fridge in a sterilised, airtight container. Before use remove from the fridge and bring up to room temperature.

For the Baked Figs

Preheat your oven to 350 F / 180 C / Gas Mark 4. Carefully cut the figs into quarters, from the top almost to the base, and arrange on a non-stick baking tray. With your fingers break up the goat’s cheese and divide between the figs. Place in the oven and bake for ten to fifteen minutes until the cheese is melted and tinged brown.

While the figs are baking cut up the tomatoes and place in a small bowl. Add the finely diced onion then sprinkle with the caster sugar and season generously. Mix together thoroughly. When the figs are done add the olive oil to the tomatoes and mix once more. To serve place the salad leaves in the centre of the plate and circle with the simple tomato salsa. Carefully place one the baked figs and using a teaspoon flick over some Balsamic reduction. Enjoy.

Move Over Beans Asparagus for Breakfast: Toasted Sour dough, Bacon, Eggs and Asparagus Recipe

Is there any other seasonal vegetable that attracts your attention, and then tickles taste buds like fresh, tender asparagus spears? We are slap bang, right in the middle of the all too short, English asparagus season* and now is the time to sing the praises of this versatile vegetable. Char-grilled over the dying embers of a barbecue, baked wrapped in Parma ham or dipped in a luxurious duck egg, I simply cannot get enough of the stuff. Asparagus is grown and eaten pretty much worldwide, and because of the year long availability of imports it is no longer the quite the once sought out delicacy it was in English and European kitchens. But I am not talking about the bunches of stuff in your supermarket from Peru or South Africa, I mean the fresh, fine stems available for a limited time, if your are lucky enough from your garden or if not from your neighborhood Farmers Market or local Green Grocers.

*The English asparagus season traditionally begins on 23 April and ends on Midsummer Day.

Asparagus has been prized since Greek and Roman times as a culinary delight, for considered medicinal properties and was even used as a offering to their deities. Asparagus has also been considered to be an aphrodisiac , the sixteenth century erotic writer Shayk al Nefzawi, claimed a daily dish of asparagus, first boiled, then fried in fat with egg yolks and condiments, has ‘great erotic effects.’ I cannot go so far as to confirm his claims but asparagus is packed full of vitamins and minerals, is low in calories and sodium and is an excellent source of dietary fiber.

Before the recipe I better answer a couple of frequently asked questions. First is white asparagus different to green? The asparagus eaten in continental Europe is almost exclusively white, and you can see it regularly in jars on the shelves of good delicatessens. The lack of colour comes from obscuring the growing asparagus tips from day light by piling earth around the shoots. This ‘blanching’ of the stems as they grow results in white or ivory asparagus which is considered to be both less bitter and more tender than green asparagus. The stems however tend to be thicker and need peeling before cooking.

The second question is a little more delicate, does Asparagus make our urine smell funny? The problem is that not everyone can smell if in fact, if this is true. Some of the great minds of the past wrote about the subject, the American polymath ,Benjamin Franklin, in a letter to the Royal Academy of Brussels commented,”A few Stems of Asparagus eaten, shall give our Urine a disagreeable Odour…” Asparagus contains a protein that does alter the smell but it was not until 2010 that was it discovered that only about 22 per cent of the population have the necessary genes required to appreciate the result.

 

Storing, Preparing and Cooking

If you are not able to harvest your own asparagus bed and drop straight into a pan of boiling water, then when you buy your bunch and bring it home simply wrap in damp kitchen paper, put in a paper bag and place in the salad drawer of the fridge. You can also store it in a glass or jug of cold water in the fridge.

New season asparagus spears only require you to cut off the bottom centimeter and then a good wash under the cold tap to remove any grit. For larger older asparagus, which will have more pronounced flavour, grip the spear in both hands and bend until it snaps. Keep the top for eating and freeze the thicker woody end for making soup. If the end of the spear still feels a little tough, you can shave away the skin using a vegetable peeler.

Traditionally asparagus is boiled or steamed, for about three to five minutes, depending on thickness, until the stems are just drooping, but not totally soft and floppy. You then dip in hot melted butter or Hollandaise sauce. Alternatively the spears can be brushed with good quality olive oil, sprinkled with sea salt, then roasted or grilled, then served with freshly grated black pepper, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice and a few Parmesan shavings.

When you have collected a good quantity of frozen woody stems you can defrost and then simmer in a nice home made chicken stock with a couple of large, peeled potatoes. Blitz in a food processor then pass through a sieve. This will remove any stringy pieces but can be a little time intensive. You can finish this soup with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice, a little double cream or crème fraiche, a good amount of seasoning and garnish with a few fresh asparagus spears.

 

Toasted Sour dough, Bacon, Eggs and Asparagus

This is a delicious late Sunday breakfast or midweek lunch and the great thing is you can prepare most of it in advance, and there really is no recipe just some guidelines on times and quantities. A good supermarket or farmers market should provide all of the viands, don’t skimp one the quality of the bacon good, thick, fatty slices are best. I have included a ‘glug’ of olive oil, the amount is not particularly important, more than a drizzle less than a pour. I regularly use a glug at cooking demonstrations and everyone seems happier with that, than with metric or imperial amounts.

Sour Dough Brunch-001

A generous slice of Sour dough bread per per person

One free range egg per person

Approximately four slices of streaky bacon per person

Six to eight asparagus spears per person

A handful of cherry tomatoes per person

Two cloves of garlic, peeled and thinly sliced

A couple of good glugs of quality olive oil

A generous sprig of fresh thyme

½ teaspoon caster sugar

Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Preparation

Halve the cherry tomatoes and place in a baking tray. Sprinkle with the sugar and very generously season. Spread over the garlic and thyme and drizzle with some of the oil. Place in a very low oven, Gas Mark 1 / 140 C / 275 F ( you can make these when you are preparing meringues if you are that organised), and leave for three to four hours. The resulting tomatoes should semi-dried intensifying and enriching the flavours and sweetness. You can keep the tomatoes in the remaining olive oil, in a sealed plastic container, in your refrigerator for up to a week and use on salads, in pasta dishes and sauces.

Bring a pan of water to the boil and add room temperature eggs, this stops the eggs from cracking and blowing in the pan. Boil for five minutes then refresh by plunging immediately in plenty of ice cold water to stop the cooking process. Peel the eggs carefully.

To Serve

Line a baking tray with foil to catch any drips and top with a baking rack. Lay out the bacon and place under a moderately hot grill to cook and crisp, turning occasionally. Wash the asparagus carefully and trim any thicker stems. Once the bacon is cooked remove from the grill and keep warm. Start to toast the bread. Heat a second pan of water and add a quarter teaspoon of salt. Poach the asparagus for three minutes the add the eggs and simmer for a further to minutes. Assemble the dish by buttering the toast and placing on the bacon and asparagus. Dress the asparagus with a little olive oil and a sprinkle of salt and pepper. Carefully halve the eggs and place on the plates with a few tomatoes and there we have it. Enjoy.

 

Tis The Season…. For Jersey Royals

cooking, recipes, food, potatoes, potato, Tis the Season.... for Jersey Royals fieldsIf you love your potatoes, your mash, your roasties and your chips then now is the season to celebrate. The first or early potato crops are being lifted in Cornwall and the South West, but for the real connoisseur there is only one option, the Jersey Royal. Now you lucky folk can get them in every high street in Britain, every good green grocer, every supermarket sells the most tasty potatoes you will try. Quite often at a better price than on the island of Jersey itself. So I hold my hand up here, I live on the island, I could always just go dig up a bucket load I guess, if the farmers didn’t guard them so highly.

Tis the Season.... for Jersey Royalsthefields

Right now across our fertile fields you can see acres of plastic sheets covering the wonderful Jersey main season potato crop. The earliest and hardiest growers would have been planting in November for the early season potatoes. Visitors to the island are often amazed by the land that is turned over to potato growing, virtually vertical pockets of soil on rocky outcrops are planted carefully suspended by ropes. The potato harvest lasts from early April through to June depending of course on the climate conditions. The above average temperature of the island, its easy draining soil and the use of the abundant local seaweed as a fertilizer all helps to shape the flavour of this perfect potato. The islanders would swear to the fact the secret is all in the use of abundant amounts of the pungent seaweed.

Tis the Season.... for Jersey Royals potatoes potatoes, cooking, food ,recipes,

We need however to go back to 1878 ( fear not this is only a minor historical digression and an essential part of our tale ) for the origin of the Jersey Royal or to be more precise the Jersey Royal Fluke and it’s unique taste. A pair of abnormally large potatoes were purchased and later cultivated by Hugh de La Haye becoming the fore runners of the modern jersey potato industry. Today at its peak 1500 tonnes a day are exported during the seasons peak and the Jersey Royal enjoys EU protected status.

So what do I suggest you do with the lovely little tubers, on the island they are consumed simply served in a bowl with golden Jersey butter. I have a taste for freshly boiled Jersey Royals with some cold smoked Jersey butter and coarse sea salt if I’m feeling a little culinary inclined. You can served them with Spring Lamb, they as you would expect excellent with simply grilled fish, but here is my favourite, a nice early summer recipe to look forward to, healthy, full of flavour and texture and very easy to make.

Tis the Season.... for Jersey Royalssalads

Roasted Jersey Royal, Chickpea and Sweet Red Pepper Salad

serves 4

The wonderful sweet flavour of the potatoes are complimented by the rosemary, the slightly smoky charred peppers, the salty olives and the crunch of the chickpeas all bound in a simple but fragrant vinaigrette.

1 lb Early season Jersey Royal potatoes, thoroughly washed 2 large sweet red peppers
4 oz ripe on the vine cherry tomatoes
a small tin ( around 4 oz ) of chickpeas, washed and drained 8 tlbsp quality olive oil

2 tlbsp sherry vinegar 1 tsp clover honey
1 tsp Dijon mustard
2 cloves of garlic

1 small chilli, seeds removed

a large sprig of rosemary
a small bunch of flat leaf parsley, washed and picked mixed salad leaves
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

a heavy duty plastic food bag

Preheat the oven to 375F / 190C / Gas mark 5. Place your peppers on an oven proof dish and bake until the skins to blacken. ( You can achieve the same results under a salamander in a shorter period of time ). In a medium sized sauce pan place the Jersey royal potatoes and cover with cold water. Add half a teaspoon of salt place on the hob and bring to the boil, simmer gently for five minutes. Remove from the heat and drop into a bowl of ice cold water. Drain thoroughly and place in an oven tray. Toss with 2 tablespoons of the olive oil, one crushed clove of garlic, the rosemary sprig broken up and plenty of salt and pepper. Roast for 30 – 40 minutes until the skins are crispy.

In the meantime place the charred peppers in the food bag, seal and allow to cool. As the peppers cool the self generated steam will loosen the blackened skins. When cool remove from the bag and on a chopping board scrap off the skin. Do not worry if you cannot remove it all a few blackened pieces add a smoky flavour to the salad. Remove seeds and any membranes and slice. Slice tomatoes in half.

Wipe a medium sized glass bowl with the second piece of garlic that has been cut in half. In the bowl dissolve a good pinch of the salt into the sherry vinegar then add a good grind of black pepper, the honey and mustard. Whisk in the oil. Immediately before serving toss the chickpeas, tomatoes, pepper slices and parsley in the dressing. Place over 4 bowls of mixed salad leaves drizzling with any remaining dressing, top with crisp roasted potatoes and enjoy.

 

https://about.me/cgott

 

 

Mother’s Day Gift Guide

Mother’s Day is on the 15th of March this year and It is time to spoil the most important women in your life. Here is our handy guide to gift-buying for Mother’s Day.

Ringtons loose tea and infuser gift box

We love this. The tea is absolutely amazing and the infuser is easy to use and looks great.

The fantastically presented loose tea infuser sets come in a stylish Ringtons cream and gold gift box, decorated with the famous Ringtons crest.  The sets include a Ringtons tea infuser – a simple device designed to take the fuss out of preparing loose tea and bring out the full flavour of the leaves – and three full size packet of expertly selected loose teas as well as three x 30g sample blends.

 

The Luxury Great British Tea Infuser Gift Box (top image) • £22.99

Includes: Traditional English Breakfast loose tea (125g), Afternoon Blend loose tea (125g), and Classic 1907 loose tea (125g), and 3 x 30g samples.

ringtons tea set

The Luxury Taste the Exotic Tea Fuser Gift Box

• £22.99

Includes: Bird of Paradise loose tea (50g), Samavor Orange Spice loose tea (125g), and Mint Marrakech loose tea (125g), and 3 x 30g samples.

 

The Ringtons Signature loose teas featured and Ringtons gift boxes are available via mail order at www.ringtons.co.uk or via customer care on Freephone 0800 052 2440.


Some Flowers.

buy flowers

Try The Fantastic ‘Summer Memories’ Bouquet – Fresh Flowers with free Delivery

The Notebook  on DVD

notebook

 

Mother And Daughter Message Bangle from notonthehighstreet.com

mother's day gift ideas

 

 

Personalised Thank You Print by Rosie Robins from notonthehighstreet.com

normal_personalised-thank-you-print

Mum’s Measure Wine Glass by Becky Broome from notonthehighstreet.com

normal_mum-s-measure-wine-glass

 

Personalised Family Tree Cushion by A Type Of Design from notonthehighstreet.com

family tree, mother's day mothers day , gift, guide, ideas

 

Cocktails are always a good idea….

cocktail recipe

Quintessentially Vodka Rhubarb Rickey

35ml Quintessentially Vodka

12.5ml Rhubarb liqueur / syrup

12.5ml Fresh lime

Soda (top up)

 

Method: place the Quintessentially Vodka, rhubarb syrup and fresh lime in a tall glass, adding ice and a spritz of soda.

To finish, stir a few times before adding a wedge of lime.

 

What will you be doing for your mother?