Winter Soup with beans and winter veg – cooked on an ESSE flued Gas range cooker by River Cottage Head Chef, Gill Meller.
by Dan
by Dan
Winter Soup with beans and winter veg – cooked on an ESSE flued Gas range cooker by River Cottage Head Chef, Gill Meller.
by Dan
This is a fantastically warming way to cook purple sprouting broccoli and delicious either on its own as a starter, or with roast lamb or mutton.
Serves
Four people
Ingredients
Method
Peel and thinly slice the garlic. De-seed and chop the chillies. Set a medium-sized, heavy-based pan over a medium heat and heat a good slosh of olive oil.
Throw in the garlic, chilli and anchovies. Fry until the garlic takes on a golden tinge around its edges.
Add a splash of white wine or marsala, boil for a few seconds and then add the double cream. Bring to a simmer and turn the heat down. Cook until the sauce is reduced by a third.
Blanch the purple sprouting broccoli in boiling water for a minute.
Drain and allow to steam dry. Lay the broccoli in an ovenproof dish, pour over the cream sauce and scatter with grated parmesan. Bake at 190°C/Gas Mark 5 for 10-12 minutes until golden and bubbling.
Try the same recipe with curly kale in the winter months.
by Dan
Try this stress-free dessert recipe with Tim Maddams: strawberries and chocolate-topped cinder toffee!
by Dan
You will also need 6 individual ramekins
Serves
Serves 6 people
Ingredients
To Serve
Method
Stir together 2/3rds of the lemon juice and the golden syrup.
Heat the mixture gently over a medium heat. Tip it into the pudding basin. Cream together the butter, lemon zest and caster sugar until it’s really light and fluffy. Beat in one egg at a time, adding a spoonful of flour with each, then fold in the remaining flour. Finally stir in the last of the lemon juice.
Spoon this mixture into the ramekins, the lemon juice and Syrup mixture will rise up the sides of the basin – don’t worry about this, and don’t attempt to stir it in with the batter.
Half fill a roasting tin with hot water; it needs to be big enough to fit the ramekins’ in.
Place the puddings in the roasting tin, the water should be coming half way up the sides of the puddings, close the door. The top oven should be reading ‘Hot’ on the dial.
Bake gently 45 minutes or until the puddings are cooked and well risen.
The ESSE is perfect for this type of cooking as it keeps in moisture which is perfect for delicate baking.
by Dan
This soft, moist, dense almondy cake can be served warm for pudding, with lashings of cream, or cold, with a cup of tea or coffee. Firm conference pears should work a treat here.
Serves
Six people
Ingredients
Method
Preheat the oven to 160°C. Your esse dial wants to read hot but not the far side of hot. Grease a 20cm diameter, springform cake tin with a little of the butter and line the base with baking parchment.
Put a saucepan over a medium heat and add 25g of the butter. When it’s sizzling, add 1 tbsp sugar and stir until it dissolves. Add the pear quarters and fry in the buttery caramel for a couple of minutes, until they start to brown. Put the pan to one side to cool a little.
Put the remaining butter and sugar in a mixing bowl and cream together until light and fluffy. Beat in the two eggs, one at a time.
Whiz the whole blanched almonds in the food processor for about a minute to grind them. Tip them into the cake batter (or add the ready-ground almonds), then sift in the self-raising flour and fold in gently. Scrape the mixture into the prepared tin. Arrange the pieces of pear on top of the cake. Bake for about 45 minutes, or until a knife pushed into the centre comes out clean.
Place the tin on a wire rack to cool. Serve warm or cold.
by Dan
Yorkshire Bonfire Toffee (also known as treacle toffee, Plot toffee or Tom Trot) is a hard brittle toffee associated with Hallowe’en and Bonfire Night. It tastes strongly of molasses or black treacle and easy to make at home.
I think it is wise to make with a sugar thermometer since you can be assured of the brittle texture that comes with the hard-crack stage of cooking but it isn’t essential – patience is! The traditional version is hard, shiny and brittle but if you want a softer, chewier version (and have good strong teeth) then boil to the soft-crack stage.
Tip 1
Do take enormous care when preparing this toffee – the sugar syrup becomes extremely hot. It’s not a recipe for children to make although they can certainly help with measuring out the ingredients.
Tip 2
Cleaning the pan and the thermometer is made so much easier if you fill the pan with hot water and immerse the thermometer in it as soon after cooking as possible. Leave to stand for a while before washing in warm soapy water.
No sugar thermometer?
It is possible to make this toffee without a sugar thermometer but you will need to check that the correct stage and temperature has been reached. This is easiest done if you drop just a small amount of the cooked mixture into a bowl of iced water. When it cools (which is quickly) lift it out and bend it. If it snaps easily then the hard crack stage has been reached. If it bends into pliable strands then the soft crack stage has been achieved.
Makes about 500g
Ingredients
Method
Line the base and sides of a 30 x 21 cm shallow tin with non-stick parchment and then liberally grease with oil.
Place the sugar and hot water in a heavy-based pan and heat gently to dissolve the sugar. Don’t stir the sugar at any time just tile the pan from time to time to mix and move around.
Add the cream of tartar, treacle and syrup. Again tilt to mix but do not stir. At this stage add the sugar thermometer if using.
Bring to the boil and boil until you reach the hard-crack stage on the thermometer (149 C/300 F). This will produce a brittle toffee typical of that from Yorkshire. If you prefer something softer and chewier then boil until you reach the soft crack stage (140 C/279 F). This may take from 30 to 45 minutes so you need to be patient but do not leave the pan unattended as things can change quickly. When the desired stage is reached, pour into the prepared tin and leave to set.
Once cool, remove from the tin and break into pieces with a toffee hammer or rolling pin. Store in an airtight tin or wrap in cellophane for gifting if liked.
by Dan
Ive already posted a Redcurrant jelly recipe but, as I’m trying to make the most of the wild larder here’s another one that can be made right now.
You can make great preserves on the Iron Heart.
The solid plates transfer a wonderful, consistent and even heat into the base of your preserving pan, and its at this time of year that ill have the fire going daily so perfect for the gentle simmering of preserves, jams and chutneys.
I love an autumn forage with the family, and its been a great year for it, crab apples, blackberries, rose hips, sloes and damsons, They have all be found in and around our garden and the woods that surround the us.
This preserve is amazing with pork and chicken but just as good spread on drop scones or crumpets. If you cant find enough crab apples you can makeup their weight in good old Bramleys.
Ingredients
Method
by Dan
Mouthwatering vegetarian recipe for your ESSE Range Cooker from Tim Maddams
February representative demonstrations prepared by Tim Maddams of Green Sauce
Ingredients
In a casserole dish that is stove top safe, begin by frying the sliced onions in plenty of olive oil. Add shopped thyme, garlic then the mushrooms, a few at a time. Once everything is ticking over add the caraway and then the beer, season well and bring to the simmer and then transfer to your low oven or cook at ESSE dial guide COOL to MODERATE (150) for at least an hour.
Diced pancetta can be added if meat as required, this should go in at the start with the onions, around 100g.
For the polenta:
Warm the milk with everything except the cheese and the polenta until its just simmering, add the polenta and stir, it will cook in around 10 minutes and have the consistency of a very thick porridge. Season well, adding more milk if needed, then grate the cheese and add half of that to the polenta.
For the greens
Wash the greens well and de stem if they have tough stems. Chop finely and dress in a little olive oil, mustard and lemon juice, season with a little salt.
Plate the dishes up, starting with the polenta, then the mushrooms and a little cheese, finish by sprinkling with dressed greens.
by Dan
Mouthwatering vegetarian recipe for your ESSE Range Cooker from Tim Maddams
ESSE February representative demonstrations prepared by Tim Maddams of Green Sauce
Ingredients
For the tortillas
Work into a soft but pliable dough, rest.
Roll out thinly and cook briefly in a hot frying pan with no oil until puffed up and lightly coloured.
For the mushrooms
Toast the spices and lightly crush, cut the mushrooms into slices, slice the onion, chop the garlic and chilli.
Sauté the onion and mushrooms in a hot frying pan with the spices, and a little oil, chilli and sauté for another minute or two.
Finely grate the garlic and add it to the yoghurt to serve with the wraps.
Serve with the tortillas and lashings of natural yoghurt, sprinkle with plenty of fresh coriander and make sure you have some nice winter leaves to hand.
by Dan
Broken Broad Beans and Fennel Seed Gluten Free Crackers
Second May recipe prepared by Tim Maddams and the ESSE demo team
For the crackers
Ingredients
Method
To make the crackers, heat your oven to 180 degrees c, or aim for the dial reading to be at the top end of moderate or very low end of hot, and line a baking sheet with non stick parchment.
Drizzle a little oil onto the parchment. Mix all the ingredients together to make a flowing batter. Pour the batter onto the baking sheet and place the sheet in the oven for around 15 minutes, once crisp and golden turn the oven off or remove to a cooler oven to thoroughly crisp up the cracker. Break into pieces for serving.
For the broken beans
Ingredients
Method
For the broken beans, we are aiming for a nearly pesto come hummus type thing but very much more chunky with plenty of bean like bits to add texture and flavour peaks to this dish that makes an excellent starter or snack course. Begin by blanching the beans in a little salted water very briefly, just for a minute perhaps and then remove them to cold water to rapidly cool them so you can then remove their little bitter outer skins. If the beans are very young and small, you can skip that step but as the beans get bigger the skins will toughen up and become bitter.
Pop the beans in a blender with half the oil and half the cheese along with all the rest of the ingredients except the fresh oregano. Blend on pulse until a coarse paste is formed and remove from the mixer. Add a little more oil and the oregano and season to taste.
Serve up with the remaining cheese sprinkled over and the crackers on the side.
by Dan
These are very moreish rich brownies made with fresh strawberries.
For this reason they need to be kept in the refrigerator after making and will only keep for 2-3 days (not that they will last that long!).
If you want them to keep longer then don’t add the strawberries to the mixture but serve with them instead.
Serves
Makes 16 squares.
Ingredients
Method
Recipe by Carol Bowen Ball.
by Dan
Grilled asparagus and spring onions with spiced yoghurt prepared by Tim Maddams of Green Sauce
Last Thursday, Tim Maddams joined the ESSE sales team at the Hearth & Cook showroom near Exeter, UK. Tim highlighted the benefits of the ESSE Ranges by demonstrating May’s recipes
May is all about the emergence of the new season, spring has sprung and the farms and gardens of this island are beginning to bring fourth their bounty, time to get stuck in!
Ingredients
Ingredients
Method
Wash trim and slice the asparagus and onions in half lengthways. Dry on a little kitchen roll then dress with a little oil and salt. These can then be grilled till just tender wether on a griddle, on the stove top, directly on the stove top or even better roasted in the Fire Stone. What we are looking for here is tender but crisp veg, with a fair amount of charring to lift the whole thing up and make it feel nicely spring like.
Toast the spice seeds, crush them and add them to the yoghurt along with the paprika and grated garlic.
Once cooked, arrange on a platter and squeeze over the lemon and dress with the spiced yoghurt. Additional items such as lentils or crunchy croutons and fresh herbs can be added to beef things up a bit if you like. Chilli flakes are an option too, which I highly recommend.
by Dan
ESSE Loaf – Enjoy learning to bake beautiful bread with Gill Meller on his ESSE range cooker.