Friday, April 6, 2012

HAPPY YEASTER! YEAST-FREE PIZZA DOUGH

Call me strange, but I'm not a massive fan of yeast - the idea of it has always creeped me out. But herein lies a problem, it's a part of so many delicious things like bread and bread and did I mention, bread?

It's also in most pizza doughs. But then I discovered a nice way to make a pizza base minus the yeast. The result? A fluffy cross between a thin and a pan pizza that tastes a bit like a scone too. This dough can make one big pizza, two medium ones, or break it into four portions, flatten out and use it to make small calzones. Seriously it's dough good.




HAPPY YEASTER PIZZA DOUGH
Makes one large pizza or two medium ones.

Ingredients

1.5 cups of self-raising flour
1 egg
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 cup of milk
Pinch of salt

Method

In the bowl of an electric mixer (or a bowl with a wooden spoon if you're old-fashioned) put self-raising flour and a pinch of salt.

Make a little indent in the middle of your flour and salt mixture and crack your egg into this pocket.  Add your olive oil. Turn on your mixer (or start mixing with that spoon) then gradually pour in milk.

Combine it all together until it resembles a lovely slightly sticky dough. With a bit of extra flour, flour your bench or board and roll out. If you're making a large pizza roll your dough till it's about 1.5 centimetres thick.

Top with your favourite ingredients and put in the oven for 15-20 minutes until cooked.

Tip: This makes a great garlic pizza base, so just add a bit of crushed garlic, some oregano, sea salt and a good drizzling of olive oil to make a delicious side bread for a pasta or salad dish.



Thursday, April 5, 2012

A LOVELY CHICK'S CHICKPEA ROGAN JOSH

 This Tweatery entry comes from the delicious and babelicious (lame, I know) Reneé - here's what she had to say about this lovely vego curry:


This recipe is great for a meat free Monday or any other day for that matter. The lime adds a burst of flavour, which instantly makes you forget that there was no meat in the first place.

Chickpeas are a major source of protein for vegetarians and soak up all the ingredients.

The recipe makes a decent amount; it fed two of us on Sunday night and has given me two more meals since. Great to take for lunch, beware of jealous co-workers.




Spinach, tomato and chickpea Rogan Josh
Serves a curry-load

Ingredients

1 Clove garlic, minced or finely chopped
1 Medium brown onion, diced
2 Cans chickpeas rinse well and drain
4 Ripe tomatoes diced
3 Tbsp. Rogan Josh paste
1 Tbsp. tomato paste
1 Vegetable stock cube
400g Baby spinach leaves, rinsed
Juice of 1 lime
3 Kaffir lime leaves
Pinch sea salt
Coriander to serve
Low fat natural yoghurt to serve

How to do it.

Heat a non-stick frying pan with oil add onion and cook for a minute or so until translucent. Throw in the garlic and stir for another minute.

Add rinsed chickpeas and tomatoes and stir constantly for 2 minutes. Now it’s time for some flavour, crumble the vegetable stock cube, tomato paste and Rogan Josh paste.

Throw in your spinach in batches so as not to lose it over the edge. Squeeze in your lime juice, kaffir lime leaves and sea salt, reduce heat to a simmer, cover with a lid and let it simmer for 10-15 minutes stirring occasionally.

Serve in a deep bowl with a dollop of natural yoghurt and a scattering of coriander.

I prefer to go without carbs however a little brown rice helps to soak up the juices at the bottom and occasionally I add a cheeky naan bread or roti on the side which I usually grab from my local Indian takeout.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

SWEET LIKE CHOCOLATE CAKE

I'm not exactly always in the ktichen, in fact, sometimes I barely want to venture into it. Sometimes it's just all too daunting. But then the phone rings. It's a friend and they're thinking about coming over in the afternoon. Trained by my mother that a full friend is a happy one (and trained by Max Brenner that chocolate definitely makes you feel better) I always* knock up this chocolate cake for guests.

*A NOTE TO GUESTS WHO COME TO MY HOUSE - I may not always make this chocolate cake, so please don't visit me expecting a slice of it straight out of the oven.  But you might be lucky. Maybe.


SWEET LIKE CHOCOLATE CAKE
(Serves 8 - or 4 really hungry greedy chocolate addicts)

  • 150g butter, softened
  • 1½ cups of brown sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1½ teaspoon of bicarb soda
  • 350mls of milk
  • 2¼ cups of sifted plain flour
  • 3 teaspoons baking powder also sifted
  • ½ cup of dark chocolate cocoa powder sifted (I used Hershey's)

    Cream Icing
    (If you're serving this in the afternoon I like to use a fresh cream topping instead of an icing sugar-based one because 
  • 3/4 cup of thickened cream
  • 1/2 cup of sugar
  • 4 tsps cocoa powder
  • 2 tbsps peanut butter (This gives it a nutty taste)
  • Crushed hazelnuts (or your favourite nuts) to decorate




So this batter is a real lick-the-bowl kind of thing but don't lck too much of it or you won't have enough to fill the tin. Preheat your oven to about 170ºC.


Chuck the butter in the microwave for 30 seconds until the butter softens a bit, put it in a bowl with your sugar and beat together until creamy. Into your cup of milk add your bicarb soda and mix in until it froths then pour into the butter and sugar mix.

Sift your flour, cocoa powder and baking powder in a big bowl then add the milk and butter mix and then beat it together until lovely and combined. Your mix should look a little chocolate mousse.


Get a deep round cake tin and coat with cooking spray, spoon your mix into the tin and then put in the oven. Bake for a 45-50 minutes. The best thing you can do to check if it's cooked after about 40 minutes is to put a skewer in the middle. If it comes out dirty it's still a bit undercooked, if it comes out relatively clean then you're good to go.

Let the cake cool on a rack for a good 30 minutes. For your icing, whip the cream with sugar together and cocoa powder until thick (add peanut butter here if you want an extra nutty taste). Spread the topping on the cake so it's thick and creamy and then add crushed nuts on top.  An alternate topping (as pictured right up the top) is without peanut butter and instead has chocolate curls.




OHMYGODIAMSOSLACK ... SAUCE

'Scuse the title of this post but really it stands for two things - first, I'm REALLY sorry to all you loyal readers because I've been REALLY slack with Tweatery lately. What can I say? Life happens. I've been busy busy with work and I had a quick trip overseas for work to Austin, Texas (OMG THE FOOD) and well if it wasn't a text from a friend/reader earlier tonight I probably wouldn't be doing this post right now.

That being said for my first post back in over 2 months I decided to do a really fitting sauce for a pasta dish that matches my 'ohmygodIamsoslack' feeling. That's because quite simply this sauce is really quick, really easy - in fact it's so quit it's barely a recipe. But it's delicious on filled pasta (ravioli, tortellini) or a wide fettuccine.





OhmgodIamsoslack Sauce
The Recipe (Coats about 500g of fettucine or 350g of filled pasta)

  •  3 tablespoons butter
  • 1 bunch of fresh sage, washed
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 egg
  • 1/2 cup of parmesan cheese
  • 1 tsp olive oil




With a few minutes to go on your pasta, put olive oil and salt in a pan. Rinse fresh sage really well and then rip in half. Add to pan and start to cook until slightly crispy. Take off heat for a few seconds and put your butter and salt in the frying pan.

Let the butter and sage go a slight slight brown and then add your cooked pasta. Put your 1/2 cup of parmesan cheese in and extra salt to season. Coat the pasta well ensuring it's all covered in the burnt butter and sage sauce. Serve immediately (and make sure you've got a bit of crusty bread left over to wipe up the delicious sauce)