Stir up Sunday

We seem to be in the middle of November in the blink of an eye. This weekend sees stir up Sunday upon us. When the children were little we used to have a lovely village fundraising event where families came together to make puddings or mincemeat in the village hall as a fundraiser for playgroup. Now they are grown-up it’s hit and miss whether we remember to do it on the right day! However, this year with all of the lockdown shenanigans I have been much more conscious of the changing seasons in everything we do, from shopping and cooking to gardening to celebrating festivals great and small, so today a little bit of gentle stirring…


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500g MIXED DRIED FRUIT AND PEEL

225g DARK BROWN SUGAR

110 g BREADCRUMBS

25g CHOPPED OR FLAKED ALMONDS

110g SHREDDED SUET/ VEGETARIAN SUET

50g SELF RAISING FLOUR

1tsp MIXED SPICE

1/2 CINNAMON AND A GRATE OF NUTMEG

JUICE AND ZEST HALF A LEMON

JUICE AND ZEST OF AN ORANGE

1 APPLE - GRATED

1 CARROT - GRATED

2 EGGS

75ML BRANDY

100ML STOUT

I tend to use a sort of version of Delia for my pudding, I kind of don’t know what I bother with the tradition of it as only Mr H and my dad particularly like it, but it is steeped in familial nostalgia and tradition, so it would seem wrong to not have it on Christmas Day, even if its only a teaspoonful.

So here is the recipe we make every year and it’s so easy that you could give it to your children to do this afternoon! Basically, just weigh out all of the ingredients; the dry ones in a big bowl and the wet ones in a jug.

Mix the dry ingredients well and break up the sugar and the fruit so they aren’t clumped together and pour in the wet, then make sure everyone stirs it and makes a wish.

Put the mixture into greased pudding basins and top with a double layer of greaseproof with a pleat folded in it.

Steam for about 4-6 hours (make sure you check if you need to add more water to the pot). When it is cool, replace the greaseproof with a fresh piece and a lid of foil and keep it in a dark cool place till Christmas Day.

Reheat either in the steamer or take the foil off and microwave it.

This makes 2 puddings (depending on the size of your basin) but you can spread the mixture across several basins and give them as gifts. If you can find any vintage basins even better! Top with brown paper, tied with ribbon and a sprig of greenery.

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This Sunday I will be making my mincemeat and I might do a cake. Only Mr H likes Christmas cake. I really don’t like sugary icing and the kids always prefer something chocolatey or panettone.

When I was thinking about Christmas cakes, I went down the inevitable Pinterest rabbit hole! So this year, I am not going to be wildly precious about a traditional cake and I might make several different things and share them with friends and family. I found an interesting recipe in an old Waitrose magazine which I like the look of, a different riff on a traditional fruit cake; fig and sherry cake decorated with marzipan, so I will definitely give that a go.

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I found some lovely ideas to share with you whether you are a traditional fruit cake fan or after something a little bit different . You can link back to all of the original source via my Pinterest board here .

I love the idea of combining a simple cake ( - you could do a sticky date cake, or a chocolate cake or just a simple layered sponge) and then decorating it with a gingerbread house theme.


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If you are feeling chocolatey rather than traditional, I love the idea of making a big tiffin or biscuit cake. Make it dark and squidgy with good cocoa and excellent chocolate, or one of my favourite cakes is chocolate and stout sponge with a cream cheese frosting. If you want absolutely minimal effort and max impact, buy a nice panettone or pandoro and dust it liberally with icing sugar, decorate it with some sprigs of greenery and add Bambi or Rudolph balanced on top! - very cool!

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Whatever you happen to be being this weekend, have fun!

Homemade ricotta inspired by Italian travels

I think sadly I have had to say goodbye to our summer trip to Italy this year. Sad though it is to miss it this year, we will go back next year and hopefully, experience all the joy of Liguria in 2021.

One of my favourite things about our summers in Levanto is the gentle rhythm of the day. We get up, go and sit and have a coffee then cycle to the market to buy the days provisions, maybe stop for a gelato, have a long lazy lunch and then go for a late afternoon swim before an aperitivo in the square.

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When the friendly alimentari owner in the market has fresh wobbly ricottas on his counter I am unable to resist. I love it served super fresh with chestnut honey, or mix it with shredded basil and a little lemon zest and fill courgette flowers with it before deep-frying them till crisp - perfect with a glass of chilled white wine.

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Since we aren’t going to see the friendly face of the cheese man, I have been making my own version this summer and it’s really rather good. It is not proper ricotta but it is pretty similar and it tastes great. Here’s how you do it…

You need:

1 ltr of whole milk,

1 cup of double cream

1 teaspoon sea salt.

Bring this just to boiling point then take it off the heat. Stir in 2 or 3 tablespoons of good quality white wine vinegar and then leave it to settle. You will see the milk mixture separate into curds and whey.

Allow it to sit for half an hour or so and then strain into a sieve or ricotta mould, (I annoyed everyone by bringing one back in our luggage 2 years ago) and leave it to drain.

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When it has drained turn it out and use it in your recipe. if you want to keep it for a few days, place it in a covered bowl in the fridge.

You can use it to stuff pasta, or to make a whipped ricotta dip.

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Veg box cooking

It has been a funny old week, I keep getting up and putting shorts on because it looks sunny and warm, then I go outside and it is really cold and I have to search out a jumper. I lost all of my beans to a  frost on Sunday night and I can’t plant my courgettes out yet so they are gasping in the greenhouse.

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In other news, I’ve had a different career hat on this week and become a greengrocer. With the Farmers Market closed for the time being, I contacted Styan family farm - one of the local suppliers at our lovely farmers market in Stroud and we have set up a village veg box. What has been so lovely is that not only are we supporting a lovely  family farm,  we are also exchanging recipe ideas and food tips.

Our village veg What’s App group has been buzzing with interesting ways with chard, recipes for colcannon and other things to do with asparagus. I’ve even delivered some of the boxes on my bike!

This week I’m going to share some recipes for beetroot, as I think it is an underused veg and one that sometimes brings back rather yucky memories of the ’70s (certainly for my husband who didn’t like it at all until lockdown started but now he’s a fan.)

As a child of the ’70s, I remember (quite fondly) those salads which constituted a couple of lettuce leaves, (the round limp variety - none of your fancy leaves then), a sliced tomato, a few slices of cucumber, maybe a spring onion or a radish out of the veg patch, a crinkle-cut beetroot in vinegar and a dollop of salad cream.  I loved this but sadly my husband did not. Coupled with getting it boiled at school he was destined to be a lifelong sceptic but now he has embraced this lovely pink-hued veg in all its glory.

lovely beetroots in this weeks veg box

lovely beetroots in this weeks veg box

beetroot growing in my veg patch

beetroot growing in my veg patch

Here are a few of my favourite recipes for doing interesting things with beetroot. Don’t forget to use the leaves, you can cook them like spinach, so don’t fling them in the compost. 

As you know I’m not the world’s most accurate cook so some of these are approximate on the measuring front. You may need to adjust depending on how many you are feeding and how spicy or seasoned you like your food.

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BEETROOT BHAJIS

Coarsely grate a beetroot and finely slice a red onion.

Mix them in a bowl with:

1 teaspoon cumin seeds

1 teaspoon garam masala or curry powder

some chopped coriander

chilli (if you like it)

plenty of salt and pepper.

Add about 3 tablespoons of gram flour (chickpea flour - you can find it in the world food section of the supermarket or from an Indian grocery and a tablespoon of water to bind everything together. If it feels very dry and floury add another tablespoon of water. If it feels too wet add a little more gram flour but you want the veg to shine here not the batter, so you need a bigger ratio of veg to batter.  

Leave to rest.

Heat up about 4cm Sunflower oil in a pan. When it’s hot fry dessert spoons of batter till crisp.

Serve with natural yoghurt. 

BEETROOT ROSTI 

Boil a large potato for 8mins and cool.  When it’s cool enough to handle coarsely grate it into a bowl.

Coarsely grate 1 large raw beetroot into the bowl, and season with salt and pepper.

Mix well together and squish into flat patties. (It might turn your hands a bit pink.)  

Gently fry the patties in butter and olive oil on both sides.

Serve with smoked salmon or smoked mackerel and a dollop of creme fraiche mixed with horseradish. 

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BEETROOT HUMMUS - a riff on a Hugh Fearnley recipe 

Toast 50g walnuts for about 5mins, and blitz with 25g stale white bread, 1 teaspoon of cumin, 1 tbs tahini, 200g cooked beetroot.

I tend to wrap the beets in foil and roast them till tender then peel them.

Add the juice of half a lemon and a crushed clove of garlic and season with salt and pepper.

Blitz to a puree, adjust the seasoning and lemon juice to your liking.

Serve with warm flatbreads. 

SPANOKOPITA - a lovely Greek wild greens and feta pie. Perfect for using up the tops of your beetroot.

Finely chop an onion and fry gently in olive oiling a large sauté pan. Add a crushed clove of garlic and a pinch of salt and pepper.  

Shred the washed leaves of a bunch of beetroot and any other greens you have to hand. I've used wild garlic leaves, rocket that’s going over in the greenhouse, spinach, nettles even shredded spring greens. You can use a mixture or just one or two.  Wilt the greens and when cooked tip into a bowl. 

Add a crumbled up block of feta cheese and a beaten egg, and mix well.

Butter a baking dish or tin and line with a sheet of filo pastry. Brush the pastry with melted butter and top with another sheet of filo. You can add another sheet if you feel it is too thin.

Pile in the filling and fold the pastry over the top to cover. You may need another buttered sheet of filo to top it depending on your dish. You need to cover the filling.

Bake in the oven till golden and crisp and allow to cool a little before serving.

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CHOCOLATE BEETROOT CAKE

This is a recipe that I first saw in House & Garden magazine many moons ago. It is deliciously chocolatey and velvety.

  • 250g cooked beetroot, peeled

  • 75g plain chocolate melted 

  • 125g softened butter

  • 300g soft, light brown sugar

  • 3 large eggs

  • 225g self-raising flour, sifted with 1/4tsp salt

  • 50g cocoa powder, sifted

For the icing:

  • 150g plain chocolate (70 per cent cocoa solids), broken into small pieces

  • 142ml tub soured cream

  • 5tbsp icing sugar, sifted

  • 3tbsp crème de cassis

For the cake, grate the beetroot quite coarsely and melt the chocolate in a bowl. 

Put the butter, sugar and eggs in a mixer and beat until light and pale. Alternatively, you could use an electric whisk to do this.

Add the melted chocolate, then fold in the flour and cocoa powder.

Finally, stir in the beetroot. 

Pour the batter into a greased, 20cm cake tin and bake for 45-50 minutes. (I find it makes enough batter to go in two 8” sandwich tins).

The cake is ready when a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. Turn out the cake on to a wire rack and leave to cool.   

For the icing, put the chocolate, soured cream and icing sugar in a bowl and set it over a saucepan of simmering water. Allow to melt, but don't let the ingredients get too hot. Stir everything together, take off the heat and add the crème de cassis.

Stir vigorously so that you are left with a smooth, glossy mixture. Leave to cool and thicken.  

Spread the icing over the cake with a palette knife. Leave the icing to set before serving the cake with crème fraiche. I tend to put jam in the middle and a layer of the frosting then sandwich it together and cover with more frosting.