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BASIC BUNS.

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Back to basics, and back to sandwiches today. This is a recipe for very regular and round white buns. 

Ingredients: 320g white flour, 1 full teaspoon dry yeast, 1 teaspoon soft butter, 1 spoon sunflower oil, 1 teaspoon honey, 200ml warm water, 1 teaspoon salt (no pepper this time).

Directions: Pour the water into a large bowl, and add the yeast, honey, butter and salt. Lastly, mix in the flour, make sure not lumps form. Kneed the dough until elastic on a flat surface, and continue the process using the vegetable oil for 3 more minutes. 

Cover the dough with a kitchen towel for an hour and let rise. Once it doubles its size, divide it into 5-10 buns, and sit them into a muffin pan, or simply place them equally apart on a flat baking tray. Cover once again with a kitchen towel.

After one hour, the buns should have again doubled size and become plump. With a kitchen brush, coat them with a thin layer of sunflower oil over the top. 

Set the oven to 210’C, and bake for 15-18 minutes (depending on size) or until brown and dry. 

Let them cool. 

Very sandwichable too. 


ARM YOUR BREAD.

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It’s starting to warm up outside, the snow’s melting, sun’s out - it’s sandwich season!  

To ensure a fair start, the basic building blocks: bread

The necessary condition: butter

 

And arm yourself with your weapon of choice: toppings

Starting back to back, we will takes steps. One a day. Towards the perfect sandwich feast.

A LIGHT START.

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Ingredients: Vegetables at the base; tomatoes, cucumbers, pickles, salad, onion, peppers…

… cottage cheese, and spices to your hearts delight (as spice are light, literally to your heart’s delight)

Cottage cheese is not much of a spread, more like a lumpy yoghurt in itself. Here comes in the choice of bread and topping - a universal cottage cheese spread can be spiced up with anything from sweet to salty on the taste scale. Pepper, tomatoes, parsley, chilli, salt, oregano - to get that savory hello, or honey and fruits to get that alternative sweet good morning.

That the “how”, now the “why” have something light? It’s a good excuse for a second round of sandwiches, coming up soon.

THE RAINBOW PARADE.

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Hands up for equality, on the plate. Harmony of meat, eggs, veggies and spreads.

Ingredients: 1 egg, 1 knob of butter, 2 slices of ham (turkey breast works perfect, bacon works heavenly), 3 leaves lettuce, 3 cherry (or normal, but minus the effect) tomatoes, 1 teaspoon barbecue sauce, 1 tablespoon mayonnaise, salt/pepper.

The egg is half the effort here. Melt the butter on pan and when sizzling, and crack the egg directly onto the heat (hit once at the middle of the shell firmly with a knife to make a crack, then put the knife away and open it clear over the pan). Let it sizzle until the the white becomes truly white, the yolk firms and the sides crumple up into crispy brown edges. Turn off the heat, and transfer it onto a plate. 

Let hope the ingredients are prepped. Order is everything - the harmony of rainbow of colours and tastes progress over the layers. On a thick slice of white bread, spread out a tablespoon of smoothly soothing mayonnaise and place the subtle signature ham on top. Next comes the tangy touch of the barbecue sauce - best between the smooth surfaces of the ham and the following still warm egg. After the bulk of the egg, the contrasting fresh and fluffy crisp of cold vegetables. 

Sound chaotic? No wonder it started the main culinary role in the culturally clashing “Spanglish”. Cut it in half for effect, and let the yolk spill. Me gusta. 

SAY "CHEESE"!

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As the ultimate and timeless combination, like a tequila-sunrise or the McDonald’s logo, this yellow and red duo deserve a mention.

Ingredients: cheddar/”Kasar” cheese, butter, lettuce, pickles, pepper, cherry tomatoes, parsley, ketchup

The steps are quite obvious, but do not forget the butter! It is half the success. An odd misconception would be skipping it. To be pragmatic, it keeps the bread from becoming soggy, and retains the feel of freshness by separating the ingredients. It’s creamy and smooth, giving the bread that soft touch and the dry cheese some moisture. It’s necessary for good eye sight and allows for vitamin absorption. 

Oh, and parsley. That too. 

GO GREEN!

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A ham sandwich is infallible. Whatever your choice - cucumbers, lettuce, peppers - they will always bring out the taste, while the ham brings out the crisp. But there’s a trend here, no? Go green for best results. 

Ingredients: Turkey ham (sliced), butter, bread, a green additive (cucumbers, peppers, lettuce, parsley, spring onion etc)

Although, here’s an alternative twist to the green in your pink - a Turkish pistachio idea. Replace any green with pistachio nuts, to give a twist to the taste and colour palette.

Here we have the benefit of the tasty ensemble, but a sprinkle on top goes just as well. Get the butter on the bread, the ham, and improvise.

That seems perfectly sustainable.

IN THE GREY OF THE DAY.

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Wake up to a grey day? Looks for inspiration in the fridge. No matter the weather, you will always find something colourful to look forward to peaking from between the shelves. 

Today, say hello to avocado. 

Liven up a sandwich with the green spread. A few drops of lemon to break the somewhat dull creaminess. 

By nature, my avocado’s a very ambiguous and mysterious fruit, so that’s it for today. You can’t push a shy one any further upstage. I hope yours is more cooperative. 

LEFTOVERS.

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When the party’s over, and all the ingredients have been tried, what will be of those still-smiling unused tomatoes and last slices of bread, ham and cheese?

Ingredients: cherry tomatoes to garnish, ham, cheese, butter, bread, salt/pepper.

Start the after-party by assembling the guests. Stack them up the bread, then the ham, cheese and bread again. Heat a frying pan well on medium gas, with a knob of butter melting in the middle. When the butter’s bubbly, simply place the sandwich stack into the skillet, and let it brown for 5-15 minutes, swapping side every few. 

The idea is to brown the edges lightly and melt the cheese. If the edges are already crunchy and dark, turn the heat down, to allow the cheese more time to melt. If however the cheese is flowing over the still-pale, soggy edges, turn the heat to a maximum and grill that piece of bread. 

A lovely transformation, and none’s left over.


FLOWER-POT MINT BROWNIE. Spring’s just around the corner....

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FLOWER-POT MINT BROWNIE.

Spring’s just around the corner. The birds are singing, trees turning green and blossom-full, and even in the kitchen, mint shoots up from freshly baked cake. 

Yes, this is a brownie. Brownies come in all shapes, sizes, flavours and even colours - just to give a little seasonal twist to a cake, this very regular chocolate cake in a very irregular packaging. 

Ingredients: 0.15 cup warm water, 0.15 cup vegetable oil, 0.25 cup unsweetened cocoa powder, 0.5 cups regular flour, 0.5 cups white sugar, 0.25 cups yoghurt or cream, 1 tsp baking powder, 1 large egg, a dash of vanilla sugar and a pinch of salt, as well as, 1 large(or)2 medium well cleaned new ceramic flowerpots. 

- Preheat over to 175’C and brush flowerpots in oil on the inside. Next, coat the pots with a thin layer of cocoa powder and shake out the excess. Mix all dry ingredients in a bowl, and proceed with adding the eggs, oil, cream and water. Stir until well combined, for about 3 minutes (a mixer works as well as by hand). Pour mixture into flowerpot, filling it up about 2/3 of the way and set in pre-heated oven to bake for 30 minutes or until testing stick comes out clean. Leave to cool. 

As for the garnish, begin with a base of chocolate butter cream prepared from any recipe or even pre-made. Then, the soil: I used crumbled chocolate (oreos will do) cookies, colourful chocolate pebbles. To complete the picture, a fresh spring of mint.

Spring’s just a spoonful away. 

GONE THAI

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Sadly, not me. This soup will deceive anyone though. 
Ingredients: 500g chicken wings/legs, 50g Mun Chinese mushrooms, 5 garlic cloves, an 8cm ginger root strip,  chicken boullion cube (I hate to cheat, but it is not worth the hassle), 5 tablespoons rice vinegar, 10 tablespoons soy sauce, 1 full spoon Thai red curry paste, 4 tablespoons honey, 1 chopped green onion for topping, rice vermicelli in any quantity desired, an abundance of boiled water. 
Pour enough boiling water over the Mun mushrooms, and soak them for a 10 minutes. Chop into 2-4cm strips. 
Heat the wok with a tablespoon of sesame oil and sizzle up those chicken legs/wings for 5 minutes, just to seal in the juicy flavour. Transfer them to a pot of boullion (pre-made from the cube and boiling water).
Peel and chop the garlic finely and add to the soup. Let it bubble lightly for 30 minutes. Next comes the diabolo hot red thai curry paste- a full spoon will be plenty. 
Top it off with the rice vinegar, soy sauce and honey.  Some like it hot - a single chopped chili pepper can too be chopped up and added in. The consequences may be alarming. Do not try this at home alone. 
Let it bubble, let it bubble, let it bubble.
15 more minutes.
Share out the dry rice vermicelli between the bowl, pour over with hot soup and top with fresh spring onion.   
Gone Thai, be back soon. 

EASTER EGG(CELENCE)

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Easter Sunday tomorrow. Imagine a table filled with food, family, fun - like Christmas come early. And there, amongst the plates and yellow little chickens, lays a myriad of colourful eggs, smiling from between the spring catkins branches. 

Eggs. In Poland, as in most Catholic practices, they symbolize rebirth and resurrection - the sparking of life in a dormant shell. 

We like them with a little spark of energy and a twist of colour.

These have been dyed with special grocers paint from Poland, however home-made recipes for natural paints (using onions often) produce similar effects. 

The egg goes further than being just a decoration - on Holy Saturday, we prepare the “Święconka” - a decorative basket of Easter egg and other symbolic food sampling. Eggs, for life and resurrection, bread and a sugar-lamb for the body of Christ, salt for purification, pepper to remember the bitter sacrifice and sausage for the celebration of joyful abundance. 

Fluffy catkins and cats, excellent dishes and decoration. Happy Easter! 

A CHICKEN OR EGG QUESTION.

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With all the left-over easter eggs, let’s take a pragmatic approach. 

Boil 8 eggs (10 mins) in water and let them cool. Peel the shells off and place the eggs in a bowl. 

Add 2 tablespoons of mayonnaise, a dash of salt, and blend it all together, until all it well incorporated together.  

If the Easter charm hasn’t worn off yet, and you need a steady slope down into everyday-cooking, add a little unique extravagance to the dish: a pinch of mustard,  some spicy flakes, minced fresh garlic, tabasco or some spring-scented greens.

It’s lovely and creamy. Works best on sandwiches, but dipping things is always all the more fun. 

The effect’s so good, that it makes you forget the real answer to the question: click here.

PIEROGI Z WISNIAMI (CHERRY PIEROGI)

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Now a sunbeam warm is tendered, 
          By the grateful aid of a leaf; 
Hope to a fainting heart is rendered, 
          And a cherry is robbed of grief. 

I felt that the ruby red gems, treasured by the summer, hidden from all other seasons, deserve a lyrical entrance along with James Wilkinson. 

Ingredients and recipe for the dough: See previous pierogi post

Once the dough has been rolled out, I’ll take it fresh from here. Sprinkle 50g of regular sugar over the cherries and allow the liquid to drain out through a kitchen sieve. If they’re too wet, it’ll cause the dumplings to fall apart.

Set out 3-5 cherries per dough round. They larger they are, the more will fit. Finding the perfect dough:filling ratio has been the most treasured secret of families for centuries.

Wet your fingers and fold the pierogi over, one by one. Stick the edges together firmly and if desired, press a fork onto the rims for that nice finish.

Throw them in batches of 5-15 into a pot of boiling salty water and wait for them to surface. The moment they do, leave them in there to bubble around for 2-3 minutes more and transfer them onto a large plate.

They’re ready to be eaten. Who would suspect that under that shy pink shell of dough hides a profusion of ruby red cherries. Guide your twist on the recipe, it’ll be worth millions some day.

There we go.

With measured cadence’s soft vibration, 

          Silently and one by one; 
In deepened sighs to awe relation: 

          And a cherry’s mission is done. 


TEA (TIME) CAKE.

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As cute a teatime accessories are, they make just as cute a finish.

Ingredients: 240 ml strong black tea

240 ml raisins (and some nuts too if you like)

240 ml brown sugar

2 x 240 ml white flour

1 egg, lightly beaten

1 teaspoon baking power, 1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon gingerbread spice (recipe here)

and 30g melted butter.

Mix all ingredients in a large bowl.

Until the level of cuteness drops below zero.

At this point, transfer the batter into a baking-paper covered oven-pan and bake for 1 hour in a temperature of 175’C. 

The batter has reincarnated into a state of absolute cuteness and sweetness. 

A delightful sweet for a tea party. 

POLISH "PIGEONS", GOLABKI.

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I have never known why they’re called pigeons, but I spent a fair share of my childhood believing that they indeed are made of bird meat.

My cat still hasn’t found out.

So, here’s a recipe for my cat and all those wishing to take a leap of faith into Polish cooking. 

Ingredients: 1 large cabbage (must have huge leaves), 1kg minced beef, 3 small carrots, 1 celery, 1 leek, parsley, dill, 1 egg, a few dried forest mushrooms, 10 balls allspice, 5 laurel leaves, 2 tablespoons tomato pasta, salt and pepper to taste.

Directions: Begin by preparing the ingredients: wash all vegetables and get rid of the leaves (not from parsley and dill though!) Peels the celery and carrots. 

Grate the carrots, celery and cut up the leak, parsley and dill. 

Combine HALF of the vegetable ingredients with the minced meat, and salt/pepper generously to taste. Break in an egg, and mix well - this will give it a more cohesive structure.

The other half of the vegetables will be used as part of the sauce, to produce the flavour which will soak through the cabbage leaves. 

Yes, those mushrooms, allspice and laurel leaves will make it or break it with Polish dishes. Like with most European cuisines, such tiny touches of flavour give essence to the entire dish.

The last element - the cabbage. Scald the leaves by slowly pouring the boiling water over the top of the cabbage. This will soften them and make peeling them away easier. 

Slowly pull away each leaf one by one, and cut out the hard part of the stem, to ease folding. 

Now the pigeon comes in - form a cylinder-like shape from the meat-mixture and place it in the centre of the cabbage leaf. Fold in the sides, and continue by rolling over the meat in the leaf parcel.

Repeat the process with all the meat - the leaves will start getting smaller with time, so make sure to use them wisely. Place the small or broken ones at the bottom of a saucepan. This will prevent the gołąbki from sticking to the bottom during cooking.

Once the pot’s full. Pour in the remainder of the vegetables and spices. 

The paste will come from the vegetables, however a splash of tomato sauce gives it more depth and colour. Looks fancy on dill photos too.

Add two tablespoons of tomato paste and pour over with boiling water.

Mix a bit (it will belnd in completely during the cooking) and add extra salt and pepper to flavour the sauce, otherwise, the cabbage leaves will turn soggy and tasteless.

Begin cooking for 40 minutes, covered, without mixing (or you will destroy the tender parcels). 

So maybe it’s lost its green charm and orderliness, but as one door, or pot closes, two open - its gained warmth, flavour and pigeonness.

Serve with the garnish, and enjoy these little Polish birds.


PEAKING FROM BEHIND THE PARSLEY, CAULIFLOWER

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How romantic. You can always count on it for a quick and hearty dinner.

Ingredients: pot of boiling water, 1 onion, 1 leek, half a celery, 1 carrot, 3 potatoes, (all vegetables cut into cubes with sides of 1.5 cm), a large handful of cauliflower cut in florets. 

Boil until vegetables are tender but not overcooked20 - 30 mins. Top it off with a lot of chopped parsley and dill and a tablespoonful of butter. 

Looks a bit brothy for now. Season with salt (or soy sauce), pepper, and 2 tablespoons of full cream.

Heart-warming florets, still hidden behind those parsley leaves.

THE CHERRY ON TOP.

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It’s the trinity of cake - now available in pocket version! Forget the famed trios: peanut-butter-jelly-bread and bacon-lettuce-tomato have a new rival. And this one’s going to be hard to beat

 

Ingredients (12-15 servings): 6 digestive biscuits, 4 cubes of dark chocolate, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 tablespoons butter, pinch of salt, 500 g Philadelphia cream cheese2 tablespoons sour cream, 2 eggs, 1/2 cup sugar, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

We’ll start off from the bottom up. Crush the biscuits in a plastic/aluminum foil sheet, with something heavy. A cat is not recommended as a crushing tool, but very much so as an ingredient for mental support during the violent task.

Melt the butter along with the chocolate in a little pot over a low flame - make sure it doesn’t stick to the bottom (burns easily).

Throw in the biscuits, sugar and salt and stir well. 

At the bottom of each muffin-pan/any other small baking utensil, spread out a spoonful of the cookie mass and press it to the bottom until it’s firm. Insert for 10 minutes in an oven preheated to 175’C. 

Now we get to the second layer. 

Beat cream cheese with sugar. Add one egg and the  cream. Season with, of course, a dash of vanilla. 

Fill each form with the cheesey mass, covering the chocolate-cookie layer. 

Bake for about 25 minutes at 150’C. As soon as it’s out and finished cooling, place the mini-cakes in the refrigerator for 2 hours to set properly.

For the third and final layer - the cherries, ingredients: 200g frozen or fresh cherries, 50g sugar.

In a pot, heat the cherries with sugar for 10-20 minutes.

the key is to reduce the liquid into a thick sweet sauce, and soften the cherries. Don’t overcook them though - they are supposed to retain some of their tartness to play against the fluffy cheesecake and rich-sweet biscuit layer. 

Beautiful. Just before serving, pour a few of the cherries on top of each mini cheesecake

Secret weapon? It’s in the contrast of the mellow and wild, the spicy and the mild. the heavy richness of the chocolate plays against the fluffy cheesecake-cloud floating on top. The tart cherries on top define the melodious cheesy cloud. Finally, the sugar and the salt in the base, like the acid and the sweetness of the toping, sandwich the fluff.

Challenge accepted?

END OF SCHOOL TODAY! It was a rough battle.  

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END OF SCHOOL TODAY!

It was a rough battle.  

ROSE DROP.

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When the clock strikes snack time, don’t play out the grab-and-go kitchen raid under the cover of night. There are so many other delicious things to use up hunger on.

Rose petal jam and plain greek yoghurt. 

A drop of glace rose into a bowl of white yoghurt. A delicate velvety texture and a chilling creaminess, caressed  by the deep rose essence defining its surface. 

The play of the two, created on a sudden whim, is an unconventional way to end the trip to the fridge.

CINNAMON APRICOT PANCAKES. Today it begins. What really defines...

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CINNAMON APRICOT PANCAKES.

Today it begins. What really defines a holiday? Today, I fancy, that it is the freedom to wake up past 8 and think to myself “it’s a good day to try a recipe I’ve never wanted to touch”. And start melting the butter on that pan. 

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