Sunday, 9 August 2015

Mary Berry's Pecan Pie

As discussed on my previous post, during the next few weeks I am going to let the Great British Bake-off inspire me to do some Great Maltese Baking. I'm more of a savoury chef myself, and the majority of recipes I plan to try out over the next few weekends will be savoury bakes that I've never attempted before. However, for my first bake, I've decided to go less savoury and more Mary Berry, simply because she is the ultimate inspiration for any newbie baker. Add to that the fact that I heart heart *HEART* pecan pie and this weekend's recipe was born. Actually, it was taken directly from the great baker herself.

Following a great night out with the workmates, not to mention another culinary delight at A Wong, a fantastic Chinese restaurant near Westminster, I was feeling slight worse for wear. But we had guests round for the first football match of the season and some exceptional burgers to BBQ, so I finally perked up and headed over to Asda to buy all the ingredients recommended in this fantastic recipe.

First things first. I am utterly shocked at the price of pecans in this country: £2.50 for a rather desultory small pack, which left me concerned there wouldn't be enough for the recipe, so I bought two. I spent a good fifteen minutes meandering the various food cupboard aisles at Asda, simply because I know for a fact that in the multiple world foods sections, they will sell items like peanuts and coconut milk for at least a third less than the price of the baking, nuts and Thai aisles. Apparently pecans are not a world food though, and my luck had run out.

I purchased the rest of the ingredients (so much golden syrup) and headed home to try this recipe out. I had a bit of a confusing moment when making the pastry to be honest. It's a very similar recipe: mix flour with cold butter and a small amount of icing sugar in a blender, before adding an egg yolk and tablespoon of cold water. I am so used to making all my doughs in the main component of my Kenwood that I spent a good ten minutes staring at the different mixer types and trying to decide whether I should use the K-beater or the dough hook. Luckily I soon pulled myself together and realised that none of that would work - since you initially want to combine the flour and butter to obtain a breadcrumb texture, you actually need to use a blender!! Duh...should have read the recipe more carefully.
Finally found my blender!!

So eventually I figured out all the instructions, and I have to say that I am so impressed by the ease at which one can make a sweet pastry. The combination of flour and butter to make a bread crumb texture was simplicity itself, and I was fascinated how the mere addition of an egg yolk and water could so quickly combine to make a soft pastry.

Ok, hard part over, or so I thought. After watching Mary B for so long on TV, I know fine well that one doesn't want to handle pastry too much, because it warms it up. I gave it a quick knead and rolled it out, but was shocked by how easily it fell apart while trying to lift it into my tart tin. And yes, anyone looking at the pictures with the slightest bit of common sense will know that's not a tart tin, because I don't own one! A cake tin damn well had to do!! But I eventually made it through my ordeal, got the pastry into the tin and did a bit of shaping slash moulding to make it look vaguely even, then popped it into the fridge to get cold again before sticking it into the oven.

A neatly rolled out pastry case

The best alternative to baking beans....black eyed beans


I was very nervous about the whole blind baking thing. I think I get why it's called that - once you've got the baking paper covering the pastry, you can't really see what colour it's going. However, I was more nervous about using the wrong 'weighing down' ingredients - obviously I don't own baking beans but was slightly worried if I weighed it down with pasta the whole thing would go awry! Luckily I sourced some dried black eyed beans at the back of the cupboard that did the job perfectly and, frankly, I am no longer intimidated by the whole baking blind thing. The pastry came out a treat!! No soggy bottoms in this pie!!

Not a soggy bottom in sight!

So, onto the filling itself. Although I love golden syrup, I hate working with the stuff. It's so sticky that it puts me off, and the addition of black treacle didn't help! I didn't have any orange to go into it, so put a couple of tablespoons of apple & mango juice instead of the orange juice. I also didn't think Mary's recipe had enough pecans in, so I finely chopped a small amount of pecans and tossed them into the mixture. Happily, once I'd poured the mixture into the cooling pie pastry and topped with more pecans, it looks like a slightly deeper version of Mary's recipe. Hurrah.

A sticky mess!

Pre-oven

Here's a tip for those of you trying out this recipe though. If you plan to follow my foolhardy ways and make a deep dish pie, rather than the recommended tart, lower the oven to about 150 degrees fan while cooking it, and it will need at least 45 minutes in there to set. At least that was my experience...

45 minutes in the oven later
Regardless, it came out beautifully in the end.  We've had a couple of slices each already so far, and it's a lovely sweet and gooey pie. The pastry is delightful and super crisp, and the flavours delicious. Next time though, I might invest in a pie dish, as the filling is just that...super filling!

The final masterpiece. Mary B would be proud!!!

Wednesday, 5 August 2015

Let the Baking begin....Maltese Style

So tonight the 6th season of the Great British Bake-off begins. Bakeoff is a marvellous show, made great by its hosts: the comedy duo of Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins, the baking master Paul Hollywood (and I'm totally convinced he changed his name because no one's surname is *that* awesome) and finally, the top notch Mary Berry (again, surname...this one rhymes!!). Every year I look forward to seeing this foursome get their wit on, wait anxiously for the raised eyebrows when, ironically, the bakes fail to rise, and giggle at every mention of Mary's soggy bottom. Great stuff, and I don't even like cake!

This year, boyfriend has set up some sort of bake-off competition with his workmates. This is apparently akin to their traditional Football World Cup stakes, but instead of betting money on footballers, they bet cakes on bakers. In other words, if the baker you bet on gets kicked out of the competition, you have to take a home-made baked goody into work. Smashing! Of course, since boyfriend can't bake, he has promised my culinary skills as the consolation prize, but has at least promised to lick the bowl.

The only flaw as far as I can see, is that whoever bets on the winner *does not* need to bring in a cake. Which, frankly, makes no sense, because he who picks a winner can bake cake.

I thought about setting up the same competition at my place of work, but decided there was nothing in it for me given my loathing of sweet goods. Honestly, why eat cake when you can eat bread? Or sausages? Makes sense in my head. So I've decided that instead I will be making an effort to bake something savoury every weekend that Bakeoff is on, and post about it. I'm hoping that watching Bakeoff will inspire me to do this - after all I got that amazing recipe for harissa, goat's cheese and olive plaited loaf from last year's competition, and it went down a treat. Several times :D

Literally the best bread ever


So stay tuned folks, for the many culinary delights to come, interspersed with my favourite quotes from this year's competition. Maybe I'll translate them into Maltese. Or maybe I'll just wax lyrical about Paul H's dreamy blue eyes. Wait and see!

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

A night out with Tony Rodd

Last Friday we got home from work and boyfriend mentioned that Tony Rodd, one of the three finalists in this year's Masterchef competition, was hosting a pop-up at a restaurant nearby. Boyfriend had seen an advert about this in the papers and, being the food lover that I am, knew this would get me very excited. Which of course led me to immediately Google the event, only to discover it was being held this Monday (three days later) and I probably didn't have a chance of getting a booking. Nevertheless I decided to give it the old college try and phoned the restaurant, only to be told it was full and be placed on a waiting list. My hopes were dashed and the future was bleak...

...Until shortly after lunch on Monday, when I received a call from a very Italian sounding man to let me know that there had been a cancellation, and they had space for boyfriend and I to attend that very night!! Thankfully I'd only had a very light lunch, as the evening of gourmet glamour ahead of me was to involve a five course taster menu, designed and prepared by Tony Rodd as the guest chef at Chapters of Blackheath!

So, who is Tony Rodd you ask? What even is Masterchef? Let's start with the latter. Every year, a TV program called British Masterchef features Australian chef John Torode and media personality (and former greengrocer(!)) Greg Wallace as they bring on some of the best amateur home cooks in the UK. They set them a bunch of cooking challenges, get them to serve up for some big name critics, chefs and former winners, and generally tantalise us with the breadth and depth of innovative, exciting cheffiness. I have learned so much from this program and it has certainly worked out well for contestants who got far enough through the competition - many of them enter the food industry ad become top notch chefs.

Tony Rodd was one of this year's contestants, and he was a favourite to win, only just missing out on the top prize in the final exciting episode. I love his cooking, because he likes mixing flavours, presents his stuff beautifully on a plate and follows his pre-prepared Gantt chart to the second to ensure that he gets it right (I know, I'm a total geek...whatevs). To top it all off, he stands out by having a great TV personality and a show stopping 'tache. What's not to love?

OK...enough gushing. Time to talk about the main event...I.e. the incredible five course meal that was put together for us on Monday night.

We were told that dinner begins at 7.15 but naturally I was so excited that we got there fifteen minutes earlier. Luckily the staff were on super form: sat us at our table, gave us the wine list and brought a sumptuous selection of breads to choose from. The focaccia was incredible...so much softer and yummier than the one I make. I could have eaten ten pieces, but I suppose then there would have been no space for the real food. We ordered our first bottle of wine: a lovely 2014 Hazy View Chenin Blanc from South Africa. Boyfriend found this one a bit sweet and I have to agree that the second bottle was slightly cloying. But in retrospect, I think it was a good choice, as it went well with all the white meats and fish that came later. And as we waited, I studied the menu and my lips began to water.

A taste of the night to come...
The restaurant gradually filled up and I could see some people were (almost) as excited as me. And then finally Tony Rodd stepped out in front of us all, welcomed us to the pop-up and began to introduce the first course, which was the Bloody Mary Gazpacho. He said his inspiration for this came from the restaurant we were sitting in itself, because he spends every hungover weekend sitting there, sipping a Bloody Mary.

He finished up and the waiters brought us our gazpacho soups. Now, I've had a bad experience with gazpacho in the past and since then, I've always refused to eat it. I'm also not a fan of cold food, especially not cold soup. But I was hardly going to turn down the first course prepped by a Masterchef finalist, and I'm so glad that I didn't. This gazpacho was beautifully creamy, and served at just below room temperature, making it more than palatable. After a few mouthfuls the flavour of Worcestershire sauce came through, as did the tabasco (although not in a spicy way). I couldn't taste the vodka unfortunately but I suspect that it was the reason behind the supreme creaminess of the soup. And it was all perfectly topped off with a celery stick, which was fun to stir through the gazpacho and chew on. A perfect starter!

Bloody Mary Gazpacho
with a touch of Worcestershire sauce, tabasco,
celery salt and vodka


We didn't have to wait long until Tony came back out to regale us with the inspiration behind his second course: a Celebration of Cauliflower. He dedicated this to a friend of his who's a vegetarian, but ate every single meat dish that he cooked whilst on Masterchef. What a legend! And then out came this incredible looking cauliflower cooked three ways: absolutely gorgeous on a plate and (considering I don't actually like cauliflower), pretty damn tasty too!

As you can see from the pictures, the beauty behind this dish comes from the accessories. Although there was roasted cauliflower in the centre of the dish, and pickled cauliflower sitting around it, the complement of white grapes, pureed cauliflower, hazelnut and pistachio crumb and finally the port sauce just made it incredible. Boyfriend's favourite part was the crumb (I'm going to have to splurge on nuts more often), but I fell in love with the pickled cauliflower paired with the sauce and grapes. Truly delicious and, the piece de resistance, the battered cauliflower leaf lying across the roast cauliflower was the highlight of my night.

A Celebration of Cauliflower

Drops of cauliflower puree, surrounded by a nutty crumb,
grapes and all kinds of cauliflower goodness

Don't even bother to ask if we were getting full by this point - our tastebuds had merely been tantalised by the first two courses and they were eager for more. And this came in the form of the fish dish, with the inspiration coming from Tony growing up by the sea in Essex eating the fresh cockles. And this dish, chaps, is where the evening went from merely fine dining to the ultimate gourmet experience. For out came this wonderfully presented, plump, firm, piece of monkfish, delicately wrapped in parma ham and cooked exquisitely. The pea shoots sitting beneath this were barely registered, because the rest of my focus was taken up by the delicious saltiness of the cockles, contrasted with the fresh, creamy lemony taste of the sabayon. I had never eaten monkfish, cockles, nor indeed a lemon sabayon before, and I would happily eat this every day for the rest of my life. Incredible.

Monkfish & Cockles with Lemon Sabayon

A culinary delight - plump, juicy monkfish with a zesty lemon sabayon,
 and the saltiness of the sea from the cockles

And it didn't stop coming. Next Tony told us about the meat dish - a trio of rabbit. He informed us that he had cooked something very similar on the show, but it had been rabbit four ways and he had been so pressed for time that he cut himself quite badly. So this time, he stuck to rabbit three ways.

Now you lot know that us Maltese have a particular affinity for the rabbit (see my previous blogs on Maltese cooking), and we love it chopped up and fried in garlic. So I was slightly worried that this gourmet way of dining wasn't the place for rabbit but boy, was I wrong. This dish was possibly the most beautifully presented of the lot and it was far and away the tastiest. The rabbit was cooked in three, delightfully different ways: wrapped in bacon, with a beautiful herb crust and shredded. My words cannot do the moistness and flavour of this meat justice. The mushroom sauce was delicately flavoured and light, and the spinach puree brought the whole dish home. I finally understand why John Torode always tries to stick everything on a fork at once and shove it into his mouth - because separately the morsels of food are good but together? Together they sing.

Trio of rabbit
There is no doing justice to this dish


And finally...just when I thought it couldn't get any better...the dessert. A hugely filling, but incredible delicious Jamaican ginger cake that was amazingly full of flavour, the creamiest home-made ice cream sitting on top of it. Just in case that wasn't enough, a solid chocolate tube sat next to it, filled with a beautifully light caramel mousse. And for sharpness, three drops of gooseberry coulis which, paired with the chocolate, meant that I had a furious argument with my stomach about how I didn't care if it was full, I was going to keep eating.

Chocolate, Caramel & Rum
Understatement of the Centure
And that was it chaps. An amazing dinner, cooked by someone I'm going to take constant inspiration from. What better was is there to spend a Monday night?


Monday, 29 June 2015

Cruising in Food Heaven

If you read my other blog, you'll know that all too recently we returned from a cruise to celebrate my grandmother's 80th birthday. One of the absolute highlights of this trip with the four course dinner every night, which featured Italian cuisine with fantastic presentation and a great taste - and imagine! the cooks were catering for hundreds of people at once! Quite the accomplishment.

So although the rest of this blog doesn't actually feature any of my own recipes, I simply had to show you all the amazing things we ate on this Costa cruise line in the Mediterranean, and hopefully it will not only inspire you to try your hand at some of these dishes, but it will also inspire me to try and make some of these food creations. I've made a few notes below the pictures, with a few suggestions for changes I would make to the dishes. After all, the poor chefs on the cruise had to cook these dishes up for hundreds of people at once!

Squid Ink Risotto with Prawns and Cherry Tomatoes
This was pretty nice - I've never tasted squid ink before and I was concerned it would be too salty and strong. It wasn't, just a really lovely flavour. I would have loved king prawns with this dish, cooked in garlic and butter and added on top. Probably wouldn't have bothered with the cherry tomatoes, but maybe some chilli instead?

Meat filled Ravioli
This tasted a lot better than it looked, although I haven't a clue what the sauce was. And they were advertised as 'meat'-filled, as opposed to any specific meat being named. Some spinach and more garlic would have been welcome here.

Sea Bass with creamy potato, sautéed greens and cherry tomatoes
A classic, beautiful dish. The presentation could use a bit of work, but I wouldn't change a thing!

Grilled Swordfish with lightly fried Octopus
This was one of my favourite dishes on the entire cruise. The octopus was cooked absolutely beautifully, and the swordfish wasn't bad either! Adding anything extra here would probably ruin the dish - it really didn't need any carbs or veggies on the side. Swordfish is pretty filling actually.

Steak with stuffed pepper, bubble & squeak and red onion chutney
The steak and stuffed pepper were great (a nice change from steak and chips) but I wasn't a fan of the bubble and squeak at all. It was more like a quiche, and they would have done so much better with potato fritters. I don't like having gravy poured on top of my steak either...

Mussel broth tagliatelle
Absolutely beautiful dish. You could taste the freshness of the mussels, and Italians never go wrong with pasta.

Fried courgettes in a creamy pasta sauce
This was quite a surprising dish. I'm not a big fan of courgettes, but sliced thinly and fried like this, they really work! The cream was surprisingly light, and it was an excellent starter.

Rare steak with jacket potato and kapunata
Yum yum yum! Served beautifully rare and the kapunata (Italian dish of peppers and garlic and other veg) complemented it amazingly. Again, nice change not having chips on the side - the baked potato was great!

The most amazing seafood platter
We didn't actually have this seafood platter on the cruise - I ordered this for dinner the night before we boarded in the port town of Savona. Aside from being a huge dish, at an amazing price of 20 Euro, it was perhaps the best dish I've ever tasted. The highlight was certainly the octopus, which was cooked perfectly and was absolutely divine. The mussels, prawn and scallops were fantastic, and the fish itself: swordfish, tune and the whole sea bream(?, maybe?) were incredible. And there were chips on the side!! The best start imaginable to this holiday, and I will one day return to that restaurant and order it again!!

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Meatball Tagine

I've never been to Morocco but in the last couple of years I've developed a real obsession with Moroccan tagines. I think this started when I was visiting Malta and decided to host a Moroccan party for my entire family one year. Given the size of my family, I had to think big and come up with some amazing tagines...which I did in the form of a spicy chicken and a slow cooked meatball tagine. They were so delicious that since then a good slow cooked tagine has become one of my staples.

Below I give the recipe for my favourite meatball tagine, which absolutely has to be slow cooked for a long time in either a Moroccan pot as I do, or a slow cooker or crockpot will also do the trick. It is perfect for any time of the year, and you can up or remove the spices according to your preferences. Me? I like it hot!!

Moroccan Meatball Tagine

Ingredients

Beef meatballs (feel free to make your own)
5 cloves garlic
2 tbsp ginger
1 tbsp harissa paste (again, feel free, but it's a lot of work!)
chilli peppers (quantity according to taste)
1 tbsp paprika
1 tsp turmeric
2 tbsp lemon juice
saffron (couple of small strands)
beef stock
flaked almonds
golden raisins
1 chopped carrot
2 chopped onions

Method

Heat some oil in your pot and sear off the meatballs. This will ensure that they stay whole and juicy. Remove from the fire.

Seared meatballs
Put the onions, chillis and ginger in the hot oil and sauté for a few minutes. Add in the garlic and all the spices and harissa. Stir well. Then stick the meatballs back in and allow all the tasty spices and flavours to infuse for a minute or two, whilst on a low heat.

This creates the world's best smell,
and wait til you add the spices!
Add the carrots, raisins and almonds, followed by the tomatoes, beef stock and lemon juice. Stir well, add the saffron and bring to a boil. Then cover and simmer for at least a couple of hours. I like to transfer the mix to the oven at this point, to allow the tagine dish to do its thing.

Halfway there!
Bring out in time for dinner, add a toot more almonds and dish up. Absolutely delicious!


After a couple of hours, it's ready to go!
Science Corner

Boyfriend and I have often discussed the merits of cooking in a tagine rather than a stewing pot. This is why it's better:

The conical shape of the tagine makes it a uniquely hot, moist environment for cooking in. Due to the wide base and the snug fit of the lid, steam rises into the cone, condenses and then trickles down the sides into the dish. This means you don't need to add as much water to the dish, but the meat won't dry out and will tenderise beautifully. As for the flavours...well, try the above recipe!

Monday, 15 June 2015

Fusing BBQ with Italian and a toot of the Brit

Winter can last a long time in the UK, and there are days when I've come home from work and simply ache to be sitting at my home in Malta, with the BBQ going, my feet dipped in the pool, enjoying the company of my family as we sip at a glass of wine. However, in reality it will be raining or too cold to have a BBQ, and I don't have a pool in England, so those daydreams cannot truly be brought to fruition.

I do have my own coping mechanisms however - I'll call my mum up on Skype so that I can see all those things that I'm missing, and I'll whip up my quick, healthy and tasty alternative to a Maltese BBQ: polenta, marinated and grilled pork chops and creamed spinach. Not too difficult to explain, but I'll give you the recipe here anyway.


Grilled Mediterranean Pork with Creamed Spinach & Italian Polenta

Marinade:

Garlic (crushed)
BBQ sauce
Soya Sauce
Olive Oil
Herbs (I use dried, mixed herbs containing salt, pepper, thyme, basil but feel free to be creative)

Creamed Spinach:

Fresh spinach
Garlic (crushed)
Dash of lemon juice
Single Cream
Dash of olive oilu
Salt and Pepper for seasoning

Additional:

Asda pre-cooked polenta, chopped into thick slices
Pork chops/loin/steaks (whatever you have handy)

Method

Mix the marinade ingredients together and coat the pork in them. Cover and place in the fridge for as long as possible. I try to do this in the morning to have it fully flavoursome by the time I've returned from work.

The rest is all timing. Prepare a saucepan for the spinach, get the griddle pan super hot and a frying pan with a dash of oil ready for the polenta.

Polenta, seasoned and crisping up
Put the steaks on the griddle and the polenta in the pan around the same time. Don't move the steaks around too much as they will lose heat. The polenta needs to be on a medium heat, and season as you go with plenty of pepper and a toot of salt.

The trifecta
I like to see that blackness coating the pork - perfect flavour
After you've turned the steaks and polenta once, start on the creamed spinach. Heat a dash of oil in the saucepan then throw in the garlic. Don't let the garlic burn as it will go bitter, so you want to follow up with a bag of spinach pretty quickly. Mix this around slowly, to allow the spinach to get the heat of the pan and begin to wilt. Then add a bit of lemon juice and final small amounts of single cream until you get the consistency you're happy with. Then BOOM! you're done.

Creamed Spinach
The final product...
From all angles



Monday, 8 June 2015

Indian lunch

It wasn't until I had lived in the UK for a few years that I actually tried Indian food for the first time. I'm not really sure why this is - I guess I didn't eat out a lot when I was a student and tended to prefer a Chinese takeaway. The first time I remember going to an Indian restaurant was when I moved to Preston, and we went to Spice of Bengal the day after my first proper night out there with the other PhD students. Although I'd eaten curries before, I'd never done the whole sharing poppadoms thing, and I don't think I had quite realised the range of tastes, flavours and styles that Indian food can come in.
Things have changed dramatically since then - not even five years ago. I've learnt what I like about Indian cuisine, and adopted my favourite aspects of it into my cooking. My favourite parts are, of course, the spices, flame-grilled meats, loads of veggies. And so nowadays we frequently have Indian food for dinner and it is one of my favourite things to cook when I have people coming over for a meal.
A thoroughly marinated chicken :D 


Additional chicken, for a certain someone who doesn't like bones

The following set of recipes are some that I've started cooking quite regularly, and is particularly good for big lunches with friends. A tandoori roast chicken, with chana masala, home-made chapattis, curried daal and Bombay potatoes. All super easy to make (provided you have a well-stocked spice cupboard), and most of these dishes can be made in advance, which means that you don't have to slave over a hot stove the entire time your guests are there.

And just in case any of you are of a mind to say: but this is Indian food, not Maltese recipes in an English kitchen!...well, I have a few answers to that.

First of all: English kitchens see a lot of Indian food make their way in and out again. The British love a curry!!

Second, and more importantly - a good Maltese cook needs to accept that although Mediterranean cuisine is the best, sometimes it pays to step outside your comfort zone and make something entirely different. Once you're familiar with cooking foods from different countries, you can move into Fusion cooking and hell! there's nothing better than that! And now...to the recipes..

An Indian Feast

Tandoori Roast Chicken:

raw, whole chicken
tandoori paste (you could make your own but totally not worth the time)
2 tbsp yoghurt
fresh coriander

Coriander Chutney:

handful of fresh coriander
3 garlic cloves, peeled
large piece of ginger, peeled
2 green chilli
lemon juice
cumin powder

Chana Masala:

can of tomatoes
chickpeas, soaked overnight and boiled
Fresh/frozen spinach
onion
3 garlic cloves
large piece of ginger, peeled
cumin powder
garam masala
turmeric

Curried Daal:

bag of daal (yellow split lentils)
red pepper
red chillis
cumin powder
fresh curry leaves
hot curry powder
yellow mustard seeds

Home-Made Chapattis:

chapatti flour
cold water
fresh coriander

Bombay Potatoes:

chopped, peeled potatoes
hot curry powder
garam masala
chopped fresh tomatoes
chopped, fresh coriander
half a garlic bulb, crushed

Method:

Preparing all this is all about getting your timing right, as is the case with virtually any other roast dinner. 

1. The day before, mix the tandoori paste with a tablespoon or two of yoghurt, then liberally baste your full chicken in this. Be sure to lightly slice the drumsticks, to allow the flavour to soak into these tender parts. Sprinkle a handful of chopped fresh coriander over the top, cover with foil and leave in the fridge to marinate overnight.

2. Prepare the chana masala first. Add chopped onion to a little oil over the hop, and sauté for about five minutes, until they're soft but before they turn brown. Add chopped ginger, garlic and chilli to the mix and after another minute, add generous helpings of all the herbs and spices. I don't usually measure this part, but at least a tablespoon of each. Stir these into the mix, add your chickpeas and can of tomatoes and bring to the boil. Leave this simmering for about an hour and then take off the heat and allow it to partially cool down, which enhances the flavour. When you reheat it on the stove before serving, add the spinach.
Chana masala - ready to be dished up
3. At the same time, put the chicken in the oven (still covered in foil) at about 180 degrees for a couple of hours. You can also get the daal on the go - put some oil in a pan, then add mustard seeds. Wait for them to start popping, at which point go in with your chillis, red peppers and other spices. Then, add the daal to the pan with boiling water (just enough to cover the daal), stir, and leave to simmer until the daal soaks up all the water. Tada!
Curried daal with red peppers and fresh tomatoes
4. Only a few things left to do. The coriander chutney is very easy - stick all the ingredients into a blender and the rest is fairly obvious. Add a little olive oil if it looks too dry.

Coriander chutney - star of the meal!
5. Mix chapatti flour with chopped coriander, seasoning and small amounts of water until it comes together to form a dough. Be careful not to let it get too wet. Work it for about ten minutes, until it becomes a bit more pliable in your hands. Then rest in the fridge for about half an hour. Fifteen minutes before serving the meal, split the dough into small balls, roll them out into roughly circular, very thin shapes and cook them by putting them into a very hot frying pan for about 30 seconds on each side. You're not supposed to add any oil at this point, but I find this makes them puff up nicely. Other people might coat them with some ghee after cooking, but that makes them too fattening for my taste!

Chapattis - ready to go in the pan
6. The last thing to do it the Bombay potatoes, and there's loads of ways to make these. I like to par-boil chopped, peeled potatoes beforehand. Fifteen minutes before serving, I'll throw the spices with a lot of garlic into a saucepan with hot oil, then add the potatoes and chopped tomatoes. A little bit of water also helps the process. I continue to stir these on a medium heat until the potatoes have soaked in all the spices and softened enough to eat. Then a sprinkle of fresh coriander, et voila!

Looks good enough to eat!

Et voila!! The final masterpiece