Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts

Wednesday 30 August 2017

Cauliflower Cheesecups

Cauliflower Cheese-cups




Cauliflower Cheese-cups

Healthy enough to eat and pretty enough to serve. Just a whizz in the food processor of raw cauliflower, some spicy cheese, or not, if you prefer, and egg to bind it together.  
Fill it with more cheese and a sharp chutney or jam and you have an elegant side.
I would recommend a tamota-adu-limbu ni jam or a mango chutney with this. Both recipes are in The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders.

Alternatively, fill them up with caramelised onion or a wild mushroom ragout.  


Serves 6

 Makes 12 Cheese-cups


1 medium to small head of cauliflower
1 cup grated jalapeno cheese + 1/2 cup for filling
2 eggs

Preheat oven to 190 °C | 375 °F. Cut cauliflower into chunks. Place cauliflower chunks and grated jalapeƱo cheese into a large food processor and pulse until pieces resemble little pebbles. With the food processor still running, add the eggs until well-combined.

Grease a muffin pan with butter or oil. Spoon cauliflower and cheese mixture into each cup and press mixture to sides with a spoon to resemble a small cup.

Bake for 25 minutes, or until edges are golden brown. Remove from oven and allow to cool for one to two minutes before loosening edges with a dull butter knife. Place on a serving platter and spoon remaining ½ cup of cheese into each cup. Top each with a small dollop of Tomato or Mango chutney of choice. Serve immediately.

Tips

Make sure not to over-process the cauliflower and cheese in the food processor. It should be soft enough to spoon but not completely smooth.

Be sure all edges of the cups are even when pressing them down with a spoon. The most common mistake at this step is to press the sides too much and the bottom not enough. This will result in overbrowning of the sides and an undercooked bottom. However, be sure to keep the bottom thick enough that you can easily remove the cups from the pan after baking.

Any cheddar cheese works well. Adding a teaspoon of paprika or finely chopped jalapenos to plain cheese is an option. This recipe does not need salt because most cheese is salty. Add salt only if desired.













TIP

Make sure not to over-process the cauliflower and cheese in the food processor. It should be soft enough to spoon but not completely smooth.

Be sure all edges of the cups are even when pressing them down with a spoon. The most common mistake at this step is to press the sides too much and the bottom not enough. This will result in overbrowning of the sides and an undercooked bottom. However, be sure to keep the bottom thick enough that you can easily remove the cups from the pan after baking.

A tomato ginger, lime jam recipe is part of my 3 award winning cookbook The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders.

Use a tsp of paprika if you do not have jalapeno cheese.

Make it with pizza fillings; adding saute`d wild mushrooms, caramelised onions and some more cheese would be delicious. 
This recipe does not need salt because most cheese is salty. Add salt only if desired.

If you wish to eat it as a "toast" instead of bread simply spread the mixture into two cookie sheets lined with parchment paper. Remember to mark the diamond or square shapes prior to baking. Cook until golden brown and allow to dry slightly.
Using a ''drier'' cheese will help to emit less oils and avoid it from being greasy.
Store in a covered container and heat as needed on a skillet over the stove top or in the oven for a minute or two.


Pieces of cauliflower toasts!


My published cookbooks are available for sale through myself and on amazon.

The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders is a 3 award winning book. It has been self published in July 2019 and will be going into its second print in 2022. 

The Art of Parsi Cooking; reviving an ancient cuisine was published in 2016 by Austin Macauley and continues to be available through amazon book depot book depository and from the publishers.



Pretty cheesy cauli ~ flowers

Tuesday 27 December 2016

Boule ~ Cheese Bread

Bread with marmalade of cheese 

Preparing to make bread can be the most therapeutic. 

Once the basic dough is made, it has so many variations that one can try out with the fillings. 

Boule is a French word for ball, which is flattened; it is pronounced as "boul".





Cheese and Marmalade Boule.



Proofing the yeast:
In a bowl add 
a sachet of traditional active yeast (8gm/.30 ounce approx 1 tbsp)
1 tsp sugar
1/4 cup tepid warm water
Leave this for 10 minutes to rise and become into a thick pasty liquid.

For the Dough


Sift 3 1/4 cup flour

1 tsp salt
1/2 cup sugar
Add 1 /3 cup melted oil and butter mix - this must be warm and take half and half of both.
The finished yeast
Add to this the fine zest of one large orange soaked in 1 cup of tepid warm water.
Mix with a dough hook or knead with your hands until soft, shiny, and smooth.
You may need to add another 1/4 cup flour or 1/4 cup water to make it balanced.
If the texture is too sticky  add flour; if it is too dry, add water. 
 

Put it into a large glass bowl. Cover it with a tea-cloth and leave it in a warm, dry place like the oven-top or stove-top. After 1 hour, punch it down with your knuckles and re-cover, leaving it there for another hour.


After an hour, dust the table top with flour and roll out the dough to a large rectangle.

14x10 inches/35x25cm is the approximate size. 

For the filling
Mix
1/2 cup cream
1 cup grated strong cheddar cheese
3/4 cup marmalade

Spread the filling all over carefully, do not go to the edge, keeping a finger's width empty. This will prevent it from oozing out while rolling. 

Starting with the shorter side closest to you, roll tightly away from you. Now twist the roll as tightly as you can and make it into a coil. 
Place in a well buttered cake pan of 32cm/ 9-inch.
Brush the top of the dough with oil, butter, or cream. 

Bake the bread in a preheated oven at 200 °C [400 F  for 35 minutes.



Tips

Flour
There are so many types of flour that you can get, and if you are fortunate enough to find it in your city, pick one that is unbleached. 
Sift the flour twice to make it fresh and light. 
Mix all the dry ingredients well before adding any of the liquid to prepare the dough. 

Yeast

There are two types of yeast commonly available. instant or rapid rise, and traditional. I prefer the traditional one.  To proof the yeast, add 1 tsp sugar and pour 1/4 cup of tepid warm water over it. Allow it to sit for 10 minutes and watch it bubble into a cup of pasty, dirty looking liquid. It is now ready to be used. If it fails to rise, do not add to the flour mix, as the bread will not rise. 

Sugar
All recipes call for white sugar, but I generally bake with brown, and so this recipe did have brown sugar only. 

To store and eat, keep it covered in the refrigerator. Slice it with a sharp bread knife and toast it for a minute on each side in a hot skillet, turning once. A perfect way to eat over the week.

 

My published cookbooks are available for sale through myself and on Amazon.

The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders is a 3 award winning book. It has been self published in July 2019 and will be going into its second print in 2022. 

The Art of Parsi Cooking; reviving an ancient cuisine was published in 2016 by Austin Macauley and continues to be available through amazon book depot book depository and from the publishers.




Niloufer's Kitchen : French Bistro 

Jalapeno and Cheese bread


Jalapeno and Cheese Loaf



Jalapeno and cheese loaf






For the Dough

Proofing the yeast:
In a bowl add 
a sachet of traditional active yeast (8gm/.30 ounce approx 1 tbsp)
1 tsp sugar
1/4 cup tepid warm water
Leave this for 10 minutes to rise and become into a thick pasty liquid.

In a mixer bowl
Sift 3 1/4 cup flour
1 tsp salt
1/2 cup sugar
The ready yeast
Add 1 /3  cup melted oil and butter mix-this must be warm and take half and half of both.
Add to this the fine zest of one large orange soaked in 1 cup of tepid warm water.
Mix with a dough hook or knead with your hands until soft, shiny, and smooth.
You may need to add another 1/4 cup flour or 1/4 cup water to make it balanced.
If the texture is too sticky  add flour; if it is too dry, add water.
 

Put it into a large glass bowl. Cover it with a tea-cloth and leave it in a warm, dry place like the oven-top or stove-top. After 1 hour, punch it down with your knuckles and re-cover, leaving it there for another hour.

After an hour, dust the table top with flour and roll out the dough to a large square.
11x11 inch/30x30cm approximate size

For the filling
Mix
1/2 cup cream
1 cup grated strong cheddar cheese
3 to 6 sliced jalapenos

Spoon the filling in the middle of the dough leaving the top and bottom folds empty
tuck the sides in and then fold down the top of the dough to cover the filling and place the bottom fold over the top one to seal.

Place in a well buttered loaf pan; sealed side down.
Brush the top of the dough with oil, butter or cream.

Bake the bread in a preheated oven of 200 C | 400 F for 35 minutes.


Tips

Flour
There are so many types of flour that you can get, and if you are fortunate enough to find it in your city, pick one that is unbleached. 
Sift the flour twice to make it fresh and light. 
Mix all the dry ingredients well before adding any of the liquid to prepare the dough. 

Yeast
There are two types of yeast available: instant or rapid-rise yeast and active traditional yeast. I prefer the traditional one. To proof the yeast, add 1 tsp sugar and pour 1/4 cup of tepid warm water over it. Allow it to sit for 10 minutes and watch it bubble into a cup of pasty, dirty looking liquid. It is now ready to be used. If it fails to rise, do not add to the flour mix, as the bread will not rise. 

Sugar
All recipes call for white sugar, but I generally bake with brown, and so this recipe did have brown sugar only. 

To store and eat it, keep it covered in the refrigerator. Slice it with a sharp bread knife and toast it for a minute on each side in a hot skillet, turning once. A perfect way to eat over the week.

My published cookbooks are available for sale through myself and on Amazon.

The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders is a 3 award winning book. It has been self published in July 2019 and will be going into its second print in 2022. 

The Art of Parsi Cooking; reviving an ancient cuisine was published in 2016 by Austin Macauley and continues to be available through amazon book depot book depository and from the publishers.



Niloufer's Kitchen : French Bistro 

Friday 4 December 2015

Samosa

Samosa

Originating in Central Asia, there are many many variations of the word Samosa/samoosa, sambhusa, samsas. Derived from the Persian word "sanbosag", legend has it they were first prepared in the Middle Eastern Region. 


As it spread to every country in the region, its influence was felt as far west as Portugal (thanks to them being the colonisers in Goa, India). 

From fillings of meat being popular in Northern India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, to the commonplace potato-pea mix in the vegetarian states of India, it is one of the most versatile snack foods in the Asian world. While the ancient civilisation referred to as the area of the Levant, i.e. Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey, like to fill their filo samosa with cheese and herbs, often changing the shape to cigars rather than triangles, the Central Asian states of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Azerbaijan prepare it with a bread-like dough instead. This dough-filled delicacy is baked in a hot tandoor and not fried like the samosa as we know it. Larger samoosas with a very thick, crisp fried casing are called kachori and are native to India. 

Deep fried samosas are the most commonly found and generally appear in two sizes; cocktail and regular. They are wrapped in thin filo-like wrappers which are specially prepared for samosa and available in most Indian stores. With the food world becoming closer than ever before and fusion food being the norm, it is left to one's imagination to enjoy a favourite combination of choice. Supermarket shelves across the globe are stocked full of prepared frozen samosas of all sorts. 


I am going to share a recipe that is my version of something I enjoyed while I was residing in Dubai. It is a fusion samosa of spices, chillies, and cheese, with or without chicken. I hope you enjoy them too!




Samosas with a thin crispy wrapping freshly fried

Approximately 36 to 48 samosas


Filling

Mix together in a bowl

1 cup cottage cheese

1 cup grated cheddar cheese
12 finely chopped green chillies
1 cup finely chopped fresh coriander leaves
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup cream/milk to bind everything together

Optionally

1 cup cooked diced chicken 
add a few fresh mint leaves, 
dry red chilli flakes or ground black pepper. 

Mix it all together to make a big lump. Fill 1 generous tsp in each samosa patti (a wrap to wrap the samosa in); this can be found at your local Indian store. 
Repeat and prepare the rest of them. Place it in the refrigerator until ready to fry. 

Heat the oil to approximately boiling point 175-190 C | 350-375 F and deep fry three at a time. It will take about 2 minutes per batch. Place the fried samosas on white kitchen paper to drain. 


Serve immediately. You may enjoy some tamarind and date chutney or green coconut chutney to dip them in. 


Tips

If you prefer to make meat samosas, try the kheema recipe in The World of Parsi Cooking: Food Across Borders- Ensure all of the liquid has evaporated before you fill the samosa. Leftovers from the Parsi Lagun nu stew(also in this cookbook) is a vegetarian option that is simply delicious. 

If the samosas are not tightly sealed, the filling will leak and the oil will start burning. 

To deep fry, the oil must be at the correct temperature. If its cool you will get oily samosas, if its too hot you will get them burnt ones.  

                                                                Zoom demo 2021





You can freeze the samosas if you wish. While frying them, make sure that they are not wet or sweaty. To avoid that, open up the packet and allow it to air dry or lightly pat it dry with a dish towel.


For more fun recipes including a minced meat that can be filled in samosas click

Niloufer's Kitchen: Quick and Easy from read.amazon.com