Ann’s Silver beet Pie (vegetarian)

There’s a story in our family that goes something like this…..

My parents were away and I was at home alone with my older sister, while my young brother was staying with friends. 

I would like to think I wasn’t very old when this took place, but the family reminds me that I was in my mid-teens. 

In my attempt to keep the normal home routine going (and probably a little because I was missing them), I went about the jobs that I thought my mum did each day. I remember wearing her apron and sweeping the floor a lot, but I can’t remember much more than that. 

Other than soak silver beet.

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In my mind, there always seemed to be a sink full of silver beet soaking, so I took it upon myself to keep this important tradition going in my mother’s absence. 

Apparently after a few days, with a bit of an odd smell emanating from the kitchen, my sister discarded the over-soaked silver beet. 

This story makes me smile. A little with embarrassment, as I clearly had no idea what I was doing. But also because it reminds me of the power of food in our lives and stories. In my mothers absence, there was obviously something comforting about doing what she did that made me feel just a little closer to her, even though we were apart. 

My mother’s Silver beet Pie was a simple staple in our home and we all loved it. 

I was therefore a little shocked when I served it up to my boys, with the story of how loved it was in my home growing up, that they didn’t feel the same way. 

This is the first recipe I have posted on cook fast eat slow that my boys don’t like, but I decided to post it anyway.

Because I love it. Because I loved it as a little girl. And so did my brother and sister. 

This simple, cheap, vegetarian dish is so easy to make and highlights a wonderful and nutritious leafy green vegetable that we often don’t know what to do with. A relative of the beetroot family, silver beet often gets confused with spinach. The distinctive white stems of silver beet help tell it apart from English Spinach or Baby Spinach. Where english or baby spinach can be consumed raw, the leaves and stems of silver beet need to be lightly cooked by steaming or sautéing, before eating. 

Ann's Silver beet Pie
Serves 6
A filling of silver beet and cheese in between layers of puff pastry.
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Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
30 min
Total Time
40 min
Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
30 min
Total Time
40 min
Ingredients
  1. 2 sheets of frozen store-bought puff pastry, thawed
  2. 1 bunch of silver beet (also known as swiss chard)
  3. 1 tablespoon olive oil
  4. 1 brown onion, peeled, finely diced
  5. 1 clove garlic, peeled, finely sliced
  6. 2 eggs
  7. 3/4 cup grated tasty cheese
  8. 1 teaspoon of grated nutmeg
  9. 1 egg yolk, extra, for brushing the pastry
  10. 2 tablespoons of sesame seeds
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 180 degrees celsius.
  2. Wash the silver beet and roughly chop the stems and leaves. You may find it easier to soak it in a sink full of water and then drain.
  3. Put the silver beet in a saucepan and add a tiny bit of water.
  4. Place the lid on and over a medium heat, steam the spinach gently until lightly wilted. This will only take a few minutes.
  5. Drain, pressing down on the silver beet to remove as much moisture as possible and set aside to cool slightly.
  6. Using the same saucepan, heat the olive oil and gently sauté the onion and garlic over a medium heat until soft.
  7. Add to the silver beet and stir through the eggs, grated cheese and nutmeg.
  8. Line the base of a 20cm pie dish with one sheet of pastry.
  9. Add the silver beet mixture.
  10. Place the remaining piece of pastry on top, at a different angle to the bottom piece, to form a star shape pattern.
  11. Fold the edges of the pastry back on top of the pie, so that the filling is enclosed.
  12. Using a pastry brush, brush the egg yolk over the pastry and then sprinkle with sesame seeds.
  13. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes or until puffed and golden.
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Farewell Summer Salad

When Autumn officially started 11 days ago, I was all ready with my soup pot and slow cooker, dreaming of new ways to use autumn’s rich bounty of fruits and vegetables. 

As anyone reading this in Sydney would know, we’ve had 2 extra weeks of summer, as temperatures have stayed above 30 degrees and the humidity has been at 1000% every day and some nights too. 

The hydrangea, my favourite summer flower, has continued to give me great joy with this extended heat. They began flowering early, last October in fact, and this beauty is the very last one in my garden. I just had to capture it in the fading afternoon sun. 

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So officially Autumn, but in the midst of a heat wave, we have kept enjoying The Weather of Salad. 

It was on a bend on a very busy road that I saw the mango man, and probably with not enough warning for the drivers behind us, screamed at my husband to stop and let me get what would probably be the last box of mangoes for the season. 

We’ve had mango at breakfast, after lunch and at dinner over this last 2 weeks of our extended summer, a fitting farewell to the fun, outdoor season that we love. 

While the BBQ was heating and the boys were finishing in the pool, this salad was thrown into a bowl. Being honest, most of the ingredients chosen were because I was once again, doing a fridge clean out. But as I began throwing this in with that and chopping this, I could see that the colours and flavours were actually working. 

I hope you enjoy it as much as we did. 

Farewell summer, we’ve had a blast.

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Farewell Summer Salad
Serves 5
A colourful and fresh salad topped with avocado, mango, feta and fresh herbs.
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Prep Time
10 min
Total Time
10 min
Prep Time
10 min
Total Time
10 min
Ingredients
  1. 3 big handfuls of baby spinach leaves, washed
  2. 1/8 purple cabbabe, finely shredded
  3. 1 large cucumber, halved lengthwise and cut into thin rounds
  4. 1 corn cob, husks removed, or 1 small can of corn, drained
  5. 1 avocado, flesh sliced thinly
  6. 1 large mango, flesh sliced thinly
  7. 100 grams greek feta, cut into cubes
  8. a handful of yellow cherry tomatoes, cut in half
  9. a handful of fresh mint
  10. juice of 1 lime
  11. salt and pepper to taste
Instructions
  1. If using a fresh corn cob, steam it in the microwave for 2 minutes or until soft. Using a sharp knife, remove the corn from the cob.
  2. Layer the baby spinach and cabbage in the bottom of a large salad bowl.
  3. Add cucumber, corn, avocado and mango.
  4. Top with fresh mint leaves, feta and cherry tomatoes.
  5. Squeeze lime juice all over the salad, finishing with a pinch of salt and pepper to taste.
Notes
  1. As with all salad recipes, leave out ingredients you don't like or have on hand, and substitute with whatever takes your fancy. There are really no limits when it comes to salads, however, the fresh mint and lime juice really do finish this salad off.
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Champagne Risotto with Asparagus and Snow Peas (vegetarian)

It’s Valentine’s Day on Sunday.

If you rolled your eyes as you read that, this post is for you my friend.

I know, another commercial day where we are forced to buy over priced flowers BLAH BLAH BLAH…..I’ve heard it all before.

I’m just going to jump out on a limb and state an observation from among my fellow middle-age, too weary and too busy friends who are raising kids right now.

No-one I know is suffering from TOO MUCH ROMANCE.

It’s been a while since a girlfriend has complained to me over coffee that her husband is JUST ALWAYS BUYING FLOWERS and holding her hand while they watch TV and enough already!

It’s rare that I hear my peers whingeing about TOO MUCH TIME TOGETHER, talking and dreaming over a meal and candles.

I could count on one hand the people I know who are getting this right and balancing home/parent/work life with a side of romance and spontaneity thrown in.

Back to Valentine’s Day.

Half the hard work has been done for you my friend.  The day is set aside. It even falls on a weekend this time! Flowers and cards and small gift ideas are available every where you look. It’s going to be hard NOT to pick up a card and your partners favourite chocolate. Not that I recommend service station flowers, but if that is your only option…JUST DO SOMETHING.

It doesn’t have to be big or expensive or flashy.

And those little cherubs you are so busy trying to raise right?

They’re watching and listening…..ALL THE TIME. Every short word, eye roll, huff and puff and tense discussion, they don’t miss any of it.

So let’s change it up a little and show them that even THEIR mum and dad still actually love each other and it’s a good idea to make a fuss about the other person every now and then.

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This Champagne Risotto is not a mid-week meal. You are not supposed to make this while juggling tantrums, baths and homework.

This one is designed to be made after the kids are in bed, or are otherwise preoccupied.

Start with opening the champagne and pouring yourself and your partner a glass. Light a candle, turn on Norah Jones and if you are cooking, make sure there is a stool or chair nearby for your partner to sit and chat while you stir.

It’s not hard, it just takes a little patience. A bit like a good relationship really. And the results are worth it. It tastes just beautiful, especially with a glass of your favourite wine and sitting beside your favourite person.

The original recipe is from delicious. cookbook Simply the Best by Valli Little.

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Champagne Risotto with Asparagus and Snow Peas (vegetarian)

  • Prep Time: 5m
  • Cook Time: 30m
  • Total Time: 35m

Ingredients

  • 30 grams unsalted butter
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 leek, trimmed, washed and finely chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 300 grams arborio rice (approx 1 cup)
  • 1 cup Champagne (or white wine)
  • 1 liter (4 cups) chicken or vegetable stock, heated
  • 1 bunch asparagus, woody ends chopped off, then chopped into small pieces
  • a handful of snow peas, top and tailed and finely chopped
  • 1/3 cup parmesan cheese, finely grated, plus extra to serve
  • 2 tablespoons mascarpone
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped parsley to serve

Method

  1. Melt the butter in a large frying pan over a low heat.
  2. Add the leek and cook gently until soft.
  3. Add garlic and cook further for 1 minute.
  4. Add rice and stir to coat the grains.
  5. Increase the heat to medium and add the Champagne, then simmer for 1-2 minutes till almost all the liquid has evaporated.
  6. Stir in the stock one ladleful at a time, allowing each to be absorbed before adding the next. This will take about 20-30 minutes. Test that the rice is cooked, it should have a slight bite, but not be chalky.
  7. Towards the end, stir through the asparagus and snow peas and allow them to soften slightly.
  8. Stir through the parmesan and mascarpone.
  9. Serve sprinkled with finely chopped parsley and more parmesan cheese and ground pepper.

 

 

Sweet Potato & Cashew Salad (vegetarian)

I recently got to hear Nigella Lawson speak at the Opera House.

What a night it was, listening to this amazing lady, (who refuses to admit she has a food empire!) share of her journey with food and her desire to champion the home cook.

“No human being should be ill at ease in the kitchen” was one of many quotable quotes from her that night, interspersed with her obvious love of using store-bought stock and frozen peas in her recipes wherever possible! She’s the real deal that lady.

Inspired to reconnect with her cookbooks, I started reading Forever Summer again, one of her early cookbooks.

It was this paragraph that I related to as I now blog about my home cooking journey and share it with you all.

“If at anytime I’m still wondering if this or that particular recipe is worth keeping, I set myself a scene – a friend, a reader, a fellow mother at the school gate, is coming up to me, telling me that she is going to cook my something-or-other. If I’m not filled with impatient, evangelical enthusiasm at the imagined exchange, and if that recipe doesn’t also inspire in me unwavering, bossy confidence, then out it goes. I want to write only about the food I love, and I want you to love it too.”

I couldn’t agree more.

This salad I found by accident.

After begging my friend Rebecca for one of her dessert recipes, I was excited to receive my photocopy from her. Scrawled in handwriting at the bottom of this photocopy, was the recipe for this salad. I read it and thought that sounds beautiful, but the photocopy was filed in DESSERTS in my overflowing recipe folder and it was a while till I remembered to look at it again.

Fast forward to the day of our office Christmas Party. My husband, the fearless leader, was taking his team out on the harbour sailing and my job was to feed them all day!

After filling lots of portable containers with salads, meats, snacks and desserts and transporting it to the boat, I was reminded by one of the team, that most of the men on our staff didn’t actually like or eat salad! Imagine my joy…..

As often happens, this salad was inhaled by our team as we sat moored in a bay off Pittwater.

“Can you please give this recipe to my mum?” said one of the team. “This is going to be the only salad I eat from now on.”

I smiled and happily emailed it later to his mum.

So it’s been called ‘Rebecca’s salad’ by me, then it’s been called ‘Emma’s salad’ and now, finally, it will be known as the Sweet Potato and Cashew Salad.

I’ve made it as a side dish many times, but we’ve also had it for lunch and dinner, with a piece of grilled meat on the side.

Go forth and try it and maybe a non-salad eater in your life just might love it too.

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Sweet Potato and Cashew Salad (vegetarian)

  • Prep Time: 10m
  • Cook Time: 30m
  • Total Time: 40m

Ingredients

  • 500 grams sweet potato (kumera), peeled and cut into small pieces (1 medium size sweet potato, use more if you are using this as a main or feeding a crowd)
  • 1 cup mint leaves
  • 1 cup basil leaves
  • 1 cup baby spinach and rocket mix (more if you are feeding a crowd)
  • 1/2 cup roasted cashews
  • juice of 1 lime, to produce at least 1/4 cup (you may need 2 limes if they are not juicy)
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1 teaspoon heaped, of freshly grated ginger or ginger paste

Method

  1. Preheat oven to 200 degrees celsius.
  2. Place cut sweet potato on a baking paper lined tray and roast for approx 30 minutes, or until golden and soft. Set aside.
  3. Place fresh herbs and salad leaves on the base of a large plate or platter.
  4. Add sweet potato and cashews.
  5. Combine the lime juice, sesame oil and ginger and shake. Pour over the salad.
  6. If you are making this for a large group and want to use more sweet potato and greens to bulk it out, double the dressing ingredients also.

Chargrilled Peaches with Basil and Beans

Christmas With My Family is one of my favourite days of the year. Chaos, noise and the occasional meltdown from a child is almost guaranteed, but I love it anyway. We’re not a perfect family, but we’ll all tumble into my parents house with arms full of food, drink and gifts and lots of news to share that we will all try and share at once! The girls will end up chatting around the kitchen bench and there are usually bets on which over-tired Dad or Uncle will fall asleep first. Amy Grant’s Christmas album will be on repeat and the kids will hover around the tree until everyone has arrived and Nonni and Grandad say ‘It’s TIME’ to open the gifts.

And probably one of the best bits, is when my Dad stands up and always a little choked with emotion, gives thanks to God for his family, our many, many blessings and the gift of his son, Jesus.

And if he can’t get through the prayer, my brother usually takes over.

Then there will be countless loads through the dishwasher and a few fights from over-tired and over-sugared children, as we wait for the late night breeze to blow through the house and start to cool us all down.

This is will be my family Christmas and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

I enjoyed making and eating this salad last summer, from memory I made it for a Christmas gathering and enjoyed it again at our NYE celebrations.

After looking back at the original recipe from Delicious Dec 14/Jan 2015 I realised that it could lose a step or 2 to make it a little more achievable for the time poor cook.

And you could even go one step further – if the thought of char-grilling your peaches overwhelms you, just thinly slice them and add them to the salad just as they are. Chargrilling anything just ‘caramelises’ the natural sugars in the food and brings out the sweetness.

This salad is best assembled right before eating, so if you need to make it in advance, just prep your ingredients and store them separately, putting it all together at the last minute.

Chargrilled Peaches with Basil and Beans

  • Prep Time: 5m
  • Cook Time: 10m
  • Total Time: 15m

Ingredients

  • 500 grams green beans, trimmed
  • 4 peaches, cut into wedges
  • 1 cup fresh basil leaves, shredded, plus extra to serve
  • 1/4 cup slivered almonds, toasted
  • 2 tablepsoons basil infused olive oil (or plain extra virgin olive oil)
  • Balsamic Vinegar to serve

Method

  1. Steam green beans until just cooked, rinse under cold water and place on serving platter.
  2. Heat a chargrill pan or BBQ over high heat.
  3. Place the olive oil in a shallow bowl and tumble in the peach wedges. Toss around to coat in oil.
  4. Cook the peach wedges in the pan or on the BBQ for a few minutes on each side until fragrant, soft and slightly golden.
  5. Remove from the pan and place on top of beans. (Or you can store them separately at room temperature until you are ready to plate the salad up and serve)
  6. Add the shredded basil leaves and almonds to the platter.
  7. Drizzle with Balsamic Vinegar to serve.