Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, vegetarian, side dish, main Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, vegetarian, side dish, main Antony

Peanut-tomato baked dhal with paneer

We’ve yet to meet a dhal we disliked and, as the Subcontinent is filled with variations on the theme of spicy, soupy lentils, we’re far from done with this pulse-based dish. Dahl is dependably easy, filling and delicious, and a dish you can generally whip up using affordable pantry staples. It’s quick too…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, baking, dessert Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, baking, dessert Antony

Easy lemon tart

Lemon tart… but make it easy, we say! No tricky pastry to roll out and potentially shrink in the oven because you’ve over-handled it… no filling that requires culinary wizardry to get just right. As a bonus, the base here is gluten free, if that’s important to you, although any health-related claims stop well and truly there. No one is pretending…

Read More
Autumn, cookbook, Winter, Spring, Summer, Korean, dessert Antony Autumn, cookbook, Winter, Spring, Summer, Korean, dessert Antony

Traditional Korean rice doughnut - Gaeseong juak 개성주악

“Named ‘juak’ after the shape of a pebble, this traditional Korean dessert is a perfect combination of chewy, sticky rice bathed in jocheong (rice syrup). In the past, Gaeseong Juak was an essential dessert for special guests and wedding ceremonies. Today, it’s a steady seller at Korean dessert cafes and has actually become somewhat trendy.” - Jung Eun Chae

Read More

Monk fish ball soup - Agwi saengsun eomuktang 아귀 생선 어묵탕

“We’ve put this fish ball soup on the menu at CHAE. It’s nice on a cold day because it’s hot and a bit spicy. The main tip for success is to make the kelp stock the day before and cook it for at least 5 hours. If you can’t find monkfish, you can replace it with another firm fish such as snapper; prawns (shrimp) are fine too.” - Jung Eun Chae

Read More
Autumn, cookbook, Winter, Spring, Summer, main, Korean, pork Antony Autumn, cookbook, Winter, Spring, Summer, main, Korean, pork Antony

Pork kimchi stew - Dwaejigogi kimchi-jjim 돼지고기 김치찜

“Kimchi-jjim is one of Korea’s favourite dishes, a daily food that every family will prepare in a slightly different way. Even when the recipe is the same, everyone’s kimchi is different so the dish will have its own character. I’ve even changed my recipe from my mum’s version: she doesn’t use stock. I’ll eat this any day, any time with boiled rice.” - Jung Eun Chae

Read More
Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, Turkish, vegetarian, main Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, Turkish, vegetarian, main Antony

Burghul köfte with garlic yoghurt

Welcome to Fellah Köfte. With roots in Turkish and MIddle Eastern cuisine, it’s a humble kind of a dish using everyday staples that would traditionally have been super-cheap and constantly on hand. Depending on what burghul and semolina cost in your vicino, it’s still pretty cheap to make and if you can get Turkish pepper paste all the better…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, Korean, main Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, Korean, main Antony

Braised gochujang chicken and vegetables

You’d think, wouldn’t you, that this kind of a bung-together-and-forget simmered recipe would be made for the slow cooker, wouldn’t you. So did we. But THREE tests and many chicken legs later (many bloody legs), we can hand-on-heart report that it is, in fact, way better and far less hassle to just simmer it on the stove…

Read More

Lemon currant beignets

OK, kids, let’s make choux pastry. It’s a weird beast for sure; you heat water and butter in a smallish saucepan JUST until it simmers and the butter has melted. Next, you dump in sifted flour, then stir like crazy over the heat until the mixture forms a cooked, smooth, floury ball that leaves the side of the pan…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, side dish, cakes, baking Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, side dish, cakes, baking Antony

Rum syrup cake

When life gives you rum, you make a cake, no? Well, we do. We don’t touch rum ordinarily as it conjures unfortunate memories of scooping Dark ’n’ Stormies from a plastic bucketful (true story) in our Uni days. Which was not an occasion that crowned anyone with glory, and it’s a miracle we can still face anything flavoured ginger…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, side dish, main, vegetarian Antony Spring, Autumn, Winter, Summer, side dish, main, vegetarian Antony

Budget-beating stuffed baked onions

These are so satisfying to make. You simmer onions whole until they turn tender, carefully scoop out the innards, chop them up, mix them into a cheesy, bread-based stuffing, then pile this into the outer onion shells and bake until they’re deep golden and crusty on top. Yum. This is the kind of dish that comes from the Italian cucina povera tradition…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, main, Winter, pie Antony Spring, Autumn, main, Winter, pie Antony

Left-over lamb pie

Hands up who has memories of their Mum making shepherd’s pie? Us too. Ours minced the cold roast lamb using a hefty metal mincer with a crank handle. It screwed onto the edge of the bench or dining table and made short work of reducing the lamb to teeny tiny bits; yes, kids, there was life before food processors…

Read More
Spring, Autumn, main, Winter, soup Antony Spring, Autumn, main, Winter, soup Antony

Ribollita

Why use the Italian name for this dish? Because when translated, ribollita means ‘reboiled’ and we don’t know about you but a dish with that name would not exactly entice us to the dinner table. “What’s for dinner, Mum?” “Reboiled!!” “Ooh…

Read More

Uncle’s ‘dry’ laksa

“When most people think of laksa, a bowl of brothy slurpy noodles comes first to mind, so a dry laksa might sound like a curious thing. I first had dry laksa at a friend’s place. Her father would politely interrupt every maths revision session with a plate of food, because ‘you can’t study on an empty stomach’. I vividly remember Uncle’s dry laksa; he had tried it at a trendy new café and recreated it for us…

Read More