Showing posts with label bacon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bacon. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 April 2023

Hawaiian Chops

Thanks Vicky from Unusual Coleslaw !    

Adapted from http://unusualcoleslaw.blogspot.com.au/

4 leg chops;  1 cup breadcrumbs;  1 cup chopped tomatoes;  1 cup shredded pineapple;  1 dessertspoon brown sugar;  Salt & pepper;  4 lightly grilled bacon rashers

Method: Lay chops in casserole with a little water to prevent sticking. Mix crumbs, tomato, pineapple and sugar. Divide into four portions and put one on each chop, cover and cook in moderate oven for 1 hour. Then add bacon rashers and cook further 15 minutes without lid. Serve with rice and minted peas.





Source: contributed by Carola Grantham Penneshaw Area School: Culinary Creations (Penneshaw Area School Welfare Club, Kangaroo Island: 1998), p.38.

Sunday, 5 February 2023

Pineapple and bacon bites

Thanks to Annette N for reminding me about this old favourite -  pineapple pieces wrapped in bacon – cooked in an air fryer, basted with a melted butter brown sugar mix mmm, Anne

Adapted from https://sweetteaandsprinkles.com/air-fryer-bacon-wrappedpineapples/?fbclid=IwAR0nyG1x68A6pGqxNOcKHp7ONr1YLA0uZOJUI_C2am83u27iq34JXk-o8JQ

Thursday, 21 May 2020

Lamb Rolls Billabong


One of this week’s jobs was to sort a lifetime of recipe clippings. Today I came across this souvenir cookbook of the 1964 bake-off. It was an insert in the Woman’s Day of July 13, 1964.  Ruby Borrowdale was one of the judges and there is a photo of her with the other judges.



And who was second senior grand champion? Mrs Charmaine Solomon, home cook and mother of three. 500 pounds prize, which was a fortune.

Bob and Dolly Dyer were the hosts.

I have a hard copy Best of the Bake-Off Recipes 1969 which I actually use, and some of the ones from 1964 are in it. Very disappointing that the cooks’ names are not listed with the recipes, or in fact anywhere. The recipes are “from the finalists and prizewinners of over one hundred thousand recipes submitted…”  Glad I didn’t have to sort and rank those! Ann.



Best of the Bake Off Recipes, edited and compiled by Trevor Wilson 1969 Sydney

Main Dishes: Lamb Rolls Billabong

Serves 6

12 lamb chops; 6 rashers bacon; 1 egg; 12 pineapple rings; plain flour; breadcrumbs; cooking oil

Remove bones from chops. Trim and shape each chop into a round. Wrap ½ rasher bacon round each, then secure with small wooden stick. Dip each into flour, then beaten egg and breadcrumbs. Brush with oil. Place on oven tray and bake in moderate oven 15 to 20 minutes. Serve each lamb roll on a ring of pineapple ad garnish with parsley. Serve with green peas, duchesse potatoes, glazed carrot straws and Sauce Supreme.

Sauce Supreme: 4 oz mushrooms; 1 cup canned tomato soup; ¼ cup dry white wine; ½ cup cream; 1 tblsp butter; ½ cup finely chopped shallots; 1 chicken cube; black pepper

Fry sliced mushrooms with crumbled chicken cube in butter about 5 minutes. Add shallots, soup and wine, season with black pepper. Simmer 20 minutes. Add cream and serve.


I was worried about it falling apart in the oven.  I used leg steaks and instead of wrapping the bacon I placed it on the top of the meat, no toothpick, and crumbed it all together.  After five minutes in the oven I thought “Oh No, the bacon is going to curl up as it cooks and my efforts will be wrecked.” So I turned two of them (I made four) upside down to keep the bacon flat, but all four turned out perfectly, no curling or lumpy bacon. And I only crumbed it once. Often I would crumb twice (flour, egg and crumbs, then egg and crumbs again) but had run out of egg by that stage.
 
And the flecks in my sauce are some parsley. As you can see I didn’t bother with the duchesse potatoes, carrot straws and peas. Ann. 

Saturday, 18 April 2020

Hawaiian patties

http://unusualcoleslaw.blogspot.com/

Thanks for the inspiration Unusual Coleslaw, Anne



Hawaiian Patties

1 lb. minced pork fillets; 1/2 lb. minced veal; 12 thin pineapple slices; 3 level tablespoons apricot jam;1 egg; Pinch nutmeg; Salt and pepper; 6 bacon rashers

Method: Mix together the minced meats, 2 tablespoons of the jam, beaten egg, and seasonings. Using a little flour, shape into patties same size as pineapple slices, place one between each two pineapple slices, wrap in a bacon rasher, and secure with a cocktail stick. Brush over with remaining jam. Place patties on greased baking dish; bake in moderate oven 45 minutes.

Source: Delicious Pork Recipes. Presented by the Australian Pig Society (S.A. Branch) & United Farmers & Graziers of S.A. (Adelaide: c1968-70), n.p.




Sunday, 15 December 2019

Pineapple and taro

https://www.food.com/recipe/taro-pineapple-sweet-potato-and-bacon-chips-455175

TARO, PINEAPPLE, SWEET POTATO AND BACON CHIPS
Recipe by Annacia

INGREDIENTS:
1lb taro root, peeled; 1 lb sweet potato, peeled; 6-8 fresh pineapple slices; 4-6 bacon, rashers; 2 tablespoons vegetable oil; 1 tablespoon butter; 6-8 green onions, chopped; fresh ground pepper; sliced lemon and salt (to garnish)

DIRECTIONS:
Cut taro and sweet potato into 1/2" thick slices and steam or boil until tender but still firm.
Drain, spread to cool, then cut into chips about 1" x 1/2".

Cut pineapple slices into similar size and bacon into 1/2" wide strips (The gammon style bacon is best for this or get bacon ends from a good butcher shop).

Heat oil and butter in a heavy frypan and fry taro/sweet potato chips until golden and brown.

Remove, drain and place on absorbent towel then keep hot in oven at 200 deg. F. In the same pan saute pineapple.

Then fry bacon until crisp. In a bowl quickly combine the hot chips, pineapple and bacon and toss lightly with green onions.

Sprinkle with pepper, salt transfer to serving dish and garnish with lemon slices.
Serve immediately.

Tuesday, 18 April 2017

Pineapples everyday!

River Cottage: Fruit everyday!  Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 2013 London




I'm having a wonderful time discovering new flavor combinations with this book – thanks Julia!! Despite Hugh describing pineapples as . . . “TROPICAL KITSCH” !!!

I may have varied the recipes slightly due to availability in our little country town . . . but everything was just delicious and is highly recommended, Anne

In context . . . “Saving the most flamboyant tropical treat of all for last, we arrive at the pineapple. Tropical kitsch they may be – think Carmen Miranda’s hat – but they are no less delicious for that.”  Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

 
For sale on etsy!!!

https://www.etsy.com/au/listing/488207099/is-miranda-verde-carmen-miranda-vintage?ref=market

Pineapple, cheddar and radicchio salad

Serves 2 as a lunch, 3 – 4 as a side dish


¼ - ½ large ripe pineapple, peeled (about 300g peeled weight); 1 radicchio or 2 heads of white chicory; 1 tblspn extra virgin olive oil, plus extra to trickle; 100g crumbly, nutty, mature Cheddar; juice of 1 lemon; sea salt and freshly ground black pepper


Thinly slice the pineapple, remove the core and cut into bite-sized pieces. Put these into a large bowl.


Trim the radicchio or chicory and shred the leaves fairly coarsely. Add to the pineapple. Add 1 tblspn extra virgin olive oil and some salt and pepper and toss together thoroughly. Arrange over a serving plate or divide between individual bowls.
 

Slice the cheese thinly, or shave with a potato peeler, then tear or break each slice into flakes, scattering them evenly over the pineapple and radicchio. Squeeze over the lemon juice, give the salad another trickle of olive oil and another grinding of black pepper, and serve.



Barbecued pineapple

“Some fruits have an amazing affinity with the grill, and pineapple is definitely one of them.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

 
Serves 4

1 pineapple, about 1.5kg

For the dry marinade: 2 tspn fennel seeds; a pinch of dried chili flakes; 2 tspn demerara sugar; 1 tspn coriander seeds; finely grated zest of 1 lime


To serve: lime juice; shredded mint

 
For the dry marinade, grind all the ingredients together as finely as you can using a pestle and mortar or a spice grinder.


Cut the top and base off the pineapple, then stand it on a board and slice off the skin. Turn the fruit on its side and cut into 1 – 1.5 cm thick slices (2 per person). Lay these on a plate and scatter with the dry marinade, patting it on so each piece is well coated. Leave for about 30 minutes (after which time, the pineapple will taste pretty amazing already, before you even get around to grilling it.)


Working in batches, cook the pineapple on the barbecue or in the pan, turning each slice from time to time to get plenty of colour on each side – this can take up to 12 minutes. Transfer to a large plate.


Finish off with a squeeze of lime juice and some shredded mint. I like to serve something creamy on the side, such as ice cream, crème fraiche, yoghurt or the chilled coconut rice pudding (see below). The spiced pineapple goes well with meat too, in a savoury context.


 

The BLP
 
 
“If you think it sounds odd to augment a bacon sarnie with pineapple, think again. Bacon goes with tomato – a fragrant, sweet-tart fruit – so it should work with a tropical candidate too. And gammon and pineapple is a tried and trusted pairing. A couple of crisp, delicately bitter leaves and a smudge of mustard give the perfect edge to the salty-sweet combination.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall
 
Per person: A trickle of sunflower oil; 2 – 3 rashers of good bacon (back or streaky, smoked or unsmoked, as you prefer); 2 slices of good white bread; butter, for spreading; a little of your favourite mustard; 1 – 2 slices of peeled ripe pineapple, 1.5 – 2cm thick; a couple of radicchio, chicory or romaine lettuce leaves; freshly ground black pepper
 
Heat the oil in a non-stick frying pan over a medium heat. Add the bacon rashers and fry, turning once or twice, until done to your liking. Butter one piece of bread and put the hot bacon on it.
 
Rub the second piece of bread around the frying pan to absorb some of the bacon fat, then spread it with a little mustard.
 
Add the pineapple to the hot pan and fry for a couple of minutes each side, until golden and hot.
Put the hot pineapple on top of the bacon and give it a few twists of pepper. Add the salad leaves and top with the mustardy piece of bread. Leave it a minute or two for the pineapple to cool a little, then tuck in.
Variation: For a more substantial, main meal dish based on the pork and pineapple combo: fry a pork chop, then sear a couple of slices of pineapple in the fat left in the pan. Use a splash of cider, white wine or just plain water to deglaze the pan. Combine these pan juices with a little mustard, olive oil and salt and pepper to make a simple warm dressing for some salad leaves to serve alongside.
 
 
 
 

Coconut rice pudding with rum pineapple


“This is basically a pina colada pud: good old rice pudding given a makeover and taken for a night out on the town.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall
 
Serves 6

80g pudding rice; 2 X 400ml tins coconut milk; 200ml whole milk; 60g caster sugar; ½ vanilla pod (optional); For the rum-macerated pineapple – 500g peeled ripe pineapple; 4 tblspn dark rum; 2 tblspn soft dark brown sugar
 
Rinse the pudding rice in a sieve under a running cold tap.

Pour the coconut milk and whole milk into a large saucepan and add the sugar. Snip the vanilla pod, if using, into a few pieces and add these to the pan. Bring slowly to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the sugar and amalgamate the coconut milk

Add the rice and cook gently over a very low heat., barely allowing it to simmer and stirring often, until the rice is swollen and tender and the mixture has the texture of a very loose risotto. This should take about 45 minutes. It will thicken more as it cools.

Remove the pieces of vanilla pod, if using. Transfer the rice pudding to a dish and leave to cool completely, stirring it now and then to prevent a skin forming. When cold, cover and chill in the fridge for at least a couple of hours.

Meanwhile, cut the pineapple into bite-sized chunks, discarding the core. Combine the pineapple, rum and brown sugar in a bowl, cover and leave to macerate in the fridge until ready to serve.

Serve the rice pudding in bowls with a generous spoonful of the pineapple and its rummy juices.
 
 

Melon and pineapple with ginger


“Fresh root ginger gives a lovely heat to this juicy salad. Make sure you use ripe, fragrant pineapple and melon – Galia and Charentais are particularly fine melon varieties.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

Serves 4

500g ripe melon (about ½ medium Galia or Charentais); 500g ripe, peeled pineapple flesh (from 1 medium pineapple); a large piece of ginger (about 75g); finely grated zest and juice of 1 small and ½ large orange

Remove the seeds from the melon. Cut the flesh into slices, then into bite-sized pieces, cutting away the skin as you go.

Cut the pineapple flesh across into slices, about 1cm thick. Quarter the slices and remove the core and any remnants of ‘eyes’ from the outside. Cut the pineapple into bite-sized pieces.

Grate the ginger finely, then extract the juice from it. You can do this by simply squeezing the pulp in your hands over a bowl. Alternately, grate the ginger into a fine sieve and press with a spoon to extract the juice into the bowl. Either way, you need about 25ml ginger juice.

Divide the melon and pineapple between individual bowls and toss to combine. Stir the orange zest and juice into the ginger juice. Trickle this zingy dressing over the fruit and serve straight away.


Fried fish with pineapple salsa

 
“Inspired by a memorable dish I once ate in a beach café in Thailand, this fresh and fruity salsa is exquisite with a whole fish that’s been rubbed with aromatics and soy and fried until crisp. The saltiness of the soy and pungency of the garlic and ginger combine beautifully with the flavours of the salsa. You do need a pretty large frying pan to tackle a whole fish. If that daunts you, the salsa is also delicious with a grilled, barbecued or baked fish (see the variation below).” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall
 
Serves 2
 
1 gurnard, black bream, sea bass, grey mullet, or trout (about 1kg), or 2 smaller fish, gutted and descaled; 2 garlic cloves, grated; a thumb-sized piece of ginger, grated; a dash of soy sauce; a few bay leaves; 2 tblspn sunflower oil; sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
 
For the salsa: 200g peeled and cored ripe pineapple; ½ small garlic clove, very finely chopped; ½ medium-hot red chilli, deseeded and finely chopped; finely grated zest of 1 lime, plus a spritz of juice; 1 tblspn chopped coriander
 
To make the salsa, cut the pineapple flesh into roughly 5mm chunks. Combine with the garlic, chilli, lime zest, a squeeze of lime juice and the coriander. Taste and add salt and pepper, plus a little more lime juice if needed. Cover and set aside, while you cook the fish.
 
Make several diagonal slashes on both sides of the fish, without going right through to the bone. Mix the garlic and ginger with enough soy sauce to make a wet paste. Rub this over the fish, working it into the slashes and the belly cavity. Tuck a bay leaf into a few of the slashes. Season the fish with salt and pepper.
 
Heat the sunflower oil in a large, non-stick frying pan over a medium heat. Add the fish and fry for 5 – 6 minutes each side, until cooked through to the bone, turning the heat up towards the end to help crisp the skin.
 
Serve the fried fish straight away with the pineapple salsa, some plain boiled rice and steamed greens.
 
Variation: To oven-cook your fish, preheat the oven to 190°C/Gas5. Slash the fish, rub in the aromatic flavouring paste and season, as above. Place in an oiled baking dish and trickle over a little more oil. Bake for 20 – 25 minutes or until the fish is cooked through.


Friday, 31 March 2017

Appropriating Dali: Pineapple-ism

(or perhaps, Dali's little known experimentation with Pineapple-ism)
 
It all began with the discovery of this cookbook . . . and then the horror that it didn't contain a single recipe with pineapple - fresh or canned!
So we thought we should correct that omission at a dinner party of our own!
 
THE COOKBOOK
 
"We would like to state clearly that, beginning with the very first recipes, LES DINERS DE GALA with its precepts and its illustrations, is uniquely devoted to the pleasures of Taste. Don't look for dietetic formulas here.
 
We intend to ignore those charts and tables in which chemistry takes the place of gastronomy. If you are a disciple of one of those calorie-counters who turn the joys of eating into a form of punishment, close this book at once; it is too lively, too aggressive and far too impertinent for you." The introduction to Les Dîners de Gala

 
 

Les Dîners de Gala, translated by Captain J. Peter Moore (original publication 1973) by Salvador Dali, Taschen, Köln 2016
 






 
Photographs from Les Dîners de Gala
 
 
 
Sue tried to confused us with a combination of surreal and so-real fruits

 
 and Greg's pineapple parrot's plummage was perfect
 
OUR GUESTS
 
 
(Sculpted by Sue)
 
OUR FEAST
 
 
Phyl's philly filler

Phyl constructed the hors d’oeuvres according to her mother-in-law’s 1970s method of skewering pineapple with cream cheese and a glacé cherry.


 
 And the camembert cheese slowly melted beside Sue’s dehydrated pineapple

Thousand year old eggs.

“You certainly know these thousand year old eggs, one of the crowns o Chinese cuisine. We will not presume here to reach their ultimate perfection, but we will simply try to help you follow an amusing recipe which has the advantage of being prepared ahead of time.

 
First, boil the eggs for ten minutes in salted boiling water. Take them out, put them under cold running water which will make it easier to shell them. In the same water in which the eggs had boiled, add the cloves, sugar, vinegar, a lot of Tabasco sauce, the lemons (cut I eighths) and thyme. Boil for fifteen minutes. Shut off the flame, dip in the tea-bag and let them steep for 10 minutes.


In a jar, put the diced onions and garlic. Add the shelled eggs, and pour the brth so that the eggs are completely immersed. Close the jar and keep it on the lower shelf of your refrigerator.

 
Be patient for three weeks before opening the jar and serving. These eggs go well with cold meats and fish.” Dali


Noel preserved these eggs about 10 years ago. His advice – don’t eat them!!!
 
 
Noel’s non-edible novelty
 

Vegetable Pie  (with Greg's gourmet garnishes in bold)
 
1 roll of frozen dough for pie crust (puff pastry); 6 potatoes (plus sweet potato); 6 carrots; 10 oz of white mushrooms; 6 eggplants; 1 tablespoon of butter; 2 onions; 2 tablespoons of tomato paste; 1 pint of heavy cream; 1 egg
 
Using the frozen dough, line the bottom and sides of a mold with a thickness of ¼ nch. Keep some dough to make a cover.
 
The eggplants have been sliced (1/4 inch); sprinkle them with salt and let them stand for ½ hour.
 
Slice the potatoes very thinly; do likewise with the carrots and mushrooms.
 
At the bottom of the mold, put a layer of potatoes, salt and pepper, then a layer of carrots, mushrooms and eggplants. Start all over again, and finish with a last layer of eggplant.
 
With the rest of the dough, close the pie crust, being sure to wet the edges to secure them.
 
Bore a hole at the center of the “cover” so as to make an outlet for the steam. Using a knife, make a few decorative drawings (of pineapples) on the cover, and bake – 375F° – for 45 minutes.
 
During that time, brown the sliced onions in butter. When they turn golden, add the tomato paste and let the colour turn darker.
 
Add 3 tablespoons of cream, boil for 5 minutes, then mash.
 
Off the fire, add the remainder of the cream and combine with the egg.
 
Using a funnel stuck in the hole of the pie “cover” pour this sauce mixed with tomato paste into the pie filling. Bake for another 15 minutes and serve. (Dali)

 
 
Tropical Chicken (with Sue's surreal substitutions in bold)
 
1 tablespoon of oil; 3 shallots; 2 cups of water – 1 cup of rice; Cayenne pepper; 1 chicken; 8 oz of pine nuts; 1 package cream cheese; 1 slice of with bread; ½ cup of fig liquor – 1 tablespoon honey (as Sue wasn’t able to buy any fig liquor she steeped some dried figs in vodka for a couple of days and made a syrup); 1 tablespoon of vinegar – 2 tablespoons of oil; 4 shallots – 1 cup of water; 7 oz powdered almonds (omitted); 1 tablespoon of olive oil
 
Fry the finely sliced shallots in oil. When they become transparent, add the water; at boiling point throw in the rice. Add salt and Cayenne pepper. When the rice is cooked, all the water should be absorbed. In the rice add 2 ounces of the pine nuts (replaced by pineapple, chopped and browned in a pan), the cheese, and the slice of bread dipped in the fig liquor. Mix it all well and stuff the chicken. Sew up the bird.
 
In a saucepan put the oil in which the shallots are getting golden; add honey, vinegar, water, salt, pepper and put the chicken over the mixture. Cover and let simmer slowly. After half an hour add the powdered almonds. If the gravy becomes too thick, thin out with some water and fig liquor.
 
Let it cook for another good half-hour (or longer). Remove the chicken, and add the remaining 6 ounces of pine nuts, and the olive oil until it boils once and no more.
(Dali)
 

 
we ate this chicken
 
 
not this chicken

 
Apples n' ham (with Anne’s audacious additions in bold)
 
6 nice yellow apples; 1 large onion; 10 oz country ham; 1 egg; 12 thin slices of smoked bacon; 2 tablespoons of oil; wooden toothpicks
 
I suggest yellow apples for this recipe, since they impart an essential sourish taste to the dish. If, however, you use another type of apple, you will have to add two tablespoons of vinegar to the stuffing.
 
Make a large hole at the center of the apples, which is quite easy to manage if you are careful and use a pointed knife.
 
In such a manner, you will have cored the apples. Throw out the pits but keep the pulp attached to the core.
 
 
In a frying-pan, put the first tablespoon of oil, the thin strips of ham, the sliced onion and the pulp you saved from the (apple) cores.
 
Let it simmer over a low flame for a good half-hour, stirring now and then, while it cooks and dries up at the same time.
 
Taste it; if it is not tart enough – and it all depends on the degree of ripeness of the fruit – add some vinegar.
 
Now, fill the apples with the stuffing and wrap each of them with two slices of bacon, using the wooden toothpicks to secure the bacon and a slice of cheese cut into the shape of a … pineapple.
 
Brush with oil and bake in a hot oven – 450F° – for 20 minutes.
 
It may happen that the fruit will crack while baking, but they won't fall apart since the slices of bacon and will hold them together. (Dali)
 
Serve on top of grilled pineapple rings.
 

 


Peaches with almonds.
 
Soak the almonds and walnuts in cold water for 2 hours.
 
Crush very vigorously as you have to make a really smooth paste.
 
Then add the sugar combined with water and brandy. Mix well.
 
Whip the heavy cream to a whipped-cream consistency. Stop whipping as soon as it stands around the beater. Since we don't want to make butter, let's put the whipped cream in the refrigerator for another hour. Mix with the other ingredients.
 
Pour into a flat mold which you have already greased.
 
Put into the freezer for 1 hour, then in the refrigerator for another hour.
 
Meanwhile, split the peaches and twisting them around, detach them from their pits.
 
Sprinkle with icing sugar and fill the center hole with cranberry sauce (or pineapple jam). Light the broiler and put the peaches in the oven, at the bottom of a baking dish (with a little pineapple juice. Cover with foil.) Bake for 15 minutes.
 
Unmold the almond-nut mixture and put it over the very hot peaches. Serve. (Dali)
 
Just to simplify things – I beat the cream with a little icing sugar, no freezing, just refrigerating. And served in a bowl decorated with crystallised pineapple, chocolate silver balls and a Pineapple Princess, Anne

 


 
OUR PLACEMATS
 
(montage-ists Les and Anne)
 



 




 
 
OUR CHEFS
 
 
 
OUR APOLOGIES!
 
 
Illustration from  Les Dîners de Gala, translated by Captain J. Peter Moore (original publication 1973) by Salvador Dali, Taschen, Köln 2016