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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Lamb Neck Tagine

lamb tagine


Sorry for the not very exciting pic but this is really very good and one of the best things I've made for a while. It's a combination of a few different recipes and techniques. I've been working through my half a dorper lamb from Dorper Lamb (same place I got my NYE wagyu from) and the rolled roast leg was very nice, reminded me more of venison. I'm also working my way through the Pickled Pink range I got given and am using now the photos are done (also really good, available at Tarts in Northbridge - the cafe, not just any old tart, and Sayers in Leederville). There was a jar of baharat and not knowing what it was, suspected it was Middle Easterny and found out it can be used for tagines - similar to ras al hanout.

Here's the recipe in a very convincing recipe like form -

1kg lamb neck (or shanks)
2 cups chicken stock
olive oil
2 onions, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 tins chopped tomatoes - drained with juice reserved
2 pieces of lemon rind
1.5 tablespoons Baharat
4 fresh apricots, cut into large chunks
10 dates, seeded and halved
1 tbs honey
salt and pepper
2 tins of canelli beans (or similar), drained

Trim the lamb of excess fat and brown the meat in a frypan. Place lamb in a tagine or casserole. Deglaze the frypan with the tomato juice and add to the lamb. Add the stock and the lemon rind. Top with water to not quite cover the meat (remember the other ingredients). Get to a boil and the reduce to a simmer.

Meanwhile, fry the onion and the garlic in the olive oil until soft. Add the baharat and stir through until aromatic. Add the tomatoes and stir through until heated. Add the rest of the ingredients except for the beans.

Place the lid on and cook gently on the stove top or in an oven at 150C for an hour and a half. Add the beans and cook for another hour or until the meat is tender. Add water if necessary or remove lid to allow sauce to reduce. Season and you can also add a little more baharat to taste.

I served it with rice which was a bit of a bodge together of basmati cooked in chicken stock with a cinnamon stick and then fried onion, garlic, cardamom seeds, and hot chilli sauce sauteed together and finely chopped lemon rind all mixed into the rice.

Entree was the lamb kofte here served on a bed of rocket, parsley and mint with a lemon and EVOO dressing.


Sunday, March 11, 2007

Mango Pancakes

mango pancakes

Lots of things go through my head mustreplytoemailfromtwoweeksagowhatsthenameofthewomaninphwoarridingbiketotokusukaairbaseheylookthatsatoranaI'dlikeoneofthoseonedayha!yesfathertedeurovisioncontestsongahwasthataredlighthmm100%ofyourlovemangopancake

And then I go: good mango pancakes and here they are,

Follow the bouncing ball from this Curtis Stone recipe (bless him for trying to balance what's become a $8.2billion celebrity chef trade deficit with the UK - there was a time when we made our own Rick Steins, just out of Sydney and then Australia was one of the few places to have a Nigella Lawson assembly plant outside of Europe). Just forget about the blueberries and the sugar and replace with a large mango and 1/3 of a cup or so of desiccated coconut. Makes sure you get 'bits' of mango to add to the pancake along with some mush, then you can puree (or mince if you like chunkier feel) the rest with some vanilla honey to out over the top along with icing sugar if you can be bothered.

That's it. Tasty.