Tuesday, 2 November 2010

Chinese Style Shore Crab and Sweetcorn Soup with Wood Sorrel


Recipe
Ingredients: for stock
900g shore crabs
1 x medium onion
2 x stick celery
2 x carrots
3 x peppercorns
1 x head garlic
veg oil
---------------
1-2 inch piece of ginger
 1 x onion (finely diced)   
1 x tin creamed sweetcorn ( or pureed fresh )420 g
1x tin sweetcorn in water 340g (pureed)
1 x tablespoon light soy sauce.
spring onion & wood sorrel
                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      1
                                                                                    














Sunday, 24 October 2010

The squirels nuts






Baked custard that just manages to hold itself up on the plate, real custard comfort food!

Recipe
ingredients

2 desert spoons of roasted and ground acorns (see acorn coffee blog)
100g sugar
375 ml milk
250ml single cream
half a vanilla pod
2 Eggs (well beaten with a whisk)
3 Egg yolk
sugar to make dark caramel


Method

You will need to think about this the day before by first infusing the acorns overnight in the milk and cream or just the milk if you like. Put the milk, cream, vanilla and roasted ground acorns in a heavy bottomed pan and bring to the boil, take off the heat immediately let it cool and put it in a container in the fridge overnight.

Next day make a dark caramel using about a cup of sugar, then carefully add a desert spoon of water (watch out for the bubbling and spitting) pour this into the bottom of the ramekin dishes in a thin layer. you will need to work quickly as it starts to set pretty fast. tip and roll each one to move the caramel across the bottom.
Pass the acorn milk you made the day before through a fine sieve. Put the milk, cream mixture in a heavy bottomed pan and bring back to the boil, stir in the 100g of sugar then briskly but briefly whisk in the egg and yolk.

This is your custard ready to pour into the moulds on top of the caramel. Fill them to the top then sit them in  deep tray containing hot water (not boiling) , the water needs to come nearly to the top of the moulds containing your custard.. temperature should be 70 to 80 degrees c, if you don't have a thermometer then you can hold your finger in the water for a second or two it should be about right.

Put them in the oven at 150 degrees c for 30 to 40 minutes being carefull not to let the water splash into the custards. (Putting the tray into the oven and then pouring the water into the tray can make things easier).
After 25 min you must watch them carefully and check "the wobble", use your finger to tap the top and if you get a kind of ripple as if there is liquid under the skin then they will need longer. you can also give the mould a slight tap to check this.

The perfectly baked custard can take some mastering and may take several attempts, so many factors come into its making like - accuracy of your oven (convection is better) , initial water temperature, how fresh your milk and cream is and the quality of your eggs. Once you get the hang of it you will learn that slower is better, i like to turn the oven down by 5 degrees half way through and cook for a little longer.
You may also decide they are not quite cooked but taking them out of the oven, or turning it off and leaving them in the water bath to cool down will just about finish off the cooking.

The custards are best left in the fridge for 24 hours, this gives the caramel on the bottom time to dissolve which will be your sauce when you turn it out. But also i find the flavour improves in this time.

Gently push your finger into the custard at the edge of the mould to tease it away from the edge, this makes it easier to turn out. You shouldn't need to run a knife around the edge.

Note:  Every oven is different, this is one of the reasons you must start looking closely at the custards before cooking time is supposed to finish.









Acorn coffee



What to do with that sweet-looking nut that comes with its own little pixie hat, and unfortunately, is so full of tannins only squirrels, wild boar, deer & weevils can eat them?


People - only desperate people, I might add - have for a long time roasted and ground acorns up to make a coffee substitute(i have seen an episode of the 1970s Colditz series where the prisoners made a huge pot of it...ra ra ra old bean).
Many countries leech the tannins out of the raw nut by pulverising it and rinsing it in water, and then use the flour in pastries, puddings and pastas.
I  tried the acorn coffee and it does work (albeit a labour of fondness).

After roasting the shelled acorns at 180°C until dark brown, taking care to watch them (I used a timer set to go off every 5 mins once they had started to colour). They do suddenly burn! Taking into account the amount of time it takes to pick and shell them, you may find yourself as wound up as you feel when trying to speak to someone at a bank or an electricity supplier on an automated telephone line. So don't let them turn to charcoal, the flavour is bitter enough!



The acorn trees at the front of our house are not English oaks but evergreens, which means that pigeons shit all year round all over the car in all sorts of wonderful colours. The next wild food meal may just have to be some Kentucky-fried squirrel and roast wood pigeon washed down with a tasty Licor de Bellota
When I was a Spanish food rep for a short time, I was introduced to an acorn liqueur which was surprisingly good and tasted like amaretto. This Licor de Bellota is made from Holm Oak acorns. Holm Oak is the same Mediterranean evergreen that grows outside our house, favours coastal regions and is often used as a wind break(my wife thinks thats handy considering my diet and the beer i consume). My last batch of acorns are definitely going to be turned into this warming tipple! 


I digress... Anyway, back to the acorn-no-caffeine-coffee. Once roasted, grind up the nuts which will now be rock hard and brittle. Grind them to a powder and stick them in a cafetiere. Process as you would for normal coffee and voilà! it looks like coffee, smells exactly like coffee, and tastes worse than crap, cheap percolated coffee you would find at a 'bring and buy' sale in the local church hall!.. Mmm, get out the nice biscuits and bourbons.

So I ask myself,  "What's the point?"...



I then think about the types of food I could get this flavour into. I've never been a great fan of coffee-flavoured anything. I can't abide coffee cake though can tolerate mocha.
It makes sense for the bitterness to be offset by sugar  in a desert, and my first attempt was definitely a surprising success.
Acorn crème caramel.
 And as it so happened. It tasted very much the same as a classic coffee crème caramel.
And that was exactly the point!







Thursday, 21 October 2010

Hairy Bittercress.

This is a great little weed if you like hot and bitter like watercress, it tastes like american land cress only the plant is much smaller.Good with smoked fish or in any salad

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

Mark gets the Horn of Plenty !! Derek and Clive would have loved it......

 The illusive trumpet of death only named so because of their colour, are wonderfully flavoured earthy mushroom and a rare find .
 Also here is the Amethyst Deciever, a deep purple -lilac colour it is common and grows in small troops . The white ball shape is a common puffball , most puffball are edible but you have to identify them 100 % correctly or you could end up in serious ill health .

 Wild rocket, this tastes like the real thing , very peppery and a little bitter, you need patience to pick this little fella but once you start to get accustomed to seeing it you can find a lot.
  We found a lovely crop of perfect watercress close to 3 Kilo
Rocket

Monday, 27 September 2010

What a weekend

Sloe & Wild have returned from a brilliant weekend on Hove Lawns, Brighton, at the World Food Festival. We served some stunning Sussex food including Pork Wraps, Gravlax, chocolate meringues and all our beautiful products and preserves! The big hit of the weekend was our South Coast Octopus with potato, aioli and paprika & our Sloe & Wild Labna Cheese! 

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

World Food Festival Menu

This weekend Sloe & Wild will be at the World Food Festival on Hove Lawns, Brighton we will be serving lots of tasty food including slow cooked Pork, Crab & vegetarian Souvlakis, home smoked prawns, Sussex Octopus with Spanish potatoes, Sloe & Wild Labna, and beautiful meringue.


We will also be selling some locally foraged produce and our Sloe & Wild products and preserves. 
We look forward to seeing you there!

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Autumn Foraging

Autumn is a great time of year for foraging for mushrooms. Across the UK there are so many varieties which taste amazing! This week we found a few different varieties including a large crop of Bay Bolete. These fungi are cream coloured when you break into them, then they turn blue and brown in a matter of seconds , old ones seem to turn a more vivid blue , strange as this is such an unnatural food colour yet very edible. Never collect or eat wild mushrooms unless you know what you are looking for - it's easy to mistake a breed of mushroom and make your self very ill. 


 

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Brighton & Hove Food Festival

Sloe & Wild will be at the World Food Market in association with the Brighton & Hove Food Festival. 
We will be serving tasty hot food and selling Sloe & Wild products. With stalls from Sussex and the Continent, alongside world foods, this huge seafront market on Hove Lawns is always one of the festivals most popular events. With a beer tent, dancing and lots of kids activities, it's a great Brighton day out some make sure you come and say hello!

Hove Lawns, Brighton seafront
25th & 26th September 2010, 10am - 6pm

Friday, 10 September 2010

Sloe & Wild Preserves and chutneys

The taste of Sussex is bought to you by Sloe & Wilds new collection of chutneys, jams and pickles made from the wild food growing across the county. Look out for them at your local deli's and farmers markets or buy directly from us.

Thursday, 9 September 2010

Welcome to the blog!

Welcome to the world of Sloe & Wild where we specialise in foraging wild food from across Sussex to bring you exquisite hand made preserves and chutneys and one of the most unique catering services in the South East.