Tuesday 12 November 2013

Pizze Bianche

Bored of pizza margerita?  Try one without a tomato base. This pizza uses creme fraiche instead, which makes it feel lighter.
Serves two

For the dough:
110g plain flour
110g strong white bread flour
pinch of sea salt
a few lugs of olive oil
150ml warm water
4g quick yeast
half tsp of sugar

For the topping:
2 or 3 tbs of half fat creme fraiche
Whatever fresh herbs are to hand (marjoram, basil etc)
A couple of sliced tomatoes
1 tbs of capers
1 small shallot, thinly sliced
Small handful of hard-type mozzarella cheese, cubed
 plus whatever else you fancy - in the one in the picture I used some chunks of leftover roasted squash and some grilled peppers

To make the dough, sift the flour into a large mixing bowl. Add the salt and some olive oil, then mix together. Make a well.
For the yeast mixture, add the sugar to the warm water in a bowl and stir. Sprinkle in the yeast and stir, then leave for a few minutes until it starts to activate.
Once the yeast is ready, pour it gradually into the well in the flour, folding it in until it's all incorporated. Keep stirring the dough mixture with a fork until it comes together, then switch to hands, kneading it until it's smooth and elastic (if it gets too sticky, drizzle a bit of olive oil around the bowl). This will take five or ten minutes. Cut a cross on top, and cover. Leave to prove for about an hour.
Pre-heat your oven (and pizza stone) as hot as it will get.
When proved, knock back the dough and work it on a floured surface, or toss between your hands until it's thin and roughly pizza shaped. Carefully transfer to the pre-heated pizza stone, then add the topping.
Spoon on the creme fraiche, then sprinkle the other ingredients on top. Bake for about 15 minutes or until it looks done!

Cut in half or into slices and serve with a mixed salad.

Wednesday 14 August 2013

Grilled sardines with samphire salsa verde

...following on from the samphire salsa verde post earlier, here's a serving suggestion!

Flatten out your sardines, slash the skin a few times, season well with salt and black pepper, and put them under a hot grill for 3-4 minutes.
Arrange a circle of salad leaves on each plate, and in the middle, scatter some garlic croutons dotted with spoonfuls of the salsa. Place the grilled sardines ontop of the croutons and dot the last of the salsa on top. Squeeze over some lemon juice and you're done!

Samphire salsa verde

This is a great accompaniment to fish. Try it with grilled Cornish sardines!

Handful of fresh samphire
A few cornichons or pickled gherkins
Tablespoon of chopped mint or lemon mint
Tablespoon of chopped fresh parsley
Plenty of freshly ground black pepper
A few capers
A big dash of cider vinegar, or white wine vinegar
A couple of lugs of olive oil

Either chop everything by hand or use a mixer. Check for seasoning - there's no need to add salt, as the samphire is really salty. If you're using ordinary mint, you might want a squeeze of lemon juice. Make it a couple of hours before you need it and let the flavours mingle in the fridge.

Wednesday 7 August 2013

Cocoa shortbread

This rustic-yet-sophisticated chocolate shortbread works well (possibly best) with ice cream. It's quite crumbly, with a light texture, and the cocoa powder gives at an after-dinner feel. Or just have it with your morning coffee if you can't wait til then.

Makes about 10 pieces (depending on how you cut it up)

150g plain flour
50g caster sugar (plus extra for sprinkling)
120g unsalted butter
25g cocoa powder
pinch of salt

Preheat your oven to 150C.
In a bowl, mix the flour, sugar, cocoa and pinch of salt. Rub in the butter, then combine into a smooth dough.
Place the dough on a non-stick baking sheet and roll out to about 8mm thick. Prick all over with a fork, and bake in the oven for about 30 minutes.
Sprinkle with the extra sugar and cut up whilst still warm and pliable before allowing to cool.

Wednesday 24 April 2013

Prawn, samphire and roasted pepper pasta salad

A summertime supper dish. I love samphire (or 'Hampshire', as predictive text prefers) with fish, with all its salty, mineral flavours. You can eat it raw, but it's also really nice just quickly steamed.

Serves two

Handful of samphire
200g raw prawns
A roasted sweet red pepper, cut into chunks
Cherry tomatoes, halved
Pasta, cooked and cooled
Handful of rocket

For the dressing:
Juice of half a lemon, olive oil, sea salt

Steam the samphire and prawns together for just a few minutes, until the prawns are done. Meanwhile, toss all the other ingredients together with half the dressing. When the prawns and samphire are done, add them to the dish and drizzle over the rest of the dressing.

Tuesday 23 April 2013

New look, new format!

I've redesigned the Raw Prawn a bit. Got a posh new header thing, courtesy of Stewart Harris Designs.
And I'm going to post recipes in a less formal way - that way I can post stuff even if I can't remember what quantities I used (I never measure anything unless baking). So I'll post up the general idea of a dish - I'm sure you can work it out...