The Vicar’s Wife’s Cook Book. Elisa Beynon

The Vicar’s Wife’s Cook Book - Elisa Beynon


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      100g green beans

      about 20 stems of thin baby asparagus, trimmed

      100g sugar snap peas

      

      For the dressing:

      1 garlic clove, peeled and crushed

      1 teaspoon French mustard

      1 tablespoon lemon juice

      3 tablespoons basil oil

      2 tablespoons flatleaf parsley, chopped

      2 tablespoons basil leaves, roughly torn

      salt and pepper

      

      

      Throw the beans in a pan of boiling, salted water and cook for about 5 minutes. After 1 minute, add the asparagus. (If you are using the thicker baby asparagus, you may need to put them in at the same time as the beans.) Throw in the sugar snaps 3 minutes before the end of the cooking time.

      

      

      Meanwhile, whisk together the garlic, mustard, lemon juice and basil oil for the dressing. Stir in the parsley and basil and season to taste with salt and pepper. Drain the vegetables well, chuck them into a warmed serving dish and pour over the green herby dressing. Now get everything and everyone to the table and enjoy all those sunny, fragrant flavours.

      

      

      Do feel free to make the pastry for this tart yourself, but if you really can’t be bothered with it, do what I did and buy some ready-made fresh pastry. Lazy, I know, but I have a friend at Leith’s Cookery School and she confessed to me that pastry was her weak point; and if she is prepared to admit that, then so can you.

      

      

      250g chilled ready-made sweet pastry

      plain flour, for dusting

      227g curd or cream cheese

      4 tablespoons homemade lemon curd, or a good-quality bought one

      finely grated zest of 1 lemon

      2 tablespoons pudding wine, such as Muscat de Beaumes de Venise

      a big tub of fresh raspberries (about 250g)

      icing sugar, to sprinkle

      

      

      When you have made the pastry, or taken it out of its shop-bought packaging, roll it out thinly on a lightly floured surface and use to line a lightly greased 20cm loose-bottomed flan tin (I used half a packet, so divide in half first). Chill for 20 minutes, then bake it blind – by which I mean you cover it with a sheet of greaseproof paper showered with baking beans.

      

      

      Bake for 15–20 minutes in an oven preheated to 200°C/Gas Mark 6 until biscuit-coloured, then remove the paper and beans and return to the oven for a further 5 minutes. Once out of the oven, let it cool.

      

      

      For the filling, combine all the remaining ingredients, bar the raspberries and the icing sugar, until smooth and pour the mixture carefully into the cooled pastry case. Arrange the raspberries on top and then chill for at least 1 hour. Just before serving, put about 1 tablespoon of icing sugar in a big sieve and sprinkle it over the tart. This little touch makes the tart look pretty, and you, professional. (You are welcome to arrange these adjectives the other way around if that makes you feel even better about yourself!)

      

      

      A very late lunch with the out-laws

      Eurovision Song Contest last night. I fell asleep on the sofa, but not before the Vicar had pronounced the show ‘a veritable cultural smorgasbord’. Maybe it was that very comment that triggered his suggestion for the next day: as we were on holiday we could do what some crazy non-churchgoers do on a Sunday and go to Ikea. (Not that I’m saying that people who don’t go to church are crazy, per se; it’s just that Ikea, or anywhere like that, on a Sunday isn’t my idea of weekend relaxation.) Anyway, I had idly mentioned I needed a couple of extra things for lunch and he somehow saw it as a chance to go Swedish.

      

      

      On the way back home I ran into a crowded supermarket to get my stuff and we only got home at around 1pm, the out-laws hot on our heels. They arrived in the rain just as the meat went in; after that, shopping was put away, gin was drunk, jobs were shared out and, very hungrily, we finally ate two hours later.

      

      

      The meal was perfect for a rainy spring day – the weather was damp enough for us to crave comfort in the form of crackling and mashed potato, but it was too depressing to give up all hope that warmer days were on their way: hence the summery pudding.

      

      

      As I proved on that late-lunch day, this lot can be cooked in 2 hours flat. Below are the necessaries. I sorted the pork first, then prepared the carrots for the oven, made the mash, got the pudding together and left it on the side, did the pears and then the cabbagey/leeky/fennel stuff and last, but not least, made the gravy/sauce.

      

      

       ROAST PORK WITH CRACKLING AND GINGERED PEARS

       MUSTARD MASH

       ROASTED CARROTS WITH THYME

       WHITE CABBAGE, LEEK AND FENNEL COOKED IN GARLICKY WHITE WINE

       SUMMER FRUIT CHARLOTTE AND CLOTTED CREAM

      

      

      1.3kg pork loin, boned and rolled (please don’t buy this in a supermarket, go to your most trusted butcher for a piece of organic, happily-reared, properly-scored pig)

      salt and pepper, to taste

      2 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed

      3 teaspoons fennel seeds

      2 tablespoons olive oil

      3 pears

      1 teaspoon ginger (fresh or from a jar), grated

      250ml white wine

      2 teaspoons ready-made apple sauce

      

      

      Bring the pork back to room temperature before you cook it. Preheat the oven to 220°C/Gas Mark 7. Dry the pork off with some kitchen towel and, if the fat hasn’t already been scored by your butcher, take a Stanley knife and cut slits diagonally down the skin at intervals


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