Archive for December, 2009

365 Days of Web Development, Design, Photography or Cooking.

Saturday, December 26th, 2009
Something a day

Something a day

It’s a new year, and a new decade. There are a lot of ‘Photo a day’ things. My plan is to dedicate a bit of time (maybe 10 minutes, maybe a few hours, we’ll see) a day, every day, for the next year, into doing something creative. Weather that’s cooking something new and interesting, designing some wallpapers or web apps, developing a new section to a website…. It doesn’t really matter, as long as it’s something. It’ll help keep the mind sharp, and hopefully I’ll come up with something useful to someone.

So, everyone, have a great 2010, I’m going to make this one My Year, and I look forward to the journey.

Sweet Chilli Jam (or sauce if it doesn’t settle)

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
A lovely christmas prezzy.

A lovely christmas prezzy.

Have I come up trumps, or have I come up trumps. Oh boy, this is a great recipe. There was a bit of flaffing about, cutting up all the vegetables (and braving ASDA a few days before Christmas), but I think this one is worth it, and it makes so much that if you give 3/4 of it away as a gift, you’ll still have enough to last you a good while. There is a Sweet Chili sauce I buy from the local butchers, “So!Go sweet chili”, it’s about ÂŁ4 a bottle, and although it lasts a little 200ml bottle. It’s great stuff, but if I was charging that for this stuff, I’d be a millionaire after the 5th batch, and let me tell you, it’s a damn sight better.

This is the first time I’ve made a Jam/chutney/thinggy. If It sets, then I’m calling it a jam, if it doesn’t, it’s a sauce… I’ll let you know in the morning.

What you’ll need….

  • 8 ‘pointer’ red peppers (they’re nicer than normal peppers)
  • 10ish Red Chilis (don’t worry, it won’t blow your head off)
  • A bundle of Spring Onion.
  • Two red onions
  • A bottle of Red Wine Vinegar (350ml)
  • 1kg of Preserve Sugar (or I hear you can use Golden Caster Sugar).
  • A nice thumb of ginger
  • A haa-aaa-UGE pan.
  • Some jars to keep it in.
  • Two ‘things’ of Cherry Tomatoes… about 500g.
  • Hand Blitzer

What to do

  • De-seed the Chilis, you can just cut the top off, slice them in half and use a spoon to scrape out the seeds.
  • ‘Rusticly’ fine-slice all the various vegetables, (if you’ve got a blender, it’ll make life easier, but I don’t, so I did it by hand)
  • Shove half of all the veg, sugar and vinegar into the pan and mix it about. If you do it in that order, the vinegar will melt the sugar, rather than taking up so much room.
  • Do as above with the second half, in the same pan. There is to much there to stir around if you do it in one go.
  • Put the heat on under the pan, and let it boil, then put the heat down at let it simmer for 50 minutes, making sure you give it a good stir every 5 minutes.
  • After then, give it a little taste, if needs a little bit of this or that, add it. Personally, I thought it tasted perfect.
  • Let the mixture call down a little bit, about another hour.
  • Get a hand blitzer and blitz it down a bit, but keep it slightly course, it’s about getting a good mix.
  • Get some jars, I needed 4 coffee jars and two bigger ones.
  • The idea is to sterilize them, so you fill them half way up with water and microwave them for about 2 minutes, making sure that you’ve removed all the labels as in the ones that I used had metal in them.
  • Fill the jars up if the Sweet Chili goodness, and enjoy =)
Cut off the top, slice in half, use a teaspoon to scrape out insides

Cut off the top, slice in half, use a teaspoon to scrape out insides

8 Chillis, but mild and not hot.

8 Chillis, but mild and not hot.

Use a rough chop on everything, or even better, a food proccessor.

Use a rough chop on everything, or even better, a food proccessor.

It's a lot of Red Pepper, but it's good.

It's a lot of Red Pepper, but it's good.

Bung it in, in two halfs, to make life easier (I did it in one and it was too much)

Bung it in, in two halfs, to make life easier (I did it in one and it was too much)

oops, forgot the tomartoes, never mind, they'll break down when cooking so don't bother chopping... to much hassle.

oops, forgot the tomartoes, never mind, they'll break down when cooking so don't bother chopping... to much hassle.

Ok, I made a mess, i'll clean up in the morning.

Ok, I made a mess, i'll clean up in the morning.

Use the blitzer to get the consistancy you like.

Use the blitzer to get the consistancy you like.

A lovely christmas prezzy.

A lovely christmas prezzy.

Pad-Gonz

Monday, December 21st, 2009
Doesn't look amazing, but tastes great.

Doesn't look amazing, but tastes great.

Pad Gonz, it’s like Pad Thai, only not quite. The whole thing was easy to make, took less than 10 minutes, most of the stuff I already had in the fridge. I’ll be honest with you, I forgot a few bits as I was cooking it, I was going to incorporate Peanut Butter to give it that Satay’ish touch, I still think it would have worked, but never mind, I’ll try that next time. I’m separating this into two recipes because the chicken part would work with any sauce. I used to really like those packets of Chinese’y sauce you can get in the shops, but now I find they all taste synthetic… I promise I’m not a snob when it comes to food, but I really do find they taste of chemicals.

What you’ll need –
The Chicken Part

  • Chicken breast. (it’s cheaper with the skin on, which is easy to take off and you can always use it for Chicken Scratchings)
  • A couple of beaten eggs
  • Some flour
  • Some sesame Seeds (if you want).
  • Some Sun Flower oil
  • A pinch of salt, or some seasoning (maybe something like Mild Curry Powder would work?)
  • A wok, and some Kitchen Paper

What to do –
The Chicken Part

  • Cut up the chicken into bite-sized strips, the smaller they are, the crisper, but less succulent.
  • Beat an egg in a bowl, sprinkle some Sesame Seeds in there
  • Cover the chicken in flour with a pinch of salt or seasoning
  • Heat up the oil in the Wok, the hotter the better. Pour a drop of the egg in, if it’s sizzling, then you’re hot enough.
  • Dip the chicken in the egg, then put in the oil.
  • When the chicken coating is slightly brown, turn it around. If they all start to stick together, like a pancake/doughnut-with-chicken thing, separate them up.
  • When you think they’re all done, cut the thickest one in two, if that’s cooked, then the rest should be.
  • Leave them to rest on some kitchen paper.

What you’ll need –
The Stir Fry part

  • Honey
  • Dark Soy Sauce
  • Peanuts and/or Cashew nuts
  • A chopped chili (I like the mild ones)
  • Some chopped up red pepper
  • Chopped up red onion
  • Chopped up Spring Onion
  • The fried chicken from above (if you want)
  • The left over egg (from above, if you want)
  • Some noodles, straight-to-wok is fine.
  • Some sunflower oil (about half from above if you want… empty the half into a cup or something to dispose of later)
  • A wok

What you need to do –
The Stir Fry part.

  • Chop up your veg, chop up the nuts
  • Pour a drop of oil into the wok and heat it up.
  • Put the chili and spring onions in the wok (from here onwards, shake the pan around every 30 seconds or so)
  • Put in the Red Onion and Red Pepper
  • Then add in a generous drop of honey and a good few dashes of soy sauce, most (but not all) of the nuts, and the sesame seeds.
  • Add the noodles (and chicken from above)
  • Give it one last shake-up and pour onto a plate.
  • If you’ve got the left over egg from the chicken above, pour that into the wok and keep on stirring so you get almost like a scrambled egg.
  • Put the stuff back off the plate, into the scrambled egg, shake it all up, and put it back.
  • Sprinkle some chopped nuts on top
  • ….. enjoy =)
Just bung it in.

Just bung it in.

Egg and Sessimi seeds to cover the chicken and make the scrambled egg thinggy.

Egg and Sessimi seeds to cover the chicken and make the scrambled egg thinggy.

Fry up that chicken - Flour, Egg, Sessimi Seeds in sunflower oil

Fry up that chicken - Flour, Egg, Sesame Seeds in sunflower oil

Really really nice, works with most sti-frys

Really really nice, works with most sti-frys

The noodles take on the flavours and colour of the sauce.

The noodles take on the flavours and colour of the sauce.

The scrambled egg thing works well, soaks up the sauce and gives a nice texture.

The scrambled egg thing works well, soaks up the sauce and gives a nice texture.

Doesn't look amazing, but tastes great.

Doesn't look amazing, but tastes great.

Chicken Scratchings ! (Now I know why you can’t get these in the shops)

Monday, December 21st, 2009
CHICKEN SCRATCHINGS !

CHICKEN SCRATCHINGS !

It was cheaper for me to buy chicken fillets with the skin on, than to have them with the skin off. I didn’t need them in what I was cooking, and didn’t what to just chuck them away. When having a roast chicken, the best bit is the crispy skin… so can I do this by itself?

I covered them with some sesame oil and a sprinkling of sea-salt, put them on some tin-foil*, and put them in a low oven (about 150ish) for about 10ish minutes to crisp up. This is when I forgot about them and turned the oven off, without turning the fan off… I’m not sure if this effected things. When I did remember about them, about an hour later, they came out as the pictures show. They were a little too dry, but I think if I took them out at around the 12-13 minute mark, they would have been perfect.

* I’m going to tell you that it was to reflect the heat to the underside, rather than me being lazy and wanting to save on some of the washing up.

sesame and a sprinkling of sea salt, on tin foil.

sesame and a sprinkling of sea salt, on tin foil.

Home made chips

Monday, December 21st, 2009
OH BOY OH BOY OH BOY ! I sure do hope I don't burn my house down.

OH BOY OH BOY OH BOY ! I sure do hope I don't burn my house down.

I’ve got the most fabulous and lovely Rose coming over for dinner tonight, so I’m going to try and re-create Ma’s Home Made Chips & Rib-eye Steak. I’m not sure exactly how many potatoes I needed, so I bought 6. I was bored yesterday so I cut them up, but to stop them browning in the air, they’re swimming in water… I got a tub thing from ASDA to keep them in.

These are about the right size, I hope.

These are about the right size, I hope.

My “ASDA, you suck, I hate you, [expletive-x10]” ‘arole

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Good stuff

Good stuff

I hate ASDA, ASDA is on par with one of the circles of hell. As you walk through the door, people seem to lose all sense of spacial awareness. I’m going to bullet-point this list.

  • People with a complete lack of spacial awareness and think they’re the only people there. How can they think it’s a good idea to leave a trolley horizontal in an a aisle? People leave their trolleys and then walk off a few meters, naturally in front of the goods that you want at the time, so you can’t get to them without seeming rude by moving their trolley.
  • Uncontrolled Children. I swear, if I acted half as bad as the brats there, belts would be touching bottoms. They’re skating about* without a care in the world. OK, I understand the “WAHHH I WANT THIS, I WANT THAT”, that’s kids, kids are always going to do that. But running around skating? I don’t mean to be grouch, I really don’t, but I would send them up the chimneys for some good old Victorian style punishment.
  • Crates of stuff just left anywhere they want, and as above, right in front of the products that you want.
  • People (I’m looking at you, Grannys) taking forever to turn the corner, and only moving their trolley at the last second, blocking not only the aisle, but the corridor too.
  • The crowd of people hording over the reduced section. It’s a sad state of affairs when society is reduced to fighting over a packet of almost of date bacon. I don’t mean to be political about this, but it wouldn’t happen in Church-hill’s day**.
  • The self-service tills. Oh god, oh my, I hate these things. I hate these things so much. I understand that you can fit 6 machines and 1 member of staff, where as before you would have 4 members of staff and 4 tills. It saves money in that respect. And I know it’s great for the “Oh diddiums, it didn’t scan? Oh my, my mistake, sorry m’lurd” people. Bleep, Bleep… Checking Weight. Checking Weight. While the member of staff has had a momentary laps in concentration (starting, probably, from the moment they signed up to the job).
  • The unknowledgeable staff. OK, I understand these people probably don’t have degrees in media studies and are working for a base-wage. And there are (probably) 100′s of 1000s of various items and products, but today I had to explain what a chorizo is. I’m not sure if I’m in the wrong, maybe it is something obscure.
  • There is no queue space for the self-service section, so it normally ends up going down one of the aisles and becomes a big mess. Then you get some twat with a trolley trying to get in on our basket-dude turf.
  • One thing I will say, I got a lot of respect for the staff, it can’t be easy working in such a soul-destroying environment when they could just sign on instead (and almost be better off, financially), I don’t look down on any job what-so-ever, from the head of a bank to the guy who empties the bins, a job is a job. I think, personally, everyone who walks into that building looses a few points on their I.Q, and some people it grows back when they walk out. I can’t blame the staff for that.

Anyway, I managed to get everything I wanted into my basket, everything was going fine and I was at my self service till, when for the forth time I did that “checking weight” thing, and by then I had enough, I really did. There was some screaming brats next to me too and I completely autisim’d, just left it and walked out.

But the thing is, I had this idea of what to cook in my head, I’d been thinking about it for hours. So what did I do? I went to the fabled Tescos and “made do”, and this is what I “made do” with…..

Stuff you’ll need.

  • A packet of decent sausages (Chorizo would be better)
  • A mild chili
  • Paprika, Garlic Salt (proper garlic would be better).
  • Two tins of chopped tomatoes
  • Two tins of Butter Beans
  • Some oil
  • Some herbs and stuff, honestly, whatever you got, just use it up.
  • Red Onions and Red Peppers
  • A bit of flour
  • Some sugar
  • …. maybe a bit of balsamic vinegar? Honestly, use your imagination here, nothing is set in stone.
  • Some nice bread to serve it up with, like Tiger Bread.

How to go about making it

  • Take the meat out of the sausage and brown them off in a bit of oil. If you got some garlic, mash it up with some salt and a fork and add it to the oil.
  • Sweat down the onions and peppers
  • Transfer it from your frying pan into a saucepan, including those lovely juices from the sausage/chorizo.
  • Dollop in two tins of tomatoes and two tins of butter beans, keep the whole thing over a very low light.
  • Add in whatever spices, herbs and chili you’ve got (eg, the garlic salt/garlic/paprika).
  • Keep it over a low light for about 10 minutes until it’s thickened a bit and it looks good.
  • Give it a taste, if you think it needs some sugar, balsamic, salt or pepper, put that in. Remember, you can always add, you can’t take away. Just a little bit at the time. The sugar cuts through the sharpness of the tomatoes to even and mellow everything out.
  • Add some flour to thicken the sauce, I used about one and a half heaped table-spoons.
  • Serve in a bowl with a nice bit of bread.

This was made really hap-hazordly, I didn’t really think, I just *did*. The sausage broke up a bit when stirring it around, which helped thicken things up… in general, it’s worked well, I bet it’ll be good tomorrow for lunch too.

* Skate? SKATE? In my day, in my day, if I wanted to skate in a supermarket, well, it wouldn’t happen. Bottoms would turn red first. How the hell do people allow their kids to ‘Helees’ (and yes, they are skating) in a supermarket?
** Ok, it would, but there was a war on, they’ve got an excuse.

The tomartos with sauce are quite lose, but we'll thicken it up later.

The tomartos with sauce are quite lose, but we'll thicken it up later.

Browning off the saussage meat

Browning off the saussage meat

Just bung it in, it'll work, hopefully.

Just bung it in, it'll work, hopefully.

Transfer it to a saucepan

Transfer it to a saucepan

Ma’s Steak’n'Chips (it’s ohmygood)

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Bing bang bosh, done.

Bing bang bosh, done.

There isn’t much in this world that makes me close my eyes in pure unadulterated pleasure, savoring every mouth-full, but this is one of those things. Should I have a “Death row meal”, it won’t be foie gras and lobster from Claridges that I would be asking for, it would be this. In my mind, I’ve always related this meal (or even just egg’n'chips) with something special, only having it 3 or 4 times a year. They’re so much better than ‘chippy’ chips, and don’t get me wrong, they have their place in the world, but then again, so does McDonalds.

Now, before I start with the nitty-gritty, I want you to be extra careful, you’re dealing with hot oil that can lead to a really really nasty accident, this is definitely lock-your-kids-out-of-the-kitchen stuff. Never, ever, leave boiling oil alone. Should a fire break out, damp a cloth under the sink, squeeze it dry, and place it over the pan/wok, covering the flame and cutting off the flame’s oxygen supply.

Ingredients and Equipment

  • A deep Wok or saucepan for frying.
  • About 1kg of ‘chipping’ potatoes, like King Edwards (Enough for 2 or 3 good portions)
  • A nice Rib-eye steak.
  • About one-and-a-half red onions
  • Loads of sunflower Oil, about half a bottle.
  • Japanese Seasoned Rice Wine Vinegar (take a peek at the photos for my favorite brand).
  • Some salt and pepper
  • A pan for frying the onions and steak (Naturally, the all mighty Griddle Pan would make the whole thing 17.5% nicer)
  • A colander and deep dish.
  • A little bit of Butter

How to go about making “The Best Meal Evah ™”

  • Peal the potatoes (if you want, not important) and cut them into 1cm thick chips.
  • Chop up the onions into strips
  • Lots of salt’n'pepper on the steak
  • If you’re cutting the potatoes in advance, leave them in a bowl and covered with water, to stop them blackening. About 20 minutes before you’re ready to cook, empty the chips into the colander and let them drip dry(ish)
  • Fill up the wok or pan about half way with oil and put on a medium-high heat. After about 5 minutes, drop one of the chips in, it should give a satisfying sizzling sound, if it does, put in about half the chips… be careful with this though, don’t over-fill the wok. You can always do two batches. If you are doing it in two batches, you can semi-pre-fry this beforehand… if you do that, don’t put them into the water as above, and you should fry them until they turn from white to yellow.
  • Pour some butter into the frying pan (not the wok) and sweat down the onions for about 10-15 minuites, then take out and leave on the side.
  • At around the 30 minute mark, the chips should be almost done, but not quite done. I like my chips well-done, so you get nice crispy bits.
  • Put some butter and oil in the pan you just did the onions in and turn up the heat, when the pan is hot when you hover your hand about 3 inches above it, put on the steak for 3 minutes… don’t turn it around when cooking, just let it cook. Then turn it over for another three minutes…. now leave it to rest on the side
  • It’s now been about 45 minutes since the chips started frying, and they should be perfect now, use your own judgement as to weather they’re done or not.
  • Put some kitchen paper into a bowl and take out the chips to put on top. Use something like a metal slotted spoon thinggy to get them out.
  • Put it on the plate, and enjoy. Personally, the only condiments I have with this is a drop of mustard for the steak, but it seriously doesn’t need anything. That vinegar I mention in the photos is amazing on this.
  • When the oil has cooled down from the chips, you can put it back into the bottle it came from, but please make sure it’s cooled down first. Never empty it down the sink, I can’t remember why, but I hear the results can be quite grim. You can use the oil again as nothing has really flavoured it
    Bing bang bosh, done.

    Bing bang bosh, done.

The uncooked chips

The uncooked chips

Ribeye Steaks - Season well

Ribeye Steaks - Season well

Let the water drain from the potatoes.

Let the water drain from the potatoes.

Fill wok half way or less with oil

Fill wok half way or less with oil

Chop up some onions

Chop up some onions

Sweat them down.

Sweat them down.

Let the oil simmer before adding chips

Let the oil simmer before adding chips

Such a satisfying sound - use one chips as a tester first.

Such a satisfying sound - use one chips as a tester first.

Don't over-fill the wok.

Don't over-fill the wok.

Lovely onions

Lovely onions

The best vinegar in the world - Love this stuff !

The best vinegar in the world - Love this stuff !

Onions. Done.

Onions. Done.

Oh Boy Oh Boy Oh Boy - THE CHIPS ARE DONE !!!

Oh Boy Oh Boy Oh Boy - THE CHIPS ARE DONE !!!

Absolutely Perfect-e-mo

Absolutely Perfect-e-mo

Oh man, soooooooooO0o0o0o0o0o0o Good.

Oh man, soooooooooO0o0o0o0o0o0o Good.

Chicken and Pasta (with sauce)

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
Quick'n'Easy pasta

Quick'n'Easy pasta

This is simple one, using the sauce from ‘Steak Sandwich with Mustardy/Creamy/Oniony sauce‘, I boiled up some pasta, griddle-pan’d some chicken and mixed it all up.

The sauce, before I heated it up, was quite thick (almost solid), but upon adding it to the heated pan after cooking the chicken, it became the right consistency again, but reduced to the point where there wasn’t enough pasta… so I added a few dollops of mayo, and that fixed things.

Griddle Pan up some chicken and boil some pasta

Griddle Pan up some chicken and boil some pasta


The sauce reduced quite a bit.

The sauce reduced quite a bit.


A dolop of mayo fixed that.

A dolop of mayo fixed that.


Add the sauce once the chicken is done.

Add the sauce once the chicken is done.


Quick'n'Easy pasta - Tuddah

Quick'n'Easy pasta - Tuddah

Steak Sandwich with Mustardy/Creamy/Oniony sauce

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
The finished artical

The finished artical

Steak, allegedly one of the finest things known to culinary kind. And a fillet steak is king of steaks. And “28 day matured beef” steak is the king of fillet steaks. And the fact that I got it from ASDA knocks it down a peg, but it’s still a top notch steak. I decided to do a fillet steak with a sauce made from cream, onions, Dijon mustard and grainy mustard. I’ll be honest, I’m not the manliest of men, and steak doesn’t normally float my boat, but I wanted to recreate the memories of my favorite restaurant in Cyprus, The Moon Over The Water.

The sauce is amazing, I’m more than pleased with that, the steak though, left a bit to be desired. I think it could be that I didn’t cook it properly, or may have chosen the wrong kind of steak (fillet, rump…etc). I did the sauce first and then the meat, rather than the other way ’round (getting steaky-flavour into the sauce) because I wanted to have the sauce the next day and I wasn’t entirely sure it would be safe with the meat there.

Ingredients and Equipment

  • Griddle Pan ! (yes, love them, get one, right now, if you don’t have one)
  • Dijon Mustard
  • Grainy Mustard
  • Double Cream
  • An onion
  • Fillet Steak (or some kind of meat, it would work well with chicken)
  • Butter
  • Salt and Pepper

Instructions

  • Put a ‘Bake at home’ half-baked Ciabatta in the oven. I wasn’t sure if you should keep it in the bag, so I took it out.
  • Chop up the onion so you get slivers of onion (I mean, not diced)
  • Melt some butter into the pan and sweat down the onions for about 5 minutes
  • Pour over the cream
  • Put two big dollops of Dijon and one big dollop of grainy mustard into the sauce
  • Keep on stirring until the cream is thick enough to have a consistency that you want.
  • Pour the whole lot into a bowl and run the pan under the tap and whip it dry.
  • Pack a load of Salt, Pepper and any sort of Herby things (I used dried Basel) over the steak.
  • Now, I’ve been told the following rule for a fillet steak …
  1. Two minutes on each side, 8 minutes resting = rare
  2. Three minutes on each side, 4 minutes resting = Medium
  3. Four minutes on each side, 2 minutes resting = Well done.
  • Well, let me tell you, that didn’t work. I went for medium rare and the middle was still cold when I went to cut it, so I put it back on, gave it about 5 minutes on each side, the middle was still raw (not rare, raw). I tried one last time and I *think* it was cooked. I didn’t enjoy the steak part, which was double-gutted because I thought that would be the best bit.
  • Anyway, take the ciabatta out the oven, slice it in half, spread some butter and mustard on top.
  • Slice the steak into strips and place on the bottom slice
  • Pour over some of that AMAZING sauce
  • Put top on
  • Plate up

The good news though, is that I have plenty of sauce left over, that I’ll do with some chicken and pasta tonight.

My lovely Griddle Pan

My lovely Griddle Pan

Nice and organised

Nice and organised

Sweat 'em onions down

Sweat 'em onions down

The sauce (still need to stir it in)

The sauce (still need to stir it in)

Finished Sauce

Finished Sauce

Ok, a little bit messy.

Ok, a little bit messy.

Steak on the Griddle Pan

Steak on the Griddle Pan

Great, GRIDDLE MARKS !

Great, GRIDDLE MARKS !

I still think this is raw, did I eat raw steak?

I still think this is raw, did I eat raw steak?

Steak and Bread - I AM MAN !

Steak and Bread - I AM MAN !

The finished aritcal (opened)

The finished aritcal (opened)

The finished artical

The finished artical

Asian Salmon with Asparagus

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
Asian Salmon, Ohhh Boy.

Asian Salmon, Ohhh Boy.

My Asian Salmon with Asparagus is a home made recipe that I came up with. It’s taken me a couple of tries and mess-arounds to perfect it, but my goodness, is it good, and healthy. I admit, I’ve spent most of the past 5 years eating take aways, but I’ve recently discovered how to cook for myself, and I regret all those take-aways now. It’s not always cheaper if you’re cooking for one, but it is way way nicer.

Equipment and Ingredients

  • Sandwich Bag
  • Griddle Pan
  • Spatula
  • Half a chili*
  • About 4-5 spring onions
  • Sesame Seeds
  • Honey
  • Salmon Fillet
  • Dark Soy Sauce
  • Sesame Oil
  • Asparagus tips

* as someone with stomach-problems, I choose a mild red one and only used half. The intensity of the chili is reduced during the cooking process, but if you like things a bit hotter, add in a whole one or a hotter one.

Instructions

  • Run the Spring Onion, Chili and Salmon fillet under the tap to give it a little clean.
  • Finely slice and de-seed the chilli, put it in the sandwich bag.
  • Chop up the spring onion up , put it in the sandwich bag. Don’t bother with the green-with-no-white bits, they’re taste’n'texturely unpleasant.
  • Put in about half a handful of sesame seeds in the bag.
  • Put in two glugs of honey, half a glug of sesame oil, a glug of soy sauce into the bag
  • Put the salmon into the bag.
  • Squidge it all around and leave in the fridge for an hour or two (you can do this before you go to work if you want). Put it on a plate in case the bag leeks.
  • Heat up the griddle pan with a splash of sesame oil.
  • Take the salmon fillet out with about half the sauce and put it skin-side-up for about a minute or two, don’t move it about or you won’t get those lovely scorch marks.
  • Turn the fillet around (skin-side-down), and put the asparagus in the pan, for about 3 or 4 minutes
  • Pour on the rest of the sauce for another minute or two.
  • ……. Make it pretty on the plate and serve up !

This would go well with boiled potatoes with a bit of butter. You can buy these microwaveable baby potato that steam in the bag.

Asian Salmon, Ohhh Boy.

Asian Salmon, Ohhh Boy.

IMG_0229

Stuff in the sandwich bag

SCORCH MARKS ! WIN !

SCORCH MARKS ! WIN !

Skin side up first.

Skin side up first.