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Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Persian Pork and Fresh Date Wok stew.


Persian Pork and Fresh Date Wok stew.
Dates have been a staple food of the Middle East and the Indus Valley for thousands of years.
There is archaeological evidence of date cultivation in eastern Arabia in 6000 BCE.
They are believed to have originated around what is now Iraq, and have been cultivated since ancient times from Mesopotamia to prehistoric Egypt, possibly as early as 4000 BCE.
The Ancient Egyptians used the fruits to make date wine, and ate them at harvest.
There is also archeological evidence of date cultivation in Mehrgarh around 7000 BCE, a Neolithic civilization in what is now western Pakistan.

Evidence of cultivation is continually found throughout later civilizations in the Indus Valley, including the Harappan period 2600 to 1900 BC

In later times, traders spread dates around South West Asia, northern Africa, and Spain.
Dates were introduced into Mexico and California by the Spaniards in 1765, around Mission San Ignacio.

A date palm cultivar, known as Judean date palm is renowned for its long-lived orthodox seed, which successfully sprouted after accidental storage for 2000 years.
This particular seed is presently reputed to be the oldest viable seed but the upper survival time limit of properly stored seeds remains unknown.
Fossil records show that the date palm has existed for at least 50 million years.

Friday, 11 March 2016

Japanese Carving Axe bespoke, hand forged made for me by alchemist


Japanese Carving Axe bespoke, hand forged made for me by alchemist
Jimmy the Blacksmith from the Highlands.
300 year old Yew handle with Wild cherry wedges.
Axe head made from Second World war spade shovel.
What a delight to use new hardware, upgrade software for da Chef ;)

Turf roofed Motorway service station Gloucester.

Turf roofed Motorway service station Gloucester.
Wow such an improvement to your normal motorway pitstop.
Is promising that it will host no chain coffee shops, fast-food joints, gambling machines, or – that most curious of motorway rest area attractions – driving video games.

Instead the service station, owned and operated by a family firm, promises to be a showcase for artisanal products and will be working with 130 suppliers based within 30 miles of the site and another 70 from the wider south-west of England.

If not a gastronomic destination in itself, it will at least be a place where the fan of good food will not be horrified by soggy chips, mass-produced coffee and chain-store sandwiches.

The project also has a charitable arm called Gloucestershire Gateway Trust to make sure the business provides good jobs and to plough money into local social regeneration schemes.

It already claims to have created new jobs for 150 people, many of them from the more deprived areas of Gloucester, which were specifically targeted by recruiters. The service station will donate a percentage of its profits to the Trust – an estimated £10m over 20 years – to spend on community projects

Sarah Churchill, who will supply the jam she bubbles in a copper pot in her Gloucester kitchen, said Britain's motorway travellers deserved more than what was provided at most services. "I remember holidays in France where you would be wide-eyed at the food on display at service stations. It's very different in general here."

The chance to supply the service station is a huge boost for the likes of Churchill, a one-woman operation who was this week celebrating a gong for her
Blaisdon red plum jam, made with fruit from a traditional unsprayed orchard. "It's a real boost for me. They have told me they will be my shop window. Gloucestershire producers need this sort of exposure."

Deborah Flint, who runs Cinderhill Farm in the Forest of Dean with her husband Neil, will be supplying sausage rolls and pasties. She said: "We're a tiny farm, a smallholding, just eight acres.

"We have been selling at local farmers' markets so we didn't have much hope when we turned up in our battered old van with straw hanging out the back to show them our produce."

But the buyers liked what the Flints were offering. The pair have already taken on a new worker to meet demand and there has been a knock-on effect for their suppliers. "Lots of people are doing well out of this," said Flint.

The Gloucester services is intended to expand and develop the concept. It also looks strikingly different to other service stations, featuring Cotswold stone walls and a grass roof on its main domed building. There will eventually also be a lake and beehives so honey can be produced on site.

Its first phase opens on the northbound carriageway on Wednesday and work has begun on a southbound site.

While artisanal food is the main selling point, the service station also says it will offer hearty motorway restaurant staples such as fish and chips, pizza and steak and ale pies – but all produced freshly in one of the site's three kitchens.

Sarah Dunning, chief executive of Westmorland Family, said: "We believe proper food matters. So we serve it where you would least expect it – on the motorway. Local food shouldn't be considered the preserve of a handful of high-end shops. It should be at the heart of everything we make and eat."

The Parsnipship, a favourite at markets and festivals in the south-west, will be supplying food such as its
Briezy peazy pie "a marriage" of brie, peas and lemon with a nettle leaf pastry"





Thursday, 3 March 2016

Lemongrass and Ginger Infusion with a shot of Tequila.


Lemongrass and Ginger Infusion with a shot of Tequila.
Perfect Afternoon tea at the http://thebristolian.co.uk/ cafe.
My new cafe on the doorstep :)
Superb breakfast menu till 3pm
#Bristol #Cafe

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

Hoy Mang Poo Half shelled mussels fried with lemongrass, Thai sweet basil


Hoy Mang Poo Half shelled mussels fried with lemongrass, Thai sweet basil
and chillies with lime and chilli sauce.
Classic Margarita to drink a great pairing.

Super food @ http://www.sabaiaberdeen.co.uk/
Amazing atmosphere and water bubble lighting features .
#Restuarant #Sabai

Sunday, 3 January 2016

A Knife were it starts.

A Knife were it starts.
I feel that a good one is important.
Anyone who has chopped an onion using a good knife alongside a bad will see an obvious difference.
The good knife will just glide on through.
The bad knife needs some muscle.
The same can be said about slicing and carving meat.
Remember how I said that thin portions are ideal in a stir fry?
A good knife will easily do that.
Meanwhile, that cheap, serrated, made in China piece of crap from the kitchen aisle at Walmart will just make a mess of things.
There’s a whole world of difference between the two.

You want a good knife.
And a good knife just goes far beyond all that.
Find a good knife and you’ll see yin and yang in action.

It’s cosmic harmony expressed and the answer to Crom’s enigma.
You see, steel that’s too soft, bends.
Steel that is too hard is brittle and breaks.
Find the spot in between, and you’ll see virtue.

This concept is seen again in the angle of the grind, once more finding that point where strength through width and keenness through narrowness meet. That point is generally accepted to be 17 degrees.

Like so much in life, a knife maker strives to avoid extremes.

It’s the Taoist concept of Wu Wei.
Good knives illustrate balance and perfection.

And this will blow your mind.
The next time you’re testing for sharpness, instead of shaving your arm or cutting some paper, just hold the blade up to the light.
When you look along the cutting edge, you should see nothing.
Both sides should join together perfectly, meeting infinity and vanishing into nothingness.
It’s like a geometric line, a series of points so infinitely small that they all but cease to exist.
Diminishing to the point of absolutely no thickness, your edge becomes nothing.
And nothing is what you’re after.
You absolutely want nothing.
Nothing is key.
When you have nothing, you really have something.
But something is absolutely nothing.
Understanding all this, it’s clear that a good knife is the very embodiment of Zen.
Meditate deeply.
#Knife

https://ananarchistscookbookwordpresscom.wordpress.com/2015/12/24/a-good-sharp-knife/

Friday, 1 January 2016

Brace of Pheasants and Duck flew into front door dear oh dear.


Brace of Pheasants and Duck flew into front door dear oh dear.
First meal of the New year coming up.
Slange from The Art and Mystery of Cooking ;)