Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cabbage. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Of cabbages and mash

Come muse and sing of mash and of dark green cabbage. Tell of their their divine union, tossed together by man’s blind hand, stirred by fate and burnished gold by the terrible heat of the Pan. Sing dear muse of this sweet ambrosia: sing dear muse of bubble-and-squeak!

Cheap, quick, versatile and unutterably delicious; how can anyone not love bubble-and-squeak? Even if you had never tasted it, you would know that nothing so beguilingly named could be anything less than divine. My first encounter with The Squeak was in The Wind in the Willows where Mr Toad (to this day my template for manhood) was brought a steaming plateful by the jailor’s charitable daughter, keen to see him snap out of the black depression he had fallen into.

Mr Toad, the rascal, loved a bit of bubble and squeak.

"It was bubble-and-squeak, between two plates, and its fragrance filled the narrow cell. The penetrating smell of cabbage reached the nose of Toad as he lay prostrate in his misery on the floor, and gave him the idea, for a moment, that perhaps life was not such a blank and desperate thing as he had imagined".
What was this mysterious preparation? Whatever it was I knew it was for me, and, after a week of pestering, I found myself tucking into a piping hot plateful of buttery goodness. A love affair had begun.

At its simplest and most frugal bubble-and-squeak is nothing more than roughly equal quantities of leftover cooked cabbage and potato fried together in some good fat. This basic squeak can then be elaborated upon in myriad ways. A little onion, cooked till golden and sweet, can (and should, in my opinion) be added to the mix, as can fresh or dried herbs or some crisp lardons. Other leftover veg can be added, though I would never bother unless they were otherwise going to go to waste. Carrots, leeks, roasted parsnips and spinach have all made enjoyable, but by no means essential, appearances in my squeaks. How much or little you add to your squeak should be determined by what you want to serve it with.

For two people start by sweating a thinly sliced onion till totally soft and lightly coloured. In a mixing bowl loosely combine equal quantities of chopped cooked green cabbage (or kale, broccoli etc) from which you have squeezed all the excess water and whatever cooked potatoes you happen to have. There’s no reason you can’t cook the veg fresh, but if you do, allow them to cool slightly before mixing. If the potato isn’t mashed then break it up a little with your fingers, but don’t feel the need to mash it – lumpier spuds seem more at home in a squeak than smooth pureed ones. Season the veg generously with freshly ground salt and pepper and mix in your golden onions.

Melt a generous amount of butter, dripping or olive oil in a non-stick pan and allow it to get good and hot. The choice of fat is up to you – each will lend a slightly different character to the dish, none is without its merits. Keeping the heat fairly high, dump the veg mixture into the hot fat and press it down so it forms an even layer.

Now the heart of a truly splendid squeak is its golden crust. If you crave the crust you need to leave well alone once it goes in the pan. Don’t go prodding and teasing it like some ant-in-his-pants wok master; leave it alone, trust it, it knows what its doing. But beware! Whilst an impatient squeak chef will be punished for their haste with a limp and anemic offering, the overly laid back will soon discover the singular unpaletteability of burnt brassicas. Patience and vigilance should be the watchwords of any pupil of the squeak.


A wok master at work - Not the way to make a good squeak

After about 3 minutes tentatively lift an edge of the squeak with a spatula and take a peek at the underside. Is it crisp and golden, with patches of honeyed chestnut brown? If so, then turn it over as best you can. If not, then wait another minute or two before turning. Once turned, cook for a couple more minutes until piping hot right through. Your squeak is ready to devour!

If you’re lucky enough to have some gravy kicking about you can comfortably make a meal of just the squeak. Otherwise, you will almost certainly want an accompanying egg or two, poached or fried, the choice is yours. Tomato ketchup is, in the absence of gravy, also an essential (though roasted or tinned tomatoes are just as good). What? You demand a little meat? Then throw some crisp bacon or glossy sossies into the equation, or, better still, some left over baked or boiled ham. Now that’s good eatin’!

One last thing. If you really fancy something utterly savoury, then add some little cubes of cheese (any variety) to the original mixture. This tasty treat makes a truly memorable dinner when accompanied by some cooked tomatoes (roasted/grilled/tinned) that have had a brief flirtation with some crumbled dried chilli.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Of Cabbages and Cream

From: Ryan
Sent: 10:55
To: Richard
Subject: Not hot chilli

Good morning good sir,

How was your weekend? Good times? I cooked chilli last night and it was disappointingly not spicy, despite using 4 hot chillies and plenty of “hot” chilli powder. I am pretty sure I still have taste buds, but it just was not spicy.. any ideas why?! It had potatoes and beans in as well as the standard chilli con carne stuff.

Eggs’n’taters.

Ryan


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From: Richard
Sent: 11:48
To: Ryan
Subject: RE: Cabbages and Cream

I cooked one of the most delicious things I’ve ever eaten on Saturday: cabbage pasta! It was a recipe from my river café book and was basically cavolo nero, cream and garlic, but transformed through technique into one of the most delicious things ever. It did take over an hour and involve four separate pans and the Magimixthough, so I would have been disappointed if it had been anything less than stunning. If you’re interested in trying it the recipe is here (I cut the quantities down to 1 third for the sauce which I found ample for 250g of spaghetti – the pasta amount they recommend if for starter portions with a sauce to pasta ratio that would be inedibly rich as a main course). I think kale would be almost indistinguishable from cavolo nero and much more readily available, and the recipe calls for 2 to 3 chillis rather than 23.

Not as posh as the Savoy.

Perhaps 23 chillies would have been more suitable for your chilli last night. I’ve suffered at the hands of the mysterious non-hot chilli phenomenon before. It’s weird. I’ll have packed a chilli with up to 10 chillies and still it’ll end up as meek and timid as a new born bush-baby. I think a lot of it is down to the unpredictability of the heat contained within individual chillies (I’ve also had the opposite, when a pasta sauce, for example, will be insanely fiery after just 1 chilli). I also suspect that an over long cooking time can temper the heat of an initially respectable chilli, and the inclusion of fire extinguishing starchy elements (like your potatoes and beans) can also have an emasculating effect. The only answer is to prepare some Liquid Fire while the chilli is cooking by stewing at least 10 dried birds eyes in a little water and oil. Then, each diner can tailor their chilli’s power to their own palette by adding a teaspoon at a time of the Fire to their portion.