Tuesday 24 April 2012

Wild Garlic Omelette: tea in hand

Wild Garlic must be one of the best thing nature has to offer from her wonderful wild larder. After getting back from picking a nice bag full, with my mate Eoin I was putting the chickens in for the night when I had one them great ideas for a recipe, so I was straight in to the kitchen to rustle up a nice light wild garlic omelette for dinner.

Wild Garlic Omelette:   
Ingredients:
Large handful of fresh chopped wild garlic leaves
7-8 mushrooms
½ a leek (white end)
2 eggs
Cheese (optional)
Salt and pepper
Method:
Finely chop the mushrooms and leek
And fry in butter for 4-5 mins until tender
Add garlic leaves and fry for a minute
Whisk eggs until frothy
Pour into pan a leave till eggs are cooked about 2/3 through 
Sprinkle with a little grated cheese
Fold in half and take off the heat and leave sit for a few minutes till cooked fully
Serve with a nice steaming cup of tea and some chunky toast!!!
So with tea in hand and omelette in belly I’m sitting back think of the things I have planned tomorrow for the rest of the garlic leaves and looking forward to creating some fab dishes based on this wonderful ingredient !

Wednesday 18 April 2012

nettle beer

With a smile on my face at the thought of the fun I’m going to have drinking this. I’m out with my trusty rubber gloves picking nettles leaves to make a great summer tipple, and in 3 short weeks we will be enjoying our first taste!!


Gibney’s Nettle Beer:
3kg nettle tops (approximately 6 carrier bags stuffed to bursting, just the top 6 leaves)
25 litres water
2.5kg brewing sugar
Juice of 10 lemons
150g cream of tartar
2 tbls. spoons of fine chopped ginger
Copper fining, not essential. If used, follow the instructions on the packet
A sachet of beer yeast (I would you a light beer yeast)
Method:
·         Rinse the nettles,
·         Boil in the water for 15 minutes. Either do this in a six-gallon brewing boiler or do it in batches if you only have smaller pots.
·         Strain the liquor into a fermentation bucket, containing the lemon juice, lemon rind (no pith), sugars and cream of tartar and top up to 25 liters. Stir vigorously and allow to cool to blood temperature.
·         Sprinkle the yeast over the top, cover the bucket  loosely with a cloth and leave for 24 hours. Replace the cloth with an airlock and leave to ferment for a further 3-4 days.
·         Strain into a second clean and sterilised brewing bucket and leave for a further 7 days to clear more
Time to either bottle or keg. If using a keg, it's worth adding another half pound of white sugar to help get the pressure up.
Leave for at least seven days before drinking. Serve chilled.
I hope ye all enjoy this and a special hello to my new friends in iceland!!!!


Thursday 5 April 2012

Stinger Soup: Sunshine Fritters:Dandelion Lemonade

So I think I got the bug for nettles and dandelions (FOR not FromJ ) after the pesto last week so I think I have some apt recipes to follow on from there this week, To keep the frugal but seasonal theme going
  
Stinger Soup

Ingredients:
·         1 large onion
·         4 garlic cloves
·         Carrier bag full of young nettle tips
·         2 or 3 potatoes
·         Olive oil, salt and pepper
·         Some stock or a stock cube (chicken or vegetable)
·         Cream to taste

Method:
Firstly prepare the nettles. Wash and drain them. Trim the stems out of the nettles you have picked, leaving just the fresh, young leaves.
Next peel and chop the potatoes, onion and garlic and sauté them in a saucepan with a splash of olive oil and a bit of butter to taste and season well with salt and pepper.
When the onion starts to soften and the potato is forming a slight crust, drop in the nettles and give them a quick whisk around with a spatula.
Then add a litre of boiled water and your stock. Stir it all up and let it simmer for about 12 minutes, or until the potato is soft.
Put it through a liquidiser once it has cooled, then return to the pan to warm it when you are ready to serve.
To serve, pour the soup into a bowl and add some cream. Swirl the cream around with the back of a spoon. Add salt and pepper to taste
Sever with a nice crusty bread and lashings of real butter mmmm!
Gibney’s Sunshine Fritters:

Ingredients:
·         As many Dandelion flower heads as you want to make fritters (Pick your flowers in the sunshine when they are open, and when you have time to make the fritters right after.)
·         1 egg
·         1 cup of milk
·         1 cup of flour
·         Butter for cooking the fritters
Method:
Mix together one egg and one cup of milk.  Stir in a cup of flour and your fritter batter is ready to go.  (If you like your fritters sweet you can add 1 tbsp. of castor sugar)
Now, prepare a skillet on the stove with gently warmed olive oil – keep it over medium heat. 
Take one of the flowers and hold it by the greens at the base of the flower petals. Dip the petals into the batter and twirl until the flower is covered. 
Drop it into the frying pan, flower side down.
Continue dipping and dropping flowers, checking the first ones every once in a while to see if they are brown.  When they’ve lightly browned, flip them over and brown them on the other side.
When they’re brown on both sides remove them from the pan and drain the excess oil on paper towel. 
For a sweet treat, drizzle them with maple syrup, honey, jam, or powdered sugar.
For savoury fritters try adding some savoury herbs to the batter, rosemary works well.
You Won’t Pee In The Bed Lemonade

This is a very simple summer drink the kids and adults will love very tasty and good for you
Ingredients:
·         4 pint glasses filled with Dandelion flower heads
·         4 lemons
·         Honey to taste
·         4 litres water
Method:  
Wash flowers head to make sure all bugs are gone
Place in a large bowl or pot
Add all the juice and some of the rind from the lemons
Add the water room temperature  
Add honey to your preferred sweetness
Chill for 3-4 hours
Strain into some glass flip top bottles and enjoy!!
I’m really enjoying the year so far finding some great ways to live closer with nature and with what’s available from nature’s larder. I really think we are missing something not using all that around us, to help balance our bodies and keep us in good health. So please try these recipes and let me know how you get on and add any favourites of your own!