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Wednesday 5 November 2014

Eggplant Parmesan

It's been a busy week and I haven't gotten round to cooking much. Okay, I did cook yesterday but that was just caramelized leek quiche and a pumpkin pie. The first I've already posted and the second... well let me say that no one except me enjoyed it :( Unfortunate for the "others" they are stuck with it for dessert until it is over :)
Today was busy too but the eggplant was not going to last much longer. I figured eggplant Parmesan would be a good option to use it up. I search for the recipe on food.com (that's where I first found the recipe). But oh my, our internet connection has been really slow for many websites (thank goodness not blogger) and I could not download the recipe. I had to kind of go at it blind. So what you have here is not a traditional eggplant Parmesan but some modified version of it!



Serves 8; Preparation time: 1 hour 20 minutes

Ingredients

1 kg Eggplant
Salt for sprinkling
1 Egg
1 tbsp. Flour
3 tbsp. Milk
2 cups Bread crumbs
Oil for frying
800 ml Pasta sauce (tomato)
3 tbsp. Cream
1/4 cup Basil leaves (loosely packed)
2 tbsp. Thyme
125 g Fresh mozzarella
1/2 cup Grated Parmesan

Method:


I'd decided on eggplant Parmesan pretty early in the afternoon. So I took a break from my work and sliced the eggplant into slices about 1 cm thick. (Note this is a European eggplant so it's big and fat. If you have the Asian variety I would slice it lengthwise instead of crosswise.) Then I sprinkled it liberally with salt and put it in a colander to rest. I went back to work and literally forgot about it!

Next there was the rush... 15 minutes to move dinner along before running out of the house to pick up my youngest one from Viola lessons. What could I possibly get done in 15 minutes and without a recipe? So I just guessed. I put two skillets on the cooker on high heat (with one I was never going to be done in time). Then I washed the salt off the eggplant and beat up an egg with some flour and milk. I didn't measure anything precisely but I know that I used 2 heaped teaspoons of flour, which is probably the same as in the ingredients above. I must have put about 3 tablespoons of milk in. But you know what, it's not a precise science. I just needed something that would stick the breadcrumbs to the eggplant. Anything that you use to make a cutlet or Chinese roll should do too. I do believe that the egg makes it crunchy so don't leave that out. 

To fry eggplant you need a lot of oil. There is something about eggplant that makes it only taste good if it is doused in oil! So I poured some oil into the pan then one by one patted the eggplant dry with a kitchen towel, to remove some of the dampness so that the batter adheres better, dipped them in the batter then into the breadcrumbs and fried them. When I turned them I added extra oil to the pan else the breadcrumbs would not become golden brown. And I reduced the heat else the breadcrumbs start burning and that is a mess. Here is what they looked like:


It took me 15 minutes to finish all of them and get out of the house. I was in time to pick up my child. Phew!!

Once I got home again I had to put everything together. I first set the oven to 160 Celsius and then got to work. I picked my largest casserole dish and poured in about 300 ml of pasta sauce from a jar. Then I arranged the fried eggplant on top of it. Since I had so much eggplant I put two layers of eggplant. Then I used the cream to clean out the empty pasta sauce jar and poured that on top.



There were some herbs that still had not died! A basil plant, which is on it's last legs and the thyme plant which was bought for the quiche. Actually the thyme has been doing really well since I started watering it. I didn't bother picking off the leaves of the thyme because the stalks were really soft so I just kind of broke it up over the dish. I did the same with the basil leaves (no stalks please!).



Then the rest of the tomato sauce was poured over and evenly distributed. Finally on went the cheese. The fresh Mozzarella was shredded and the Parmesan finely grated. All of this was popped in the oven for around 30 to 40 minutes. At some point I felt like the cheese was not browning quickly enough so I increased the temperature by 10 degrees. This helped speed up the cooking.


And while that all was cooking I managed to clean up the kitchen and make some pasta to eat with it. I took the opportunity to finish the linguine that I used for the half an hour pasta with mushroom dish. You can also eat it with bread or rice and serve a nice green salad with it if you want to be fancy.





Tuesday 21 October 2014

Half an Hour Vegetarian Pumpkin and Potato Soup

Well this one was never truly meant to be! My shopping schedule is all off due to the kids vacations and as usual I forgot that on Sunday the shops are closed. Something that I have never quite been able to get used to. The fridge was almost bare except for some butternut squash and a few potatoes. So I decided to throw them "all" together and make a soup. I happened to have half a loaf of bread left over from yesterday and a few cheeses so I figured we could manage.

Oh and I forgot to mention it was day 2 of the girls musical performance so I only had ... yes, you guessed it, 30 minutes to prepare dinner. When we picked up the girls their first question (as always) was "what are we having for dinner?". They were not too happy when I said soup and bread.

I pretty much grew up eating soup. My mum's soup is famous! I remember my aunt, uncle and cousins coming to visit one evening and they joined us for dinner quite sporadically. My mum made soup and my aunt asked my mum what she put in it because it was delicious. The reason that this stuck in my mind was that my mum made the soup from the beans left over from lunch! Actually whatever was left over from lunch went into the pot together with onions, garlic, water and a vegetable cube. It was then boiled, put in the liquidizer and served with bread and butter. Hmmm delicious... if you only knew! Okay that's not to say that my mum didn't make soups from scratch. She did that all the time, with spinach soup being our all time favourite. Always made with organically grown spinach, freshly plucked from the back garden. And in case you are wondering left over soups really do taste good, depending on what was left over of course!

Serves 4; Preparation time 30 mins.

Ingredients:

3 tbsp. Olive Oil
1 small Onion
2 cloves Garlic
500 g Butternut squash or Pumpkin
250 g Potatoes
750 ml Water
1 Vegetable cube
12 stems Thyme
Salt & Pepper


Method:

Soup is ultra easy to make. First peel the pumpkin and potatoes and then cube them. The smaller the better because they will cook quicker and be easier to pulverize at the end. Also dice the onion and the garlic.


Then take a large saucepan and heat it on high. Throw in the oil, onions and garlic and stir fry until soft. Around 1-2 minutes. Then add the pumpkin and potatoes and mix it well. Let it fry for 5 minutes or so, stirring to make sure it doesn't stick to the bottom of the pan and burn. 

Add the water, vegetable cube, salt and pepper stir it all up, put the lid on and let it boil. Reduce the heat as necessary. 

Now I have this thyme plant left over from making the caramelized leek quiche so I decided to put some of that in too. But I really could not be bothered with picking the leaves off so I just took around 12 stems of about 7 - 8 cm length and chopped them up. I picked out a few of the harder stems once I was done chopping and threw the rest of the leaves into the bubbling pot.



The vegetables didn't have to boil for more than 10 minutes and they were done. I then pulled out my Kenwood stick mixer (Stab or Bamix depending on where you live and your age!), stuck it in the pot and mashed everything up. If you want a lumpy soup you can just use a potato masher. If you only have a liquidizer your in for bad luck because you can't put hot liquid in a traditional liquidizer. Actually there is a way around it. If you prepare the vegetables with a minimum amount of water you can then add cold water to them once they are cooked. This is usually cool enough to use in a liquidizer. However, afterwards you have to heat it up again. 

The girls just looked at the soup and said "what is it?" After I explained what was in it our oldest agreed to having one soup spoon full and the youngest demanded half a spoon. But half spoons don't exist (according to my husband) so she had to make do with a whole spoon. Then they tried it and couldn't get enough of it! I had to fight to have some left over so that I could pack it up as a school lunch for the next day!!! So it was successful (otherwise I would not be sharing it here, no?).





Monday 20 October 2014

Half an Hour Vegetarian Linguini in Creamy Mushroom Sauce

I was not planning on cooking so many quick meals in a row. After all it was the weekend. Weekends usually equal a quick lunch and an elaborate dinner. But I totally forgot that the girls were performing this weekend and would be out of the house from 1 to 4.30 pm. This meant that us adults got some time together. And what a wonderful weekend it turned out to be with bright sunshine and warm air. On Saturday we visited a flea market and picked up some CD's, puzzles and books for the kids. Then we had a huge ice-cream and went shopping. But all this meant that there was only half an hour to get the dinner on the table by 5:30 pm! Good for you :)


So this was Saturday's dish. One I have not made for ages because the spaghetti is so cheap here and the linguini, which is called Tagliatelle here (and might be different), is so expensive (comparatively). If pasta is not readily available or extremely expensive then stay tuned and I'll post my favourite pasta recipe. It's easy to make but it increases the time needed to make this dish exponentially.

Serves 4 (if you have a hungry lot you might want to serve a quick green salad with it); Preparation time 30 mins.

Ingredients:


250 g Linguini 
2 tbsp. Butter
1 small/medium Onion
2 large cloves Garlic
500 g Mushrooms
1 Red bell pepper
2 tbsp. White wine
250 ml Whipping cream
1/2 cup Grated parmesan
Salt & Pepper

Method: 

I first put a large pot of water on the stove to boil. If you want to speed up the process put a little bit of water in the pot on the stove and while this is heating up boil the rest of the water in a kettle. Once the water boils add it to the pot. I use this method when I'm in a real hurry!

After putting the water to boil I peeled the onion and sliced it and then peeled and finely chopped the garlic. 


Then I washed the mushrooms and sliced them rather thin (<1 cm). 


For the red pepper I used some frozen char broiled peppers, but you can use a regular red pepper instead or leave it out altogether. If you are using fresh pepper now is the time to wash and cut it. Next I took a large wok and melted the butter on medium heat. Once it was melted I put in the onion and the garlic and fried it for about 1 minute. Then I added the mushrooms (add the bell pepper if you are using a fresh one) and fried them until they were fully cooked. 



At some point during all this the water for the pasta boiled and I threw the Linguini into the boiling water. I then brought the water back to boiling point, stirred the noodles so that they didn't stick to each other and then set the timer according to the recommendations on the packet. I always use a timer with pasta. Hubby does not like over cooked pasta it has to be just right! 

Once the mushrooms were cooked I added the char broiled peppers and increased the heat to high. Then I added the wine. I actually don't like alcohol and that's why I increased the temperature to high. This way the alcohol will all burn off leaving just the taste of the white wine. I'm always careful not to inhale the fumes otherwise I would be drunk before dinner! 



Once the alcohol has evaporated the rest of the ingredients are added. The sauce is then done and if you are lucky your pasta will be done too. 
I always drain my pasta and wash it under cold water so that it doesn't stick together. Then I added it to the sauce and mixed it all up, tasting for salt and pepper and adding accordingly.


And I forgot to say that I happened to have spinach tagliatelle so that's why my noodles are green. 
Serve immediately! Does not reheat well.


Sunday 19 October 2014

Half an Hour Vegetarian Stir Fry (Chinese)

My husband read my previous post and came home expecting a European stir fry (although I'm not quite sure what that would look like!). Unfortunate for him it turned out to be Chinese style :( But it still hit the spot.

So I decided to do this right and I set my kitchen timer to 30 minutes to make sure that it truly took half an hour. I must admit that together with setting things up to be photographed and taking the photographs half an hour is really stressful. But at least this time I managed it!



What I love about stir frying is that the cooking is done really quickly and you can use almost any vegetable you have at home. The down side is that all the chopping and cleaning of the vegetables takes a while. In keeping with my promise to have adequate protein in these meals I went out and bought some fresh tofu. We have this awesome Asian store just down the road from us that sells super fresh tofu. The tofu sits in a big blue basin of water in the fridge and is packed in a little bag for you to take home. The stuff doesn't last more than 3 days but it sure beats the vacuum packed type. And all that for just 1 Euro 10!! My mother-in-law frequently asks me to bring a stack when I go to visit. According to her it's the cheapest tofu around (okay that was when in cost only 90 cents!).

So here goes:

Serves around 8; preparation time: 30 mins!


Ingredients:

?? Jasmine rice
2 tbsp. Oil
1 Onion
3 cloves Garlic
6 slices Ginger
3 Carrots
1 small European eggplant
250 g Mushrooms
1 block Tofu
1 cup Shitake mushrooms
2 cups Chopped napa
3 tbsp. Soya sauce
3 tbsp. Corn starch
1 cup Water
1 Vegetable cube
Salt & Pepper
2 cups Bean Sprouts

Method:

The very first thing you need to think about is whether you are going to use dried Shitake mushrooms or fresh ones. If you are then you have to soak them ahead of time. Anywhere between 24 hours and 30 minutes would do. Wash them first and then pour boiling water over them. Make sure every one is covered and then forget about them. Of course alternatively you could use fresh Shitake mushrooms but they are way more expensive and harder to get. We use the dried ones for three reasons. The first two are above and the third one is that I don't like the taste of fresh Shitake mushrooms!!

So first of all you need to cook the rice. With a bit of luck you have a rice cooker to do this. So you just have to figure out how much rice your family will eat and then throw it in there. I think we all pretty much know how much will be consumed. My family eats between 1 to 1.5 rice cooker cups of raw rice and they all dislike reheated rice so I try to guess if it's going to be a 1 cup day or a 1.5 cup day.

Once the rice is set to cook it's time to get busy with the washing and the chopping. First peel and cut the onion into 2 cm dice. Yes, I like the onions in my stir fry to be big just like in the tacky Chinese restaurants! Then peel and mince the garlic and slice the ginger. I slice my ginger very, very thin.



Next up are the carrots which have to be washed, peeled and then sliced. The thinner the slices the quicker it will cook and the longer it will take to chop. It's a bit of a trade off. 5 mm is probably optimum. Next wash and dice (1.5 cm) the eggplant. I'm in Germany, so I get Italian eggplant. It's large and fluffy and that's why I say use a small one. If I were to use a Chinese, Japanese or Sri Lankan eggplant I would just use a regular sized one.

Finally, wash and quarter the mushrooms. As you can see I used button mushrooms. If you are in SL you can use oyster mushrooms. They need to be super fresh and you don't have to cut them too small. Just keep in mind that oyster mushrooms lose a lot more water so you should probably reduce the added water to around 1/2 cup.




For this stir fry I used the largest wok that I own. Okay, it's not humongous but it's pretty big. There are a lot of vegetables here and before they are fully cooked they take up a lot of space. So the wok gets heated up and then the oil goes in. I used to put the oil in the wok and then heat the pan, but my father-in-law does it this way and he owned his own Chinese restaurant so... go figure! I later found out that the cold oil prevents things from sticking to the pan!

Put the oil in the wok and then the onions, garlic and ginger and stir fry for around 1 minute. [While it's frying take out your tofu and dice it into 2 cm pieces]. Then add the carrots to the onion mix and stir it well. Carrots take the longest so they go in first. Make sure you stir it and cook for 1-2 minutes during which time you can finish off chopping the tofu.


Next in go the eggplant and the mushrooms and that gets stir fried too. While you are stir frying you can cut up your shitake mushrooms. Since I use the dried variety I had to remove the stems and cut the caps into halves. How you cut the caps will depend on how large they are. Mine were really, really small. Taking the stems off takes forever but luckily the vegetables now need to cook a bit.


Once you are done with the shitake mushrooms then chop and wash the nappa, which is also known as Chinese cabbage. Throw this, the tofu and the mushrooms into the pan and stir it all up.



Now comes the sauce. Well I'm a bit lazy when it comes to sauces. I don't like to dirty an extra bowl to mix the sauce unless it is really necessary. So I just pour the sauces into the saucepan. I was running out of time because my vegetables were on the verge of being over cooked so there was no time to mix and photograph, so the sauces went directly into the pan. Pour in the soya sauce and then mix the corn starch with the cold water and pour this into the pan. Crush up the vegetable cube and sprinkle it on top. Then mix it all up. Now my family likes it's gravy so you'll find that this is a bit of a gravy heavy stir fry. The amount of gravy is adjustable, you just have to add less water. If you want a thicker gravy then once the water and corn starch has boiled take out a bit of the gravy from the pan, mix in some more corn starch and add it back into the pan. Make sure you allow it to boil because only then will the starch thicken the sauce.


Finally, while you let all the juices absorb and the tastes combine, quickly wash the bean sprouts and throw them in. I like to add them right at the end so that they are still crunchy when they are served. Oh and don't forget to season with salt and pepper. I almost always don't have enough salt in my cooking!! Generally I just forget about it. I've been trying really hard lately to remember to put enough salt but unless my recipe says "1 tsp. salt" I just sprinkle some in and hope for the best. I guess less salt is better than too much!


Serve pipping hot with the rice.

Friday 17 October 2014

Vegetarian meals in half an hour

Germany is definitely a meat eating country if ever there was one. Even today, you will be hard pressed to find a decent vegetarian meal in a traditional German restaurant. Around 10 years ago it was hard to find ANY vegetarian food here, but things have changed radically since then. So much so that people seem to feel bad when I tell them that we are vegetarian. The typical response I get is "we don't eat that much meat either, only twice or thrice a week. My husband is a heavy meat eater so we have to have some meat". Well I don't expect everyone else to be vegetarian and I certainly don't judge you differently if you eat meat. For our family the choice is personal and not dependent on health or religion. 

A full vegetarian meal: Not cooked in half an hour!


Another common response that I get is that it just takes so long to cook vegetarian food. And it is this statement that inspired me to write a series of posts with vegetarian meals you can cook in half an hour, that are protein rich and taste good. 

Peanut dip with toast and deep fried tofu


As you can imagine these are not going to be gourmet meals. They can't be. Any quick meal, even if it contains meat, cannot be gourmet if it's been cooked in half an hour. Meat has to be marinaded and you still have to cook some starch to accompany it. 

Hummus: A firm favourite!


Don't expect these meals to be vegan! We eat eggs over here and depend a lot on cream and cheese. In my view the best vegan food in the world is Sri Lankan food!

Lumpreis: No it's not supposed to be cooked in half an hour but it is vegan!


Happy vegetarian cooking and stay tuned to discover how easy it is to cook vegetarian food. I'll see you tomorrow with a vegetarian stir fry.

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Caramelized Leek Quiche

Oh my, oh my! Last night I could hardly sleep. 60 page views in one day AND the discovery of a caramelized leek quiche that was amazingly delicious. So delicious that it just had to be shared.

When I went grocery shopping on Monday (restocking after Paris!) not only did the savoy cabbage look good but so did the leeks. They were massive and fresh. I've always had problems with leeks. All the recipes that I know use the dark green part of the vegetable, but in Europe and the USA most of the dark leaf is cut off leaving light green leaves and a white stalk. But I was in the mood to buy what was cheap and fresh looking so I bought two huge stalks of leek.

Somehow I had in my mind that I wanted to make them into a quiche, it just felt right. So I went to my old friend (Google!) and asked him for a recipe. This is the one that I chose:


But you know how that goes, one has to modify the recipe a bit to accommodate ones specific situation! So I'll post my modified recipe here.

For all of you who just hate vegetarian food, this is for you. The final product tasted unbelievably as if it had some type of meat in it!

Feeds 4. Prep time 1 - 2 hours depending on how you do the pastry.

Ingredients:


Pastry:
6 oz Four
3 oz Butter, cold
1/4 tsp. Salt
Filling:
2 tbsp. Olive oil
500 g Leeks (white and light green part)
2 tsp. Fresh thyme leaves
Salt and pepper to taste
100 g Gruyere, grated
3 Eggs
125 ml Whipping cream

Method:


For the pastry follow this link http://vinitasfamilyblog.blogspot.de/2014/09/basic-pastry.html

So I made the pastry and then went out to the store to buy the Gruyere and the thyme. Here in Germany you usually buy herbs in a pot. I found this very weird in the beginning but I've figured out how to keep (at least!) my basil alive so I can reuse it over and over, so now I love it :)
Here is my thyme plant that now adorns my kitchen windowsill. Lets see how long it lasts!



Back at home I rolled out the pastry and put it in my favourite flan pan. It's an amazing non-stick pan that I bought many years ago. The pastry is always crisp and it never, ever sticks. And because it never sticks I can slide it right out of the form onto a plate so I never have to cut my quiches or flans while they are still inside and thus damaging the non-stick coating.

I pricked the base with a fork and then stuck it back in the fridge.

Then I cut up the leeks. First quartering them and then cutting them into slices around 1 cm thick.



Then I had to deal with the thyme leaves. Oh now that was a royal pain. Having first washed the thyme the tiny leaves kept sticking to my hands. But I painstakingly removed the leaves from the stalks until I had what looked like enough.


Then the fan oven went on at 180°C to pre-heat for the pastry shell. Into a large skillet went the olive oil and it was heated on medium-high heat. And then went in the leeks, thyme and salt & pepper to taste. The thyme smelt divine. The leeks need to be stirred every now and then because you want to caramelize them (i.e. make them brown) and not BURN them, which I very nearly did. You also want them to be evenly cooked (and caramelized) and stirring them will help you achieve this.


With the leeks cooking and the oven heating I took out my pie dish and coated it with aluminium foil and filled it with baking beans. Now for those of you who are looking for an alternative to those expensive artificial baking beans that you can buy in the store. I have the answer: mung beans! I first used mung beans because I wanted to roast some to make some mung kauwm (which is a yummy Sri Lankan sweet meat that requires roasted mung flour). I never got round to using the mung beans for anything other than baking beans. I've been using them for years and they work wonderfully.



By this time the oven was hot so in went the pie shell to bake for 20 minutes.

While the leeks were cooking I grated my cheese and mixed together my eggs and cream with more salt & pepper to taste. Now if you are wondering why I didn't follow the recipe here the answer is simple. It looked like I had too many leeks and the milk and extra egg would not have fit in my dish. Plus I really hate to waste egg white.
If you are short on cream I think that whole milk would work fine. I know my mum always made quiches with milk in Sri Lanka and they turned out delicious.

Once your leeks are caramelized they will look like this:



If you have time allow them to cool.

After 20 minutes take out the pie shell out of the oven, remove the baking beans and the foil and put the shell back in the oven to bake for a further 10 minutes or so.

Now the original recipe says you should let the pie shell cool before you fill it but I had to fill it immediately because I had to have the quiche cooked before I went to pick up my girls from their musical project. And if I let the shell cool, then the oven would have to be reheated again which is really a waste of electricity. And so I sprinkled half the cheese into the base of the hot pie shell, put the leeks on top of it spreading them out to fit in all the corners and then poured over the egg and cream mix. On top of that went the rest of the Gruyere and then in the oven for a total of 30 minutes.



Off went the oven, the door was propped open to let some, but not all, the heat and out of the front door I went. Off to perform my soccer mum duties!






Tuesday 14 October 2014

Wirsing-Pie (Savoy Pie)

It's that time of year again when the German supermarkets fill up with super cheap cabbage. I've been here for almost 5 years and have never tried any. But at 69 cents a head I just could not resist buying an ultra fresh looking head of Wirsing (turns out it's English name is Savoy).


The big questions were: What do you do with Savoy? How do you cook it? Does it taste good?

A Google search led me to this web site:
http://www.essen-und-trinken.de/wirsing/vegetarische-rezepte-mit-wirsing-1018534.html

I decided to try out their "Wirsing-Pie", of course I modified it a bit because I didn't have the exact ingredients.
Did it turn out well, you ask? Two of us liked it, one said it was "okay" and the other was so stuffed from the snacks she had had at the musical project she is attending that she didn't get passed the salad! I rather think that the cabbage scared my kids!!

Serves 4 - 6 (as always depending on the level of hunger). If I remember correctly it took me about an hour from start to finish.

Ingredients:


500 g Savoy cabbage
100 g Onions, diced
2 cloves Garlic, minced
20 g Sliced almonds
2 + 1 tbsp. Butter (or margarine)
2 tsp. Flour
Salt and Pepper
200 ml Water
200 ml Whipping cream (or soy substitute)
1/2 Vegetable cube
2 tbsp. Lemon juice
Zest from one lemon
1/4 tsp. Sugar
2 packs Instant mash potato mix (plus all the ingredients that the packet calls for)
100 g Gouda (or not if you are vegan or lactose intolerant) 

Method:

500 g of savoy turns out to be about half of a German head.

The 500 grams needs to be halved and the hard stem part removed. Then half it once more and cut into strips about 1 cm wide and then wash the cabbage.


Put 2 tablespoons of butter into a large pan [make sure it is large enough to hold all of the chopped cabbage] on medium heat and after it melts add in the sliced almonds and fry them until they are golden brown. Once they are browned remove them from the pan but leave the butter in the pan. As you can see I kind of almost burnt my butter and maybe my almonds were too brown. (I was cutting the onions and garlic and forgot about the almonds!) However, since they were not "burnt" I let them be and they gave a nice colour to the finished product.

Toasted Almonds

Then put the onions and the garlic into the hot butter and fry them for a minute or so. Be careful not to let the butter burn (ha, ha!).


Then add in your savoy and mix it in. Sprinkle the flour on top of the savoy, and I mean "sprinkle". If you just throw it in then you will have lumps of flour in your pie.


Mix it all up so that the flour is well incorporated and add salt and pepper to taste.

Next add the 200 ml water and the vegetable cube. I use a rather large vegetable cube. If I were to use a Sri Lankan Maggie cube then I would use a whole cube in this recipe. Alternatively you can use 200 ml vegetable stock. If you've been reading my blog you will know that I can't be bothered making/buying vegetable stock!

Then add the cream, lemon juice, lemon zest, sugar and toasted almonds and mix it all up. By this time the savoy is probably cooked. Mine was but that was probably because I spent a lot of time just finding the ingredients. I was a bad cook and didn't prepare anything in advance. I was under time pressure.


Once the savoy is just about cooked place it in an oven proof casserole dish. Put the fan oven on at 180 C.

Then prepare the mash potato. I was running out of time and used two packs of instant mash. Each pack supposedly serving 3 people. It is a bit too much but I didn't have a choice. 1 pack was too not enough. The instant mash should be prepared according to the instructions on the package. Then I chopped up my Gouda and mixed it into the mash. This mash then went on top of the cabbage, the last bit of butter was dabbed on top of the pie and the whole thing was popped in the oven  (which was preheated to 180 degrees Celsius, fan oven) for 25 minutes. For a conventional oven use 200 C or 400 F.



And lo and behold it was done just before I had to pick up the girls from their above mentioned musical project. Cabbage never tasted so good!