Monday, June 18, 2012

Lasagnia for Vania

Whoa, so obviously I'm not a blogger because it's been 5 months since I last posted a recipe but after a shout out from one of my favs Lani Says, I thought I'd chuck up a post I've been meaning to do for aaaages.

Earlier this year, my Aunty Vania sadly passed away from cancer. She was an amazing, brave woman who was so loved by many of us. Like typical Samoans who have a feed whenever they get together, the majority of the memories I have of her relate to food. Her favorite dinner when she came round to my mum's place was my brother and I's lasagna. I know a lot of people that think they make the best lasagna (which actually sounds like a cool night if anyone's down for a lasagna battle) but this is some epic shit right here as I know my Aunty agreed. The key is definitely getting the sauce right, and don't pike on me and use pre-bottled shit because it's easy enough to do it from scratch and way better. The extras?....Mushrooms, spinach and ham. I know it sounds crazy but trust me, it just works. My dad used to put dollops of sour cream in-between the layers too which is also really good so feel free to give that a go too if you're feeling really game (up yours calorie counter).

So here it is, in memory of my Aunty, Vania Savila.

Lasagnia for Vania
This will feed like 10 hungry people

Tomato Sauce
500g lean beef mince
2 brown onions
4 cloves garlic
1/3 cup Olive oil
1 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp oregano
Salt and pepper
2 cans chopped tomatoes
400g Leggos tomato paste
2 Tbsp brown sugar
12-15 button mushrooms

Heat a splash of olive oil in a frying pan over moderate heat. Chop the onions roughly and cook till transparent. Add the mince and brown well. Crush/finely chop the garlic and add with the paprika,oregano, and a decent spike of salt and pepper. Continue to cook for 1-2 minutes. Add the canned tomatoes, tomato paste and 2 cans of water. Bring to the boil and add the brown sugar and olive oil. Cover and reduce heat to a moderate simmer for about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally and adding a little more water if it gets too thick so it doesn't burn. Wipe the mushrooms and chop roughly. Add to the sauce and cook for a further 10 minutes. The sauce should be relatively thick and chunky so try to cook it down as much as possible if it's too watery. Taste and check your seasoning. 

Cheese Sauce
150g butter
2 heaped Tbsp flour
2 cups Milk
1 cup grated cheese (edam, colby)

Melt the butter in a small saucepan over low heat. Add the flour and stir till combined. Cook for 2 minutes. Add about 1/2 cup of the milk and stir until smooth. Bring to the boil, then add another 1/2 cup milk and bring to the boil again. Continue this process until you've added all the milk. Add the cheese and stir until smooth. 
(Note: if you find the cheese sauce consistency a bit curdled, chuck it in a blender for a minute or two and somehow it really makes a difference to the taste of it too)

You will also need
Lasagna sheets
250g shaved ham
Grated cheese
1 large bag of Spinach
[Take the spinach leaves and boil in salted water until cooked through. Remove from heat, drain, and cool. Squeeze as much water as you can from the spinach with your hands, then put the spinach between paper towels and press to dry it out as much as you can]

To assemble
Take a large deep oven proof tin and put a large scoop of your tomato sauce in the bottom and spread out. Take your lasagna sheets and assemble in a single layer over the top, breaking them into the correct sized pieces as needed. Place a layer of tomato sauce over the pasta. Next up, open up pieces of shaved ham and layer over, then chuck bits of the spinach over that. Drizzle a layer of cheese sauce of over the top. Repeat with the pasta layer and so on, ending with a layer of tomato sauce (You should get about 3 layers of ham and spinach). Pour any remaining cheese sauce over the tomato sauce followed by a couple handfuls of grated cheese. Bake in a 200 degree oven for around 40 minutes or until you can insert a sharp knife through the pasta layers easily. Cool for around 15minutes before serving so the layers stay together better when you try to get it out.







Serve with salad and some tasty carbs and enjoy.














We all miss you Aunty Vans. xx

Monday, January 30, 2012

Mexican Fiesta

The blog has been a little sparse lately- mainly because I've been a bit lazy and going back to the old favs, and also because there's been a baking fail or two which I won't go into. But this will make up for it-trust me.

I've only been over to the states twice, but if somebody could bring Taco Bell here it would be much appreciated, especially at 5 in the morning on the way home from Hitch. A Taco Bell 'chulupa' is a taco where the shell/tortilla is substituted for fried bread. As in roll up your sleeves, kitchen covered in flour, homemade bread. I've struggled with bread making as I've previously mentioned-but these always turn out great so I can't stress enough how much you need to try this. It's a lot of work- and there's a lot of little things going on. If you attempt it for 1 or 2 people, you are probably out of your mind. But it's the kind of recipe that you could get lots of people round, get everyone doing bits and pieces and make a night of it.







So the chulupa consists of:
Deep fried bread (recipe below)
Refried beans
Rice
Meat of your choice (recipe below)
Chilli corn mix (recipe below)
Salad (lettuce, tomatoes, red onions)
Guacamole (recipe below)
Sour cream
Cheese

Four recipes today!!!

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Smoked salmon pasta with capers

The old man came round for dinner last night and smoked salmon seemed like the way to go. I made smoked salmon pasta a few months ago but tried a recipe and couldn't seem to get the balance between creamy and acidic right. Looking for recipes yesterday, nothing really stood out as what I was looking for, so as I tend to do, I took my fav parts from a few different recipes and combined it to make my own....and holy jeebus was it good.
And it goes a little something like this....

Smoked salmon pasta with capers

50 grams butter
1 brown onion
3 cloves garlic
Salt/pepper
Pinch cayenne pepper (optional)
1/2 tsp dried oregano
1/2 red capsicum
375ml Campbells Fish Stock
1/2 lemon
250ml cream
1/4 cup capers
200g smoked salmon

Your favorite pasta. I got this amazing pappardelle from Nosh a couple of months ago and it looks so preeeetty...
Handful chopped parsley and freshly grated parmesan for garnishing

Melt butter in a frypan over medium heat. Chop the onion finely and cook until transparent. Mince the garlic and add to the pan, frying till lightly browned. Season and add oregano and cayenne pepper. Chop the red pepper finely, add and cook till soft. Add the fish stock and the juice from 1/2 lemon and boil over medium heat until reduced by half. Put the mix in the blender with 50ml cream and blend until smooth.
Put back in the frypan and add the rest of the cream and the capers. Cook down until thickened enough to coat the pasta. Taste...taste....taste! You might need to add more salt, or lemon or cream to get that balance right between the acidic lemon and capers, and the cream.
When done, take off the heat and add the salmon broken into large chunks.
Cook your pasta till al dente and toss through through the sauce.
Serve with a garnish of parsley and parmesan, and a couple of slices of crusty bread.
Yum!!


Saturday, January 7, 2012

Lemon-blueberry layer cake with lemon cream cheese frosting

Welcome to the 2012. I haven't posted in a while with all the holiday madness but I've taken some much needed annual leave so get ready to be bombarded with recipes and tales from my kitchen.
I don't bake for myself. I bake to fill cupcake orders, or for my family, workmates and kids. So my first official day off I decided I wanted to bake something just for me (although my brother and white brother did come over for official taste testing). I had tons of lemons left over from our Christmas house party and had leftover lemon curd from this Christmas breakfast I made for my mum.

I decided while blueberries were in season I wanted to do something with those too hence this idea was born. Blueberries always remind me of my grandparents- who are in fact the coolest people I know. My older sister and I used to spend nearly every school holidays with them growing up. There was a summer spent picking blueberries in the pounding sun day after day. In reality, my grandparents picked them while we lay under the bush trying to get shade and ate them till we made ourselves sick.

My idols
My attempts with layer cakes have always had issues. I am getting better but how people get these things so straight seems to be beyond my amateur skill level, so all my cakes tend to have a gangsta lean. This attempt was average but I can never get the top even. So if you do try this recipe and have any success, please let me know-because this forever frustrates the hell out of me.

Anyway, after all that rambling, the recipe I used was the Magnolia Vanilla Cake recipe, tossed in 2 punnets of blueberries and spread it evenly into 3 round tins. The lemon curd recipe I used was made in a microwave so takes 3 minutes and is found here. So make the curd first and then get it really cold otherwise it squidges out with the weight of the cakes. Layer them up and then put the whole thing in the fridge to set.
I don't use a recipe for my frosting but it's a combination of cream cheese, butter, icing sugar, lemon juice and lemon rind until you get a consistency that's thick and easy to manage. Apparently the tip for layer cakes is to put multiple thin layers on, refrigerating the cake in between coats.






My photos need work, I do realize this. By the time I finished all the layers of frosting, it was a bout 10pm and my dinner guests were hurrying me up.
It didn't turn out perfect looking but this is a great cake if you're looking for something light, fruity and summery.  You could probably put cream cheese frosting on a shoe and I'd be tempted to eat it. I do want to try a layer cake with 8 layers or so but don't hold me to it because my frustration with trying to get it straight will probably result in it being hurled out my kitchen window accompanied by several curse words.
May your 2012 be filled with deliciousness.
You'll be hearing from me again soon
Jen