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Easter Fajitas
My friend Lionel Heath owned a Tex-Mex restaurant in Cannes and is the inspiration for this Mexican spread which I always include in my Around the World cookery weeks and my Introduction to Cooking with Spices Courses.
There are probably many variations on this recipe, the most important thing is to have a cast iron plancha or griddle:
– make some soft totillas with white flour (or a mix of white flour and maize flour), sugar, a little yeast, warm water, a little cooking oil, and salt. Let the dough stand in a warm place.
– marinate chicken (or beef) pieces in lemon juice, honey, olive oil, ground chilli and ground coriander seeds
– roll out tortilla dough (about 30g per tortilla) on a floured surface. Cook for just a minute or so on each side on a very hot griddle (flat side upwards). Put aside and keep warm.
– wipe off any excess flour and heat a little olive oil on the plancha/griddle. Cook some chopped onions and peppers with the marinated chicken pieces, keep turning so the meat is seared on all sides, it just take a couple of minutes so long as the plancha is hot enough
– decorate with chopped coriander and serve with shredded lettuce, tomato salsa, greeted cheese and sour cream (made from french cream, fromage blanc and lime juice) all rolled up together in a tortilla.This recipe is great fun, children especially enjoy it.
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Travels in the West Indies
We have had cable TV and internet for several years but now, at long last, the big screen has arrived in Bequia. See here for Keegan’s Resort More people are killed every year by falling coconuts than by sharks Beautiful Union Island. You are not allowed to die there but there is a fast catermeran ferry boat now. See here for the Amerindi Hotel Union Island was known for something reflected in local architecture -
West Indian cuisine
Research for the cookbook is coming along just great. I thought maybe some of you would like a fore taste
First the coleslaw:
– Shred white cabbage, onions, lettuce and carrots
– Make the salad sauce with lime juice, honey, mustard, olive oil and mayonnaise (out of a jar)
– decorate with slices of mangoDolphin fish is not dolphin, it’s a big fish with a green/yellow underbelly and a flat head
– bone the fish and cut into thick chunks
– fry the chunks
– when browned add some West Indian curry powder, some chili sauce and some tomato sauce, cover to cook through
– pour rum into the pan and set fire to the whole thing
– serve with mashed potato mixed with mashed edoe (if you can find some) shaped into the form of a volcano, pour a little of the tomato sauce into the cone like lava. -
The International Festival of One-Liner jokes (continues)
A Friend Is Like A Good Bra…
Hard to Find , Supportive
Comfortable, Always Lifts You Up
Never Lets You Down or Leaves You Hanging
And Is Always Close To Your Heart! -
Beast in the garden
What is this strange lizard we found in the garden?
Apparently they bite and you have to burn them off if their jaws clamp down on your finger. Some kind of salamander?
Ugly, but rather beautiful animal.
Note the guitarist’s finger.
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Welsh Rarebit
I went to Bordeaux this week, nice town? We ended up in a pub who served “Welshes” as a speciality. These were nothing like the Welsh rarebit my mum used to make when I was a boy but I found this snack concept quite interesting – I had a “welsh” with Basque espelette chillies, it was really wonderful.
So returning home I improvised the following recipe – you can improvise on this concept depending upon what you have in the fridge.Put a slice of bread in the bottom of an ovenproof dish. Slice some chorizo. Place the chorizo (or ham coated with mustard) on top of your slice of bread Cover with grated cheese, cheddar, swiss, or any cheese. Add a little beer or white wine. Place in a hot oven or under the grill for 6-7 minutes, break an egg over the dish after 2-3 mins. -
Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Please visit this petition website and sign and/or donate Defense Fund for Nick Abson. Fuel cell pioneer Nick is facing jail so it’s urgent.
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Jean Gabin quote
I came across this quote from the great French actor Jean Gabin:
I will drink milk when I see cows eating grapesMeanwhile I got a ukelele as a present, I’m starting to play it quite well and I begin to understand why this was George Harrison’s favorite instrument.
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The American Civil War
Man has mounted science, and is now run away with. I firmly believe that before many centuries more, science will be the master of men. The engines he will have invented will be beyond his strength to control. Someday science may have the existence of mankind in its power, and the human race commit suicide, by blowing up the world. Not only shall we be able to cruise in space, but I’ll be hanged if I see any reason why some future generation shouldn’t walk off like a beetle with the world on its back, or give it another rotary motion so that every zone should receive in turn its due portion of heat and light.
Henry Brooks Adams
Letter to Charles Francis Adams Jr., London, 11 April 1862. -
New and old Songs
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More Pizzas
As mentioned in previous posts here, we have a wonderful pizza shop in town. In fact Bruno, who runs the place single handed, has just been voted number 1 pizza chef Champion of France.
This is his latest masterpiece, on a pizza base cooked with a mixture of wild mushrooms he places slices of melon, cherry tomatoes, buffalo milk mozzarella and salad.
Great for the summer, in fact we have been eating this pizza almost every Sunday since July (I should have posted the photo long ago).
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The International Festival of One-Liner jokes
I got this one is the mail this morning:
One guy says to the other: I am dating 2 anorexics, 2 birds 1 stone!!
I didn’t get it at first, having not lived in the UK for about 30 years, I had forgotten that a stone is an obscure British measure of weight. It didn’t help that I thought anorexics were people who had lost their memory.
Sometimes we can all be really thick. -
Sleepless nights
Incredible news.
Apparently I don’t snore anymore
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Granny Sands’ birthday
My Grandmothers birthday today, God bless her soul.This photo dates from March 1917 and was taken in Trindad, about nine months later my mother was born. Do we see that sparkle in her eye?
We are working on a photo exhibition at the museum in the Saint Vincent Botanical Gardens, actually the house where my mother was born (see here).
More information here coming soon.
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Back again
After almost a years silence I’m back. These last 12 months have been terrible with
– health problems (I was almost unable to walk for nearly 4 months due to back problems)
– work problems (the film/TV business is governed more and more by Microsoft excel and there are no longer the “criteria” we had in the old days)
– building problems (my house in the Grenadines is taking on monetary proportions that I had not envisaged)
– money problems (why don’t people pay my bills on time anymore?)
– sentimental problems (with concise direct dialogue human beings can resolve, or at least discuss, their differences, when there is silence it’s like deaf people speaking to each other and misunderstanding makes it worse).All this to say that over 10,000 pages of this blog are viewed every month and so someone out there is interested and cares.
So please come back here soon: the good things coming up are:
– we put the bonus DVD of THE MOON AND THE SLEDGEHAMMER online, please go here and buy the box set with the movie: TheMoonAndTheSledgehammer.com
– the fuel cell project in Dordogne is about to start and we are negotiating with the Saint Vincent and the Grenadines government to bring clean waste-to-energy low cost electricity to the islands for nearly half the price they pay today
– our rigid airship is about to take off
– volume two of Denis Weldone’s time travel thriller is nearly finished (click here for volume one)
– some great new songs will appear here soon
– new recipes of course
– new category about healing, Shamanism and related topics
– and many other interesting things including more recipes, memorable restaurants, eco-architecture, heavy cult stuff, and lots more (maybe even some pornography!!). -
Back on my travels
Been away for a while, back on the road again, lots of drama and tears shed.
Plenty new songs, awating for the final mixes, some acoustic versions are available here: newsongs -
Salmon and cucumber salad
I invented this starter for Sunday lunch this week. I confess it was a little inspired by the crab mousse with smoky ham wafers which I tasted at Les Quatre Saisons restaurant in Sarlat la Caneda (photo right).
For my version I used diced smoked salmon, shredded carrots, chopped red onion and cucumber chunks. Mix all these ingredients in a light mayonnaise with added mustard, lots of dill, olive oil and lemon juice.
First, make some ribbons of cucumber with a potato peeler, as long as possible along the whole length of the cucumber. Wrap these around a yoghurt pot (or anything round, you can find special stainless steel rings in some professional cookery shops which, obviously, is the best and can be used for all sorts of other recipes), three or four ribbons per plate, to make some round cucumber “crowns”. Fill with the salmon and carrot mixture and decorate as you want.
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Garlic Chicken
This is a recipe that I think originally came from Jean-Baptiste Reboul’s book La Cuisinière Provençal written in 1910. If you can find this book anywhere, buy it. It starts with a whole chapter on the concept and theory of Pot au Feu.
This is dead easy. You need a cast iron of earthenware pot with a lid. Start by placing 40 or 50 unpeeled cloves of garlic in the bottom of the pot with a little olive oil. In French we call this “ail en chemise”, garlic with its shirt on. Separate the cloves from the head of garlic but do not peel them. And yes, I said forty or fifty cloves of garlic, more if you want.
Place a chicken (with some lemon slices inside the cavity) on top of the “pearly bed” of garlic and place the pot under a hot grill in the oven (without the lid on) – this serves to brown and crisp the chicken on top.
While your chicken is getting crisp under the grill (just a few minutes) mix some flour and water to make a bread dough. Remove the pot from the oven when the chicken is nicely browned, stuff all the fresh herbs you can find around the chicken (rosemary, sage, parsley, thyme, basil, whatever you’ve got), add some salt and pepper, and place the lid on the pot. Seal the lid hermetically onto the pot with the bread dough all around the joint and place back in the oven (normal oven settings, switch off the grill) at 160 degrees for 1 hour and a half or two hours, more for a big chicken. The idea is to cook everything slowly inside the sealed pot and enable the garlic cloves to stew in the juices.
Bring the pot onto the table and break open the bread dough around the lid to release the fabulous aroma of garlic and herbs when you open the pot. The stewed garlic cloves pop out of their peel like butter, spead onto country style bread and eat with the chicken. -
Monsters in the kitchen
This monster has invaded our kitchen, can’t get rid of him. He just keeps getting back into the house somehow – and he bites!!!
Got some real fan mail for my multimedia universe blook which can be experienced here, elsewhere on this website. This has encouraged me to continue steaming through Volume 2 which will have some new songs and more intrigue, but if anyone out there has some ideas about how to make money with this kind of thing, PLEASE LET ME KNOW….
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Stuffed Courgette Flowers
This is a tricky recipe because the flowers are very delicate and you must be very careful not to damage them.
You have to choose very fresh baby courgettes. Wash the courgettes and flowers in cold water and carefully dry them with kitchen roll. There is a debate about removing the pistils inside the flowers or not: personally I remove them because this allows more space for the stuffing.
Dice the baby courgettes leaving about 2cm on the flowers. You can leave the whole baby courgette with the flower but in this case you need to cook everything a little longer in the oven (unles you like your courgettes al dente.
Prepare your stuffing. I make a sausage meat stuffing and add the diced courgettes but you can use your imagination here (blue cheese and hazelnuts is quite a good one). Bind your cooked stuffing with an egg and add lots of fresh basil.
Delicately stuff the flowers and lay them on an oven dish. Add a couple of diced tomatoes to the remaining stuffing and surround the flowers with the mixture. Sprinkle parmesan cheese on top, cover with tin foil, and cook in the oven at 180 degrees for 20 minutes.