Greenfeast. Nigel Slater
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Greenfeast - Nigel Slater страница 6

Название: Greenfeast

Автор: Nigel Slater

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Кулинария

Серия:

isbn: 9780008336622

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ oil 1 tablespoon

      vegetable stock 200ml

      coconut milk 250ml

      fish sauce 1 tablespoon

      lime juice 2 tablespoons

      spring vegetables (such as asparagus tips, broad beans, peas) 450g total weight

      shredded greens, such as spring cabbage a handful

      pinch of sugar and soy sauce

      For the paste, put the white peppercorns and coriander seeds in a dry non-stick frying pan and toast lightly for two or three minutes, then tip into the bowl of a food processor and add half a teaspoon of sea salt, the turmeric, lemon grass, peeled garlic cloves, ginger, green chillies, three tablespoons of groundnut oil and a handful of coriander stems and roots. Blitz to a coarse paste. You can keep this paste for a few days in the fridge, its surface covered with groundnut oil to prevent it drying out.

      In a deep pan, fry three lightly heaped tablespoons of the curry paste in a tablespoon of oil for thirty seconds till fragrant, stirring as you go. Stir in the vegetable stock and coconut milk, the fish sauce and lime juice.

      Add the asparagus tips, broad beans and peas and continue simmering for five to six minutes, then drop in a couple of handfuls of greens, shredded into thick ribbons. Finish the curry with a pinch of sugar, fish sauce, a little soy sauce and more lime.

      Cold fruit soup. Refreshing. A deep scent of summer.

       Serves 6

      Romano peppers 3

      a large yellow pepper

      cucumber 250g

      cantaloupe melon, ripe 1.25kg (unpeeled weight)

      basil 10g

      sherry vinegar 1 tablespoon

      half a lemon

      ice cubes

      Halve and seed the peppers, then cut them into large pieces. Coarsely mince or process them to your preferred consistency, then put them in a large bowl. I prefer quite a smooth soup, but others like a more robust texture. Peel the cucumber and cut into rough chunks, then process to the same texture as the peppers and add to the bowl. Prepare the melon, discarding the skin, seeds and fibre, then cutting the flesh into chunks. Process in a similar way to the other ingredients, then mix with the peppers and cucumber.

      Roughly chop the basil and stir into the soup together with the sherry vinegar, lemon juice and a little salt and black pepper. Cover and chill thoroughly. Stir in the ice cubes just before serving.

      • A light, bright-tasting soup to serve chilled. By which I mean thoroughly cold and with ice cubes. The consistency can be as smooth or rough as you like, but I prefer it to have a coarse texture, so I use the mincer attachment to the food mixer. I have used a food processor too, but a careful eye is required to avoid reducing it to a purée.

      Gentle soup for a spring day. The warmth of toasted garlic and ginger.

       Serves 2

      cauliflower 150g

      garlic 2 cloves

      ginger 30g

      groundnut oil 2 tablespoons

      dark miso paste 2 tablespoons

      light miso paste 2 tablespoons

      mirin 2 tablespoons

      Cut the cauliflower into florets, then slice them thinly. Peel and thinly slice the garlic. Peel the ginger and cut into matchsticks.

      Warm the groundnut oil in a shallow pan, then fry the garlic and ginger for a couple of minutes until pale and soft. Add the cauliflower, turning it over from time to time, letting it cook for four or five minutes until the slices colour lightly. By the time the cauliflower is cooked, the garlic should be a deep honey gold. Divide the cauliflower, garlic and ginger between four bowls.

      Bring 1 litre of water to the boil, then stir in the miso pastes and the mirin. Simmer for two minutes, then ladle into the bowls over the cauliflower.

      Light, savoury, sustaining. A little bowl of calm.

       Serves 4

      sugar snap peas or shelled peas 150g

      vegetable or chicken stock 750ml

      white miso paste 4 tablespoons

      spring onions 3

      pak choi 125g

      enoki mushrooms 100g

      Thai basil a small bunch

      a lime

      light soy sauce

      Bring a medium-sized pan of water to the boil. Add the sugar snaps or shelled peas and let them boil for two minutes, then lift them out with a slotted spoon and drop them into a bowl of cold water.

      Warm the stock in a large pan. When the stock is hot, add the miso, stirring until it has dissolved. The stock should be very hot but not boiling. Finely slice the spring onions and add half to the stock. Halve the pak choi and push the pieces down into the stock. Remove and discard the roots from the enoki mushrooms, then add to the stock too.

      Tear up the Thai basil leaves. Squeeze the juice from the lime. Divide the hot broth between four bowls, and add the remaining spring onions, the peas, basil leaves and the lime juice. Pass soy sauce around at the table, leaving everyone to season as they wish.

      • Clear, light, gentle. I look upon this as something for those moments when you want a bowl of soup that is quietly sustaining rather than filling. A full-flavoured vegetable stock is essential, as is a generous hand with the seasoning. I tend to use chicken stock for this. I would leave the addition of soy sauce to individual diners. Just a little for me please, as I find soy sauce all too easily dominates СКАЧАТЬ