food + drink · menu ideas · posts

Light Lunch Menu

Having a few girls around for a light lunch needn’t be a hassle with a menu that is easy and quick to prepare, leaving you with more time catching up with your friends and spending less time in the kitchen. No slaving over a hot stove with this light and refreshing menu.

Over time and with the addition of more recipes I hope to create different menus with recipes from Food and Tools. This hopefully will make it a little easier when choosing a menu for entertaining. We all (including me) have mulled over endless recipes and thought, “what shall I make”  or found it difficult to choose, so having a few menu ideas at hand is a good place to start.

The suggested menu below and do ahead tips will leave you with plenty of time to catch up… and we girls do love to chat!

Menu

Light Lunch with the Girls 

Edamame Beans with Vanilla Saltedamame beans with vanilla salt

Vietnamese SaladVietnamese Salad

Lemon Posset with Fresh ThymeLemon Posset with Fresh Thyme

Getting Ahead

Starter: Only needs a couple of minutes in a steamer before serving.

Main Course:  Chicken can be poached the day before and refrigerated. Vegetables can be prepared a few hours before serving and kept in a salad/vegetable keeper or ziplock bags in the fridge. The cooked chicken can be shredded in advance. The herbs are best chopped before serving. Assembling the salad and mixing with lime juice is best done before serving.

Dessert: Best made the day before as it needs about 4 hours to chill and set.

BON APPÉTIT 🙂

appetizers · food + drink · posts

Dumplings and a Clean Kitchen!

Restaurant

Kitchens are the hub of a restaurant and the heart of a home and I think it’s safe to assume that most of us love our kitchens! The kitchen is where I spend a large part of my day, whether it’s cooking, baking, preparing family meals, immersed in food photography or simply catching up with family and friends over a cup of coffee. There are so many things I love about kitchens, from the childhood memories of aromas and heart-warming meals, to the pots and pans that hang on the walls, to the utensils and appliances placed in the cupboards and drawers… calling them all my kitchen jewellery!

From morning till night, sounds drift from the kitchen, most of them familiar and comforting… On days when warmth is the most important need of the human heart, the kitchen is the place you can find it; it dried the wet sock, it cools the hot little brain. “ – E.B White

Restaurant Recently I got to view up-close a theatrical style kitchen at Meisei, a modern fine dining  Japanese (with other regional influences) restaurant in Bahrain. A leisurely morning with the AWA (American Women’s Association), who organized a lunch with a little food demonstration from Chef Michael’s team, all wearing very trendy looking hygiene masks. At Meisei kitchen hygiene is of utmost importance, as well as the quality of food served and Chef Michael reiterated this while walking us through the various areas and floors of the restaurant, including the pizza area and rooftop. His talk on kitchen hygiene reminded me of Mr Ganley, a chef who was one of my tutors at catering college. Mr Ganley would only dine at a restaurant if allowed to view the kitchen beforehand! Can you imagine if we all decided to adopted that policy… would we be allowed to view restaurant kitchens behind closed doors and if we could, would we find ourselves quickly heading for the front door!

Restaurant

It brings me to another thought… how would our own kitchens pass a health inspection! What would they find in your kitchen!  Would they find family pets… sorry pet lovers, this is one I will never get my head around! How many expired food items would they find. What about correct storage and placement of foods in the fridge and freezer! How often are kitchen cleaning cloths, sponges and drying cloths changed! Is your fridge/freezer at the correct temperature! When did you last clean out the fridge or de-frost the freezer! Is the dishwasher working properly. Do you sanitize your kitchen bin!  When were the cupboard and storage areas last cleaned out. These are only some of the question they would be asking! Health and safety is just as important in our own home kitchens as it is in the restaurants that we choose to dine at!

Restaurant

With no worries about kitchen cleanliness at Mesiei restaurant, our delicious lunch of Japanese salad, assorted dumplings and a variety of Japanese pizzas all went down a treat. If you fancy making some spring vegetable dumplings/pot-stickers then hop over to smitten kitchen were there is a wonderful tutorial on making your own dumplings and some freeze ahead advice. And if you would like to try making the dumpling skins instead of buying them, then head over to The Little Teochew.

Here’s to happy dumpling making in a clean kitchen!

appetizers · food + drink · salads · store cupboard

Fresh Fruit with Chaat Masala

Fruit MasalaIt has taken me a little longer to get around to posting again since returning from my trip to India. This trip was a little different from the usual family holidays… an all girls road trip from Delhi to Agra, Jaipur and Udaipur! We squeezed so much in with lots of sightseeing and visited some truly amazing and memorable places, like the Taj Mahal, Amber Fort, Askshardham Temple and City Palaces, words to describe what you see visually I will leave to the writers and poets of the world!  The other side of the coin is that there are families and people in living conditions and surroundings that are less than basic and at times left you feeling a heavy sense of sadness…!

IndiaIndian food was on the menu every evening and we had some delicious dining experiences, the most memorable was at the Rambagh Palace Hotel in Jaipur where most of us ate the Rajasthani thali,  sampling a variety of dishes from the region. Choosing more wisely at breakfast each morning, I ate some of my favourite fruits, papaya, bananas and pineapple. So, it seems fitting to include a very simple recipe and easy my way back into posting… with a little spice!

Fruit Chaat is a very popular street food in India, fresh fruit served with a mix of spices called chaat masala, giving the fruit a sweet, sour and spicy taste.  Chaat masala is also used in salads like this easy cucumber salad and some savoury dishes like Aloo chaat, a savoury potato dish.

IndiaThere are many recipes for chaat masala and the only ingredient I could not find was mango powder (amchoor) as it was out of stock, so I bought some dried pomegranate seeds instead. The packaged version of chaat masala contained black salt (kala namak) which gave a very sulfurous eggy taste to this spice mix and was not something I liked with the fruit. However, this post on black salt may change my mind, when I get around to trying some with fried potatoes! Fruit chaat could be served as a light starter before an Indian dish like Dal Makhani, a very popular lentil dish.

Chaat Masala With a little experimenting I wanted a simpler version of this spice blend, the packet version had 19 ingredients! Lulu hypermarkets in Bahrain stock a range of spice mixes and of course not forgetting the spices from the Manama souk. If chaat masala seems a little much to start sprinkling over your fruit, try mixing a little black pepper with some chilli powder or just keep it plain and simple… lime juice and fresh mint.

Chaat Masala

Ingredients:

  • 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns
  • 1 teaspoon dried pomegranate seeds
  • 2 teaspoon whole coriander seeds or cumin
  • 1/2 teaspoon ajowan seeds
  • a pinch of Himalayan salt or sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon of ground Kashmiri chilli

for the fruit salad

  • 1 papaya, peeled and cut into cubes
  • 1 pineapple, skin removed and cut into pieces
  • 3 bananas, peeled and sliced
  • 4 small limes, juiced (more to taste)
  • a handful of chopped fresh mint leaves

How to make: Use a pestle and mortar and ground together the black peppercorns, dried pomegranate seeds, coriander seeds or cumin, ajowan seeds and a pinch of Himalayan or sea salt into a fine powder, mix in the Kashmiri chilli. Store the spice mix in a small container until needed.

Place the prepared fruit into a bowl, pour over the lime juice and add the mint, gently mix until combined. Place into a serving bowl or individual dishes and scatter over some chaat masala. Serve immediately. Serves 4 to 6.

Note: The papaya and pineapple can be prepared in advance but leave the bananas before serving as they discolor quickly when sliced.