Showing posts with label Rice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rice. Show all posts

Friday, 11 May 2012

Thai Pork Burgers and Lettuce and Lime Salad

Thai Pork Burgers and Lettuce and Lime Salad




These Thai inspired beauties are the new favourite in the house, lighter than a classic beef burger, they are beautifully fragrant and spicy.  They are also a doddle to make, and most of the ingredients for the spice paste were already lying around in my kitchen, so no long searches for obscure ingredients.

These little burgers go superbly well with chunks of roasted sweet potato and/or fragrant Jasmine rice,  and the lettuce and lime salad.  This salad is crisp, bitter, refreshing, salty and zesty, a cleansing balance to the meaty spiciness of the burgers and is pretty delicious.  Close your eyes and you could be in Bangkok.... 



INGREDIENTS:
Thai Pork Burgers (makes enough for 2 greedy people):

500g Minced Pork
Thumb sized piece of Ginger, peeled
4 Garlic Cloves, peeled
2 Chillies
1 Fresh Lemongrass Stalk, outer skin peeled off
1 Small Red Onion
Zest and Juice of one Lime
1 Tablespoon Light Soy Sauce
1 Small bunch fresh Coriander, stalks and leaves roughly chopped

  1. In a food processor, blend the ginger, garlic, chillies, lemongrass, red onion, soy sauce and lime zest and lime juice until it becomes a paste.
  2. Add this to the pork mince with the chopped Coriander and mix with your hands until thoroughly mixed.  
  3. Form into small burgers and fry in a little oil until brown and cooked.  Serve with Jasmine Rice and/or roasted Sweet Potato chunks, and the Lettuce and Lime salad.  

Lettuce and Lime Salad

Crisp white lettuce, washed and roughly chopped
Small handful of Coriander, leaves and stalks
10 (or so) Mint leaves
Juice of half a lime (or to taste)
1-2 Spring Onions finely sliced
1 Green Chili, deseeded and finely chopped (optional)
Good pinch of Salt

  1. Roughly chop the lettuce and place in a large bowl
  2. Finely chop the Coriander, Mint, Spring Onions and Chili and toss with the lettuce leaves.  
  3. Squeeze a generous about of lime juice over the salad and a good pinch of salt.  Taste and add more lime juice or salt as necessary.  Serve with the Thai Pork Burgers





Friday, 27 April 2012

Mushroom and Thyme Risotto with Pancetta

Mushroom and Thyme Risotto with Pancetta


I have a new love in my life.  It is slightly embarrassing, but ho hum, here goes, it's... Morrisons.  Yep, the supermarket.  Let me explain, a couple of weeks ago, I visited one of their newfangled fresh market stores and I was utterly blown away.  On sale was the most varied and interesting fruit and veg I have ever seen.  Things that I had never even seen before! It was amazing and I got stupidly excited.  Ohh and there's mist (!).  Some genius has come up with the idea that by spraying a fine mist over the vegetables, it keeps them perkier for longer.  It also looks like some 80's music video (it's the dry ice effect), which is pretty awesome. 

Anyways, I took a trip there (upsettingly, none of these stores are close to me, so it was a special trip) and came across some cool 'shrooms.  I got giant King Oysters, dainty egg yellow chantarelles, and... wait for it... BLUE mushrooms.  Blue! I just had to have them.  


With such ace ingredients I had to make something that would put the mushrooms center stage, so what better way than with a delicious mushroom risotto.  At home, I had some chestnut mushrooms, and also some dried mushrooms waiting to be used, so I added them to the mushroom mix.  The risotto with the mushrooms, thyme and pancetta turned out to be damn good.  Try it.  It's yum...

Make enough for two, plus left overs

INGREDIENTS:
Knob of Butter
1 Stick of Celery, finely chopped
1 Medium Onion, finely chopped
2 Fat Cloves of Garlic, finely chopped
150g Arborio Risotto Rice (Roughly one mug full)
Small Glass of White Wine
The leaves from a few springs of Fresh Thyme
500ml Hot Stock (Chicken or Vegetable)
Roughly 500g - 700g of Mixed Fresh Mushrooms, chopped.  I used Chestnut, King Oyster, Blue Stalk and Chanterelles.  Use the most interesting you can find - not the boring white mushrooms!    
Small Handful of Dried Mushrooms 
Freshly grated Parmesan
2-3 bits of Pancetta or Smoked Streaky Bacon per person


  1. In a mug put the dried mushrooms and pour in some just boiled water to about halfway.  Stir and leave to soak for at least 30 minutes (or see packet instructions). 
  2. Put the butter in a large saucepan over a medium-low heat and add in the celery, onions and garlic.  Stir regularly and cook for about 5 minutes, without letting it colour.  
  3. Stir in the rice and let it cook for 2 minutes, constantly stirring. 
  4. Add in the white wine and stir.  Let it bubble for 3 or so minutes.  Keep stirring so that the rice doesn't stick to the bottom of the pan
  5. Add in the chopped  fresh mushrooms. the sprigs of thyme and half of the stock, stir. 
  6. Drain the soaked dried mushrooms but reserve the mushroomy water. 
  7. Finely chop the soaked mushrooms and stir into the risotto along with the mushroomy water. 
  8. Keep stirring the risotto every minute or so.  When most of the stock in the risotto has been absorbed. add in the rest of the stock.  
  9. In a frying pan, fry the pancetta or bacon until crispy, drain and cut up into pieces.  
  10.  By the time most of the stock in the risotto has been absorbed, the risotto rice should be cooked.  If not, add a bit more stock (or water).  You want the risotto to be quite oozy, so if it looks too thick, add in some stock or water to loosen it. 
  11. Take the risotto of the heat, stir in a good grating of Parmesan, fresh black pepper and taste.  Add more pepper, and salt if needed.  
  12. Scatter over the pancetta pieces, few thyme leaves and a bit of grated Parmesan and serve.