Helen’s Christmas Cake
This is the most fantastic and easy Christmas Cake recipe ever, tried and tested over many years. Given to me by a very dear Australian friend, way back in the 70’s. I’m afraid it’s all in imperial measurements, and I really didn’t want to risk converting to metric in case it didn’t work! ~ Chris
Helen’s Christmas Cake Recipe
Before you start, soak the fruit overnight in brandy (about half a cup)
Ingredients:
2lb mixed dried fruit (it’s best to mix your own from raisins, sultanas and currants)
2oz ground almonds
3oz glace cherries
4oz mixed peel
1/2 lb self raising flour
1/2 lb butter
1/2 lb dark brown sugar (Muscovado if possible)
1 tablespoon of black treacle
Grated rind of one lemon
Grated rind of one orange
1 teaspoon of mixed spice
A few drops of vanilla essence
4 eggs
Method:
– Cream the butter and sugar, add the eggs, then add and combine all the other ingredients.
– Line a cake tin very well with 3 or even 4 layers of newspaper on the outside and then greaseproof paper on the inside.
– Cook for 3-4 hours. 350 degrees for one hour, then turn down to 300 degrees
Product Spotlight – Dishcloths Categories: Kitchen, Cleaning.
Is it wrong to get excited about dishcloths? No, definitely not when they are Swedish dishcloths from Iris Hantverk.
We have stocked these household cloths for many years and they always get rave reviews from anyone who tries them (although we must admit they have occasionally been mistaken for a pair of socks!) We personally use these at home all the time, and have a loyal following of customers who come into the shop to pick them up from time to time.
There are no less than TEN vibrant colours to choose from. They’re hardwearing, washable, really absorbent and have a good ‘wipe’ to them – for want of a better word. The best dishcloth you will ever buy – and made from all natural materials. Woven in Sweden from 55% linen and 45% cotton.
*Cleaning will be an absolute pleasure and everyone will be fighting to do the washing up! (*Not an official guarantee 😊)
Hotties Heatlogs and Ignite Firelighters
Updated: December 2020
We have just started stocking these fantastic products. Tried and tested by us, we just had to share.
We don’t sell these from the website, because the cost to ship is just too expensive compared to the price of the product, but please call in for supplies.
Ignite Firelighters are the natural choice for your fire or stove.
Made from renewable, untreated wood shavings dipped in wax they are easy to use and it only takes one firelighter to get your fire or stove going.
Suitable for all stoves, open fires, campfires, pizza ovens, firepits and chimineas
Easy to light
Odourless
Long Burn
Clean and convenient
Made in the UK
FSC® Certified
50 per pack
Hotties Heatlogs are manufactured in the UK from renewable clean wood residues.
Easy and clean to handle, easy to stack/store
Suitable for all stoves, log burners, firepits and chimineas
Reliable flame with assured warmth: once you use them, you’ll always want to use them
Easy to light, burn well, throw off great heat, safe (no expansion during burning)
Low ash residue (0.5-0.7%), no soot, keep stoves, cassette fires and chimneys clean
Low moisture content – normally less than 5% (average wood log moisture content is between 25 and 50%)
No spitting or sparking
Great used alone or mixed with regular fuel type
Log dimensions: 70mm x 200mm length
Recipe of the Week
Pheasant Forestiere
Serves Eight
2 or 3 plump pheasants
1oz butter for sauce – plus extra butter for browning pheasants.
Six shallots, sliced
8oz chipolata sausages
12oz unsmoked bacon, chopped
2-3 glasses of red wine
8fl oz stock
12oz button mushrooms
1 bouquet garni
Brown pheasants in hot butter in a large casserole. Remove pheasants and brown shallots, bacon and sausages. Remove sausages and add pheasants, wine and bouquet garni, cover and simmer for 30-40 mins.
Add quartered mushrooms and return browned sausages and cook for a further 7 mins.
Remove pheasants, carve and set the meat aside. Remove sausages and reserve with pheasant meat. Remove and discard bouquet garni.
Knead 2oz butter and 1oz flour into a paste.
Add stock to the casserole, then simmer and whisk in butter paste. Re-boil to thicken and return the carved pheasant meat and sausages.
Perfect served with creamy mashed potato and seasonal vegetables.
Sunday 28th October.
This is the most fantastic and easy Christmas Cake recipe ever, tried and tested over many years. Given to me by a very dear Australian friend, way back in the ’70’s. I’m afraid it’s all in imperial measurements, and I really didn’t want to risk converting to metric in case it didn’t work!
Helen’s Christmas Cake
Before you start, soak the fruit overnight in brandy (about half a cup)
Ingredients:
2lb mixed dried fruit (it’s best to mix your own from raisins, sultanas and currants)
2oz ground almonds
3oz glace cherries
4oz mixed peel
1/2 lb self raising flour
1/2 lb butter
1/2 lb dark brown sugar (Muscovado if possible)
1 tablespoon of black treacle
Grated rind of one lemon
Grated rind of one orange
1 teaspoon of mixed spice
A few drops of vanilla essence
4 eggs
Method:
Cream the butter and sugar, add the eggs, then add all the other ingredients.
Line a cake tin very well with 3 or even 4 layers of newspaper on the outside and then greaseproof paper on the inside. Cook for 3-4 hours.
350 degrees for one hour, then turn down to 300 deg.
Lamb Shanks and Apricots
Serves 6
50g butter
6 lamb shanks
1 onion, finely shopped
½ tsp ground cumin
½ tsp ground ginger
½ tsp ground cinnamon
2 tsp paprika
4 cloves
115g ground almonds
3 large strips of orange rind
225g dried apricots
115g dried prunes (pitted)
115g raisins
Melt the butter in a large casserole. Brown the lamb shanks
all over, three at a time, then transfer to a plate. Stir the onion and spices
into the pan juices and cook for 5 minutes to release their aroma, and soften
the onion. Add ½ tsp salt and plenty of pepper, then stir in the ground
almonds.
Return the lamb to the pan with the orange rind and cover
with 1.2 litres water. Bring to the boil, then turn the heat to very low. Cover
the surface with a sheet of crumpled baking parchment, then the lid (this will
prevent too much liquid escaping during the cooking process).
Simmer for 1 hour, then add the apricots, prunes and raisins,
stirring them into the liquid. Cover and simmer for another hour.
Ideally serve with couscous.
We often make these Cheese Sables in the shop on the ESSE cooker when we are demonstrating. They are so easy to make, and extremely impressive! There are only three ingredients, all equal quantities, so it’s really simple to double or triple the quantities for a crowd. Don’t forget to brush with beaten egg before baking, as this is crucial to success!
Cheese Sables
500g Butter
500g Plain Flour
500g Finely Grated Cheddar
Sift the flour into a bowl. Cut the butter into the flour and as soon as
the pieces are well coated with flour, rub in with fingertips until resembling
fine breadcrumbs.
Add the grated cheese and press the mixture
together to form a dough. Knead gently until
silky smooth and then chill in the fridge for about half an hour.
Carefully roll out the pastry into a fairly
thin oblong. Remember to flour the
rolling pin and table, as this mixture tends to stick!
Cut into 2″ wide strips and then into
triangles.
Brush with beaten egg.
Place sables on a baking sheet and bake for
about 10 minutes at 375 degrees until golden brown.
Eat immediately!
This is fish soup with a delicate touch, the pools of melted butter are an essential indulgence!
Cullen Skink
900g undyed smoked haddock
1 onion, finely sliced
450ml milk
450ml water
450g floury potatoes, peeled and cut into large chunks
225g leeks, finely sliced
300ml single cream
1 large egg yolk
2tbs chopped fresh parsley
50g butter
Salt and ground black pepper
Put the haddock, skin side up, in a shallow pan and cover with the onion
slices, milk and water. Bring to just below boiling, turn down the heat and
poach gently for about 10 minutes until cooked.
Meanwhile, boil the potatoes in salted water for 10-15
minutes, or until tender, then drain and mash. When the fish is cooked, strain the cooking liquid into a
pan and reserve. Flake the fish and set aside.
Whisk the mashed potato into the reserved fish liquid, stir
in the leeks, bring to the boil and simmer for 10 minutes until the leeks are
tender. Whisk the cream and egg yolk together and stir into the
soup.
Reheat gently, without boiling, until slightly thickened.
Gently stir in the reserved flaked fish, taste and adjust the seasoning if
necessary, and heat through. Stir the chopped parsley into the soup and serve piping hot,
dotted with knobs of butter that will melt and run over the surface of the
soup.
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This creamless soup combines one of our favourite overlooked vegetables with pears and shallots to create a light starter that’s delicate and complex-tasting.
For the soup:
-
-
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 cup coarsely chopped shallots
- 1 1/2 cups peeled, coarsely chopped ripe pear
- 4 cups coarsely chopped celery
- 1 tablespoon minced fresh thyme leaves
- 3 cups vegetable stock
- 3 cups water
-
For the garnish:
-
-
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- 4 medium shallots, thinly sliced
-
For the soup:
-
-
- In a large pot over medium heat, melt butter until foaming. Add olive oil, shallots, and pear, season well with salt and ground white pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, until tender, about 5 minutes.
- Add celery and thyme, season with more salt and pepper, and sweat until most of the liquid has evaporated and the celery has just started to soften, about 12 minutes.
- Add stock and water, increase heat to high, and bring to a boil. Once boiling, reduce heat to medium and simmer until celery is tender, about 10 minutes.
- Using a blender, purée soup in batches until smooth. Return soup to the stove to reheat. Season well with salt and pepper.
-
For the garnish (optional):
-
-
- Heat olive oil in a small frying pan until bubbling.
- Add half of the shallots and fry until golden. Remove to a plate lined with paper towels, season with salt, and repeat with remaining shallots.
- Serve soup topped with fried shallots.
-
Microplane!
Sunday 17th September:
We are adding to our stocks of Microplane with some seriously lovely new products, and have just made a start on uploading.
But as always, uploading has taken a bit of a back seat while we are busy, busy, busy in the shop selling Weber BBQs and ESSE cookers and stoves. We still have hundreds of products to add, but needs must and dodging between customers in the shop and spending time online becomes difficult sometimes! Please do email us, or even give us a call on 01728 723757 for any enquiries.
Yet another patent for ESSE’s hand-built British technology!
The UK’s oldest stove and range cooker manufacturer, ESSE, has been granted yet another patent for its industry-leading technology; this time for the innovative ‘surround heat’ system used on the company’s electric range cooker models.
Lancashire-based ESSE continues to develop ever more pioneering and energy-efficient models; pushing the boundaries of modern cooking and living, even after 163 years.
ESSE’s electric cookers benefit from elements that ‘wrap around’ each oven for completely even temperatures. These surround elements have been recognised as completely unique and granted ‘patented’ status to illustrate this ingenuity.
What does this mean for customers?
Sales Director Mark Blewitt explains: “ESSE range cookers have always been known for their fuel economy and even temperatures. We wanted to make sure that there was absolutely no compromise on ESSE’s reputation for perfect performance.
“Our surround heat system means that the elements in our electric ovens offer the same radiant heat as our solid fuel, oil, wood-burning and gas models. Temperatures are consistent throughout the space, which means you don’t need to turn dishes or swap shelves during cooking, and you can even place dishes directly on the base of the oven to cook.
“The additional benefits of ESSE’s electric models include the fact that they are fully controllable, they offer fast heat up times, simple installation (just plug in and cook), a full-width grill, dual hotplate and versatile ovens, as well as low running costs.
“Since 1854, ESSE models – both stoves and cookers – have continuously evolved to suit the needs of the modern British home. Carefully considered details mean that our products offer a host of benefits; these may be relatively small details, like easy-shut doors on our range cookers, but they make all the difference when you lift a hot dish out and you can nudge the door closed with your knee!
“We are proud to have achieved yet another patent on our coveted range cookers. It goes to show we’re not content to rest on our laurels, even after more than a century and a half of Great British manufacturing.”
The NEW electric 990 EL has a huge dual hotplate (cast iron and induction), a full-width grill, two independently-controlled ovens and a warming oven which is perfect for slow cooking melt-in-the-mouth casseroles and more. This model also includes a beautifully cast adjustable vent to maintain more or less moisture in the oven, depending what your recipe requires.
Barbecue Tips
1. When making your own burgers, don’t make the mistake of using lean steak mince. The juiciest and most flavoursome burgers are made with beef having 20% fat content, usually chuck or braising steak. If you can’t buy it, get your butcher to mince some up fresh.
2. When using a charcoal BBQ, only cover half the grate with lit coals, that way you have two cooking zones, one hot zone for direct searing of burgers and steak etc., and a cooler side for indirect cooking of larger pieces of meat.
3. When using a tomato based BBQ sauce, only use it for the last ten minutes of cooking, as the sugars can blacken the food.
4. Invest in an instant read meat probe, to take the guess work out of cooking meat, especially chicken.
Lemon drizzle cake – August 2008
We had a fantastic open day during August 2008, the weather was perfect and the cake was oh so scrummy!
Mandy Gooden at the Kitchen Range
This was Mandy on her first visit to us, back on Easter Saturday 2008 – and what a fantastic day it was. Mandy produced the most wonderful dishes from our Rayburn – and all so effortlessly at the drop of a hat!