Monday, August 16, 2010

Another Mystery Photo - Random # 3

Remember this mystery photo from a post last week ...

Greece 217, edited

There were guesses for tamarind (close), vanilla, almonds, macadamias, and a few others that I've forgotten, but the correct answer (guessed by Natalia at Gatti Fili e Farina) was carob.

Interested in knowing a little bit more about carob?  You can find some useful information here in Wikipedia.

And now for another mystery photo.  Clue  - I took this photo at La Boqueria market in Barcelona.

Barcelona 143, edited

Do have a guess, and leave your answer in a comment.

I am submitting this post to the Two for Tuesdays blog hop.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Tandoori Salmon with Orange Date Mayonnaise Recipe


Tandoori Salmon 2, cropped & edited

Who doesn't love a pot luck dinner?  The thing I love about a pot luck is not so much the food - although that is invariably great, the food on such occasions seems almost irrelevant to me.  What really floats my boat is the generosity of spirit that prevails and sense of abundance;  the willingness of folks to share whatever they have, no matter how little or how simple that might be.  With such ingredients, a pot luck dinner can never fail to be a celebration.

And celebrate we will.  At I Heart Cooking Clubs we continue to cook with Mark Bittman, and our theme this week is Pot Luck.  I always love checking out everyone's contributions to our virtual pot luck dinners, and this Tandoori Salmon is great celebration food and exactly the kind of thing that I would like to share with others.

Salmon, cropped & edited

The salmon itself is unbelievably simple - salmon fillets (need I say, the freshest you can lay your hands on - I used beautiful ocean-farmed fillets from Holy Smoke) are simply marinated in a mixture of tandoori paste (as simple as opening a jar of Pataks) and yoghurt, then pan-fried until done - how easy is that?!  You could keep it as simple as serving this with just some steamed Basmati rice, a bit of mango chutney and some crispy pappadums.

Tandoori Salmon 1, cropped & edited

However, since this was a celebration I chose to take it up a notch with my accompaniments.

I made a cucumber-mint raita for those that like something cooling and refreshing.  Simply finely chop some cucumber, salt liberally, and set in a strainer over a bowl for about an hour.  Then rinse throughly to wash off the salt, and squeeze firmly to get rid of any excess water.  Mix through some natural yoghurt and add a generous handful of freshly chopped mint.  Taste and season with salt if necessary.

Personally I like something with a bit more zing and heat, so I also made a fresh mango salsa.  Now there is not much better in life than a beautiful fresh, soft, sweet, juicy perfectly ripe mango - but here I wanted firmer texture to contrast with the soft flesh of the salmon, and I wanted a little tartness, so I used a mango which was slightly on the under-ripe side.  After cutting the flesh of the mango into dice, I added a sprinkling of dried chilli flakes (actually a fresh red chilli would have been better, but they're out of season here right now, so dried made a good substitute), juice of 1/2 an orange (if I'd had a lime that would have been better, but use what you have), handful of chopped pistachio nuts, freshly chopped coriander, and a drizzle of olive oil.

Mango Salsa, cropped & edited

With these two side dishes, I also served some crispy pappadums and a bowl of steamed green vegetables.  I nestled the salmon on a fluffy bed of steamed Basmati rice, and topped it off with an orange and date mayonnaise - and, let me tell you, this mayonnaise was the real star of the show.  I was inspired by an Allyson Gofton recipe I clipped from a magazine some years ago, but long since lost the recipe.  Although my recollection of the recipe is a little hazy (I think tandoori salmon was baked and then served on top of roasted red peppers and grilled mango), memories of an orange date mayonnaise that topped the salmon have stayed with me.  I loved it back then, and it is exactly what I wanted to recreate here - I hope my version does Allyson justice.

Orange & Date Mayonnaise 3, cropped & editted

I hope you'll give this a try, and drop by and see what everyone else is bringing to our Pot Luck Dinner at I Heart Cooking Clubs.


Tandoori Salmon Recipe
Adapted from Mark Bittman's
Click here for a printable copy of this recipe

180g salmon fillet for each person

1/4 cup natural, unsweetened yoghurt
(this amount of marinade would be enough for 4 salmon fillets)

Mix yoghurt and tandoori paste together in a shallow bowl (or you could use a plastic bag), and completely smother the salmon fillets with the mixture.  Leave in the fridge to marinate, overnight if possible, but at least 8 hours.

Heat a saute pan over a high heat until pan is very hot.  If you have a non-stick pan you will be able to get away with a dry fry, as there will be quite a bit of oil that will come out of the salmon.  If not drizzle just about a tablespoon of oil into the hot pan.

Wipe most, but not all, excess marinade off the salmon, and add to the hot pan, skin side down.  Cook until the skin is browned and crispy (about 2 minutes), then turn over and cook until salmon is just medium-rare (about another minute or 2).  Take care not to overcook.

Serve on steamed Basmati rice, with a spoon of Orange & Date Mayonnaise on top.


Orange & Date Mayonnaise Recipe
Inspired by a recipe by Allyson Gofton
Click here for a printable copy of this recipe

1x egg yolk, free range
grated zest of 1/2 orange
2 teaspoons orange juice
1 teaspoon water
neutral flavoured oil (about 1/2 cup)
3x fresh dates
salt to taste

Remove stones from the dates, and then mash up in a mortar and pestle (or food processor if you prefer) until you have a paste.  Add the grated zest of the orange and set aside.

Orange & Date Mayonnaise 1, editted

In a bowl mix the egg yolk with the orange juice and water, and then start to add oil to the egg yolk mixture a few drops at a time, stirring constantly until each addition of oil is fully amalgamated.  Once the yolk starts to thicken a little, you can begin to add the oil in a slow steady stream, until you end up with a thick emulsion.

Orange & Date Mayonnaise 2, cropped & editted

If it gets too thick thin with a little more orange juice.  If your mayonnaise splits add a tablespoonful or two (just add them one at a time) of warm water and stir vigorously until it comes back together again.

Lastly, stir the date paste and orange zest into the mayonnaise until well incorporated, and add salt to taste.

Notes:

In my opinion, there are few things more magical in the kitchen than the alchemy of transforming egg yolks into mayonnaise.  It excites the heck out of me every time and why anyone would want to deny themselves the pleasure of doing this is beyond me.  It takes just moments;  demands nothing more of you than a bit of vigorous stirring;  you know exactly what's in your mayo;  and the taste is infinitely superior to any store-bought mayonnaise.  That said, if you're really nervous about making your own mayonnaise, or squeamish about raw egg yolks, or just can't be bothered, then go right ahead and use a store-bought mayonnaise and just tart it up with the mashed up dates, orange zest and  juice.  I, for one, will not hold it against you.

This mayonnaise would be equally good with grilled chicken or barbequed lamb chops, or I can even imagine it going pretty nicely with roasted beetroot.  I really enjoyed it the next day slathered on toasted ciabatta bread with avocado.

 How to Cook Everything: Bittman Takes on America's Chefs 

This post is also submitted to the January 2011 Culinary Smackdown, where the monthly ingredient is salmon, and the which is this month hosted by the lovely Brenda at Brenda's Canadian Kitchen.


Thursday, August 12, 2010

Mystery Photo - Random # 2

If you saw my post a bit over a week ago for Blood Orange and Black Olive Salad, then you will also have come across this "mystery food photo" that was in the same post ...

Greece 259

There were several guesses for olives, and one for immature red grapes, and although it does indeed look as though it could be either of those things, to my surprise no-one guessed that these are in fact pistachios.  Yes, surprised the heck out of me too.  Don't you think they look rather lovely, and apparently as they mature they turn almost completely red.  It was so exciting to me to see something that (to my knowledge at least) is not grown in this country, and which I only know from the harvested product we get at the supermarket.

So now another mystery food item, again photographed on my trip to Greece.  Can you see the bright green "pods" hanging in the tree in these two photos, and do you know what they are?

Greece 217, edited

Greece 218, edited

The answer will be posted next week.

I'm also submitting this post to the Two for Tuesdays blog hop.

A year ago:  Winter Vegetable Nonya Curry

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Orecchiette with Broccoli & Anchovy Sauce Recipe- Cooking Italy 8


Orechiette with Broccoli & Anchovy Sauce 2

I love belonging to the Cooking Italy group - not just for the fact that they still talk to me even though I haven't submitted anything for months; and not just for the fact that I love the way that members of this group help each other grow and develop their culinary repertoire and skills with advice about the food we are cooking, offering guidance to each other through our trials, successes and failures; but also for the way in which this group connects with each other "off-blog", so to speak, sharing stuff with each other which is very real and touches us all deeply - a group which is willing to share, connect and trust people who are relative strangers, but who become less "strange" by the week through these shared communications.

Aahhh - food really does bring people together - even in the virtual world - I love that.

Which really brings me to the touchstone of my whole cooking philosophy.  As you may have read here before, my food is all about making those connections and is my way of showing the people I care about how much I love them.  It is how I keep alive the memories of family and friends no longer in my daily life;  it is how I nurture those near and dear to me whenever we come together;  and it is how I open my heart and extend the hand of friendship to new acquaintances.  You may be reading this on the other side of the world, but I hope you know that the food and stories written here are offered to you with love.  This to me is what real food is all about - it is food made from the heart;  it is food made with real, fresh, seasonal ingredients;  it is food which shows as much respect for the environment from which it is drawn as it does for the people to whom it is offered;  it is food that comes out of your kitchen - not out of a box or, worse still, a drive-through;  it is food that shows you care, in every possible way.  Because I am so passionate about this, I was very excited this week to be invited by Alex at A Moderate Life to participate in the Two for Tuesdays weekly blog hop where other bloggers who care passionately about real food are sharing their recipes, stories and information.  I hope you'll go and have a look, and enjoy what some other "real food" bloggers have to offer.

So today's recipe from Marcella Hazan's "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking" does double-duty, being submitted to both the Cooking Italy group and Two for Tuesday.  It is exactly the kind of dish that I would like to share with friends. It is simplicity itself - let's face it, things don't get much more simple than pasta and broccoli, right?!  It is the kind of casual, comfortable, unpretentious food that you can linger, and chat over, and enjoy a good glass of wine with, and yet the little bit of anchovy in the sauce adds enough complexity and sophistication to this dish that it could fit right in on those occasions when perhaps a little more elegance is called for.

Hey, do I hear the stampede of fingers? Does the very mention of anchovy have you reaching for your mouse right now to change pages? Well, just hang on one darn minute. If you, or one of the people you cook for, freak out at the very thought of anchovies I urge you to give them one last try in this recipe before you give up on them completely. I can promise you that this dish does not taste of anchovy, or in the slightest bit "fishy" - rather they melt into the dish, adding a "savouriness" that I can't imagine you could get in any other way, and without which I think this dish would be really rather bland. To be honest, if you're not brave enough to try the anchovy, then don't make this dish at all - don't be tempted to try and just leave it out, as without it the dish would be nothing. My only suggestion for a passable substitution would be bacon - won't taste anything like this version of course, but would still be a pretty nice dish with the broccoli (and let's face it, is there anything that isn't great with bacon? - chocolate, maybe, but I suspect a case could be made for even that).

I also added some toasted walnuts to my final dish - not at all necessary, but just because, well, I can't leave anything alone - the tinkerer in me always has to have a little "tweek" here or there. Secondly, because, although the classic "menage a trois" may not be everyone's idea of the ideal domestic relationship, there are many culinary examples of a trio of ingredients that make the perfect marriage - without being exhaustive tomato-basil-mozzarella or the classic mirepoix of carrots-onions-celery are a couple of excellent examples. I happen to think that broccoli-anchovies-walnuts is another one of those wonderful trinities that just turns out to be perfect. What's your favourite trio of ingredients? Leave me a comment, I'd love to know.

This dish also enabled me to use a whole lot of broccoli, on which I had got a great special this week. Lately, (I think because we have had rather a lot of wet weather for Canterbury) broccoli has been in short supply, and thus extremely expensive, but this week I was excited to snap up at my local greengrocer heads of broccoli for just 79 cents each - they're not big, but still less than half the price of same sized heads at the supermarket, and are just the right size for one meal.

I enjoyed this dish so much that it will definitely become a regular, stand-by meal in my home - one of those great "meal in a hurry dishes" that sacrifices nothing in the way of flavour and goodness.  You honestly could have this on the table faster than you could say "takeaway" - I hope you will give it a try.

A word about quantity - Marcella's recipe states that it serves 6.  In my opinion this quantity of sauce would maybe feed 4 as an appetiser or part of a multi-course meal;  or, as would more likely be the case in our house, would give two generous servings as a main meal.

Orechiette with Broccoli & Anchovy Sauce

Orechiette with Broccoli & Anchovy Sauce 3

Adapted from Marcella Hazan's

Click here for a printable copy of this recipe

fresh broccoli, about 500g
hot red chilli, finely chopped
(I used dried chilli flakes instead)
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
6-8 anchovy fillets (depending on size), finely chopped
1/2 cup parmesan cheese, freshly grated
1/4 cup pecorino cheese, freshly grated
generous handful toasted walnuts, chopped (optional)
125g pasta per person (I used orecchiette)

Set a large pan of water over high heat and bring to the boil.

While you are waiting for the water to come to a boil, prepare the broccoli.  Cut the florets off the stalk, but don't throw the stalk away.  Cut the thick, woody base off the stalk, and peel off the thick, dark outer layer of the stalk.  Once the water is boiling, salt liberally, add the broccoli and cook until just fork tender.

Remove the broccoli from the water and set aside.  Add the pasta to the water and cook until al dente.

While the pasta is cooking ...

Cut the broccoli florets into smaller pieces and dice the stalks.

Put the oil in a saute pan and set over low heat.  Once the oil is warm (not too hot), remove the pan from the heat, and add the anchovies.  Keep stirring and mashing the anchovies into the warm oil to dissolve and make a paste.  Add the broccoli (including the stalks) and the chilli (fresh or dried) to the pan, return the pan to the heat, and cook for a few minutes, turning the broccoli regularly to make sure it is well coated.

Reserve a little of the pasta water, then drain the pasta and add to the pan of broccoli and sauce.  Toss well, then add the cheeses and toss again.  Toss through the walnuts, if using, then serve immediately.

Serve with extra cheese if desired.

Orechiette with Broccoli & Anchovy Sauce 4


Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking 

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Spellcheck for Signwriters?! - Random # 1

This is a first - and hopefully the first of many.

You see, I want to keep in touch with you a little more regularly than my weekly (okay, almost weekly) recipes that I blog about.  I may have mentioned before that I am totally in awe of those bloggers who manage to churn out a blog a day all beautifully written, complete with gorgeous photos.  But I'm a bit of a slow-poke, and a fuss-pot to boot, so it literally takes me all week to get my posts done to a stage where I am happy to release them to you.

But in between times, I think of you all often, and have random little things I'd like to share with you.  So, I thought, why don't I just do that - share those random things with you on a more regular basis.  Maybe it will just be a photograph I like, or a quotation that inspires me, maybe a new product I've discovered, or maybe a quick and easy meal idea that doesn't need a full-blown recipe - you beginning to get the idea?

So here is the first - a photo taken of a sign at my local butcher shop that makes me chuckle everytime I see it.  The signwriter really needs help with his spelling - how many spelling mistakes can you spot?

Peter Timbs Sign

Hope you're having a great day - if not, hopefully, this will at least make you smile :-)

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Blood Orange & Black Olive Salad Recipe


Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 1

I'm ashamed to say that it's been a long time since I contributed to the I Heart Cooking Clubs group;  nevertheless, some of you may recall that the group is cooking with Mark Bittman, and our theme this week is Raw Foods.  I'll be honest - when I read that my heart sank.  Now that doesn't mean I have anything against raw foods - quite the opposite in fact - but here in New Zealand, in the middle of winter, our thoughts turn more readily to soups and stews right now.  And, let's face it, a lot of what's seasonal here right now doesn't exactly lend itself to being served up "in the raw", so to speak.  Raw kumara (sweet potato) or pumpkin?  I don't think so!

What's more, this idea seemed to just compound the battle already raging within over my food choices right now.  As I mentioned last week, having just come back from a month in Greece, I find myself constantly longing for the food which reminds me of that time - which was of course beautiful, light, fresh summer food.

Eggplant salad
 The salad in this photo is one that I made while on Paros of fried eggplant, rocket, green olives, lemon zest and a local cheese called Mizithra

I just cannot get excited right now about root vegetables and casseroles, things that normally I really enjoy when the season comes around.  So I have been trying in my cooking lately, as much as possible, to give my wintery food a bit of a summery twist or "tweek" it in some way that is reminiscent of the food I ate in Greece.  I think I succeeded reasonably well with the Dried Fruit Compote I posted last week - a compote of dried peaches, apricots, figs, cherries and prunes - same fruit that I had eaten almost daily on Paros, just given a different treatment.  I think I also captured some of that feeling in a warm salad I made during the week of steamed beetroot and brown lentils - I got my Greek fix, by tossing everything in a very lemony vinaigrette (sweetened ever so slightly with a little honey and spiked with dried oregano), then adding black olives, chunks of feta, and some roasted hazelnuts.

So the challenge then for me - make something raw, using seasonal ingredients, and which would also transport me back to Greece for a few glorious moments.  This orange and black olive salad fits the bill perfectly for me, and even though Mark Bittman was actually inspired to make this dish after a visit to the south of France, I could easily be in Greece.  You see I chose to use blood oranges, instead of the naval oranges that were called for in the original recipe, and just the gorgeous rosy-orange colour of those on the plate with the pile of black olive paste reminds me immediately of this beautiful Paros sunrise.

Paros Sunrise

Now, I know you are waiting for me to just get on with the recipe, but before I do here is a little mystery food item for you.  Do you know what this is in the photo below?  Post your answer in the comment section - sorry I don't have a prize for getting it right, and I imagine for some of you out there it's a complete "no-brainer", but it was something I had never seen before.  Clue - unsurprisingly, I took this photo during my holiday in Greece...

Greece 259

Keep watching this space for next week's mystery food item.  Now, on with the recipe.

Blood Orange & Black Olive Salad
Adapted from Mark Bitman's
Vegetarian, gluten-free
Click here for a printable copy

1 cup of Kalamata olives (or any black olives you prefer)
olive oil (quantity will vary with type of olives used)
1x blood orange per person
thyme
fennel seeds

Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 6

Begin by removing the seeds from the olives - please do yourself a favour and avoid already pitted olives.  This is very easy to do - simply place the olive on a hard surface such as a plate or board;  press firmly with your thumb (or if your olives are harder you can use the bottom of a cup or glass);  the olive will easily split open;  remove the seed and discard.

Put the pitted olives now into your food processor with about a teaspoon of olive oil and pulse a couple of times to roughly chop the olives.  Add a little more olive oil and keep pulsing till you have the desired consistency - take care not to turn this into complete "mush";  you want to keep a bit of texture to the paste.

Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 5

Now to the oranges.  Grate the zest of one orange and set aside.  Then remove all the skin (including the white pith) from the oranges, and slice into thickish rounds.  Hint, do this on a plate so that you can collect all the juices which will come out of the oranges.

Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 4

Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 3

To serve, arrange orange slices on a plate and top with a dollop of the olive paste.  Drizzle with your best olive oil and some of the reserved orange juice.  Sprinkle with a few thyme leaves and fennel seeds and a little of the reserved orange zest.

Blood Orange & Kalamata Olive Salad 2

Then sit back, close your eyes, and enjoy your Paros sunrise on a plate!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Remembering Paros & Dried Fruit Compote


Dried Fruit Compote 3, cropped & edited

No prizes for noticing that I haven't blogged for a couple of months - well, I've got a good excuse - well, for some of that time at least.  As many of you know, I have just had a wonderful trip to Europe, thus managing to escape a good chunk of this New Zealand winter.  Add to that a couple of weeks before I went away of being "too busy" to blog, and then coming home and taking a couple more weeks to get back into regular routines - you know how it goes - "I'll start blogging again tomorrow", but tomorrow keeps becoming the next day and the next day and so on.  Not being a natural writer, I have found it surprisingly difficult to get back into it - I know that once I sit down and just start to write, things will start to unfold, but somehow I have been a bit afraid to just sit down and get started, as though I don't know where to begin.  But anyway, enough excuses, here goes ...

So what exactly have I been doing while I was away?  I began my trip with several days in Barcelona (quite possibly my favourite city in the world, so far) - an opportunity to shop, to enjoy great food and make daily visits to La Boqueria market (absolute foodie heaven) (you can see more of my photos from La Boqueria here) ...

La Boqueria 2

... to enjoy the cultural and artistic history of this wonderful city, including a visit to the Fundacio Joan Miro (a museum housing an extensive collection of the works of Joan Miro, one of my favourite artists) ...


Barcelona 032

... and, on my last evening in Barcelona, take in a cooking class at Cook & Taste.  As well as a tour of the market, we cooked a typical four course Catalan meal which included Chupito de Sopa de Tomate al Aroma de Idiazabal (shots of tomato soup flavoured with idiazabal smoked cheese), Tortilla de Patatas y Pan con Tomate (potato omelette with tomato bread), Paella de Marisco (seafood paella) and Crema Catalana (Catalan cream) - yes, I promise to share some of these recipes with you in the future.  The cooking school kitchen is lovely, and our tutor, Ignasius, was immensely knowledgeable and informative, as well as being very warm, friendly and entertaining.  The other students (mostly from the US, but surprisingly also another couple from New Zealand) were equally friendly and amusing.  In groups of 3 or 4 we all got a hands-on turn at cooking one of the courses, and then we all got to eat together the meal we had created.  The food was delicious, and there was plenty of good Spanish wine to wash it down with.  All in all, this was a wonderfully fitting way to end my stay in this beautiful city.

Barcelona 172

From Barcelona I travelled to Athens for a night, and then on to the island of Paros for a four week yoga intensive with Graeme and Leonie Northfield, which was the whole purpose of my trip.  It is almost impossible to put into words what a deeply profound experience this was, and I am not even going to try.

I can, however, tell you this.  I have been privileged to have Graeme and Leonie as my teachers for several years now.  I appreciate enormously the vast amount of experience they each have, and the knowledge and wisdom that they bring to their teaching.  I appreciate their passion for teaching students to develop a practice which is both safe and which will endure.  I am grateful for the wise and intuitive way in which they have guided my practice, helping me through injuries, and encouraging and leading me forward when the time is right.  Most of all, I'm incredibly grateful for their warmth, love and compassion.  And they're also good fun ...

DSC02617, cropped & edited

I'm also incredibly grateful to have had the opportunity to practice with some of the most wonderful people I have ever had the privilege to meet, and who I now feel I can call friends.  Fellow students who, despite coming together as strangers, opened their hearts and without reservation offered love and support for each other when it was needed.  I could not help but feel very humbled.

After practice ...

But, enough, I know you just want me to get right to the food!  The first thing I can tell you is that the Greeks really, really know how to do vegetables and this is a great place to dine out for a vegetarian.  All the cafes and tavernas I dined in had probably at least 20 vegetable dishes to choose from, and then several salads as well.  Everything was fresh, in season, and simply but deliciously prepared - nothing "chefy" about this, just really simple, honest food bursting with flavour - special favourites were peppers and tomatoes stuffed with rice, wild greens simply steamed and served with loads of lemon juice and black pepper, artichoke hearts braised with broad beans, courgette fritters (I think these were everyone's favourites), and aubergines Imam (cooked in lots of olive oil and filled with tomatoes and feta).  Of course no meal is complete without the ubiquitous Greek salad - we managed to have these on an almost daily basis without ever tiring of them.

Pot Luck Dinner 1

Pot Luck Dinner 2

We had regular group pot luck dinners - always celebratory affairs, with beautiful food, plenty of local wine, and of course much laughter.

Greece 167, edited

We dined in beautiful tavernas so close to the water's edge that the fish could have almost jumped onto our plates - of course you nearly have to take out a mortgage to pay for the fish here!  As fish stocks in the Mediterranean diminish, so the prices seem to escalate.  From what I observed fish seemed to be usually served whole in restaurants, rather than by the fillet, and accordingly are charged by the kilo, with prices starting at 55Euros per kilo (that's NZ$110 per kilo - yes you are reading that right) and going up to around 110Euros per kilo (NZ$220 - gulp)!  So if you're planning to eat seafood here, expect to have to really cut a lot of moths loose from your wallet.  On the other hand, if you are happy to eat a little further down the food chain, you'll do yourself and the planet a favour.  Seafood such as sardines and calamari are plentiful and sustainable, as well as tasting great -you could eat a beautiful dish of grilled sardines or calamari for around 7Euros a plate.

Greece 416

Although I have never been that much of a breakfast person, it was in fact breakfast that became my favourite meal of every day.  As is so often the case, good food for me is as much about connecting with others as it is about what's on your plate.  It became our morning ritual, having finished our yoga practice, to enjoy a refreshing swim, after which everyone would disappear to their rooms to prepare their breakfast, emerging a little while later to eat breakfast together in the garden - usually a bowl of thick, luscious Greek yoghurt;  a mountain of fresh fruit (peaches, apricots, melons, cherries, strawberries were all very abundant);  a drizzle of local honey and some nuts.  It was fun each morning to peer into each other's bowls and see what assortment everyone had come up with.  Breakfast was a leisurely affair - usually a couple of hours when we would sit and talk, laugh, occasionally cry - a time to share and support, and a time to plan the rest of the day - should we have a sleep first and then go to town for a coffee, or maybe go for coffee first and then sleep? - or maybe an excursion to the supermarket to get some ingredients for one of our potluck dinners is in order.  Oh the tough decisions you have to make when you're on holiday!

Since I've returned home, I've found myself still needing to have my "Greek breakfast" and contemplate my day at a leisurely pace.  I have never before been much of a yoghurt lover - I often use it as an ingredient, but seldom eat it straight.  Oh, how my head has been turned since eating real Greek yoghurt!  You can buy a variety of "Greek style" yoghurts here, but they're not quite the same - you can, however, almost approximate it:  firstly, line a seive with a paper towel;  at least 3 hours before you want to eat it (overnight is ideal) spoon a serving of yoghurt into the paper towel;  set over a bowl (in the fridge) to drain.  That solves the yoghurt issue, but what about the fruit?  In the depths of winter here stone fruit, berries and melon are simply not an option.  Yes, I guess you could have a selection of apples, oranges and pears - but, I'm sorry, they just don't do it for me.  Although they are all fruits that I like to use in salads and sometimes even in desserts, but just as fruits for their own sake - no, not for me - I am without question a summer fruits girl.  My solution is a dried fruit compote - full of peaches, apricots, figs, cherries and prunes, infused with lemon, vanilla and star anise, in a syrup thick with honey (for a New Zealand twist I used manuka honey) - topped off with a sprinkling of chopped pistachio nuts, I ended up with a breakfast that even in the depths of the New Zealand winter transports me back to Paros everyday, and helps me to to still feel connected to new found friends at far flung corners of the world.

Dried Fruit Compote 5

And, of course, I strongly recommend good coffee on the side!

Dried Fruit Compote Recipe
Makes 6-8 generous servings
Click here for a printable copy of this recipe

There are no precise quantities required here - those given are approximate and should be adjusted to suit your personal taste

4-6 cups of dried fruit, whatever you like
I used approximately one cup each of dried peaches, apricots, figs, cherries and prunes
I also left all of my fruit whole, but if you like little pieces by all means go ahead and chop

For the syrup:
2 cups of cold water
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup honey (I used Manuka)
1 vanilla bean
2 star anise
3-4 strips of lemon peel (or orange would also be good)

To serve:
Greek-style yoghurt
chopped pistachios

Put the cold water, sugar and honey into a medium sized saucepan.  Split the vanilla pod lengthwise, scrape out the seeds, then add the seeds and the pod to the pan, along with the star anise and the strips of peel.

Set the pan over medium heat and stir until the sugar and honey has dissolved and the syrup begins to simmer.  Allow to simmer for about 5 minutes, then add all of the fruit to the pan.  Allow to simmer gently over low heat until the fruit is just soft - around 15 minutes.

Remove fruit from the pan to a bowl, then continue to simmer the liquid for a few more minutes until it has a thick, syrupy consistency.

Dried Fruit Compote 1

Remove pan from the heat and pour the syrup over the fruit.  Cool completely and refrigerate overnight.  (Of course you could eat this straight away, but I think leaving all the fruit to steep in the syrup overnight really allows all the flavours to develop and mellow out).

Dried Fruit Compote 2

To serve - put a generous dollop of Greek-style yoghurt in the bottom of a bowl and drizzle generously with some of the syrup.  Place a good serving of the fruit over the top and finish with a sprinkling of chopped pistachios.

Dried Fruit Compote 4

Kali Orexi!