Schlagwort-Archive: Nigel Slater

Let’s Do Brunch! with a Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich

Let's do brunch  
 
 
 
 
I heart Cooking Clubs is looking for Nigel Slater recipes suited for lazy morning indulging. I decided to serve
 
 
 
 

Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich

©Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich

It was brunch for the sons and lunch for the parents, just a nice meal together.

Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich

Yield: 4 medium sandwiches 10 x 12 cm

Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich

Nigel Slater toasted mushroom sandwich is packed with flavour – melted cheese with mushrooms on toasted sourdough bread.

Ingredients:

for the filling

  • 250 grams mushrooms, thinly sliced
  • 4 tablespoons rape seed oil
  • 8 thin slices sourdough bread, 10 x 12 cm
  • 60 grams cheddar cheese, grated, I used Dorset Drum Cheddar Käse *
  • salt
  • pepper

SOURCE

modified by from:
Nigel Slater, The Observer

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Warm the oil in a frying pan and add the mushrooms, season with salt an pepper and cook for 10 minutes or so over a moderate heat till soft.
  2. Using a draining spoon, pile them on to evenly onto 4 slices of bread. Scatter over the grated cheese. Place another slice of bread on top and press down lightly.
  3. Wipe the pan out lightly with kitchen roll, because you need a thin film of oil to fry the sandwiches. Place the sandwiches in the pan, letting it cooc for a few minutes till the bread is golden and the cheese is starting to melt. Turn the sandwiches and cook the other sides. Perfection is when the bread ist lightly crisp, the mushrooms soft and the cheese oozing.

total: 30 minutes
preparation: 10 minutes
cook: 15 minutes

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IHCC

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Nigel Slater Tart of asparagus and tarragon

Veg Out 
 
The I heart Cooking Clubs is presenting fresh vegetables this week. I go seasonal and local: We have asparagus season in Northern Germany.

The weekly market
©Wochenmarkt Exer Bauer Reimers

offered some wonderful asparagus tips.

©Spargel-Spitzen Asparagus tips

We Germans are fond of white asparagus 16.08.2025 **. I decided to prepare a

Tart of asparagus and tarragon

©Spargel-Tarte mit Estragon Nigel Slater (1)

©Spargel-Tarte mit Estragon Nigel Slater (3)

©Spargel-Tarte mit Estragon Nigel Slater (2)

©Spargel-Tarte mit Estragon Nigel Slater (4)

from Nigel Slater Tender Vol. I*. I like tarts, because they could be eaten warm and cold, so you have something for the lunch box. I liked the combination of tarragon and asparagus, the pastry was great with its shortbread like texture.

Although I was lazy and did not bake blind the pastry crust, it wasn’t soggy. Instead of putting it into the fridge for 20 minutes I gave it in the freezer and poured the filling directly on the frozen pastry. The asparagus was cooked for 8 minutes in a steamer.

Nigel Slater Tart of asparagus and tarragon

Yield: serves 6 or 4 hungry persons

Nigel Slater Tart of asparagus and tarragon (3)

Pastry filled with asparagus

ingredients:

FOR THE PASTRY

  • 90 grams butter
  • 150 grams plain flour, I used wheat flour type 405
  • 1 egg yolk, about 16 grams

FOR THE FILLING

  • 250 grams asparagus tips
  • 3 eggs, size M
  • 285 ml double cream, Ulrike: 200 grams cream, carrageen free
  • 4 or 5 bushy terragon sprigs, the leaves
  • 3 tablespoons grated parmesan, about 15 grams

SOURCE

978-0007248490 *

modified from :
Nigel Slater
Tender Vol. I
ISBN: 978-0007248490
*

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Cut the butter into small chunks and rub it into the flour with your fingertips until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs. Mix in the egg yolk and enough water to make a firm dough. You will find you need about a tablespoon or even less.
  2. Roll the dough out to fit a 22 cm tart tin preferably a loose-bottomed tin, pressing the pastry right into the corners. Prick the pastry base with a fork, then refrigerate it for a good twenty minutes. Don’t be tempted to miss out this step; the chilling will stop the pastry shrinking in the oven. Bake blind at 200°C/Gas 6 for twelve to fifteen minutes, until the pastry is pale biscuit coloured and dry to the touch.
  3. Bring a large pan of water to the boil, drop in the asparagus and let it simmer for seven or eight minutes or so, until it is quite tender. It will receive more cooking later but you want it to be thoroughly soft after its time in the oven, as its texture will barely change later under the custard.
  4. Put the cream in a jug or bowl and beat in the eggs gently with a fork. Roughly chop the tarragon and add that to the cream with a seasoning of salt and black pepper.
  5. itemprop=”recipeInstructions”Slice the asparagus into short lengths, removing any tough ends. Scatter it over the partly baked pastry case, then pour in the cream and egg mixture and scatter the cheese over the surface. Bake, the oven temperature lowered to 180°C/Gas 4, for about forty minutes, until the filling is golden and set. Serve warm.

total: 75 minutes
preparation: 10 minutes
cook: 45 minutes

*=Affiliate-Link to Amazon

IHCC

For all other great Veg Out! entries visit the I heart cooking clubs site

more Nigel Slater recipes
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** 16.08.2025 http://germanfood.about.com/od/introtogermanfood/a/asparetiquette.htm wird umgeleitet auf https://www.thespruceeats.com/white-asparagus-german-spargel-cooking-1446965 und ist im Webarchiv verfügbar

Nigel Slater Rhubarb cinnamon polenta cake

May2014Potluck
 
 
 
It is Potluck week at I heart Cooking Clubs. That means to choose the recipe or the chef. It’s still rhubarb season in Northern Germany and especially after this tweet 
 
 
 

it was time to try the

Rhubarb cinnamon polenta cake

Rhubarb cinnamon polenta cake (2)

from Nigel Slater. An excellent cake, which doesn’t get soggy the following day. For decadent indulgence serve with rhubarb juice and cream.

Nigel Slater Rhubarb cinnamon polenta cake Button German

Yield: Serves 8, 1 springform tin Ø 20 cm

©Nigel Slater Rhubarb Polenta Cake (1)

Gritty, sugary crust meets slithery rhubarb. Enjoy the Rhubarb cinnamon polenta cake with the reserved juices from the cooked rhubarb.

Ingredients:

for the filling

  • 500 grams rhubarb
  • 50 grams golden caster sugar
  • 4 tablespoons water

for the crust

  • 125 grams coarse polenta
  • 200 grams plain flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 pinch ground cinnamon, freshly grated
  • 150 g golden caster sugar
  • 1 small orange, grated zest
  • 150 grams butter
  • 1 large egg
  • 2-4 tablespoons milk; Ulrike: 30 ml

SOURCE

978-0007325214 *

modified by from:
Nigel Slater
Tender Volume II, a Cook’s Guide to the Fruit Garden *
ISBN: 978-0007325214

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Lightly oil or butter a 20 cm loose-bottomed cake tin, preferably springform. Set the oven at 180 °C/Gas 4 and put a baking sheet in it to get hot. Trim the rhubarb, cut each stem into short pieces and put them in a baking dish. Scatter over the sugar and water and bake for thirty to forty minutes, till the rhubarb is soft but still retains its shape. Remove the pieces of fruit from the dish and put them in a colander or large sieve to drain. Reserve the rhubarb juice to serve with the cake.
  2. Put the polenta, flour, baking powder, cinnamon and caster sugar in a food processor. Add the grated orange zest and the butter, cut into smallish pieces, then blitz for a few seconds till you have something that resembles breadcrumbs. I sometimes prefer to do this by hand, rubbing the butter into the polenta with my fingertips as if I were making pastry. An extraordinarily peaceful thing to do if one has the time. Break the egg into a small bowl and mix with 2 tablespoons of milk, then blend into the crumble mix, either in the food processor or by hand. Take care not to over mix; stop as soon as the dry ingredients and liquid have come together to form a soft, slightly sticky dough. If it is not a little sticky, then add a touch more milk.
  3. itemprop=”recipeInstructions”Press about two-thirds of the mixture into the cake tin, pushing it a couple of centimetres up the sides with a floured spoon. Make sure there are no holes or large cracks. Place the drained rhubarb on top, leaving a small rim around the edge. Crumble lumps of the remaining polenta mixture over the fruit with your fingertips, and don’t worry if the rhubarb isn’t all covered. Scatter over the Demerara sugar. Place on the hot baking sheet and bake for forty-five to fifty minutes, then cool a little before attempting to remove from the tin. Serve in slices, with the reserved rhubarb juice.

total: 1 hour 30 minutes
preparation: 10 minutes
cook: 75 minutes

*=Affiliate-Link to Amazon
IHCC
 
 
For all other great May Potluck! entries visit the I heart cooking clubs site
 
 
 
more Nigel Slater recipes
more recipes in English