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Lentil Shepherd’s Pie

18 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by Zoli in British, comfort food, kids, Vegetarian

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Tags

easy family meal, easy vegetarian recipes, lentils, mashed potatoes, shepherd's pie, vegetarian mains

lentil vegetarian shepherd's pie
So I moved house. Which took ages. And although I did a lot of cooking during this time, I didn’t have time to do much else and that is what took so long to get back to this little project.

It was a cold wet day and something rustic, something countrified, like a shepherd’s pie was in order. I call it shepherd’s pie or cottage pie even though it is not made with lamb or beef; it is made with the lovely lentil. To me, rustic food means inexpensive, comforting and flexible. It can be made with whatever you have to hand. For example, I was out of celery and peas but I did have mushrooms, carrots, corn and peppers. I do love cooking this kind of food. You get to chuck it all in and adjust as you go.

I have made this recipe so many times now that it’s soaked into my fingertips which prepare it on autopilot. I cannot locate the original recipe or exact measurements but I hope my estimates will serve you well enough.

Ingredients
For the mash
6 med-sized floury potatoes or mix of potatoes and yams (I used waxy and they were not as fluffy)
butter and milk for mashed potatoes
mature or sharp cheddar grated
salt and pepper to taste

For the sauce
1 cup of puy or black lentils (I used black)
2 or 3 cloves garlic chopped
1 small onion chopped
1 large carrot chopped
1 celery chopped
4 to 6 mushrooms chopped (dried mushrooms work really well)
1/2 a pepper chopped
1/2 cup frozen peas and corn
1/2 teaspoon thyme
1/2 vegetable bouillon cube
soy sauce or amino braggs to taste
olive oil
pepper

*Optional: make the lentil mixture a red sauce by adding strained tomatoes, passata or even some tomato puree to taste

potatoes potatoes potatoes

buttery mashed potatoes

First make the mashed potatoes. Boil till tender, add milk, a fat chunk of butter, salt and pepper to taste. Leave the skin on or off. Season them well and add strong grated cheese for extra flavor. (The mash can be made more interesting by adding other root vegetables such as turnips, rutabaga, parsnip or sweet potato. Whatever strikes your fancy.)

Wash the lentils, add about twice as much cold water, bring to boil and then simmer for about 30 minutes. Add more water if necessary or strain out any excess water once they are tender. Don’t cook them to a mush; they should be tender and chewy. While they are cooking, get out the other ingredients and complete all the prepping and chopping.

Or just have a glass of red wine and watch the rain coming down. Tra la la.

cooked lentils for vegetarian shepherd's pie

To the frying pan!

chopped vegetables for veggie shepherd's pie

A generous glug of olive oil. Rustic! Dump the chopped vegetables in, but not the frozen peas and corn (and not the tomato passata if you are using). Turn the heat down and saute gently till the vegetables are soft.

Add the lentils and some cold water. Add a little at a time to keep the consistency like a bolognese sauce for pasta or like a chili. The lentil sauce should not be dry.

Add the thyme, pepper, soy sauce or liquid amino braggs, 1/2 bouillon cube. Taste and adjust the seasoning if need be. Simmer for a minute or two and add in the frozen peas and corn (and the tinned chopped tomatoes or passata if using). Again, eyeball it so that it doesn’t turn into a soup.

Preheat oven to 375.

Assembly time!

Using a large baking dish, pour the lentil mixture in and begin covering with the mashed potatoes. Once it is mostly covered, go over the potatoes gently with a fork to smooth them down and eliminate any gaps.

lentil vegetarian shepherd's pie, ready for the oven

Dot the top of the mashed potatoes with cold butter and bake in the oven until the top is golden brown. Around 40 minutes. My 8-yr old set the table and we ate this with a simple salad and a little bread and butter in our cozy kitchen. Enjoy!

Shepherd's pie and a simple salad. Family style.

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Pastry for eclairs, cream puffs and all sorts of fancy Frenchiness

24 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by Zoli in dessert, french, kids, party bites, pastry

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cream puffs with chocolate glaze

I’m kind of on a French kick at the moment–or French inspired anyway. I have plans to face several of my cooking fears, for example I am terrible at poached eggs and hollandaise (or berenaise, or you name the naise). But today, it’s the cream puff. Choux paste (or pate a choux) plus a custardy cream plus a chocolate glaze. Or berries. Or chestnut cream. And on and on…

This pastry is the basis for many lovely things such as eclairs, french crullers, profiteroles, croquembouches, beignets (although the recipe I use for beignets is not traditional) and so much more. The big difference between beignets and choux pastry is beignets are deep fried and choux pastry is baked–or rather steamed–in the oven. Healthier, no? No. Because you then stuff it with cream and drench it in chocolate.

ingredients for choux pastry, pate a choux

If you google it there are many recipes out there for ‘basic choux paste’ or ‘how to make the perfect choux paste’ and guess what? they’re all quite similar. This is what I did for about 30 cream puffs.

Ingredients

1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup water
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 tbsp extra fine granulated sugar
1 stick unsalted butter, cubed
1 cup flour (I used bread flour, but you don’t have to)
1 cup eggs, loosely beaten (I used 4 large eggs)

I plan on sharing my mistakes with you so that you won’t mess up as I totally did! My first mistake was not reading the recipe all the way through before I started. Doh! Second mistake: Although I had all my ingredients prepped I did not have all my equipment to hand and this hurt me when it came time for the cream filling. I was also cooking Ruth Reichl’s hashbrowns at the same time (I truly was!). So get out all your trusty appliances beforehand.

1. Begin by heating up the milk, water, sugar, salt and butter.

2. As soon as it boils, take it off the heat and add in the flour. I sifted the flour in and made a mess all over my stove. But it was fine.

boiling milk for choux paste, pate a choux

Stir the flour in until well mixed and you have something that resembles a giant ball of buttery play dough.

adding eggs to choux pastry

3. Whisk in the eggs, a little at a time, until you have a soft batter with wet sheen to it. Or add this to your Kitchen Aid and use a paddle attachment to combine the egg in stages. Using a hand whisk worked for me and bonus, I didn’t have to clean a Kitchen Aid.

Keep an eye on the batter. I may have added just a drop too much egg. Yes, this is a soft wet batter but it needs to hold its shape once it’s been piped onto the baking tray. Here’s mine.

choux pastry ready for the oven

4. Preheat the oven to 350 and pipe the batter onto the baking trays covered with baking parchment. They can be close together. The trick to these pastry puffs is to steam them in the oven. So do not open the oven door to check on them! (You will do this at the very end when they are nearly cooked.) Spy on them through your oven window around the 20 minute mark and see if they’ve puffed up. Mine did not the first time and I took them out too soon.

Here’s a sad little picture of my fail.

Choux pastry fail

5. Once they look like they’ve puffed up, crack the oven slightly and let them dry out and the tops crisp a little. When I let mine cook a little longer they turned out alright. (For eclairs, just pipe out a long tube shape and cook about 5 minutes longer.)

Here’s my success!

choux pastry success

6. Now you can create whatever you like. Make a cream filling, glaze them, fill them with whipped cream and strawberries, or nutella. They were very good with nutella, but what isn’t?

I decided to try the cream filling.

cream puffs, choux

Ingredients for pastry cream

For first phase:
1 cup milk
1/4 cup cream
1/4 cup extra fine sugar
vanilla bean (ideally) or vanilla extract (shhh!)

For second phase:
3 large egg yolks
2 tbsp extra fine sugar
3 tbsp cornstarch

If you’re going to go all the way and make the cream filling, you will need: a medium or large-sized pot, a large bowl and an electric mixer.

1. Bring the milk, cream and sugar and vanilla bean (or add tsp of vanilla extract at the end) to boil.

2. With an electric mixer, whisk the egg yolks and the 2 tbsp extra fine sugar and then whisk in the cornstarch Do not leave the milk boiling for a long time while you do this! It will burn on the bottom of the pan. This should all be a quick process.

3. Ladle some of the boiling milk to the eggs and keep whisking to combine and bring the eggs up to temperature. Needless to say, you do not want to have scrambled eggs. You want a hot eggy liquid.

4. Pour the egg mixture into the pot of hot milk. Bring to boil again and whisk quickly until it turns into a thick but runny liquid. (If not using a vanilla bean, add the vanilla extract at this stage). It should look like this.

making the pastry cream

5. Chill on ice or put in the fridge to thicken up more. You can flavor with a liqueur as well.
6. When the cream is cooled down and nice and thick, pipe it into the pastries.

Chocolate glaze.

I did not use a recipe, I just mixed in nice cocoa powder with powdered sugar, a little melted butter and a drop of vanilla. Or you can melt nice chocolate, mix it with heavy cream and leave to cool and thicken.

Glaze your pastries and enjoy!

cream puffs with chocolate

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