Showing posts with label seasonal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seasonal. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Winter Bites

Cook food, serve love.

As the snow fell last night we were busy working on some menu ideas for next week's pop-up.

Although it's bitter outside there are loads of wonderful, hearty flavours to warm the body and soul at this time of year. We've put together a lovely seasonal menu that seems all the better for the thick blanket of snow outside. There are so many ingredients that bring some light to these gloomier months, and we've been playing around with things like chicory, leeks, carrots, celeriac, oxtail, rhubarb, oranges, artichokes, mushrooms, Guinness, cloves, salsify, cauliflower, and purple sprouting broccoli to name a few.

A table has cancelled so we still have some places available for next Sunday's meal. Email us at WalbrookandAvon@gmail.com if you would like to come and find out what made it on to the menu.

Oxtail and ale pie.

Menu deliberation.

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Back on Broadway Market















After a few months off Walbrook & Avon return for the first of a series of summer-inspired pop-ups.

We are back at F. Cooke on Broadway Market, Hackney on Sunday 3 July at 2.00pm. We will be serving a seasonal menu in the unique 1930’s surroundings of the pie shop. Tickets priced at £25 per person are now on sale, and as usual this includes two alcoholic drinks.

Places are limited and to ensure fairness we operate on a first pay, first served basis.

If you would like to sample the delights of Walbrook & Avon on Sunday 3 July then please drop us an email at walbrookandavon@gmail.com and we will get back to you with further details and payment info.


We look forward to seeing you there.

Tuesday, 14 June 2011

We're still here...

...we know we've been really quiet of late, but we're still here.

Lots of busy weekends have been getting in the way of things but we are planning our next couple of dates and we will be popping up a few times before the summer's over!

Watch this space.

Polly and Paul

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

Sunday's menu and jars of chilli jam

We still have places left for Sunday's pop-up following a few drop outs. If you would like to come along please send us an email and we will get back to you with details.

We spent Sunday making a batch of our super tasty Walbrook & Avon chilli jam. If you would like to get your hands on a jar please come and see us at F. Cooke on Broadway Market on Sunday from about midday. Prices start at £3 a jar.


Walbrook & Avon, Sunday 13 February 2011


Pomegranate and orange Bellini
-
Leek and cheese tart with winter coleslaw
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Pork and celeriac stew with root mash and greens
(V. Swede risotto with roasted vegetables)
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Poached pear and chocolate pot
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Goat's cheese with Walbrook & Avon chilli jam

Tuesday, 1 February 2011

...We're Back



Walbrook & Avon started 2011 in fine style on Sunday with our first pop-up of the year. It was really nice to see a few familiar faces, along with lots of people new to Walbrook & Avon. It is great to now have a few diners we can call regulars.

Our wintry menu went down so well we will be back doing it all again in a couple of weeks. We return to F. Cooke on Broadway Market, Hackney on Sunday 13 February at 2.00pm. We will be giving people another chance to sample a seasonal menu served in the unique 1930’s surroundings of the pie shop. Tickets priced at £25 per person are now on sale. As usual the £25 includes two alcoholic drinks .

Places are limited and to ensure fairness we operate on a first pay, first served basis.

If you would like to sample the delights of Walbrook & Avon on Sunday 13 February then please drop us an email at walbrookandavon@googlemail.com and we will get back to you with further details and payment info.

We look forward to seeing you there.

Polly & Paul
Cook Food, Serve Love

Sunday, 17 October 2010

Recipe: A Simple Autumn Stew Recipe



As the temperature starts to fall and winter approaches stews come into their own. They are a versatile way of cooking that make the most of much of what is in season at this time of year.

Stews, in some form, feature prominently in the cuisines of many nations. From highly spiced, fragrant affairs in Malaysia, Vietnam and Japan, to the meat-laden hearty offerings from South America. In Turkey stews are widely available in Esnaf Lokantas, tradesman's canteens, where workers can eat homely meals for next to nothing. In France they have Beef Bourguignon, in Hungary they have Goulash, in Poland there is Bigos and throughout the Arab world there are many versions of tharid.

Here stews have traditionally been used as a frugal way of making the most of cheaper cuts of meat like oxtail and scrag end. They also tend to feature the more robust winter root vegetables that store well and cost very little. Pulses, barley and pasta add heart and substance, thickening potentially watery broths.

Stews have wonderfully restorative properties; they warm and comfort like few other meals can. They can also be left on the stove for hours in a single pot, making them very light on labour.

With a bit of imagination very humble ingredients can be lifted; stews are definitely more than the sum of their parts. Here swede, onion, butternut squash, carrot, yellow lentils and pearl barley are bought to life with Urfa chilli, sumac and thyme.

Urfa chilli comes from the town of Sanliurfa in eastern Turkey where darker, almost black chillis are dried in the sun and then sweated at nigth before being ground into dark sticky flakes. Urfa chilli has a moderate heat and a deep, almost smokey taste, it works very well in stews. It is also great in salads, on roasted meat and in tomato sauces. Sumac is a Turkish spice made from the small red berries of the Sumac shrub. It is a great spice that adds a tangy, warm depth to dishes. In London (especially in Hackney and Haringey) both are widely available in Turkish shops. Sumac can be found in some supermarkets and is well worth finding. The Urfa chilli in this recipe can be replaced with red chilli flakes.

A Simple Autumn Stew

Half of a small butternut squash
Quarter of a large swede
1 large white onion
Half a dozen or so Chantenay carrots (or 2 'normal' carrots)
1 cup of pearl barley
1/2 cup of yellow lentils
About 100g of spaghetti
1 tablespoon of sumac
1 tablespoon of Urfa chilli
1/2 teaspoon of a seasalt
a few large sprigs of thyme
a handful of sage
a handful of parsley
1 large clove of garlic



1. Start by covering the barley in cold water and bringing it to the boil. Once boiling, drain and again cover in cold water and bring to the boil. Repeat this again but allow it to simmer for about 30 minutes.



2. Whilst the barley is cooking peel and dice the carrots, butternut squash, onion and swede. Cook in a little olive oil in a large, heavybased saucepan or stockpot.



3. Next add the thyme leaves, chopped sage, Urfa chilli, chopped garlic, salt and sumac. Cook for a few more minutes on a medium heat until the vegetables start to colour.



4. Add the lentils and partially cooked barley and cover in a good amount of cold water. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and allow it to simmer for around 45 minutes.


5. When you are ready to eat bring the stew back to the boil, break the spaghetti into smaller strands and add to the stew. Stir and allow to simmer for about 10-15 minutes. Once the spaghetti is cooked, chop the parsley and add it just before serving so it retains it's colour. Adjust the seasoning and serve.