Preperation time 20 mins, plus cooking.
Serves 6.
Take advantage of Gramma pumpkin season in Autumn/Winter to make this delicious pumpkin pie or a pumpkin cheesecake.
Good quality shortcrust pastry, lined into a 18cm pastry tin and baked blind at 200c until golden (approx 15 mins)
1kg gramma pumpkin, peeled chopped into large peices and steamed until tender then cooled a little
2 lemons juiced
2 tbspns orange zest
2 eggs and 1 egg yolk lightly beaten
1 cup light muscovado sugar (or substitute brown sugar)
1/2 tspn freshly grated nutmeg
1/2 tspn ground cloves
2 tspns ground cinnamon
1/2 currants (we suggest naturally dried Tabletop grapes) warmed with 2 tbspns brandy and left to soak
Heat oven to 220C.
Add pumpkin with the rest of the ingrediants and mix thoroughly and add to pastry case, smooth top.
Bake for 10 mins, reduce heat to 180C then bake for a further 10-15 mins.
Serve warm or cold with double cream or cream frache.
Preparation time 15 mins
Serves 6
A delicious and impressive salad that can be served as a starter or a main and takes advantage of autumn produce.
2 large ripe pomegranates
6 duck breasts
2 lemons, juiced
3 tablespoons good quality balasamic vinegar
1/2 tspn finely zested orange
2 radicchio heads leaves washed and then chopped
500g walnuts, dry roasted in a pan over medium heat and then roughly chopped
Lightly score the skins of the duck breasts, with a sharp knife and season well with salt and pepper.
Halve pomegranate and remove seeds then place in a bowl with salt, pepper and 2 tbspns lemon juice, orange zest and 1 tbspn olive oil.
Lay the duck breasts, skin side down, in a large, heavy-based dry frying pan and gradually turn up the heat. Fry for 5-10 minutes until most of the fat has rendered from and the skin is golden brown.
Turn over and lightly brown the other side for a couple of minutes or until the duck breasts feel slightly springy when pressed. Remove from the pan and add balsamic vinegar, 2 tbspns lemon juice and 2 tbspns olive oil. Remove from balsamic, and then slice breasts.
Mix raddichio and pomegranate, plate then drizzle with balsamic from duck, season to taste. Top with duck slices and sprinkle with roasted walnuts.
Preparation time 20 mins, plus 4-8 hours for quince cooking
Serves 6
This recipe might seem like a lot of work is required but cooking quinces is worth it! Double the poached quinces recipe and eat leftover quinces for up to 2 weeks for breakfast or dessert. Poached quinces can also be added to cakes or tarts.
Poached Quinces
6 quinces washed and peeled and cut into sixths, cores reserved
1 vanilla bean
1 stick cinnamon
juice of 1 lemon
9 cups water
4 1/2 cups sugar
Crumble Topping
100g plain flour
65g brown sugar
50g ground walnuts, for best results shell fresh walnuts then blitz in a food processor (you can substitute ground almonds)
30g walnuts, lightly toasted in a frypan with a 1 tbspn caster sugar and roughly chopped
75g butter chopped
1 tbpsn finely grated orange zest
Quince Icecream
1/2 litre good quality vanilla icecream (or make your own)
1 cup reserved quince poaching liquid reduced to a syrup over medium heat to 1/3 cup strained and cooled
Poached Quinces
Preheat oven to 150C.
Heat water and sugar in a large heavy based saucepan until sugar has dissolved.
Place cores in a piece of muslin and add to saucepan with quinces and tie, vanilla bean, cinnamon and lemon juice. Make sure sugar syrup covers the quinces otherwise add a little more water and sugar (2 parts water to 1 part sugar). Cover with a baking paper cut to fit and a lid and cook for 4-8 hours until quince is deep red, do not stir. Cool. Poached Quinces will keep covered in syrup in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
Remove approximately 3/4 of quince pieces and place in one large buttered or six individual baking dishes.
Crumble
Preheat oven to 180C
Combine flour, sugar, ground and chopped nuts in a bowl. Rub in butter and rind using fingertips until mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. (You can double this or any crumble mixture and freeze half for later use as a quick dessert.)
Spread crumble mixture over quinces and bake for 45-50mins nntil crumble is golden and bubbling.
Serve with Quince Icecream or vanilla icecream and double cream.
Quince Icecream
Remove icecream from freezer and soften slightly mix in reduced quince syrup, return to freezer for 30 mins or until needed.
Preperation time 10 mins
Serves 6 as a appetiser
Don’t be daunted by cooking with zucchini flowers they are quite easy to prepare and cook and make a delicious and impressive appetiser. Experiment with different cheeses and herbs including ricotta, feta and goats cheese.
12 zucchini flowers
Stuffing
200g chevre, we suggest Udder Delights Chevre
4 tbspns grated parmesan, plus extra for serving
1 egg lightly beaten
2 slices good quality stale bread roughly crumbled into crumbs
1 tbspn chopped chives
1 tbspn chopped dill
Batter
2 cups self raising flour
300ml beer
1 tspn salt
sunflower or vegetable oil for frying
To prepare batter sift flour into a bowl, make a well in the centre and whisk in salt and enough beer that mixture is runny and smooth, leave batter to rest for 2 hours, 30 min is ok if that is all you have.
To prepare zucchini flowers, gently open flower and remove the stigma, stamen and pollen tube (everything inside the petals).
To prepare stuffing crumble chevre into a bowl, add bread crumbs, egg, and mix well, then add herbs.
Using a teaspoon open flowers and fill with mixture until pleasantly stuffed. Close petals over the stuffing. Place flowers on a plate, this step can be done a few hours in advance.
Heat enough oil to come 2/3 up the sides of a medium saucepan until it reaches approximatly 180C, if you don’t have a thermometer oil should be just about at simmering point. Cook one flower first to check temperature gently place flower petals first into the oil holding the other end of the zucchini for a few seconds while petal is in the oil so the flower doesn’t sink to the bottom. Then gently drop the other end into the oil. Flower should take a few minutes to go golden brown, remove and place on paper towel. If temperature is hot enough to brown flowers in a few minutes continue to cook flowers in batches.
Once all the flowers are cooked, plate, sprinkle with extra grated parmesan and serve while still hot.
Australian Macadamias as well as Chestnuts, Hazelnuts, Walnuts and Almonds.
Custard Apple Sweet mature fruit.
Apples Sundowners have started our pick this week, crisp with a slightly tart flavour, for a sweeter apple choose Fujis.
Oranges Aussie Navels from SA are superb, Aussie Valencia’s are coming to an end but still good for juicing.
Papaya Good value whole papaya.
Pomegranate Great year for Pom’s continuing, season ending soon.
Mandarins Small and large Imperials good value.
Quinces Still very good.
Pumpkin Gramma pumpkin has started. The pick for pumpkin pie, cheesecake and other sweet pumpkin dishes. NSW pumpkin season continues.
Raddichio Treviso has started. Bitter variety good for salads, sauteeing and risotto.
Garlic Last weeks for Aussie garlic until Spring.
Beans Local Sydney Broad Beans available.
Peas Very good quality.
Leeks Demand is strong for small and large leeks.
Baby Vegetables Baby beetroot and turnip bunches.
Tomatoes Prices are high.
Potatoes Victorian Sebagoes the pick.
Fennel Good quality bulbs at a reasonable price.
Chrysanthum’s good spider, disc bud and field varieties. Proteas and leucadendron’s good range available.
Quince Fry shallots and grated quince in butter and olive oil until golden add blanched cavolo nero and lemon juice, great with roasted or grilled meats.
Broad Beans Fry pancetta until crispy and mix with boiled podded broad beans, goats cheese, mint, lemon juice and olive oil, serve as a starter or serve on top of toasted bread.
Radicchio Treviso Saute 1 quartered apple in olive oil for approx. 5 mins, add sliced radicchio and cook until wilted add a little chopped thyme and cider vinegar and serve with pork or duck.
Preparation time 15 mins, plus chestnut preparation time
Serves 4
A delicious salad by itself or with left over roast chicken or a panfried duck breast or pork chop. To get chestnuts to the peeled stage first score, then simmer in water for 15 mins and then remove the outer shell and the inner shell while chestnut is still warm.
2 handfuls washed curly endive leaves, broken into pices
2 handfuls washed radicchio leaves
1 small handful pancetta cut into small pieces, or subsitute bacon
1/2 bunch shallots finely chopped
250g peeled chestnuts (approx 500g whole chestnuts)
2 tspns dijon mustard
1/3 cup walnut (or other nut oil)
1 tspns red wine vinegar
2 slices sourdough bread, toasted, buttered and cut into cubes, make just before needed so they are still warm
pepper
Arrange salad leaves on a large plate or invidual plates.
Saute pancetta over medium heat in a frypan until crisp remove pancetta, leaving oil in pan, and spread over leaves.
Cook whole chestnuts in the same pan for a few minutes and then add to salad.
Add shallots to pan cook for a couple of minutes then add oil and mustard to pan and then vinegar.
Pour hot dressing over salad, sprinkle with cubed bread and season with pepper to taste.
Australian Chestnut season has started. We have easy peel chestnuts from a local Lake George farmer. Use in savoury or sweet dishes, they can be made into soup, used in salads, pureed and used as a tart filling. To use chestnuts they are first scored, then cooked in order to soften the skin to enable peeling, peeled and then they may be cooked again. To score hold the nut flat on a board and score the skin in a cross, a stanley knife works best. Once scored chestnuts can be simmered for 15 mins, roasted or barbequed at 180c for 2o mins, deepfried at 180C for 1 minutes or microwaved for 5-6 mins. Peel chestnuts while they are still warm. Once peeled chestnuts are ready to use if the recipe involves further cooking or otherwise chestnuts can be further cooked by simmering in water or milk for 10-15 mins until tender.
Serves 4
Preparation time 10 mins, plus cooking.
A very easy dessert that can be prepared up to baking in advance, leftovers are also delicious.
6 Large plums
100ml orange juice (or water)
100ml white wine
1 vanilla bean
1 cinnamon stick
100g unsalted butter
12 Digestive biscuits (stocked at Wiffens)
4 tspns sugar
150ml plain yoghurt
150ml double cream
Preheat oven to 150C
Melt butter and then roughly crumble digestives into the butter, crumbled biscuits should all be coated with butter .
Halve the plums and place cut side up in a baking dish where they fit snugly.
Sprinkle sugar evenly over the plums, then stuff with biscuit filling.
Pour wine and juice around the plums add half the vanilla bean and the cinnamon stick.
Bake plums in oven until they are tender, if filling starts to burn cover with foil.
While plums are cooking mix together cream and yoghurt with seeds from half the vanilla bean.
Serve plums with vanilla yoghurt cream or icecream.
Serves 4
Preparation time 15 minutes, plus cooking.
Who doesn’t love steak and roast potatoes and kale is a perfect match. The secret to these crispy roast potatoes is boiling them first and not using any salt when baking, for a healthier less rich option omit the sauce.
7 Dutch Cream potatoes washed, peeled and quartered or halved depending on size
1 bunch kale, finely sliced and washed
3 cloves garlic finely chopped
4 good quality sirloin steaks
Olive oil
Salt and Pepper to taste
2 tbspns Essential Cuisine Classic Beef Jus (Wiffens new Product can substitute water)
2 tspns seeded mustard
2 tbspns cream
100ml water
100ml Essential Cusine Classic Beef Jus (or subsitute red or white wine)
Preheat oven to 190C. Place the potatoes in a saucepan of hot water over medium heat. Bring to the boil and cook until potatoes are not quite tender, ie a fork will quite easily travel through the first third of the potato but there is still resistance at the centre. Remove from heat and drain, shaking as you do so the surface of the potatoes is roughened up a little. Allow to cool and some moisture to escape. Add a couple of good slugs of olive oil to a baking dish, add potatoes mix so oil is evenly distributed then bake turning once for approximately 40 mins until potatoes are crisp and tender.
While potatoes are cooking remove steak from the refrigerator so they come to room temperature. When potatoes are almost ready heat 2 tbspns of olive oil in a large saucepan over medium heat , add garlic and cook for approximately 10 seconds, being careful not to burn the garlic, add kale and cook for a few minutes while stirring. Add jus or water and continue cooking until kale is wilted. Remove from heat, season to taste and put in a bowl covered with foil, and place in oven which has been turned off.
Season steak with salt and pepper and heat olive oil in a large frypan over high heat. When oil is smoking add steaks and cook for a couple of minutes on each side until steak are rare. Remove from heat and place steaks on a plate covered with foil.
For sauce-mix mustard, cream, jus and water in a jug. Place pan steaks were cooked in over medium heat and add mixed sauces. Bring to a simmer and cook until sauce has thickened and become glossy. Remove steaks from oven and add the juices from the plate. Remove from heat.
Plate potatoes on a plate with the steak on top of the kale, pour a small amount of sauce over steak and serve.
We have a number of new products lines including:
Eat Gourmet’s range of delicious organic award winning yoghurts. Eat Gourmet are a family-owned Australian company based on Sydney’s Northern Beaches making organic and all natural yoghurts- which means no artificial colours, flavours or preservatives; free from gluten and gelatine; low in sugar and fat, yet high in nutritional value.
Zokoko’s range of premium artisan Australian made chocolates, drinking chocolate and cocoa. Try Alto Beni organic which displays a delicate citrus and honey profile and has won a number of award including a Gold medal at the 3rd Annual Chicage Chocolate Tasting Panel Awards 2011.
Key Ingrediants Soups made in Sydney from quality ingrediants and perfect for cool Autumn days and nights.
Essential Cuisines wide range of Stocks and Jus from New Zealand.