Showing posts with label farmers markets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farmers markets. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Butternut Squash and Bacon Risotto



Having recently returned from the farmers market with a box full of local produce I decided to make a butternut squash risotto. The recipe calls for a two step process as you must make a soup before you can begin the risotto.  The soup is delicious as it is but can also be frozen to be used to make another risotto in the not so distant future.  This is a truly scrumptious one! 

Step One: 

Butternut squash soup with crisps. (Serves 3-4)

Ingredients for the soup:
  • 1 butternut squash
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • butter, to taste
  • 600ml/20fl oz vegetable stock, plus additional to loosen soup if desired
  • 1 heaped tsp hot smoked paprika
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper
Ingredients for the crisps:
  • reserved butternut squash peelings
  • drizzle olive oil
  • few drops of sherry vinegar
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped rosemary
Method:
  1. Peel the butternut squash and reserve the long strips of skin. 
  2. Discard the butternut squash pulp and chop the remaining butternut squash into chunks.
  3. Heat the olive oil in a large casserole dish, add the onion and butternut squash and plenty of butter (to taste) and cook until brown and caramelised,
  4. Pour over the stock.  Simmer for 20 minutes.  Remove from the heat, leave to cool slightly then blend using a food processor or hand blender to the desired consistency.
  5. Add hot paprika and season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper. 
  6. For the crisps, preheat the oven to 140c/275f/gas 1. 
  7. Place the reserved butternut squash peelings in a roasting trap and top with olive oil, sherry vinegar, chopped rosemary and put in the oven to cook for 20 minutes on a low heat to crisp up.
  8. Remove the crisps from the over and place on kitchen paper to absorb any excess oil.
  9. Serve the soup with the skin crisps.
Step Two: 

Butternut squash and bacon risotto (Serves 2) 

Ingredients:
  • 200ml left over butternut squash soup
  • 200ml vegetable stock
  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 100g/ 3.5 oz arborio rice
  • 4 tbsp grated parmesan 
  • 4-6 rashers of bacon
  • a sprinkle of hot smoked paprika
Method:
  1. Combine left over butternut squash soup and stock in a pan and warm through.
  2. Heat the olive oil in a pan over a low heat and soften the onion. 
  3. Dice bacon into small pieces and fry up with olive oil and onions until crispy.
  4. Separate bacon from majority of onion and remove bacon and set aside.
  5. Add the rice to the pan and cook through for 5 minutes.
  6. Ladle the stock into the rice pan at regular intervals, allowing rice to absorb each time.  Stir well each time the stock is added to the pan.  Continue this process until the rice is cooked through and soft.
  7. Add parmesan and mix through rice until you have a thick sticky consistency. 
  8. Remove risotto from pan and press into a small serving bowl before turning over onto a plate and topping with crispy bacon and a sprinkling of parmesan and hot smoked paprika. 

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

ST dereLictOUIS

St Louis, you overwhelm me.  Between the gorgeous Forest Park, French Colonial mansions, beautiful brick town houses, artsy hipster bars, farmers markers, green suburbs and the up market streets of Clayton there is a mess.  A huge mess.  A mess that I can't help but fixate on whenever driving around the city.  I've grown up and worked around the East End of London which has many of it's own problems and higher than desired rate of crime, but i've never seen anything like the city of St Louis before.  There are streets upon streets of derelict houses. factories, schools, hospitals and unmaintained roads.








One minute you are driving past a gated, far above upper class community, the next you are smack bang in the middle of a ghetto in the adjacent street.  It is awful to see how segregated the city is between the poor and the wealthy. The city comes across as segregated in other ways too.  At home everyone mixes together like a multicultural soup in London.  We all ride the tube, we all take the bus, we all have a freedom to walk into a place and not be made to feel unwelcome.

The cause:  The population of St Louis hit its peak in the 1950's with an estimated 856,796 people living within its borders.  In 2011 there was an estimated population of 318,069.  Over half the population of St Louis packed their bags in the past 60 years. It's incredibly sad to imagine exactly how many of the existing buildings must be entirely vacant now.  The people that could leave appeared to have along with their business's and jobs and the people that couldn't were likely left behind without much to keep them out of trouble. Crime statistics sky rocketed with St Louis winning an award for being the most dangerous city in the country for several years in row now.

If you look past the damage and despair you can see that there was once something quite special about this city.  Unfortunately, no importance is placed upon preserving the architecture of the past and too often you see buildings torn down after years of being left in wreck and ruin.  The most unfortunate part of it all is that I find it difficult to imagine that things will improve until he city is populated again and i'm not convinced there is a big enough draw to the city to encourage that to happen any time soon.