Welcome



These are tried, tested and much loved recipes. Our families and friends are always unselfish and devote themselves to taste-testing these delicious creations and demand them repeatedly time and time again.

Our aim is to share with you our favourite meals and the little tricks and tips we have learnt along the way.
Time is precious.
Food is expensive.

Both are resources too valuable to waste.

We want to share recipes that deliver delicious, nourishing meals - making the most of your time and ingredients.

Life is way too short for bland, disappointing food.
So ... Feed your inner cook - and Enjoy!

Thursday, 30 March 2017

Smoked Salmon and Dill Risotto


Risotto is so versatile - choose your favourite ingredients to cook and create a delicious meal that is comfort food, flavoursome and satisfying.  This recipe is a good example of a little bit of something special going a long way in a risotto. If you are not a fan of smoked salmon, simply change it for a little cooked chicken or mushrooms if you prefer. 

Risotto making cannot be rushed, it is gentle, soothing and relaxing. Listen to some music and sip a little glass of wine.    Enjoy!

Smoked Salmon and Dill Risotto by Feed Your Inner Cook
Preparation               5 minutes
Cooking            20 - 30 minutes of relaxed, routinely stirring the rice
Serves                       4

Ingredients
1 cup Arborio Rice
4 cups (1 litre) Salt-Reduced Chicken or Vegetable Stock (may not need all)
1/2 cup dry white wine  
1 tablespoon Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1 tablespoon Butter
1 onion - very finely diced
2 cloves garlic - crushed
2 stalks celery - finely sliced PLUS a few of the soft inside leaves shredded
pinch celery seeds
pinch fennel seeds
tiny pinch sumac (optional)
200 gram smoked salmon - roughly chopped into pieces
1 1/4 cups frozen green peas - prepare at start so defrosted a little when adding
small handful fresh dill - leaves .  Reserve a little for garnish    OR   parsley
1/4 cup Grated Parmesan Cheese  plus extra for garnish
Cracked black pepper
extra salt - to taste
Squeeze of fresh lemon - at the end - just a little 

Method
Heat the stock and wine in a separate saucepan.  Keep on simmer.  The warm liquid is needed for absorption by the rice.  Stock must be warm, not boiling. It is added 1 ladle at a time.

Use a deep wide pan - not too shallow or rice will spill out when you stir, not too wide or liquid will evaporate too quickly.  Large saucepan/stockpot usually works well.
The idea is the 'beating' of the rice against the pan sides brings out the starch and softens the grains. The regular stirring (not too forceful) helps make risotto creamy. I like to use a wooden spoon with a flattish base.

Heat the oil and butter together gently.
Stir in the onion. Cook gently until softens then add the garlic and seeds
Stir the rice into buttery onions for 2 mins approx. so Rice starts to become  translucent

Use a ladle to add 1 ladle of stock to the rice.  Now stir it in well.  The rice will slowly absorb the liquid. Don't allow pan to dry out, just keep stirring, let rice soak up the stock then add another ladle - one at a time.  Repeat until most of the stock is used. 

When about half the stock is in the pan - add the celery and stir in

Once most of the stock has been absorbed - have a taste - if the rice still has a hard centre you will need more liquid - hot water will be fine.  Just add a ladle and repeat the stirring process.  You want the risotto to have a creamy taste but not be sloppy. Different packets of rice vary and need more or less liquid.  That is why you add a ladle at a time, but generally the 4 cups of stock are needed.

Stir the peas through and add the sumac if using
Once the rice grains have softened to taste - the risotto is almost ready
quickly stir in the salmon pieces, fresh dill and shredded celery leaves along with cracked pepper
Taste and check - rice should be soft, and creamy
Add the parmesan reserving a little for garnish.
Taste again.  More salt?  more pepper?
Just before serving - squeeze a tiny amount of fresh lemon over the risotto and serve garnished with the reserved dill and parmesan.
                                    Enjoy!    Colleen





Thursday, 23 March 2017

Crispy duck breast with vegetables braised in creamy mustard sauce

I rarely cook dishes with rich sauces but sometimes it is great to enjoy the creamy flavour especially with French Mustard and caraway. Cabbage is the main vegetable but feel free to add a variety of greens to the dish.   Enjoy!

Crispy Duck with creamy mustard vegetables by Feed Your Inner Cook



Serves                      4     -    1 small duck breast per person
Preparation            10 minutes
Cooking                 30 minutes including oven baking time

Ingredients
4 small duck breasts -    pat the skin dry.  Score the fatty skin in a criss cross pattern,  avoiding cutting into the flesh.

2 potatoes – very very finely sliced and par-cooked for a few minutes, then dried.
pinch of Salt
1 small onion – finely sliced
2 cloves garlic – crushed
Handful mushrooms – sliced
¼ small cabbage   - very finely shredded
Handful baby spinach leaves
1 bunch asparagus  -  remove the tip with about 2 inches stem then cut remaining thicker stem into 1 – 2 cm pieces  -  the tips will be added close to the end.  The stems take longer to cook
Baby green beans – cut into 1 – 2 cm pieces
Splash of Extra Virgin Olive Oil  (optional)
2 Pinches caraway seeds
Pinch celery seeds
2 teaspoons French wholegrain mustard
Splash brandy (optional)
Tin Cannellini beans – rinsed and drained
Pepper – add generously to taste
Cream  (I sometimes use a longlife reduced fat cream)

Method
Preheat the oven to 190 - 200˚C.  Have a tray with baking paper ready for duck.
On a separate prepared tray place the dried potato slices ready to be brushed with the rendered duck fats.

Heat a wide deep non-stick pan over medium-high heat.  Do NOT add oil.
Season the scored dried duck skin with a little salt.
Place the duck breasts skin side down in the heated pan.
Leave the duck to cook without moving.  Cook the skin side for 3 minutes until golden
Turn over and cook flesh side for 1 minute
Remove from pan and place onto the tray and finish cooking in oven approx. 8 minutes. 
Check at 6 minutes.   When cooked, remove from oven tray and allow to rest on a warm plate, uncovered.

While the duck is in the oven:
Paint the prepared potato slices with a little of the rendered duck fat then immediately bake in the oven.

Keep and re-warm the fat in the same pan
Saute the onions until softening then add the garlic and mushrooms continuing to cook through.
Stir in the finely shredded cabbage and wilt over the heat
Add the baby spinach leaves, asparagus stems and green bean pieces
If it becomes too dry add a splash of Olive oil and continue cooking until cabbage tender
Stir in the mustard, caraway seeds, celery seeds and splash of brandy.
Add the cannellini beans and heat through
Taste and grind in a generous amount of pepper.  Possibly a touch of salt too.
Pour in the cream – enough to make a silky sauce but not sloppy.

Plate the warmed duck breast, potato slices and creamy vegetables.

                                                Enjoy!   Colleen

Wednesday, 15 March 2017

Ham and Veggie Impossible Pie

Every Kindy fundraiser recipe book has a recipe for a savoury Impossible Pie – and with good reason!  It is the perfect ‘quick what can I cook for dinner’ recipe that delivers real crowd-pleasing family comfort food flavours. There is NO need to make a pastry crust – the flour added into the recipe forms a thin crust during baking.

It is so easy to make this pie with whatever you have to hand: swap the ham for bacon, cooked chicken, tinned fish or leave out and add more veggies.  Replace the zucchini with chopped broccoli or mushrooms. You get the idea – it’s a real standby and excellent for using up the odd veggies in the crisper.  Tasty, great for lunches the next day and always popular for those ‘bring a plate’ events. In summer I like to serve with a generous tomato and green salad or with warm veggies in winter.   Enjoy!  Colleen

Ham and Veggie Impossibe Pie by Feed Your Inner Cook

Preparation       5 – 10 minutes
Cooking           30 – 45 minutes depending on pan size
Serves              4 – 6     depending on how many veggies included

Ingredients
Note:  I tend to cut the firmer veg like onion and celery finely so they cook at same speed as rest
2 large slices of ham – cubed
1 small onion – very finely diced    OR   2 shallots  -  sliced.. .  May need to saute onion first
1 small zucchini – finely diced
¼ red capsicum – diced
1 stick celery – finely diced
2 handfuls baby spinach – roughly chopped   OR    baby kale leaves
½ cup frozen peas and corn
Herbs – your choice:  fresh basil leaves, parsley or thyme leaves
Small shake dried chilli flakes    OR   tiny smear of Wholegrain mustard   (optional)
Quick grind of fresh pepper   Note:  I do NOT add salt as the ham, cheese are salty
½ cup Plain Flour
1 ¼ cups Milk
4 eggs – lightly beaten together
1 cup grated cheese  (3/4 cup for mixing in  - then – ¼ cup for sprinkling on top
Few halved cherry tomatoes for topping

Method
Preheat oven to 180 -190˚ C 
Have all the ingredients chopped and ready
Lightly grease a pie dish
(mine is about 20cm wide at base PLUS I make an extra mini dish with any excess)
Using a large mixing bowl, whisk the milk into the flour ensuring there are no lumps.
Add the eggs and whisk to combine well.
Stir all the remaining ingredients into the egg mixture (Note – some of the cheese is needed for sprinkling over the top later)  and combine well to distribute evenly
Pour the mixture into the prepared dish (or dishes) 
Sprinkle with the reserved cheese and dot with the tomato halves.
Bake for approx. 30-40 minutes.  Check at 30 minutes with the tip of a knife into middle – will be firm and not oozy when cooked.    Smaller dishes will need less time. 
If needed, pop under a hot grill until top is golden. 
Serve with salad or vegetables of your choice.
                   Enjoy!   Colleen

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

Spaghetti Tomato Frittata

Rich tomato and vegetable based sauces are so versatile that I keep some in my freezer as a base for multiple dinner options.  Belinda Jeffery's recipe was the inspiration for this dish which makes a great change from 'spag bol' .  With or without meat, it is delicious, great for lunch the next day plus the optional Harissa adds a real tastebud kick!  Belinda Jeffery's cookbooks are packed with so many flavour packed recipes and I encourage you to explore her books that also celebrate the Northern NSW idyllic lifestyle.  Enjoy!


pasta spaghetti frittata Feed Your Inner Cook
pasta spaghetti frittata Feed Your Inner Cook
     

Serves            4   -  depends on quantity of pasta cooked
                       (this recipe makes extra sauce so you can freeze some for later)

Preparation    5 minutes 
Cooking         20 - 30 minutes for sauce ( also pasta cooked during this time) 
                       TIP:  sauce could be pre-cooked or use from reserved frozen storage

                       then 10 minutes for frittata on stovetop plus a few minutes under grill

Ingredients

Sauce
Australian Olive Oil
2 large onions - finely diced
2 cloves garlic - crushed
shake dried chilli flakes   OR 1/2 - 1 red chilli finely sliced
2 red capsicums - diced
4 - 5 ripe tomatoes - chopped
1 tablespoon Tomato Paste
2 tablespoons Sun-dried tomato pesto
1/2 teaspoon sugar  (optional)
1 - 2 tablespoons Red Wine Vinegar  (add 1 , cook, then taste and add more if needed)
Handful fresh basil leaves - torn  NB a little for the sauce, most in the frittata mix and a little for garnish  (reserve the small leaves for garnish)
Option
a little shredded ham or bacon, or 100 gram beef/pork mince

Spaghetti OR  Angel Hair pasta     100 - 150 gram  approx
Olive oil for tossing after drained

Frittata mixture
5 eggs
20 gram grated fresh Parmesan cheese
The reserved small Basil leaves
Australian Olive Oil
100 gram soft goat's cheese  OR  mild crumbly fetta  OR a little cheddar cheese grated
pepper to taste (optional salt - depends on saltiness of cheese used)

Harissa Yoghurt  to serve separately
1/4  - 1/2 cup greek yoghurt  mixed with 
1/4 - 1 tablespoon Harissa   (add a dash at a time for your taste preference)

Method   I use a 24cm frypan (with a lid) suitable for stovetop and also ovenproof (no lid needed in oven)

Cook the pasta according to packet directions until just al dente. Drain and stir with a splash of olive oil to stop strands sticking together. 
 
While the pasta is cooking - make the sauce.
Heat a little oil in pan add onion and cook gently on medium until softens.
Add the  garlic and chilli and meat if using.
Increase heat a little and stir in the capsicums,cooking for a few minutes
Mix in  tomatoes then the paste and pesto along with sugar and half the vinegar.
Reduce to low and cover with lid.  Simmer gently approx 10 -15 min.  
Sauce is cooked when most of liquid is absorbed.  Spoon will run through and mix will separate in pan.
Remove from heat.  Taste.  Add extra vinegar if needed.
Season with a little pepper and salt if needed.  Stir 1 tablespoon of basil leaves through.

TIP:  I use half of this sauce mixture with the pasta and save the remainder in the freezer for next time.

Using the pasta pan - toss the sauce through the prepared drained pasta and stir well.

Whisk the eggs parmesan, most of the torn basil, pepper and optional salt together.
Pour the frittata mixture into the pasta/sauce and gently combine using tongs.

Wipe the frypan.  Warm a little oil on medium low.  NB  preheat oven grill to High
Pour the pasta /sauce/frittata mixture into the warmed frypan.
Stir regularly and gently, lifting the eggy mix up slightly to allow uncooked mix underneath to cook.  Continue until egg on top is no longer runny but just cooked.  Remove from heat.
Crumble the cheese over cooked frittata
Place pan under grill until top dries a little and slightly golden - usually only a few minutes
Remove from heat and either serve from the pan or slide onto serving plate.
Serve with reserved small basil leaves and bowl of harissa yoghurt and fresh tomato salad.
                                              Enjoy!   Colleen











Wednesday, 1 March 2017

Sumac Chicken with pomegranate and sesame seeds

Pomegranates are one of my favourite fruits.  I even have a tree in the backyard!  The vibrant jewel juicy arils (the red 'seeds')  give colour, texture and a flavour explosion to a recipe.  Pomegranate Molasses is available at most supermarkets now and is an intense unique flavour.  Sumac is a spice that is lemony with a little pinch imparting a tangy taste.
This recipe was inspired by Rick Stein’s oven roasted chicken with sumac and is delicious served with salad, roasted sweet potatoes and a dollop of minty yoghurt.   Enjoy!

 
Sumac Chicken Pomegranate by Feed Your Inner Cook


Pomegranates growing at Maggie Beer's Farm SA  by Feed Your Inner Cook


Serves    4 for fillets  or   6 for chicken pieces
Time      1 – 4 hours marinating.   30 min – 1 hour cooking

Ingredients
4 chicken thigh fillets (quick option)   OR   preferably 1 chicken jointed into 8 pieces
Splash Olive Oil
Scattering of Sesame Seeds – white and/or black
Few chopped roasted pistachio nuts
Some fresh pomegranate arils for garnish and also in salad if possible
Mint leaves for garnish
Lemon wedges for optional squeeze
Optional salt and pepper to serve
Serve with Greek yoghurt mixed with dried mint, chopped fresh mint and pepper
Option:  dice up some sweet potato, drizzle with oil and roast on a tray while chicken is cooking

Marinade
2 tablespoons ground Sumac
Shake dried chilli flakes (1 use 1/2 teaspoon) adjust to your heat preference
1 tablespoon Tomato Paste
1 tablespoon Pomegranate molasses
2 garlic cloves – crushed
1 teaspoon Salt

Method
Place all marinade ingredients in a large plastic freezer bag and add chicken pieces.  Squeeze and rub will into the chicken.  Leave in fridge for at least one hour.
Preheat oven to 180 °C (fan)  or 200 °C
Place chicken in lightly oiled roasting pan.
Drizzle with a splash of Olive oil and scatter with sesame seeds.
Cook 20 – 30 minutes for fillets  (check at 20 minutes)  or 30 – 40 minutes for pieces.  Chicken piece juices need to run clear.
Garnish with the pistachios, pomegranate seeds and mint leaves.
Serve with fresh salad, roasted sweet potatoes, lemon wedges and yoghurt.
                             Enjoy!   Colleen