Showing posts with label blood oranges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blood oranges. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Baked feta with beetroot and chickpeas

I'm always on the lookout for good, healthful recipes that are easy and will provide leftovers for lunch. As I work in an office with one grungy microwave servicing many, many people, if that lunch doesn't have to be warmed up, all the better.

I'm also a big fan of food writer Nigel Slater, and so, when I stumbled across his recipe for a salad of feta and beets, I was intrigued enough to give it a try.

The recipe seemed to combine things I likeed, and I already had the chickpeas and blood oranges on hand, so all I needed to get was the feta and beets. I took more than few liberties with the intial instructions, but I think my version turned out just fine.

I used far fewer chick peas than called for in the recipe, and less cheese as well (400 g is a heck of a lot of cheese -- especially for two servings!). And I skipped the mint and opted just for parsley instead.

I must say that the salad is best when the feta is warm and wobbly. Let me just say that a baked slab of feta, draped in thyme and olive oil will be a revelation for you. It certainly was for me.

The salad kept very well for lunch the next two days (this made a lot), though the beet juice stained all the chick peas a lovely scarlet red and tinged the cheese pink as well. If you don't mind a purple meal, this could be the ticket for you.

BAKED FETA WITH BEETROOT AND CHICKPEAS
Serves 2

For the chickpeas:
2 medium beetroot *I used three
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
3 small shallots *I used red oninon
1 tbsp Dijon mustard *I used grainy mustard
a pinch of sugar
5 tbsp olive oil
2 tbsp chopped parsley
1 tbsp chopped mint
1 x 400g can of chickpeas, drained and rinsed *I used peas cooked from dry, probably about a cup or so total
2 blood oranges


For the baked feta:
400g feta *be warned..this is a lot
a few sprigs of thyme
a little olive oil

Trim the beetroot but do not peel them. Boil them in deep water (or bake wrapped in foil) for about 40 minutes, till tender. Peel, cut into thick wedges and leave to cool.

Meanwhile, set the oven at 200C/gas mark 6. Place the feta in a small baking dish, add the thyme leaves and trickle over a little olive oil. Bake for 15-20 minutes or until the cheese is soft and wobbly.

For the dressing, put the vinegar in a small bowl, stir in a ½ tsp of salt, then peel and very finely chop the shallots. Add the shallots to the dressing with the mustard and sugar, then beat in the olive oil. Stir in the chopped parsley, mint and chickpeas. Season with black pepper.

Peel the blood oranges and slice them thinly. Divide the dressed chickpeas between two shallow bowls. Add the oranges and beetroot. Divide the warm feta between the dishes. Pour over any juice from the baking dish (there may be very little) or trickle with a little fruity olive oil.

P.S. I recently read Nigel Slater's Eating for England, which is a collection of playful stories and recollections about the British and how they eat. It's a charming account of culinary icons, not all of which will be familiar to Canadians, but the affection with which Slater writes crosses borders.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Blood orange tart

Now that spring is finally here, I guess I should write about a winter fruit recipe I made a few months ago (okay, so the seasonal segue isn't the greatest, but it's been a long week).

Anyhoo, I'm a big fan of blood oranges for their beautiful colour and their seemingly constant supply at my neighbourhood Farm Boy. I came across this recipe and was inspired to recreate it just as soon as I finished drooling over the photos.

The pastry is a cinch to whip up, and it baked into a lovely, crispy display for the bejewelled fruit. I must say the preparation of the oranges is a bit fussy, in that you have to tediously segment so many of them, but the purple-stained fingers and hands were well worth the end result. I love rustic tarts for their intrinsic handmade quality, and this one produced a manageable sized dessert as well. Very good for just a handful of people.

I'm not sure I'd bother with the salted caramel sauce again, though I might give it another try as I think I burned the sugar a bit. A spoon or two of thinned out dulce de leche would be an equally yummy substitute.


My orangina rustica!