Chicken with Spring Vegetable Compote
/’ve added fava beans although they are not fresh in Canada yet. Green peas or even sliced dandelion greens would be a good substitute if you can get them.
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These recipes are developed, tested and re-tested until perfect. Try one at home tonight.
I used the Japanese Kuri squash which is a fiery red colour. It roasts well. You can use any drier variety of squash for this curry.
The best Scottish shortbread handed down through my family. Crumbly, sweet and buttery.
This dish has a salty, savoury sauce with a little bit of a kick. If you don't want the spice of the jalapenos, leave it out, and finely diced onion can be used instead of the shallots.
This is the one hors d’oeuvre that I keep being asked for time and time again. It’s crunchy, creamy, spicy and hits all the high spots.
Mushrooms and squash have a real affinity and this soup proves it. I like to use oyster mushrooms, but chanterelles, which I found at the supermarket this week, provide the best flavour.
The fifth taste, umami, has much to do with glutamate, an amino acid found in such foods as prosciutto, soy sauce and a number of cheeses. Umami can show up in your glass, too (fermentation is glutamate’s old friend).
When this recipe originally ran in The Globe and Mail, I received a lovely note from reader Barbara Zuchowicz. This dish reminded her of a wonderful meal she had in Italy: "It brought back joyful memories of a trip to Italy my late husband, an exceptional cook, and I took a number of years ago.
’ve added fava beans although they are not fresh in Canada yet. Green peas or even sliced dandelion greens would be a good substitute if you can get them.
Read MoreWild leeks freeze very well, so you can have them year-round. Pickling them is also a popular way to preserve their springtime taste, or you can make wild leek pesto and freeze it.
Read MoreThere are three steps to making this magnificent cake. You need to make (or buy) lemon curd (recipe follows), bake the cake and make an icing (recipe follows).
Read MoreFregola is a Sardinian pasta rolled into little balls, dried and then toasted, which gives it its distinctive nutty flavour. It is a perfect match in soups, mixed with seafood, or made like a risotto.
Read MoreThis recipe looks spectacular and it is easy to make.
Read MoreIt’s that time of year where peas are growing in my garden: snow peas, sugar snaps and shelling peas. Once the peas are harvested, the branches the snow peas grow on are wonderful in salads.
Read MoreThis recipe is inspired by a dinner I enjoyed at Charlie Palmer’s restaurant, Burritt Room + Tavern, in San Francisco. Based on the old style of meat-and-drink-heavy establishments that dotted San Fran in another era, it serves impressive cocktails and fun, trendy food.
Read MoreThis dish is simple and decadent. If spot prawns are not available, then use a 15- to 20 (per pound)-size shrimp preferably farmed organic. I prefer white shrimp to black tiger, which seem all texture and no taste to me.
Read MoreThese scallops are cooked on high heat which produces a perfectly cooked scallop, seared on the outside and opaque all the way through.
Read MoreSpot prawns usually come with the shell and head on, which is what makes them expensive. However, this recipe also works well for headless prawns and shrimp. The meat cooks inside the shell for maximum flavour and messy eating.
There are various ways of serving this very intense mousse. Drizzle a touch of a very peppery olive oil over it and a pinch of fleur de sel. Or make a sauce with chopped dried apricots simmered in a store-bought marmalade, a drop of orange juice and some Cointreau. Drizzle around mousse for the perfect chocolate orange taste.
Read MoreThis recipe features spicy chicken with the warmth of Brazil in it. Brazilian food has many outside influences, from Japanese to other Asian cultures, because of its wide immigration from other countries. It makes the food interesting and flavourful. The spice in this dish is jalapeno which gives a milder heat than other chilies.
Read MoreA sweet tangle of onions and shrimps with spicy overtones make this an exceptional dish. Use large shrimp (15 to 20 to a pound or 450 grams) to protect against overcooking.
Read MoreI have childhood memories of rhubarb just picked from the garden and Mum making this rhubarb sponge. Rich and caramel-like with a moist sponge on top, it beats all the rhubarb desserts I know.
Read MoreBison is a rich, lean, grass-fed organic meat that delivers great taste and has fewer calories than beef.
Read MoreRed quinoa has more texture than white and has a nuttier flavour.
Read MoreThis is the perfect salad to serve with chicken. It’s crisp, soft, rich and cool.
Read MoreI am learning not to overdo marinades. Always make sure there is oil and nothing sugar-based.
Read MoreIf only thick stalks of asparagus are available, peel the stalks. Blanch in boiling water for 2 minutes, drain and run under cold water until cold. If you have thin stalks, do not peel them, and blanch for only 1 minute.
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© 2018, Lucy Waverman.