Tag: chicken stock

Chicken and dumplings

This looks horrible but honestly it was delicious

I have been asked to do a bit more on the feeding of small children and I do, as it happens, have some new things to say on this fabulously tricky subject.

So the situation is this: Sam will be one next week, (which is staggering considering he’s still such a massive, fat, melon-bummed baby who can’t crawl or anything), and will no longer eat puree and isn’t especially terrific at feeding himself. Or so I thought.

Because I am not terribly bright, I have always thought that one day babies go from being spoon-fed puree, to sitting down and eating giant Sunday roasts totally competently, on their own, with a knife and fork.

I thought there was something wrong with Kitty when she failed to do this. In fact, I now see that there is a torturous in-between stage where you have to put aside your bourgeoise expectations of keeping your children and their terrifying barbarism at arm’s length and get your hands dirty.

It has always struck me as bizarre that although as a species we live entirely unnatural lives – we fly in airplanes, have central heating, electric lights – when it comes to babies people go wild about everything being natural. You must co-sleep because it is natural, you must breastfeed exclusively because it is natural, you must chew up your kids’ food and spit it out of your mouth into theirs because it is natural. I’ll tell you what else is natural – dying of diphtheria, headlice and being murdered by Vikings.

But in this instance, I concede that if Sam is going to eat, I have to drop the fucking attitude.

So feeding Sam is now a three-pronged attack. I give him something large to hang on to and gnaw at, like a corner of bread, a triangle of hamburger, a ball of sausage; other small pieces of stuff are placed on his highchair tray, a bit of potato, pinches of chicken, pre-chewed (hurp) bits of serious meat like stewed beef or spare rib or whatever. Then from a bowl of meat, veg and carb I pinch together little combinations of food and feed him by hand.

For example, at lunchtime today I bought a chicken and avocado sandwich from Pret and gave him that; I tossed away the salady leaves, gave him some of the bread to chew on, pinched tiny bits of chicken up and put them on his tray and then mashed up marble-sized combinations of chicken, avocado and bread to post into his gob with my fingers.

It’s a very slow, rather messy process but the fact that he’s eating it, (and with the sandwich meaning I haven’t had to bloody cook anything), outweighs everything.

I also find that most mealtimes have a sort of arc of speed that you have to respect and have patience with. It takes Sam a while to get going and warm up – he spat out the avocado a few times and turned his head away from the offered chicken for a few minutes – then he decides he’s hungry and things descend into a sort of orgy of gobbling, finger sucking, licking, gaping mouths, trembling tongues. He wants to feed me, jamming things into my mouth and going “maaaah”, (just to check, I suspect, that I am not trying to poison him).

yes the bib is from Ikea. yes I know you have the exact same one

Then he slows down and starts launching things off his tray onto the floor, hanging his head over to see where it has gone. I usually take this as an indication that the savoury part of lunch is over. Today he got for his pudding half a slice of Pret banana cake (no icing), which he poked down with a speed and alacrity I haven’t seen since his father left for America. Then a yoghurt, then a 5oz bottle, then bed.

All this might seem obvious to everyone else, but I would never have believed you when Kitty was Sam’s age that I could have bought a sandwich and fed that to her for lunch. It would have halved my blood pressure. Or she might have refused to eat that, too.

A great success last night was a meal of chicken and dumplings, inspired by the song She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain (“Oh, we’ll all have chicken and dumplings when she coooooomes…”) Sam liked it a lot. He likes especially to hold on to a chicken bone like Bam-Bam and chew on it. Kitty was more reluctant about the dumplings, but she ate the chicken and I provided on the side some chopped cucumber and carrots for her to have with it.

Chicken and dumplings with gravy

6 chicken wings or 3 chicken thighs
85g self raising flour
40g beef suet
salt
parsley if you have it
about 150ml chicken stock
1 tsp plain flour

1 Roast the chicken pieces at 180 for 40min in a small tin that can also go on the hob.

2 Meanwhile make the dumplings – mix together the flour and suet with a large pinch of salt (if you want) and a sprinkling of parsley – then add some dribbles of water and bring this dough together until you get a soft consistency, not too dry. Shape them into four or six balls.

3 Steam these in a steamer or in a sieve over a pan of boiling water for about 20 minutes. They can sit in the steamer to keep warm until you’re ready for them (just turn the heat down).

4 Take the chicken out of the oven and put the pieces aside to cool. Sprinkle a teaspoon of plain flour over any juice or grease in the tin (there won’t be much, don’t worry about this) and mash it about until there is sort of a paste. Then pour over a splash of the chicken stock and mix this in. The pour over the rest of the stock and whisk over a medium heat until you get a gravy. You can add a dash of soy to this for a bit of extra flavour.

If you are thinking that this seems to be an awful lot of hassle for kids tea then you are right, it is. But once you’ve done it once, it will seem less of a hassle the next time – and the dumpling dough can be made in advance.

Try not to worry, if you too are at this stage of weaning, about waste. It’s just one of those things with kids, it’s impossible to get amounts exactly right. It’s also difficult to cook very tiny amounts of things, so compost and use leftovers where you can but beyond that, just put it in the bin and forget about it and make a donation to Oxfam to assuage your guilt.

Don’t not try out new things because your heart sinks at the idea of waste (as mine did with Kitty, which is why her meal repertoire is a bit thin). Children obviously have things that they’d rather eat than not and no child should be expected to eat everything – or, some days, to eat anything – but at the same time they will just eventually eat things if they come across them often enough.

For example Kitty and Sam eat toast with quite bitter marmalade because that’s what we eat; Kitty will drain the dregs of your espresso if you look the other way for a millisecond, because that’s what there is lying about the house. She will even, one time in three that it is offered, eat an entire floret of broccoli. I’ve always put it in front of her and not said a word about whether she eats it or not. Not like I’m so fucking brilliant, but it does work. Sometimes she’ll fancy it and nosh it down, other times not. I’m the same really.

Other things:

– To save time I will quite often cook a batch of rice up at either breakfast or during Sam’s lunchtime naps, which can then later be quickly fried off in a pan with some butter and frozen peas.

– New potatoes will cook in 20 min in an oven at top whack, and they can then be roughly mashed with butter and you don’t have to bugger about boiling anything. NO SAUCEPAN TO WASH UP.

– I hammered a nail in to the wall next to my sink and hang on it a special j-cloth, to be kept chemical-free, to wipe small faces and hands so that we don’t go through 40,000 wet wipes every mealtime.

– I always keep handy for Sam a lot of yoghurt, Ella’s fruity pouches and rusks in case dinner is a total disaster and he needs to eat something else just for my own neurotic peace of mind.  I personally don’t think that a child under about 18 months will be canny enough to reject food because they “know” that you will give them something else. It is hard with your first child to understand that, but they are terribly dim – if they can’t see it, they don’t know it’s there. Or rather, they can’t be sure enough to hold out for it.

– Now Sam isn’t eating mainly pureed veg and is drinking cow’s milk, I give him Abidec vitamin drops every day. Kitty has chewable vitamins, like a fortified Haribo. The “sweetie fairy” leaves it for her on her Trip Trapp every morning and she gobbles it down. Sucker.

-I read to my children at teatime. Pretty much the only thing Kitty is not allowed to do is eat her lunch or tea in front of the telly. If I let her she would sit and eat everything on her plate, but I just can’t do it. Everyone’s got a line they don’t cross and that’s mine. So instead we read and it means that she will keep eating after she has satisfied her basic hunger, rather than running off, and also she will distractedly stuff things in her gob that she might otherwise be suspicious of.

On an entirely separate point, it’s my birthday today. I know how you all like to keep up to date with important events in the Rifle Calendar.

Since you didn’t ask, I am 34. I don’t feel at all old. The oldest I’ve ever felt was when I was 25 and although at times it hasn’t felt like it, life has improved every year since.

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Gordon Ramsay’s Cottage Pie With Guinness Recipe To serve…

Gordon Ramsay’s Cottage Pie With Guinness Recipe

To serve 6 you will need:

a large pie dish
2 tbsp olive oil
900g good quality (low fat) minced beef
sea salt and black pepper
3 medium onions, peeled and finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
a few thyme sprigs, leaves only
2 nice fat plum tomatoes, chopped
2 tablespoons of tomato purée
330ml bottle of Guinness
5 tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce
300ml chicken stock (I used fresh home made chicken stock) but you can use a Knorr stock cube
1 kg floury potatoes, such as Maris Piper or King Edward, peeled and roughly cubed
50g butter a handful of grated cheddar, plus extra for the top of the pie
1 large egg yolk
plus a good handful of cooked peas and carrots if you fancy

How to do it:

Put a large frying pan over a high heat and add a thin layer of olive oil. Season the mince with salt and pepper and fry, stirring, in two or three batches, until nicely browned.

Drain off any fat, although you shouldn’t really have worth worrying about if you used good quality mince.

Put the cooked mince into a bowl and set aside.

In the same pan you just used, put it over a medium-high heat and add a little olive oil. When it’s nice and hot, fry the onions, with the garlic for a few minutes until until soft and golden.

Now add the thyme and cook for another minute or so.

Add the browned mince, tomatoes and tomato puree. Stir constantly for 4-5 minutes.

Add the Guinness and Worcestershire sauce and boil until the liquid has reduced by half. Pour in the stock and return to the boil.

Turn the heat down and simmer for 20-25 minutes, by which time the mixture should be lovely and thick and glossy.

Continue to simmer for another 5-10 minutes if it doesn’t seem quite thick enough. Once done remove it from the heat.

Preheat the oven to 180C/350F or Gas 4

Meanwhile, add the potatoes to a pan of salted water, bring to the boil and cook until tender. Drain and return to the hot pan for 15 seconds or so, to dry out, then take off the heat.

Pass the potatoes through a potato ricer back into the pan or mash smoothly. Mix through the butter, cheese and egg yolk.

Taste and adjust the seasoning.

Put the cooked peas and carrots into the bottom of the dish if you are using them and then spoon the mince mixture on top.

Spoon the mashed potato on top and rough up the surface with a fork.

Grate over some extra cheese and bake in the oven for about 30 minutes until bubbling and golden brown.

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Chicken, ham and mushroom pie

Goodtoknow TV

Free & easy recipe video: Watch new how-to recipe videos with goodtoknow and Woman’s Weekly see all videos >

Comfort food at its best. Make this chicken, ham and mushroom pie on a lazy weekend. Filled with veggies in a creamy sauce, serve with fresh greens for an extra health boost

  • Serves: 8

  • Prep time: 30 mins

  • Cooking time: 1 hr

  • Total time: 1 hr 30 mins

  • Skill level: Easy peasy

  • Costs: Cheap as chips

That’s goodtoknow

Want an extra challenge? Make your own puff pastry

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 onion, peeled, halved and sliced into wedges
  • 2 medium leeks, trimmed and sliced
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
  • 850g chicken thigh fillets, each cut into 3 or 4 pieces
  • 150g baby button mushrooms, halved if large
  • 400g ham, torn into chunks
  • 50g unsalted butter
  • 75g plain flour
  • 350ml chicken stock, made with 1 stock cube
  • 350ml semi-skimmed milk
  • Juice and zest of 1 lemon
  • 14g packfresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
  • 300g ready-made puff pastry
  • 1 medium egg, beaten
  • 500g frozen petit pois, to serve
  • 600g broccoli, cut into florets, to serve

Method

  1. Heat the oil in a large pan and fry the onion and leeks for 10 minutes, adding the garlic for the last minute. Transfer to a bowl and set aside. Add the chicken to the pan, season well with salt and freshly ground black pepper and fry over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes, until golden brown. Add the mushrooms and cook for a further 5 minutes, then stir in the ham.
  2. Melt the butter in another pan, then stir in the flour. Cook for 1 minute over a low heat, then remove from the heat and slowly add the chicken stock and milk, stirring well after each addition, when all the liquid has been added, bring to the boil, stirring. Boil for 5 minutes, then stir in the lemon juice, zest and parsley. Stir the white sauce into the chicken mixture, then spoon into a 2.5-litre pie dish. Preheat the oven to 200°C, 400°F, Gas Mark 6.
  3. Roll out the pastry into a rectangle slightly bigger than the top of the dish, then cut off a strip the length of the rim. Use a little egg to fix the strip to the outer edge of the dish brush with egg, then lift the pastry over the pie. Gently press down the edges, then trim with a sharp knife. Decorate with leaves made from pasty trimmings and make a hole in the middle so steam can escape. Brush lightly with egg, then bake for 25 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown.
  4. Meanwhile, cook the peas and broccoli in a pan of boiling water for 3-4 minutes, until tender. Drain and serve with the pie.

By For more great recipes visit sainsbury’s.co.uk

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Nutritional information per portion

  • Calories 681(kcal)
  • Fat 36.5g
  • Saturates 13.3g
  • Salt 0.8g

This nutritional information is only a guide and is based on 2,000 calories per day. For more information on eating a healthy diet, please visit the Food Standards Agency website.

Guideline Daily Amount for 2,000 calories per day are: 70g fat, 20g saturated fat, 90g sugar, 6g salt.

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Delia Smith is no longer the face of Waitrose but Heston Blumenthal will stay – whose food would you rather eat?

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