Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Chicken with Prunes (à la Eli)

Chicken (legs or other parts)
3 onions or some leek
carrots
Prunes (or other dried fruits, if you like them)
Whisky (only a little glass, let's say 50-100 ml)
Olive oil
Pepper
Herbs

As a side dish, you may have fried vegetables or fried white rice with mushrooms and oil.

1. Heat some olive oil in a big pot.

2. Cut onions or leek and add them into the pot. Let them cook until they become golden.

3. Clean the chicken and add it into the pot too. Let it become golden too, then add some herbs (this will take you around 20 minutes).



4. Once the chicken has got its golden colour you can add the whisky. Then put the lid on and let it cook for 5 to 7 minutes.

5. Add the carrots cut in round slides.

6. Boil the prunes or the other dried fruits in a small pot and boil them for about 5 minutes.

7. Once the prunes are boiled, add them to the chicken. Keep the water you boiled them in.



8. Let the chicken cook at low heat for 20 to 25 minutes. Then add a little of the water you were cooking the prunes in in order to make a sauce. Don't add too much water, or the chicken will become watery.

9. If at any time the chicken sticks to the pot, add a little bit of whisky.



ENJOY IT! I love it!

Eli

Monday, August 14, 2006

Melanie's Chocolate Cake



A delicious cake with a strong chocolate flavour. My first try does not look as good as Melanie's looked, but I guess it gets better very time I will make it.

250 g baking chocolate (not the one you usually eat)
100 g butter
100 g sugar
4 eggs
2 big spoons of flour
salt

1. Melt the chocolate in a pan with a bit of water.

2. Separate the egg whites from the egg yellows. Mix the yellows with the sugar and then add the flour and the salt. Mix it.

3. Mix the butter with the melted chocolate and add it to the dough.

4. Beat the egg whites with a pinch of salt until it becomes stiff. Add it to the dough and mix it carefully.

5. Put the mixture into a cake form and bake it at 200 °C for 25 to 30 minutes.

Enjoy!

Monday, August 07, 2006

Tortilla or Spanish Omelette

4-5 potatoes (medium size)
1 onion (optional)
3-4 eggs (depending on the number of potatoes)
salt
oil (sunflower or olive)

1. Peel and cut the potatoes into the shape you prefer. Not very thick, though, and all the same size, so they don't burn.



2. Put plenty of oil into a frying pan or a pot, more or less enough to cover the potatoes. When it's hot, add the potatoes and the onion and put the lid on. Wait until they are cooked (tender, not crunchy like fried potatoes).



3. Meanwhile, beat the eggs in a bowl and add salt (however much you like).

4. Mix the potatoes/onions and the eggs in the bowl.

5. Put a wee bit of oil into the frying pan (or empty it if you fried the potatoes in the same one) and heat it. Add the mixing and turn the fire down a bit.

6. Wait until it's cooked on that side (maybe 2 minutes, but it depends on the cooker and how much cooked you want your omelette)



7. Then the tricky moment: turning the omelette. Put a plate on top of the frying pan and hold it with one hand, while you turn the frying pan with the other. It looks harder than it is. Try turning it onto the table or somewhere you can put it back into the pan from. Put it back into the frying pan. You can add a bit of oil first.



8. When it's ready, put the omelette on a plate. You can turn it again to see if it's really cooked and put it back if it's not.



That's it. Just remember that, if you have some slaves to help you, the process of peeling potatoes is faster.

* Note: Elisa will hate me for this remark, but I transformed my meat recipes into vegetarian ones for her too: If you need meat (because your French, for example), you can add cubes of bacon or ham to the omelette, or slices of sausage. In fact I'd say you can add whatever comes to you mind (tough, wait Henriikka, no chocolate cake!).

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Tiramisu

The classic Italian dessert. There are many different recipes, but this is one of the easiest. For more special ones you might contact Alessandro or Annalisa.


500 grams of mascarpone
4 eggs
80 grams of sugar
2 packs of sponge fingers (the Tiramisu biscuits)
coffee
amaretto (typical Italian almond liquor, optional)
chocolate powder

1. Make a huge cup of very strong coffee. You can add some sugar, if you like it really sweet. Let it cool for a while.

2. Mix the 4 egg yellows with the sugar and the mascarpone. Beat the egg white until it is becomes snow (stiff) and carefully add it to the mixture.



3. Put the coffee on a plate and soak the biscuits with it until they become soft. Put them close to each other in a baking dish or any kind of bowl, for example one you could make a lasagne in.



After the layer of biscuits add half of the mascarpone mixture. Then do the same again: one layer of biscuits, one layer of mascarpone mixture. Put two big spoons of chocolate powder in a sieve and distribute it over the Tiramisu.

4. Let the Tiramisu rest in the fridge. The longer it stays there, the better it becomes. 12 to 15 hours resting is ideal, 6 are necessary. It can be eaten before, but it won't taste as good!



Enjoy your meal!

* Note: If you don't like coffee, you can use fruit juices such as orange juice. You can improve your fruit Tiramisu by adding fruits to it. For example you can cook plums with sugar and, optionally, some red wine, soak the liquid with the biscuits and put the cooked plums in the mascarpone mixture.