Author: AYFOC-Admin

  • Apple Cinnamon Oat Crumble Cake

    Apple Cinnamon Oat Crumble Cake

    A homely apple cake with a cinnamon oat crumble top.

    Apple Cinnamon Oat Crumble Cake

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Apple Cinnamon Oat Crumble Cake

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 25 minutes
    • Cook: 45 minutes
    • Serves: 8
    • Best season: Autumn

    Ingredients

    • 180 g unsalted butter, softened
    • 160 g light brown sugar
    • 3 eggs
    • 220 g self raising flour
    • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
    • 2 eating apples, peeled and chopped
    • 60 g rolled oats
    • 40 g plain flour
    • 40 g cold butter, diced
    • 40 g demerara sugar

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 180 C and line a 20 cm cake tin.
    2. Beat the butter and brown sugar until pale. Add the eggs one at a time.
    3. Fold in the self raising flour, cinnamon and chopped apple. Spoon into the tin.
    4. Rub the oats, plain flour, cold butter and demerara sugar together, then scatter over the batter.
    5. Bake for 40 to 45 minutes until a skewer comes out clean. Cool before slicing.

    From my cottage notebook

    I like this cake best on the second day, when the apples have settled and the top has softened just enough. It is very good with plain yoghurt for breakfast, though I pretend that is accidental.

  • Slow-Simmered Beef and Barley Stew

    Slow-Simmered Beef and Barley Stew

    A deep, steady stew with beef, barley, carrots and ale.

    Slow-Simmered Beef and Barley Stew

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Slow-Simmered Beef and Barley Stew

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 25 minutes
    • Cook: 2 hours 30 minutes
    • Serves: 6
    • Best season: Winter

    Ingredients

    • 800 g stewing beef, diced
    • 2 tbsp plain flour
    • 2 tbsp oil
    • 2 onions, sliced
    • 3 carrots, chopped
    • 2 celery sticks, chopped
    • 150 g pearl barley
    • 500 ml beef stock
    • 330 ml ale
    • 2 bay leaves
    • Salt and pepper

    Method

    1. Toss the beef with flour, salt and pepper. Brown it in batches in a heavy pan.
    2. Soften the onions, carrots and celery in the same pan.
    3. Return the beef and add barley, stock, ale and bay leaves.
    4. Cover and simmer gently for 2 to 2 and a half hours, stirring now and then.
    5. Taste, season and serve with greens or bread.

    From my cottage notebook

    This is rain food. It sits on the stove and minds itself while I stack logs, answer messages and pretend I am not checking the pot every ten minutes.

  • Rustic Mushroom and Thyme Tart

    Rustic Mushroom and Thyme Tart

    A crisp tart with mushrooms, thyme and soft cheese.

    Rustic Mushroom and Thyme Tart

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Rustic Mushroom and Thyme Tart

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 25 minutes
    • Cook: 30 minutes
    • Serves: 4
    • Best season: Autumn

    Ingredients

    • 1 sheet ready rolled puff pastry
    • 350 g mixed mushrooms, sliced
    • 1 tbsp olive oil
    • 25 g butter
    • 2 garlic cloves, chopped
    • 2 tsp thyme leaves
    • 120 g soft cheese
    • 1 egg, beaten
    • Salt and pepper

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 200 C. Place the pastry on a lined tray and score a border.
    2. Cook the mushrooms in oil and butter until their liquid has gone. Add garlic and thyme.
    3. Spread soft cheese inside the pastry border. Spoon mushrooms on top.
    4. Brush the border with beaten egg.
    5. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes until puffed and golden.

    From my cottage notebook

    Mushrooms need a hot pan and a bit of patience. I still have to remind myself of that. Let them sit, let them brown, then they taste like supper rather than water.

  • Strawberry Rhubarb Breakfast Scones

    Strawberry Rhubarb Breakfast Scones

    Tender breakfast scones with strawberries and sharp rhubarb.

    Strawberry Rhubarb Breakfast Scones

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Strawberry Rhubarb Breakfast Scones

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 20 minutes
    • Cook: 18 minutes
    • Serves: 8 scones
    • Best season: Spring and early summer

    Ingredients

    • 300 g self raising flour
    • 75 g cold butter, diced
    • 40 g caster sugar
    • 100 g rhubarb, finely chopped
    • 100 g strawberries, chopped
    • 150 ml buttermilk
    • 1 egg, beaten
    • Demerara sugar for sprinkling

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 200 C and line a baking tray.
    2. Rub the butter into the flour until it looks like rough crumbs. Stir in sugar, rhubarb and strawberries.
    3. Add buttermilk and bring together gently. Do not overwork it.
    4. Pat into a round and cut into 8 wedges. Brush with egg and sprinkle with sugar.
    5. Bake for 16 to 18 minutes. Eat warm, preferably with butter.

    From my cottage notebook

    These are untidy scones. The fruit leaks a little, the edges catch, and the whole tray smells like a June morning.

  • Lemon Elderflower Drizzle Cake

    Lemon Elderflower Drizzle Cake

    A lemon loaf cake soaked with elderflower syrup.

    Lemon Elderflower Drizzle Cake

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Lemon Elderflower Drizzle Cake

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 20 minutes
    • Cook: 45 minutes
    • Serves: 10 slices
    • Best season: Spring

    Ingredients

    • 200 g unsalted butter, softened
    • 200 g caster sugar
    • 3 eggs
    • 200 g self raising flour
    • 2 lemons, zested
    • 3 tbsp milk
    • 4 tbsp elderflower cordial
    • 3 tbsp lemon juice
    • 80 g icing sugar

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 180 C and line a loaf tin.
    2. Beat butter and sugar until pale. Add eggs one at a time.
    3. Fold in flour, lemon zest and milk. Spoon into the tin.
    4. Bake for 40 to 45 minutes.
    5. Mix elderflower cordial, lemon juice and icing sugar. Poke holes in the warm cake and spoon over the drizzle.

    From my cottage notebook

    Elderflower always feels like a small deadline. One week it is there, frothy and generous, and then it is gone. This cake is my way of catching a little of it.

  • Blackberry Jam Thumbprint Biscuits

    Blackberry Jam Thumbprint Biscuits

    Buttery little biscuits filled with blackberry jam.

    Blackberry Jam Thumbprint Biscuits

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Blackberry Jam Thumbprint Biscuits

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 20 minutes
    • Cook: 14 minutes
    • Serves: 18 biscuits
    • Best season: Late summer

    Ingredients

    • 180 g unsalted butter, softened
    • 90 g caster sugar
    • 1 egg yolk
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract
    • 240 g plain flour
    • A pinch of salt
    • 6 tbsp blackberry jam

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 170 C and line two baking trays.
    2. Beat the butter and sugar until soft and pale. Add the egg yolk and vanilla.
    3. Mix in the flour and salt to make a soft dough.
    4. Roll into small balls and press a thumbprint into each one. Fill with a little jam.
    5. Bake for 12 to 14 minutes. Cool on the tray for 5 minutes before moving.

    From my cottage notebook

    I make these when the jam shelf looks too full, which is a ridiculous problem and one I am happy to have.

  • Herbed Chicken with Root Vegetables

    Herbed Chicken with Root Vegetables

    A tray of chicken, carrots, parsnips and herbs roasted until golden.

    Herbed Chicken with Root Vegetables

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Herbed Chicken with Root Vegetables

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 20 minutes
    • Cook: 1 hour 10 minutes
    • Serves: 4
    • Best season: Autumn and winter

    Ingredients

    • 4 chicken legs
    • 4 carrots, cut into batons
    • 3 parsnips, cut into batons
    • 2 red onions, quartered
    • 2 tbsp olive oil
    • 2 tsp chopped rosemary
    • 2 tsp chopped thyme
    • 1 lemon, halved
    • Salt and black pepper

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 200 C. Put the vegetables in a roasting tin.
    2. Rub the chicken with olive oil, herbs, salt and pepper. Sit it on top of the vegetables.
    3. Squeeze over half the lemon and tuck the other half into the tray.
    4. Roast for 1 hour to 1 hour 10 minutes, turning the vegetables once.
    5. Rest for 10 minutes before serving with the tray juices.

    From my cottage notebook

    This is the kind of supper I used to overcomplicate in restaurant kitchens. At the cottage I leave it alone, and it is better for it.

  • Creamy Leek and Potato Pot Pie

    Creamy Leek and Potato Pot Pie

    Leeks and potatoes folded into a creamy filling under crisp pastry.

    Creamy Leek and Potato Pot Pie

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Creamy Leek and Potato Pot Pie

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 25 minutes
    • Cook: 40 minutes
    • Serves: 4
    • Best season: Winter

    Ingredients

    • 3 large leeks, sliced and washed
    • 500 g potatoes, peeled and diced
    • 40 g butter
    • 2 tbsp plain flour
    • 350 ml milk
    • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
    • 100 g mature cheddar, grated
    • 1 sheet ready rolled puff pastry
    • 1 egg, beaten
    • Salt and pepper

    Method

    1. Boil the potatoes for 8 minutes, then drain.
    2. Cook the leeks in butter until soft but not coloured. Stir in the flour and cook for 1 minute.
    3. Add the milk slowly, stirring until smooth. Add mustard, cheddar, potatoes, salt and pepper.
    4. Spoon into a pie dish and top with pastry. Brush with egg.
    5. Bake at 200 C for 25 to 30 minutes until golden and bubbling.

    From my cottage notebook

    Leeks are quiet workers. They do not shout from the garden bed, but they make supper taste as if someone has been looking after it.

  • Roasted Tomato and Basil Garden Soup

    Roasted Tomato and Basil Garden Soup

    A bright tomato soup made with roasted tomatoes, garlic and basil.

    Roasted Tomato and Basil Garden Soup

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Roasted Tomato and Basil Garden Soup

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 15 minutes
    • Cook: 45 minutes
    • Serves: 4
    • Best season: Late summer

    Ingredients

    • 1.2 kg ripe tomatoes, halved
    • 1 red onion, sliced
    • 4 garlic cloves, unpeeled
    • 2 tbsp olive oil
    • 600 ml vegetable stock
    • A small handful of basil
    • 1 tsp sugar, if needed
    • Salt and black pepper

    Method

    1. Heat the oven to 190 C. Put the tomatoes, onion and garlic on a tray. Add olive oil, salt and pepper.
    2. Roast for 35 minutes until the tomatoes slump and char at the edges.
    3. Squeeze the garlic from its skins and tip everything into a pan. Add the stock and simmer for 10 minutes.
    4. Blend until smooth, then stir in the basil. Taste before adding sugar.
    5. Serve with bread, olive oil and a few torn basil leaves.

    From my cottage notebook

    Tomatoes are bossy in the best way. When they are ripe, I try not to interfere too much. Roast them, blend them, and let lunch be lunch.

  • Honey Butter Cottage Loaf

    Honey Butter Cottage Loaf

    A soft white loaf brushed with honey butter while still warm.

    Honey Butter Cottage Loaf

    I wrote this one after a day that started with good intentions and ended with me eating at the kitchen table in my gardening jumper. That is often how the better recipes arrive here.

    Honey Butter Cottage Loaf

    Recipe Notes

    • Prep: 20 minutes, plus rising
    • Cook: 35 minutes
    • Serves: 1 loaf
    • Best season: All year

    Ingredients

    • 500 g strong white bread flour
    • 7 g fast action yeast
    • 1 tsp fine sea salt
    • 300 ml warm water
    • 2 tbsp runny honey
    • 40 g unsalted butter, softened
    • Extra butter and honey for brushing

    Method

    1. Stir the flour, yeast and salt together in a large bowl.
    2. Mix the warm water with the honey, then pour it into the flour. Add the butter and bring the dough together.
    3. Knead for 8 to 10 minutes until smooth and springy. Cover and leave until doubled.
    4. Shape into a loaf and place in a greased tin. Leave for 35 to 45 minutes.
    5. Bake at 200 C for 30 to 35 minutes, then brush with melted butter and honey while warm.

    From my cottage notebook

    This is the loaf I make when the cottage feels a little bare. It asks for very little, then gives back toast, crumbs on the board and the sort of smell that makes me stop what I am doing.

  • A Year From Oak Cottage

    A Year From Oak Cottage

    A quiet cottage kitchen at the beginning of the year

    I have cooked under pressure for most of my adult life. Tickets printing, pans clattering, someone asking where the garnish has gone. I was good at it, and I loved parts of it, but somewhere along the way I stopped tasting the day properly.

    So I have come to Oak Cottage for a year. There is a small kitchen, a garden that needs work, a compost heap with opinions and enough weather to make every plan provisional. I want to grow as much as I can, cook with what is ready, waste less and remember why I fell in love with food in the first place.

    What this year is about

    • Cooking with the seasons rather than against them.
    • Growing herbs, vegetables and soft fruit in a cottage garden.
    • Using the whole ingredient when I can.
    • Writing recipes that real people can cook after a long day.
    • Letting the kitchen be warm, useful and a little imperfect.

    The first recipes are already here: bread for soup, tomato soup for the garden glut, a lemon cake for spring, scones for breakfast and a beef stew for weather that refuses to behave.

    It feels strange to start again in my forties. It also feels right. I will take both.