Tuesday, 31 January 2017
RECIPE FOR WALNUT AND APPLE TART
Click here for the 'Seeds of Eaden' seed shop
Ingredients
225 g / 8 oz plain flour
250 g / 8 oz butter
4 eggs
200 g / 7 oz honey
125 g / 4 oz light muscovado sugar
125 g / 4 oz dried apples and pears
125 g / 4 oz walnuts, chopped
2 tbsp icing sugar
1 lemon
Method
To make the pastry put the flour and icing sugar into the bowl or food mixer. Add 125 g chilled butter and mix until it resembles breadcrumbs. Beat 1 egg into a bowl and add with 1 tbsp cold water and mix until comes together. Wrap in cling film and chill for 30 minutes in fridge.
Warm the honey gently in a small pan. Place the muscovado sugar in a bowl with 125 g / 4 oz butter and mix together until light and fluffy. Beat the remaining eggs and add to the bowl with the zest from the lemon and juice, walnuts, apples, pears, and warm honey. Stir well.
Roll out the pastry and line out a 23 cm / 9 inch flan case. Trim the edge and prick out the base. Cover with cling film and chill for 30 minutes.
Preheat oven to 180 C / gas mark 4. Line the pastry case with greaseproof paper and fill with baking beans and bake for 10-15 minutes. Remove the paper and beans and bake the pastry for 5 minutes longer. Pour he apple and walnut filling into teh pastry and arrange teh pear slices on top. Brush with the top with honey.
Place the tart on a baking sheet, cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove foil and bake for a further 25 minutes until tart is golden brown and slightly risen.
Sunday, 29 January 2017
Recipe for cider roast pork
Click here for the 'Seeds of Eaden' seed shop
This cider roast pork is fabulous. Apple and pork have been a winning combination for years, so the cider works brilliantly. I made this for my family this weekend and it was delicious.
Ingredients
1 kg bone, rolled loin of pork (fat removed)
1 tbsp olive oil
2 onions
2 apples
440 ml can cider
salt
pepper
thyme sprigs
Method
Place the pork in a large bowl with the olive oil, chopped onions, quartered apples and thyme. Pour the cider over the pork and marinate in the fridge for 4 hours, or preferably overnight.
When ready to cook, remove from the fridge 20 minutes before putting in the oven. Preheat the oven to 200 C / gas mark 6. Put the joint in a roasting tin with the marinade ingredients and season. Roast for 25 minutes per pound (450g) plus 20 minutes.
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Chicken stir fry
Chicken supreme
How to roast pork
How to roast turkey
Recipe for Asparagus Quiche
Recipe for cauliflower cheese
Recipe for home made olive bread
Recipe for Italian pizza
Recipe for Italian tomato sauce
Recipe for lasagna
Recipe for pea salad with mint
Recipe for pickled cucumber
Recipe for Salmon with lemon and herbs
Recipe Spaghetti bolognese
Recipe for spinach and broccoli fritatta
Recipe for tomato soup
Recipe for cider roast pork
Spiced brussels sprouts
Vegetarian recipes - vegetable fried rice
Sunday, 8 January 2017
HOW TO GROW AN APPLE FROM SEED
Click here for the 'Seeds of Eaden' seed shop
George recently handed me an apple seed and said he wanted to plant it. We have planted acorns and grown cress before, but apple seeds are new for me. I wondered how long it would take before the tree grew, and if growing it true for seed (rather than grafting onto a rootstock) would give us a viable tree.
Firstly, to grow an apple tree from seed will take much longer than grafting it onto rootstock. The size and vigour of the tree will be as programmed in the seed, not the rootstock. Apples trees grown from seed will not have the dwarfing qualities of those grown on rootstock and so will be much larger, 9 meters in height, and will take nearly ten years to bear fruit.
The variety of apple see you plant will determine the size, shape and vigour of your tree but remember apple trees do not grow true to type, and so the seeds from apple will not grow be identical to its parents. Apple seeds are not self pollinating so if you want your tree to bear fruit and have not got any adjacent apple trees in your garden you may be lucky enough to get two varieties for one apple but to be on the safe side collect two different types of seeds to ensure cross pollination. Ensure you select varieties of apples that grow well in your climate zone, or the plants will die once planted outside.
Firstly dry out your apple seeds on some kitchen paper and allow to air dry. In order to facilitate germination you need to mimic winter so place your seeds on moist kitchen towel and seal in a transparent plastic bag in the fridge. Keep in the fridge for ten weeks until they have germinated and the seeds have sprouted. Check regularly to ensure that the kitchen towel is kept moist. It is best to align this germination period with winter so that the seedlings can emerge into their first spring and make the most of the growing season.
Fill a 9 cm pot with John Innes seed and potting compost. Use a dibber to make a hole in the pot 1 cm deep and carefully drop your sprouted apple seed in, pointed side facing up. Place 2 seeds in every pot to allow you to select the strongest seedling when they emerge. Cover with soil and water gently. Place in a sunny and warm position such as a windowsill. After several weeks shoots should start to appear and from then on your tree will continue to grow and get stronger.
When the seedling is 10 cm high place it outside or in a cold frame to harden off for several weeks. Plant your seedling directly into well drained soil in a sunny, sheltered site well away from any frost pockets. Allow sufficient room for your tree and leave 5 metres between trees.
Dig a hole twice the size of the rootball and plant the sapling in the hole. Water after planting to eliminate air pockets. Ensure you mark the location carefully with a stake and remove any competing weeds from around the base of the tree. Water regularly and protect from rabbits with rabbit mesh.
How to overwinter banana plants
How to grow hardy bananas
How to grow an apple from seed
How to grow a lemon tree
Recipe for cider roast pork
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