Last weekend we gathered for brunch in Antwerp, at Tati.
It's a bistro in Borgerhout, which doesn't usually do brunch, but I asked them to cook something up. And they delivered...
We had a reason to celebrate
Delicious dishes kept coming
I really enjoyed the cosy atmosphere, delicious food and good company!
Afterwards we went to see the show Maria Pascallas by our great actor Pascale Platel, in the beautiful theater Roma.
29 November 2007
18 November 2007
Cucumber salad, red beetroot salad and potato salad
Today I had friends over for lunch: an oldfashioned Sunday lunch. So I went for oldfashioned fare.
I prepared a soup from chicken broth, as posted before, and I served the cold chicken meat with salsa verde, and with a few salads from Claudia Roden's book of Jewish food.
The quantities serve 6 persons.
Cucumber salad
2 cucumbers
salt
lemon juice
1 tbsp sugar
2-3 tbsp sour cream
Peel cucumbers, cut in half and remove the seeds.
Chop them finely, sprinkle with a lot of salt, and let this drip in a sieve for at least 1 hr until it gets soft and looses the moisture.
Rinse and dry with kitchen towel.
Mix lemon juice and sugar with sour cream and add this to the cucumber.
Red beetroot salad
500 g red beetroots, boiled, peeled and chopped
1 onion, chopped finely
salt & pepper
lemon juice
1 tbsp sugar
2-3 tbsp sour cream
3 tbsp dill, chopped finely
Mix sour cream, lemon juice and sugar.
Add the other ingredients.
Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary.
Potato salad
1 kg potatoes
salt & pepper
olive oil, extra virgin
1 onion, chopped finely
3 tbsp parsley, chopped finely
Wash potatoes and steam them. Peel them immediately and slice them. Add olive oil, salt and pepper to taste while they're still warm. Mix well. When they've cooled, add onion and parsley.
Note: you can add capers, anchovy, black olives, boiled egg etc. Today I omitted this because I also served salsa verde, which contains most of these ingredients.
We had a great bottle of wine with this meal.
I prepared a soup from chicken broth, as posted before, and I served the cold chicken meat with salsa verde, and with a few salads from Claudia Roden's book of Jewish food.
The quantities serve 6 persons.
Cucumber salad
2 cucumbers
salt
lemon juice
1 tbsp sugar
2-3 tbsp sour cream
Peel cucumbers, cut in half and remove the seeds.
Chop them finely, sprinkle with a lot of salt, and let this drip in a sieve for at least 1 hr until it gets soft and looses the moisture.
Rinse and dry with kitchen towel.
Mix lemon juice and sugar with sour cream and add this to the cucumber.
Red beetroot salad
500 g red beetroots, boiled, peeled and chopped
1 onion, chopped finely
salt & pepper
lemon juice
1 tbsp sugar
2-3 tbsp sour cream
3 tbsp dill, chopped finely
Mix sour cream, lemon juice and sugar.
Add the other ingredients.
Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary.
Potato salad
1 kg potatoes
salt & pepper
olive oil, extra virgin
1 onion, chopped finely
3 tbsp parsley, chopped finely
Wash potatoes and steam them. Peel them immediately and slice them. Add olive oil, salt and pepper to taste while they're still warm. Mix well. When they've cooled, add onion and parsley.
Note: you can add capers, anchovy, black olives, boiled egg etc. Today I omitted this because I also served salsa verde, which contains most of these ingredients.
We had a great bottle of wine with this meal.
15 November 2007
Vive le roi!
I'm not really a royalist, although I don't like this idea of splitting our small country up.
But today I like our monarchy, because as a public servant I get a day off for the celebration of our royal dynasty ;-)
Days like this give one the occasion to meet up with old friends, have coffee on the heated terrace of Hotel Mêtropole in the last sunshine and watch the passersby, buy beautiful gloves at an oldfashioned glove shop in Galerie de la Reine,
buy speculoos at Dandoy, in anticipation of Sinterklaas on Dec. 6, and stop at Le Cirio, a Brussels institution
where you must have half-en-half, a Brussels speciality which is a mix of white wine and sparkling wine,
and pick up a book at Passa Porta, a favourite bookshop.
And sometimes, on days like this, you get really lucky and already receive beautiful roses for your birthday, weeks in advance. Thanks N!
But today I like our monarchy, because as a public servant I get a day off for the celebration of our royal dynasty ;-)
Days like this give one the occasion to meet up with old friends, have coffee on the heated terrace of Hotel Mêtropole in the last sunshine and watch the passersby, buy beautiful gloves at an oldfashioned glove shop in Galerie de la Reine,
buy speculoos at Dandoy, in anticipation of Sinterklaas on Dec. 6, and stop at Le Cirio, a Brussels institution
where you must have half-en-half, a Brussels speciality which is a mix of white wine and sparkling wine,
and pick up a book at Passa Porta, a favourite bookshop.
And sometimes, on days like this, you get really lucky and already receive beautiful roses for your birthday, weeks in advance. Thanks N!
Sunday dinner
A while ago, I was invited for a delicious Sunday dinner. I really enjoyed hunting for premeal snacks, spying on the preparations,
eating a delicious meal in good company, letting myself go on the pies, left over from an afternoon visit - a Flemish tradition, pie on Sunday afternoon -
and after this enormous meal, still stuffing our faces with the most vicious sweet in het world: AUTODROP!
eating a delicious meal in good company, letting myself go on the pies, left over from an afternoon visit - a Flemish tradition, pie on Sunday afternoon -
and after this enormous meal, still stuffing our faces with the most vicious sweet in het world: AUTODROP!
11 November 2007
Celebration
I haven't commented yet on two small causes for celebration. The first one is this blog's first anniversary, on October 21st. So one year already of recording fun in the kitchen, delicious food, and also some fun in Brussels and in general.
The second one is that I received the Nice Matters award from labelga at Leafy Cooking. Thanks a lot!
The second one is that I received the Nice Matters award from labelga at Leafy Cooking. Thanks a lot!
Red pepper and walnut paste
Last month, when my friends came to dinner, we prepared this paste and served it on small toasts as a starter. You can also use it as a sauce to dip vegetables in. It's another Claudia Roden recipe, called muhammara.
Serves 6
2 red peppers
red chili paste
1 slice of bread without crust
90 g peeled walnuts
1/2 garlic clove, crushed
juice of 1/2 lemon
1/2 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground cumin
olive oil
Roast red peppers in the oven at 200°C for 30 min. Turn them once. Let them cool in a plastic bag, then peel them and remove stem and seeds.
Blend all ingredients into a paste using a blender.
Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary.
The walnuts were deftly and painstakingly peeled by hand using Mono Pico, a very simple device which my cousin brought me from the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
We forgot to take pictures of the result - which was delicious. So instead a few pics showing the view from the kitchen in the evening.
Serves 6
2 red peppers
red chili paste
1 slice of bread without crust
90 g peeled walnuts
1/2 garlic clove, crushed
juice of 1/2 lemon
1/2 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground cumin
olive oil
Roast red peppers in the oven at 200°C for 30 min. Turn them once. Let them cool in a plastic bag, then peel them and remove stem and seeds.
Blend all ingredients into a paste using a blender.
Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary.
The walnuts were deftly and painstakingly peeled by hand using Mono Pico, a very simple device which my cousin brought me from the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
We forgot to take pictures of the result - which was delicious. So instead a few pics showing the view from the kitchen in the evening.
07 November 2007
Pumpkin and quince stew
Last month I had friends over for dinner and now I'll finally share a delicious recipe with you that I prepared that day. It's a sweet dish with pumpkin and quince that accompanies a couscous, in stead of oignons confits for instance. The recipe comes from Claudia Roden's 'The book of Jewish food' and she calls it 'Hlou aux coings et potiron'. I love quince almost as much as pumpkin, so I really wanted to try this combination.
Serves 4-5
2-3 tbsp sunflower oil
100 g sugar
1 big onion, chopped
250 g pumpkin, peeled and chopped
2 quince, peeled and chopped
juice of 1/2 lemon
Heat oil with sugar until sugar starts to caramelize and get brown.
Add onion and fry for 5 min.
Add pumpkin and quince and lemon juice, add water until everything is just covered.
Let the dish simmer for 45 min.
The mixture should be thick, like a jam.
Serve hot or cold with couscous.
The taste was fantastic and the dish was a great success with my guests.
I prepared the couscous according to Claudia Roden's basic recipe, which I won't copy here.
Serves 4-5
2-3 tbsp sunflower oil
100 g sugar
1 big onion, chopped
250 g pumpkin, peeled and chopped
2 quince, peeled and chopped
juice of 1/2 lemon
Heat oil with sugar until sugar starts to caramelize and get brown.
Add onion and fry for 5 min.
Add pumpkin and quince and lemon juice, add water until everything is just covered.
Let the dish simmer for 45 min.
The mixture should be thick, like a jam.
Serve hot or cold with couscous.
The taste was fantastic and the dish was a great success with my guests.
I prepared the couscous according to Claudia Roden's basic recipe, which I won't copy here.
05 November 2007
London
Went to London for a short break. We enjoyed very sunny and mild weather. And great food, as usual.
Ahh, the pleasure of a gin-in-T at the local...
After that, you may imagine seeing foxes roaming the neighborhood, but this one was for real
We went for a nice curry at the South-Indian restaurant Rasa in Stoke Newington, with mango lassi
and fish cakes for starters
We also had Japanese food at Aki Japanese Bistro. London is the place where I had the best Japanese food ever, and we weren't disappointed on this occasion.
My favourite Japanese dish: beef teryaki
Another favourite is brunch at the Giraffe in Islington, where you can have smoothies such as Mango Mama
or Groovy Muesli Smoothie
and my all time favourite cooked breakfast - aahh, still smacking my lips -
but you can also have pancakes with maple syrup
Look at the weather we had:
Ahh, the pleasure of a gin-in-T at the local...
After that, you may imagine seeing foxes roaming the neighborhood, but this one was for real
We went for a nice curry at the South-Indian restaurant Rasa in Stoke Newington, with mango lassi
and fish cakes for starters
We also had Japanese food at Aki Japanese Bistro. London is the place where I had the best Japanese food ever, and we weren't disappointed on this occasion.
My favourite Japanese dish: beef teryaki
Another favourite is brunch at the Giraffe in Islington, where you can have smoothies such as Mango Mama
or Groovy Muesli Smoothie
and my all time favourite cooked breakfast - aahh, still smacking my lips -
but you can also have pancakes with maple syrup
Look at the weather we had:
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