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Goodbye from the 大象传媒 Food blog

Emily Angle Emily Angle | 14:46 UK time, Thursday, 18 October 2012

The chocolate mints have been passed, the brandies have been quaffed and now it鈥檚 time to say goodbye to the 大象传媒 Food blog.

The blog is closing and will no longer be updated after this post听closes for comments in two weeks.

Thank you to those that have read the blog, shared it and posted comments. We鈥檝e really enjoyed discussing your kitchen conundrums and reading your recipe ideas.

But now we are making an adjustment to the way we publish. We are using a different (more flexible) article template to publish stories where we鈥檒l continue to explore the way we eat now: investigating new (and old) ingredients, interviewing chefs and food producers, and examining the science and history of food.

In the future, comment and analysis articles, similar to those posted in the 大象传媒 Food blog, will be published in these templates, and can be found from the 大象传媒 Food homepage.

This change will enable us to do what the 大象传媒 Food blog has always set out to do, but more effectively.
We鈥檙e still available for a natter on Twitter (@大象传媒Food) and on .

Thank you again for all your contributions,

Emily

大象传媒 Food producer

Confessions of a gadget junkie

Fiona Beckett Fiona Beckett | 11:14 UK time, Monday, 10 September 2012

The other day I was given a bean slicer by a kind friend who couldn鈥檛 believe I still sliced my runner beans by hand. I bought some and eagerly set to work only to find that most of the beans were too big to fit into it. Which left me with a gadget that will slice thin beans which don鈥檛 really need slicing anyway.

It鈥檚 not the only gadget I鈥檝e got that doesn鈥檛 earn its keep. There鈥檚 an egg separator, a hard-boiled egg slicer and a musical egg-timer you pop in the boiling water which plays 'Killing me softly' when the eggs are soft-boiled. My husband inexplicably loves that.

Slow cooker beef

Gadget proof? Would your slow cooker come out of the cupboard for this beef brisket ?

I have a gravy de-greaser and a cherry and olive stoner that I use once a year, if that. A lemon zester (what鈥檚 wrong with the small holes on the grater?) and a gadget for stamping out ravioli that I bought on an Italian trip when I went mad in a local hardware store. And this I haven鈥檛 ever used - along with a gnocchi roller.

At least they don鈥檛 take up much room. I鈥檓 almost embarrassed to tell you about the larger gadgets that clutter my cupboards and unit tops.

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Why don't we eat more cauliflower?

Post categories: ,听

Clare Hargreaves Clare Hargreaves | 14:50 UK time, Wednesday, 29 August 2012

If there鈥檚 one dish that reminds me of childhood home, it鈥檚 cauliflower cheese. My mum was a reluctant cook so cauliflower cheese became our staple diet 鈥 every day for high tea. We washed it down with weak tea and Women鈥檚 Institute cake. Actually, mum did a pretty good job: unlike the cooks at school who turned cauliflower into grey mush, she never overcooked it. And she lavished the magical tree-like florets with generous amounts of cheese-rich sauce.

So I鈥檓 sad to hear that we Brits no longer want to eat this wonderfully eccentric-looking vegetable. Sales have dropped around 35% over the past decade, and last year, nearly half of British households didn鈥檛 buy a single cauliflower. In short, if we don鈥檛 start buying this snowy brassica again, growers are now warning it could soon become extinct.

Cauliflower cheese

The reason I鈥檓 fighting to keep cauliflower on our tables - apart from bringing back tender childhood memories 鈥 is its sheer versatility. It鈥檚 crunchily delicious eaten raw in a salad with plenty of lemon, in fritters, or as a pretty crudit茅 to dunk into delicious dips. It combines brilliantly with spices, green beans, cucumbers and courgettes to make a piccalilli, and is amazing in a curry. Cauli is nice roasted too. And few things pair better with fresh scallops than a silky smooth cauliflower pur茅e.

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Cake: man v machine

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Deborah Reddihough Deborah Reddihough | 10:10 UK time, Wednesday, 22 August 2012

As part of our on-going series on the kitchen gadgets that really count, this time our eye turns to cakes. Discussions in the office pit me against the rest of the team who believe an electric hand whisk is an essential piece of kit when making cakes. I remonstrate that people were making cakes long before we had electricity in our houses, but they insist: cakes are just better when an electric whisk is used. Time to find out鈥

Mary Berry's Victoria sponge cake

Mary Berry's Victoria sandwich is a baking classic and highly rated by users of 大象传媒 Food.

The set up
A basic sponge recipe is needed so that we can easily assess any differences in texture, taste and appearance. Moist cakes such as fudgy chocolate cake and carrot cake have more tolerance for slip-ups than simple sponges, so I decide to plump for the classic Victoria sponge. Mary Berry鈥檚 perfect Victoria sandwich is our highest-rated sponge cake recipe so, knowing the recipe works, it seems a sensible choice.

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Outdoor entertaining Moro-style

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Louisa Carter Louisa Carter | 15:07 UK time, Thursday, 9 August 2012

With hopefully a few weeks of summer to eke out, I got thinking about how to manage outdoor cooking and eating in a more effortless and stylish way than I have in the past.

When the sun suddenly shines and I decide to throw an impromptu barbecue, it's often the same food that I reach for 鈥 sausages, whole mackerel, courgettes halved lengthways and brushed with olive oil; all fine food but it's time for something new.

Barbecue food

So who better to ask than Sam and Sam Clark of award-winning restaurant Moro in London? They will be cooking at this weekend鈥檚 where food is arguably the headlining act (the line-up of chefs also includes Yottam Ottolenghi, Fergus Henderson and Valentine Warner).

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In praise of British butter

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Deborah Reddihough Deborah Reddihough | 12:00 UK time, Friday, 3 August 2012

When it comes to dairy, the French are commonly considered the best producers in the world, with some regions being given the protection of AOP status. And when we鈥檙e looking for something special to smear on our bread we reach out for French products, because they鈥檙e the best. Right? Well, maybe not.

As the Isigny AOP butter website puts it 鈥淗ow do we explain the fact that gourmets favour Isigny butter? It is simple! The Isigny terroir has the advantage of a mild, damp climate鈥. Mmm, remind you of anything? The British climate is nothing if not mild and damp - so why aren鈥檛 our dairy products held in equally high esteem?

Butter

British: you can't put a better bit of butter on your knife.

There are lots of fabulous butters available in the UK and you don鈥檛 have to look far to find them: most supermarkets stock butter from small, local producers and typically the price will be less than that of the big-brand butters. So you can support small businesses and dairies, pay less and most probably get a better tasting product 鈥 what鈥檚 not to like?

The UK鈥檚 mild summers punctuated with frequent bouts of drizzle produce green and pleasant lands that are perfect for dairy production. The best cream comes from dairy cows grazed in meadows, so climate is crucial because it affects what will grow in the fields and therefore what the cow eats. And a cow鈥檚 diet has a marked effect on the flavour of butter.

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