Tuesday 1 September 2015

Cheese D'Artois - the Scottish way


cheesy and golden! 


I am a keen follower of the Shetland Times, which you too can follow on Facebook, if you want to be kept up to date with the goings-on of this island archipelago.  It must be the Scottish blood in me that just loves anything Scottish.  And I love the way they write about events (and crimes) here.  Recently, one of the contract workers had been found to be drunk (and swearing!), and was exiled from the islands.  Don't you just love that? Let's suggest it to Mr. Abbott as a punishment for wrongdoers.  Oops, I think he has already done that.

Anyway, I bought a Shetland cookbook earlier this year, from which I have made (and blogged) a couple of recipes.  I had also taken note of this recipe, French obviously with that name, but included in our Scottish author's book.  Well, how can you resist a Scottish version of a French dish? (A bit of a hybrid like Mary Queen of Scots who spent her childhood at the French court).

Our lovely neighbour and friend Princess Pia invited us over for a drink on the weekend, so I decided to MBT (make, bake and take) this across to soak up the booze:)  The Princess is one very hospitable lady, so when  newbies moved in next door, she invited them over for a drink one afternoon.  They left 10 hours later!  Yes you read that right. Ten hours! By that time, it was after midnight, so she collapsed into bed to recover.  I think the longest we have stayed for a quick drink with her was 5 hours.  See, she needs to get tough and chuck us all out at a respectable hour.

This is a great little snack to make when you may have been imbibing just a wee bit too much (or plan to).  All that cheese and carbs - just soooo good as a boozy sponge. Grab a snag and you have a complete meal.  I mean after all, your food bases are covered with the herbs in the mix!

ingredients:

2 sheets of frozen puff pastry, thawed
100g. vintage/tasty cheddar cheese (Shetland if you can get it)
2 eggs, lightly beaten with a fork
55g. ham
3 tsp lightly dried parsley (use fresh if you wish)
1.5 tsp lightly dried chilli flakes
freshly ground black pepper (to taste)

Method:

Preheat your oven to 200C 
Place one sheet of pastry on a lightly greased baking tray 
Grate the cheese and dice the ham
Place the cheese, eggs (except for a tablespoon or 2), ham, parsley, chilli and pepper in a small mixing bowl and stir together well
Spread the mixture over the pastry sheet, leaving a centimetre's edge on all sides
Brush water around the edges (not too much!)
Fold the 2nd sheet of pastry in half lengthwise
Make equidistant slits along it, without cutting all the way to the edge (see below)
Carefully pick up the pastry sheet and unroll it gently over the base
Press it down around the edges
Brush with the left-over beaten egg
Bake at the top of the oven for 20 minutes or till golden and puffed
Serve straight out of the oven

Hints: 
Make sure the oven is preheated and that the shelf is at the top
Use other herbs if you like (the author suggests thyme or oregano)
Add different spices if desired
Grease the tray with butter rather than oil, so you get a crisp base

I think it is best to keep this pretty simple.  The original recipe has no chilli or ham; I just knew it would be tastier with it.  By using that much parsley, it was a bit like a vegetable rather than a herb, which I think gave it a nice flavour and colour.  



my wonky egg doodle 


















ingredients (I used Aussie cheese of course)  

pastry sheets ready to go  

spreading out the filling  

gently unrolling the top sheet of pastry over the base

pat it down around the edges

a delicious plateful of golden pastry 

These went down a treat at Princess Pia's drinks gathering.  Not one scrap was left. Success!  Highly recommended if you want to please your friends at your next party.

14 comments:

  1. This looks amazing! I miss puff pastry since we went wheat free. We do use spelt flour but making my own puff is not really something I cherish the idea of.

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    1. are you a coeliac stella? yes i think making your own puff pastry would be quite hard with a different flour. I have seen some recipes for rough puff so I must try it sometime.

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  2. Oh yum-looks great! These flavours always work a treat. Satisfying with every bite no doubt :)

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  3. That looks very tempting and perfect for a dinner meal or as you say a meal with a drink. Hehe maybe Mr Abbott is also a subscriber to the Shetland Times! :P

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    Replies
    1. I think Mr Abbott needs to be exiled for a bit to see what it is like:)

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    2. I think Mr Abbott needs to be exiled for a bit to see what it is like:)

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  4. Oh yes I am ready with my plate

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    Replies
    1. hi cquek
      they were very yummy so i don't blame you:))

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  5. This looks awesome. It would go down a treat in our house. We are fans of all things Scottish too :)

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    Replies
    1. hi zena
      such an easy recipe and so worth the tiny effort to make:)

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  6. Yep - that's the ultimate booze soaker. We went to a house half a dozen doors down to have a drink with a frien of a friend. 6 hours later, we would say we were all a lot closer... so glad we could stagger home!

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    Replies
    1. isn't it great to just stagger home across the road? we love it!

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