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Tuesday 25 October 2011

Lemon Ice Ice Baby

Sicily, Sorrento and the Amalfi coast in particular, boast some of the best (if not the very best) citrus fruit in the world. Lemons and oranges can be found practically everywhere and are used locally in a whole range of ways - perfumes, soaps, liquors, sweets, and of course the local cuisine.

The differences between what grows over there and what we have in the UK are noticeable immediately. They're much bigger, more perfumed and far far sweeter with none of the sharp bitterness usually associated with lemons. These badboys are so special that the 'Sorrento Lemon' was even granted it's own IGP recognition (Protected Geographical Indication) in November 2000, something more usually associated with the production of wine.

Other than squeezed over fish, my two favourite uses of these prized assets are in the production of 'limoncello' (a local liquor that I'm sure everyone has drunk at some point, usually excessively) and 'granita di limone' (a semi-frozen treat now available in all sorts of flavours).

One will get you pissed, the other will cleanse your palate. You can always mix them both together like I drunkenly did with some friends on Saturday night, I think I remember it working...

Anyway, if you want 'limoncello' get yourself to Sorrento. But if you want granita, here's a really easy recipe to make the original lemon version, and damn refreshing it is too.

Serves 4-6:

600ml of water
300g of sugar
500ml of lemon juice (approx 8-16 lemons)
zest of 1 lemon

Bring the water and sugar to a light simmer and reduce until you have a slightly syrupy consistency, this shouldn't take much more than 10 mins. Remove from the heat and leave to cool.

Strain the lemon juice through a sieve straight into the cooled syrup, mix well and leave to rest for 30 mins. Add the grated zest (and ribbons of very finely shredded mint if you fancy) and pour into a plastic container with a lid.

Pop this into the freezer for 4-5 hours stirring (and eventually scraping) the mixture well every 30 mins with a fork. That's pretty much it.

Get stuck in or just keep in the freezer until you're ready. If it solidifies a little too much over time just fluff it up again with a fork before serving in a glass. Enjoy!

Wednesday 19 October 2011

Look Mum, No Hands!

As much as it pains me to say this, smartphone apps and the internet in general are unquestionably eating into (excuse the pun) the cookbook market. I still get a lot of enjoyment flicking through the Silver Spoon for inspiration but books like this are bloody heavy, take up a lot of space and make it comparatively harder to bookmark, refer back to and ultimately find what you're looking for.

With that in mind it's not surprising that one of the most popular categories in app development is indeed 'cookery'. The only problem with recipe and food related apps is the fact that you don't always want Moroccan Chicken Rub fingers swiping across your shiny touchscreen.

To combat this terrifying dilemma the geeks over at Random House Group and Ebury Publishing have come up with a nifty solution – the 'My Kitchen Table' app.

Using what it calls ‘pioneering Touch Free technology’ you can swipe through a recipe - you guessed it - without touching your screen.

It's free to download but only works on fourth-generation devices. Stop hating and upgrade...

See the app in action below (warning, the video is mildly annoying but Antonio Carluccio features so that's ok):


Thursday 13 October 2011

How to piss off the French

This is brilliant. A hidden camera, an English actor and a fake product hit a local market in Castelnaudary (capital of the infamous 'cassoulet') to sell a British take (mint, sweet & sour, curry) on the quintessential French dish.

To put this into context 'cassoulet' is the French's 4th favourite meal and a source of immense national and gastronomic pride. It is also utterly delicious.

Needless to say the concept does not go down very well with the locals. One even tries to sabotage the stand. Watch the full video below, genius...