Monday, 8 July 2019

VEGGIE-LITE We need to talk about gravy



Last Sunday we had a roast dinner. 

Elspeth has never much liked meat. When she was little, she’d eat all the other bits of a roast dinner with great gusto, but didn’t want the meat (funnily enough, I used to like my roast dinners like this when I was a child, but I liked to eat the meat first, in my fingers when it was hot, and then not have any on my plate). So when Els suggested making a roast dinner following the recipes in Anna Jones’s A Modern Way to Eat I thought, why not? Let’s give it a go. 

I couldn’t really imagine how it was going to work. I was thinking of the types of vegetables I usually roast – peppers and aubergines and onions. They didn’t seem very roast-dinnery. There would be gravy, Elspeth said, and I thought of the delicious onion gravy I make (from a Nigel Slater recipe, just to prove after last week that I really do have time for him). The centrepiece would be a Yorkshire pudding. Great – that made sense. And roast potatoes, of course. You can’t have a roast dinner without roast potatoes.

What we actually ate was the huge plateful of different flavours and textures that you see above – which, as it turns out, exactly mirrored the traditional parts of a meat-based roast dinner without for a moment making me feel that the meat was missing. There was roast squash, carrots and beetroot. I must have had roasted carrots before, but these were a revelation. I wonder if I’ll bother with parsnips again – carrots are tenderer and sweeter. There were perfect roast potatoes. There was a mixture of greens, purple sprouting broccoli, asparagus and green beans, just barely still crunchy and with a tahini dressing. The Yorkshire pudding, flavoured with horseradish, could have been lighter, but it drew all the flavours together perfectly.

And the gravy?

I can’t tell you how perfect the gravy was. You need to try it yourself. It looked like the very best homemade gravy you ever saw, perfect thickness, dark, a little shiny. And it tasted, rich, flavourful, well-seasoned. This was Anna’s sticky roasted vegetable gravy, made by roasting celery, onion, leeks, carrot and garlic very hot, then mashing them in the roasting tin. You then place the roasting tin on the hob and proceed in the usual way of making gravy, adding flour and stock, scraping in the bits that are stuck to the pan.

Here’s the thing – I think the gravy makes the roast dinner. When there’s too little or it’s too thin or too salty or not flavourful enough, it can dull the meal, no matter how perfect the rest is. This gravy is good enough that I would consider making it even if I were roasting meat.

And we’re already wondering how we could enhance this roast dinner to become our Christmas dinner – or if we should just do it exactly the same the next time. 




You can find the complete menu from week twenty-one here.



Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Friday, 5 July 2019

VEGGIE LITE New cookbooks!

Lemony lentil and crisy kale soup, from A Modern Way to Eat by Anna Jones


I do like a new cookery book and I got two of them for my birthday. One is another by Anna Jones, her first, A Modern Way to Eat. Essentially it’s more of the same as the one I already have and love, but from where I’m standing the moment that’s just fine. Anna seems to have hit exactly the right note for me just now, to the extent that I’ve just planted some chard seeds and I’m wondering about digging a bed for some kale next year…

And so the particularly beautiful lemony lentil and crispy kale soup form Anna’s book that you see at the top of the page was this week’s triumph. I am pretty fond of lentil soup anyway. It is everything I want in a soup, rich, filling, comforting, flavourful. This was a fabulous take on that, the solidity of the kale making a good contrast with the smooth lentil texture and the lemon giving it a surprising summeriness.

I’m not yet sold on the other book I got for my birthday. This was Nigel Slater’s latest, Greenfeast. He starts by describing how he likes to have lots of bowls of different things on the table for people to help themselves from. I do love these kinds of meals, but for everyday dinner I want to cook one thing, perhaps with some accompanying vegetables or bread or salad. Because he’s writing with this particular kind of meal in mind, nothing in the book is substantial enough to put on the table on its own and a lot of what’s here would just look like a side dish even if you multiplied the quantities. We had ‘Broad beans, new potatoes, tomatoes’ (they’re all named after the main ingredients like this) and it was a huge faff of skinning a mountain of broad beans and then realising we’d have to get the cheese out because there was no way we’d be full. I want to love this book. I do feel when I have the time to investigate some of the recipes, when I take them on board so that I can rustle up two or three without the attention required when you’re working with a new recipe, then I’ll find some gems in there. We don’t have very many Nigel Slater books, but those we do have have the wrinkled, food-spattered pages that show your true love for a recipe book. 

Oh, and another slight gripe about Greenfeast – it’s beautiful to look at, with a magenta fabric cover, about the size of a paperback and fat as a blockbuster. But oh just try cooking from it! You can’t lie it flat or prop it up in any way so that it stays open on the page. I’m not even sure it would work on a cookery book stand if I owned one. I managed to hold the pages open with another book but honestly, what I want in a cookery book is practicality. I want the whole recipe – method and ingredients – on one page. I want a picture of what it’s supposed to look like and I don’t mind the odd arty lifestyle picture, but please don’t overdo it. Ideally I’d like some suggestions about what to serve each recipe with and I’m open to ways to make variations. There are too many recipe books that really might just as well be coffee table books. I’m not putting Greenfeast in this league, as it actually ticks most of the former boxes and also has an attached page marker. It’s possible too that with use it will soften and lie open but I doubt it.



Anyway, enough.


You can find the complete menus from week twenty here.



Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Tuesday, 25 June 2019

VEGGIE-LITE Week 21 menu

Tuesday
Pasta alla Norma*
Jamie's Italy Jamie Oliver


Wednesday
Herby, nutty, noodly salad*
Veg Every Day Hugh Fearnely-Whittingstall

Thursday
Summer minestrone&
Forever Summer Nigella Lawson

Friday
Surprise Tatin
Plenty Yotam Ottolenghi

Saturday 
Double greens and filo pie*
A Modern Way to Eat Anna Jones

Sunday
Roast dinner*
A Modern Way to Eat Anna Jones

Monday
leftovers...


*new recipes to us


Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Sunday, 23 June 2019

VEGGIE-LITE Week 20 menu

Tuesday
Broad beans, new potatoes, tomatoes*
Greenfeast Nigel Slater

Wednesday

Lemony lentil and crispy kale soup*
A Modern Way to Eat Anna Jones

Thursday
Tomato and coconut cassoulet*
A Modern Way to Eat Anna Jones

Friday
Frittata

Saturday 
Spaghetti with polpette
The Modern Cook's Year Anna Jones

Sunday
Black sesame noodle bowl*
The Modern Cook's Year Anna Jones

Monday
Baked potatoes


*new recipes to us


Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Saturday, 22 June 2019

VEGGIE-LITE Where's the curry?

I had expected to end up cooking more curry-type dishes when we started this vegetarian thing. Those cuisines which are traditionally vegetarian seemed to be the most obvious direction to go in. So it has been a bit of a surprise to find that we have hardly ventured in that direction at all. I suppose that’s because we haven’t looked much at traditional recipes … mostly due to my falling in love with Anna Jones and her ‘modern’ take on cooking.

I’ve been trying to identify what it is makes her style ‘modern’ but, not being particularly experienced in analysing cooking, I’m struggling a bit. She has a lot of recipes where everything is together in one dish with no one star part of the meal at the centre of the plate as generally happens in a meal containing meat and can also happen in vegetarian cooking sometimes with something vegetarian as substitute (the nut roast school of veggie cooking). In fact, there are very few occasions when what she’s making is asking for vegetables or salad on the side. For quite a few weeks, the broccoli and carrots and potatoes and salad I always automatically buy have been unused until I suddenly realised I needed to do something with them, and I don’t know the last time I broke out the frozen sweetcorn.  Is this what makes Anna's cooking ‘modern’?

I suppose it’s healthy too and in a way that’s different from the dense, heavy wholefood vegetarian cooking of the seventies. I think then their task was to have people believe that you could have a vegetarian meal that was as filling as a meat meal and today we don’t necessarily believe that that bursting at the seams feeling is what you’re looking for in a meal. There have been occasional meals where I have felt not entirely full after dinner, but not many and I’ve never woken up starving. The portion sizes can be a bit askew at times and I think perhaps even though the meals look complete in themselves, it would be good to put bread on the table too or have a salad afterwards. It’s a different way of thinking about food. Which is fine by me. I do like to think about food (as if you haven’t noticed!).


And as to curry – we had a pretty great Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall recipe this week, from his book Veg Every Day. It was a kale and new potato curry, yellow with turmeric and warmly spicy rather than hot. Kale’s a funny vegetable, isn’t it? I’m sure the supermarkets never used to sell it. I think it must be one of those things that they grow for cattle feed, or else only people with allotments grow. It’s a vegetable that you couldn’t possibly just steam or boil and have on the side of the plate in the traditional British way. Too tough, too bitter. But in a curry like this it doesn’t wilt like spinach would. You can fry or roast it crispy or put it in a bubble and squeak, add it to a smooth soup to give a texture contrast and a little bitterness. I feel sure it's good for you. I like it steamed in a bowl of miso soup and noodles – takes no longer to make than a sandwich.

You can find the complete menus from week nineteen here.



Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Monday, 17 June 2019

VEGGIE-LITE Messing around food



There is something very festive about the kind of food where you have a lot of different dishes on the table and you construct your own meal with them. It's fun and it suggests a casualness which is totally at odds with the fact that in order to make such a meal you've got a whole lot of different ingredients and methods and timings to bring together. And the more I read veggie cookbooks, the more often I come across this way of doing things.

I do completely love these types of meals and preparing them can be fun if you have someone or ones to help you or if you are very organised (which I am). But I don't have enough of these dishes at my fingertips to be able to figure out what will work with what taste-wise and what will work together in terms of what you're actually doing in the kitchen at any one time. I tend to rely on a handful of tried and trusted recipes that I know I can put on the table at more or less the same time.

And then there are those recipe books where they just tell you all the things you need that go together! This week, Ottolenghi's divine falafel, made with soaked but not precooked chickpeas which I couldn't see working at all. But they were so good, and the graininess of the blitzed chickpeas was lovely, quite different from the smooth mush of precooked ones. And to go with it - homemade pitas, a salad of coriander and tomatoes and cucumber, hummus (just because we had it in the fridge), tahini sauce and a spicy herby mixture called zhoug.

How good does that look?



You can find the complete menu from week eighteen here.



Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.

Monday, 10 June 2019

VEGGIE-LITE Week 19 menu

Tuesday
Mushonara
(that's Liv's name for carbonara with mushrooms instead of bacon)

Wednesday
Pea and parsely soup
Veg Every Day Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

Thursday
Veggie chilli

Friday
Leek and goat's cheese quiche

Saturday 
Roasted veg with pommes boulangere

Sunday
Grilled Caesar salad with crispy chickpeas*
The Modern Cook's Year Anna Jones

Monday
Chard and new potato curry*
Veg Every Day Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall


*new recipes to us


Claire Watts and her family are cooking vegetarian for a year. You can find out why - and why 'cooking vegetarian' doesn't always necessarily mean 'eating vegetarian' here.

Claire Watts writes and edits books for children.
She's currently working on making something beautiful with fairy tales.
Find out about her Snippets project and how you can help on her Patreon page.