9 January 2010

Gummi Light Chandelier by Jellio


Oh what could be more amazing than a chandelier made with Gummi Bears! Ok, they're not real gummi bears but made from acrylic, but they still look amazing. From the brilliant food inspired designers at jellio.com.

Want one now!

5 January 2010

Let It Snow!


Happy New Year all! I admit I have been rather lax of late at the old blogs but never fear a new year, a list of resolutions and thousands of new ideas!

Meanwhile I thought I'd share a picture of my patio today as I'm snowed in in Salford with only tea and bran flakes for company. Egbert managed to walk to the city centre this morning and work for the office branch there as he feared he may be stuck in Sheffield. I'll just crank up the thermostat and arrange my new recipes while he works away, maybe the snow will last til tomorrow....

22 October 2009

I Want To Be An Airplane Hostess


Hula Seventy's brilliant blog has this great image that really made me want to be an airplane hostess, oh the glamour of the 60's! Maybe it's not too late to change me career...

Stilton Fondue with Walnut Bread and Pears

Stilton Fondue with Walnut bread and Pears

300g Stilton, derinded and cubed
200g Mascarpone cheese
4 tbsp vodka


Walnut Bread
400g strong wholemeal flour
250g strong white flour
120g walnut pieces, chopped
2 tbsp light Muscovado sugar
1tsp salt
7g sachet yeast
3 tbsp walnut oil
450ml warm water

For the Bread:

Put the wholemeal and white flour into a large bowl, add the walnut pieces, muscovado sugar and salt. Sprinkle over the yeast, then pour in the oil and warm water. Mix together until the mixture combines to a rough ball.
Tip the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 10 mins until smooth and elastic. Shape into an oval and put on to a greased baking tray (You can score to top with diagonal lines). Cover loosely with greased cling film and eave in a warm place for about 40 mins until doubled in size.
Preheat the oven to 200°C. Remove cling film from bread and bake the bread for 35 mins until golden and the base sounds hollow when tapped.

For the Fondue:

Put the Stilton and Mascarpone in a small saucepan over a very low heat and warm through for 5 minutes, stirring, until melted. Stir in the vodka and remove from the heat. Chop the pears and the bread into bitesize chunks when ready to serve. Warm through some small ramekins or a fondue pan and pour in the Stilton mixture. Serve with fondue forks along with the bread and pears to dip in.

Butternut Squash Ravioli with Sage Butter


So as promised I'm kicking off my Instant Restaurant recipes with one of my starters, Butternut Squash Ravioli served with a Sage Butter - tasty seasonal and light!

Handmade Butternut Squash and Goat's Cheese Ravioli with Sage Butter
Makes 24

Sage Butter:
75g butter
12 sage leaves (from the garden)

Pasta
550g ‘oo’ flour
4 fresh eggs (for 2 duck eggs)
salt

Filling
1 butternut squash
I medium onion, finely chopped
1 garlic clove
100g strong goat's cheese
1 tbsp butter
1/2 tbsp sage, chopped
120g parmesan, grated, plus extra to serve
Salt and black pepper

Method

Preheat oven to 190C, cut squash in half and remove the seeds from the butternut squash and brush all over with olive oil and place cut side down on a baking tray. Bake in the oven for about 35-40 minutes, until very soft. Meanwhile sautee the onions without browning. Scoop out the butternut squash flesh into a bowl, add the parmesan and some olive oil. Mix well, using the back of a fork to squash the butternut squash into a thick puree. Season to taste and set aside to cool.

Make pasta by hand into long sheets (by mixing flour, eggs and salt until into elastic dough then run through pasta maker until setting 1 thin.). Cut out circles and fill with squash mixture and crumble in the goat's cheese.

Blanch for 30 seconds ready to cook to serve. When ready to serve cook for 2 minutes in boiling salted water until cooked.

For the sage butter, heat butter until frothy, add in sage leaves until crispy, pour over ravioli to serve.

Instant Restaurant


So, big news people, I was lucky enough to be filmed for BBC2's new show Instant Restaurant last Friday! I had to create a pop-up restaurant for one night in my tiny terraced house and be followed by not one but two cameras, following the spills and thrills of trying to create a professional restaurant with my one oven and tiny hob. The good news is I did it, and it was a success!

After some hairy moments involving making ravioli in the living room two minutes before serving as all the pre-prepared pasta had stuck to the plate! As well as having a mini-breakdown five minutes before the guest arrived as I was still cooking on the dining table and had no flower arrangements. But as if by magic as they walked in, an air of calm came across us and we had the best fun!

Be sure to catch me on BBC2 in January! And check out all my recipes from the show over the next few posts!

21 September 2009

The Knitted Lamp


Every now and then I come across a piece of design that immediately makes me jump straight to my studio and start recreating. The knitted lamp by French designer Phillipe Tyberghein is a beautiful idea rejecting the modern textures of sleek cables and covering them in a lovely knit.

Nobody likes cables, and as a designer I am constantly surrounded by a nest of ugly shades of white and black shiny wires - when all I needed was to knit them a cover. I'm currently figuring out how to knit such a tiny long sock to neatly cover my laptop cable - I think it may take me some time! In the meantime I may order the Phillipe Tyberghein lamp instead.

Transparent Toaster


I have to say the bain of my morning is burning toast, and at the moment my toaster is set to an unchangeable burn on one side uncooked on the other - not the best start to my day. So imagine my delight when faced with this beautiful new invention of the transparent toaster bu Inventables.

Not yet for sale, the prototype claims to cook your toast using heat conducted through the glass sides allowing not only perfectly done toast, but a beautiful contraption for your kitchen which is nearly invisible! As soon as they hit the shelves I will be having one!

18 September 2009

Parking Day!



September the 18th brings us one of the most strange but brilliant days; The International Parking Day, where residents across the world (although I've only seen it in the USA) reclaim street-side parking spaces and use them as green public spaces, laying down turf, create community events - the space is the only limit!

See what people have been up to here or check out their website www.parkingday.org.

Porject of the week: Tool Belt


Etsy's How To has come up trumps with this lovely tool belt making guide by Lexie Barnes taken from her book Sew What! Bags. Everyone from bakers to graphic designers need something to put their pens/spoons/scissors/rogue kittens in. What delays a project more than loosing the things you are working with?

When I was in Vietnam last year I bought a beautiful linen smock dress which came to a pouch at the front which is still my dream dress if I ever get to open a cafe...
In the meantime I'll keep my tool belt until I get to open that cafe!

I'll post my version as soon as I'm done!

Anglepoise Fifty


My latest addition to my studio space is two Anglepoise Fifty lamps, clear and orange. A quirky take on the traditional Anglepoise lamp the Fifty by designer Anthony Dickens is made of clear perspex with the cable shaped in the Angelpoise shape. Genius!

Even better they are two for one at the moment here - making them a mere £16.84 each! Bargain and beautiful!

17 September 2009

Red Sky at Night


Red sky at night, shepherds delight, red sky in the morning shepherds warning. Good job it was in the evening then! I think it may be the last of the fizzy Fridays sitting outside but at least it was a pretty one, it will be pink champagne indoors from now on, although we will have to introduce some scrabble into the mix...