Archive for March, 2008

Alder Carr Farm

Monday, March 17th, 2008

It seems that we’re getting to be at farmers’ markets almost as often as the farmers themselves. Keen to seek out fresh produce closer to home, on Saturday morning we jumped into the car and drove the 9 miles from Ipswich to Needham Market.

Alder Carr Farm is a working farm, and sells locally-sourced food from the on-site farm shop, while customers can also pick their own fruit and vegetables. Local farmers, growers, and producers sell their wares at the monthly farmers’ market, and, if the car park was anything to go by, attract a healthy throng of interested buyers.

Alder Carr Farm Farmers’ Market
The farmers’ market at Alder Carr Farm is held monthly

The farm’s courtyard was abuzz with activity, with stalls selling fresh meat, fish, cakes, chocolates, truffles, and even Indian food to go. The equally well-stocked farm shop inside one of Alder Carr’s barns sells fruit and vegetables grown on site, as well as local and European cheeses and cold meats, and quiches, sausage rolls and other meat goods made in its production kitchen. There’s even locally-sourced alcohol.

Alder Carr Farm local produce
All manner of local produce is sold in the farm shop

Filling our farm shop basket with an odd pairing of vegetable stock and local beer and cyder (with a hint of blackberry liqueur), it was all very impressive, and encouraged our self-sufficiency and local market selling pipe dreams still further. Again, the locally grown vegetables really were very large, as in so many places we’ve been to recently. There was much to tempt the taste buds, but we even somehow managed to avoid being swayed by the Fruit Cream Ice, also made on the Alder Carr grounds.

Highland Cattle at Alder Carr Farm
Three-week old Highland Cattle calf with its proud mother

There’s even something for the children, and the older children among the visitors. Looking and sounding like a fictional farm from The Archers, a three-week old baby Highland Cattle calf was being shown to the world by a very proud mother, and there were bantam chicks and baby Pygmy goats to stroke. That’s not to mention the roadside field of Lohmann chickens, which rush up to the gate like old women at a Debenham’s sale if they think you have feed.

It was a very enjoyable and relaxing start to the weekend, and we would definitely visit again. The farmers’ market is held on the third Saturday of the month from 9am to 1pm, although the farm shop, tearoom and restaurant are open weekly Tuesday to Saturday 10am to 4.30pm, and 10am to 4pm on Sundays.

Find Alder Carr Farm in Creeting St Mary just off the A14/A140 junction to Needham Market, by following the brown tourist signs.

Recipe: Cornish pasties

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Cornish pasties

Pies and pasties are a bastion of English cooking, and are a favourite and traditional part of a vegetable and gravy meal in many areas of the country. They also represent good, wholesome, home cooking.

There are numerous regional and county variations, but this recipe is for Cornish pasties filled with the traditional meat and vegetables, but vegetarian varieties can be made, too, substituting the meat for more chunky foodstuffs that once grew in the garden. Cooked fish is another filling that could be used for non-meat eaters.

Once cooked, these moderately-sized pasties can be eaten warm as an evening meal with the traditional vegetables and gravy, or cold as a lunchtime treat – much better than a sandwich. This recipe should be enough for 10 pasties, which if not eaten after cooking, can be frozen when they have cooled. Potatoes can be used instead of turnips for a more traditional pasty.

Ingredients
250g (9oz) of minced (ground) beef
1kg (35oz) of shortcrust pastry
1/4 pint of gravy
1 egg
A little water
2 turnips
2 carrots

For vegetarian pasties, use half a small swede as a meat substitute and ¼ pint of white sauce as a gravy variation.

Method
Chop the minced beef, and wash, peel, and slice the turnips and carrots. Dice the vegetables into 5mm cubes, and add to the meat, mixing together. Put the chopped and mixed ingredients into a large bowl, and add gravy, which can be made using granules (if not using white sauce for vegetarian pasties, ensure the gravy granules are suitable for non-meat eaters). Mix all the dry ingredients with the gravy to bind them together.

Flour a work surface and roll out the pastry to a thickness of 5mm. Cut out circles approximately 16cms round, and then lay a strip of the meat, vegetable, and gravy filling across each one from outside edge to outside edge, passing through the centre.

Once all the pastry circles have been ‘filled’, brush a little water along the whole edge of each pasty round, and fold in half along the filling line, and pinch up into the traditional Cornish pasty shape. Pinch from end to end, until all the filling has been enclosed, and place onto a greased baking tray.

Slice shallow holes in the top of each pasty (traditional Cornish pasties have different slit arrangements denoting different fillings) to allow ventilation while cooking, and lightly brush with egg.

Place the baking tray full of pasties into a pre-heated oven at 230 degrees Celsius (450 degrees Fahrenheit) for 10 minutes, and then bake for a further 40 minutes at 190 degrees Celsius (375 degrees Fahrenheit).

Take out of the oven once cooked, and turn out onto wire racks to cool. Enjoy hot or cold with vegetables and gravy, or baked beans. If the pasties are to be stored frozen, place them into the freezer the same day once they have cooled.

For a sweeter taste, even fruit fillings such as apple and raspberry, and strawberry and custard can be used to create an unusual dessert.

Local produce: Aspall Draught Suffolk Cyder

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Aspall Draught Suffolk Cyder 

We like to seek out local produce on goodrichard.com and support local growers and producers, and buyers in East Anglia are spoilt for choice with supermarkets stocking all sorts of food and drink from around the area.

Aspall Draught Suffolk Cyder is lightly sparkling, and is made from a different blend of base cyders, all fermented using the same technique. Using local apples or fruit from their own orchards, the eighth-generation Suffolk brewing company first produced the Normandy-style cider variation back in 1728, when Clement Chevallier fermented his first batch of the golden drink.

First created in 2003 to mark the 275th year of making local cyder, Aspall Draught Suffolk Cyder is refreshing, crisp, and has a fresh apple aroma. Light to drink, not at all gassy, and initially sweet with a pleasantly dry aftertaste, it is enjoyable to drink on its own before a meal as we did, and doesn’t feel heavy like a more traditional lager or bitter would.

It was the perfect introduction to the pressed apple beverage, so beloved of many friends, and that somehow, in the last 34 years, had passed me by.

Aspall also produce English Apple Juice, and Cyder Vinegar (a bottle of which we have in the cupboard), in the village of Aspall near Stowmarket. Click here for more details on their traditionally and locally-made products.

A day of firsts

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Today was a day of firsts, predominantly in the kitchen. As the day we spent cycling into town wore on into early evening, we clicked on the radio and moved obstructive books, food, pans, and trivets into the hallway, so that we could spend a couple of hours whipping up culinary masterpieces.

This evening’s cooking menu almost read like a homely three-course meal. There were Cornish pasties to start, a leek, lemon and mushroom risotto for main (though it wasn’t this recipe), and apple and cinnamon muffins to finish. No, I didn’t make the muffins (but did lick the spoon), though I did have more than a handful of fingers in the other recipes.

The first first, the pasties, were very easy to make, and shortcrust pastry is so much easier to make with a Magimix. After we’d filled, crimped and finished them, the pasties did look like mini masterpieces, and very true to their supposed Cornish origins. Workday lunches this week will be truly good.

The risotto used the first fresh leeks from the garden, but they soon appeared to dissolve into the warmed ingredient mixture. I’d always imagined a risotto to be hard to make, with all the constant stirring and adding of stock, but, as long as you keep the mixture off the bottom of the pan and keep it moist, the whole process is actually quite easy. Quick too, and the second first was eaten in less time than it took to create it.

The third first I had no hand in creating. We cracked open a bottle of Aspall’s Draught Suffolk Cyder to celebrate our culinary successes. My first taste (and our reward for an evening spent under the glare of the kitchen’s halogens) of the sparkly apple liquid was well-deserved, and an enjoyable end to my day of triple debuts.

Volkswagen Polo ‘Confidence’ TV commercial

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

This latest TV commercial for VW’s Polo had its first airing on Monday night. I don’t know what Volkswagen is trying to say here – maybe that the Polo gives you (or your pets) extra confidence… But to do what exactly?

The 30-second spot is quite entertaining, though, well done, and fits in with the brand’s new ‘American-ness’ (which is ironic as the Polo isn’t currently sold there) as seen on its recently relaunched UK website.