Cooking up our simple version of Peperonata for a big party

One of our party clients wanted an informal day but some fairly formal food as a lot of the guests were coming from culinary school in Switzerland for her party. They clearly wanted different salads, instead of the usual, for their gourmet guests. We suggested our own home grown lettuce and leaves for a green and red salad, the leaves to be picked on the day of the event from the Deli Truck HQ garden. We also suggested an old favourite from the south of France – a fabulously simple red pepper, fresh basil and garlic salad with a side of anchovy fillets.

deli truck, peppers, catering

Stacks of Peppers ready to be prepped for the grill

We char the peppers under a very hot grill, then in batches let them sweat in plastic bags, so the burnt skin just brushes off. It’s wonderful at this stage how the peppers completely change flavour to a deep nutty richness. They also start producing their own oil, we just add a bit of extra virgin olive oil to help things along, oh and fresh garlic of course. And with many many peppers to do – this will be a half day bake and make – but the smell at Deli Truck HQ is worth the effort. I personally don’t think there is a better smell than peppers being charred. 

Deli Truck, catering< peppers

The peppers after 10 minutes under a very hot grill

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The blackened skins being peeling off the peppers

Peppers getting a big slurp of extra virgin olive oil

Peppers getting a big slurp of extra virgin olive oil

And the final result - peppers with Garlic on the buffet. We made 150 individual pieces of peperonata they all disappeared with in 45 minutes.

And the final result – peppers with Garlic on the buffet. We made 150 individual pieces of peperonata they all disappeared with in 45 minutes.

Making Strawberry and Rum Ice Cream

This morning – “we be making” – strawberry Ice cream with strawberry chunks that have been soaked in spiced rum and sugar for the last 48 hours. The rum adds great vanilla and spice flavours and the alcohol also stops the the strawberry chunks from freezing into little iceberg nuggets. They are like smooth little explosions of sweet spice when you bite through one.

deli truck, ice cream,

The strawberries soaking in spiced rum for 48 hours

Deli Truck, Ice cream.

Strawberry Ice Cream ready to eat. We mixed in about 200ml of rum to 4 litres of ice cream. Tastes amazing.

Chocolate fudge sauce making – part of our sauce collection for our “Ice Cream Bar”

A bowl full of 70 percent chocolate over the double boiler.

A bowl full of 70 percent chocolate over the double boiler.

Spent the last hour making our chocolate fudge sauce for our “Ice Cream Bar” next Saturday. To make it fudge we melt 70% coco solid free trade chocolate with a little bit of evaporated milk and a drop or two of cream. We thought we may be able to find a very good quality commercial sauce – but it seems all the chocolate sauces available in the UK are made to a budget. Some where OK but most tasted more of sugar than chocolate. So we felt we really had to make our own. The difference using pure high grade chocolate with no preservatives or additives is worth the extra 20 minutes it takes to make.

Chocolate saucecooling down after being made.

Chocolate saucecooling down after being made.

Inventing a new high powered “Cherry Bomb” Ice Cream

Just finished making our own Morello Cherry Ice Cream for a 21st Birthday party this Saturday. Been experimenting with lots of interesting ingredients to try and get the Ice Cream we like – and finally found a fabulous concoction at Sainsbury’s called Morello Cherry Compot. Never even knew it existed until researching for this ice cream. Brilliant flavour. So we blitzed the compote with real cherries in kirsch, Cherry Brandy, and a tiny touch of white chocolate. This turned out to be the winning set of ingredients. It really tastes sensational with that lovely little bit of bitterness from the berries – sweetness from the Ice cream custard and chocolate, and a zing from the booze. The colour is almost neon…

Deli Truck, Morello Cherry, Ice Cream

Morello Cherry Ice Cream

Fresh Home Grown Summer Salad for our guests

Growing our own salad again this summer for our clients parties. This year we have come up with a slightly different way of growing. Because this year we are almost booked out all the way through to October, we can plan our salad growing period for each individual party. For example – salad in photos below is just becoming perfect. We planted this lot specifically for a large 21st birthday party in 8 days time. Salad will then be at it’s best – so we will pick on the day of the party. It will be crunchy, fresh and additive free. Also adding beet leaves this year to our usual “green” salad. A large percentage of the young party goers attend a culinary school in Switzerland – so they know their food and expect the best.

deli truck, salad, catering, summer

This year we are growing yellow beets and using the leaf for our green salad selection. A slightly bitter leaf, works well with an mustard based emulsion vinaigrette, with a little bit of palm sugar added.

Deli Truck, salads, summer

This years selection of leafs for our green summer salads.

Lettuce_leafs_WR

Foody trip to deepest Normandy

A quick trip to France to stock up on supplies for the Deli Truck and of course couldn’t go back without a touch of regional, old school, french cooking  – First off the famous Galette.

The Normandy Galette in all its bucolic  magnificence. We reckon there may be 2,000 calories on this plate... Bring it on

The Normandy Galette in all its bucolic magnificence. We reckon there may be 2,000 calories on this plate… Bring it on

French comfort food in a cheap cheerful cafe in the little village of Ernee. Galette is the snack food of Btittany. It’s a buckwheat pancake with fillings. This one stuffed with potatoes, onions, garlic and two types of ham all finished off with a light sauté in cream. Then a huge slab of raclette (a melty mountain cheese) is melted on top. Perfect with a carafe of chateau plonk of the red variety. Cost with wine 8 quid.

The slightly acidy, poopy, lower intestinal tract sausage.. Absolutely brilliant

The slightly acidy, poopy, lower intestinal tract sausage.. Absolutely brilliant

Another great dish from a small restaurant – this time a place I have been before called La Table Normande- the entree is a classic – a slice of Tatin d’andouille de vire a la Normande. This is a sausage made from the lower intestine of a pig, so a bit poopy, but in a good way. Sitting on a bed of caramelised apples.

What to do with all those tomatoes over summer

Lovely fresh Tomatoes from the Deli Truck

Lovely fresh Tomatoes from the Deli Truck

Had a lot of vibrant coloured, fully ripened and very tasty tomatoes left over from our Sunday event at the Valance school. If you’ve never made oven dried tomatoes (especially with uber-ripe ones) you have to try this. Cut tomatoes in half, put into a baking tray, dust with salt and pepper, fresh thyme and olive oil – then put in the oven at just 100/110 degrees centigrade for 6 to 7 hours.  Or overnight at 90 degrees for 10 to 12 hours. It’s indescribable how different the tomatoes end up – it’s like 20 tomatoes distilled into one. As the water (which makes up 80% of the tomato) evaporates, you end up with a super-concentrated tomato taste that is both sweet and savoury and lightly caramelised. Squashed onto a toasted and buttered slice of sourdough, this is a meal in itself.

Tomatoes Deli Truck

After 8 hours in the oven at just 100 degrees. the Tomatoes lightly caramelise and intensify in flavour

A more smokey smoke for our pork shoulder

We have devised a new way of smoking our pork shoulder after we thought a stronger smoke would be better for our pulled pork recipe. So instead of using those silly little oak chips you buy from the internet or garden centres we now have access to a supply of oak timber. The smoking is intense and results in a much stronger smoke – as you can see here in our latest video on how we do it.

 

How to make the best Pea and Ham soup

In the middle of preparing our yummy food for the Tunbridge Wells Farmers Market @TWBCFrmrsMkt tomorrow (Saturday). During the last couple of weeks many of you have asked us to bring back our seafood chowder, which we did last week. We sold out, but predictably – many of you were disappointed that we had taken our meaty, chunky super-tasty pea and ham soup off the menu in place of the chowder. So this week the pea and ham is back on and even better I’m going to show you how easy this incredibly tasty dish is to make.
I get loads of Deli Truck customers asking how we make the soup so thick and hammy – well this is how.
I’m making 40 portions for the photos below so adjust the amounts to suit your appetite – you will be eating this for a few days.

Deli Truck Pea and Ham soup

Two ham hocks, one smoked the other just salted waiting to go into a pot of water for a 3 hour simmer

So grab two ham hocks from your butcher and simmer them with an onion, bay leaf and about 6 pepper corns. Ham hocks are very cheap and sometimes free if you have a good relationship with your butcher – if they are chunky ones like this then you get a lot of good meat as well. They will take about 3 hours until tender and falling off the bone. Take them out of the pot, cool and chop into chunks.

Deli Truck Ham and Pea soup

Ham hocks cooled after a 3 hour simmer – then chopped into largish chunks

Keep the water the hocks were boiled in for later seasoning. This water will be very very salty so be careful when adding to the soup.

Del Truck, Pea and Ham Soup, onions

Onion and garlic chopped – I put this in the blender to make it much finer before it goes into the pot with oddles of butter to cook without colouring 

Deli Truck

As you can see I cut the potatoes into quite small chunks before they go in the pot with the chicken stock. This way it doesn’t take to long to cook and the freshness of flavour remains.

In a large pot put in a good slab of butter, three finely chopped onions and two large garlic cloves. Simmer until cooked then add 3 large potatoes, chopped, 3 bay leaves, ground pepper and a litre of Chicken stock. Boil until potatoes are nearly cooked then add two and a half bags of frozen peas. Bring back to the boil and cook the peas for about 3 minutes. At this stage it looks a little watery – dont worry you’re about to hit the mixture with a blending stick which will transform the dish into a thick unctuous green mixture.

Deli Truck Pea and ham soup

Before blending the soup looks a little watery – dont worry it gets really thick once the potato and peas are blitzed

Deli Truck

A blending stick for blitzing the mixture brings the right texture and explodes the taste

Blend until smooth and thick. (reminds me of a TV presenter I once worked with) Add the chopped ham hock – allow to simmer for a minute or two and then taste. If it needs salt use the “ham hock simmering water” as your seasoning. Then add the remaining half packet of peas into the soup for texture, taste and season again if necessary. It should be so thick that you can stand a spoon up in it.

It should be so thick that a spoon stands up in it

It should be so thick that a spoon stands up in it

NOTE: There will always be a debate about frozen/tinned versus fresh. I think there are really only three things that are better pre-packed. One is frozen peas because they are snap frozen only hours after being picked and really do maintain the flavour and colour better than sitting for hours in a truck on the way to a supermarket. Secondly – tinned Italian tomatoes, you can never get them as intense and fully flavoured fresh in the UK. And thirdly puff pastry – who wants to make that every time, considering the quality of the bought product which is now so good.

It’s pruning time in the vineyards of Kent

It’s that time of the year – the world renowned champagne vines on the “Squerryes Estate” in Kent are having their annual pruning after lying dormant during the cold winter months. We are lucky that we live in the middle of the estate surrounded by acres of Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and Pinot Meunier vines. And I’ve been eyeing up the prunings.

deli Truck, Squerryes Estate, champagne

Squerryes Estate Vineyards In Kent – Last summer 2014.

Ever since I had a grilled meat epiphany in the Bordeaux as an impressionable young man – I have always desperately wanted to cook meat over vine prunings. 29 years ago an old farmer in the Bordeaux region invited me to his home after a rather exhausting day tasting his wine. We were both very hungry by the time we got to his old stone house.


He quickly piled a heap of very dry vine prunings from the previous year into his stone fireplace, lite them and after an initial flare, they settled down to a lovely 10 cm layer of hot aromatic coals. He quickly covered the coals with a cake cooling rack sitting on a couple of bricks and threw on a heavily seasoned piece of prime top rump beef – enough for four people. He turned it twice brushed on some butter and removed after about 8 minutes. After resting it was a perfect medium rare. He sliced it thinly on the bias and the flavour was like nothing I had ever had before. The vine branches had added a distinctive smoky, berry, citrusy note to the meat. Served with simple sautéed potatoes it was probably the best steak I had ever had ’till that time.

Deli Truck, Champagne,

Picking the Prunings from the Vineyard in Kent


This is why we spent a very cold day yesterday in the vineyards in Kent collecting vine pruning. This summer we plan to cook a lot of our grills and burgers for the Deli Truck over these smokey clippings when they have dried out I hope it tastes as memorable as it did nearly 30 years ago.

Del Truck, Champagne, Squeeryes Court Champagne

You can see the size of the prunings in this photo, when they have dried out they will burn fast tp start with then lay down a very good layer of coals – that will last about ten minutes perfect for cooking a large steak.