Sunday 22 April 2012

Nettle Soup

Irish Restaurants seldom serve Irish food, so your only hope is to make it yourself. Nettle Soup is a classic, traditional and delicious dish, cheap and easy to make. Young nettles are plentiful and easily found by even the most reticent of foragers.

Wild Nettles (Urtica Doica) growing in County Kilkenny
Pick young nettle tops, using rubber gloves, you can pick them without gloves if you know how to grab the stems and leaves, without getting stung.

Apologies to Darina Allen for corrupting her recipe.

RECIPE
Large bunch nettles
Tablespoon of butter
3 shallots or 1 onion or leeks
1 medium Golden Wonder Potato
1 litre good quality homemade chicken stock

Freshly picked Nettles (Urtica Doica)
Melt the butter until bubbling, add finely chopped shallots and well diced Golden Wonder potato, add a little salt and pepper. Cover and cook over a low heat until the potato is soft. Add the stock and simmer for a couple of minutes, then add the chopped nettles, cook for another couple of minutes.

Nettle Soup
Puree the mixture in a blender until smooth (originally, it would have put through a hair sieve) and reheat before serving. A delicious Irish country soup, the traditional recipe would not have used potato, an introduced species - oatmeal or some other cereal would have been used instead.

According to Ray Mears and Gordon Hillman, Stinging Nettles (Urtica Doica) are a very good source of protein, as well as vitamins C & B, calcium, potassium iron, phosphorous, magnesium etc. So, give it a go...

Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com

Monday 16 April 2012

Nettle and Barley Pudding - An Experiment

It is time to go foraging for Nettles, they are now in season, here in County Kilkenny.

Bunch of Freshly Picked Nettles

Best eaten tender, soon after emerging from their winter slumber.  When picking them, wear rubber gloves, so you will not be stung. This recipe calls for a decent bunch. Make sure they are growing in a spot where they have not been sprayed, away from a road and preferably where there are no livestock grazing.

Added ingredients: leeks, sorrel, watercress, thyme & chives
This recipe is based on an ancient type of pudding, commonly eaten in the past. 
Puddings, nowadays, apart from blood puddings, are usually regarded as sweet dishes, but this was not always the case. Originally, they were placed in an animal's stomach, like the modern Scottish haggis. From the seventeenth century, puddings, generally savory, wrapped in a cloth and thus cooked. Later, in second half of the nineteenth century, they were placed in a pudding basin and steamed. 

Barley and Nettle Pudding being placed in Lamb Stock
RECIPE
Lamb, ham or chicken stock
Barley (pearl barley was used in this case)
Bunch of nettles
Bunch of watercress
Bunch of sorrel
2 leeks
Chives
1 wild garlic leaf
Sprigs of thyme
Salt

The barley was soaked before hand, in lamb stock and then drained (there is a similar version of this recipe, that uses barley flour). The greens were finely chopped, added to the barley, along with some sea salt, mixed together.  Some of the larger leaves were held aside and used to line the pudding cloth, and to wrap the pudding. It was then tied up and cooked in a saucepan of lamb stock for an hour and a half.

Nettle and Barley Pudding
VERDICT
The pudding should have been opened, once it had cooled, but being in a hurry to taste it, it was opened while still steaming - so it lost its shape! It was wonderfully tasty, and was eaten with some locally produced lamb. It is likely that in medieval times, all sorts of exotic foreign spices (of which they were so fond), would have been added - by those who could afford it. 
Next time, I am going to try the barley flour version, it is an inspirational dish: traditional, healthy, cheap, local and seasonal. 

Sunday 8 April 2012

Real Mint Sauce for Easter Lamb

Have you ever gone out to dinner, ordered lamb and mint sauce? The lamb was delicious, but the mint sauce was a disappointing nasty, vinegary mess, out of some mass produced jar - sadly, this is a common scenario for which there is absolutely no need.

Homemade Mint Sauce made from a mixture of Applemint and Spearmint.
Mint is one of the easiest herbs to grow in County Kilkenny, so much so, it can become a weed in the garden, if not kept under control. Spear Mint (Mentha Speicata) is used here, along with Apple Mint (Mentha Sauveolens), both can be grown in an old pot or bucket.

Mint Sauce is the simplest of sauces to make, there is no excuse for not giving it a go. It is a very good example of how one can be thrifty and still enjoy good food, by complimenting it with a quality sauce, at virtually no cost.

RECIPE
Pick a bunch of young sprigs of mint
Tear the leaves from the stems
Chop the leaves, finely
Place in bowl, cover with boiling water
Add teaspoon of sugar, vinegar to taste and a pinch of salt.
Leave to cool and serve.

Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com