Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Red Currant & Lavender Jelly for the Easter Lamb

At Nashtown Castle our preserves, jellies and pickles are made seasonally with local seasonal produce where possible. They are home grown and home made. Here is our list of the preserves that are currently available.
Nashtown Castle Red Currant & Lavender Jelly for Easter

  • Apple Jelly - made with apples from an old traditional Kilkenny orchard
  • Apple & Lavender Jelly - made with our homegrown lavender
  • Bitter Orange Marmalade - this is our only preserve that has no locally grown ingredients
  • Cucumber Pickle - made with three varieties of cucumber, grown in our garden
  • Gooseberry & Apple Jelly - has a subtle gooseberry flavour
  • Pickled Red Cabbage - robust old fashioned pickle, made with our own red cabbage
  • Pumpkin, Ginger & Orange Marmalade - more like a relish, delicious with cold meat
  • Spicy Pumpkin Chutney - perfect with cold beef and a baked potato
  • Red Currant and Lavender Jelly - to be eaten with the Easter roast lamb. Fresh mint will be difficult to find as Easter is so early this year, so here is a great alternative

Sunday, 3 March 2013

A Bucket of Blood

A friend arrived with a bucket of fresh organic pig's blood a couple of days ago, this was the opportunity that we have been waiting for. Fed up with eating black puddings, posing as being made from traditional recipes, but actually made from dried imported blood, here was our chance to make our own genuine organic pudding.
Fresh organic pig's blood
The first problem was to locate a traditional Irish recipe, there were plenty telling us how to use them in cooking, but few were found on how to actually make them and those ones had quantities of white breadcrumbs in them, that we wished to avoid. Not having used fresh blood before, the safest course of action was to use a sensible French recipe. So, we began with Jennifer McLagan's Boudin Noir. This proved to be a success and good starting point.
Black pudding made with fresh organic pig's blood, ready for the oven.
The next morning, feeling a lot braver and considerably more foolhardy, it was time to go it alone and create our own recipe to try and achieve the traditional style of Irish black pudding, that we were aiming for.
It turned out to be as simple as rendering down some organic pork back fat, cooking onions in the fat, adding cooked pearl barley, oat flakes, spices and last of all: the blood. Then baking it all in a bath of water, in the oven.
Traditional homemade black pudding ready to cook for breakfast
What a delicious breakfast - two different types of homemade, locally sourced, blood pudding, fried slowly with a nob of country butter. The first one was very rich and light in texture and the second was exactly as we had hoped: moist with a rich traditional flavour.
Homemade black pudding almost ready for the breakfast table
From now on, we will find it difficult to buy blood puddings, as we know that we can make vastly superior ones, in full awareness of the origin of all the main ingredients.

Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com