Better late than never I have been kindly asked to cook two of the dishes entered in the OcUK Christmas Cooking Competition. I have two fantastic looking plates of food to cook from OcUK big-guns MKS2005 and Miracleboy. Be nervous boys because I am a hard judge and you will not like me. But the more you hate me the more you will learn. I am hard but I am fair.
For two great dishes I'm going to need some great ingredients and Marks and Spencer is the perfect place to buy them. Here's the contents of my lurid green shopping bag:
I have free range chicken leg quarters on special offer at two packs for £3 and I've seperated the drumsticks for another day and boned the thighs. Miracleboy's recipe calls for chicken stock so I smashed the bones and let them bubble down with some onion and carrot to a thick stock for his sauce. There's a large butternut squash, a bottle of unoaked chardonnay, red onions, potatoes, baby cabbage, cream, goat's cheese and puff pastry. That little lot came to £16 and will feed me some 4-5 pretty special meals.
So that you know how I have prepared and cooked the two meals as they were intended I was supplied with an ingredient list, preparation technique with quantities and a photo log of how it looked at each stage from the entrants. I have copied it as best as I can so I should have a fairly accurate representation of what was originaly cooked.
So bear with me while I sit here feeling fat and stuffed and write up my comments on our first entrant's plate of food...
For two great dishes I'm going to need some great ingredients and Marks and Spencer is the perfect place to buy them. Here's the contents of my lurid green shopping bag:
I have free range chicken leg quarters on special offer at two packs for £3 and I've seperated the drumsticks for another day and boned the thighs. Miracleboy's recipe calls for chicken stock so I smashed the bones and let them bubble down with some onion and carrot to a thick stock for his sauce. There's a large butternut squash, a bottle of unoaked chardonnay, red onions, potatoes, baby cabbage, cream, goat's cheese and puff pastry. That little lot came to £16 and will feed me some 4-5 pretty special meals.
So that you know how I have prepared and cooked the two meals as they were intended I was supplied with an ingredient list, preparation technique with quantities and a photo log of how it looked at each stage from the entrants. I have copied it as best as I can so I should have a fairly accurate representation of what was originaly cooked.
So bear with me while I sit here feeling fat and stuffed and write up my comments on our first entrant's plate of food...