How is that for name dropping? Cooking
at the oldest cookery school in the country as the guest of the
famous Le Creuset brand cookware.
Well, it happened to me. I received an
invitation from Gillian MacGregor, the marketing manager of Le
Creuset, to attend one of their customer evenings at the Silwood
Kitchen in the southern suburbs of Cape Town.
All of this because I use their
cookware and flaunt it. I flaunt the cookware because it does really
deliver the goods and makes for a pleasant cooking experience.
People following my blog will know that
I like cooking. They will also understand that the cooking that we do
on board a small yacht out at sea differs from your everyday cooking
by being limited both in ingredients and equipment. So it was indeed
a privilege and a welcome change to go and experience a smooth
running kitchen. I was very exited when Gill called me with the
invite. Almost danced a small gigue then.
We arrived at the school on a late
Thursday afternoon, where we were greeted by Gary of the Silwood
Cookery School and our instructor for the evening. This was actually
quite an eye opener to arrive just before dusk and to see the garden
at the school. The setting is quite idyllic, with large trees in the
garden.
We were duly plied with wine to ease
our nerves. The school staff made us chef's hats and we were issued
with bright orange aprons to round off the looks.
The kitchen, of course, was immaculate
and their were little packages of welcoming presents for all of us. A
kind gesture from Le Creuset. Amongst other things, the package
contained a mini
fluted flan dish which we were going to use for the tarte tatin
that we making later on.
Thai
chicken curry and banana and blueberry tarte tatin. All, except the
curry being foreign terms to me. My pasta experience is limited to
the spaghetti Bolognese version that we make on board. A far cry from
what we were to experience.
We
started off with making the tarte tatin, as these need baking and
thus take a long time. The very famous upside-down French dessert.
You make it upside down, then turn it over before serving it. The
first part of it was making the caramel. I have never done this
before, so it was nice doing it under supervision of a pro! A neat
trick to get even consistency and colour in the caramel is to add a
little fluid to the sugar. The caramel went into the flan dish first.
Then, after letting the caramel cool somewhat, the banana and
blueberries are added. Over this goes a piece of puff pastry slightly
larger than the dish. The pastry gets tucked into the dish, as this
will be the serving platform when the cooking is done and you turn it
over. These went into the oven and the next item on the menu started.
Which
was the curry. This was made by frying the onions, sweet pepper and
garlic in oil, then adding the curry paste and, after frying all of
this for a minute or two, the coconut milk. This sauce was then
boiled over medium heat to reduce before the chicken was added. At
the end some fresh basil and coriander leaves are added. A wonderful
dish indeed.
I
had a discussion about the recipe with Gary, our instructor. The
discussion centred on the preparation time. Again, I learned
something new. The difference between my procedure and the school's
one is the order of proceedings in making the dish. This does make a
difference. Of course, it is rather nice having all the spices ready
as you need it. Very nice at the school. However, at home and on the
boat I have to do it all by myself. A labour of love well worth the
effort, given the results.
Lastly
we made the pasta. Gary demonstrated the procedure for making the
pasta from the basic raw ingredients. Not too difficult, but you need
to pay attention. Certainly worth the effort as well. Fresh pasta is
not to be sneezed at. And this one especially, made with fresh
spinach. The tagliatelli came out a dark green colour. We had
ready-mixed pasta to process, which was a lot of fun. I don't have a
pasta mill at home, so I have to make do with an Indian rolling pin,
and a cutting board. The Indian rolling pin is about as thick as a
Tabasco bottle and tapers towards the ends. This gives a lot of
leverage to get the dough thin. When the dough gets to large, simply
cut it into long strips and roll these out to the desired thickness.
The lesson here is to measure the quantities. 100 grams of flour
makes a huge amount of pasta. I once made pasta a la Jamie Oliver by
chucking the whole packet of flour onto the work surface, adding salt
and three eggs and mixing the lot. We had pasta for the next week,
after the missus threw away the rest. So, a proper lesson indeed.
The
pasta alla Saffi tastes of heaven. The fresh spinach flavour goes
very well with the asparagus and peas, the cream consolidates the
flavours. Hmmmm!
I
also had the opportuity of cooking with the triple
layer stainless steel saucepans made by Le Creuset. A marvellous
concept indeed. The pan heats up very quickly and keeps its heat.
They are not too heavy and the handle lies comfortably in the hand.
What a pleasure to use these. There is one on my shopping list, along
with a round
cast iron casserole to complement the buffet
casserole and saucepan
that we already own. Perhaps another smaller saucepan. These work a
treat as well. Once these cast iron pots are up to heat you can turn
the gas way down low, even on the smallest setting. We have been
using our 32 cm buffet casserole extensively over the last year and
this heat retention rings true. You use the lowest setting on the
smallest burner of the gas stove to keep the pot boiling. Literally.
Our gas usage runs to 9kg over six to eight months, cooking every
day. The variation is attributable to having dinner guests over more
than twice a month.
The
food was delicious. The evening a pleasure. And all of us amateur,
part time home chefs enjoyed ourselves to bits.
And
we all learnt something.
Thanks
again to Le Creuset and the Silwood Kitchen.
Authored by Johan Zietsman
Last updated on 2012-12-12
Authored by Johan Zietsman
Last updated on 2012-12-12