Egg and Asparigus

Dish taken from my first book - ‘Modernist Vegetarian’ - click here for details
64℃ Poached and Fried Egg
Asparagus Ribbons
Smoked Balsamic Vinegar
Croutons

This dish is based on simple flavours. A classic pairing of a poached egg and asparagus, served with croutons and balsamic vinegar.
However this dish has been cooked and perfected using some very modern techniques.
For instance the egg has been cooked precisely at low temperature and is both poached and then lightly pan fried.
The Balsamic Vinegar in this dish has been slightly thickened, to the consistency of a balsamic reduction, but without actually being heated or sweetened.
Then it has also been lightly smoked with oak.
Finally the Asparagus is cooked Sous Vide, with butter and tarragon, to precisely control the cooking and retain a very pure flavour.

Asparagus Ribbons -
Ingredients
20g Butter
5 Asparagus Spears (medium thickness)
½ Tablespoon of chopped fresh tarragon
Set a SousVide waterbath to 85ºC, I use the PolyScience® SousVide Professional™.
Vacuum seal the asparagus in a vacuum bag with the butter and chopped fresh tarragon.
Place the sealed bag into the waterbath and cook at 85ºC for 15 minutes.
Then place the bag into iced water to stop the cooking process.
When cool carefully slice the cooked asparagus into thin strips.
Dress the asparagus with a little olive oil, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice and a little salt and pepper.
Store in the fridge until ready to use.
The asparagus can be served at room temperature or gently warmed up a little if preferred.

64℃ Poached and Fried Egg -
Ingredients
Six medium free-range eggs
The PolyScience® SousVide
Professional™
Set the waterbath to 64℃.
Carefully place the eggs, whole in their shells, into the waterbath and cook for 80 minutes.
Note – eggs can then be fried straight away or cooled in ice water and kept in the fridge for up to 48 hours - to reheat from chilled place the pre poached eggs in a 60℃ waterbath bath for 15 minutes.
When ready break each, still hot, poached egg straight into a hot pan with a little olive oil in it.
Fry for 30 seconds on just one side and then serve immediately.

Smoked Balsamic Vinegar
Ingredients
Croutons
Fresh white bread
Olive oil
Garlic
Smoked Balsamic -
100g Balsamic vinegar
0.8g Xanthan gum
Oak chips for smoking
Firstly for the croutons tear up some pieces of good quality white bread.
Now heat some olive oil in a pan with a clove of garlic and gently fry the bread until lightly golden.
Crumble the croutons up lightly and season with a little salt.
Now for the smoked balsamic -
Blend the Xanthan Gum into the balsamic vinegar using a hand blender.
Place the thickened balsamic in a bowl and cover with clingfilm, then smoke the balsamic in the covered bowl using with the Smoking Gun with oak smoking chips.
Store the smoked balsamic in a squeeze bottle in the fridge.

Plating Up -
Firstly place four or five of the asparagus strips in the centre of the plate allowing them to sit naturally in a loose bundle.
Then place a hot poached and fried egg on top of the asparagus.
Now scatter some of the seasoned croutons in a rough line from the top of the egg out to the edge of the plate.
Then delicately dot the thickened, smoked balsamic in a curve around one side of the asparagus.
Finally I used an edible Viola flower (which are easy to source or grow) to garnish the dish.
Then finished it with a last grind of salt and pepper.

Tofu Temupra, Sour Cucumber Puree, Seaweed Ash

Tofu Tempura, Sour Cucumber Puree and Seaweed Ash
This dish is taken from my next book which should come out this spring or early summer. Its built from a mix of traditional and innovative new ideas.
The Tofu is marinated in a simple, traditional, japanese dashi before being cooked as a tempura. To create an incredibly light crisp batter some of the water in the batter is substituted with vodka (which evaporates out much more quickly during cooking), the batter also includes methylcellulose F50, which forms an oil impermeable film in the batter (so the tofu steams inside the tempura and doesn’t absorb any oil or become greasy), finally the whole batter is carbonated in a cream whipper to create an incredibly light airy batter which turns out crisp and glassy once cooked.
The sour cucumber fluid gel is fresh and sharp with very clean flavours, it acts as the sweet and sour element in the dish, provides vibrancy and mimics the use of cucumber in fish dishes (here the flavour of the sea comes from the use of seaweeds).
Finally the whole dish is finished and seasoned with a Seaweed Ash, this is something I haven’t seen anyone else do before and I was really pleased with as a finishing touch for the dish. Incinerating the dried dulse seaweed to ash keeps its delicate flavour of the sea and slight saltiness whilst giving you a beautiful, unique new product to season the whole dish and provide the final flavour of the sea.
Sour Cucumber Puree
600g Cucumber Juice
120g Caster Sugar
8g Citric Acid
8g Ascorbic Acid
7g Agar Agar
Juice the cucumbers to obtain 600g fresh cucumber juice.
Immediately mix the ascorbic and citric acid into the cucumber juice, followed by the sugar.
Separate out 300g of the cucumber juice into a pan, whisk in the agar and gently heat to a simmer whilst stirring. Hold the mixture at a simmer for three minutes then remove from the heat.
Now off the heat slowly pour the cold cucumber juice which was set to one side into the hot juice in the pan. Stir and then pour out into plastic containers to set in the fridge.
Once the gel has set use a stick blender to blend it to a smooth puree.
Reserve in a squeeze bottle
Marinated Tofu
240g Plain Tofu
1 Stick / 12g Kombu
50g Dried Shittake
500 ml boiling water
1 teaspoon dried thyme
80g Tamari
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
Combine the kombu, shitake, thyme, tamari and vinegar in a bowl. Pour over the boiling water and leave to infuse for 2 hours.
Strain the dash and cut the tofu into 3cm cubes. Marinade the tofu cubes in the dashi at least 24 hours before cooking.
The Tempura Batter
100ml Methylcellulose Slurry (Made by blending 3g methylcellulose in 200ml boiling water then stirring until it cools and thickens - store excess in the fridge)
85ml Vodka
125g Plain Flour
2 teaspoons Chinese 5 spice
Pinch Dried Chilli
A good pinch of salt
Mix all the liquids together and stir well.
Combine the flour with the spice and salt in a bowl.
Now whisk the liquid into the flour until smooth.
Strain the batter to remove any lumps.
Pour into a cream whipper and charge with two co2 chargers.
Chill if the fridge. Ideally for arround two hours
Heat deep frying oil to 190C.
Place pieces of tofu first into flour and coat. Shake off excess flour.
Spray some batter out of the whipper into a bowl.
Dip the tofu into the batter then drop in the fryer, cook 2-3 mins until crispy.
Drain off excess oil on paper towel.
Seaweed Ash
Burn Dulse seaweed with a blow torch in a bowl until it no longer flames but just glows read.
Allow to cool, carefully place the ash in a spice grinder and powder, store in an airtight container
Plating up -
Dot cucumber purée arround the plate,
Place a few of the tofu tempura arround the plate.
Finish by sprinkling over the seaweed ash
Fresh Home Made Tofu
I was working with fresh tofu for a new dish, which in the end I didn’t think was ready yet, I might come back to the dish and change it/ work on it in the future or it or it may never get re-visited. Don’t get me wrong it was pretty delicious but particularly as I work on my next book I’m setting a high standard for the dishes that are going to make it in there. So even thought the whole dish was a lot of work both in development and preparation, its not making the cut for the book as it is (but I think its important to be pretty strict in self editing).
However I really liked the fresh homemade tofu, especially when then marinated in cold pressed sesame oil with smoked salt and lemon zest. (I tested a variety of marinades and also smoked different homemade tofus with a variety of flavoured smokes too, but the sesame oil marinade was my favourite - it adds a light nitty flavour which I liked).
I’d highly recommend making your own tofu if you have never tried it or if you are dubious about how delicious tofu can be, its a real eye opener.
The recipe I’m going to give you is for a slightly lemon flavoured tofu, then marinaded in cold pressed sesame oil, with smoked salt and lemon zest. This is delicious lightly fried in a dry pan (so it cooks just in the oil it is marinated in).

The picture above is the dish that didn’t quite make the cut for the book (but the tofu was delicious!)
All of the elements (listed bellow) were lovely, but for me the dish as a whole just didn’t quite cut it.
Lemon and Thyme Tofu
Cadamon Scented Dashi
Sweetcorn Panna Cotta
Smoked Lemon Zest Powder
This tofu recipe though I’m really pleased with -
Recipe - Lemon Tofu
350g Organic Soy Beans
1125ml Water - for Soaking the Beans
1200ml Mineral Water - for Cooking
4 Tablespoons Fresh Lemon Juice (for traditional tofu use 2 1/2 tsp Niagri instead)
300ml mineral Water - to mix with lemon Juice
Soak 350g of soy beans in 1125ml water overnight

Blend the beans in their soaking water until as smooth as possible.

Now heat 1200ml of mineral water to the boil in a large pan. Then add the soybean puree into the boiling water.
Now bring the liquid back to a simmer, then drop the temperature and continue to cook for 10 mins on a low heat.
Strain this mixture into a container through muslin cloth collecting the soy milk liquid which pours through the cloth.

Now mix 4 tablespoons of lemon juice into 300ml water (for a traditional tofu you would use 2 1/2 tsp dried Niagri). Reserve this to one side for the moment.
Heat the fresh soy milk in pan to approximately 70C. Then remove the pan from the heat and stir the soy milk to create a whirlpool.
Now slowly pour in half of the lemon juice and water mixture. Then stir milk in the opposite direction, again creating a whirlpool, and pour in other half of the lemon juice mixture.
Cover over the pan and leave it to sit for 15 minutes. The soy milk will split into curds and whey (very similar to making paneer if you have made that from scratch before)

Note - the light foam on the top of the liquid, very similar to the texture/form of an ‘Air’ - this is due to the natural presence of lecithin in soy milk. Soy lecithin is a really useful emulsifier and also one of the things we can use to make stable, light, foams and ‘airs’.
Now strain the split soy milk through muslin to collect the curds.
Wrap these curds up in muslin and place in vestle – (a tub or colander) with holes in the bottom, then place a heavy object on top of the wrapped tofu and leave it to drain for at least 1 hour.

Then carefully unwrap the tofu and gently rinse it in cold water.


Then I like to break the tofu into chunks and place it in a bowl then sprinkle it with a good pinch of smoked salt. Add the zest of one lemon then finally pour over just enough cold pressed sesame oil to cover the tofu. This gives the tofu some seasoning and flavours it with more lemon, smokiness and nuttiness from the oil.

These pieces can be stored like this in the fridge then removed and pan fried in a dry pan for a minute or so on each side.

Enjoy :)
A Dish Evolving
Anyway, this just a short post, mostly in pictures, for those who are interested on the way that a dish can evolve for me. Apologies if this seems self indulgent but I know for some people it will be of interest. :)
The dish in question focuses on Bronze Fennel, Elderflower, Feta Cheese, Apple and Cucumber.

Summer 2011 - At my parents house in the garden my Mum points out the bronze fennel they have grown and I notice elderflower growing nearby. I start to think about their flavours and using them in a dish paired with apple and cheese. (This is the photo I took on my phone that day)

The same day - I don’t have the other ingredients I want with me but I start to look at how the fennel and elderflower look on the plate. (again this is the actual photo from my phone from the day)

I go away and refine my ideas and settle on serving small cubes of feta and cucumber vacuum infused with apple and elderflower. - Full post on the dish here

A year later and I am asked to do some dishes for a norwegian magazine, we are going to use my parents house as the location for the photographer to get pics of them so I wanted to make this dish again but as its later in the year there is no fresh elderflower so I alter the dish to make it more suited to the transition into autumn. So I use dried elderflower to smoke an apple puree, keeping with the ensconce of the dish but also seasonality. So it now consists of -
Bronze Fennel
Feta Cheese
Elderflower Smoked Apple Puree
Fresh Cucumber
Pickled Beetroot with Juniper.

The finished dish, which they selected for the front cover of the magazine.
I hope thats of some interest to you guys. I’m going to post some more stuff today swell, including a recipe.
Squash, Blue Goats Cheese, Hazelnut, Blueberry

Squash, Blue Goats Cheese, Hazelnut, Blueberry.
Squash Roasted with Caraway
Blue Goats Cheese,
Blueberry and Cinnamon Glass
Hazelnut Oil Powder
Celery Cress
So first off thanks to all of you keeping up with the blog and apologies I have been a little quiet on here recently.
At the minute I’m working on two more ebooks following the success of my first - ‘Modernist Vegetarian’. I’ll post more information about these soon and it shouldn’t be too long of a wait until there is news of release dates for them.
Also I’ve been doing a lot of work on new ideas and research, so soon I’ve have some stuff with a centrifuge to put up here and I’m also working on courses and some other cool stuff for next year.
But back to the now and its autumn, probably my favourite season even in rain drenched Manchester. So I wanted to put up a suitably autumnal dish and recipe. This is something I made for a Norwegian magazine a week or so ago.
It’s focused around squash, a beautiful vegetable, here the squash is roasted with toasted caraway seeds accentuating its nutty flavour. Then paired with a local blue veined goats cheese ‘Blacksticks Silk’, which is a smooth, delicious and unique cheese. Then there is a Blueberry Glass lightly spiced with cinnamon and finally powdered hazelnut oil which melts in the mouth.
The glass is made using Kuzu which a nice technique for making brittle fruit glass, and the hazelnut oil powder is made using maltodextrin. Both of which are available for Modernist-Chef.com my online shop, so also please check that out.

Squash
80g Squash cut into 1cm cubes
15g butter
1teaspoon toasted caraway seeds
salt and pepper
Place all of the ingredients on a sheet of aluminium foil. Then wrap this into a small bundle and roast in the oven at 180C for twenty minutes until the squash has softened.

Blueberry and Cinnamon Glass
55g Caster Sugar
30g Lemon Juice
25g Isomalt
35g Kuzu
85g Fresh Blueberries
90g Pear Juice
140g Cranberry Juice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Mix all the ingredients together in a jug and blend with a stick blender.
Now heat this mixture in a pan whilst stirring until the mixture thickens and turns glossy.
Spread this mixture thinly on non-stick sheets.
Dry out at 68C (or in a low oven) for 14 hours until crisp and brittle.
Then break the blueberry and cinnamon glass into shards and store in an airtight container.

Hazelnut Oil Powder
30g Hazelnut Oil
25g Tapioca Maltodextrin
Mix together to form a powder

Serving
Spoon some of the hot pumpkin cubes onto the plate along with the caraway seeds they have been cooked with.
Crumble a little of the blue goats cheese over the pumpkin. Then scatter some of the hazelnut oil powder around the plate.
Place a few shards of the blueberry and cinnamon glass over the dish, and finish with a few strands of celery cress.
Finally for those of you who haven’t yet please check out my ebook for the iPad - ‘Modernist Vegetarian’, or recommend it to friends and nick their iPad to look at it.
And have a little gander at the online shop - Modernist-Chef.com for modern ingredients and equipment or starter kits i you just want to experiment with some new ingredients and techniques.
Caramelised White Chocolate and Saffron Ice Cream. With Caramelised Peppers and Pistachios.

This recipe is from the book I am currently working on. The idea is that it will be follow up to my recently released ‘Modernist Vegetarian’ ebook, but that this second book will be more accessible - no expensive unusual equipment but modern ideas and recipes which can be made in any kitchen without much investment.
So in this recipe the ice cream is made using caramelised white chocolate. This takes on a toffee like flavour as the sugar within the white chocolate caramelises. Then it might seem strange to use the flavours of saffron and peppers in a dessert, but for a while I had wanted to do something like this because the caramel flavours and the floral notes of saffron and peppers really compliment each other. Its note about trying to slam these flavours together but how well they match and finding a way to make a delicious dessert based on that.
THE RECIPE
Caramelised White Chocolate and Saffron Ice Cream. With Caramelised Peppers and Pistachios.
Caramelised White Chocolate
250g White chocolate
Preheat the oven to 180C.
Now melt the white chocolate in a bowl placed above a pan of simmering water.
Once melted pour the melted chocolate onto a non-stick baking sheet (ideally a silicon mat).

Now place the mat in the oven for approximately 10 minutes until the chocolate browns (cook a little longer if necessary).
Now allow the chocolate to cool.

Caramelised White Chocolate and Saffron Ice Cream
250g Caramelised White Chocolate
250ml Double Cream
500ml Whole Milk
100g Caster Sugar
6 Medium free-range egg yolks
Pinch Smoked Salt
One teaspoon of loose saffron threads.
First break the caramelised white chocolate into pieces and gently heat it in a bowl set over simmering water.
Now pour the double cream over the chocolate and continue to gently heat, stirring constantly, until you have a smooth caramel coloured mixture without any lumps.
In another bowl beat the yolks and caster sugar together until pale and fluffy.
Now heat the milk with the saffron and smoked salt to a little bellow a simmer.
Next gradually, whilst whisking, pour the hot milk over the beaten eggs and whisk to combine.
Return the milk and egg mix to a pan and gently heat whilst stirring until the mixture begins to thicken.
Then pour the hot thickened milk and egg mixture into the bowl with the white chocolate and cream mix, stirring to combine.
Allow this mixture to cool – stirring intermittently, then chill in the fridge.
Finally freeze the ice cream using an ice-cream machine, following the manufacturers instructions.
Caramelised peppers
1 Red Pepper
1 Yellow pepper
2 tablespoons honey
75g Caster Sugar
Juice and zest of one Lemon
Cut the peppers into thin strips
Heat the honey and sugar in a pan on a medium heat.
Add the peppers and cook for 4-5 minutes until softened.
Add the zest and juice of the lemon and continue to cook on a medium heat for five minutes until the peppers are lightly caramelised and the liquid has reduced to a syrup.
Allow the mix to cool.

Pistachios
Pre-heat the oven to 200C
Place a single layer of pistachio nuts on a baking tray and roast them in the oven for 4-5 minutes until just beginning to brown.
Allow the nuts to cool
Now in a pestle and mortar lightly crush two tablespoons of roast pistachios with one tablespoon of caster sugar and a pinch of salt.
Store the broken pistachio in an airtight container until ready to serve.

To Serve
Place a few of the caramelised peppers on a plate.
Sit a scoop of ice cream on top of the peppers.
Sprinkle a little of the broken roast pistachio mixture over the plate.

Tea Eggs
Tea Eggs

So recently I haven’t posted much new in the way of dishes or ideas as I’ve been pretty mental busy. I’ve been finishing the ebook - ‘Modernist Vegetarian’, writing a course for Brian Mellors School and working on a few other big projects (some to be announced soon), plus moving flats and setting up a new work space.
All very exciting projects and there is alot of new material and ideas in the book but I wanted to make sure I keep up to date here and don’t neglect sharing some of the things I have been playing with.
This July the ebook should be out and it is full of new stuff and has been a pretty big project, it’s taken alot more perfectionism and time than putting things up on the blog does and has taught me, I think, a new kind of discipline in recording, photographing and creating dishes in general.
So anyway, I haven’t had much time but I had this dish for while and I was going to use it in the book but in the end I decided it didn’t quite fit or match up to the rest of the dishes. 
Eggs Cooked and Smoked with Tea and Dashi
Yolk and Mushroom Wafer
Grapefruit
Spring Onion
Crisp Shiitake
So I’m not going to give the full recipe here right now unless there is some demand because I’m pressed for time to type it up.
But to outline the ideas here there is -
Eggs, quickly boiled then the shells are lightly cracked. Then the eggs are cooked again at low temperature in a tea flavoured dashi staining the eggs in a pattern and adding flavour. Then eggs are halved and the yolks removed and a dashi is carefully set with agar in the space left from the yolk. Finally the prepared eggs are smoked with earl grey tea. Using the PolyScience Smoking Gun - From www.Modernist-Chef.com
The egg dish is then surrounded with shiitake mushrooms crisp fryed in toasted sesame oil and finished with smoked salt.
Then there is an egg yolk and mushroom wafer. Grapefruit pieces. Spring onion.
Anyway this is just a snippet of a dish that didn’t make it to the ebook but I hope the idea might be interesting to a few of you.
Cheers
Eddie
Blacksticks Silk, Broccoli Stem, Red Onion Puree, Parsley

Blacksticks Silk, Broccoli Stem, Red Onion Puree, Parsley
Blacksticks Silk – Blue Veined Goats Cheese
Nutmeg and Lemon Breaded Broccoli Stem.
Red Onion Puree
Fried Parsley

Blacksticks Silk is a fantastic blue veined goats cheese hand made in Lancaster by ‘Butlers’ - http://www.butlerscheeses.co.uk/. Its got a really nice balance of sharpness, blue cheese depth and delicate nuttiness. Its one of my favourite cheeses and something I wanted to centre a dish around for a while. In the end I decided, rather than cooking with the cheese or manipulating it, I wanted to present the cheese simply in slices in all its glory, no messing with it, and pair it with complimentary elements.

To go with the Blacksticks Silk I have made a sweet, citrusy Red Onion Puree with Pomegranate molasses and Sumac, its sticky and sweet/savoury like an onion marmalade but with an extra citrus hit and then blended to a smooth sticky puree.
For some crunch and complimentary flavour I’ve made little disks of Nutmeg and Lemon Breaded Broccoli Stem. These are crisp on the outside and inside is tender cooked broccoli. Usually people throw away the stem of broccoli but honestly, cooked carefully it can be delicious, and prepared like this it goes really well in this dish.
Finally the plate is finished with a couple of leaves of delicate, crisp microwave fried parsley.

(Microwave Fried Parsley)
Nutmeg and Lemon Breaded Broccoli Stem
Broccoli Stem - Cut ½ cm thick slices from the middle of the main broccoli stem.
Flour Mix –
40g Plain Flour
20g Ground Nutmeg
Pinch Salt
Sieve the Flour and nutmeg together with a pinch of salt and mix evenly.
Lemon Mix -
90g Fresh Lemon Juice
105g Water
5g Methylcellulose
Blend the ‘Lemon Mix’ ingredients together with and immersion blender until smooth, then whisk a little until the mixture froths up similar to an egg white foam.
You will also need -
Panco Bread Crumbs
Slash Soy Sauce
Technique -
Cook the slices of broccoli stem in a large pot of salted boiling water for approx 1 ½ minutes until just cooked (tender but only just cooked through). Remove and immediately refresh in ice-cold water.
Drain and dry off the cooked broccoli stem.
Next quickly drag each of the slices of broccoli through a little soy sauce and shake off the excess liquid. Now toss the broccoli stem in the flour and nutmeg mixture and again shake off the excess.
Then one by one dip the flour coated broccoli into the lemon methylcellulose mixture and make sure they are coated evenly all over.
Finally delicately cover the prepared broccoli stem slices in breadcrumbs, making sure they are coated in single layer of breadcrumb all over.
Heat a couple of tablespoons of olive oil in a frying pan on a medium heat and fry the bread-crumbed broccoli on both sides until golden brown.
To finish, drain off the excess oil on a little paper towel and lightly season with a little Maldon salt and freshly ground black pepper.

(abit of a 70’s cookbook looking pic)
Red Onion Puree
750g Red Onions - Cut into thin slices (about 6-7 Onions)
6 Cloves Garlic – Roughly chopped
40g Salted Butter
Splash Olive oil
Zest and Juice of One Orange
Zest of One Lemon
2 Teaspoons Sumac – Ground
1 Teaspoon Ginger – Ground
½ Teaspoon Chilli – Ground
2 Tablespoons Soy Sauce
40g Pomegranate Molasses
50g Balsamic Vinegar
175g Red Wine
1 Star anise
30g Soft Dark Brown Sugar
Pinch Dried Thyme
Melt butter in a pan on a low heat then add a splash of olive oil.
Add in the sliced Red Onion and Garlic and one star anise and cook on a low heat for 30 minutes stirring as little as possible.
Add the soft brown sugar, ground sumac, chilli and ginger as well as the soy sauce and cook for another 10 minutes.
Now add the Balsamic Vinegar Followed by the Pomegranate molasses and turn the heat up a little and cook for a further 5 minutes.
Add the juice and zest of one orange and the zest of a lemon and reduce this liquid for a couple of minutes.
Then add the red wine and a pinch of thyme. Add a little salt and pepper at this point aswell.
Reduce this marmalade gently for around 10 minutes more. Then season it to taste.
Cool the onion marmalade at room temperature then blitz it to a puree with a hand blender and reserve until you are ready to use it.
Microwave Fried Parsley –
Fresh Parsley Leaves
Olive Oil
Pinch Salt
Pick out a few of the nicest parsley leaves, without blemishes.

Prepare a plate by pulling a sheet of clingfilm tight over a flat, microwave safe, plate. Then lightly brush the clingfilm with a little olive oil.
Now brush each parsley leaf with a little olive oil on each side and carefully place them on the clingfilm, with some space left around each leaf.

Microwave fry the parsley on the clingfilmed plate for appox four minutes at
600w until they are dry and crisp. Give them an extra 20-30 secs if they are not completely crisp.
They should be semi transparent when you hold the leaves up to the light.
Finally dry the excess oil of the leaves on a little paper towel and lightly season them with a pinch of salt.

This microwave fried parsley technique was developed by Heston Blumenthal and his team and you can read more about it in the groundbreaking book ‘Modernist Cuisine’.
Plating Up
Place a large spoonful of the Red Onion Puree at the top of the plate then with a palate knife swipe it across the plate. Place slices of room temperature Blacksticks Silk in the centre of the plate. At the other end of the plate stack a few hot pieces of the Breaded Broccoli stalk. Finish the dish by garnishing with a couple of the fried parsley leaves.
Carrot Cake, Orange and Ginger

Carrot Cake, Ginger Sorbet, Orange Fluid Gel, Glazed Chantaney Carrots and a Cinnamon Dry Caramel.
View in more detail in the ebook ‘Modernist Vegetarian’

This dish is inspired by traditional Carrot Cake and the naturally complimentary flavours of Carrot, Orange and Ginger.
The hub of the dish is a moist crumbled Carrot Cake with spices and Macadamia Nuts, complimented by sweet Glazed Chantenay Carrots. The richness of the cake is then cut by a refreshing Ginger Sorbet which adds a little kick of heat from the ginger and a very clean, bright flavour.
The Orange Fluid Gel gives an added intense orange flavour to compliment the Carrot and Ginger with zesty citrus. Then finally we have a Cinnamon Dry Caramel (inspired by an Alinea technique) which almost magically turns to chewy soft caramel in your mouth. It’s a sensation that’s amplified by the fact that your mind expects something powdery and chalky from the look of the dry caramel then experiences it change texture swiftly in your mouth to a familiar soft and luxurious caramel.
The idea here is that all the elements work very naturally together and give the diner something both familiar - traditional carrot cake flavours, and something unexpected - the composition of the dish and textures.
Xanthan Gum & Agar used in this dish are available via www.Modernist-Chef.com
Carrot Cake
200g Finely Grated Carrot
200g Self Raising Flour
200g Vegetable Oil
200g Soft Light Brown Sugar
3 Free-Range Eggs
50g Chopped Macadamia Nuts
Zest of two Oranges
1 tsp Bicarbonate of Soda
2 tsp Ground Cinnamon
Seeds of One Vanilla Pod
2 Tablespoons of Ginger Syrup (poured off stem ginger)
1 tsp Ground Nutmeg
Begin by lining a cake tin with baking paper and pre-heating the oven to 180C.
Sieve the flour into a large bowl along with the rest of the dry ingredients (sugar, spices, chopped nuts, bicarb and zest).
Now beat the eggs together and then whisk the oil into the beaten eggs.
Mix the beaten eggs and oil into the dry ingredients along with the ginger syrup.
Now fold in the finely grated carrot along with a small pinch of salt.
Spoon the combined mixture into your prepared cake tin and bake at 180C for 45 mins or until risen and browned on top, and check that a sharp knife inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean.
Cool on a rack, the cake can then be stored in an airtight container. It could be served as slices simply with the ginger sorbet and is delicious like this but I decided to lightly crumble the cake when plating it up here to get a different texture and allow the diner to get a little of all the elements of the dish on a spoon easily. Also I liked the idea that mirroring the effect of the dry caramel this really moist cake would appear dry when crumbled then be revealed to be soft and fresh as its eaten.
Ginger Sorbet
250g Caster Sugar
400g Water
70g Grated Ginger
Juice and Zest of one Lemon
40g Cointreau
1.5g Xanthan Gum
Squeeze the grated ginger in muslin or a clean tea towel to extract as much juice as possible. Set the fresh ginger juice to one side and reserve the grated ginger solids separately.
Heat the water and sugar in a pan together with grated ginger. Simmer for five minutes.
Now strain the hot liquid into a bowl to remove all the solids. Stir the Ginger juice, Cointreau, Lemon juice and zest into the hot liquid and then allow the mixture to cool.
Once the liquid has cooled blend in the xanthan gum with a hand blender then allow the liquid to sit for a couple of hours in the fridge so that it can fully chill and air can escape from the mixture.
Place the chilled liquid into an ice cream machine and churn while it freezes then store this in a sealed plastic tub in the freezer.
If you don’t have an ice-cream machine you can freeze the liquid simply in a plastic container but return to it frequently as it’s freezing to stir it (this will work ok but ideally its preferable to use an ice-cream machine).
Your sorbet can then be stored in the freezer until you’re ready to serve it. I set mine in hemisphere moulds but you could just take a quenelle or scoop of the sorbet as you need it.
Orange Fluid Gel
600g Orange juice – to be reduced to 300g
Pinch Salt
10 Cardamom Pods – Broken open
2g Agar
50g Caster Sugar
Zest of one Orange
First reduce the orange juice by half along with the cardamom, sugar, orange zest and pinch of salt. Strain and then let the liquid cool down to room temperature.
Whisk the 2g Agar into the 300g of cooled juice mixture and place it back on the heat. Bring to a simmer whilst whisking.
Pour out the Juice mixture into a wide plastic container and leave to cool and set.
To prepare the fluid Gel simply blend the set gel until it reaches a smooth consistency.
Cinnamon Dry Caramel

150g Caster Sugar
150g Soft Light Brown Sugar
200g Golden Syrup
300g Double Cream
75g Butter
3 teaspoons Ground Cinnamon
A Large Pinch of salt
50g Ab-Zorbit Tapioca Maltodextrin
Heat the caster sugar in a pan wit a tablespoon of water. Gently heat until the sugar has turned a golden brown. Then quickly remove the pan from the heat and stir in the butter followed by the rest of the ingredients. Then gently bring this mixture up to 110C in the pan before pouring it out to cool down.
Now take 200g of your caramel base and place it in a blender. In short bursts blend in the Tapioca Maltodextrin a bit at a time until you have a dry to the touch powder with the look of fine breadcrumbs. This can be stored in an airtight container.
See the top of this post for a brief description of how this changes texture in the mouth in quite a wonderful way.
Glazed Chantaney Carrots
8-10 Chantaney Carrots
2 Tablespoons Caster Sugar
1 Tablespoons Stem Ginger Syrup
1 Tablespoon Orange Juice
First off bring a large pan of salted water to the boil. Place your carrots into the boiling water cook until just cooked through. As soon as the carrots are just done refresh in iced water.
Carefully slice the carrots in half. Now heat the sugar, ginger syrup and orange juice in a wide pan, as soon as the sugar has dissolved add the carrots into the pan and continue to heat until the glaze turns a golden caramel brown, moving the carrots around the pan to make sure the are nicely coated in the caramel.
Remove the carrots from the pan and allow any excess caramel to drip of them. Ideally serve these hot although they can be stored and served cooled.
Plating up -
Crumble a little of the Carrot Cake and place it into a bowl. Next to it sit two of the glazed carrots.
Now spoon some of the dry caramel mix into the bowl and press a hemisphere of ginger sorbet out of the hemisphere mould and place it at the bottom of the dry caramel.
Finish off by sprinkling a little chopped fresh coriander over the crumbled Carrot Cake and a small pinch of Maldon Salt on the Dry Caramel.
Hendricks Gin Edible Cocktail

Hendricks Gin Edible Cocktail
Hendricks and Elderflower Vacuum Infused Carbonated Cucumber. Rose salt
This carbonated edible cocktail is built around the unique and unusual Hendricks Gin (http://www.hendricksgin.com/). Hendricks is infused with cucumber and rose as well as the traditional juniper, giving it an individual character which I’ve chosen to highlight in this little one bite dish. You could serve these in a stack for people to share or individually, like I have here, on a pin.

I have the lovely Wendy Swetnam (chef extraordinaire) to thank for introducing me to Hendricks Gin, and her much celebrated and delicious Gin and Tonic cake. In fact it was after having cocktails with Wendy that I decided to experiment with this idea. I’d had a champagne cocktail with Hendricks and Elderflower, served with a cucumber garnish and it got me thinking about ways I could make something edible inspired by this drink.
So here I started here by adding elderflower syrup to Hendricks. Then I used a vacuum infusion technique to infuse the cucumber with this boozy mixture. Then I’ve carbonated the cucumber to give it a fizzy kick. Finishing it all off with a little rose and salt for a floral note and to enhance and unite the flavours.
Hendricks and Elderflower Liquid –
150ml Hendricks Gin
75ml Elderflower Syrup (home made or you can buy ‘Routin 1883’ Elderflower Syrup here)
Juice of half a Lemon
Simply stir these together and set to one side.
Cucumber Infusion –

If like most people you don’t have access to a chamber vacuum machine the cucumber will need to be cut into segments small enough to fit inside a large syringe for this infusion (see above pic).
I used a very small pastry cutter to get even sized pieces of cucumber then cut them into 1/2cm thick slices, but you could simply peel the cucumber then slice it into rounds of the size you desire (so long as they aren’t too thick to infuse).
To infuse the cucumber I used a large syringe (you can see Dave Arnolds post on home vacuum infusion here)
In short I took three slices of cucumber at a time and placed them in the syringe. Then I filled the syringe with enough of the Hendricks and Elderflower liquid to cover the cucumber plus a bit. Then you expel any air in the syringe by inverting it and pressing the plunger to push out any excess air.
Now you can cover the tip of the syringe either with a cap or just your finger and pull out the plunger as far as you can to create a vacuum inside the syringe. You should see air suddenly rapidly bubbling out of the cucumber. Hold the vacuum for a minute or so.
Now once again expel the air that has been sucked out of the cucumber and pull a vacuum in the syringe again but this time pull the plunger all the way out of the syringe letting air rush back in. This will force the Hendricks liquid into the cucumber and leave it infused with the liquid.
You can then repeat this process until you have as much infused cucumber as you need. This is time consuming using this technique rather than a chamber vacuum machine but if it is just for a few portions then this is a nice simple and affordable technique.
Carbonating the Cucumber –

Cream Whippers available from www.Modernist-Chef.com
Next I carbonated the infused cucumber in a cream whipper – (see video here)
Just place the infused cucumber into the cream whipper and cover with some more of the Hendricks and Elderflower liquid.
Charge the whipper with one CO2 charger then vent it completely to remove as much air from the whipper as possible. Now charge the whipper with two C02 chargers, shake the cream whipper gently and then chill it for at least two hour. When you are ready to serve these simply vent the gas and strain out the cucumber pieces.
Floral Salt –
For my floral salt to finish off the edible cocktail I simply roughly chopped some dried edible flowers – mainly roses, and then combined this with some Malden salt and gave in another swift chop through to mix.
You can buy dried edible flowers online or like I did you can buy them fresh unsprayed, then pick the petals and wash them before drying them out yourself.
Watermelon ‘Tartare’ with Ginger, Yuzu and Coriander

Watermelon ‘Tartare’ with Yuzu, Stem Ginger, Fresh Coriander and Ginger Sugar Spirals.
I began working on this dish inspired by a happy accident. I was experimenting with partially freezing carbonated watermelon on the anti-griddle for a project I was commissioned to do focused on cocktails (see pictures at the end of this post). When I was finished with the watermelon I set it to one side on the countertop and then didn’t look at it again until the following day, when I did I saw it had become flexible and turned a deeper red colour with the distinct look of raw meat. Tasting it, it had an intensified sweet flavour and unusual texture. This unexpected transformation and finished appearance intrigued me enough to decide to explore it further and then ultimately construct a dish around it.
It turns out I had stumbled onto a variation of a technique a few other chefs have been playing with - a similar effect to ‘compression’.
Several chefs, notably Thomas Keller, have been compressing melon (amongst other things) in vacuum machines to alter its texture and appearance. Furthermore others were using a similar process to the one I was experimenting with, of freezing then thawing melon, to create an effect similar to vacuum compression. For instance Michael Natkin in his excellent post here. So it seems great minds think alike right!
I found in the end I got the results I was after by freezing then thawing the watermelon, squeezing out the excess liquid and then adding a final very short stage of low temperature dehydrations to intensify the watermelons sweetness.
The Finished product has a surprising raw meat like look, which is why I’ve nicknamed it ‘tartare’ here. I liked the idea of emphasising this interesting visual characteristic for my own amusement, reflecting the fact many vegetarian supermarket products are made to mimic meat products (burgers, sausages etc) or called things like ‘Chicken Style’, so this is my riff on that practice.
I somewhat provocatively hope that amongst vegetarians and meat eaters alike this raw meat look and name for a vegetarian dish will perhaps spark some debate. For me its entertaining and given the dish tastes very different to how it looks, I think its interesting to explore how much appearance plays a role in our expectations of a dish and experience of eating it. Though obviously I’m not exactly exploring that ideas subtly here, with a vegetarian dish that presents fruit like raw meat, but I will be genuinely interested to see what reactions this gets.
The process I put the watermelon through does more than alter its appearance though, it changes its texture, and the melon becomes flexible, denser and a little chewier. Also due to removing a fair amount of water from the melon, the flavour is intensified. It becomes sweeter and fruitier.
I’ve then paired the manipulated watermelon with a little yuzu (Japanese citrus) juice, to add a small punch of acidity. Then added stem ginger, scored with a hot knife for a hint of caramelisation, to add heat, freshness and sweetness.
I used a little fresh coriander leaf as a compliment to the other flavours and to give the bite a fresh herbaceous finish. Then garnished the dish with spirals of lightly ginger flavoured sugar work. These make an interesting visual finish for the dish I think, with their very neat, carefully produced look contrasting the natural, random shapes formed by the watermelon
Finally those delicate ginger sugar spirals also serve to add a little necessary crunch to the bite and then the dish is finished simply with a tiny pinch of Maldon salt to help the flavours really leap out.
The full recipe is below and I’d be interested to hear from veggies, meat eaters, chefs and amateurs alike on their thoughts about vegetarian foods that mimic meat and their reaction to my play on that with this dish.
Watermelon ‘Tartare’

One fresh watermelon - flesh cut into one centimetre thick wedges.
Freeze the watermelon pieces in your freezer (ideally overnight).
Remove from the freezer and defrost slowly at room temperature in a single layer.
Now gently press out as much liquid as possible. Having been frozen, during which ice crystals form breaking the cell walls of the watermelon, it will now be flexible and easy to handle and squeeze without breaking.
Now finally place the watermelon pieces into a dehydrator set at 35C for two hours, turning the pieces over midway through.
These can then be stored in the fridge until you are ready to use them, and will be dressed with a little yuzu juice at the last minute and finished with a fresh coriander leaf.
Stem Ginger
Two or three pieces of stem ginger in syrup (drained of the syrup)
Simply cut thin 1mm slices of stem ginger then from these cut several 1cm squares.
Then heat a small knife, ideally with a blowtorch but a gas hob will do, until the knife is as hot as you can get it. Then carefully, gently press the hot knife to each squares of stem ginger a couple of times forming a criss-cross scoring effect (reheating the knife as necessary as you work).
The sugar in the stem ginger will caramelise where the hot knife makes contact and give each piece an extra layer of flavour.
Ginger Sugar Spirals

You can see this technique with video in my ebook ‘Modernist Vegetarian’

Isomalt available from - www.Modernist-Chef.com
Ginger Syrup –
30g Fresh Ginger Juice (grate fresh ginger and squeeze out juice through a clean tea towel)
5g Yuzu Juice
70g Isomalt
Heat the ginger juice, yuzu and isomalt whilst stirring until the isomalt completely dissolves. Now keep this syrup at a very low simmer, gently bubbling, for around ten minutes until the liquid is reduced by about a third.
Ginger Sugar Spirals –
120g Isomalt
50g Ginger syrup (see above)
Preheat your oven to 140C
Place a sheet of silicon paper on a baking sheet, with another sheet of silicon paper cut to that same set to one side at the ready.
Heat isomalt and the reduced ginger syrup to 155C in a small pan occasionally stirring.
Now spread the hot isomalt liquid as thin as possible in a smooth motion on the silicon paper readied on the baking sheet. Then cover this over with the second silicon paper sheet.
Place the isomalt sheet in the oven for about two minutes until the isomalt is soft and pliable.
Now quickly go over the isomalt, sandwiched between the sheets of silicon paper, with a rolling pin to flatten it out to a 1mm thickness sheet.
Heat the thin isomalt sheet (still between its layers of paper) again in the oven for one minute until soft again then quickly cut it into 8cm long, 1/2cm thick strips with a sharp pair of scissors.
Allow the strips to cool then carefully remove the silicon paper from them.
Now a couple at a time place the sugar strips on a fresh piece of silicon paper back in the oven for about thirty seconds to a minute to soften again.
Then, while pliable, quickly twist each isomalt strip from each end, simultaneously gently pulling, to form spirals. Set these spirals to one side to cool, then store them in an airtight container along with a small wrap of silica crystals.
Note – it takes a bit of practice and time to get a feel for creating these sugar spirals but keep with it and you will get the hang of it, just don’t be disheartened if the first few to try don’t come out perfect there is a bit of a knack to it.
Plating up –
I’ve served this dish on a small fork as it is really a one or two bite dish.
Place two pieces of the prepared watermelon, folded or rolled, as you like, on the end of the fork. Then dress the watermelon with a couple of drops of yuzu juice.
Place a prepared, scored square of the stem ginger ontop of the watermelon.
Delicately place two of the Ginger Sugar Spirals crossing over atop the watermelon.
Finally finish with a few fine strands of sugar left over from creating the spirals, a single coriander leaf and a tiny pinch of Maldon salt.
Please do get in contact with your opinions about vegetarian foods that mimic meat and any reactions to my play on that here.
Eddie x
PS below are a couple of pics from my cocktail experiments using the anti-griddle that sparked off the idea for this dish.


Bronze Fennel, Apple and Elderflower Infused Cucumber, Feta

Bronze Fennel, Apple and Elderflower Infused Cucumber, Feta
This dish is inspired by having spent a lot of time at my parents house recently and seeing some of the fantastic produce they have growing in the garden. I was really excited to make something with these great ingredients and so I’ve tried to come up with something beautiful and simple. The dish is just a couple of elements but to me it is my parents garden at this time of year on a plate.
I loved the shapes and look of the bronze fennel leaves and their natural taste, so I did nothing to these except for pick the tips at random. The leaves have a slightly sweet anise flavour, almost like liquorice.
I decided to pair the fennel with elderflower that was growing near by and then also apple, which goes beautifully with both fennel and elderflower.
I prepared a sweet and aromatic infusion of apple and elderflower, with a hit of calvados and vacuum infused (see bellow) cucumber with this liquid. The vacuum infused cucumber has a really interesting texture and a translucency that makes it look like gellee once it’s been cut to small 2mm cubes.
Vacuum infusing the cucumber with apple elderflower is my play on the idea of the dish as a salad. I also used tiny cubes of feta give a nice salty and sharp touch.
I loved playing with idea of presenting the dish in a way that contrasted the beautiful natural and spiky shape of the fennel leaves with the geometric shapes I cut the feta and infused cucumber into.
Then the dish is finished with some of the beautiful purple elderflowers and with a small sprinkle of Himalayan Pink Salt over the whole dish, this helps all the flavours pop and its unique rose colour suits this dish perfectly aswell as adding a hint of crunch.
Apple and Elderflower Vacuum Infused Cucumbers
Apple and Elderflower Liquid -
200g Calvados
400g Apple Juice
4 Tablespoons Dried Elderflower
75g Caster Sugar
Zest of one lemon
Juice of one lemon
Heat all the ingredients except the lemon juice in a pan and bring to a simmer. Allow to gently simmer, occasionally stirring, for 15 minutes.
Set the pan to one side to allow the liquid to slowly cool.
Then strain and add the lemon juice.
Chill in the fridge until needed
Cucumber Infusion –
Most of us aren’t lucky enough to own a chamber vacuum machine at home so here I used a used a ‘vacuvin’ coffee saver to vacuum infuse my cucumber.
You can do this infusion at home using either a vacuum coffee saver like I did or with either a vacuvin winesaver or even a large syringe. (Although you can only do small amounts at a time in the syringe).
You can get more information on these infusion techniques by reading Dave Arnolds post here
So first off I cut thin (a couple of millimetre thick) strips of cucumber flesh.
Place the cucumber strips in the vacuvin tub. Pour over all of the chilled apple and elderflower liquid to cover the cucumber well. I then used the mesh from an old sieve that just fitted the tub to keep the cucumbers submerged during the infusion.
Now pump out the air as directed in the vacuvin instructions until you have a vacuum. You should see air bubbling out of the cucumber strips.
Hold the vacuum for a minute, then quickly allow the air back in, this will force liquid into the space left from removing the air from the cucumber
You may need to repeat this process – I got my best results by infusing twice.
Once infused the cucumber will turn translucent. You then just need to cut the cucumber into small 2mm cubes.
Feta
Simply cut good quality feta to the same 2mm cubes as the cucumber
To Plate Up
I simply placed a few springs of the bronze fennel around the plate. Then placed cucumber and feta cubes all around the plate and finished off the dish with a sprinkling of fresh elderflowers and a pinch of Himalayan Pink Salt.
Elderflower Smoked Halloumi, Rhubarb Relish, Lightly Pickled Radish, Rhubarb ‘Glass’. With Radish Sprouts, Pea Shoots and Edible Flowers.

Elderflower Smoked Halloumi, Rhubarb Relish, Lightly Pickled Radish, Rhubarb ‘Glass’. With Radish Sprouts, Pea Shoots and Edible Flowers.
This is a vibrant dish packed with bright summer flavours. I wanted it to be exciting, lively and reflect my childhood memories of summer aromas and tastes. So really this dish is based on those happy recollections refined into an elegant and delicious dish which for me offers a taste of the summer at its brightest.
The Elderflower Smoked Halloumi, cooked on a griddle, has a smoky flavour and hint of elderflower which are scents that take me immediately back to childhood summer holidays. The depth of flavour from the smoke and the floral elderflower notes beautifully enhance the, already moreish, Halloumi.
Rhubarb has always been a favourite for me ever since as a kid we used to harvest it from the garden and use it to make simple, homely but delicious rhubarb crumble (I think this is one of the first things I ever learned to cook). Here I’ve made a sweet and sharp relish with the rhubarb, with a hint of spice and its own background fresh elderflower flavour. This compliments the Halloumi beautifully and is at the centre of the delicate balance between sweetness and sharpness across the dish.
This course is also crowned with a shard of brittle, semi-transparent, rhubarb ‘glass’ that shatters as you bite into it, releasing an intense rhubarb flavour which compliments each element of the dish.
Then there is the lightly pickled radish with a fresh clean flavour and acidity, which cuts the richness of the Halloumi and sweetness of the relish. And finally the dish is finished with peppery radish sprouts and tender pea shoots with their distinctive fresh flavour.
Elderflower Smoked Griddled Halloumi –
300g Halloumi
Dried Elderflower
Heat a griddle pan to a medium high heat.
Slice the Halloumi into centimetre thick pieces. Cook the Halloumi for about a minute on each side (giving it a half turn while cooking each side to get a criss cross pattern if you like)
Once cooked set the Halloumi slices to one side to cool.
Trim the cooked Halloumi to even squares and place into a glass bowl.
Cover the bowl with cling film and smoke using the Polyscience Smoking Gun, loaded with dried elderflower, filling the covered bowl with smoke. Sit covered for around five minutes to allow the Halloumi to take on the flavour of the elderflower smoke.
The PolyScience Smoking Gun is available from www.Modernist-Chef.com
Toss the smoked Halloumi in a tiny bit of olive oil just to stop it drying out and store in the fridge until ready to use.
When you’re ready to serve simply heat the Halloumi for two minutes in a hot oven to bring it up to serving temperature.
Rhubarb Relish –
200g Sugar
150g Cider Vinegar
500g Chopped Rhubarb
50g Water
6 Teaspoons Dried Elderflower
One thumb sized piece of Ginger (sliced)
1 Teaspoon Grated Nutmeg
6 Black Peppercorns
Pinch salt
Place the Elderflower, Ginger, Nutmeg and Black Peppercorns into a piece of cheese cloth and tie it to make a closed wrap containing the flavourings.
Now heat the sugar, vinegar and water in a pan with the spices. Simmer for 10 minutes and dissolve sugar, then allow the liquid to cool with spices in to infuse.
Clean the Rhubarb and chop it at an angle into inch long pieces of the same size.
Add the chopped rhubarb into the pan with the infused liquid and gently heat for five minutes until the rhubarb is just tender.
Pour the rhubarb relish into sterilised jars while still warm and store until ready to use.
Rhubarb Glass –
For the Rhubarb Juice –
350g Apple Juice
800g Rhubarb – cleaned and cut into chunks
50g Caster Sugar
Juice of two lemons
Pinch Salt
2 Teaspoons Ground Ginger
1 Teaspoons Ground Nutmeg
Glass –
170g The Rhubarb Juice
42g Pure-cote B790
20g Caster Sugar
First off you need to prepare the rhubarb juice.
For the rhubarb juice heat all the juice ingredients and simmer for around twenty minutes until the rhubarb softens and breaks up. Then allow the mixture to cool a little.
Now strain the contents of the pan through a sieve lined with cheesecloth and then squeeze remaining rhubarb in the cheesecloth to extract the remaining juice.
Now to prepare the rhubarb glass slowly heat the rhubarb juice, Pure-cote B790 and sugar to 90C in a small pan whilst whisking, and hold the mixture at 90C for two to three minutes, continually stirring.
Remove the pan from the heat and pour the liquid into a blender.
Blend the hot mix for ten minutes on full power.
Now dab a small amount of olive oil on to a couple of sheets of acetate and wipe with paper towel to form a very light coating.
Pour the warm rhubarb juice mix onto the acetate sheets and form as thin a layer of the juice mix as possible by moving the sheets around.
Place the acetate sheets into a dehydrator ser at 33C for 3 -4 hours until the juice mixture has become a malleable but dry film. (The coated acetate can be left at room temperature to dry overnight but I find this low temperature stage in the dehydrator works well and speeds up the process).
Peel the rhubarb film away from the acetate and shape the film as desired. For this dish I roughly tore strips of the film.
Finally dehydrate the shaped rhubarb film on baking paper at 57C for 10-12 hours until you are left with crisp and brittle, abstract shaped, pieces of rhubarb glass.
(These can be stored in an airtight container - layering with baking paper along with a small wrap of silica crystals to prevent the glass from absorbing moisture).
Lightly Pickled Radishes
100g Radishes - Thin sliced
100g Cider Vinegar
50g Caster Sugar
5g Salt
Stir together the vinegar, sugar and salt until the sugar is fully dissolved. Now simply pour the liquid over the radishes sit for 2-3 hours to lightly pickle the radishes.
I’m actually working on a new quick pickling technique at the moment and once I’ve done more experiments I might come back and update this element using that technique when I’m happy with it.
Plating Up –
Place a couple of tablespoons of the Rhubarb Relish in the centre of the plate.
Sit two squares of the hot Elderflower Smoked Halloumi on top of the relish having cut a small slit in the top of one of them.
Delicately sit a piece of the Rhubarb Glass in the slit cut into one of the pieces of Halloumi so that the glass stands upright and place a couple of pea shoots around the glass.
Now take some of the lightly pickled radish slices and dab with paper towel to remove excess liquid. Place these overlapping in a circle around the rhubarb relish and finish by garnishing with a few sprigs of radish sprouts and a couple of edible summer flowers.
Cheers
Eddie x
Goats Cheese Parfait, Avocado and Dill Pollen Puree, Yuzu Soured Goats Milk Froth, Dill Oil. With Crushed Pine Nuts, Cucumber, and Preserved Lemon Zest

Goats Cheese Parfait, Avocado and Dill Pollen Puree, Yuzu Soured Goats Milk Froth, Dill Oil. With Crushed Pine Nuts, Cucumber, and Preserved Lemon Zest
This refreshing chilled dish focuses on the flavours of goats cheese, dill, and avocado. The central frozen square of goats cheese parfait is rich and refreshing and acts as a base for the dish. The yuzu soured goats milk froth is sharp and light while the avocado puree is thick and smooth, with the delicate flavour of dill pollen. Then the dill oil, which splits the goats milk froth, unites the dishes flavours. Finally cucumber cubes and crushed pine nuts give an added texture contrast to this small, elegant dish.
Goats Cheese Parfait
300g Soft Goats Cheese
100g Goats Milk Yoghurt
200g Double Cream
2 Free Range Egg Yolks
First off whip the cream to soft peaks and set it to one side.
Next blend together the goats cheese, egg yolks and goats yogurt along with a little salt until smooth.
Finally fold the whipped cream into the goats cheese mixture and season to taste.
Spread the mixture to about 1 cm deep in baking trays lined with baking paper and place in the freeze.
Once frozen cut the parfait into small squares and reserve in the freezer until you’re ready to plate up.
Avocado and Dill Pollen Puree
200g Avocado Flesh
30g Avocado Oil
15g Glucose Syrup
25g Lemon Juice
3 tsp Dill pollen
Salt and pepper
Simply blend all the ingredients together until smooth. Then pass the puree though a fine sieve. Check the seasoning and chill in the fridge for at least two hours before using.
Yuzu Soured Goats Milk Froth
50ml Yuzu Juice
25ml White Wine (dry)
250ml Goats Milk (whole)
Salt
Heat the yuzu juice and white wine in a pan till boiling, then simmer and reduce for two to three minutes.
Add the goats milk and simply bring to a gentle simmer for 2-3 minutes whilst whisking. Add salt to taste.
Chill the soured goats milk in the fridge. If it begins to separate simply stir to recombine.
Reserve chilled in the fridge
Dill Oil –
50g Fresh Dill
100g Olive Oil
This technique for making herb oils is something I’ve been playing with as a way to make flavourful herb oils without waiting a long time for them to infuse or needing to heat the oil.
Using my technique herb oils can be made quickly and you can use oils which would otherwise be spoiled by heating.
So for the dill oil – First blanch the fresh dill in boiling water for about 45 seconds before plunging quickly into ice water.
Now squeeze as much water out of the dill as possible through cheesecloth.
Next set the dill on some paper towel and dry in dehydrator for one hour at 33C (or sit in a warm dry place until excess moisture has dried out).
Next I use a rapid infusion technique – which you can read more abour here and see a video of here
So, you place the dill and oil into a cream whipper and charge with two bulbs of nitrous oxide. Shake the whipper for one minute then allow it to sit for a couple of minutes.
Now vent the gas and pour out the oil and the dill. Now blend the oil and dill together well. I blended this for five minutes in a jug with a hand blender since it was a small batch.
Finally strain the oil through a double or even triple layer of cheesecloth and store until ready to serve.
Garnishes –
One Cucumber
One Preserved Lemon
A couple of teaspoons of Pine Nuts
For the cucumber cubes first off peel the cucumber then cut strips less than a centimetre thick of the flesh (you don’t want the seeds for this). Then simply cut the cucumber flesh in to even cubes of just less than a centimetre.
For the preserved lemon zest simply use a zester to collect the zest of the preserved lemon.
For the pine nuts, just crush or chop the nuts into small pieces.
Putting it together
Place a square of the goats cheese parfait in the centre of a chilled dish.
Now froth a little of the yuzu soured goats milk with a small whisk and then take a couple of tables spoons of the lightly frothed milk and mix in a little dill oil. Gently stir these together and then spoon the mix over the parfait onto the plate. The milk and oil will separate out on their own to ensure a good distribution of the small oil droplets but also giving a nice visual effect.
Now on one side of the square of parfait delicately place a little of the crushed pine nuts. Then take a quenelle of the avocado and dill pollen puree and place it on top of the crushed pine nuts. Finish by sitting a pinch of the preserved lemon zest on top of the puree
Next, on the other side of the square of parfait, place 3 or 4 of the cucumber cubes, equally spaced.
Then that’s it your ready to serve this refreshing chilled dish.
Hope you like this.
Cheers
Eddie x
Chocolate Mousse, Orange Glass, Smoked Salt Hazelnut Caramel, Crystallised Micro Coriander (Vegan)

Chocolate Mousse, Orange Glass, Smoked Salt Hazelnut Caramel, Crystallised Micro Coriander (Vegan)
This rich, intense chocolate mousse, foamed using a cream whipper, is dairy and egg free but really packs a punch of full on deep chocolate flavour. Here I’ve paired it with complimentary flavours and contrasting textures. There’s a brittle, delicate Orange Glass. Sweet, aromatic, crystallised micro coriander. And finally caramel coated hazelnuts finished with smoked salt.
Chocolate Mousse (Dairy and Egg Free)
110g Dark Chocolate (Minimum 70% Cocoa Solids – Dairy Free)
330g Water
80g Caster Sugar
15g Coco Powder
20g Smoked Brandy (click here for smoked brandy method)
2g Xanthan Gum
2g Soy Lecithin
First off melt the chocolate in a glass bowl over a pan of simmering water. Meanwhile in a separate saucepan combine the water, sugar and coco powder and bring to a simmer whilst whisking.
Next stir the hot sugar and coco mixture into the melted chocolate. Mix well for a minute or two, and then stir in the smoked brandy.
Set the chocolate mixture to one side to cool completely. Once cooled blend in the Lecithin and Xanthan gum with a hand blender. Now set the mix to one side to sit covered overnight (12-24 hours).
After it has been sat overnight you are ready to foam the mixture. First give the mix a good stir to loosen it up a little (it will be quite thick). Next spoon the mixture into a ½ liter cream whipper and charge with one bulb of Nitrous Oxide.
Shake the whipper vigorously for around 30 seconds, then when you’re ready to serve invert the whipper to dispense your chocolate mousse (if you want a more aerated mousse use an additional bulb of nitrous but I prefer the texture with just one).
Bellow you can see a video of me demonstrating the foaming technique used in this dish.
Cream Whippers available from - www.Modernist-Chef.com
Orange Glass
165g Fresh Orange Juice
40g Pure-cote B790
15g Caster Sugar
5g Icing Sugar
Tiny Pinch of Salt
1/2 Teaspoon Ground Cardamom
One Tablespoon Freshly Squeezed Lemon Juice
Slowly heat all ingredients except the lemon juice to 90C in a small pan whilst whisking. Hold this mixture at 90C for two to three minutes, continually stirring.
Remove the pan from the heat and pour the liquid into a blender, now adding the fresh lemon juice.
Blend the hot mix for ten minutes on full power.
Now dab a small amount of olive oil on to a couple of sheets of acetate and then wipe them with paper towel to create a very light coating of oil.
Pour out a little of the warm orange juice mix onto each of the prepared acetate sheets and form as thin a layer of the juice mix as possible by moving the sheets around.
Next place the acetate sheets into a dehydrator set at 33C for 3 - 4 hours until the juice mixture has become a malleable but dry film. (The coated acetate can be left at room temperature to dry overnight but I find this low temperature stage in the dehydrator works well and speeds up the process).
Carefully peel the orange film away from the acetate and shape the film as desired. Here I tore small pieces of the film into simple shapes.
Finally dehydrate the torn orange film on baking paper at 57C for 10-12 hours until you are left with crisp and brittle, abstract shaped pieces of orange glass.
(These can be stored in an airtight container - layering with baking paper along with a small wrap of silica crystals to prevent the fruit glass from absorbing moisture).
Crystallised Micro Coriander
100g Caster Sugar
100g Water
Micro Coriander
Firstly make a simple sugar syrup by heating the water and sugar together whilst stirring until the sugar is completely dissolved.
Now allow the syrup to cool completely.
Then dip the clean fresh micro coriander into the sugar syrup, one piece at a time (this is easiest using tweezers). Shake any excess liquid of the herbs and place them, well spaced out, on a non-stick sheet.
Now simply place the sheet into a dehydrator at 35C for 8- 12 hours until the coated micro herbs are crisp and dry on the outside (its worth checking on the herbs half way through and carefully turning them over if necessary)
Smoked Salt Hazelnut Caramel
200g Caster Sugar
50g Hazelnuts
Smoked Maldon salt
First make a simple caramel by gently heating the sugar in a non-stick pan until it melts, then continue to heat the sugar until it reaches a golden colour. Now stir in your hazelnuts and immediately pour out the caramel onto a heatproof mat (or lined baking tray) to cool. Sprinkle a little smoked maldon salt over the caramel whist it is still tacky.
Then smash the caramel into small pieces and reserve until your ready to put together the dish. (You can store the caramel in an airtight plastic tub, ideally with a small wrap of silica crystals for longer life)
To Serve
Put a little of the broken salted hazelnut caramel in the bottom of a glass. Now dispense the chocolate mousse from the cream whipper into the glass. Finally place a piece of the orange glass into the mousse so that it stands up and finish with a couple of pieces of the crystallised micro coriander. Serve immediately.
Cream Whippers and Nitrous Oxide are available from -
Grape Amuse Bouche

Carbonated Anti-griddle ‘Seared’ Grapes - Purple Grape Glass - Fennel Sugar Strands
This dish is a celebration of grapes, with just a couple of simple complimentary flavours. Where it really gets exciting here is in highlighting the beautiful flavour of grapes by playing with textures and sensations in the mouth to showcase a fantastic ingredient in a new way,
The ‘Purple Grape Glass’ is brittle and delicate but delivers an intense, lingering flavour. The fizzy, carbonated fresh grapes are refreshing and palate cleansing, cutting the sweetness of the sugar strands. They also have a solid, then smooth and yielding, fast frozen edge. Finally the fragile, crisp, crunchy fennel sugar stands provide an extra hit of sweetness along with the distinctive and complementary flavour of anise.
This recipe uses fantastic bit of kit called an ‘Anti-griddle’. Its available on the www.Modernist-Chef.com shop. It’s an amazing piece of modern kitchen equipment made by PolyScience, with a ‘griddle’ surface which chills down to bellow -35C . The anti-griddle allows you to freeze items incredibly quickly (thus giving you a smoother texture as ice-crystals don’t have time to form) and to freeze objects upwards from the ‘griddle’ surface by increment, allowing you to achieve unique textures and temperature contrasts within elements of a dish.
In this recipe the cut edges of halved carbonated grapes are frozen on the anti griddle. The top three quarters each grape stays soft and unfrozen so you keep the taste and texture of fresh grapes (with an added fizz). But you also get a texture and temperature contrast within each grape, and a really bright clean flavour from the frozen edge.
Whippers and The AntiGriddle available from

Above - The Purple Grape Glass
Purple Grape Glass
165g Purple Grape Juice
40g Pure-cote B790
15g Caster Sugar
5g Icing Sugar
Tiny Pinch of Salt
0.5g Ground Cinnamon
15g Freshly Squeezed Lime Juice (roughly equal to the juice of half a small lime)
Slowly heat all ingredients except the lime juice to 90C in a small pan whilst whisking, and hold the mixture at 90C for two to three minutes, continually stirring.
Remove the pan from the heat and pour the liquid into a blender, now adding the fresh lime juice. Blend the hot mix for ten minutes on full power.
Now dab a small amount of olive oil on to a couple of sheets of acetate and wipe with paper towel to form a very light coating.
Pour the warm grape juice mix onto the acetate sheets and form as thin a layer of the juice mix as possible by moving the sheets around.
Place the acetate sheets into a dehydrator ser at 33C for 3 -4 hours until the juice mixture has become a malleable but dry film. (The coated acetate can be left at room temperature to dry overnight but I find this low temperature stage in the dehydrator works well and speeds up the process).
Peel the grape film away from the acetate and shape the film as desired. For this dish I tore small pieces of the film and simply crumpled them up a little, pinning then in that shape with transparent cocktail sticks.
Finally dehydrate the shaped grape film on baking paper at 57C for 10-12 hours until you are left with crisp and brittle, abstract shaped, pieces of purple grape glass on cocktail sticks.
(These can be stored in an airtight container - layering with baking paper along with a small wrap of silica crystals to prevent the fruit glass from absorbing moisture).
Fennel Sugar Strands
40g Isomalt
20g Glucose Syrup
20g White Fondant
0.75g Ground Toasted Fennel Seeds (about ¾ of a teaspoon)
Heat all the ingredients except the ground fennel to 165C in pan.
Once the sugar mixture hits 165C remove the pan from heat and let it rest for a few seconds, then quickly stir in the fennel powder. (The mixture should be clear and uncoloured except for the fine fennel powder suspended in it).
Pour the hot sugar mixture onto a silicon mat (such as a ‘Silpat’)
As soon as the sugar is cool enough to touch, but still flexible, pull and stretch thin pieces of the ‘caramel’ into long, fine abstract shapes, working quickly.
You want a variety of shapes – some small flatter pieces and some long thin strands of sugar. Allow the fennel sugar strands to cool and harden on baking paper.
(As with the fruit glass these can be stored in an airtight container – layered with baking paper along with a small wrap of silica crystals to prevent the sugar stands from absorbing moisture).
For the Grapes
A mix of good quality Green and Red seedless grapes
Two Co2 chargers
Take about 20 mixed grapes and cut them in half.
Place the halved grapes into a cream whipper and charge it with two Co2 chargers. Then place the whipper in the fridge and chill for at least two hours.
Complete the following steps once you are ready to serve the dish (and have prepared the Fennel Sugar strands and Grape Glass)
Lightly oil the surface of the anti-griddle and turn it on around ten minutes before your ready to use it so it can fully chill down to temperature. 
Above - The Anti-Griddle
Now, when you have everything prepared, fully vent the gas from the cream whipper, then carefully open it up and remove the grapes.
Place the grapes, cut side down on the lightly oiled anti-griddle. Allow the cut edge of the grapes to freeze and the freezing to continue up the grape by about a 2-3mm (this will happen very quickly)
When the grapes are frozen at the base remove them from anti-griddle surface with a silicon spatula. This should be done as close to serving as possible so that the edge of the grape remains frozen whilst the rest is fresh and fizzy from carbonation.
Putting it together
Alternately place the prepared grapes and some of the smaller pieces of fennel sugar in a small shot glass.
Arrange a couple of the longer thin strands of fennel sugar protruding from the shot glass.
Finally take one of the pieces of purple grape glass on its cocktail stick and gently press the tip of the cocktail stick into one of the grapes in the shot glass, so that the purple grape glass sits above the shot glass.
Lentil Salad (Vegan)

‘Lentil Salad’ (Vegan)
Green Lentils - Apple Film - Savory Beetroot Meringue (egg-free) -. Horseradish Soymilk Emulsion - Celery - Walnut – Watercress - Citrus
For a while I’ve wanted to do a very modern vegan dish that plays on the stereotypes people often have about vegan food (ie -the use of lentils).
The recipe is based on flavours that work together brilliantly and often come together in simple salads. My idea was to work with these flavours but play with the textures and the presentation and hopefully give a modern refined twist to a simple salad.
Savory Beetroot Meringue – (I have now updated the technique for this, the one bellow works but I now make my juice based meringues the way you can see here
All the modern ingredients used in this dish can be found on
350g Beetroot Juice (this will be reduced to 300g)
35g Isomalt
20g Glucose syrup
20g Caster sugar
Pinch Salt
2 Tablespoon Lemon Juice
Pinch Chilli Powder
11g Methylcellulose
1.5g Xanthan Gum
Bring the beetroot juice to a simmer and reduce it to 300g. Now whilst stirring add in the Isomalt, Glucose, Caster Sugar, Lemon Juice, Chilli Powder and Salt to taste and stir until they are dissolved. Set the mixture to one side to cool.
Take 250g of the beetroot juice mix and blend in the xanthan gum with an immersion blender. Once the mixture has thickened add in the methylcellulose and blend again until fully combined.
Now either my hand or in a kitchen aid whip the beetroot mix to stiff peaks (this may take a while but you need to persist and get it to stiff peaks).
.
Once whipped to stiff peaks delicately spoon the whipped beetroot mix into a piping bag a carefully pipe small meringues onto s nonstick sheet.
Finally dehydrate the meringues at 57C for around 10 hours until dried, light and crispy (dehydrate for longer if necessary).
These can be stored in an airtight container
Apple sheet –
For the Apple Juice mix -
300g Apple Juice
3g Sodium Alginate
Pinch Salt
Grated Zest of one Lemon
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon cracked black pepper
Calcium Lactate Solution -
100ml water
5g Calcium Lactate
Bend sodium alginate into the apple juice until it thickens. Now stir in the lemon zest, cinnamon, black pepper and a pinch of salt.
Now let the apple juice mix settle in the fridge for an hour.
Next prepare the calcium lactate solution by blending the powdered calcium Lactate into 100ml of cold water. Pour this solution into a spray bottle/atomizer.
Now spread a little of the apple juice mixture in a thin layer on a flat nonstick surface (a baking sheet or even just a flat plate will do). Now spray the apple mixture with the calcium solution, this will cause the apple mixture to begin setting. Leave it for five minutes then you should be able to gently lift and turn over the apple sheet so you can spray the other side. Leave the apple sheet for a further five minutes then cut it into strips (these will be used to roll up the lentil mixture in). Finally heat the cut apple sheets in the microwave for 20 seconds to dry them out a tiny bit. Now set to one side on greaseproof paper until ready to use.
Lentils-
125g Dried Green lentils dried (for 250g cooked)
2 bay leaves
40g Crushed Walnut
1 Carrot - Diced
1 Stick Celery – Diced
2 tabs fresh chopped parsley
Rinse the dried lentils then cook them in salted water (starting with cold water) with two bay leaves for approx 15 minutes until cooked but still retaining texture. Now drain them and rinse again with a little cold water.
Now place the cooked lentils in a bowl and mix in the diced celery, diced carrot, crushed walnut, chopped parsley and a splash of olive oil. Season to taste.
Horseradish Soymilk Emulsion
170ml Soymilk
600ml Light Olive Oil
One Teaspoon Mustard
Juice One Lemon and Zest.
2 Tablespoons White Wine Vinegar
One Tablespoon Horseradish Puree
2 cloves Garlic
In a food processor blend the garlic, mustard, lemon juice and zest, and vinegar for one minute.
Now add the soymilk into the food processor and blend for another minute.
Now gently in a slow stream (as slow as possible) pout the olive oil into the soymilk mixture whilst blending.
As you drizzle in the olive oil while blending the mixture should gradually emulsify and thicken. Add seasoning to taste (bending it in to combine). Place some of the emulsion in a squeezy bottle and store the rest in the fridge.
Putting it together –
Take a small spoonful of the lentil mixture and place it at the bottom of one the strips of apple film and roll it up like a small cannelloni. Make up three of these for each plate, trimming them to neaten them up.
Place small dots of the emulsion on the plate swiping them with the tip of the squeezy bottle to make teardrop shapes.
Place three of the small apple wrapped lentil parcels on the plate and garnish them with a little orange zest.
Delicately place a little watercress around the plate and place a few of the beetroot meringue around the plate aswell.
Cheers
Eddie
Shitake Mushroom, Butterbean and Pea Korokke. With - Pickled Ginger. Shaved Cucumber. Apple Beetroot and Wasabi Gellee. Crispy fried Kombu.

Shitake Mushroom, Butterbean and Pea Korokke. With - Pickled Ginger. Shaved Cucumber. Apple Beetroot and Wasabi Gellee. Crispy fried Kombu.
The centerpiece of this dish is my take on Japanese ‘Korokke’. Usually these would be potato-based patties that are bread crumbed and deep-fried. Here I’m using butterbeans to replace the potato and adding shitake mushrooms, peas and spices to the mix. They’re then shaped into little balls, coated with breadcrumbs and black sesame seeds and deep-fried.
My version of Korokke is served with sharp, hot pickled ginger, cooling cucumber shavings and an Apple, Beetroot and Wasabi Gelee, which has a beautiful flavour and sweetness but also adds another layer of texture contrast to the dish.
The finishing touch is the, addictively tasty, crispy fried Kombu. It’s is a type of kelp that’s used a lot in Japanese cooking. It’s a great source of Umami, the fifth taste -…link… and its used to make Dashi, a Japanese stock. In this dish the Kombu is shredded and deep fried which works great with all the other flavours and textures, that is as long as you can manage to resist snacking on it long enough that it actually makes it onto the plate.
Korokke -
50g Dried Shitake Mushrooms
230g Drained Rinsed Butter Beams
50g Frozen petit pois
One bunch Fresh Coriander
One carrot – finely diced
1 Thumb Sized Piece of Ginger – finely chopped
1 Green Chilli – finely Diced
2 Cloves of Garlic - chopped
2 Shallots – finely diced
Toasted Sesame oil for frying
Soy sauce
2 Tablespoons Rice Wine Vinegar
Fine white Bread Crumbs
Black Sesame Seeds
Egg wash for bread crumbing
Plain Flour for bread crumbing
Oil for deep-frying
First off, in a bowl, pour 1lt of boiling water over the dried shitake mushrooms and leave them to soak for one hour.
Then drain the mushrooms and gently squeeze out any excess liquid (its worth keeping the soaking liquid from the mushrooms as you can use it to make a great Umami rich Dashi at a later point – look here for more info)
Thinly slice the shitake. Now heat 4 tablespoons of toasted sesame oil in a wok. Toss the shitake into the wok and stir-fry until they absorb all the oil. Now add six tablespoons of soy sauce and two tablespoons of rice wine vinegar and continue to stir-fry until the mushrooms have absorbed all the liquid. Now you can set them aside to cool.
Now stir-fry the Chilli, Ginger, Shallots, Garlic and diced carrot in a little sesame oil for around two minutes. Add this to the bowl with the cooked mushrooms and set to one side.
In another bowl crush the drained butterbeans well with the back of a fork then mix in the frozen peas. The mixture should be pretty solid and hold its shape. Now mix in the cooled cooked mushrooms and stir fried spices. Roughly chop a handful of fresh coriander and add this to the mixture.
Season the mix to taste then form it into small balls and place these on a tray.
Now mix together breadcrumbs and black sesame seeds in a ratio of about 4 parts breadcrumbs to one-part sesame seeds in a bowl.
Beat three eggs in another bowl and in a third bowl place a handful or two of plain flour.
To Breadcrumb the Shitake and butterbean Korokke roll each one first in the flour, then in the egg wash and finally in the breadcrumb and sesame mixture, making sure they are completely coated. These can now be reserved on a tray in the fridge until you’re ready to cook them.
To cook them, heat a deep fat fryer to 190C and cook a couple of the balls at a time – frying them for 2-3 minutes until golden brown and hot through to the centre. Drain off any excess oil on a little kitchen towel. These can be briefly kept warm in the oven while setting up the plates.
Beetroot, Apple and Wasabi Gellee –
300g Beetroot juice
300g Apple juice
One teaspoon Wasabi Paste
Pinch Salt
2g Agar Agar Powder - Available from www.Modernist-Chef.com
Whisk the juices and wasabi together with a pinch of salt and place in a pan, Bring the liquid to a simmer and gently reduce the liquid by half, intermittently skimming off any froth that forms on the top of the juice. You should end up with 300g of total liquid.
Allow the reduced Beetroot Apple and Wasabi liquid to cool down to room temperature.
Whisk the Agar into the cooled juice mixture and place it back on the heat. Bring to a simmer whilst stirring.
Pour out the juice mixture into a wide plastic container so the Gelee is about 1cm deep and leave to cool and set.
Once set cut out a small circle of the Gelee for each Korokke (just bigger than the Korokke that will sit on them). Also cut a small amount of 1mm dice of the gelee to be used as garnish.
(You can see more on Agar and its uses in a post I did here)
Crispy Fried Kombu –
Place four or five strips of dried kombu in a large bowl and cover with boiling water. Leave to soak for around an hour then drain (as with soaking the shitake mushrooms you can hold onto the soaking liquid and use it in the future to make an Umami rich Dashi).
Finely slice the Kombu into thin strips about 10cm long and deep-fry at 190C for about a minute until the oil stops bubbling rapidly and the strips are crispy.
Drain on a little kitchen towel and lightly season with a pinch of salt.
Finishing Touches –
Using a peeler take thin strips of cucumber. Tear some pickled sushi ginger down into thin strips. This is powerful stuff so you won’t need too much of it to get a real flavour impact.
Prepare some spring onion curls as a garnish by slicing spring onion extremely thin lengthways and placing these thin strips into ice cold water for around an hour to curl up. They can then be drained and used as garnish.
Plating up
Place a Circle of the Beetroot Gelee on the plate and sit one of the Korokke on top. Put a little of the crispy fired kombu around the plate. Place slightly crumpled strips of cucumber and pickled ginger around the kombu. Finally garnish the Korokke with a little of the spring onion curls and finish by carefully placing a few pieces of very finely diced Beetroot Apple and Wasabi gelee over the spring onion.
Smoked Griddled Aubergine wrapped Lemon and Black Pepper Goats Cheese with Crouton, Balsamic Reduction and Orange Sauce.

Smoked Griddled Aubergine wrapped Lemon and Black Pepper Goats Cheese with Crouton, Balsamic Reduction and Orange Sauce.
This delicious starter is really pretty simple to make but it’s beautifully flavourful and moreish. The sharp goats cheese cuts the robust flavour of the smoked griddled aubergine, while the sticky, sweet balsamic reduction and aromatic orange sauce bring this dish together and gives it an elegant finish. It makes a great start to a meal with its balanced yet bold flavours, and demands attention as something a little different but utterly delicious.
The quick smoking of the aubergine is done with the polyscience smoking gun which is a great bit of kit.
The smoking gun is available here
www.Modernist-Chef.com
Its a brilliant and versatile piece of kitchen tech that I’d recommend to anyone really into their cooking.
The Recipe makes 10 servings as a starter or canapé.
Goats Cheese –
125g Goats cheese
Zest of two lemons
1 teaspoon of cracked black pepper
Simply mix the goats cheese, lemon zest and black pepper together in a bowl
Then roll the goats cheese mix into about 10 small sausage shapes and reserve in the fridge until ready to use.
Smoked Griddled Aubergene –
Two Aubergines
One Finely chopped red chilli
Chopped Fresh Parsley
Polyscience Smoking Gun
Oak Smoking chips
Seasoning
Slice down the length of the Aubergines to get strips about ½ a cm thick.
Place these in a colander and toss with two of tables spoons of salt and leave them to sit like this for an hour, the salt will draw out some of the bitterness from auberegenes. After an hour thoroughly rinse the salt off the slices.
Now place them in a bowl and toss with a splash of olive oil, one finely chopped red chilli, a sprinkling of chopped fresh parsley and a little salt and pepper.
Pop the Aubergine strips on a hot griddle pan for one to two minutes on each side until they’re is just cooked through.
Now place the hot Aubergine into a large bowl and cover with clingfilm.
Use the Polyscience Smoking Gun, loaded with oak smoking chips, to fill the covered bowl with smoke. Sit covered for one minute to give the aubergenes a smokey flavour.
Finally your ready to place one of the pieces of the rolled goats cheese at the bottom of each of the, still warm, smoked Aubergine strips and then roll them up and pin in place with cocktail sticks. Now simply pop them in a hot oven for one minute to make sure they are hot when you serve them.
Croutons –
Cut 6cm wide circles of good quality bread – about 1cm thick – using a pastry cutter.
Fry these in olive oil, in a pan on a medium heat, for around a minute on each side until golden brown. Sit the cooked croutons on kitchen roll to allow some of the excess oil to drain off.
Orange sauce
150ml cointreau
50ml Dry White wine
600ml Orange Juice
Pinch Salt
Thumb sized piece of ginger cut into thin strips
2g Xanthan gum
Bring the cointreau and white wine to a simmer and reduce for two to three minutes. Now add the orange juice, ginger and pinch of salt. Continue to simmer the sauce until it has reduced by half. Stain through a fine sieve and allow to cool, then blend in 2g of xanthan gum and transfer the sauce to a squeezy bottle. This can either be served cold up heated up when plating the dish.
Balsamic reduction
200ml Good quality Balsamic Vinegar
Bring the Balsamic up to a boil in a saucepan then drop the temperature to a simmer and allow it to reduce by about three quarters. It’s ready when it reaches a syrupy consistency. Let it cool and place in a squeezy bottle.
To serve –
Sit each of the hot rolled up smoked Aubergine and goats cheese parcels on top of a crouton in the centre of the plate and alternately dot the orange sauce and balsamic reduction around the plate.
I hope you’ll give it a go (even if you don’t have a smoking gun), its well worth it.
Eddie x

www.Modernist-Chef.com
Mushroom and Nutmeg Fillo Wrap. With Lemon Dill Spheres and Blueberry Puree
Mushroom and Nutmeg Fillo Wrap. With Lemon Dill Spheres and Blueberry Puree
This is a really zesty, fresh tasting dish thats perfect with a glass of chilled white wine. The flavours compliment each other beautifully. Sharp lemon dill sauce and the sweet and tart blueberry puree cut through the richness of the buttery, indulgent, Fillo wrapped mushrooms with nutmeg. Then the texture contrasts on the plate add excitement and playfulness, with crispy fillo pastry, cooked mushrooms, and spheres of lemon dill sauce that burst into liquid in your mouth. It’s a dish with real impact and is, I hope, both delicious and kind of fun.
Serves 4
For the Fillo Wraps
700g mixed mushrooms -–
I use a mixture of Portobello, Closed cap and Chestnut mushrooms.
3 cloves garlic
4 Shallots
Tablespoon fresh chopped oregano
Zest and juice of one lemon
Half a glass of white wine
50g butter, plus a little for frying
One and a half whole nutmeg, freshly grated
A small pot of melted butter
8 Sheets Fresh Fillo Pastry cut to 20cm squares
First fry the chopped shallots and garlic with a tablespoon of butter and a little olive oil for about a minute.
Roughly chop the mushrooms and add them to the hot pan to fry for a couple of minutes before pouring in half a glass of white wine for the last minute of cooking until the mushrooms are just done.
Drain the liquid from the cooked mushrooms and transfer them to a bowl. Now add 50g butter, a tablespoon of fresh chopped oregano, the zest and juice of one lemon and the grated nutmeg into the bowl and mix together well.
Place half the mushrooms in a blender and blitz to a rough mix then roughly chop the left over mushrooms before recombining them together with the blended mix. Add salt and pepper to taste and a touch more butter if necessary to hold the mix together. Chill the mixture for a couple of hours in the fridge before using. It should become a moldable consistency that will hold its shape when pressed into small balls.
Now cut several sheets of fresh Fillo pastry to 20 Cm squares. For each fillo package brush one sheet lightly with melted butter then place another sheet on top of the first and again gently brush this with a little melted butter.
Take a generous tablespoon of the chilled mushroom mixture and shape it into a ball and place this in the centre of the double-layered fillo square. Then lift up the corners of the square and bring them together above the mushroom mix, pinching in any loose pastry at the top. Twist the bundle to make a small closed package containing the mushroom filling. Brush the outside of these little fillo pastry bundles with a touch more melted butter and now these can either be cooked straight away or reserved in the fridge.
When ready to cook them place the filled fillo packages on a baking sheet on the middle shelf of the oven at 220C for 10 to 15 minute until golden brown and crisp.
Serve them piping hot
Blueberry Puree –
250g Fresh Blueberries
Juice of one Lemon
Pinch of salt
2g Xanthan Gum
Blend the fresh Blueberries, lemon juice, and small pinch of salt in a tall container with a hand blender till smooth. Pass this mixture through a sieve. Now Blend in the Xanthan Gum and pour into a squeezy bottle, reserve in the fridge until ready to use.
For the Lemon Dill Spheres –
Juice of one lemon
50ml white wine (dry)
A good handful fresh Dill chopped
300ml Single cream
Seasoning (salt and course black pepper)
Sodium Alginate Bath –
5g Sodium Alginate
1 Litre Water
This is a criminally easy and quick sauce to make, but its lovely - fresh, delicate, sharp and moreish.
First prepare your sodium alginate solution by blending 5g of sodium alginate (available from www.Modernist-Chef.com) into one litre of cold water in a large mixing bowl. Leave this to settle in the fridge for thirty minutes before using.
Now for the sauce heat the lemon juice and white wine in a pan till boiling, then simmer and reduce for two to three minutes.
Add the cream, and chopped Dill and simply bring to a gentle simmer for a couple more minutes, while stirring, to thicken the sauce a little, Season to taste.
Next chill the sauce then drop small spoonfuls of it into the sodium alginate solution using a ‘dropping spoon’, and leave for one minute to react, before refreshing the orbs in cold fresh water.
The small, calcium rich, orbs will react with the sodium alginate and a thin film will form around them so that they hold their shape but will burst to liquid in you mouth.
To serve - Heat the orbs by placing them in a saucepan of cold water and gently bringing this up to just below a simmer (about 80 to 85C, keep it at this temperature for around two minutes to heat through). Remove the spheres carefully with a slotted spoon just as your ready to serve the dish.
Putting it together –
Place one of the fillo packages in the centre of the plate with circles of the blueberry puree around it. Finally place three of the hot lemon dill spheres around the plate (putting each of them ontop of one of the circles of blueberry puree helps to keep the spheres from sliding about on the plate).
Enjoy x
Sodium Alginate is available from 
www.Modernist-Chef.com
Tempura

Tempura - Super light and crispy tempura. (vegan)
Using Methylcellulose in this tempura batter helps to create an incredibly light, crispy batter inside which the vegetables essentially steam whilst they’re cooked. It helps to keep moisture in the coated ingredients and also reduces the about of oil absorbed through the batter.
As well as using methylcellulose here I’ve also replaced some of the water in the batter mixture with vodka, which boils out very quickly during frying, giving you a fantastically crunchy, crisp texture.
Finally I also carbonate my tempura batter in a cream whipper to help get a beautifully light batter.
350g Vodka
450g Water
250g Plain Flour (or Rice Flour)
Pinch salt
Pinch chilli powder
8g Methylcellulose
Plus your choice of ingredients to batter – ie shitake mushrooms, broccoli, baby corn, carrot batons, strips of peppers etc.
Blend the methylcellulose into 250g of the water using a hand blender.
Next whisk the vodka into the flour (seasoned with a pinch of salt and chilli powder).
Now add the methylcellulose mixture into the flour and finally whisk in the remaining 200g of water.
Whisk the batter until smooth then pour it through a sieve.
Take 500ml of the tempura batter and pour it into a cream whipper then charge this with two Co2 chargers (soda chargers).
Give the whipper a good shake and place it in the fridge to chill of around two hours or until your ready to it.
When your ready to make your tempura invert the cream whipper and dispense the batter into a large mixing bowl.
Dip your ingredients to be fried into a little flour then into the batter before gently placing them in a deep fat fryer (at 190C). Only fry a few tempuras at a time.
The tempura will cook very quickly (less than two minutes), take them out of the fryer when they are crisp and crunchy and serve up with a dipping sauce or with as part of a larger dish.
Read my Methylcellulose Introduction here
Go to my Molecular Basics Section
Methylcellulose is Available from
www.Modernist-Chef.com
Dry Caramel

Here I’m just going to give you a recipe for a Cinnamon Dry Caramel (inspired by an Alinea technique) which almost magically turns to chewy soft caramel in your mouth. It’s a sensation that’s amplified by the fact that your mind expects something powdery and chalky from the look of the dry caramel then experiences it change texture swiftly in your mouth to a familiar soft and luxurious caramel.
I used it as past of a dish here –

Carrot Cake, Orange and Ginger
Carrot Cake, Ginger Sorbet, Orange Fluid Gel, Glazed Chantaney Carrots and a Cinnamon Dry Caramel.
Cinnamon Dry Caramel
150g Caster Sugar
150g Soft Light Brown Sugar
200g Golden Syrup
300g Double Cream
75g Butter
3 teaspoons Ground Cinnamon
A Large Pinch of salt
50g Ab-Zorbit Tapioca Maltodextrin (Texturas Malto) - Available from www.Modernist-Chef.com
Heat the caster sugar in a pan wit a tablespoon of water. Gently heat until the sugar has turned a golden brown. Then quickly remove the pan from the heat and stir in the butter followed by the rest of the ingredients. Then gently bring this mixture up to 110C in the pan before pouring it out to cool down.
Now take 200g of your caramel base and place it in a blender. In short bursts blend in the Tapioca Maltodextrin a bit at a time until you have a dry to the touch powder with the look of fine breadcrumbs. This can be stored in an airtight container.
Maltodextrin available from -

www.Modernist-Chef.com
Umami Rich Shitake Mushroom and Noodle Broth

Umami Rich Shitake Mushroom and Noodle Broth
Umami Rich Shitake Mushroom and Noodle Broth (Serves two as a main course).
This Japanese inspired dish is really rich in Umami (the fifth taste) and makes a beautiful main course with incredible flavour. For more information on Umami check out my blog on the subject.
Ingredients-
50g Dried sliced Shitake Mushrooms
2 Cloves of garlic chopped
3 Shallots diced
1 red chilli - roughly chopped
1 thumb sized piece ginger – cut into matchsticks
3 tablespoons Toasted Sesame oil
4 tablespoons Dark soy sauce
2 tablespoons Lemon juice
2 teaspoons ‘Ume plum seasoning’ (or if you can’t get this use a little rice wine vinegar)
1 tablespoon Vegetable stock
Fresh coriander
One-bunch spring onions
2 servings of Noodles – either use fresh egg noodles or cook some dried noodles and set to one side.
Optional - One Piece dried Kombu. It will add an extra umami boost, but it will also give a suble seaweed flavour to the dish aswell.
First off for this dish put the dried shitake’s (along with the Kombu if using) in a bowl and cover with 1 litre of boiling water, let them soak and rehydrate for at least an hour. It’s really important that you remember to keep the water that you soaked the mushrooms in, as this will be the base for our Umami rich broth.
Heat the sesame oil in a pan or wok and stir-fry the ginger, shallots and chilli for about a minuit, then toss in the garlic and fry for another minuit. Roughly chop the shitake mushrooms and throw them into the pan to cook for two minuits.
Now pour the liquid you rehydrated the mushrooms in (a simple ‘Dashi’), over all the ingredients in the pan and bring the liquid to a simmer (if using kombu simmer the soaked piece of kombu in the liquid aswell) . Next in goes the soy sauce, veg stock, ume plum seasoning, lemon juice and just a very small pinch of salt and pepper. Check the seasoning, adding soy rather than salt if you desire it to be saltier, and lemon juice if you want more acidity.
Next pop you noodles into the broth (cooked them separately first if using dried noodles) and simmer for another minuit. Finally chop a few sprigs of fresh coriander and a bunch of spring onions and pop them in for the last minuit or so of cooking. Serve it up in some nice bowls with chopsticks, and garnish with fresh coriander, spring onion curls and a sprinkle of black sesame seeds (remove the kombu, if using, before serving).
Chilli, cumin seed and fenugreek flat bread

Chilli, cumin seed and fenugreek flat bread
Makes about 12.
7g dried active yeast
375ml warm water
Pinch Sugar
600g plain flour
1 tablespoon salt
olive oil
2 tablespoons chilli flakes
3 tablespoons dried fenugreek leaves
1 tablespoon cumin seeds
150g melted butter
5 garlic cloved
pinch cracked black pepper
Chopped fresh corrianda
First make the garlic butter by mixing finely chopped garlic with the melted butter and seasoning with pepper, set this to one side. If you want you could make clarified butter (ghee) at this point but a simple garlic butter is fine for us at the mo.
Now activate the yeast in the warm water and sugar. (Leave it for around 10 mins to become frothy).
Add this to a bowl filled with the flour, salt, olive oil and the spices.
Kneed together into a dough. Its worth really kneeding it well, for about ten minuets, so get right into it and enjoy it, or bang it in a mixer and have a beer.
Place the dough in a covered bowl in a warm place to rise for around an hour and a half after which it should be about twise the size.
Knock the dough back to its origional size and divide it into 8 pieces.
Roll out the breads to 5mm thickness. Brush with a little oil and cook, oiled side down on a hot griddle pan for a minuit on each side until bubbles appear in the bread.
Spread with the garlic butter mix, sprinkle with chopped fresh corrianda and serve.
Cinnamon and vanilla Bavarois with Dark chocolate Kahlua Ganache and coffee tuile.

Cinnamon and vanilla Bavarois with Dark chocolate Kahlua Ganache and coffee tuile.
Cinnamon and Kahlua Bavarois
Makes 4 individual puddings or one 13cm cake tin.
Base –
100g digestive biscuits
50g Melted butter
One tablespoon golden syrup
First make a simple biscuit base for the desert by mixing together 100g of digestive biscuits, which have been broken down to the consistency of fine bread crumbs, with 50g of melted butter and a table spoon of golden syrup. Press this mix into the bottom of the molds you are using or line the base of a cake tin with it.
Bavarois –
65g Caster sugar
Two tea spoons ground Cinnamon
6g agar agar
2 free range egg yolks
250ml whole milk
One vanilla pod
250ml double cream lightly whipped
Mix the agar agar into the milk and allow to soak for 5-10 minuits.
Mix two free range egg yolks and 50g of caster sugar in a bowl.
Heat the milk, agar agar and the seeds of one vanilla pod in a pan to just below boiling point. Keep stiring the mixture till the agar agar is completely dissolved.
Make a syrup from 15g caster sugar two tea spoons of cinnamon and one table spoons of water and add this to the milk. Continue to stir on the heat for a further 2-3 minuits. Pour the liquid over the egg and sugar mix and stir in bit by bit.
As soon as the mixture shows the early signs of setting swiftly fold in the lightly whipped double cream. Stir to insure that the mixture has a smooth consitency.
Quickly pour the mix into your molds or cake tin, this must be done quickly as the Bavarois will begin to set as soon as it starts to cool.
Allow to set in the fridge and once set top with the chocolate and kahlua ganache and refrigerate once again until the topping is also set.
For the Chocolate and Kahlua Ganache topping-
150g good quality (70% cocoa solids) vegetarian dark chocolate.
50ml single gream
One tablespoon golden syrup
50ml Kahlua
Melt 150g of good quality dark chocolate with 50ml single cream a table spoon of golden syrup and 50ml of Kahlua, in a bowl over a pan of water just below boiling point, stirring until smooth.
Once desserts are set remove the molds or cake tin and serve cold.
For the coffee tuile –
60g butter
60g plain flour
60g icing sugar
one large free range egg white
2 teaspoons instant coffee
drop vanilla essence
pinch ground cinnamon
Melt butter and stir in coffee to dissolve. Mix the flour, sugar, egg white, cinnamon and vanilla essence together. Then mix in the butter coffee mix to make a pale brown/beige paste. Pop this mixture in the fridge for one hour. Then spread the mixture to about a millimetre thick on a non stick baking sheet or baking papper. Place in the oven at 200 centigrade for 5 minuits. The buiscuits can then be cut to shape whilst still a tiny bit pliable and left to cool and crisp up.
Serve with a quenelles of the set kahlua ganache coated in cocoa powder, fresh strawberries and coffee tuile.
Baileys and chipped dark chocolate parfait

Baileys and chipped dark chocolate parfait
Ingredients-
50g good quality dark chocolate
150g caster sugar
3 free range egg yolks
1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract
300 ml double cream
2 shots of Baileys
First whip the cream to soft peaks and set to one side. Then in a non-stick pan make a syrup by melting the sugar with a table spoon and a half of water, allow this to simmer for about two minuets until the you have a smooth syrup. Whisk the egg yolks until fluffy and pale then add the syrup to the yolks whilst continuing to whisk for a further couple of minuets to a smooth, thick mixture.
Chop or smash the chocolate in small uneven pieces. At this point one by one fold the Baileys, vanilla extract and chipped chocolate into the egg mix. Finally fold in the whipped cream and spoon the parfait into individual molds or ramekins and freeze ideally over night but for at least four hours.
Turn the parfaits out of their molds and onto a plate, the alcohol in the Baileys should have prevented them from being absolutely frozen solid. These look great simply garnished with a dusting of icing sugar, some grated chocolate and some quartered strawberries to add colour and contrast. Parfait is similar to ice cream and is a lovely indulgent and classy way to end a dinner, while at the same time being easy to make up in advance.
Mushroom Laksa

Mushroom Laksa
(could be vegan if you use egg free noodles)
Ingredients –
4 cloves of Garlic
3 or 4 red chilies
40g fresh ginger
One red pepper skinned and de-seeded
200g free range egg noodles
900ml prepared Vegetable stock
3 Cans of coconut milk
400g closed cap mushrooms
250g portabella mushrooms
A handful of fresh coriander
Lime and soy sauce to taste
chopped sping onions to garnish
Finely chop or blend the garlic, lemon grass, red pepper, ginger and chilies (including their seeds), fry these for one to two minuets. Then add the coconut milk and stock and bring to the boil. Quarter the closed cap mushrooms and slice the portabella and add them to the pan along with a handful of roughly chopped fresh coriander, season with salt, pepper, soy sauce and lime juice to taste, leave to simmer for around 15 minuits.
Whilst the Laksa is simmering bring some water to the boil and cook the noodles. To serve first put some noodles in each large bowl, then ladle out the Laksa and top. Garnish with fresh coriander. This is a great dish in any season and can be made as spicy or mild as you like. Its real comfort food but works great presented as a gourmet main course. You can experiment with adding a variety of deferent veg to this versatile and hearty meal.
Spiced plum and strawberry crumble, dusted with cinamon with a dark chocolate and ginger sauce.

Spiced plum and strawberry crumble, dusted with cinamon with a dark chocolate and ginger sauce.
Crumble -
240g Golden granulated sugar
75g Butter
175g Plain flour
30g Pecan nuts (roughly chopped)
2 tea spoons of chilli powder
2 tea spoons of ground cinnamon
8 fresh ripe plums
500g fresh ripe strawberries
Dark Chocolate and ginger sauce –
Thumb sized piece of root ginger
100ml single cream
175g Organic dark chocolate (60% cocoa solids)
1 or 2 tea spoons of honey
3 tabs butter
Crumbles cook in 25 minuits
Chop the plums (skin on), into 3cm chunks, remove the stalks from the strawberries and halve them through the centre. Stew the fruit in a 50ml of orange juice with 180g sugar and 2 tea spoons of chilli powder, a pinch of ground ginger for approx five minuets until softened. For the crumble topping, rub 75g butter (diced), into 175g flour. Mix in about 80g of sugar and the roughly chopped pecan nuts and 2 teaspoons cinamon.
Spoon the stewed fruit equally into four ramekins, top with the crumble and dust with a little cinnamon.
Bake at 180C for approximately 25 minutes until the topping is golden.
For the chocolate sauce, - melt 175g of choc with a 2/3 flat tabs of butter and a thumb of grated ginger squeezed in muslin to get juice into sause in glass/metal bowl over boiling water, add honey to taste,
Once ready take off heat and then very quickly stir in 75ml/100ml cream.
Chocolate gnocchi and spiced red wine poached pear with 'blacksticks' blue cheese sauce and walnuts.

Chocolate gnocchi and spiced red wine poached pear with 'blacksticks' blue cheese sauce and walnuts.
I haven’t finished this recipe to my satisfaction yet but my girlfriend loves it so here is a working version of it. Feel free to play with it and adjust the strength of the flavours to your own taste but make sure the blue cheese you use is vegetarian (doesn’t use calf rennet).
I came up with this recipe with Christmassy, winter, festive ideas in mind.
It might sound like a bizar concoction but honestly these flavours all really go together and compliment each other beautifully – blue cheese and pear, chocolate and blue cheese, red wine and chocolate, walnuts and pears, blue cheese and walnuts, chocolate and nuts, these are all tried and true lovely pairings, this dish combines then into an intense savory main course. Also if chocolate in a savory dish sounds odd to you its actually nothing like a new idea, its been used in savory dishes in many cultures for hundreds of years.
In this dish the bitterness of chocolate gnocchi is contrasted and contained by the sweetness of the poached pear, the blue cheese sauce unites these contrasting tastes. Creaminess and crisp walnuts provide the scenery in which the other, each intense, flavour can stand out without overpowering the others. So when all the flavours come together there is a harmony.
You only need small servings of this dish, it is very intense flavour wise and the gnocchi are very dense and filling for how small they are.
For the gnocchi
400g peeled and mashed floury potatoes
400g plain flour
50g cocoa powder
Salt and pepper
One free-range egg
Pinch sugar
Sieve the flour and cocoa into the mashed potato, mix together well until you have the consistency of fine breadcrumbs. Season with salt pepper and a pinch of sugar, just enough to take the edge off the bitterness of the cocoa. Break an egg into the centre of the mix and work into the flour and potato. When the mix comes together kneed it and then roll out into long sausages about 2cm thick. Dust these with flour and then cut at 1.5 cm intervals all along the dough. Place the gnocchi into salted boiling water. Cook until they pop up to the surface of the boiling water, at this point they are ready, scoop out the cooked gnocchi with a slotted spoon and immediately refresh by dropping into cold water to halt the cooking process. Drain and toss the gnocchi in a little olive oil. These can now be set aside until ready to use.
Blue cheese sauce
75g Vegetarian Blacksticks blue veined cheese
150ml single cream
Tablespoon butter
25ml whole milk
Seasoning (not to much salt)
I’ve used ‘Blacksticks’ blue veined cheese here but you can substitute any vegetarian blue cheese to taste. This is a quick simple sauce. Just heat up the milk, butter and cream then add the cheese and melt it in, stirring until the sauce begins to thicken. Season with pepper and a little salt.
Poached pears
Red wine (check its suitable for vegetarians)
Peeled and halved pears
Teaspoon chilli powder
Pepper
Place the peeled halved pears, place in a pan and cover with red wine, add some pepper and the chilli to red wine and bring to the boil for 5 – 10 minuits until the pears are soft all the way through.
Bringing it together and serving
Place the cooked gnocchi in a pan with a little olive oil and bring up the heat so they crisp, just a little on the outside, pour over the sauce and heat through. When the gnocchi and sauce are heated through toss in a handful of walnuts. Transfer to a plate and sit the poached pear halves on the gnocchi in the centre of the plate.
Orange and herbed goats cheese crostini

Orange and herbed goats cheese crostini
200ml Balsamic vinegar
400g soft goats cheese
One bunch fresh chives
25g Fresh Basil
2 Oranges
1 Lemon
1 Baguette
Seasonal salad leaves
First make a balsamic reduction by heating the balsamic vinegar in a saucepan and letting it simmer and reduce to one quarter of the original liquid until it has a syrupy texture. Next mix the goats cheese in a bowl with the finely chopped chives and a couple of basil leaves cut into fine strips, season with pepper.
Peel and split the oranges into segments (cut between membranes above a bowl to collect the juices) add a dash of lemon juice to the reserved juice from the oranges along with a good slush of olive oil, whisk together and season to form a dressing. Lightly toast slices of baguette and set aside. Now on each piece of bread arrange a few of the orange segments and drizzle them with a small amount of the dressing, next spoon on some of the herbed goats cheese and pop the crostini under the grill for a minuit or so until the goats cheese begins to melt and colour on top. Place your crostini on plates with a small salad of seasonal leaves tossed in the dressing made earlier. Finally give each crostini a good drizzle of the balsamic reduction and serve.
The sweetness of the balsamic reduction really compliments the tartness of the goat’s cheese, whilst the oranges and lemon add acidity which gives this starter freshness and zing
to it.
New potato, hallumi and spring onion rosti topped with garlic white wine mushrooms, on a bed of spinach with toasted pine nuts and a lemon air -

New potato, hallumi and spring onion rosti topped with garlic white wine mushrooms, on a bed of spinach with toasted pine nuts and a lemon air -
This is a recipe I came up with for a main dish thats satisfying and ‘meaty’. Its simple and relatively quick to make. Its not the most delicate and dainty of meals but I promise you this it tastes amazing. With touches like the lemon air, which adds a little glamour and citrus kick to cut through the potential heaviness of a dish with potatoe and cheese in it, and the delicate,light, herb and white wine ,bringing the best of the mushrooms to link the flavours in this dish together, this could be served up and refined to fine dining or equally be the kind of comfort food you just want to curl up with an enjoy undisturbed. By no means is this a diet meal, its all about indulgence but once in a while its brilliant!
Ingredients list
- 250g Baby new potatoes
- 100g Hallumi
- 2 Basil Stalks (finely chopped)
- pinch dried oregano
- 2 Cloves of garlic (roughly chopped)
- 250g closed cap mushrooms
- 2 Sprigs of Rosemary (leaves removed and finely chopped)
- Splash Glass of dry white wine
- Splash lemon juice
- A couple of spring onions finely chopped
- 75g Fresh leaf spinach
- Olive oil
- A little butter
- A small handful of pine nuts
Recipe
First boil your potatoes (skins on) for 15 minuits , allow them to cool and then grate them into a bowl, the skins should just fall away as you grate the potatoes and you can discard them. Next rrate the hallumi into the bowl with the potatoe and mix them through each other. Finely slice the spring onions and add them to the mix. Season the rosti mix with a good sprinkle of cracked black pepper, some finely chopped rosmary, oregano and just the very smallest pinch of salt (the hallumi adds a lot of salt itself).
Shape the rosti mix into two patties, press the rostis into flat circles about 12cm across, 1.5 cm thick. In a hot pan with olive oil add a little butter and fry the rosti on each side for about two minuits. They should be nicely browned and crispy in the outside but with a softer centre.
For the mushrooms –
Chop mushrooms into quarters. Put the roughly chopped garlic, rosemary and finely chopped basil stalks into a pan with a good slug of extra virgin olive oil. Fry for one minuet before adding the mushrooms, fry for another one to two minuets then add a half a glass dry white wine and a tiny drop of lemon juice. Fry for another moment but be careful not to over cook the mushrooms, you want them so stay juicy and moist.
Toast pine nuts on baking tray in an oven at approximately 180C for a couple of minuets.
Lemon air
3g lecite (available from specialist suppliers such as http://www.creamsupplies.co.uk/)
350g lemon juice
250g water
Blitz the Lecite and freshly squeezed lemon juice with an immersion blender (hand blender). Add the water and continue to blitz in a wide bottomed bowl covered as far as possible with cling film (leave only enough space between the cling film and bowl rim get the blender in, otherwise you will end up covered in lemon juice and believe me it will find its way to any cuts or burns you have or straight into you precious eyes). Blitz with the blender half submerged in the liquid and watch as a lovely citrus foam forms atop the liquid. Scoop off a table spoon or two and delicately sit the foam just falling off the side of the rosti. The foam/air will hold its shape as the lecite emulsifies the lemon juice.
Falafel with beetroot and cucumber tzatziki.

Falafel with beetroot and cucumber tzatziki.
Falafel is a bit of a cliché of vegetarian cooking, but I’ve put up a recipe for it because its so easy to make and ded useful to knock up for a snack or as part of a meal. It tends to need something moist to go with it so here I’ve done a, once again quick and easy, beetroot tzatziki, which has a lovely flavour and works really well with these fryed chickpea patties but also has a wicked colour and stops it being a visually boring plate of brown stuff.
Fallafel recipe
250g dried chickpeas soaked overnight
½ a large onion diced
3 cloves of garlic chopped
A small handful of roughly chopped coriander
1 ½ tablespoons ground cumin
A teaspoon of chilli powder
4 tablespoons lemon juice
6 to 8 tablespoons gram flour (chickpea flour)
salt and pepper
1 table spoon cumin seeds and one of coriander seeds – dry fried and ground in a pestle and mortar
Soak the chickpeas over night then drain and rinse them well. Next take the chickpeas along with all the other ingredients except the garam flour, and stick them in a blender and blitz up into a rough paste. Add the flour bit by bit to get a mix that will hold together in little patties. Heat a decent about of vegetable oil in a frying pan and cook the falafel for about two minuits on both sides. Sit on a little bit of kitchen towel to remove some of the oil and serve hot.
Beetroot and cucumber tzatziki recipe
4 small cooked beetroot
½ a cucumber
2 tablespoons roughly chopped mint
a squeeze of lemon
splash of olive oil
200g greek yoghurt
salt and pepper.
Grate the beetroot and cucumber into a bowl. Add the lemon, olive oil and mint. Stir in the greek yogurt and season. Serve chilled
Wasabi Mayonnaise (Vegan)

Wasabi ‘Mayonnaise’ (Vegan)
This dip is the perfect accompaniment for my tempura recipe. It can also be easily adapted to make a plain mayonnaise, herb mayonnaise, Aioli etc by simply removing the wasabi and adding appropriate flavourings of your choosing.
85 ml Soymilk
300ml Vegetable Oil
One Teaspoon Mustard
Juice One Lemon
1 Tablespoons Rice Wine Vinegar
4 Teaspoons Wasbai Paste
1 Clove Garlic
In a food processor blend the garlic, mustard, lemon juice, wasabi and vinegar for one minute.
Now add the soymilk into the food processor and blend for another minute.
Next slowly drizzle the oil into the soymilk mixture whilst blending.
As you pour in the oil into the mixture whilst blending it should gradually emulsify and thicken. Continue drizzling in the oil until the desired mayonnaise texture is reached. Add seasoning to taste (bending it in to combine).
Garnish with sliced chilli and finely sliced spring onion.
Savory Beetroot Meringue

(Savory Beetroot Meringue using Methylcellulose)
Savory Beetroot Meringue (vegan)
Methylcellulose here replaces egg white in giving the meringue its structure and texture. These meringues are then dried until crisp in a dehydrator. Here I’ve used low sweetness products (isomalt and glucose syrup) to replace some of the sugar in order to create savory Meringue but sweet meringue could be made in the same way by simply upping the sweetness.
An added bonus of this technique is that it’s suitable for vegans and people who can’t have egg products.
The full recipe is bellow and you can read my Methylcellulose Introduction by clicking here.

3g Methylcelulose
200ml Water
Boil the water in the kettle then measure out 200ml of just boiled water.
Now blend the Methylcellulose into the hot water with a stick blender.
Next begin to cool this mixture over an ice bath while stirring intermittently until cool.
Allow this mix to sit for at least a couple of hours but for best results sit in fridge overnight.
Beetroot Meringue
45g Methocellulose Slurry – (see above)
260g Beetroot Juice
1.2g Xanthan Gum
40g Isomalt – powdered
10g Caster Sugar
Seaonings to taste
First blend together the beetroot juice, methycellulose slurry (prepared as above) and xanthan gum with a stick blender.
Then in bowl start whipping this mixture with an electric whisk and add in isomalt and caster sugar bit by bit.
Whip this mix to soft peaks, this will take a little time (more than whipping egg whites) but will go to stiff peaks eventually if you persist and want more control of the meringues finished shape.
Pipe into neat blobs on a non stick sheet or spread into a thin layer (or basically produce any shape you like)
Dehydrate at 57C for 10-12 hours till crispy.
This technique can be adapted for a wide variety of juices and a similar textured liquids.
See the meringue as I used them in a recipe here

Go to my Methylcellulose introdution
Go to the Molecular Basics Page
For more on methylcellulose and modern techniques check out my ebook
‘Modernist Vegetarian’

Methylcellulose Available from -

www.Modernist-Chef.com

