Tuesday 19 April 2016

A year later. The Hastings Fish Pie



Variable 4, becoming east or northeast 4 or 5, increasing 6 at times.

Mainly smooth, becoming slight or moderate.

Fair.

Good.





It`s a year now since I moved here. And a year of food blogging.  A year in which I went from full Vegetarian to part time Vegetarian. A year in which I learned about fish, thanks to the Boys Ashore.
So I decided to celebrate this occasion by creating a Hastings dish. Of course it must have something to do with fish. Local fish. Fish you can buy at the Rock-A-Nore.
But if they don’t have the ones I have chosen, feel free to substitute. Just ask your fishmonger which fish would be suitable and has the smallest carbon footprint. Ask him to give you one which is not endangered. And if you are really scared to debone a fish yourself, be very nice and ask him to do that for you. Just make sure you take the bones and head with you.
But why not try to do it yourself? Here is a very good video how it is properly done. And if you make the first time a mess, who cares? It goes into a fish pie.

Why a fish pie? It is a rather humble fish dish..a bit like Hastings. There is something old fashioned about it. Deeply comforting. Forgiving. Easy to do. Not pretentious. Has seen better days but still holds its head up.
But it is not as cheap and cheerful as the countless Fish & Chips shops you find in Hastings. And quite a few are pretty bad!

There are several rules:
1. No salmon. I don’t think salmon works very well in any fish pie. It is ...boring. There is more to fish than salmon.
2. Don`t cook the fish in advance.
3. Use scalloped potatoes as a topping. This was a bit tricky, after all a good fish pie can be eaten with a spoon; and while the obligatory mash on top will fulfil that credo, scalloped potatoes have a bit more bite. But I think a fish pie can be a bit more adult. Not everything needs to be nursery food.
4. Don`t add peas to it. Yes, I know. Mrs Beeton`s fish pie has peas in it, but I prefer mushy peas. Another nod to Hastings` fish “culture”. However be warned. There is a reason I don’t show the fish pie on a plate on top of mushy peas. It`s a bit messy looking. But delicious.
5. If you don’t have anchovies, add a bit more parmesan.
6. English mustard keeps it regional, but if you don’t have it, use Dijon or any other strong mustard.
7. If you cant be bothered doing your own fish stock, a good quality fish stock cube is acceptable.
8. Dont skip the white wine.
9. Experiment. Why not add scallops to it, after all Rye is not far away. 
10. Enjoy.

Hastings Fish Pie

100g boneless Whiting fillet, skinned and cut into small chunks
100g boneless Huss fillet, skinned and cut into small chunks

150 ml fish stock (just boil the heads and bones of the fish in 250ml of water, add half a bay leaf, a bit of parsley, a squeeze of lemon, salt and pepper and simmer away until it is 150ml)
50ml white wine
15g butter
15g flour
100ml double cream
1/2 tsp English mustard
1 splash of Worcestershire sauce
1 anchovy, finely chopped
Salt and freshly ground white pepper
1 tsp chopped parsley

15g salted butter
200g white potatoes, peeled, and sliced into thin rounds
Freshly ground white pepper
10g grated Parmesan



Either do your own mushy peas or by a tin.



Melt the butter in a thick-bottomed pan over a low heat, then stir in the flour. Gradually add the drained stock and wine, stirring well until it has all been added. Bring to the boil and simmer gently for 15 minutes. Add the double cream and the anchovy and continue to simmer for 10 minutes or so, until the sauce has a thick-coating consistency. Stir in the mustard and the Worcestershire sauce, and season with salt and freshly ground white pepper if necessary. Leave to cool for about 15 minutes. Add the parsley.
Gently fold the raw fish into the sauce, and spoon into an oven proof dish, to about 3cm from the top of the dish. Leave to set for about 30 minutes.
(This can be all done it advance. Just store it in the fridge, but take it out when you preheat the oven).
Preheat the oven to 180°C.
Cook the potatoes in a large pan of boiling, salted water for 4-5 minutes.  If the potatoes are too hard they will be waxy and the butter will run off them.
Drain well and leave to cool a little.
Top the fish mixture with the sliced potatoes, overlapping them slightly (here is a good picture what I mean with overlapping, mine were a bit square-ish).
Brush the potatoes with melted butter; add a bit of white pepper and bake for 30 minutes, then scatter on the cheese, and bake for a further 15 minutes until golden.

If you have, unlike me, a very steady hand, take the whole pie out of the dish and place it over a good portion of warm mushy peas. Otherwise eat it side by side, one fork pie, one fork mushy peas.

Of course it is allowed to drink the white wine you used for the sauce. After all the bottle is now open, isn’t it?

And celebrate the sea. And the fact that Hastings still has a working harbour.


Saturday 16 April 2016

Flamiche. A Flemish Leek pie/flan/quiche/pizza/pastry



Northerly, 4 or 5, occasionally 6 at first.

Slight or moderate.

Showers.

Good.

 


Please note this recipe is for 2. Quite generous! Or one now and tomorrow`s lunch sorted.

 

Flamiche is..yes, what exactly is it?
Originally done with bread dough, so a kind of filled focaccia or a calzone.
However it also contains eggs and cream, so looks more like a leek quiche, but has a top layer of dough. A tart? A tart with a top on?
A bit like strata? The savoury egg pudding as described here? 

It gets even more dodgy if you, like I did, replace the bread dough (and lets face it, we don’t have always bread dough just laying about) with puff pastry. We are now in the Prasopita range, the Greek leek pie. But it does not contain Feta and is not done with Phyllo pastry.
It cant. Its neither Greek nor Italian, it is French. Or Belgian, depending on where you stand in the great Flamiche war. Lets be diplomatic and declare it as a Belgian/French border dish. A Flemish dish.
And a Flamiche Aux Poireaux is a Flemish tart/cake thingy with leeks. Easy, isn’t it?
But it is also a great way of learning about how to deal with leeks.


As you know, leeks tend to have a white stem which gradually gets greener and ends in dark green leaves. You find the same in another member of the allium family, the spring onion. Or in fennel which is white and has green tops. You also see this in asparagus: white asparagus left to grow outside the earth turns green. So yes, the white part is from under the soil and the longer it grows outside, the greener it gets.
And the taste change. The white part is delicate, the more greener the stronger the taste.
So you should choose your leek according to what you want to do with them. Are you after a delicate leek and potato soup, get a leek with lots of white. You are doing a hearty stew with fatty sausages? Throw the whole lot in. Even with the leaves, just cut them off after you are finished cooking and before you serve it.
And remember, leeks can contain lots of sand, so cut them in half lengthways and clean the layers under running water.

As usual: Egg based dishes taste better if they are room warm or cold. And, as already mentioned here, a quiche needs strong seasoning or it will be boring. So be generous with salt and pepper.

Flamiche
A sheet of puff pastry (about 350gr)
1 packet of Vegetarian Gelatine
3 big leeks with lots of white
3 eggs
150ml crème fraiche or double cream
50gr butter
Salt and white pepper
1 pinch or rub nutmeg
50gr strong cheese (Parmesan, Gruyere, mature Gouda, Raclette cheese), grated (the cheese is optional)
Cut the green of the leeks off and use that for something else (great in a stock). Cut leek in half lengthwise and rinse the layers under running water. Shake dry, but not too much. Lay the leek halves cut side down on a chopping board and cut into thin half rings. Add to a bowl (or pot if you don’t have a microwave). Add all the butter, a pinch of salt and a good pinch of white pepper, cover it and cook in the microwave 3x2 minutes, stirring in between. If you use a pot, just heat all this and let the leeks get very soft. Let it cool down as much as possible. This can be even done in the morning or evening before. Just put it in the fridge until needed.
Heat oven to 180C. Add a baking sheet right at the beginning so it is nice and hot.
Prepare the gelatine according to the instructions on the packet; just use a little bit less water.
Roll the ready prepared sheet out.  No need to further roll it out with a rolling pin. Remember that the waxed paper underneath is normally oven proof, so you have already your prepared baking paper.
Brush the pastry with the (already thickening) gelatine and put that for 5 minutes in the fridge while you deal with the filling.
Once the leeks are cool, add 2 eggs and the egg yolk from the third egg. Keep the last egg white. Add cream, salt, pepper and nutmeg, and if you use it, the cheese. Give it a good stir. If it seems too thick, add either a drop more cream or milk.
Take the pastry sheet out and cover one half pretty high with the filling, but leave a border of 1 cm. Fold the other half of the sheet over and crimp the two together. Here is a cool video about proper crimping.
But you have a square, so you need to crimp three sides.
Cut with a pair of scissor a little hole into the top (about the size of a one pence piece), to let the steam escape.
Into the oven and bake until the top of the quiche is getting nicely browned (about 20 minutes). Now brush the top with the remaining (beaten) egg white and give it another 15-20 minutes, until the Flamiche is golden. You can also, as I did, sprinkle some flaked salt over it once you brushed it with the egg white. But this is optional. Take it out, put on a cooling rack. Eat lukewarm or cold. Can be eaten up to 2 days if you keep it in the fridge.
Serve with a green lettuce salad.
Enjoy.