A Kitchen Diary of sorts with rather a lot of chit chat and some exceptionally useful recipes. Photos and artwork by Anna Vaught (me), Giles Turnbull and the generous people at Flickr who make their work available through creative commons. They are thanked individually throughout the blog.

Saturday 30 May 2009

A fantastic chicken sandwich

All recipes copyright Anna Vaught.

Oh -- it's the first day, so have an extra recipe. This is for an early tea on a summer's day -- with a bit of background 'chicken' information! So you're down with my frugality!

A fantastic chicken sandwich.

You take a large white roll or, perhaps, a cheese bread or the kind of bread roll my (American)_ husband calls a kaiser: one encrusted with caramelised onions. Then, you spread it pretty generously with butter or, if you must, some marg. Add lots of soft lettuce -- the old fashioned kind. If you are growing lettuce, you could use some early leaves. I also added some handfuls of mint (remove the stalks) and some chives that I had coming up. Also, some little dandelion leaves from the garden (really, you need to blanch these under a pot, but if you pick them when they're really tiny...). Little sorrel leaves would also be good. Sorrel is hard to buy but easy to grow: it looks like spinach but has a sharp lemon tang.

If you made this sandwich later in summer, you could add some sweet local toms. I used some vine tomatoes that were big and squashy and not those woolly things (but imported --I'm not perfect). Right, shred some chicken with your hands (oh go on), add the tomatoes and then the chicken and sprinkle the lot with crystals of Maldon sea salt and add some grindings of pepper. Close up the sandwich and squish -- a little. It's just best in a soft roll.

It seemed, shall we say, cosy, to have this with a big mug of tea. Yorkshire being the brew of choice.

Now, that CHICKEN. I had roasted it, a large free ranger, last night, when it made meals for two adults and two children. There's still some more meat on there, so the rest -- brown and white-- will be going into a curry with little brown chick peas (gughni) tomorrow. Then I'll make stock and be glad I did. To make the stock, I'll just cover the carcass with water, add a small handful of black pepppercorns and a couple of bay leaves. But experiment. Though not too much. Freeze it afterwards?

Welcome to the blog

All recipes copyright Anna Vaught. All recipes serve 4-6, unless otherwise specified.

This is all about food. Things for you to eat every day. I mean, what I am actually cooking that day as I, err, cook all the time. Come on in. Here is the gate to my house.


I've been keeping recipes and scribbling down notes about food since late childhood. I have my mother's recipes, articles she saved and the odd jotting from my grandmother. I was lucky enough to be brought up on outstanding food. I had an imaginative and yet frugal cook for a mum, I learned to cook very young --essential training because, with said mother often poorly, I needed to be pretty handy in the kitchen. And the garden: big and wild and full of vegetables, herbs and old, gnarled fruit trees. Sounds idyllic. Sadness there, too: I expect that all sorts of emotions will weave their way through what I will write here. Food's simple enough: we eat to live, but the emotions it provokes are powerful indeed. But hey: I'm practical, so on with the recipe of the day.

What to do with leftover potato? Make a simple potato curry.

Today, we have leftover boiled potato from last night (ooh: now I remember stuffing my face with hula hoops when I came in late after seeing Doctor Ralph Stanley and his crew perform exemplary bluegrass at the Music festival here: all hail to the king. All the g&ts explain the hula hoop frenzy: classy). The potatoes are in large chunks. There's about a soup bowl of them. In a frying pan, put a little film of oil, and then gently fry one chopped medium onion. Gently, so it softens and smells sweet. Now add one teaspoon of turmeric and a dessertspoon each of ground cumin and ground coriander. Cook very gently with the onion and do not let this burn. You could add dried red chilli to taste, or perhaps have cooked a couple of cloves of chopped garlic (throw out your garlic presses: knives are what you want for garlic) in there with the onion. Right: when the spices smell toasty, you add the potato and stir it all around. It might need a little water, but this is supposed to be a dry dish. Salt and pepper to taste. If you can lay your hands on green mango powder (amchoor) or pomegranate powder (anardhana), then add a teaspooon or two of one of them just before you serve. They would add aromatic sourness -- which I happen to love.
This is great served with fried or poached eggs. Serve them on top. And, although I'm doing this potato thing for a lunch for me and the husband (the children are eating Lidl fishcakes!), I have been known to make this for breakfast and to take it back to bed with me. Alone.