Some friends of mine recently declined a dinner with someone who was proud to be able to demonstrate his culinary skills by boiling frankfurters in their can, cremating an omelette and garnishing a Caesar salad with a torn in half Scotch egg... I can understand why. Said person is, however, one of the reasons this blog was started, and why it will include the most basic of dishes alongside the most gourmet cuisine.
Brighton being a University town most students spend their first year trying to learn to cook and discovering how expensive it is if you eat out every night. By the second year most of them can manage staples of Spaghetti Bolognese, pizza, beans on toast and similar simple dishes aided by jars of ready made sauces and pre-made bases. Depending on whether or not they go home after Uni, to the sanctuary of Mum's cooking, or whether they're staying on in the town, some of them even go on to investigate the world of food further.
Roughly chop the mushrooms, about the same size as the peppers and put them to one side. |
Fancy things like Frittata usually come about the end of year one, when they lose their fear of buying things not in tins - like vegetables. It's pretty much as simple as it comes, really, but it is a filling, satisfying meal done in one pan for two people.
A cupped handful each of frozen sweetcorn and frozen petit pois - set these aside for now. |
Since there is yet a chance of the dinner invitation being re-offered I can only hope that my friends send the food miscreant to this blog for his step by step photo guide to cooking something without killing people or requiring a stomach pump.
Add your potatoes to the pan and mix in well then let them brown a little. |
This is the point where you want to start looking under the sides. This is still wet and runny in the middle, but while some of the edge is damp other bits are cooked and solid. |
Slide the spatula further under and gently lift a little. If it holds together well, and doesn't leak fluid, it's time to take the pan off the stove. |
This is what you're looking for. When you look under the grill and you see a Frittata through the melted cheese, it's done! Get an oven glove or wrap a towel round your hand and get the pan out. |
This is it - done, finished, cooked through, not burned on the bottom, not raw in the middle or on the top, perfectly cooked, with melted cheese on top. Time to get it onto a plate. |
Well, yes, you could eat it right from there, but it's nicer and more polite if you cut it into chunks and put those on a plate to eat. Especially if you're sharing. |
On a plate, in chunks, waiting for the Lea and Perrins! Delicious. |
And look - no burnt bottom, either! |
Frittata (Printed Version)
Ingredients:
2 medium sized potatoes, peeled and cut into 2.5 cm cubes or roughly that
1 onion, peeled, topped and tailed and chopped
1 red pepper, pith, seeds and stalk removed cut into 2.5 cm squares or thereabouts
Half a punnet of mushrooms, roughly chopped to be about the same size as the pepper
1 pack 10 Hurta Frankfurters
1 cupped hand of frozen petit pois
1 cupped hand of frozen sweetcorn
6 eggs, preferably large and free range
An eggcup full of milk
Salt and Black Pepper
A small block of hard cheese such as Cheddar
To Serve:
Lea and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce (optional)
Bread and butter (optional)
Salad (optional)
Method:
Put the peeled and chopped potatoes into a pan of salted water for 10 to 15 minutes until they are cooked and just going soft. Drain, shake dry and set to one side.
Prepare the pepper and onion as above and put into a good, non-stick frying pan with about a tablespoon of olive oil. This is about one and a half times the spoon you eat your pudding with that isn't a teaspoon. Turn the heat to about three quarters, so the pan gets hot enough to brown things but they don't cremate and the oil doesn't burn. If the pan is smoking, turn the heat down and let it cool before you add the oil or you will set your kitchen alight.
So, oil in the pan, pepper and onion in the pan. Get them lightly browned - that means mostly a pale goldish colour with the odd spot of brown here and there.
Chop the Frankfurters into 1.5 to 2.5 centimetre long logs and add them to the frying pan. Stir them in with the rest of the ingredients and let them get a little bit browned.
Add the potatoes and again stir them in with the other bits in the pan and let them get a few brown spots on them.
Add the mushrooms and let things carry on cooking with the odd stir while they shrink down a little and get a bit darker.
Grate a good handful of the cheese and set it aside for now.
Crack the eggs into a jug and make sure there is no shell in with them. Add the little bit of milk and the salt and pepper. Use a fork to break the yolks and whisk the eggs a little.
Mix the sweetcorn and petit pois into the egg mixture and again, give a little whisk.
Pour the mixture into the pan and turn the heat down to a little less than half. Immediately stir the egg through the ingredients, so it gets underneath everything and it spreads all round the pan evenly.
Stop stirring, flatten it down a little and leave it alone until you see the sides of the Frittata have set.
Put your spatula under the outer edge and gently lift. If fluid runs out then put it back and let it carry on cooking. Next time check a different place. When you can pick up the outer edge and the pan remains dry underneath, slide your spatula towards the middle of the pan and gently lift a few centimetres. If the Frittata stays together and no fluid runs out underneath, take it off the stove.
Turn on the grill to warm up. You want the grill hot but not overly scorching, so again, somewhere between half and full, about three quarters or two thirds of what it can do.
Sprinkle the cheese over the top of the Frittata and slide the pan under the grill with the handle sticking out so you'll be able to get the pan back out again.
When the cheese has melted to your satisfaction, remove the pan from the grill and slide the Frittata out onto a plate where you can then cut it up and serve it.
Simple!