Stinging Nettle (“urzici”) & Spinach Soup

This is one of those soups that you do really need after a long, cold, dark winter. Nettles contain so many vitamins and have so many health benefits that you might consider this a blood purifying elixir (and far more civilised than leeches).  Apart from the obvious “pain” of picking them and then choosing nice young leaves there isn’t really much to it.   The “sting” is deactivated by heat so dont expect a “fugu” like experience! However if pain is what you seek then a dose of “urtication” (flogging with nettles that was believed to relieve palsy and numbness of limbs) might be in order.  Enough medieval medicine…this soup is definitely twenty first century and this version is gluten and dairy free.

We are very lucky that in Romania people still gather new season nettles and sell them in plastic bags at the market. Traditionally a puree is made much like (to me at least) the French “epinards aux oeufs” which is absolutely delicious. Now the problem with such virtuous food is that if you don’t do quite enough to it you are in danger of creating something that tastes like juiced roadside weeds. So I add quite a lot of onions and garlic, a generous amount of nutmeg and I thicken with potato or rice.

Ingredients

These are a guide and make quite a lot of soup.  If you don’t have so many nettles use more spinach or throw in some courgettes or cabbage.

500g young nettles the stalks and anything that looks remotely “woody” removed

500g spinach – preferably proper spinach not baby spinach. cleaned and well rinsed of sand/earth if using the real thing

1-2 onions – I like a lot of onions

2-6 cloves of garlic.  I go for the full 6.

nutmeg – approx 1 heaped teaspoon

a few sprigs of fresh thyme if you have

1 litre of vegetable stock (a good bio brand works well but so does some water, a bit of marmite and a little leftover wine)

1 large boiled potato or a cup of boiled white rice. If not GF sensitive some slices of old white bread gone stale.

I would suggest bay leaves as well but they will get lost in the green and blended bay leaves render the soup so bitter that its inedible. dont risk it! or write an anally retentive stickit on the kitchen wall to REMOVE BAY LEAVES before blending. personal experience and the bitter taste of (in this case literally).

Gadgets & Gizmos

A large saucepan and a hand held blender/ whatever blender you have

How To

Chop the onions up roughly (its going to be blended so no masterchef perfection required here). Fry them in a little oil gently until translucent.  Now add the also roughly chopped garlic. do not let it brown.

Add the nettles and the liquid.  Boil 2-3 minutes until the nettles are just cooked. Now throw on top the spinach leaves and let them wilt for a further 3-4 minutes. Stir through until the leaves are all floppy and “just cooked” in fact almost still raw.

Add your chosen starch – you dont have to – I just like my soups a bit more substantial.

Blend it!

Now season with the nutmeg, salt and pepper.

Improvs & Ideas

I’ve served it with a chilli/red pepper oil in the photo but a simple drizzle of good olive oil is all thats needed really and a hunk of good bread.

Freezes well but what you want here is freshness and the joy of tasting new season’s produce

Lemon Grass, Ginger & Date & Barberry (“Agrise”) Fruitcake

140306 Fruit Cake

This is a moist, highly flavoured fruit cake that happens to be vegan and happens to contain no added pure sugar. It is loosely based on my grandmother’s wartime fruitcake recipe when eggs were hard to come by and just about anything went in to the cake – apple chunks, dried plums and even rosehips!  It freezes brilliantly and doubles up as an energy bar if you cut it into slices and store individually. I dont often use recipes with cups but this one seems to work really well.

Ingredients  (feel free to change the mix according to what your store cupboard yields)

2 cups mixed dried fruit  ( I like apricots, prunes, sultanas and “agrise”/ barberries

1 cup chopped dates covered with boiling water and a pinch of bicarbonate and pureed OR 1 cup of unsweetened apples sauce (I like the dark colour the dates give but apple sauce is faster and easier)

½ cup of crystallised ginger

1 stick of fresh lemongrass chopped very finely or dried lemongrass blitzed

1 tsp mixed spice

¼ tsp ground cloves

1 tsp cinnamon

1/2 tsp cardamon seeds ground

2 cups water

1 cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil (it wont be bad if you use sunflower oil or any other oil as long as its good quality)

2 cups grated carrot

4 cups wholemeal flour

1 cup of ground almonds (I blitz almonds or any other nuts lurking around until a medium fine powder)

20g baking powder

1 tsp vinegar

Gadgets & Gizmos

I like fruitcakes in little loaf tins but any cake tin will do – just be careful to line with baking paper and oil so the cake eases out rather than you needing a pneumatic drill to prize it off the sides of the poor tin.

Method

An embarrasing lack of method here. OK the date puree needs a little work but after that simply combine all ingredients together in one bowl and mix until just combined.

Spoon into the cake tins (this makes three of my little loaf tins which may not be very helpful at all… would make one deep 20cm circular tin and one brownie tray I am sure)

bake at 170C until a toothpick comes out clean…this will vary depending on your cake tin dimensions and how your oven behaves but start off with 25-30mins as a guide.

Better to leave a couple of days before eating.

Guilty pleasure: a slice of strong cheese on top of the cake.

Buffalo Mozzarella & More

buffalo

In 1960 the Romanian population of Buffalo was bigger than the Italian one…and therein hangs a tale….

Buffalo have long been kept in Transilvania and I love using the milk and yoghurt.  Contrary to popular belief buffalo products are not “fatty”…however the fat molecules are smaller than in cow’s milk and thats what makes the stuff feel more “creamy”.  Delicious and healthy…I need to use the stuff more.

these guys have been pioneering accessible buffalo products for years and the stuff is worth trying

http://www.tbprod.ro/   contains all you need to know and also where to buy from