
Seasonal food in December
December,
apart from the obvious, Christmas and New Years Eve,
has very little to recommend it, snow, ice, lots of
rain and pretty cold, it's a dire sort of a month really.
For
those of you with apples trees, some will still have
a few apples clinging on, albeit rather tenuously, especially
some of the cooking varieties, these of course can be
used in all sorts of ways to keep out the winter chill.
Solid winter fare such as apple pies, steamed apple
puddings, baked apples, apple crumble are all welcome
dishes at this time of the year.
Try adding a quince to your apple pie next time; it
really does make a superb addition. Picked in the late
autumn the quince keeps exceptionally well and is a
really super fruit. They improve apples in any form
immeasurably as well as making the most fantastic rose
coloured jelly. Jewish mythology has it that the forbidden
fruit of the Garden of Eden was in fact the quince,
not an apple at all!
The quintessential fruit of good and evil. From the
vegetable garden we get good quality cabbages at this
time of year and the red cabbage is no exception to
that rule. And what a fantastic vegetable it is, last
month I waxed lyrical about the humble cabbage in all
its guises but this month I feel I must expand a little
on the red cabbage.
As blue as they are red their outer leaves seem to develop
an ever-deepening blue bloom as the winter wears on
and the cold and the rain work on them. As hardy a vegetable
as any you will find the red cabbage will happily sit
in your garden waiting to be picked at any time throughout
the winter.
Then, once picked, it will still sit there in your fridge
for what seems like weeks if you wish it to without
deteriorating too far. Red cabbages are fantastic when
slowly stewed with juniper berries, brown sugar and
vinegar and is just wonderful with venison or any type
of game. A much overlooked vegetable deserving of far
greater use.
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Chestnuts
are in season and are quite wonderful, either freshly
roasted on an open fire or made into a soup, added
to braised Red Cabbage or roasted and added to a
beef or venison casserole.
You can of course buy the pre-peeled and cooked
vacuum-packed variety but they really are not the
same as the real thing. |
One of the biggest problems at this time of year is
that there is no fruit around. Yes, I know, there are
raspberries from New Zealand and redcurrants from Holland,
mangoes from Brazil and melons from Spain, strawberries
are coming in from the USA and even from Belgium while
from South Africa we are getting peaches, but that's
not real fruit! It's all out of season, American strawberries
in December may look great but be serious, you can't
actually eat them! Not only that but watch their price
rise throughout December and see how expensive they
become the closer we get to Christmas.
We have of course, as I've already mentioned, still
got apples and even some pears around at the moment
but we want something different don't we, my favourite,
forced rhubarb isn't around until next month although
there is often a little on the market just before Christmas.
All citrus fruits are good during the bleak months of
winter and of course Seville oranges will be in season
soon too.
Cranberries are synonymous with this time of year (and
with Delia of course), instead of just using them in
a sauce or jelly to go with the turkey why not try making
a cranberry ice cream or what about a cranberry and
vodka sorbet - even better still! You could even add
them to your apple pies and crumbles as you would blackberries.
Lychees, not a fruit that immediately springs to mind
you must admit but did you know that they are in season
at this time of year? One other fruit that does deserve
a mention at this time of year is the pomegranate, hardly
a locally grown commodity, but with their slightly tart
yet sweet ruby red seeds they go well with a variety
of meats such as lamb, venison and pheasant.
At this time of year I normally bang on about how good
scallops are, in fact how good all molluscs are, mussels
should not be over looked either. They don't need to
be served a la marinier you know, there are plenty of
other ways to deal with them but whatever you do please
use fresh mussels, not these gigantic (horrible) green-lipped
mussels. Try making a soup from fresh mussels or a sauce
for a fish. What about roasted fillet of cod on a bed
of mash with a broth of mussels, celery and thyme (celery
is at its best during the cold winter months too) for
instance!
I suppose as Christmas is almost here, and I can't possibly
get away from talking about turkey! Did you know we
have been eating turkey in Britain now for about 450
years, give or take the odd year here or there? But
it is only since the Victorian era that they really
became established as the bird to be eaten at Christmas.
Up until then it would have been traditional to eat
goose. The Aztecs domesticated these wild birds, native
to America and it was the conquistadors of Spain that
allegedly were the first to take the turkey to Europe
where they were bred to be much plumper that their wild
cousins. Turkey's, as we know them, returned to the
Americas sometime in the 1600's when the early European
settlers took this now genetically modified stock back
to its home country. Wild turkey is known to have existed
in its native America for over 10 million years, fossil
evidence haven been found to bear this out and the American
Indians are known to have hunted the turkey both for
meat and its feathers (used as flights for their arrows
and of course to adorn ceremonial dress) since AD1000.
Of course 'Boootiful' turkey growers have been trying
to persuade us to eat turkey all year round, they have
been producing smaller birds in the 5-8lb range, a size
unseen a few years ago, as well as the monsters, some
of which can reach as much as 70 pounds. Who knows,
soon it could end up like chicken; once seen as a luxury
food now they are so common that they are almost boring.
When buying a turkey always allow 350-400g/12-14oz per
person, slightly more if you are only buying a small
bird and only 280-350g/10-12oz if using a really big
bird. If you are going to stuff the turkey then only
fill the neck cavity, not the body as the temperature
in the centre will never get that hot. Allow 20 minutes
per lb plus a further 20 minutes after that cooking
time for birds up to about 6.75kg/15lb and 15 minutes
to the lb for birds larger than this with 15 minutes
extra. Like any meat once cooked allow it to rest well
before carving.
As always, if possible, buy a fresh turkey, rather than
one of the frozen ones, the difference in flavour and
texture will astound you! While on the subject of meat
let's not forget that the game season is in full swing
and December often sees the prices of all game, and
more especially pheasant and partridge, coming down
to a ridiculously low level, offering incredible value
for money. Roast Breast of Pheasant on a Bed of Red
Cabbage surrounded with Roasted Chestnuts and served
with a Compote of Apple on the side, a complete December
meal, what more could you want?
Lets finish this year by talking about goose as it is
definitely a bird worth trying, many people will not
try it however, as they are convinced it is going to
be inedible because of the fat it carries. Well if it
is cooked properly then it will be no fattier than a
duck. Score the breast of the goose with the point of
a sharp knife along its length at 5mm/½in spacings,
this will enable the fat to run off, the more you score
the fat the more fat will drain away.
Goose is starting to become the fashionable alternative
to turkey so if you want to try it before it goes up
in price (inevitable once popularised) you had better
do so soon, next year may be too late!