Nigella and Jamie have arrived!
Yipee! Nigella Express and Jamie at Home have arrived! I knew they’d be waiting for me on my doorstep so it added an extra spring to my step on the way home from work this lunch time! First lets tackle Nigella -
Oh, just looking at the number of luscious chapters in this book, we’re in for a televisual treat. We’ve already had the ‘Everyday Easy’ chapter and I don’t know if she’s going to do every chapter but there are loads more chapters, such as breakfasts, eating on the run, Christmas food, mexican food, italian food, party food plus more. The food photography is mouthwatering and comprehensive and there’s only a few cheesy shots of Nigella. Plus as usual Nigella has written this book in her usual chatty style. Anyway obviously only just got the book but recipes I’m planning on cooking from it include:
- Blackberry crisp
- Pineapple Upside-Down Cake minus the glace cherries which I can’t stand.
- Home-made instant pancake mix (which looks a fantastic idea) with blueberry syrup on top.
- Pear and ginger muffins (never thought of that combination before but it sounds delicious)
- Chocolate croissants
- Frittata (with every single filling she’s suggested, not all at once though
) - Croque Monsieur Bake (oh my goodness it looks and sounds delicious)
- Sweet and sour cucumber salad
- Warm potato salad (with bacon and mustard, yum)
- Chicken Schnitzel with bacon and white wine
- Instant chocolate mousse (finally a chocolate mousse that doesn’t involve raw eggs! (I’m a bit phobic about cooking with raw eggs))
- Butternut and sweet potato soup
- Cheddar cheese risotto (this one is going to be made very soon, possibly tonight)
- Doughnut french toast
- Totally chocolate chocolate chip cookies
- Quesadillas (I’ve been making these for years but I like her suggestion for a filling)
- Sesame Peanut Noodles
- Banana Butterscotch Muffins (I’m intrigued about these, I’ve made her banana muffins in domestic goddess and they never work, so has this recipe improved things?)
- Hokey Pokey (a delicous looking honeycomb)
- Party popcorn (with cinnamon, cumen and paprika)
- Cocktail sausages (in a gorgeous coating)
- Marshmallow crispy squares (mmmmm)
- Wasabi lime dressing
- Golden Honey Mustard dressing
- Red pepper hummus
- Vanilla apples with sweetheart croutes
Mmmm, a lovely list, something which unfortunately is not going to be so long for Jamie’s new book.
I’ve said before, quite a few times, I love Jamie, he taught me how to cook 10+ years ago with his Naked Chef series and his earlier books are still well thumbed, well used additions to my cookbook library. But when it got to ‘Jamie’s Kitchen’ things started to get a bit ‘posh’ but then again it was more about the sort of food he cooks in his resturant kitchen. ‘Jamie’s Dinners’ and to some extent ‘Jamie’s Italy’ were more back on his old track but then ‘Cook with Jamie’ came out and yeugh could not really stand that one, I think if anyone wanted to learn to cook a copy of one of his Naked Chef books and perhap a DVD of one of his earlier series would be a lot better. Still, I suspect I’ll be buying Jamie Oliver books until he stops writing them, due to my fondness and greatfulness of the skills he’s taught me plus even if I don’t cook from them (with the exception of ‘Cook with Jamie’ which I thought was bordering on Delia levels of patronisation), Jamie’s books are usually fun to read and beautifully photographed. And oh the photographs in Jamie at Home, feel like I could open the book at certain pages and stick it on the wall and go ‘ahhhh’ (for some of the scenery shots) and ‘yum’ for some of the food shots. But, there is nothing like a Jamie Oliver book these days to make me feel just like my parents are at my shoulder again going “You are sooooooo fussy”, I have to admit there are still quite a few things I don’t like but there’s an awful lot of stuff I do like now but Jamie seems to cook these days with all the stuff I don’t like, loads of beans, tomatoes (can’t stand tomatoes unless they’ve been cooked and really whizzed/mashed up) and great big hunks of meat (I’m not a vegetarian but I don’t eat that much meat). Plus (at least in this household) the dishes in this book are hardly ’standard’ family fare, a lot of them quite time consuming (although alot arn’t) and they’re more ‘dinner party’ than Thursday night tea, plus I have trouble enough getting my kids to eat the simpler dishes of Annabel Karmel and Tana Ramsay, a Jamie dish would be nigh on impossible, although to be fair on him he’s not billing this as a family cookbook (although I’m sure his kids eat this stuff). So the number of recipes I’m planning on trying from this book is considerably lower than some of the other new cookbooks out recently (Nigella, Tana Ramsay, Annabel Karmel, Rachel Allen). However I will be trying the:
- Rhubarb and sticky stem ginger crumble (Jamie’s crumbles are always nice, particularly when they’ve got oats in and I love anything with ginger in)
- Indian carrot salad (without the lamb)
- Courgette carbonara (didn’t it look divine when he cooked it on TV! The number of hits I’ve had on this blog looking for that recipe (which I ain’t going to reproduce it’ll contrivine copyright but I’d try the channel 4 site if I were you). I’m not going to to follow the recipe exactly though as I stated above with Nigella I’m nervous about cooking with raw egg, now if Jamie cooked this for me of course I’d eat it but me, cooking it, I’d be really nervous I’m about to give everyone food poisoning, so I’m probably going to combine this recipe with the carbonara from Cook Yourself Thin which I think doesn’t use egg (I’m sure Jamie would hate that!))
- Cheesy onion salad with creamy herb dressing but with a different cheese other than the roquefort which I don’t like.
- English Onion soup with sage and cheddar (I was squirming about in ectasy when I saw him cooking this on Tuesday, yum, yum)
- Balsamic Baked Onions and potatoes with roast pork (ditto as above, I’m even prepared to go against my hunk of meat loathing for this one as it just looked too delicious, wish I had a wood oven in the garden to cook this one in!)
- Pizza fritta but with different toppings, whole tomatoes, yuck, yuck, yuck!
- Pizza margherita
- Calzone (but without the mushrooms)
- Creamy rice pudding with the quickest strawberry jam
- Grilled peach salad with bresaola and a creamy dressing (now I don’t do starters except for Christmas and I could see this as a lovely starter but I know full well I’d be the only person eating it)
- Homemade ketchup
- Blackberry and apple pie
- Superb squash soup with the best parmesan croutons
- Butternut squash muffins with a frosty top (these just look fun!)
There’s also some great looking advice on how to grow your own veg, which I’d love to do but my time / space / gardening skills are pretty non-existant.
The pizzas from jamies italy are amazing, making them has become a regular occurance for me, so you have to try them if you havent already!
Hi Andrew
I’ve made Jamies pizzas from one of earlier Naked Chef books and they were always pretty good (unlike some pizza recipes I can think of where the base always turned out more bread like than pizza like), I’ll have to check out my copy of Jamies Italy, see if there are any differences!
Thanks
J.
PS The calzone from one of his earlier books as well are amazing!
Hi, I’m LKN from malaysia, 16 now. I’m a big fan of Nigella and Jamie. I also wanna be like one of you. I love to watch you guys cooking and more lots.
Hi, a friend bought me Nigella Express recently for my birthday and I was thrilled. She thumbed Jamie at Home as well, wondering, but rejected it as having too much obscure stuff like quails etc. I am delighted with Nigella’s book and so far:
Home-Made Instant Pancake Mix – the result was light enough but a bit bland, and stuck to the pan no matter what I did. I want a griddle.
Crispy Duck – I ate too much and felt sick. It was yummmm.
Instant Chocolate Mousse – didn’t set right, I think the kids stole some of the marshmallows though. Some of the chocolate too come to think of it. Certainly tasted good!
Sandwich slaw – yum yum yum, crispy, zingy, I’ll have some more thankyou.
Totally Chocolete Chocolate Chip Cookies – exactly what it says on the tin. Definitely will bake again but rather disheartening to see how fast they get eaten. Very rich, kids can only manage one each. For my lot, that’s really something.
Ice Cream Cake. I passed this one by, without taking much heed, but after watching her make it the other night and the delight of her guests I think it’ll be one of the desserts on offer in this house Christmas Day. Anything with butterscotch sauce gets my vote.
Banana Butterscotch Muffins – never even got a chance to cool down. Oh boy. I didn’t have butterscotch morsels, and it’s far from it you were reared too lol, but I did have some fudge left over from a batch made a few days before so they went in. Definitely one to make often. Well risen, light, mmmm.
Lunchbox Treats – bigger hit with the adults than the kids.
Hokey Pokey – not quite crunchy enough, more chewy. To be fair I didn’t leave it on the heat for the full 3 minutes as it looked the right colour and I may have put in too much golden syrup. Tasted just like Crunchie.
There’s lots more I want to try. Lovely book, nice size, stays open on your counter top (very important), lovely photographs. I had a thumb through Jamie at Home myself, and I’m so glad my neighbour got me Nigella instead.
Hi Ger
Yum, sounds like Nigella has been a success for you to! That icecream cake for a Christmas pud sounds a good idea, I have a family who don’t like traditional Christmas deserts (I’ve made Nigella’s Xmas cake recently, a tiny one all for me!) so an icecream cake would be appreciated and hey I can eat both! I too skipped the recipe by really when I saw it in the book but it looked divine on TV!
Oh and I’d really recommend the quesdillias, gorgeous!
Lacer
PS I have to admit, I’ve hardly looked at Jamie’s latest recently!