Blackberry Fool

Ingredientes

50g Hazlenuts
125g Butter
150g Caster Sugar
Grated Lemon
150g Plain Flour
½ tsp Baking Powder
75g Sugar
2 tbs Caster Sugar
1 tbs Lemon Juice
300ml Double Cream
100ml Yogurt
Garnish with Mint

Instrucciones

For the biscuits, preheat the oven to 200C/180C (fan)/Gas 6 and line two large baking trays with baking parchment. Scatter the nuts over a baking tray and roast in the oven for 6-8 minutes, or until golden-brown. Watch them carefully so that they don’t have a chance to burn. Remove from the oven, tip onto a board and leave to cool.
Put the butter and sugar in a large bowl and beat with a wooden spoon until light and creamy. Roughly chop the cooled nuts and add to the creamed butter and sugar, along with the lemon zest, flour and baking powder. Stir well until the mixture comes together and forms a ball – you may need to use your hands.
Divide the biscuit dough into 24 even pieces and roll into small balls. Place the balls the prepared baking trays, spaced well apart to allow for spreading.
Press the biscuits to flatten to around 1cm/½in thick. Bake the biscuits, one tray at a time, for 12 minutes or until very pale golden-brown. Leave to cool on the trays. They will be very soft when you take them out of the oven, but will crisp as they cool.
Store in an airtight tin and eat within five days.
For the fool, rinse the blackberries in a colander to wash away any dust or dirt. Put the blackberries in a non-stick saucepan and sprinkle over the caster sugar.
Stir in the lemon juice and heat gently for two minutes, or until the blackberries begin to soften and release their juices. Remove and reserve 12 blackberries for decoration and continue cooking the rest.
Simmer the blackberries very gently for 15 minutes, stirring regularly until very soft and squidgy. Remove from the heat and press the berries and juice through a sieve over a bowl, using the bottom of a ladle to help you extract as much of the purée as possible. Leave the purée to cool and discard the seeds. You should end up with around 325ml/11fl oz of purée.
Put the cream and yoghurt in a large bowl and whip with an electric whisk until soft peaks form when the whisk is removed from the bowl – the acidity of the fruit will thicken the cream further, so don’t take it too far.
When the purée is completely cold, adjust the sweetness to taste by adding more sugar if needed. Pour it into the bowl with the whipped cream and yoghurt and stir just once or twice until very lightly combined.
Spoon the blackberry fool into individual wide, glass dishes – or one large, single bowl. It should look quite marbled, so don’t over-stir it. Scatter a few tiny mint leaves on top and decorate with the reserved blackberries. Sprinkle with a little sugar if you like and serve with the hazelnut biscuits.

Categorías

Beef
Carne de Res
Carne de res es el nombre culinario de la carne de ganado vacuno, particularmente el músculo esquelético. Los humanos han estado comiendo carne de res desde tiempos prehistóricos. La carne de res es una fuente de proteínas y nutrientes de alta calidad. La mayor parte de la carne de músculo esquelético de res se puede usar tal cual simplemente cortándola en ciertas partes, como asados, costillas cortas o bistecs (filete miñón, solomillo, rabadilla, chuleta, ojo de costilla, bistec de falda, etc.), mientras que otros cortes son procesados (carne en salmuera o cecina de res). Los recortes, por otro lado, generalmente se mezclan con carne de ganado más viejo, magro (por lo tanto, más duro), se muelen, se pican o se usan en salchichas. La sangre se usa en algunas variedades llamadas morcilla. Otras partes que se comen incluyen otros músculos y vísceras, como el rabo de buey, el hígado, la lengua, los callos del retículo o rumen, las glándulas (particularmente el páncreas y el timo, conocidos como mollejas), el corazón, el cerebro (aunque prohibido donde existe peligro de encefalopatía espongiforme bovina, EEB, comúnmente conocida como enfermedad de las vacas locas), los riñones y los testículos tiernos del toro (conocidos en los Estados Unidos como sesos de ternera, ostras de la pradera u ostras de las Montañas Rocosas). Algunos intestinos se cocinan y se comen tal cual, pero más a menudo se limpian y se usan como tripas naturales para salchichas. Los huesos se utilizan para hacer caldo de res.