Now I'm organised. Or at least I WAS. All my clipped out recipes have been carefully cut out and arranged in those photo albums that used to be popular, the ones with a whole peel-back plastic page. It's a great way of storing them, easy to see the recipes and with a wipe clean surface. When they started to get hard to find, I bulk bought a supply of them. However my collection seems to stop abruptly at a point about eight years ago - which coincides with me starting my own business and no longer having time to carefully arrange recipes in albums. Now my "notes and clippings" are more likely to be bookmarks on my computer.
So anyway, my "pile of clippings" looked a lot like this:
I numbered them all - there were 10 - then got Mark to shout a number from the other room. That album was pulled from the pile and I opened it at random to this page
There didn't seem to be much point making the curry powder as it's the blend I always use when I want a pre-mixed powder and there's a freshly made jar of it in the cupboard. In fact it's probably the reason the album fell open at that page. The Stilton and Mascarpone spaghetti looked lovely but includes fresh asparagus. We need to wait a few weeks before there's any in the garden, so that was no good this time.
That left Pasta with Rosemary Braised Flaegeolet Beans or Dovedale, Pear and Pecan Puffs. Both looked delicious (of course they did, that's why I kept the recipes innit?) so a coin was tossed and it came up Puffs. I've been meaning to make it for quite a long time - the corner of the page says March 1998 and the typeface makes me think it probably came out of a Good Housekeeping magazine.
The problem was the Dovedale cheese. According to the oracle that is Google, it is still produced, but I couldn't find it when out shopping. But it's a soft blue cheese so I used Dolcelatte instead. The cheese, chopped pecans and some fresh thyme are folded into a whisked egg white, with a little cream, and piled on the pastry base, then the pears are sliced and fried with butter and sugar (Sweet Freedom in my case) to caramelise slightly and arranged on top for baking.
The result was excellent - light, delicious and a lovely variety of textures. It's taken me 15 years to get around to making these tarts - I won't be leaving it 15 years before I make them again!
Love your organisation! I have mine in ring binders with polypockets but then there are others stuffed in plastic wallets! Like you I am less inclined to cut out recipes now. Love those puffs!
ReplyDeletesooooo organised... I cannot imagine what that's like!... I'm the kind of person who would start with good intentions and then just get bored after the third page... however it's clearly been worth it for the discovery of this glorious gem... how beautiful does that look? I love it. Like a glazed pear hat!... I love the combo of Blue Cheese and Pear, so I can imagine this would be delicious. Thanks so much for the entry this month xx
ReplyDeleteYour tart looks delicious, pear and blue cheese - yum! Those albums take me back too!
ReplyDeleteI dream of being as organised as that - my clippings are in a pile that threatens to take over my house. I love the blue cheese/fruit combination as well, so this is right up my street.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful tart! I tried doing a web search in the hopes of finding the recipe and the internet at large and EatYourBooks.com in particular seem to believe that the recipe came from a BBC cookery book called, Dangerous Desserts. So maybe your clipping was from Good Food rather than Good Housekeeping. Either way, still absolutely beautiful!
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