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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 27 December 2024. English food writer, journalist and broadcaster Nigel Slater OBE Born Nigel Slater (1956-04-09) 9 April 1956 (age 68) Wolverhampton, England Occupation(s) food writer, journalist, author, TV broadcaster Nigel Slater OBE (born 9 April 1956) is an English food writer, journalist and ...
Nigel Slater, in a 2013 recipe using Christmas leftovers, adds chopped goose, ham and pumpkin to the mixture. [25] The mixture is then shallow fried, either shaped into round cakes or as a single panful and then sliced. The first method is suggested by Delia Smith, Hix and Slater; Rhodes finds both methods satisfactory; Dickson Wright, Oliver ...
The blackcurrant (Ribes nigrum), also known as black currant or cassis, [a] is a deciduous shrub in the family Grossulariaceae grown for its edible berries. It is native to temperate parts of central and northern Europe and northern Asia, where it prefers damp fertile soils.
Blackened Shrimp Bowls. Grain bowls are so versatile, and this blackened shrimp-based bowl is no exception.Filled with brown rice, seasoned blackened shrimp, a corn and red pepper salsa, and ...
Other earlier recipes are more austere, omitting the whisky and treating the fruit as an optional extra. More modern recipes have swapped the crowdie cheese for a simple whipped cream. Modern recipes usually are made from a mixture of double cream , whisky , honey and fresh raspberries , with toasted oatmeal soaked overnight in a little drop of ...
A prawn cocktail. Nigel Slater says "it is all in the sauce", and that "the true sauce is principally mayonnaise, tomato ketchup and a couple of shakes of Tabasco." [5]The chef Heston Blumenthal states that prawn cocktail is his "secret vice": "When I get home late after working in The Fat Duck there's nothing I like better than to raid the fridge for prawn cocktail."
Devils on horseback are a hot appetizer or small savoury dish of dried fruit stuffed with such ingredients as cheese or nuts, wrapped in bacon, prosciutto or pancetta.The traditional form of the dish is made with a pitted date and bacon, [1] but prunes are also used, usually steeped in brandy or some other liqueur. [2]
The earliest recipe for fruit fool dates to the mid-17th century. [6] The soft fruits used in fools in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were often boiled and pulped before being mixed with the cream. It was considered the most 'prudent' way to eat fruit at the time as there was a fear that raw fruit was unhealthy.