Monday, August 13, 2012

Recipe for Scottish Oatcakes with Olive Oil


 
Have a break, have an oatcake!

Yes, that's right...don't go for that chocolatey wafer that satisfies you for about 2 minutes and then you're off raiding the cupboards for another snack.  Oatcakes  made with extra-virgin olive oil are one of the best snacks you can have.   Oats are a superfood containing protein, essential fats and minerals including zinc, calcium, magnesium and iron.  They also contain soluble fibre that helps to reduce cholesterol, B vitamins for healthy skin, nails and hair, and helps the absorption of vitamin C (so have a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice along with your oatcakes!)  And don't forget that the energy you're getting is released slowly, so it'll keep you going for longer and you won't need anything more to eat until your next meal.


Ingredients

300g fine oatmeal
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
3/4 teaspoon salt
9 tablespoons boiling hot water
                 
 

Method

- Mix the oats, oil and salt together.  

-Stir in the hot water little by little until the dough is smooth.  

- Sprinkle some flour onto the work surface and roll out the dough when it is still warm.  

- The thickness depends on taste, but as a general guide, perhaps about a quarter of a centimetre.  

- Use a scone-cutter (or a glass if you don't have one) to cut out the shapes.

- I lightly cook the oatcakes on an old-fashioned griddle (a non-stick frying pan will do the same job), but they can also be oven baked for 15 mins at 180oC.

- One last tip...use a fish slice to transfer them from the worktop to the pan or baking tray as they can be quite fragile before being cooked.

 

Blair Atholl WatermillIf you live in our area of Scotland or decide to holiday in our self-catering holiday cottage near Blairgowrie, then you can visit Blair Atholl, also in Perthshire and see the oats being ground at the Blair Atholl Watermill, and buy a bag in the shop afterwards!

Cheese Process 1

Oh, and you'll need some fresh local cheese to eat together with the freshly made oatcakes.  We can recommend 'Anster' cheese made by St Andrews Farmhouse Cheese Company.  Visit the farm, watch the cheese making from the viewing gallery, grab a cuppa in the coffee shop and buy a chunk to take home with you.  Well, if you can manage to wait until you get home...you could take the oatcakes and a knife with you and have a wee snack on the beach at St Andrews!

Friday, August 10, 2012

Recipe for Scottish smoked salmon with fresh pasta


Recipe for Scottish smoked salmon with fresh pasta

The two main ingredients in this recipe - salmon and pasta - represent two different nations, Scotland and Italy.  I am Scottish and my husband is Italian, so if we cannot choose between eating Scottish or Italian cuisine, then this recipe is the perfect compromise!

We live on a farm near Blairgowrie in the heart of Perthshire (Central Scotland), and are privileged to have fresh, local ingredients at our fingertips.  The river Tay is full of salmon, and should you ever wish to holiday in our area you can buy a permit locally and fish for your own salmon or trout.  We rent out a self-catering holiday cottage for two, further details of which can be found by clicking this link: Hillview Self-Catering Holiday Cottage.


 If you are not into fishing for salmon, but you are into eating it, then we can recommend a good place to buy it.  Dunkeld Smoked Salmon is a small shop hidden up a side street in the village of Dunkeld, Perthshire.  It would be easy to miss the signs for it, but as with most places with not so fancy a shop front, the quality is what really attracts people and keeps them coming back again and again.



So, that's the salmon sorted, now what about the fresh pasta?  Well, it is now readily available at your local supermarket, but you could have some fun and try making it yourself!

Recipe for fresh egg pasta:

300g '00' Italian flour
2 large eggs
3 large egg yolks

I use Shipton Mill Italian '00' Flour, but you can normally find this type in larger supermarkets.  If you are staying in our holiday cottage, then I would recommend that you buy your a box of super fresh organic eggs from the Cornsheaf Health Food Store, Blairgowrie.  They are not only cheaper than the supermarket ones, but also much tastier.


Method:  Sift flour into a big bowl, make a well in the centre and pour whisked egg mixture in.  With a fork, slowly add more and more flour to the egg.  Once you feel that you've reached "saturation point" it's time to get your hands dirty.  Squish the mixture between your fingers until it is smooth - it's a great stress reliever!  If the mix seems too wet, add more flour.  If too dry, add a little of the egg white that you will have left over.  Once it is a nice solid ball and no longer sticky, wrap it in cling film and leave it at room temperature for around half an hour.  This allows the dough to toughen up a bit and you will find that it stretches better without breaking.

You do not actually need a pasta machine to make tagliatelle, but it certainly makes the process easier.  I love my Imperia pasta machine (a true Italian would never buy anything less), but a similar result can be obtained with a big rolling pin.


The trick to really good pasta is..layers.  It takes a little longer, but it gives your a lovely texture.  Put a strip of dough about 0.5 cm thick through the machine on its widest setting, this should thin it out to about half, fold lengthwise and put strip through again on the same setting.  Repeat if it does not look silky smooth.  Similarly, with a rolling pin reduce thickness by half, fold, then reduce again.  Make the strip progressively thinner (on the machine I skip from setting 6, to 4, then to 2).  I quite like a thicker pasta so often don't use the finest setting - I discovered that my husband's granny does this too.  Once it is this much thinner, and much much longer than the original strip (at this point it is wise to cut it into small strips and hang them on the back of a chair or clothes drying rack).  If you have the Imperia machine, you should also have the tagliatelle attachment, so just pass the strips through it - et voilà, or perhaps I should say, ed eccoci qua!!  If you don't have a machine, you need to make sure that the strips are well-floured, fold them lengthwise and cut as evenly as you can with a large kitchen knife.

Now, hang the strips over a chair or rack and get on with making the sauce...

Recipe for salmon sauce:


Ingredients (serves 3/4)

3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
2 cloves of garlic
200g Scottish smoked salmon,
half a glass of white wine
a small tub of cream
a handful of parsley
salt to taste (and a little grated nutmeg)

1) Warm oil in a large frying pan over a medium heat.
2) Finely chop the garlic (I find that finely grating it does the job just as well) and add to the pan, if it sizzles too much lower the heat.  There is nothing my husband hates more than the taste of burnt garlic!
3) After a few minutes add the salmon chopped into smallish chunks.
4) Stir well, then add the white wine.
5) When the wine has reduced, add the cream and some of the parsley.
6) Cook over a low heat for a little longer, taste and add salt (and nutmeg, if you like it)

It's now time to cook the pasta.  The water should be boiling and bubbling.  Use your biggest pot - I use almost two kettles of water and two teaspoons of salt.  Add salt after the water is boiling, otherwise it takes longer to reach boiling point (or so I've been told in Italy).  If you are using fresh pasta it will cook within a few minutes.  Dried pasta takes a little longer, but try it a few minutes before it says on the package.  If you have a timer, use it.  Dip your fork in every so often to see if it looks cooked, and taste a bit.  It should be al dente, that is, it should feel a little hard between your teeth.  If it doesn't have this, Italians will call it "chewing gum".

Once cooked, drain the pasta and add to the frying pan.  Use two forks to mix in the sauce, then use the same instruments to put portions onto the plates.  Garnish with the remaining parsley, then grate a little parmesan (and even a little more nutmeg) on top.

Buon appetito!!




Scottish Cooking in a self-catering holiday cottage located in the heart of Scotland


Cook with Scotland's finest ingredients

Do you love cooking?  Like buying and using fresh local ingredients?  Then renting our self-catering holiday cottage near Blairgowrie, Perthshire  (Central Scotland) is the perfect spot to get creative in the kitchen.  Blairgowrie has regular farmer's markets in its town square and participates in the campaign for "slow food".  Perthshire is famous for its soft fruit - with most of the country's strawberries, raspberries, blackberries and blackcurrants coming from the Strathmore area of Scotland.  In fact, just across the stream from the holiday cottage you will see blackcurrant bushes growing that supply Ribena with its fruit!  Berries can be bought directly from the farm at a little shop near Guildtown.

You can purchase top quality meats such as beef, lamb and pork from local butchers, but if you are feeling more adventurous there is a Blairgowrie Farm Shop that can supply you with wild boar, rabbit and venison.  Of course, Perthshire is even more famous for its fish, and salmon and trout can be caught in the local rivers on purchase of a permit.  Though if you'd rather just buy it there is a fabulous little shop in Dunkeld called Dunkeld Smoked Salmon that we can personally recommend.

At the end of the day you can come home to the holiday cottage and cook these ingredients in our well-equipped kitchen.  There is a large fridge-freezer, 4 hob cooker, oven, grill, microwave and blender.  And at the end of the meal you don't even have to do the washing up as there is a fabulous dishwasher in the holiday cottage.  Mind you, with the lovely view from the kitchen window of the rock garden, and all the wildlife that you can see, you might be tempted to wash just a few dishes by hand!

To find out more and to book this self-catering holiday cottage, visit: http://holiday-accommodation-scotland.co.uk/

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Recharge your batteries in our self-catering holiday cottage near Blairgowrie, Perthshire, Scotland


Hotel standards without hotel prices

We have been consistently praised over the years for the cleanliness of our self-catering holiday cottage.  Many visitors have said that it has been the cleanest cottage that they have ever stayed in.  We pride ourselves on maintaining high standards, and if previous guests have left it in a mess we will call in other members of the family to help get it sparkling clean again for the next guests arriving at 3pm!

The furniture, bathroom fittings, bed linen and towels are all top quality, not mismatched and cheap like some holiday cottages that we ourselves have visited in Scotland.  We have decorated and furnished the holiday cottage to the high standard that we expect from a holiday cottage that we would choose to rent.  It is treated with the same care that we have for our own home...well, actually, we often joke that it's even nicer than our own home, and that if we ever need a holiday we could just come a spend a week here (despite our house being located on the farm nearby!)

To rent this self-catering holiday cottage please visit: http://holiday-accommodation-scotland.co.uk/

An open fire in a self-catering holiday cottage, Scotland

There's nothing like an open fire!

The weather in Scotland may not always be hot and sunny like continental Europe, but we can enjoy other sources of heat.  An open fire is something that not many modern houses have nowadays, so for many of our visitors it is a novelty.  When you book a holiday in this self-catering cottage you will be given an initial supply of kindling, coal and logs to get you started!  So many of our guests have enthused about their evenings spent in front of the fire.  Some curl up in front of it with a book, other watch films, and others still just watch the flames for entertainment.  It just adds something extra to your holiday in Scotland - sometimes the old fashioned things are the best.

Some tips on how to light a good fire:

- Scrunch up loose balls of newspaper and cover the fire grate with them.
- Place a layer of bought kindling (or dry sticks that you can gather from the wood beside the holiday cottage) on top of the newspaper.
- Lay some small pieces of coal on the layer of kindling.
- Light the newspaper, put the fire guard on, and stand back (sometimes kindling can send off a few small sparks!)
- Once the kindling begins to burn and heat up the coals, put on a little more coal.
- When you can see that the coals are turning orange, you can then put on some logs.  It's lovely to hear them crackle and smell the wood burning.  Bliss!

For more details visit: http://holiday-accommodation-scotland.co.uk/

Self-catering holiday cottage, Scotland

Hillview

Are you looking for a self-catering holiday cottage in Scotland that is clean, cosy, comfortable, classy, close to all the major tourist attractions and not to costly?  If the answer is yes, then you have come to the right site.

Hillview self-catering holiday cottage has been operating as a holiday cottage for over 18 years, and has consistently been given good reviews by those who have visited it.  It is the perfect country retreat for those wishing to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city.

As the name suggests, the holiday cottage is situated on a hill and offers breathtaking views of the Vale of Strathmore, Perthshire, one of Scotland's most picturesque areas.

It is ideal for those looking for something more low cost than a hotel or B&B.  The self-catering facilities allow you to cook in the cottage itself, but if you want a treat there are lots of superb restaurants offering typical Scottish cuisine in the local area. We have only two prices, low season and high season.  Please see our website for more details: http://holiday-accommodation-scotland.co.uk/