Sunday lunch

Sunday lunch

Never mind the fancy-schmantzy patisserie, what counts around here is Sunday lunch. When we are at home, we always sit down to something a bit above average each week. If we have company, then there’s nothing we enjoy more than sitting around the table and enjoying good conversation, good (not necessarily fancy) food and a bottle or two of wine with the afternoon and evening spreading out in front of us. If there’s three of us, there’s likely to be a pavlova on the worktop, waiting for whatever fruit will be plonked on top of the whipped cream and meringue. If there are more, then perhaps there will be a choice - something chocolate-y maybe, home-made ice cream or jelly.

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Last Sunday, we enjoyed the company of long standing friends over a leg of mutton. Yes, you read that right - my hero had enjoyed some mutton in a Yorkshire restaurant last year and has not forgotten the wonderful flavour. So when we came across a special offer from an online butcher recently, we decided to give it a try. Thankfully our friends were happy to come and help us finish it off - but there was still a couple of packs of diced mutton in our freezer, awaiting attention from me. (The leg was delicious, by the way - slow roast a la Jamie Oliver et al)

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This morning was a glorious Spring day and with nothing planned, my hero and I were pottering about enjoying the sunshine and reacquainting ourselves with the garden. Meanwhile, something was in the oven, because as soon as I got up, I’d started the process of making a hot-pot.

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I’d come across a little pamphlet in Daylesford the other day with a range of ideas for Spring cookery, including a recipe for hot pot with “lamb or mutton”. Perfect! I got a bag of mutton out of the freezer yesterday afternoon and prepared the carrots, leeks and onion first thing. I delegated the preparation of the lambs kidneys to my hero 😘 (He did a grand job)

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I’m told the aroma coming from the kitchen was amazing, not that I experienced it fully, of course, since I was probably wearing that same perfume myself in spite of the spritz of Rive Gauche this morning.

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Whilst we pottered about, it did what it’s meant to do in the oven and by the time I returned to it a couple of hours later to apply a layer of finely sliced King Edwards, it was looking good. (No, actually, it was looking - and tasting - great!)

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At this point, I might have got carried away and cooked a little rhubarb for a pudding, knowing there was a cheesecake in the fridge, waiting. I had totally overlooked the other favourite, sitting there on its sell-by date, which my hero had been anticipating for quite some time!

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What can I say? The hot pot was delicious and proved to be exactly the best kind of home cooking - the sort of dish that is just too simple and undeserving of such flavour. The mutton was perfect - tasty and just about holding together. How pleased we were to know that we have another identical package in the freezer for another time!

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And there was pudding. Marks and Spencer’s Apple Pie - our guilty secret until it was recognised as the second-best apple pie in the country (after the super cheap but hard to find around here, Aunt Bessie’s) It’s definitely one of those things we seize upon whenever a £10 meal-deal comes into view and this one had been sitting there in the fridge, anticipated by us both for some days.

It was the best kind of Sunday lunch - simple, tasty, fuss-free. There might even have been a glass of our favourite red wine too, as it’s been on offer at 30% off these last couple of weeks and hey, how could we refuse?

Wake us up when something needs doing, please? (and who needs macarons?)

Fracked?

Fracked?

Mastering Patisserie

Mastering Patisserie