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Cafe St Honore

January 29, 2024

NEIL'S RECIPES: PHEASANT BREAST WITH STAR ANISE, CRISPY BACON AND RED ONION

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“We’re using a lot of pheasant at the restaurant right now. Whole pheasant is relatively cheap, so use the legs for a terrine, or a stew like coq au vin. The bacon adds necessary fat, the roasted red onions are delicious, and the star anise adds an extra layer of flavour.”

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

4 pheasant, breasts, skin on is best but without is fine

8 small red onions, peeled and halved

8 star anise

8 rashers streaky bacon

A few sprigs of thyme

100g butter

Good salt and pepper

Cold-pressed rapeseed oil for frying

METHOD

Heat oven to 180°C

Place a pan on the hob and get it hot. Add a tablespoon of rapeseed oil, and when it’s hot add the bacon to the pan. Fry until golden and crisp. Remove from the pan and leave somewhere warm on a bit of kitchen paper.

Use the same pan to heat another tablespoon of rapeseed oil then add the onions, cut-side down, to the pan. Season and add a couple of sprigs of thyme. Cook on a high heat for about 6 to 8 minutes then place them in the oven for about 20 minutes until golden and soft. Season the pheasant breasts whilst the onions are cooking.

Remove the onions from the pan and replace with the pheasant, skin-side down. Using the same pan ensures the pheasant will take on all those wonderful bacon and onion flavours. Add the butter to the pan and after 2 to 3 minutes you should achieve a nice, golden brown colour. Turn the pheasant over and add the star anise to the pan. Season again, and place in the oven to roast for 8 to 10 minutes, checking all the time so as not to over-cook. Pheasant can be eaten slightly pink, but not raw. Remove from the meat from the oven and allow to rest.

Once rested place each pheasant breast onto a warmed plate and top with the cooking juices and star anise. Accompany with the warm onions, crispy bacon and perhaps some bread sauce and watercress.

TAGS: recipes


January 22, 2024

NEIL'S RECIPES: TREACLE TART

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“A classic British dish which needs no introduction, and a best-seller of ours at the Edinburgh Farmers’ Market. It’s deliciously simple served warm with either clotted cream or thick double cream. The kick of lemon in the recipe helps to cut through the richness.”

4 portions

INGREDIENTS

1 blind-baked 10-inch sweet pastry case

750g golden syrup

300g bread or cake crumbs

1 lemon, zested and juiced

1 egg, whisked

METHOD

Pre-heat the oven to 160°C.

Mix all the ingredients well and spread into the sweet pastry case.

Place on a tray in the middle of the oven (for even cooking) and bake for 40 to 50 minutes, or until the tart is golden brown on top.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool at room temperature. Serve with clotted cream or custard.

Perhaps best eaten warmed up the next day as the mix soaks up all the syrup.

TAGS: recipes


January 9, 2024

NEIL'S RECIPES: GINGER SPONGE

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“I make this pudding in a large tray in the restaurant, but at home I make and serve it in a dish that goes from oven to table. If there are any leftovers, keep and eat it cold with a cup of tea and your feet up.”

INGREDIENTS

250g unsalted butter

140g dark brown sugar

330g golden syrup

2 eggs

200ml milk

6 pieces of stem ginger, roughly chopped

A pinch of salt

1.5 teaspoons cinnamon

1.5 teaspoons ground ginger

1.5 teaspoons bicarbonate of soda

420g plain flour

METHOD

Line a deep, 12-inch square baking tray with silicone paper. Cream the butter and sugar in a mixer until light and fluffy, then beat in the syrup, eggs, salt and sift in the flour, bicarb, cinnamon and ground ginger. Mix gently. 

Slowly pour in the milk - you may not need it all - then add the chopped stem ginger with a little syrup from the jar.

Combine and scoop the mix into the prepared tin and bake at 180°C for 35 to 45 minutes, until a knife comes out clean.

Serve with lashings of custard and ice cream.

TAGS: Recipes


January 1, 2024

NEIL'S RECIPES: SCOTCH BEEF CARPACCIO

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“Grass-fed organic Scotch Beef contains significantly more vitamins and minerals than non-organic, grain-fed beef; and its fat has a higher content of Omegas which are crucial for our health. Hung correctly and matured for further flavour and tenderness, it is almost effortless to prepare and cook with beef of this standard. This dish is named after a Venetian painter and is usually served with a little olive oil, lemon and white truffle or Parmesan. It’s totally raw, truly delicious and perfectly safe to eat. Serving raw beef is a real test of the quality of the meat and the provenance of the cattle. I’ve made this dish using many different cuts of beef for this in the past, but here I’m using fillet. It is expensive, but consider this a special dish to be savoured.”

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

250g piece of fillet of Scotch Beef, trimmed and silver skin removed

1 tablespoon cold-pressed rapeseed oil

1 large tablespoon Arran mustard

Good salt and pepper

250mls cider vinegar

250mls water

250g unrefined caster sugar

400g mixed veg for picking e.g. cauliflower, carrot, onion, courgette, red pepper

A few aromas like star anise, cinnamon or thyme for flavouring your pickles

A few salad leaves

A few shards of Corra Linn or Bonnet cheese

METHOD

Firstly bring the vinegar, water and sugar to the boil on the hob with your chosen aromas and simmer for 3 minutes, then season with salt and pepper.

Blanch the pickling veg in boiling, salted water for 2 minutes until just starting to soften, then refresh under cold, running water. Then place them into the hot pickle liquor. Once done these can be stored for weeks in a sterilised jar.

Season the beef all over with salt and pepper then get a heavy frying pan very hot and add half the rapeseed oil. Then very quickly sear the beef all over for a couple of minutes maximum. This is just to remove the raw outer layer of the beef.

Make a paste with the mustard and the remaining oil, then season with salt and pepper. Rub this paste all over the just-seared beef and wrap it very tightly in cling film until it resembles a sausage. Make sure it’s firmly secured and tie the ends so it won’t unravel. Then place the beef in your freezer for about an hour. You don’t want it to be frozen solid, just to be firm.

To serve, simply remove the beef from the cling film and slice very thinly with a very sharp knife and arrange on a plate. Season with salt and pepper, then some salad leaves and some pickled veg. Lastly, add the shards of cheese and a final seasoning.

TAGS: Recipes


December 11, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: ROAST CHICKEN AND SKIRLIE

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“As you all know, I adore roast chicken, but try adding skirlie. It’s basically a stuffing, but you can easily serve it as a side dish. A delicious way to grace any table.”

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

1 free-range organic chicken – approx 1.5kg

4 onions peeled

1 sprig of thyme

1 organic Sicilian lemon

1 handful of sage

Sea salt and freshly-ground black pepper

A few knobs of butter

A glass of white wine

500ml good, dark chicken stock (ideally made from last Sunday’s roast chicken)

METHOD

Pre-heat oven to 200 C

Season the bird inside and out with salt and pepper.  Place the thyme, sage and half a lemon in the cavity.

Slice the onions and place in a roasting tin.  Lay the bird, breast side down, in the tin and put in the oven for half an hour.

Remove from the oven and turn the bird over, season again with salt and pepper and return to the oven and cook for a further half an hour.  Remove and rest for 20 mins before carving.

To make gravy.  Remove chicken and leave somewhere warm.  Place the roasting tin on the hob and add the glass of wine.  Bring to the boil and reduce by half.  Add the chicken stock and boil for 10-15 mins and add a few knobs of butter whisking all the time.  Push through a sieve squeezing all the goodness out of the onions.  Season again with salt and pepper and more lemon juice.

Serve with roasted potatoes and lots of local, seasonal veg.

TO MAKE SKIRLIE

INGREDIENTS

1 small onion, peeled and finely diced

1 sprig of thyme

2 tablespoons of good beef fat

150g pinhead oats, soaked for a few hours in water, then drained

Good salt and pepper

METHOD 

Add the beef fat to a solid pan and melt over a medium heat. When melted, add the chopped onion and thyme and season. Fry until the onion is just starting to colour. I love this smell!

Add the oats and keep stirring as it all combines and you hear the skirl of the oats and fat. You may need to add a touch of water to prevent it sticking.

Check the seasoning and cook for around 10 minutes until it plumps up and takes on a light brown colour.

Let it cool slightly then use to stuff a chicken crop - the part between the wings - and roast the bird as normal allowing a little extra time.

Skirlie is great with gravy, as it soaks up all the chicken’s juices up during cooking and saves it for your plate.

TAGS: recipes


November 27, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: ROASTED SQUASH, CROWDIE, ISLE OF WIGHT TOMATOES AND HAZELNUT PESTO

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“This delicious, simple dish can be made as a vegetarian main course. If you can’t find crowdie, use goat’s curd or good cream cheese; and good vine tomatoes if Isle of Wight are not available. Roast the squash well as it gives loads more flavour.”

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

1/2 butternut squash, peeled, seeded and cubed into 1 to 2-inch pieces

4 Isle of Wight tomatoes, eyes removed and cut in half

4 tablespoons of Katy Rodger’s Crowdie

A handful of watercress

2 tablespoons of hazelnuts, toasted

A small handful of basil

2 tablespoons of hard cheese, grated - Isle of Mull cheddar or Anster are good

100ml cold-pressed rapeseed oil

1 clove of garlic, sliced

A sprig of thyme

Good salt and pepper

Watercress to serve

Rapeseed oil for drizzling

METHOD

Heat oven to 180°C.

Lay the cubes of squash on an oven-proof tray and drizzle over 10ml of rapeseed oil. Season with salt and pepper and rub it into the squash. Sprinkle over some leaves of fresh thyme and roast in the oven for around 45 minutes until soft and golden.

Place the tomato halves on an oven-proof tray and drizzle with 10ml of rapeseed oil. Season with salt and pepper, then sprinkle over some fresh thyme leaves and half garlic slices. Place on the bottom shelf of the oven for 3 to 4 hours at 140°C until soft and semi-dried.

To make the pesto, add the toasted hazelnuts, cheese, basil, 80ml of oil, the remaining garlic and some seasoning to a blender and blitz until a smooth paste is achieved.

To plate up, dot some Crowdie around the plate, then add the squash, a few tomatoes fresh from the oven and drizzle over the pesto. Then add a few leaves of watercress and a trickle of cold-pressed rapeseed oil.

TAGS: recipes


November 20, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: PEARS POACHED IN RED WINE

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“I love the texture of a pear, and it’s something we grow well here. Try a Packham or a Conference, and always buy British when you can. They’re delicious ripe, served with a strong cheese and oatcakes, but I'm suggesting you poach yours in red wine with sugar, cinnamon, star anise and thyme. The aromas will fill the house for days. The trick is to leave them in the cooking liquor and not to be tempted to remove them. This way they will soak up all the syrup. Serve them hot or cold with a dollop of ice cream or crème fraîche.”

Makes 4 portions

INGREDIENTS

4 firm pears (if too soft, they’ll turn to mush)

1/2 bottle of good red wine (a nice claret is perfect)

180gm dark brown sugar (or if you prefer white, that’s fine)

3 or 4 star anise

1 vanilla pod, split and scraped seeds out

A piece of cinnamon bark

A small sprig of thyme

A big dollop of ice cream or crème fraîche

METHOD

Firstly, wash and peel the pears and place in a pot large enough to hold them. Pour over the wine.

Add the sugar and place on a medium heat, bringing just to the boil before adding the spices and flavourings. I love star anise, cinnamon and vanilla here, but do experiment with other flavour combinations!

When it’s just about to boil, turn down the heat to a low simmer. Long and slow wins this race with this dish.

Poach the pears for 2 to 3 hours, keeping them warm on the back of the stove. Taste as you go, as it may need a little more sugar, or even a spoon of redcurrant jelly - it’s up to your tastebuds!

Serve the pears warm, drenched in the syrup, with some ice cream or crème fraîche on the side. 

TAGS: Recipes


November 13, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: BEEF SHIN WITH HORSERADISH DOUGHBALLS

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


Neil Forbes Shin of Beef Stew PRINT 1.jpg
Neil Forbes Shin of Beef Stew PRINT 1.jpg

“Hearty and warming, rich and decadent, this truly is a dish to serve straight from the casserole dish at the table. Full of Omega 3, beef shin also has the wonderful ability of enrichening a sauce with its incredible inter-muscular fat; and it’s just so very tasty. The doughballs are always a hit in our house, with the horseradish adding a nice kick. Serve it with mash too (why not?) and some all-important roots. Search your local butcher or farmers’ market for organic, grass-fed, pure-bred beef.”

Serves 2
Prep time: 30 minutes; Cooking time: 3 to 4 hour

INGREDIENTS

250g shin of grass-fed beef, 2-inch pieces

1 tablespoon beef fat or cooking oil

1 large onion, peeled and roughly chopped

1/2 stick celery, roughly chopped

1 sprig thyme

1 clove garlic

1 bay leaf

1 teaspoon tomato purée

1 litre good, strong beef stock

1/2 glass good, red wine

1 teaspoon flour

2 large carrots, scrubbed – one diced and one cut into thick strips

1 large parsnip, peeled and cut into thick strips

50g celeriac, peeled and cut into thick strips

1 knob of butter

100g self-raising flour

50g suet

Good salt and pepper

1 teaspoon chopped parsley

Fresh horseradish, grated (optional)

METHOD

Heat the oven to 170°C / Gas Mark 3

Season the beef with salt and pepper. Heat the beef fat in a casserole dish, add the beef and fry for 4 to 5 minutes until all the meat is caramelised. Remove the beef from the pot, leaving the heat on. Add the onion and fry for 5 to 10 minutes, stirring continually to give a good colour. Add the thyme, bay, garlic clove, celery and diced carrot.

Colour the veg until browned then add the tomato purée and the teaspoon of flour, and cook for a minute or two. Next, add the red wine and bring to the boil. Reduce until just a little is left, then add the stock. Return the beef to the dish, season and bring to a gentle simmer.

Cover with a lid and cook in a medium to low oven for 3 to 4 hours, stirring occasionally. It’s ready when the meat is so tender it could fall apart.

Blanch the remaining carrot, parsnip and celeriac in boiling, salted water for 4 minutes, then refresh under cold water. Add to a pan with a knob of butter and fry until they just start to colour. Keep in a warm place. 

Twenty minutes before the stew is ready, combine the suet and flour in a bowl. Season with salt and pepper and add the parsley, some grated, fresh horseradish and mix with enough cold water to make a wet dough.

Add the dough to the stew in 4 to 6 dollops, and place the lid back on and cook for a further 20 minutes or so.

Spoon the sauce over the dough balls and set to one side to rest for 20 minutes before serving. Garnish with a grate of fresh horseradish and a sprinkle of parsley and serve with the root veg.

TAGS: Recipes


November 7, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: BRIOCHE LOAF

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


“This is a simple loaf using yeast, so no need for a sourdough starter. Eat as a toast for breakfast with butter and jam, or turn it into a brioche and butter pudding perhaps. Even French toast? The breadcrumbs make a superb Queen of Puddings. It keeps well in the freezer if you fancy making more to stock up on.”

Makes one loaf
Prep time: 2 hours; cooking time: 1 hour


INGREDIENTS
100g milk
2 eggs
1 egg yolk
7g salt
10g sugar
10g fresh yeast
330g strong bread flour, I only use organic
Zest from half a lemon
100g unsalted butter, softened
75g unsalted butter, melted


METHOD
Warm the milk with the sugar, yeast and lemon in a pot.

Place the flour, salt, eggs and egg yolks in a food mixer with a dough hook, then add the milk mixture and mix until a good dough is produced. You can also do this by hand.

Place the dough clean, oiled bowl to prove in a warm place for 2 hours until it doubles in size. Then return the dough to the mixer and add the softened butter and beat until all the butter is incorporated.

Press the dough into a buttered and floured terrine mould or bread tin and prove again until the dough reaches the top.

Bake at 185°C for 45 minutes then reduce the temperature for a further 25 minutes to 150°C. Remove from the oven and carefully remove from the tin. Brush all over with the melted butter as it cools.

TAGS: recipes


October 23, 2023

NEIL'S RECIPES: BUTTERMILK PUDDING WITH SPICED PLUM CRUMBLE

by Cafe St Honoré in Recipes


Image: Paul Johnston, Copper Mango
Image: Paul Johnston, Copper Mango

"This pudding is similar to panna cotta but way better. The recipe comes from a chef at Ballintaggart Farm, a wonderful place in the Perthshire hills, who scribbled this recipe down for me when working at Cafe St Honoré for a few days. Served here with gently roasted plums and a crunchy crumble topping with a hint of spice. Remember to cool the pudding in the jug in the fridge and stir occasionally before pouring into the mould otherwise the vanilla seeds will sink to the bottom."

Serves 4
Prep time 1 hour, cooking time 45 minutes

INGREDIENTS

500ml buttermilk

200ml double cream

1 vanilla pod, split and seeds removed

6 ½ leaves of gelatine

150g unrefined caster sugar

4 plums, halved and stones removed

50g plain flour

50g jumbo oats

40g dark brown sugar

1 teaspoon of mixed spice

25g butter

1 teaspoon of honey

Edible flowers, optional

METHOD

Soak the gelatine in cold water until soft.

Bring the buttermilk, cream, sugar and vanilla to the boil on the hob. Turn off the heat and leave for few minutes to extract the vanilla flavour.

Add the gelatine to the pot and mix well. Pass through a fine sieve into a jug. Place the jug in the fridge to cool for 45 minutes, removing every few minutes to whisk.

Once cool, pour into dariole moulds or tea cups and chill in the fridge for a good 5 to 6 hours or overnight.

Heat the oven to 180°C.

To make the crumble, mix the dry ingredients, honey and butter together. Arrange the halved plums in an oven-proof dish and top with the crumble mixture. Bake in the oven for 20 to 40 minutes, or until the plums are soft and the crumble has browned. Serve warm along side the chilled buttermilk puddings. Garnish with a few edible flowers.

TAGS: Recipes


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Cafe St Honoré, 34 North West Thistle Street Lane, Edinburgh EH2 1EA

Tel: 0131 226 2211

Email: eat@cafesthonore.com