Shaved fennel, celery and apple salad with pomegranates and hazelnuts;
Onglet with roast beets and horseradish cream;
Blood oranges and aperol jelly;
Rhubarb, marmalade and rosemary cake….
How tempting and lip-smackingly good does that sound. Well it all comes from Diana’s Henry’s latest book “How To Eat a Peach…†Diana is fast shaping up to be many peoples favourite cookery writer. Not only has she a particularly wonderful way with words but she has a natural gift for creating beautiful balanced menus that delight rather than merely ‘stuff’ the diner.
Diana has been intrigued by menus since she was in her mid-teens. At sixteen she bought an ‘exercise copy book’, covered it carefully with brown paper and began to transcribe menu ideas – she still has the book.
I loved the stories in her introduction to “How To Eat a Peach…†Her parents didn’t have dinner parties but regularly had people in for “good food and craicâ€, dancing to Nancy Sinatra and a shot or two of Bushmills or Vat 69.
Diana threw her first ‘dinner party’ in her late teens, she planned carefully the menu, invited her school friends who were intrigued by the candlelight in the room “Are we going to celebrate Mass†and thought she was going well over the top when she served pineapple ice.
Diana continued to pour over food magazines and books, cook, travel and put lots of effort into edible research, even pouring longingly over the menu displayed in the glass cases outside restaurants when she couldn’t afford to eat there.
I particularly loved the story about “Sally Clarke’s restaurant – “I used to get the tube on a Monday night to go and see what Sally had planned for the week. I’d stand there, sometimes in the rain, with a little torch, writing down her menus in a notebook. I rarely ate at Clarke’s (I was in my first job and it was expensive), but I felt as if I ate there all the time.
Diana and I share many influences, she too, admires and is inspired by Alice Waters and her philosophy of beautiful fresh produce simply served.
Diana’s research has taken her from Belfast to France, the Breton Coast, Bordeaux on to Manhattan, Morocco…
Her menus reflects her travels, beautiful simple food… So many things I’m tempted to cook from How to Eat a Peach, check it out but here are a few tasters to whet your appetite…
Diana Henry’s Elderflower Gin & Tonic
This drink is local and seasonal to me, in Britain, in early summer, so it seems a perfect way to start a meal that honours this philosophy.
makes 500ml (18fl oz) gin
for the elderflower gin
20 just-picked elderflower heads
500ml (18fl oz) gin
5 tablespoons caster sugar
to serve
tonic water, lime slices and mint sprigs
Shake the elderflowers gently to dislodge any little bugs that might be hiding in them. Pour the gin into a big preserving jar and add the flowers and the sugar. Close the jar and shake it every day for 1 week.
Strain the mixture through a sieve lined with some muslin or a brand new J-cloth, then bottle.
Put some of the elderflower gin in glasses with ice. Top up with tonic and add lime slices and mint sprigs.
How To Eat a Peach by Diana Henry is published by Mitchell Beazley
Diana Henry’s Salad of Fennel, Celery and Apple Salad with Pomegranates and Hazelnuts
This might seem very humble before a resplendent pasta dish, but that’s the point. It’s clean and plain and a real appetite opener. Don’t make it too far in advance, though, as the fennel and apples lose their freshness.
Serves 6
2 small fennel bulbs
2 small eating apples
juice of 1 lemon
2 celery sticks, with leaves if possible, washed and trimmed.
6 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon white balsamic vinegar
¼ teaspoon Dijon mustard
sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper
seeds from ½ pomegranate
15g (½oz) halved hazelnuts, toasted
Quarter the fennel, trim the tops and the bases and remove any coarse outer leaves. If there are any little fronds, remove and reserve them.
Quarter and core the apples. Don’t leave any of this sitting around to discolour: prepare and assemble the salad quickly.
Using a mandolin – or a very sharp, thin bladed knife – slice the fennel very thinly and put it into a large bowl with the lemon juice. Slice the celery finely on an angle, reserving any leaves. Change the setting on your mandolin and slice the apples into slightly thicker pieces. Toss the celery and apples in the lemon juice, too. Add any fennel fronds and celery leaves you reserved.
Mix the extra virgin olive oil with the white balsamic vinegar, mustard and salt and pepper. Add this to the bowl, mixing it with the other contents. Taste the salad for seasoning. Just before serving, scatter the pomegranate seeds and hazelnuts on top.
How To Eat a Peach by Diana Henry is published by Mitchell Beazley
Diana Henry’s Spatchcocked Chicken with Chilli, Garlic, Parsley & Almond Pangrattato
I know, this is barely a recipe, it’s just flattened roast chicken with chopped almonds and herbs thrown on top, but I really crave this kind of food: charred, juicy meat, a contrasting crunchy texture and big, strong flavours. It’s great for one of those balmy late-summer evening meals.
serves 6
for the chicken
1.8kg (4lb) chicken
3 garlic cloves, finely grated
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper
8 red onions, cut into wedges
for the pangrattato
80ml (2¾fl oz) extra virgin olive oil
100g (3½oz) stale sourdough bread, made into breadcrumbs
2 tablespoons chopped blanched almonds
4 garlic cloves, chopped
1 teaspoon chilli flakes leaves from a small bunch of
flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
finely grated zest of 1 unwaxed lemon
Set the bird on your work surface, breast-side down, legs towards you.
Using good kitchen scissors or poultry shears, cut through the flesh and bone along each side of the backbone. Remove the backbone and keep it for stock (freeze it until you’ve gathered other bones to cook along with it).
Open out the chicken, turn it over so it is skin side up, then, flatten it by pressing hard on the breastbone with the heel of your hand. Remove any big globules of fat and neaten any ragged bits of skin. Now you have a spatchcocked bird.
Gently lift the skin on the breast of the bird so that you can put your hand in between the skin and the flesh (try not to tear the skin). Mix the garlic with 1 tablespoon of the extra virgin olive oil and some seasoning and carefully push this under the skin. Cover with cling film and put in the fridge for a couple of hours.
Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/gas mark 6 and take the chicken out of the fridge. Put the onions into a roasting tin and pour on the remaining 2 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil. Set the chicken on top, breast side up, season the outside and roast for 1 hour.
Meanwhile, make the pangrattato. Heat the extra virgin olive oil in a frying pan over a medium heat and sauté the breadcrumbs for about 4 minutes. Add the almonds, garlic and chilli and cook for another minute or so. Remove from the heat and mix with the parsley and lemon zest, chopping everything together.
Cut the chicken into serving pieces and put it on to a warmed platter, on top of the red onions. Pour any extra cooking juices over the top, scatter on the pangrattato and serve.
How To Eat a Peach by Diana Henry is published by Mitchell Beazley
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Diana Henry’s Onglet With Roast Beets & Horseradish Cream
An onglet steak – also known as hanger steak – is usually about 3cm (1¼in) thick and shaped like a small, fat snake. It is slightly chewy – but only slightly – and has a good gamey flavour. London-based chef Neil Rankin taught me how to cook steak (the instructions for all cuts are in his book, Low and Slow) and it works every time. Sautéed potatoes and watercress are good on the side.
serves 4
500g (1lb 2oz) small raw beetroots
regular olive oil
sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper
125ml (4fl oz) double cream
1 tablespoon wholegrain mustard, or to taste, 3 tablespoons freshly grated horseradish
a splash of white wine vinegar (optional)
a pinch of caster sugar (optional)
4 x 250g (9oz) onglet steaks (keep them in the fridge)
flavourless oil or beef dripping, to fry
Preheat the oven to 210°C/410°F/gas mark 6½.
Trim the beetroots and wrap in foil, moistening with a little regular olive oil and seasoning before you seal the packet. Don’t wrap it too tightly, you want there to be space around the beets. Place in a roasting tin and cook until tender; it should take 30–35 minutes, though the time can vary. Test with the point of a knife, it should pass through with no resistance. When the beetroots are cool enough to handle, peel, quarter and season. These can be served at room temperature.
Reduce the oven temperature to 140°C/275°F/gas mark 1. Put in an empty roasting tin or baking sheet large enough to hold all the steaks.
Whip the cream and add the mustard and horseradish. Taste; you may want a little more mustard. Some people add a tiny splash of white wine vinegar (or, conversely, a pinch of sugar). Add whichever of those you think you would like.
Onglet steaks don’t have flat surfaces, so flatten each steak a bit by bashing it with the base of a saucepan, putting baking parchment over it first. Don’t overdo it, you just need to make them a bit less round. Heat 2 frying pans, preferably cast iron, 7–10 minutes ahead of when you want to cook them, setting the heat dial about three-quarters of the way round. To check whether the pan is hot enough to cook in, add a tiny bit of flavourless oil or dripping. If it smokes, the pan is ready. Heat a little oil or beef dripping in the pan, add 2 steaks to each pan and press down with tongs to get the surfaces in touch with the base of the pan. Move the steaks around all the time, seasoning and making sure each steak is getting browned all over. Listen for the sizzle: when the steak is quiet, you need to move it. If the pan gets too hot and the meat is getting too dark (you don’t want it to be black), reduce the heat; if it’s not getting dark enough, increase the heat.
Transfer the steaks to the hot tin or sheet in the oven and continue to cook for about 5 minutes for medium-rare (onglet is best served medium-rare).
Using a really sharp knife, slice each steak against the grain. Neil Rankin (see recipe introduction) doesn’t rest his steak. Serve with the roast beets and the horseradish cream. A handful of green leaves is good on the side.
How To Eat a Peach by Diana Henry is published by Mitchell Beazley
Diana Henry’s Gooseberry and Almond Cake with Lemon Thyme Syrup
This is a pale pudding – soft green and cream – which seems just right for early summer. I serve it with extra gooseberries, poached (there’s a recipe for them below) but you don’t have to.
Serves 6-8
For the cake:
125g (4½ oz) unsalted butter, softened plus more for the tin
125g (4½ oz) caster sugar,
plus 5 tablespoons caster sugar
3 large eggs, at room temperature. Lightly beaten
75g (2¾ oz) plain flour, sifted
2 teaspoons chopped lemon thyme leaves
finely grated zest of 1 unwaxed lemon
75g (2¾ oz) ground almonds (preferable freshly ground)
¾ teaspoon baking powder
350g (12 oz) gooseberries, topped and tailed
For the syrup:
4 tablespoons granulated sugar
juice of 2 large lemons
2 teaspoons lemon thyme leaves
For poached gooseberries:
75g (2¾ oz) granulated sugar
2 lemon thyme sprigs
500g (1lb 2oz) gooseberries, topped and tailed
To serve:
thyme flowers, if you can find any
icing sugar, to dust (optional)
sweetened crème fraîche or whipped cream
Preheat the oven to 190 °C/375 °F/gas mark 5. Butter a 20cm (8in) spring-form cake tin and line with baking parchment.
Beat the butter and the 125g (4½ oz) of caster sugar until pale and fluffy. Add the eggs a little at a time, beating well after each addition. If the mixture starts to curdle, add 1 tablespoon of the flour. Put the lemon thyme leaves in a mortar with the lemon zest and pound together to release the fragrance. Add to the batter and briefly mix. Fold in the rest of the flour, the almonds and the baking powder, using a large metal spoon. Scrape into the tin. Toss the gooseberries with the remaining 5 tablespoons of caster sugar and spread over the top. Bake for 30 minutes.
The cake is ready when a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
To make the syrup, quickly heat the granulated sugar, lemon juice and lemon thyme leaves in saucepan, stirring to help the sugar dissolve. Pierce the cake all over with a skewer while it is still warm and slowly pour the syrup into it. Leave cool a little, then carefully remove from the tin and put on a serving plate.
Meanwhile, poach the gooseberries. Heat 175ml (6fl oz) of water, the granulated sugar and lemon thyme together in a saucepan, stirring until the sugar has dissolved. Add the gooseberries and cook over a medium heat for 4minutes, or until the fruit is soft but not collapsing (most of the berries should hold their shape). Leave to cool.
Any thyme flower you have will look lovely on top of the cake. You can leave it as is, or dust lightly with icing sugar just before serving, with sweetened crème fraîche or whipped cream and the poached gooseberries on the side.
How To Eat a Peach by Diana Henry is published by Mitchell Beazley
Imagery credit: Laura Edwards