Win a copy of award-winning The Kids Only Cook Book!

Huzzah!

We’re pretty chuffed to have won the Prima Baby Awards Family Cookbook of the Year. These awards recognise the best products and services currently available in the baby and parenting industry - and the judges are a tough bunch to impress.

Our fun cook book has gone down a storm since it was published, receiving brilliant write-ups in The Guardian, The Financial Times and BBC Good Food magazine among others. Containing over 50 recipes with step-by-step photos, kids can learn how to cook everything from soups and salads to a whole roast dinner for the family. And a few sweet treats thrown in as well, so it’s perfect for Easter.

The competition is simple to enter. Really.

Just like The Kids Only Cook Book Facebook page and share it with your friends. Click here to enter via Facebook.

OR

Follow me on Twitter and retweet one of our competition tweets. Click here to enter via Twitter.

Terms and Conditions

Entry is restricted to UK residents only. Only one share on Facebook or one retweet on Twitter is required to enter the competition. One winner will be randomly selected from all of the entries from Facebook and Twitter who have followed the entry instructions correctly. Entering through Facebook or Twitter will give you equal chance of winning the competition. There are no age restrictions as to who can enter the competition. Competition closes at midnight on Tuesday April 7, 2015. The winner will be announced on our Twitter and Facebook page shortly afterwards. No cash alternative will be offered. If you have any questions please email me at [email protected]

 

How to make delicious buttermilk plus a …

General wittering, Recipes | September 9, 2013 | By

Shirley Conran famously said that life was too short to stuff a mushroom. I’ve never agreed with her.

Stuff a mushroom, make a Christmas pudding, brew your own beer. If it satisfies a creative itch, go for it I say. That’s why I end up making things like buttermilk.

Recipes containing buttermilk often suggest making a simple substitute by splashing lemon juice or vinegar into milk, then leaving it to sit and curdle. This method works perfectly well, but until recently I didn’t appreciate the extent to which it really is just a stand-in. Real buttermilk - and I’m not talking about the stuff from the supermarket - is so much better and very easy to make.

Why use buttermilk? Because it’s fermented, buttermilk is a wonderful ingredient to use in baking. The lactic acid it contains makes tender cakes and pastry because it softens the gluten in flour (check out this beautiful buttermilk frangipane cake). It makes lighter biscuits and fluffier pancakes because the acid boosts the action of raising agents, and produces deliciously thick dressings due to its curdling properties. It’s also hugely popular to make tender fried chicken. In its most basic form, buttermilk is the liquid left over after churning cream from butter. Back in the day, milk would sit in the dairy to allow time for the milk and cream to separate. In the process, naturally occurring lactic acid-producing bacteria had time to ferment the milk. These days, health and safety has something to say about letting milk sit around to turn sour, so most commercially produced buttermilk is inoculated with cultures that mimic the traditional process. It works well, but lacks the rich, intense flavour of traditionally made buttermilk. If you like a foodie project, this one is very satisfying and brilliant to involve the kids in as some wonderful transformations take place. The best part is that in the process you get buttermilk and wonderful butter.

For the buttermilk you need: 250ml of the best double cream you can find and 50ml active natural yoghurt.

PicMonkey Collage

Place the cream and yoghurt in a jar, stir well, cover with a clean cloth and set aside on your kitchen bench until it thickens and sours. This can take up to 48 hours but mine took about 30 hours. When done, the cream should be very thick and creamy and taste sour - a bit like thick crème fraiche.

buttermilk Collage 2jpg

Transfer to a mixing bowl and beat on medium speed (I tried the paddle attachment and the whisk and both work well). The cream will turn thick, then lumpy and eventually separate into solids and liquids: butter and buttermilk.

Line a sieve with a piece of muslin or nut bag, set it over a bowl and tip in the butter and buttermilk. Gather the muslin together and squeeze out any extra buttermilk, then return the butter to the bowl. Cover it with cold water then massage and knead the butter, dunking it into the water to remove as much buttermilk as possible. Change the water and repeat. (This technique is adapted from Darina Allen’s method.)

buttermilk collage 4

You should end up with 200g of butter (just pat it into shape with your hands or use butter paddles if you happen to have some lying around) and 150ml buttermilk. Ta da! Wrap the butter in greasproof paper and store in the fridge. I don’t add salt, but there’s nothing is to stop you spreading it thickly on lovely bread and sprinkling it the Fleur de Sel or the like.

home made butter and buttermilk

If you want your domestic angel halo to shine especially brightly, try this recipe for a divine white chocolate and raspberry tart that uses both the buttermilk and the butter in the pastry.

Is life too short to make buttermilk? Let me know what you think.

The Kids Only Cook Book out now!

It’s been far too long between posts but as you can see from the little films above and below, we’ve been busy!!

The Kids Only Cook Book is out today (Quadrille) and to help it along my talented cameraman and film maker husband and children have made some really fun videos to go with two of the recipes.

The response to the book so far has been fantastic. The Guardian listed our sticky toffee pudding in a jar recipe among its top 10 recipes for kids and also gave the thumbs up to our tin can ice cream and paper bag breakfast recipes after giving them a thorough test-drive. Other reviewers have also been very kind including cookery writer Sarah Bailey and blogger no time for ironing who highly recommended the book on Amazon.

The fabulous Gransnet has made The Kids Only Cook Book their cook book of the month, and Prima Baby magazine has made it their book of the month for August.

I’m also hugely chuffed that our good friends at the Belfast Cook Book Club have decided to make The Kids Only Cook Book their inaugural Kids Cook Book Club cook book. The club is an absolutely ingenious way to get children into the kitchen cooking and I’ll report back later on how it got started and how other kids and parents around the country can nick the idea!

I would be delighted if you could share these videos with anyone who’s young or young at heart and loves cooking! The kids have put a huge amount of effort into the books and the videos and I’m so proud of them. Cue tearful moment. Enjoy and spread the love!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Children’s food apps: bad for their health?

General wittering | May 2, 2013 | By

The full version of this article appeared in the Guardian’s Word of Mouth section this week.

A children’s gardening and food app recently won the digital equivalent of an Oscar, a timely gong given the current public focus on encouraging kids to cook. Dirtgirlworld, a game played on smartphones and tablets, teaches children how to grow food from scratch and cook up tasty meals. It’s eco-friendly, full of right-on food messaging and charming enough. But are food apps for kids delicious fun or bad for their health? To read the full article in the Guardian click here