Wednesday 28 November 2012

Hedgehog Wild Mushroom Risotto - No hedgehogs were harmed!


Hedgehog Fungus Risotto

 

So I hope you’ve had a good read of my previous post on the dangers of mushroom picking now it’s on to the best part, the eating!

 

Whilst out with Archie yesterday I came across a sizable patch of Hedgehog Fungus, immediately recognising the spiny underside of the mushroom and having tried a few before I decided it was time to rustle up a tasty mushroom risotto. I gathered as many of the smaller ones as I could as the larger they are the more bitter they can taste and set off back home to get cooking.

 

Archie overseeing the mushroom collection.

Hedgehog Wild Mushroom Risotto.

 

Serves 2

 

A few knobs of butter
1 small shallot, finely chopped
1 clove of garlic, finely chopped

1 small hand full of dried Porcini, soaked in a little boiling water

1 small hand full of dried Horn of plenty, soaked in a little boiling water
300g Hedgehog Fungus, brushed clean and thickly sliced
130g Carnaroli risotto rice
A glass of white wine
500ml chicken or vegetable stock
A small handful Parmesan, grated
A small handful of parsley, chopped

Squeeze of lemon
Salt and pepper

 

Melt a couple of knobs of butter in a heavy bottomed pan and on a low heat soften the chopped shallot adding the garlic after a couple of minutes adding a pinch of salt.

Strain the dried mushrooms adding half the water from each to the stock which should be gently simmering away by now.

 

Add the Porcini, Horn of Plenty and Hedgehogs along with a little salt and pepper to the pan, give them a good stir and continue to cook on a low heat until they have softened a little.

 

Turn up the heat slightly and add the Carnaroli giving it a good stir again, after about a minute add the wine and stir until the rice has absorbed it.

 

Wild Mushroom Risotto the finished article.

Add the first ladle of stock, simmer and stir regularly until almost absorbed then repeat for around 10 minutes. At this point you should see the sauce forming and it a good time to check the seasoning and adjust as you wish. Continue adding the stock and stirring until the rice is cooked to your pleasing, there should still be a little bite in the rice if it is done properly.

 

Add another knob of butter, the Parmesan and chopped the parsley and give it a final big stir.

 

Serve with a little squeeze of lemon over it and there you have it, a gorgeous rich flavourful wild mushroom risotto. Enjoy!

Beginner Level Mushroom Foraging – Hedgehog Fungus


I’ve written this short article because I’m going to post a recipe for a wild mushroom risotto and don’t want anyone to go out and do themselves any harm. Please read it carefully!

I once heard a fellow forager say that in the school of learning wild food, mushrooms are very much in the advanced level, A level if you will. There are literally tens of thousands of types of mushroom and fungus out there with less than 1% being edible. For that reason I would say never eat any mushroom until you are not 100% certain of what it is. With the alternative being death or a life of kidney dialysis I’m sure you can see where I’m coming from. There are horror stories coming out quite regularly about people consuming poisons mushrooms and they never end well.  This article should not be used for identification purposes; a book or app such as Rogers Mushrooms will go along way to helping you with any identification but again I would say be very very careful. 

Archie with a Hedgehog Fungus

 

 If that hasn’t put you off completely then the best one to start with is the Hedgehog Fungus also called the Wood Hedgehog, Sweet Tooth, Pigs Trotter, Wood Urchin, Pied de Mouton (Sheep’s foot) in French or Hydnum repandum by its official name. The reason this is the best one to start with is that it is one of the easiest to identify with spikey tooth like structures where you would expect to find the gills on a normal shop bought mushroom. They are cream white in colour sometimes tan, grow to 5-15cm tall and can usually be found in mixed woodland although I usually find mine in coniferous areas.  They have a nutty flavour and a firm texture even when cooked. Older examples can taste a little bitter but a long cook can usually rid them of this. The only similar non-edible mushroom it could be confused with is the Sarcodon scabrosus so it’s a great one to start with!

 

Four Hedgehog Fungus in situ

Monday 12 November 2012

Beetroot Carpaccio, Sussex Cheese and Hairy Bittercress

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Simple and Seasonal.

Beetroot Carpaccio with Slip Cote Cheese, Hairy bittercress and Lemon Oil Dressing.

Serves 4

3 Small Beetroot or 1 Pack of cooked beetroot

200g of Slip Cote cheese or 200g creamy sheep or goats cheese.

A couple of handfuls of Hairy bittercress, washed.

Zest of one lemon as finely grated as possible

3 Tbsp of Extra Virgin Olive Oil

100ml Cider Vinegar

Combine the olive oil and the zest and leave for an hour or so to get the flavours going. Steam the beetroot adding the vinegar to the water for about 30 minutes until soft and leave to cool. Rub the skin off or peel it if you want to avoid purple hands. Very thinly slice the Beetroot and arrange on the plates, crumble over the cheese, sprinkle over the Hairy bittercress, drizzle the dressing and season with a little salt. Enjoy.

Thursday 8 November 2012

Saltmarsh Lamb, Wild Herbs, Samphire and Purslane


Saltmarsh Lamb, Purslane Crisps and a Samphire Kale and Blue Cheese Rockefeller.

A few months ago I was approached to enter a TV cookery competition the name of which I am currently not allowed to disclose. Having spoken briefly with a researcher about the type of recipe they where after I went off completely half cocked and created this tasty little number only to find out I couldn’t actually make it to the heats in the first place!


I wanted to have as many foraged ingredients in there as possible all within a close locality to one another. The area I had in mind was Alfriston and the tidal area of the Cuckmere river. I’d mulled over using mullet from the river but due to my massive lack of fishing skills I decided to give that a miss.

Whilst out and about collecting some samphire and a purslane, the idea came to me, Saltmarsh Lamb! A Saltmarsh lamb feeds on the purslane and samphire too so the flavours have a natural affinity with each other and having recently used the Hunter Gather Cook recipe for a Wild Herb Rub to make some great tasting lamb things were definitely coming together.

Having decided to do purslane crisps, and a Blue Cheese Rockefeller I started looking for a local blue cheese (to keep it Sussex!) in replacement for the Roquefort I’d initially thought would work best. Turns out this was much harder than I originally thought, even with the help of some of my cheese officiando friends, I was at a loss. But then I stumbled across the High Weald Dairy cheese company only a few miles from me, on the off chance I gave them a call and as it turns out they had a “prototype” Roquefort type Sussex blue in development. Mark at High Weald was nice enough to give me a tester piece to experiment with and this recipe was good to go!




Lamb with a HGC Ground Ivy Rub
2 French trimmed racks of Saltmarsh Lamb
For the Groud Ivy Rub:
  • Hand full of Ground ivy (dried)
  • Hand full of Mint (dried)
  • Hand full of Oxeye daisy leave (dried)
  • Pine needles (Fresh and finely chopped)
  • 2 cloves of Garlic (finely chopped and briefly oven dried)
  • Zest of 3 Lemons (briefly oven dried)
  • Salt & Pepper
  • Sugar
Remove the stalks, finely chop or blend all the ingredients and combine to make the rub.
Rub the racks of lamb all over with the mixture then place in a ziplock bag pour in a few glugs of olive oil and give it a little shake to get the oil over the lamb. Refrigerate over night or as long as you can. Remove the lamb from the fridge at least 2 hours before cooking.
Preheat oven to Gas Mark 4/400 degrees. Score the fat side to the lamb and season, wrap foil around the exposed ribs to stop them burning. Place on a baking tray fat side up.
Roast at Gas Mark 4 for 7 minutes then drop the temperature to Gas Mark 3 for a further 7 -15 minutes or until a meat thermometer reads 130 degrees in the thickest park of the meat.
Remove from the oven and rest for 7-10minutes cover with foil. Cut into chops and serve 3-4 a person. 
Samphire and Kale Blue Cheese Rockerfeller.
250g Kale Finely chopped
1 Handful of breadcrumbs
1 Egg Beaten
1 small Onion finely chopped
30g Butter
50g Sussex Blue Cheese from the
1 large tbsp of pickled Samphire roughly chopped.
2 Gloves of Garlic Finely chopped
2 Sprigs of fresh thyme or 1 Tsp dried thyme
Salt and ground pepper to season.
Couple of pinches of garlic salt
1 Beef tomato sliced in 2 cm thick.

Directions:

1. Boil the Kale for a few minutes and strain thoroughly.

2. Place the breadcrumbs, kale, onion, eggs, melted butter, blue cheese, pickled samphire, thyme, garlic, salt and pepper and stir well to blend the ingredients.

3. In a buttered ramekin (1 per person) place one slice of tomato and sprinkle a little garlic salt.  Spoon in the Kale mixture to fill the ramekins.

Bake at Gas Mark 4/ 350 degrees for 15-20 minutes

Purslane Crisps :

2 Handfuls of Purslane leaves, stalks removed
100g of Bread crumbs well seasoned with salt and pepper
1 egg beaten
1 small amount of flour
Vegetable oil.

Dip each leaf in the flour then egg then breadcrumbs and fry in the vegetable oil for a few seconds until golden, remove from pan and on to some kitchen towel to get rid of any excess oil.

Put it all together and there you go! Sorry there's no pictures of the actual dish, hope you like the others. Enjoy!