Thursday 3 January 2013

A vegetarian pie with winter salads

OK, so a cheese-filled pie is probably not the healthiest start to the New Year, but this was for a special occasion when my brother- and sister-in-law and nephew came round for an after Christmas dinner.

However, I'm a great one for winter salads, and the 2 below are a nice way of using raw winter veg. I felt a little smug about the amount of vegetables I'd bought so thought I'd take a picture. 


 Before
Thanks to Nigella we all know that a messaluna means 'half moon' in Italian and is a semi-circular double blade for chopping herbs.

 Messaluna pie ingredients

  • 1 pack filo pastry (approx 300g)
  • 5 eggs
  • A 200g pack spinach
  • 2 leeks
  • 1 stick celery
  • 2 small handfuls rocket
  • 1 large red onion
  • 1 bunch dill
  • 1/2 bunch parsley
  • 3 spring onions
  • 150g ricotta
  • 100g feta
  • 75g cheddar
  • Oil, for frying and brushing

2 things I forgot to put in this pie but should be added:

  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 small bunch chives or 1 tablespoon freeze-dried chives

  How to make vegetable pie


  1. Chop the red onion and celery finely and fry gently in some oil for about 5 minutes till beginning to soften without browning.
  2. Meanwhile rinse the spinach in water.
  3. Heat a large pan and add the spinach. Keep moving the spinach round till it is wilted down to almost nothing. 
  4. Tip out of the pan into a colander and allow to cool.
  5. Put the spinach into a clean cloth and squeeze out as much liquid as possible, then chop finely.
  6. Break the eggs into a large bowl and beat.
  7. Crumble in the feta and ricotta into the eggs and grate in the cheddar.
  8. Grate the lemon zest into the mixture. 
  9. Add the chopped spinach and the rocket.
  10. Finely chop the spring onions and add to to the egg and cheese mixture. 
  11. If using, add the finely chopped chives and the dried oregano.
  12. Chop the herbs and add these to the egg mixture.
  13. Season well with salt and pepper.
  14. Brush a baking tin which is slightly smaller than the sheets of filo pastry lighly with oil. I used a 30x20cm tin.
  15. Lay a sheet of pastry in the dish so that the ends hang over the outside of the dish then brush lightly with oil. It doesn't matter if the pastry breaks; just patch it up so that the dish is covered.
  16. Repeat till half the sheets of pastry have been used.
  17. Pour the filling mixture into the pastry.
  18. Fold the overhanging pastry from the pie bottom on top of the filling.
  19. Top with the remaining filo sheets, brushing each with oil before laying the next on top. Brush the final layer of pastry with oil too.
  20. Bake at 190 degrees C for 30-40 minutes or till golden. 
Serve with chilli jam.
After

Red cabbage salad


Do not be tempted to make a larger quantity of this salad as it takes a lot of chewing, so you will probably get bored halfway through your leftovers.
  • 1/8 red cabbage
  • 1 pear
  • 1 small handful walnuts
  • A few pieces blue cheese
  • Walnut oil
  • Lemon juice
  • Chopped parsley
  • 1 dessertspoon mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon yoghurt

To assemble the red cabbage salad:

  1. Mix the mayonaise, yoghurt, lemon juice, walnut oil and chopped parsley in a bowl.
  2. Shred the red cabbage finely and add to the mayo mixture.
  3. Lightly toast the walnuts in a small frying pan over a low heat for about a minute.
  4. Add the toasted walnuts to the cabbage.
  5. Peel the pear and cut into thin slithers.
  6. Add to the slaw and mix gently so the pears do not break but so everything is coated in the yoghurt mixture.

Leaf and root salad ingredients

  • The rest of the rocket left over from the pie
  • A handful watercress
  • 1/4 grated raw parsnip
  • 1/4 raw grated courgette
  • A tablespoon sesame seeds, lightly toasted
  • Olive oil
  • Lemon juice

How to make leaf and root salad

  1. In a bowl, dress the rocket and watercress with a drizzle of olive oil and a squeeze of lemon juice.
  2. Arrange on a plate, and top with the grated courgette and parsnip.
  3. Sprinkle the toaste sesame seeds over the top. 




No comments:

Post a Comment