insideKENT Magazine Issue 89 - August 2019 | Page 158

OUTDOORLIVING SUMMER BBQ CONT. SERVE WITH… (Not So) Secret Burger Sauce, www.cranble.com Ingredients: • 1 tsp of onion relish • 1 pinch of celery salt • 1 tsp of chipotle hot sauce • 3 tbsp of mayonnaise • Half an onion, finely diced • 1 pinch of mustard powder • 1 tbsp of ketchup A BIT ON THE SIDE… Roast New Potato, Kale, Beetroot and Dill Salad (4), www.lovepotatoes.co.uk Method: Put all your ingredients into a bowl and mix well, set aside until ready to use. Ingredients: Method: • 200g new potatoes, cut into wedges • 2 small cooked beetroots, cut into wedges • 100g kale, stems removed • 1 bunch of dill, chopped • 10g sesame seeds • 15ml sesame oil • 15ml rapeseed oil • 1 tsp sherry vinegar • 75ml low fat natural yoghurt • Low-calorie olive oil cooking spray • Salt and pepper to season 1. Heat the oven to 200°C. 2. Boil the potatoes for 6 minutes, then roast in a little oil until golden and crisp. 3. Cut the potatoes into wedges then set aside. 4. Spray the kale with the cooking spra y and season well. Roast until crisp, turning occasionally (about 10 min utes). Set aside. 5. Mix the dressing ingredients together. 6. Mix the beetroot with the kale and dill, season and toss through the potatoes and serve with the dressing. TIPS AND TRICKS FROM THE EXPERTS… While we’re in no way doubting your BBQ expertise, it’s always good to know how the experts do it, so we’ve picked the brains of a few celebrity chefs to give you a helping hand. Chef, Gizzi Erskine, www.groovyfood.co.uk: “The Groovy Food Company’s Organic Coconut Sugar has a delicious rich toffee caramel taste. It’s great in condiments and sauces, which I cook from scratch. It delivers a real depth of flavour to any homemade chutney, and is delicious served alongside cold meat and a c heeseboard. It’s also ideal f or creating a rich teriyaki marinade for salmon or chicken. A tablespoon of coconut sugar also adds a sweet, caramel glaze to stir-fried meat dishes; I use it in m y Vietnamese caramelised roast pork and is the best substitute for palm sugar in South East Asian curries.” Chef and Great British Bake Off star, Selasi Gbormittah, www.swearbyit.com: 1. Always marinade the night before to ensure your dishes have added flavour. 2. Speed things up b y popping vegetables in the o ven for 15 minutes before, then finish them up on the barbecue – perfect for a last-minute get together when the sun decides to shine! 3. Rotate, r otate, r otate! K eep tur ning y our mea t and vegetables constantly as you barbecue. 4. For added flavour and to ensure your food doesn’t get stuck to the grill, brush with Vita Coco Coconut Oil as you cook 5. Get those tunes going! Music is essential when you are barbecuing! 158 Indian food writer and chef, Anjum Anand, www.thespicetailor.com: 1. Marinate overnight. There are a couple of tricks w hen it comes to preparing meat for the barbecue . Firstly, and perhaps the most important, in volves marina ting meat overnight in the fridge before bringing it back up to r oom temperature before cooking. For an extra juicy and tender dish, slash or pierce the chicken, pork or beef with a fork to allow the marinade to sink deep into the flesh. 2. Use a ‘natural tenderiser’ when cooking with red meat. Essential to any standout barbecue is well-prepared and tender meat. When choosing your ingredients, try using a natural tenderiser, such as an acidic citrus juice, which helps to break down muscle fibres and soften the meat. A favourite of mine is g rated raw green papaya, which makes a world of difference and the meat juicer and more succulent. 3. It’s not all about the mea t! For those w ho ar e a little mor e experimental on the barbecue, why not try cooking with fish. For the best results, score the fish four times on each side and drizzle over some lemon juice and a sprinkling of light salt before thickly laying on a marinade. Remember to taste this before adding it to the fish – a perfect marinade should be salty and tang y. Overall the result should be a smoky, light and spicy flavour that’s difficult to resist.