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Recipes Irish Farm House Cheese Parcel Cashel Blue Cheese sandwiched between pieces of Durras and Mileens wrapped in fine pastry and baked in the oven for five to seven minutes until the cheese melts and the pastry parcel puffs up and turns a biscuit colour brown. The parcel is then placed on the root vegetable salads which are dressed with the tangy dressing. Ingredients Dressing for the root salad Good pinch of salt and freshly ground pepper Method .o0O0o. Red Bank Brown Bread The White River Mill at Dunleer in County Louth is rather special. The mill has a date stone 1698 just a few years following the Battle of the Boyne. The mill has been a source of much valued stone ground flour and has had many famous visitor over the 300 years of milling. We will leave all reference to Oliver Cromwell out just to say if he kept eating the porridge from the White River Mill his temperament would have been much improved. He was sorely in need of roughage much to the cost of all in Drogheda some years later. The present miller Gerrard Connor continues the long tradition (just work out how many millers have controlled the wheel in 300 years). The mill in completely water powered with no electricity at all except for a long extension lead coming of the letterbox for his house across the courtyard. The mill has a head of water in a lake which is full of specimen trout. The water is funnelled in a trough by opening small sluice gates. Once the sluice gates are opened the water surges towards the giant wheel waiting expectantly. Everything is silent and slowly the wheel starts to move at first barely and then powerfully the whole mill starts to rumble and shake to life. One is left rather like a child considering "Willie Wonker's Toy Factory" Everywhere there are big cog wheels with wooden teeth feeding lesser wheels. Everything is moving and one is in awe of the power. You certainly would not feel like poking a leg out to see if the wheel was ok. The giant milling stones are made from Sandstone from the Seine near Paris and date back to the schooner days when they were used as a commercial ballast and extra revenue for the Captain. These special milling stones produce a rather course grind and on its own can it can be difficult to get it to bind so we have added some plain flower and this has overcome our earlier problems. Ingredients 1 x 1 lb Loaf Tin Method .o0O0o. Dublin Bay Prawn Bisque Skerries is a small village with an active seafishing fleet on the outskirts of Dublin the capital of Ireland. We are lucky here as the farmers grow the vegetables for the Dublin Vegetable Markets and the area is known as Fingal. It was from this area that Brian Boru launched his attack on the Vikings at the battle of Clontarf. The fishing port is famous for its landings of the World renound DublinBay Prawns. In the 17 th Centuary larger trading vessels to Dublin then the principal city of the British Empire outside London used carry some of the crews wives with them. While these sailing vessels lay off Dublin Port the wives caught and sold the prawns in the streets of the city and so their name and fame spread all over the World. Prawns differ all over the world and of course Dublin Bay Prawns are the best in the World. However this soup can be adapted using other varities of prawns no matter where you are in the World.This dish with the inclusion of boiled potatoes as a side dish could easily pass for lunch. Suggested Drink :- Good dry Chardonnay or a champagne type wine. However a Glass of Guiness is equally good. Ingredients
Then add the chopped veg, herbs and wine. Sweat these to get the flavour out then add 4 to six pts of cold water and let come almost to the point of boiling. Plung in the whole prawns and just bring to the boil . The prawns will now be cooked sufficiently. Do not over cook. Remove the prawns and let cool. Remove the heads and shell the prawns ... all the shells place on a baking tray and place the prawn shells in a hot oven to bake. This might seem odd but it is necessary to obtain the fullest flavour to the soup. Meanwhile in another pot melt the butter and add the flower and cook the flower and butter gently .Then add the tomatoe puree.Put in the baked prawn heads and finally add the cooking stock with the veg and bring back to the boil. simmer for one hour then add the brandy and stir. Cook for a further 10 minutes and strain.Beat the egg yokes and cream together and add to the bisque. Do not let boil or the egg will curdle .The bisque will now thicken. Arrange the peeled prawns in bowls or soup plates and pour the bisque over the prawns. .o0O0o. Fillet of Hake "Kenure House" Kenure House was a Paladin Mansion in the next parish of Rush. It was made famous during the filming of Ten Little Indians which starred Hugh O' Brien, Shirley Eaton, Dali Lavi etc. and was based on the Agatha Christy Book. In the grounds of the now demolished house was a fine kitchen garden and among the many plants gone wild was "Horseradish Root". It is usually served with roast beef. At one time I worked with a native Chinese cook and he explained how at home horseradish was used to bring out the flavour of fish and so this is how I came to develop this Hake Dish. Hake is a very fine fish indeed and grossly underrated in Ireland where plenty of it is caught and has to be mixed with cod to sell it.The Spanish Trawlers take great risks in our coastal waters to catch Hake were it is considered the Champagne of Fish in the Spanish Markets. This will feed four people as a main course. If you cannot fillet it the fish monger will oblige.Ask also to skin it for you. Take the head ,skin and bones with you as you can make an excellent stock for Seafood Chowder and some stock we will need for the cooking process. Ingredients
Simply add an egg cup of cream and reduce over a high heat Do not loose your nerve reduce by 3/4 volume and add 2 ozs of butter shake around the pot until melted in and the pour around the fish. Serve with boiled potatoes.
Carlingford Oysters Tain Bo Ingredients Method Place 1 pt of fish stock in a suitable pot and bring to simmer add the spinach leaves and blanch . Remove allow to cool and then place on the sole fillets. Spread some of the oyster and fish mousse on the four remaining fillets and role up from the tail end. Skewer with a cocktail stick or wrap in cling film to hold in place. Using two buttered dariold moulds or an old tea cups place some of the oysterpaste in each mould. Then place the remaining oyster and then the last of the paste. Put the moulds and the oyster stuffed soles into the simmering fish stock with the strands of Carrageen moss and cook until firm to the touch. Mould the garnish vegetables into attractive presentable shapes and place into the simmering stock until cooked. Meanwhile in separate pan reduce the remaining fish stock to make a fish cream sauce using the remaining cream and unsalted butter. Heat a small pan and flame off the alcohol from the whiskey. Add some of the cooking stock from the pot with the fillets and veg cooking juices to the whiskey and reduce a little then add some of the fish cream and we have the Cooley Mountain Whiskey Sauce. In bowl blend the two remaining egg yokes with two egg cups of guinness and some rich soy sauce and oyster sauce and the reserved oyster juices mentioned at the start, whisk into the remaining fish cream and we have the Brown Bull of Cooley Guinness Sauce. Mave would have had her man fit to bull cows at this stage ! Place the Guinness Sauce in the centre of a plate and the whiskey sauce around the edge. Feather lightly. Place the oyster mould in the centre and then carve the sole fillets and arrange around the oyster mould. Arrange the green white and gold vegetable garnish and present. |
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