James Martin

Masterclass: Make Your Home Cooking Easier


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oz) butter

      1 clove of garlic, peeled and crushed

      ½ white onion, peeled and diced

      225g (8oz) potatoes, peeled and diced

      ½ tsp mild curry powder

      75ml (3fl oz) white wine

      750ml (1 pint 6fl oz) vegetable stock

      1 large cauliflower, cut into florets

      100g (3½ oz) diced leek (white part only)

      2 slices of white bread (crusts removed), cut into cubes

      2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling

      200ml (7fl oz) double cream

      Salt and black pepper

      1. Melt the butter in a large, heavy-based saucepan over a medium heat and when it starts to foam, add the garlic and onion and fry, without browning, for 2–3 minutes.

      2. Add the potatoes, curry powder, white wine and stock and bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for 5 minutes or until the potatoes are tender. Add the cauliflower and leek and simmer for a further 6–8 minutes or until the cauliflower is just cooked.

      3. Meanwhile, place a small frying pan over a high heat and sauté the bread in the olive oil for 2–3 minutes or until browned, then drain on kitchen paper and set aside.

      4. Pour the cream into the saucepan and bring back up to the boil, then remove from the heat and allow to cool for 2–3 minutes. Transfer the contents of the pan to a food processor or blender and purée until smooth. Pour the soup back into the pan and gently bring to a simmer, then season with salt and pepper.

      5. Divide between bowls, then sprinkle with the croûtons, drizzle with olive oil and serve immediately.

      This classic combination of flavours is a favourite of many. It’s important to pay close attention to the cooking time because if you cook the soup for too long you will lose the flavours and the colour. This soup is also good served cold, but it may be a good idea to add a little more liquid, as the texture tends to change and thicken as it cools. I like to use Mrs Wecksby’s goat’s cheese, or Perroche goat’s cheese from Neal’s Yard, but any other soft goat’s cheese will do fine too.

      SERVES 4

       VEGETARIAN

      1–2 tbsp olive oil

      1 large potato, peeled and cut into small dice

      1 white onion, peeled and roughly chopped

      1 sprig of thyme

      2 leeks, trimmed and chopped

      1 litre (1¾ pints) vegetable stock

      150ml (5fl oz) double cream

      100g (3½oz) rocket leaves

      Salt and black pepper

      TO SERVE

      200g (7oz) soft goat’s cheese

      1 sprig of chervil, chopped

      1. Place a heavy-based pan over a medium heat, pour in the olive oil and add the potato, onion and thyme, then sauté, without browning, for 2–3 minutes. Add the leeks and cook for 1 further minute. Pour in the stock and bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for about 10 minutes.

      2. Pour in the cream and bring back up to the boil, then remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly. Pour the soup into a blender and pulse until smooth, then add the rocket leaves and pulse again. Transfer the soup back into the pan and gently bring to a simmer, then season with salt and pepper.

      3. Divide the soup between bowls, crumble over the goat’s cheese, garnish with the chervil and serve.

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      A great classic soup with pesto added right at the end, this is easy to make and nice as a starter or a simple snack. It’s definitely a summer soup and you should always use the very best fresh summer vegetables to give maximum colour and flavour. I mix and match the pasta, as it’s a good way to use up broken or leftover bits. The best pistou soup I have come across was in Nice. Not surprising when you consider that the ingredients in its famous Niçoise salad are pretty similar to the ingredients for pistou.

      SERVES 6–8

      11 plum tomatoes

      100g (3½oz) frozen broad beans

      4 tbsp olive oil

      1 onion, peeled and chopped

      2 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped

      1 leek, trimmed and diced

      2 carrots, peeled and diced

      2 courgettes, topped, tailed and diced

      2 potatoes, peeled and diced

      1 x 250g can of haricot beans, drained and rinsed

      75g (3oz) dried spaghetti

      75g (3oz) French beans, topped and tailed and cut into 4 pieces

      100g (3½oz) frozen peas

      Salt and black pepper

      1 handful of basil leaves, to garnish

      FOR THE PISTOU

      60g (2½oz) fresh basil leaves

      4 cloves of garlic, peeled

      1 skinned, deseeded and chopped tomato (reserved from step 5)

      75g (3oz) grated Parmesan cheese

      135ml (4½fl oz) extra-virgin olive oil

      1. Score a cross in the bottom of each tomato, place in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Leave for 45 seconds, then drain and peel off the skin. Cut the tomatoes into quarters, remove the seeds and chop the flesh. Blanch the broad beans for 2–3 minutes in boiling water, then refresh in cold water and peel off the skins.

      2. Place a large, heavy-based saucepan over a medium heat, add the olive oil and all the chopped and diced vegetables except the tomatoes and fry, without browning, for 4–5 minutes.

      3. Add the haricot beans, fill with enough water to cover, and bring to the boil.

      4. Meanwhile, wrap the spaghetti in a clean tea towel and crush it on the edge of a worktop, pressing it backwards and forwards to break it into small pieces, then add these to the soup.

      5. Add all but one of the chopped tomatoes (reserving this last one for the pistou), bring back up to the boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 15 minutes or until the pasta is cooked. After 10–11 minutes, add the French beans, broad beans and peas. (It’s best to add these at the end of cooking in order to preserve their fresh colour.)

      6. While the soup is cooking, place all the pistou ingredients in a blender and purée to a paste.

      7. Remove the soup from the heat and stir in the pistou. Season well with salt and pepper and serve straight away.

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      It was tomatoes that got me interested in food in the first place; as a kid, the smell of them growing in my grandad’s greenhouse intoxicated me. I still love them so much and the first thing I did when I last moved house was to build my own greenhouse in which to grow them. Every time I open the door the smell