IndyEats June 2022

Three quick and easy recipes for comfort and joy

Put these recipes from Melissa Hemsley’s new book into your rotation for feel good food throughout the week, says Prudence Wade

Wednesday 01 June 2022 08:05 BST
Whether you oven it or BBQ it, make extra of this Filipino chicken so you can shred it into soups, wraps, noodles and salads
Whether you oven it or BBQ it, make extra of this Filipino chicken so you can shred it into soups, wraps, noodles and salads (Lizzie Mayson/PA)

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My mum calls this ‘any way chicken’ because you can make the chicken any way: I like cooking it in the oven (so I can forget about it); my mum likes to make it on the hob (to keep more of the sauce); and my boyfriend, Henry, likes grilling it on the BBQ (so it’s smoky and crispy),” says Melissa Hemsley.

“However you do it, I recommend making extra so that you can shred it into soups, wraps, noodles and salads later in the week.”

Filipino chicken with mango-tomato salsa

Serves: 4

Ingredients:

4 large chicken thighs, skin on and bone in (about 600g)

Sea salt and black pepper

2 spring onions, finely sliced at an angle, to serve

For the Filipino-style sauce:

3 garlic cloves, finely chopped

4 tbsp apple cider vinegar

2 tbsp tamari or soy sauce

2 tsp-1 tbsp fish sauce or 2 tsp extra tamari or soy sauce

2 tbsp (coconut) sugar or maple syrup

2 star anise

¼ tsp chilli flakes (or to taste)

For the mango-tomato salsa:

1 big handful of fresh coriander

100g cherry tomatoes, quartered

100g peeled ripe mango, pineapple or stone fruit, diced

2cm fresh ginger, finely grated

½ garlic clove, finely grated

1 jalapeño or other chilli, deseeded and diced

Juice of 1½ limes

4 spring onions or 1 small red onion, finely diced

2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil

A dash of hot sauce (optional)

Method:

1. Preheat the oven to fan 220C/gas mark 9. If using a BBQ, get it going now.

2. Mix all the sauce ingredients together. Place the chicken thighs in an ovenproof dish big enough to arrange the pieces about two centimetres apart (but not so big that you lose all the sauce as it cooks off in the oven), then add the sauce, coating each piece of chicken well in the mixture and leave for a few minutes, if you like.

3. Place the chicken thighs skin-side up in the dish, sprinkle a little salt and pepper over each one and roast for 25 minutes or until well cooked and the juices run clear when pierced with a knife.

4. Meanwhile, make the salsa. Roughly chop the leaves of the coriander and finely chop the stalks, then add to a serving bowl with all the other ingredients, mix together well and leave to sit for 20 minutes (while the chicken is cooking).

5. Serve the chicken scattered with the spring onions and with the salsa on the side.

Fried halloumi and chickpea rainbow salad

This salad is delicious stuffed into a wrap or served with rice or quinoa
This salad is delicious stuffed into a wrap or served with rice or quinoa (Lizzie Mayson/PA)

“Definitely make this!” enthuses Hemsley.

“It’s also delicious stuffed into a wrap, or serve it with rice or quinoa. Halloumi needs to be served straight away, so make this fresh. Swap the halloumi for paneer, or use extra-firm tofu, patted dry, for a plant-based version of this dish.”

Serves: 2

Ingredients:

2 tbsp ghee or coconut oil

400g tin of chickpeas, drained and rinsed

4 tsp garam masala

2 tsp ground cumin

225g halloumi, cut into small cubes

2 tsp maple syrup

Sea salt and pepper

For the salad:

A little diced red onion or chopped spring onions

1 large carrot, scrubbed and roughly grated

1 handful of diced ripe tomatoes

For the cashew-coriander-mint chutney (makes double):

4 tbsp cashews or other nuts

4 handfuls of fresh coriander

2 small handful of fresh mint leaves

2 fresh green chilli, deseeded if you prefer, chopped, or a good pinch of chilli flakes

½ tsp ground cumin

Juice of 3 limes

4 tbsp olive oil

Method:

1. Prepare the salad and arrange in two bowls.

2. Heat up a large frying pan and toast the cashews for the chutney on a medium heat for three to four minutes, tossing halfway through, until lightly golden, then tip half of them into the small bowl of a food processor and save the rest for garnishing.

3. Put the pan back on the heat, melt one and a half tablespoons of the ghee and fry the chickpeas (making sure they are dried well in a tea towel before so they don’t spit in the hot oil) on a medium heat for four minutes with half of the spices and a pinch of salt, stirring every now and then. Tip into a bowl, scraping out the delicious bits from the bottom of the pan as you go.

4. While the chickpeas are frying, add all the other chutney ingredients to the food processor – saving a few herbs for garnishing, if you like – along with about three tablespoons of water, then blend together, seasoning to taste with salt and pepper.

5. Put the pan back on the heat with the rest of the ghee and, when melted, fry the halloumi on a medium heat for about two minutes on the first side on (keep the pieces of halloumi spaced out) and then turn, sprinkle over the rest of the spices and fry for about one minute on the other side until lightly golden brown and crispy at the edges. Straight away add the fried chickpeas and the maple syrup, then toss together with the halloumi and fry for 30 seconds so that the chickpeas warm through and the maple syrup bubbles and thickens.

6. Scatter the chickpeas over the bowls of salad with the halloumi on top, drizzle over half of the chutney and top with the remaining nuts.

No-bake chewy nutty bars

Any nuts and seeds work in these delicious bars
Any nuts and seeds work in these delicious bars (Lizzie Mayson/PA)

“Any nuts and seeds work in these delicious bars. I’ve made them with just hazelnuts before for a lovely praline flavour,” says Hemsley.

“You might like to swap the vanilla extract for a dash of peppermint or orange extract, or add a bit of rum and a few raisins or some toasted coconut flakes.

“These are best served straight from the fridge for the ultimate chewiness!”

Makes: 16

Ingredients:

150g mixed whole walnuts, hazelnuts and almonds, roughly chopped

200g dark (50%-70%) chocolate, broken into squares

5 tbsp coconut oil

240g pitted Medjool dates

200g ground almonds

2 tsp vanilla extract

½ tsp sea salt

80g roughly chopped pistachios (or pumpkin seeds), for topping

Method:

1. Start by toasting the whole nuts (not the pistachios) for five minutes in a large frying pan on a medium heat until fragrant and just going golden. Toss them in the pan as they cook and watch them like a hawk after three minutes!

2. Next, set up a bain-marie: place a heatproof bowl on top of a small saucepan of simmering water (making sure the base of the bowl does not touch the water), add the chocolate and two tablespoons of the coconut oil and leave to melt until smooth, stirring from time to time. Once melted, set aside to cool slightly.

3. Add the dates, ground almonds, vanilla, remaining coconut oil and salt to a food processor and pulse until combined and dough-like. Add 50 grams of the toasted nuts (roughly a third, it doesn’t need to be exact) and pulse again briefly until roughly ground but still with some slightly larger bits, and then turn off the machine and stir in the pistachios or pumpkin seeds to make a nice balance of squidgy dough and crunchy nuts and seeds.

4. Line a rectangular tin about 25 centimetres × 20 centimetres and four centimetres deep – and transfer the mixture from the food processor to the tin. Press down really well with your hands to make a nice and flat, compact layer.

5. To finish, pour the glossy melted chocolate mix on top to create a thick layer, using a spatula to get every last lovely drop out of the bowl. Scatter with the rest of the toasted nuts and the chopped pistachios and pop in the fridge for three hours, until the chocolate layer is nice and hard, which makes it easy to slice and lovely to chew.

6. Bring the tin out of the fridge for 10 minutes before slicing into 16 squares. Keep stored in the fridge. These will last for a few weeks in a sealed container.

‘Feel Good’ by Melissa Hemsley (published by Ebury Press, £22; photography by Lizzie Mayson), available now.

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