Recipe of the week... ... Roasted tomato and giant couscous Greek salad |
Ingredients: Cooking oil, 300g (or more, if you like) cherry
/ vine ripened tomatoes, 200g giant couscous, 1 lemon, 150g feta cheese, salt
and pepper, and a large handful of fresh basil.
Time taken: Just over an hour, start to finish, but not a
lot of your time really. Kind of: five minutes and then a break. Then, ten
minutes and then a break. Then, five more minutes. And that’s all.
Serves: Either x2 lunchtime portions or x4 accompaniments to
whatever you’re having for tea (maybe this would go well with a quiche? Or with
veggie burgers?)
Goood afternoon readers,
How are you all today, lovely people? Are you well? I hope
you’re feeling good and patting yourself on the back after a full week at work.
It’s becoming unusual, of late, to spend a full five days in the office. So well
done for powering through the week! Are you off to a good start now with your
long weekend?
That’s right, readers, everyone living in the UK is – once again
– enjoying three-day Bank Holiday weekend. We’re spoiled with them, at the
moment. Everyone gets Monday off work and we only have to manage four days in
the office next week. Hurrayyy! This bank holiday is to celebrate May Day…
which does not involve a sinking ship, and it doesn’t involve anyone dancing around
a May pole anymore, as it did in the past.
We just spend three days setting up our gardens and caravan
pitches, getting them ready for summer. And exiling our winter clothes to the
loft or the top of the wardrobe. All the things we thought we were going to do
with our Easter bank holiday, a week or two ago, but FAILED AT because we ate
too much chocolate and just couldn’t move. The usual story.
To anyone in the UK, I wish you a wonderful long weekend! Hope
you use this time wisely to see friends and family, and spend quality time with
your loves ones. Generally – eat, drink and be merry, readers, in the best
company you can find. To anyone not in the UK, sorry that I’m boasting again about
all our time off work! I’m sure you’ll be having a fab weekend, too, and you’ll
laugh another time when the tables turn and we’re working on your holiday.
For my weekend ahead, readers, I’ve made minimal plans. It’s
been an eventful week for me with dental drama, and then nose drama, then the
trains striking (mhmm – again), and with
realisations from friends, plus I learned to parallel park a car.. all together
it’s been a lot to handle. There’s been plenty going on with me this week,
readers. Which is good!
It’s good. But it has also left me feeling a little worn
out.. and contemplative. Like I can really relate with the end tooth on my
lower right jaw, which I suppose – following the dental events of this week – must
now find itself someplace it hadn’t expected to be. It hasn’t changed. No, the
tooth’s stayed the same. But things have changed around it. And now, going
forwards, it finds itself in a position where it’s the end tooth. And everything
looks different for before, when faced with emptiness besides. Just staring
down a black hole where you can’t see the bottom. Right at the edge.. looking down
into darkness.
It’s possible – probable – that this is more how I feel, readers,
than how my tooth feels (can teeth feel?). And this week I had a dream I sometimes
dream where I’m pushing through the crowd at a house party looking for someone,
but I can’t find them. Which makes me wonder what I’m looking for when I’m
awake. But, my colleagues tell me this is just the feeling of being in
your 20s, and nothing more.
I have one colleague who’s getting married today. She will be
betrothed, voluntarily and maybe even permanently, to someone else today. That
is really actually happening, possibly right now. And another colleague of mine
turns 44 tomorrow, so he’ll become exactly double my age. But but but. My
colleagues tell me that they remember, in their 20s, being unsure about whether
it would all work out. Or how it ever could work out. And yet it did, it has, in the end.
With that in mind, I’m not too troubled by the road ahead. I’ll
crawl or walk or run it, together with lots of friends and family, and the odds
are in favour of things working out in the end. Plus, there’s bound to be
decent food and good songs along the way. This last week, I’ve been scouting
around for new music and I’ve been listening to the Hungry Yogis’ April
playlist (which you can find here). I’m really enjoying, and very much
recommend, the following five tracks…
1.
Gorillaz –
The Apprentice
A song to walk to. Strut along the pavement feeling ever so slightly badass. Likely, you’re listening to a cooler track than those other pedestrians are.
A song to walk to. Strut along the pavement feeling ever so slightly badass. Likely, you’re listening to a cooler track than those other pedestrians are.
2.
Phantoms –
Just A Feeling ft. VERITE
A song to run to. A steady beat and kind of sexy. As YOUR body will be, by the end of the run, once you pound it into shape.
A song to run to. A steady beat and kind of sexy. As YOUR body will be, by the end of the run, once you pound it into shape.
3.
Khaled –
Keep Me
A song to shower to. Not too many words for the water to drown out, and a mellow groove for you to shampoo in time with, as you sing along.
A song to shower to. Not too many words for the water to drown out, and a mellow groove for you to shampoo in time with, as you sing along.
4.
Trevor
Hall – Indigo
A song to cook to. Swaying as you stir and humming along with the tune. Dance around your kitchen and enjoy yourself, even if folk are watching.
A song to cook to. Swaying as you stir and humming along with the tune. Dance around your kitchen and enjoy yourself, even if folk are watching.
5.
John
Mayer – Love on the Weekend
A song to soundtrack your long weekend. This John Mayer track is what the long weekend sounds like to me. Pretty chilled out.
A song to soundtrack your long weekend. This John Mayer track is what the long weekend sounds like to me. Pretty chilled out.
Definitely give these songs a listen, readers. Plus, in the spirit
of decent food, I’ve been dabbling with a new recipe today, which I highly
advise you try. This recipe came about following a family meal out to a snazzy restaurant,
over Easter weekend, where I ordered a roasted butternut squash which came
topped with giant couscous… giant couscous! Totally new to me, I had never ever
heard of this before being a thing.
Was spreading word of the revelatory giant couscous, while
down south last weekend, and my bestie Floss was all like… this has so been a thing forrrever, Hayley. Even
my mum uses it. So, apparently, in London they’ve known for ages. They’ve had
it all along, but have they told anyone up north? What do we think, is this a
thing up north, readers?? Giant couscous?
Did anyone else up here know? Up in this place where the people
relish relish and speak more in sounds than words, where grey skies loom and
passion for the game outweighs skill on the pitch, with hills taller than its
buildings and with plenty of grit, just never in icy road conditions… I’ll
stop!! But were we told?
Who knows. But Google’s in on the game. I had a quick search
and found a simple recipe online for a roasted tomato and giant couscous Greek
salad (you can read the original here). I threw this together today, for a
healthy Saturday lunch to enjoy after a late morning run, and it tastes really good. Here’s the recipe in just
10 simple steps…
1.
Heat the oven to 180C, open a window and pour
yourself a refreshing drink.
2.
Halve your tomatoes and spread these about on a
baking tray. Drizzle with cooking oil, and season with salt and pepper.
3.
Carefully transport your tomatoes into the oven,
to roast for the next 25 minutes.
ChefBeHere Top
Tip: While they do, you can take a break for about a quarter of an hour. I used
this time to arrange some fresh flowers, a bunch of yellow spray carnations,
into assorted little make-do vases to sit around the house and brighten the place
up.
4.
Then, when your tomatoes have ten minutes to go,
set the kettle boiling and measure 200g couscous into a bowl. Add a pinch of
salt.
5.
Fill the bowl to the brim with boiling water,
then cover with a plate and leave the couscous for 5 minutes to cook.
6.
Once your couscous is cooked, drain, tip it into
a large mixing bowl and mix with the juice of your lemon and a glug of cooking
oil.
ChefBeHere Top Tip:
Giant couscous is cooked when each grain has grown to about the size of a bb
pellet or a Solero shot (remember those!).
7.
Then, safely take your tomatoes out of the oven
and turn this off. Tip them out into a bowl or onto a plate, so they can cool away
from the hot baking tray.
8.
Leave both your bowl of tomatoes and your big bowl
of couscous to cool to room temperature. This might take half an hour or so –
plenty of time to tackle some chores, or roll out your yoga mat.
9.
Once everything has cooled, tip your tomatoes into
the bowl of couscous along with a large handful of basil leaves – which you can
use your hands to tear up as you add to the bowl – and the feta cheese – crumble
this into the bowl with your fingertips.
10. Finally,
give everything a good stir together and you’re ready to go! Serve up, tuck in
or Tupperware for another day.
Food and flowers 😊 |
What do you think, readers? Does this sound do-able? You might struggle to locate giant couscous in a small shop (I got mine via an online food order from a large supermarket), but once you manage to find some then all the other ingredients are straightforward to source, and the steps of the recipe are easy to follow.
And, to me, this food tastes great! It looks good on the plate, with different colours mixing
together, like something you might order in a restaurant. And its strong taste
packs a punch with fresh cheese and tomato flavours… this dish makes for a
cracking lunch to visualise while you’re out pounding the pavement on a run! The
textures are all quite soft (which is perfect for me after dental drama this
week), but if you wanted more to chew on then you could throw in some nuts or
seeds, perhaps, for added crunch?
Readers, I hope you give this recipe a go. I do. As the food
is a treat to eat! And, if you have a try, please let me know how you get on in
the kitchen. Did you follow the steps okay? Did it turn out well? What did you
think of the taste?? Or, if you’re looking at this recipe, readers, thinking not in a million years… then shout out –
what is it that puts you off? Not sold on the concept of giant couscous? Or
does this just not look like something you’d eat?
Let rip with your thoughts on the recipe, readers, and perhaps
you can suggest more giant couscous recipes for me to try? I’m well stocked and
looking to experiment with this grain, so please do share if you have a favourite
recipe you can recommend! I hope to hear from you soon, readers, and hope you
have a truly wonderful time this weekend.
Chef safely,
Hayley