Monday, August 31, 2015

Lemon Rush



 
 
Not sure about everyone else, but I'm ready for the warmer weather to start. I've just about cooked everything in my winter repertoire and my taste buds are ready for a change! Is it just me or do we all seem to stick with the tried an tested recipes? I think it's a time/effort scenario. In winter if I can cook it in bulk and freeze leftovers I'm happy, or just throw everything in the pan and let it cook by itself. I'll sometimes try a new variation-but mostly it's the same dish just re-worked. Lamb shanks got a re-work this year. Traditionally I've gone the Italian route with a tomato base sauce, but this year I was into the Moroccan spices. You can find my recipe in list above or in a previous post here. The addition of dried apricots, prunes and chickpeas made for a nice change in many of the Moroccan dishes I tried, but the one I really loved was the preserved lemons. The sharp fresh flavour of the lemons was just so good. Sharp & fresh aren't usually words you associate with winter cooking. Anyway we have an abundance of lemons this year so I thought I'd give it a go and preserve some of our lemons.
This is a recipe based on the one in Stephanie Alexander's book "The Cooks Companion"
Preserved Lemons & Lemon Curd
 
 
Preserved Lemons

250g Coarse Kitchen Salt
10 Lemons, washed and cut into quarters
1 Bay Leaf
2-3 Cloves
extra lemon juice
 
Place a spoon full of salt into a sterilised jar (approx.1 litre capacity)
In a separate dish mix the lemons and salt. Stephanie suggested massaging the skin...I think this would have been easier before I'd cut the lemons.
Place the lemon quarters into the jar along with the bay leaf and cloves. Press down on the lemons as you go to release as much juice as possible. I found that squeezing each piece as I put it into the jar helped released more juice. Place any leftover salt into the jar along with the extra lemon juice. The idea is that the lemons are covered by the juice. I found that I was a little short on the juice so I topped it up with some boiling water. I also added 2 extra teaspoons of salt so that the brine remained salty enough.
In every recipe that I've read they always mention that if the lemons are not covered by the brine they can develop a white mould on them. Apparently its harmless-it just looks yuck!

You can probably see from the picture of mine that because the jar wasn't packed tight with lemons so when I added the extra water they floated to the top. I'm not sure if this is going to effect the end result-we'll just have to wait and see. I did get a tip from my friend Natalie from at Moore Farm Fresh Produce. She sliced her lemons so they sat flat in the jar. This allowed her to stack them up to the top of the jar. Clever! I think I'll try this next time.