7

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
100 gm cold butter, coarsely
chopped
1 leek, white part only,
thinly sliced
6 thyme sprigs, plus
1 tbsp thyme leaves
2 star anise
½ cinnamon quill
3 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1 litre (4 cups) chicken stock
800 gm parnsips (about 4 large),
cut into 1cm pieces
50 gm roasted hazelnuts
300 ml pouring cream
Toasted and buttered
sourdough, to serve

1 Heat half the butter in a large
saucepan over medium heat.
Add leek, thyme sprigs, star
anise and cinnamon, and cook,
stirring often, until leek is
softened (6-7 minutes). Add
two-thirds of the garlic and

300 gm thin dried rice noodles
1½ tbsp dark soy sauce
1½ tbsp fish sauce
2 tsp rice wine vinegar
2 tsp grated palm sugar
80 ml (⅓ cup) peanut oil
or other neutral oil
400 gm trimmed beef fillet,
thinly sliced
3-4 birdseye chillies, to taste,
finely chopped
3 garlic cloves, finely
chopped
1 bunch gai lan (Chinese
broccoli), stems finely
chopped and leaves torn
Crushed roasted peanuts
and lime wedges, to serve

1 Place noodles in a heatproof
bowl, cover with boiling water,
stand until soft (10-15 minutes),
then drain. Meanwhile, whisk
soy and fish sauces, vinegar,
palm sugar and 1½ tbsp water

Stir-fried beef and gai lan
with rice noodlesSERVES 4
We’ve used dried noodles in this rif on the Thai takeaway
favourite, pad see ew, but fresh rice noodles will make this
meal even faster to prepare. Stir-fry a couple of beaten eggs
with the noodles during the final step for a little extra heft.

in a small bowl to combine.
2 Heat 1 tbsp oil in a wok
over high heat, add half the
beef and stir-fry until browned
(1-2 minutes). Transfer to a plate
and repeat with another 1 tbsp
oil and remaining beef.
3 Heat 1 tbsp oil in wok,
add chilli, garlic and gai lan
stems, stir-fry until softened
(2-3 minutes), then add gai
lan leaves and stir-fry until just
wilted (1 minute). Transfer to
plate with beef.
4 Heat remaining oil in wok.
Add noodles and fry, without
stirring, until beginning to crisp
(1-2 minutes). Add sauce and
stir-fry to coat, and until sauce
reduces slightly (1 minute).
Add beef and gai lan, toss to
combine, top with peanuts and
serve with wedges of lime.

Parsnip soup with hazelnut
and thyme butterSERVES 4-6
This creamy soup is subtly flavoured with warming spices and
given texture with a nutty brown-butter topping. It’s worth making
a double batch and freezing extra for quick lunches.

cook, stirring continuously,
until fragrant (1 minute). Add
stock and parsnip, season to
taste and bring to the boil, then
reduce heat to medium and
simmer, covered, until parsnip
is very tender (15-18 minutes).
2 Meanwhile, cook remaining
butter in a small saucepan
until foaming and nut brown
(3-4 minutes), then stir in thyme
leaves and remaining garlic.
Transfer to a food processor
with hazelnuts and process
until nuts are coarsely chopped.
Season to taste.
3 Stir cream into soup, discard
thyme sprigs and spices, then
blend soup with a hand-held
blenderuntil very smooth.
Top with hazelnut butter and
serve with toasted sourdough.

60 GOURMET TRAVELLER

Free download pdf