16 February 2026

Clafoutis aux figues


Yesterday morning I was looking through our downstairs freezer where we keep things for long-term storage. I stumbled upon a plastic bag with 16 frozen figues in it. It was time to use them or lose them, so decided to make a fig clafoutis, a sort of crustless custard tart. Above left you see the figs once I thawed them and cut each one in half, and above left are the makings for the custard: milk, eggs, sugar, and flour.

What you do is mix together all the custard ingredients. You butter a baking dish and arrange the figs in a single layer. Then you pour the custard mix over them and put the dish into a hot oven and let it back until the custard sets up and starts to brown. Take it out of the over and sprinkle some slivered almonds and raw sugar over all that. Put it back into the hot oven and let it brown a little more. Serve it at room temperature or cold, spooning it out of the dish. I wouldn't try to unmould it.

15 February 2026

Flat-bean stir-fry with pork...

The last time I blogged about, or even made, an Asian-style stir-fry, unless I'm mistaken, was in October last year.
I made another one yesterday. It was about time.

The main vegetable in yesterday's stir-fry was haricots plats (in English "flat beans). They are a variety of string bean (haricots vert.) I also put in some onions and garlic, some red, green, and yellow bell peppers, and some mushrooms. The pork was a shoulder roast (a Boston butt) that I cut up into small pieces.

To season the stir-fry, I made a "wok sauce" — a mixture of soy sauce, oyster sauce, mirin (Japanese rice wine), black bean sauce, and hot red-pepper sauce (Tabasco, Texas Pete, or Portuguese piri-piri. Maybe other sauces too, but I kind of wing it when i make a wok sauce and decide by tasting it to see whether it needs more sweetness, more spiciness, or more soy. I like British HP sauce in it too.

13 February 2026

Sliced Brussels sprouts with lardons and beans

This is a recipe I found entirely by accident on the internet the other day. Credit goes to Jacques Pépin.

The first step is to trim and slice a pound of Brussels sprouts. The easy way to slice them is with the slicing blade on your food processor. You can drop six or eight sprouts in the processor's "feed tube". Then do another small batch. In just a few minutes all the sprouts are sliced. I rinsed sliced sprouts in cold water after slicing them and then let them drip-dry in a colander before cooking them in a skillet on the stove.

The second ingredient is meat of some sort, if you want it. I used French smoked-pork lardons. Diced cooked chicken would be a good substitute, as would diced cooked pork or veal. Sauté the meat in a skillet and then sauté the Brussels sprouts in the same pan, adding oil or some other fat to taste.

The third and last ingredient is a cup or two of cooked beans. I used canned flageolet beans in mine. Jacques used canned white beans in his. Red beans would be give the dish a nice color contrast. Lentils would be good, as would black-eyed peas, etc.

12 February 2026

'Tasha

This is a photo of Natasha, the Sheltie dog that we call 'Tasha. Her ninth birthday is coming up the week after next.

After posting yesterday about an omelette I made recently, I came across
this post about the same recipe from November 2025.