Tag Archives: cambridge

Plate Lickers Supper Club #2 date announced…

We enjoyed our first Supper Club experience so much that we’re back for more!

Ivana & I have been busy planning and have found an exciting new secret venue to house the next Plate Lickers Supper Club, which I can now announce will take place on Friday 13th July! (luckily neither of us are superstitious 😉

This time we’ll be serving up a 5 course Middle Eastern inspired menu including a welcome drink.

A supper club is a very sociable way of dining with everyone sat together on big table and sharing dishes so feel free to come with friends or alone, either way you’ll be warmly welcomed and made to feel at home!

The evening will start at 7.30pm with a welcome drink and canapes and we will begin the meal at 8pm.

Places are limited so to reserve yours just drop an email to platelickersanonymous@gmail.com with your names and any allergies or dietary requirements you have.

There is a suggested donation of £30 and we invite you to BYO along with a big appetite.

Our top secret location in central Cambridge will be shared with attendees just a couple of days before the event.

If for any reason you need to cancel, please let us know as far in advance as possible so that we can offer your place to somebody else & save on food waste.

You can see my write up of our last event here and can follow the chat on twitter #platelickers 

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An evening of swine & dine…

Last week my belief in Cambridge as a foodie destination increased tenfold. I think it will always remain in London’s shadow to a certain extent but with coffee scene really taking off, new supper clubs and pop up events being set up and the standard of food increasing across the board from pubs to fine dining establishments, we’re heading in the right direction. Being one of the food obsessed inhabitants and part of the Twitter community, I’m very aware that Cambridge folk definitely have the hunger for more!

I was very lucky to secure a place at a ‘Flying Visits’ event hosted by Alimentum and organised by Dingley Dell Pork. This was the 3rd of these special events, celebrating all things pig! I only discovered it a mere 24 hours beforehand and had no idea what to expect…

I arrived at Alimentum and was promptly welcomed with this exciting looking cocktail…

It was created by Joe Tivey of 12A Member’s Club and was entitled ‘If Pigs Could Fly Across the Pond’ which hints at it’s UK and US inspirations. It was made with Four Roses Bourbon that had been infused with maple syrup and smoked bacon (they even got pig into the drinks, you just wait until dessert!) and then smoked with hickory and applewood smoke. It was served on the rocks with a squirt of Aspalls Cider foam and a spoon. I had absolutely no idea how I was supposed to tackle it, so I tucked away my pride and asked someone. Apparently the spoon was there to taste the Aspalls foam but after that we were encouraged just to sip as normal. I’m not really a Bourbon drinker, but this combination worked very well indeed! 

Not only did we have a 5 course meal to look forward to, the team had also devised a wine to match the each course…what a treat!

There were boards of canapés doing the rounds…

Cider jelly and smoked bacon on toast, shortcrust pastry topped with pulled pork, red onion chutney & apple puree and how could anyone resist a delicious little quail scotch egg! (served with Perlette d’Abbaye Brut, Rhone Valley, France, NV). They were the creations of James Drury and Rachel Speak, two students from the Colchester Institute, who had won the chance to create and serve their canapés as part of the ‘A Passion to Inspire’ competition

Glasses were clinked and our attention was directed at Mark from Dingley Dell Pork, who introduced the evening. We also heard from Bob Waller of Freedom Foods and received a very interesting butchery master class from Direct Meats…

I eat a lot of pork but if you’d presented me with a whole animal and asked me to cut it up into well known joints, I’m ashamed to admit that I wouldn’t have much of a clue. Luckily there weren’t any squeamish people in attendance, we all remained upstanding and were ushered through to the restaurant for dinner.

I was sat on a table with Freedom Food afficionado, Bob Waller, and spared no time in grilling him on the subject. However, I took a few minutes first to crack into these delicious mini sage loaves and delicate milk loaf…

I find the labelling of meat in supermarkets a bit of a minefield and managed to put my foot in my mouth straight away by asking Bob if Freedom Foods classification was the step down from free range. Bob explained that Freedom Food status can be awarded to meat across the board from Supermarket own brands to free range but by having the Freedom Foods symbol on their packaging it means that the farmers comply with the minmum levels of animal welfare set out by Freedom Foods. He likened it to Fairtrade and used the analogy of fairtrade chocolate, which could vary from Cadbury’s to Thornton’s or Co-op.

So enough of my (w)offal (sorry I couldn’t resist a meat related pun). The first course presented to us was crispy pig’s head with garden vegetable salad and almonds by Eric Snaith of Titchwell Manor (served with Saint Mont Blanc, Andre Daguin, Gascogny, France, 2008)

We found out that the white blobs were almond oil balls, and had a very unique texture. I loved this dish, the pigs head was unbelievably tasty and the salad so fresh and vibrant. 

Next we had pork belly with carrots, liquorice, sweet cicely and lemon verbena by Russell Bateman, Colette’s at The Grove (served with Pinot Gris, Domaine Materne Haegelin, Alsace France, 2010 – an amazing wine, it won the place of my favourite for the night!)…

Fresh liquorice was grated onto our dishes at the table, which I thought was a great finishing touch! We identified the lemon verbena to be the white powder on top of the pork…on it’s own it was very unusual but eaten with all of the other components it really came alive.

During the meal there was live footage being streamed from the kitchen onto televisions in the restaurant so we could see exactly what was going on…

The next course was  called ‘Ham, Egg and Cheeks’ by Ross Pike and Madalene Bonvini-Hamel from The British Larder, Suffolk, who hosted the last Flying Visit (served with Toscana Bianco IGT, I Veroni, Tuscany, Italy, 2011)…

 

I’m not usually a great fan of savoury jelly but was pleasantly surprised by how tasty it was. There were nuggets of black pudding in amongst the pigs head and knuckle terrine and the pea shoots as an accompaniment were amazing!

Next up was Alimentum’s owner Mark Poynton’s creation…hay smoked pork loin with turnip, apple and jack by the hedge (served with Huaquen Reserva, Pinot Noir, Curico, Chile, 2009)…

I made the mistake of diving straight in for a taste of the lurid green concoction, which as suspected was the jack by the hedge. It was incredibly bitter, but as with the previous dish, when eaten with all of the other components, worked really well! No sooner had my neighbour asked the waiter to describe jack by the hedge, when Mark himself appeared at our table to describe it as a herb not unlike clover but on a longer stem, easily forageable in the English countryside. It’s true…you learn a new thing everyday!

Predictably perhaps, I’d been really looking forward to the dessert of peanut, strawberry and crispy pork shoulder created by Michelle Gillott, chocolatier (served with Coteaux Du Layon, Vielles Vignes, Loire Valley, France, 2009)…

The pork shoulder had been marinated in fish sauce then left to dry before being deep fried and placed atop the delicious strawberry sorbet.

Every single course had been so well thought out by a very talented team of chefs…

It was a great evening and a true celebration of everything great about pigs and pork! A high standard has been set and if we can manage a few more foodie events like this, London had better watch out…Cambridge is hot on it’s heels!

To keep up with future events you can follow Flying Visits on Twitter @FlyingVisits

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Afternoon Tea…we won’t let this rubbish weather stop us!

It appears that the sun is being a little shy in getting his hat on this year, but that’s not going to stop us hardy Cambridge folk having some afternoon tea fun! I’ve blogged previously (here) about my exciting collaboration with Cambridge Hen Party and Let’s Go Punting as their afternoon tea provider. 

This weekend, despite some sketchy weather conditions, a bride to be and her hens tucked into afternoon tea in the sheltered haven of the gorgeous converted barn at The Punter on Pound Hill in Cambridge. It was the perfect setting, I absolutely love their collection of mismatched furniture and quirky decor. I took a few minutes before the ladies arrived to take a few snaps…

I got another chance to give my collection of mismatched crockery an outing and made sure no place setting was the same 🙂 …

I served up delicate finger sandwiches, mini Devonshire scones with jam and cream, gooey brownie squares…

and luscious lemon drizzle cake with lemon curd buttercream icing…

These mini milk bottles are so adorable I couldn’t resist serving the milk in them…

to accompany tea in my favourite teapot collection…

If you’re interested in booking an afternoon tea and punting package drop Caroline an email on info@cambridge-hen-party.co.uk for hen parties or info@letsgopunting.co.uk for non hen parties (boys, you are by no means excluded from enjoying afternoon tea :).

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Just over a week ago I was invited to the opening party of ‘Hunt & Darton Cafe’ a pop-up cafe and live installation performance art project. It’s one of eight commissions thought up by members of  Live Art Collective East, taking advantage of unusual spaces and places in East Anglia as part of the Cultural Olympiad. I didn’t know what to expect but was very tickled by the whole project…Hunt & Darton are extremely funny ladies. I took a few photo’s of the things that had me chuckling…

It’s a fully functioning cafe with a witty, tongue in cheek twist, definitely worth a visit. 

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13/05/2012 · 4:39 pm

Plate Lickers Anonymous…

For the last few weeks, myself and Ivana (Miss Igs) have been in cahoots, planning our very first Supper Club in Cambridge!

We’ve been dying to shout about it but have been holding back, that is, until now! We’re both extremely passionate about cooking and decided that there was no better way to indulge our passions than to invite a group of people who love food to join us for a 5 course meal in a secret location.

Our first event on Saturday 19th May will be an Eastern European feast, inspired by our Bosnian (Ivana) & Polish (Me) roots. So expect a hearty meal…

We’ve found a gorgeous location just a stones throw from the City Centre, which will be disclosed a couple of days beforehand.

A Supper Club is a very sociable event and you’ll all be sat together so it’s equally fine to come alone or with friends.

Places are limited, so if you’d like to join us drop us an email to PlateLickersAnonymous@gmail.com with your name and any dietary requirements (we’ll do our best to accommodate you although if you’re allergic to potatoes it might be tricky ;).

The evening will kick off at 7.30pm with a welcome drink and canapes. There is a suggested donation of £27 and we wholeheartedly encourage you to BYO and a healthy appetite! 

Further details along with the secret location will be sent out to you a couple of days beforehand but spaces are limited so don’t prevaricate, to secure your place please get in touch asap.

If at any point you need to cancel, please give us as much notice as possible so that we can offer your place to others and can make sure we don’t waste any food.

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On a Cambridge mission…

Having lived in London for 5 years, I’ve been completely and utterly spoilt by the food options available to me. With even more exciting eateries opening by the minute I sometimes feel completely over stimulated and that there’s just not enough time in the day or pennies in my bank account to humour my constant hunger for exciting food!

At the end of last year I moved back to my hometown of Cambridge. It’s so easy to take familiar places for granted and not actually SEE what’s just on your doorstep, which is a travesty when it’s as beautiful as this…

In the few months that I’ve been back I’ve made it my mission to re-discover Cambridge, to look up at my surroundings instead of being on a pavement pounding mission and to seek out the little gems that may not be glaringly obvious! Cambridge is a mecca for camera wielding tourists, who mostly annoy the s**t out of me, but who also make me even more determined to shun the mainstream and to discover places off the beaten track. These are some of my findings…

I recently went to my first Cambridge supper club: Saucepan & Suitcase Secret Suppers run by the lovely Francesca, who welcomed me very warmly into her home and introduced me to Tuscan cuisine. The highlight of the evening for me, were these delicious malfatti…or as I prefer to think of them, naked ricotta and spinach ravioli, no pasta in sight!… 

I joined a Book and Bake club, which as the name suggest is all about books…and baking. Each month we choose a fiction book to discuss and a cookery book, from which we choose something to bake. Then we get together to chat and eat…perfect!…

I’ve found my new favourite restaurant, which very jammily is a hop, skip and jump from my front door…Bibimbap House. A Korean restaurant specialising in bibimbap, literally meaning ‘mixed meal’. There are just 7 options on the menu, great for an indecisive diner like me. I opted for this, the pork bulgogi bibimbap… 

When it arrived at the table, the centrepiece, a boiling hot stoneware bowl, was still sizzling away. I wasn’t sure where to start or how to tackle such a meal as there were so many exciting parts to it, so I asked the lovely owner for advise. Unless she was just humouring me, it didn’t sound like there were any hard and fast rules involved…so I just got stuck in, using my chopsticks to mix everything in the large bowl together, pouring over lashings of their AMAZING homemade soy sauce, nibbling on the cold side dishes and pausing for a miso soup break every now and again. It was so delicious that I didn’t want it to end, so delicious, in fact, that I’ve already been back within a week…

I have also made the acquaintance of my friendly local purveyor of wine, Cambridge Wine Merchants, who also do a great range of beer. I went in recently with a yearning for a Brewdog 5am Saint ’the holy grail of red ales’, unfortunately they’d sold out but luckily for me had just had a delivery of Moor’s Revival…

It’s just what it says on the bottle, ‘an immensely hoppy and refreshing pale ale’ full of citrussy, grapefruit zinginess. Now that they’ve proven their good taste, I will most definitely be returning for more beer tip offs.

These are just a few of the Cambridge gems that I wanted to share, there are many more to come and I’m looking forward to discovering them!

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My first stint at FoodCycle Cambridge…

I recently discovered FoodCycle, an amazing nationwide organisation dedicated to tackling the issues of food waste and food poverty. They collect donations of surplus food from supermarkets and local businesses, which would otherwise be thrown away and, in their own words, ‘empower local communities to set up groups of volunteers’ to prepare healthy, nutritious meals on a regular basis for those in need in the community. However, FoodCycle isn’t exclusive, the food is offered to anyone and everyone, a £2 donation is welcome from those who can afford it. I had a look at the website for Cambridge’s FoodCycle hub, saw a call for volunteers on twitter and decided to offer my services!

So, yesterday morning I defrosted my bike saddle and headed to the kitchens of St Pauls Church in Cambridge to meet Jen, the lady leading the cooking team for the day. I was the first to arrive and found Jen unpacking that days donated food. The food is collected the night before, then the coordinator devises a menu using the available ingredients. In this case, when life gives you a huge pile of leeks, an insane amounts of bananas and a selection of root vegetables, you make…

After a cup of tea and a chat with the rest of the food prep team, amongst whom, were fellow Cambridge food bloggers Miss Igs and Sue Flay of The Secluded Tea Party, we set to work…

The soup was made up of carrots and broccoli…

with a dash of cream and a sprinkle of paprika…

I was in charge of the main course along with Miss Igs. We were using Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s recipe for roasted pale roots crumble as a starting point but throwing in a bit of artistic licence on ingredients. We chopped everything into similar size pieces and put them into large baking trays…

Then made up a dressing of honey, mustard, oil, rosemary, salt and pepper and got our hands dirty to make sure everything was well coated…

We then popped them in the oven for 45 minutes, gave them a good old mix up and popped them back in for another 20 minutes…

At which point they were looking and smelling delicious…

Miss Igs toasted and chopped some walnuts, which we sprinkled over the roasted veg along with a drizzle of single cream…

We then covered the whole tray in a crumble topping made of oats, grated cheese, breadcrumbs and thyme…

After 20 more minutes in the oven it looked like this…

We served it up with cheesy leeks…

Apparently bananas feature quite regularly on the FoodCycle menu due to the fact that they can become overripe quite quickly making them unsalable. Jen encouraged us to come up with an idea for pudding as banana based inspiration was running a little dry. I’d stashed a recipe for caramelised banana upside down cake in my memory banks but for the life of me couldn’t remember where I’d seen it. But with a little help from Uncle Google I found this recipe. Emily, who was in charge of pudding chopped the bananas, laid them in the bottom of a baking tray and drizzled them with a mixture of melted butter and dark brown sugar…

She made up a banana sponge batter, which she poured over the top…

It then went into the oven and we waited nervously for 40 minutes to see whether our experiment had worked. Making something like this wouldn’t usually be so nervewracking but scaling a normal recipe up to this huge size is a bit of a new experience for me. We needn’t have worried though, it came out of the oven smelling delicious with gorgeous puddles of caramel seeping up the edges of the tin…

The bananas were gorgeously sticky and sweet and the delicately spiced sponge was light and moist…

I think we can say that it was a great success…

When all the cooking was done and dusted it was serving time. A second team of volunteers had the dishing up and serving covered and we were given the chance to sit down with the FoodCycle beneficiaries and enjoy the fruits of our labour…

I thoroughly enjoyed my FoodCycle experience, not only did I get a chance to meet like minded foodies, but I got to spend a morning doing what I love best and all for a good cause! I’ll definitely be signing up for another session soon. If you’re interested in volunteering there’s more information on their Facebook page here.

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My Afternoon Tease debut in Cambridge…

This weekend was a momentous one for me…I ran my first ‘Afternoon Tease’ cake stall at the Mill Road Winter Fair in Cambridge. It was the culmination of a lot of hard work, 15 solid hours of baking, quite a few sleepless nights and endless list writing, but I managed to pull this out of the bag…

I chose to make my favourite selection of goodies that I’ve blogged over the last year and a half, here…coconut macaroons, banana pecan fudge loaf,chocolate orange cupcakes, lebkuchen, sticky lime and coconut drizzle loaf, sticky toffee cupcakes, chocolate brownies.

In the calm before the storm, I nervously wondered whether the good people of Cambridge would actually buy my cakes…

I’m very chuffed to say that everything sold like proverbial ‘hot cakes’ and I was cleared out well before the end of the fair.

One of my bestsellers on the day were the Stollen Buns…

To make them you need…

500g Strong white bread flour

3tbsp light muscovado sugar

7g sachet fast-action yeast

3tsp ground mixed spice

1tsp salt

85g butter

200ml milk

1tbsp black treacle

2tbsp brandy

2 eggs

2tbsp sunflower or vegetable oil

250g mixed sultanas, raisins, peel and glace cherries (I used Sainsburys Taste the Difference Armagnac soaked fruit)

Zest of 1 orange and 1 lemon

400g marzipan

A handful of flaked almonds

For the syrup…

50g icing sugar, sifted

4tbsp hot water

This might sound like it’s going to be a long winded, tricky recipe but although you do need to set aside some time for letting it rise etc, it’s pretty low maintenance and I promise you…it’s worth it!

Mix together the flour, sugar, yeast, spice and salt in a large bowl. Rub the butter in with your finger tips until it has the consistency of crumbs and there aren’t any lumps of butter left.

The recipe I was using said to warm the milk, treacle and brandy in a saucepan, making sure it’s warm, not hot before adding 1 beaten egg and the oil. However, as I was using fruit already soaked in Armagnac, I omitted the brandy at this stage.

Add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients and leave to one side for 10 minutes before giving it a quick knead on a floured surface. Pop it back in the bowl, cover it and leave it to rise until it has doubled in size.

Now roll the dough out to A4 size, scatter over the dried fruits and zests and knead until they are evenly distributed through your dough. Be prepared for raisins to fling themselves liberally around your kitchen! 🙂

Roll the dough into an 50 x 15cm oblong and dampen around the edges with some water…

Roll the marzipan into a 50cm long sausage and place along the middle of your dough. Roll the dough around it and pinch the final edge to seal it so that your buns don’t unravel in the oven.

Preheat the oven to 200 degrees.

Slice the dough sausage into 14, discarding the very end pieces. Place your slices on a couple of baking sheets lined with greaseproof paper, with plenty of space between them…

Re-cover them and leave them to rise until plump and pillowy.

Beat the remaining egg with 1tbsp milk and use to glaze the buns. Finally, sprinkle them with flaked almonds and then put them in the oven for 15 minutes.

Whilst they’re cooking mix the icing sugar with hot water to make the syrup. Paint this over them as soon as you take them out of the oven…

Then make a cup of tea and then sit down an savour!

I really enjoyed being part of such a lovely event, meeting so many nice people and receiving some great comments and feedback. Cambridge hasn’t seen the last of the ‘Afternoon Tease’…I’ll be back!

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Yesterday I savoured brunch at Bills in Cambridge. The food was amazing, I’d even say it was worth putting up with slow service and surly staff for. Praise indeed coming from the most impatient person in the world!

I had the veggie breakfast with a twist…poached eggs, mushrooms, guacamole, sweet chilli sauce & toast with a cheeky side of sausage and bacon! controversial 😉

In summary…great food but don’t do if you aren’t prepared to wait for it.

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13/11/2011 · 9:07 pm

Today I’m celebrating the resurrection of a Cambridge institutionFitzbillies is (un)officially open!

This morning I hot-footed it down to Trumpington Street to purchase some of their infamous sticky chelsea buns.

Thanks have to got to Tim Hayward and his family for bringing back a much loved place and….doing it so well! mmmm

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20/08/2011 · 12:00 pm