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Miss South2010-05-23 21:27:152010-05-30 10:26:39Dandelion Fritters
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Miss South2010-05-21 13:55:402014-11-04 11:18:55Chorizo Colombiano
Asparagus and Hollandaise sauce…heaven on a plate!
It is of course asparagus season right now here in Britain…
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Miss South2010-05-16 17:31:592010-05-19 17:59:11Buffalo Soldier
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Miss South2010-05-10 15:52:532010-05-10 16:37:10Vive Colombia!
Green wet garlic, red meat and blue cheese…
As part of Miss South's trip north at the end of March I…
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Miss South2010-05-03 15:26:022010-05-03 15:54:21Invisible Food Walks
Apply wild garlic and a steak to the heart…
Keeping it fresh and local with a rather decadent mid-week…
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Miss South2010-04-29 14:24:102010-05-08 20:53:31Veally good…
Frittata? That’d be lovely, ta…
"Frittata, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul.…

Little Lamb… and huge portions
A rare opportunity to have dinner with my mum in London beckoned…
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Miss South2010-04-21 12:41:142010-04-26 17:07:00Brassica Tacks
Rhubarb and custard tarts
/in baking, Favourites, Ingredients, Kitchen stars and standbys, Recipes, Seasonal, Sweet/by Miss SouthI love custard of any description. Whether it be Bird’s or Ambrosia’s Devon kind or fresh stuff poured over a crumble or a quivering baked version, I love custard. Sadly it has never reciprocated that love and everytime I’ve tried to make it, there have been problems. It’s split, ended up scrambled, been full of lumps and the packet version has resembled concrete. I’ve always thought if I wrote a book about my cooking exploits, it would be called ‘Custard is my Nemesis.’
Few things go better with custard than rhubarb so when I finally got my paws on some proper Yorkshire forced rhubarb for the first time this season (even though Mister North has been cooking up a storm with it for a while now this winter.) I decided that come hell or high water, this weekend would be the time that I tamed custard, even if it meant the kind of mayhem in the kitchen that accompanied the cartoon duo of the same name.
I’ve been eyeing Dan Lepard’s Bay Custard Tarts forever, even having cut the recipe out of the Guardian and kept it when it first appeared several years ago and thanks to the clear and foolproof instructions in Short and Sweet, I knew this was the place to start with custard, but decided to put a seasonal twist on it by layering the baked custard with a topping of tangy rhubarb curd, partly because it would no doubt be delicious, but because it might hide a custard malfunction…
I made the tart cases from scratch using Dan’s sweet shortcrust recipe and tips on pastry handling. The first time I made pastry it was exceptionally good and I wondered why people worry about it, but every subsequent time has been a mess of varying levels. I decided to try and teach myself better pastry skills while I was mastering custard, but you could just use shop bought if that’s easier. But do follow Dan’s tip to only blind bake the cases for 15 minutes and undercook them slightly to allow the custard to ‘stick’
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