
Crispy Caper and Polenta Salad
Ok, let's get the humour about Northern Irish and Scottish people…

Homemade Alcoholic Ginger Beer
I have been mildly obsessed by ginger beer ever since I grew…
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Miss South2014-08-31 00:29:542014-10-24 01:45:08Slow Cooker Rabbit Stew
Dos and Doughnuts in the Kitchen
As I've mentioned in a few posts this summer, I haven't been…

Chocolate Cherry Ice Cream Float
I haven't been cooking very much this summer. Partly because…
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Miss South2014-08-11 00:17:202014-10-24 01:10:17Coffee Crème Caramel
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Miss South2014-08-03 00:08:032014-10-24 01:19:12Pineapple Sorbet
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Miss South2014-07-27 00:10:102014-10-24 01:18:31Cherry Brown Butter Froise
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Miss South2014-07-19 00:37:512014-10-24 01:17:40Homemade Mikado Biscuits
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Miss South2014-07-16 12:28:372014-10-24 01:17:10Watermelon Rind Pickles
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Miss South2014-07-13 00:27:172014-10-24 01:15:36A Savoury Cream Tea
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Miss South2014-07-06 00:16:472014-10-24 01:28:30Green Goddess Dressing
Salade Niçoise with guinea fowl eggs
/in Home-grown, Local, Seasonal/by Mister NorthTo be honest; until I started writing this post I didn’t know very much about guinea fowl (or guinea-fowl), never mind their eggs. I’ve bought guinea fowl on a few occasions, to make Ghanaian dishes like Nkatenkwan, as their flesh is almost gamey and really benefits from slow, moist, covered cooking methods. I also knew the bird originated in West African, hence their name, and have long been a favourite with chefs (Larousse suggests they’ve been domesticated since Roman times).
I’ve also spotted them pecking around farmyards on a few occasions, looking a little haughty and slightly out-of-place with their blue faces and wonderful op-art speckled plumage. Last week my friends from Porcus persuaded me to leave their farm with a selection of wonderful guinea fowl eggs (these are the same people who sated my quest to enjoy turkey eggs last year too)
So I came home with six speckly guinea fowl eggs, undecided on how best to use them. I’d been warned they had thick shells, which could prove a bit of a challenge to break through, but I had an extra pair of hands in the form of our mum who was visiting. A quick search on the web threw up very few recipes specifically for guinea fowl eggs, but a friend suggested making a niçoise salad. This proved to be an inspired recommendation, as the diminutive hard-boiled eggs (sized somewhat between a quail and a bantam egg) looked gorgeous nestled against the other ingredients. Not that we needed an excuse to enjoy a classic summer salad (even when the sun is somewhat lacking) which manages to combine some of our favourite family ingredients.
In this case I followed an Antony Worrall Thompson recipe from the BBC website, deviating a little from some other versions, but ticked all the boxes in terms of fresh flavours. I started by marinating the tuna steaks for an hour or so in the vinaigrette mix while prepping the veg. These and the other ingredients filled a large salad bowl. Once the tuna was sufficiently soused it got seared on a very hot ridged griddle, then rested gently.
Meanwhile we boiled the guinea fowl eggs for six minutes, then cooled them off in cold water. They proved quite difficult to peel: the shell was indeed tough, and the inner membrane was equally resistant. Eventually we managed to de-shell and slice them, and were rewarded with sight of bright yellow yolks. They looked wonderfully pretty set against the rest of the salad. Once they were in place the tuna steaks were added, everything was drizzled with the vinaigrette, and we sat down to eat.
The whole thing looked and tasted wonderful: salty, smooth, crisp, sharp and rounded flavours contrasted just as you’d expect a salade niçoise to do. The eggs were creamy and more flavoured than hen’s eggs. The final verdict: great salad, and really tasty wee eggs. If you’re lucky enough to find guinea fowl eggs, don’t pass up on the opportunity to enjoy their delights. Cracking!