Sunday, 12 July 2009

Why jacket potatoes are great

We haven't done any 'great' posts for a while, and this is a dish truly worthy of being described as 'great'.

The humble potato can be cooked in many many ways – mashed potato is the ultimate comfort food, and chips are phenomenal, but you can also boil, sauté and roast them. You can make thin french (or freedom) fries, or thick chip shop style chips, potato wedges, potato dauphinoise, potato salad – with seasoning, herbs and spices the sky really is the limit. And that’s before you even begin to consider the varieties of potato you can get – jersey royals, new potatoes, king edwards, maris pipers, anya’s – and those are just the few I know – according the British Potato Council there are thousands grown around the world, including 80 commercial varieties in Great Britain (I know – hilarious: and it was only set up in 1997, not, as I’d assumed seeped in some historical urgency, demonstrating the centuries old British love of the spud. No – this administration set it up and the next will probably abolish it. And then they wonder where political apathy stems from: success governments who piffle around the edges, political parties who cannot just agree on the need for some basic and important independent state funded organisations.)

Back to the matter at hand - why single out the humble jacket potato? Because it is, quite simply unbeatable. It’s a great hangover lunch. It’s good for an easy- yet filling- supper. how can anyone not enjoy a jacket spud??? But I think its quite a British way to eat a potato: my best mate said they were the one thing she missed whilst traveling. And the fillings: oh where do I start on the fillings?? Lets start simply and build it up:

  • Butter, salt and pepper – simple yet satisfying, and a great carb side with a steak.
  • Sour cream – very American, nice on its own, or again as a side.
  • Grated cheddar cheese is where the spud comes into its own: a meal within itself, you need nothing with this, great when you are getting over a tummy bug and need simple filling food.
  • Grated cheese and baked beans – oh how I love this filling. So quintessentially British. Who else would put baked beans into a baked potato fill it with cheese and squidge the lot together? My mouths watering already. This is often my hungover lunchtime choice.
  • Tuna (often with mayonnaise and sweetcorn) – nice – I find you have to be in the mood, and not too much mayo. Corn adds a nice sweeness.
  • Chilli or veggy chilli nice for dinner, particularly in the winter next to a roaring pub fire, with a big salad or some steamed veg and glass of red wine….
  • Broccoli and cheese (the kind of cheese you use changes the taste of this completely – mature cheddar is great, but a salty creamy blue cheese, like stilton is phenomenal) – an amazing summer supper, with a crisp green salad and cold glass of dry white wine. This is a firm fave with me and S this summer.
  • A nice spicy twist is to stir fried peppers and mushroom with chilli and spices, and grate some red Leicester cheese– split the potatoes, scoop out the inside leaving the ‘jackets’ to one side: mix it all together then carefully re-fill the jackets sprinkle some cheese on top then grill.

I won’t go on, but you get the idea – so many variations its too difficult to attempt to even list them all, but some others include garlic mushrooms, coleslaw, baked beans, gooey cheese like camembert, steamed green beans, stir fried veg, and many more classic combo’s such as cheese and sweetcorn, bacon and brie etc etc. you can mix it up and there are NO rules - just try different things and see what you like: most things taste better in a jacket potato.

“What kind of potato and how do I make this simple feast!?”

Choose the spud you want (the potato council has some ideas) and then stick them in the oven for as long as it takes to have crispy shells and soft fluffy insides. In my view, microwaved jacket potatoes are an abomination and should be banned.

Every mouthful of a good jacket potato is a joy - and that my friends, is why the jacket potato is great.

Monday, 6 July 2009

the best mum in the world!





left; here we are in the field behind the hotel where the flies attacked dhara.



right; mum and dhara painting their beautiful paintings.





talking about the vines, i had no idea how the grapes are farmed, was truly fantastic to hear so much from someone who knows so much!


Sunday, 5 July 2009

a belated birthday weekend for the best mum in the world

Last weekend we gave the supremely wonderful woman, our mother Surekha Vyas a very belated birthday present. She began the fun filled weekend on Friday night with a glass of gold champagne on arrival in st pancras. This was swiftly followed by a lovely picnic for me S and mum watching the weird and wonderful fous de basin . The next morning the sun was shining brightly, Roopa arrived early and off we went. The tomcat wasn’t very well so we took S’s car and went from London to kent to sussex to kent to sussex….and ended up at Carr Taylor vineyard in east sussex. We were taken on a tour of the vineryard, learnt lots about wine and then (our favourite bit) some wine tasting!! The wine was lovely, and it was interesting to talk about the different tastes (we didn’t all enjoy the same ones at all, but the one we all agreed one and I think we would all recommend is the carr taylor brut - third one down. Its crisp and quite dry with a very slight fruity finish. Yummy).

We then had a lovely big ploughman’s lunch and went on to do some art. The artist Katie Sollhub was great, and she took us through some different techniques which we all enjoyed trying out.

We purchased lots of wine (naturally- Vyas’s on tour etc etc) went to our hotel drank a bottle then ended the day with a wander round winchelsea (pretty but dull - see pictiure) and a big dinner.


The next was it was ridiculously sunny again, woke early and went to Rye – but the weather so gorgeous we ended up in Camber – golden sands and sunshine.

All in all a fantastic weekend (with thanks to Ben, Georgie, Katie and all those at Carr Taylor who helped make Saturday fab)

Roops – add some photos to this post?!

Monday, 25 May 2009

The best movie going experience ever...........



On Friday night we finally made it to the Inwood Theatre screening lounge, we saw Star Trek, which was a fun movie and does not require you to be a Trekkie fan to enjoy. However the real highlight of the night was the screening lounge, the best movie going experience ever! As W. pointed out, now that you have seen a movie this way, how can you go back to normal movie theaters? Just as an FYI we did have the front seat, and it was the best! So comfy, squishy, relaxing and fun. I am even more excited by the new Potter movie, in the hope that they show it here! Fingers crossed! Jigna

PS: Potter 6 was great at the Inwood!


Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Introducing Texans to hot tea, one by one


We are British and of Indian origin which means that our hot tea (with milk)/chai drinking is really rooted in our heritage, culture, background, basically in all that we are, (when I say we, here I mean my husband and I). When we arrived in Texas we were astonished to find that some people had never heard of drinking hot tea (with milk), imagine our shock, our horror! 

We have since introduced a few Texans to hot tea with milk (well, okay one). We switched cable/internet service providers, they had to come out to connect it all up and the nice guy that came out, entered our home just as the kettle was switched on (serendipity, happy coincidence, fate or kismet?). As he had never had a cup of hot tea (with milk), we offered him one and he accepted. It was a chilly day (yes they do happen in Dallas, once in while!) and so he really appreciated the hot drink. He really enjoyed it, and we polished off his cultural experience, by offering him a chocolate digestive - we showed him how to dunk. Jigna.

Monday, 4 May 2009

Vital cocktail information:

Vital cocktail information: please refer to Victoria Moore's article/blog on the Guardian website, thank you Ms Moore. Mmmmm could murder a G&T. I dunno why but the tonic water in the US just tastes funny, I have to get the imported expensive kind from "special" shops? Jigna 

Picture credit: screaming-eagles.com/ 2009/03/benny-and-the-nets

The politics of identity

I began to write a blog about, Sikh week at Texas colleges, as reported in the Dallas Morning News, a friend brought in the section for me, (surprisingly I am not a regular reader), it is a very interesting and revealing story. I think we can all applaud this effort to educate people.

I then started to think about this 
Cif (by Sunny Handal in the Guardian), regarding the politics of race and identity. I am concerned that often in our effort to reclaim,claim, explain,define etc our identities we distance ourselves from our shared humanity. This also coincides with my firmly held belief that I don't think we should be defined by just one aspect of our personalities. Whilst certain aspects of our identities may be more important to us or others in defining us, it is vital to look to ourselves as a sum of our parts rather then being defined by one characteristic, especially when you consider that the one characteristic, may be something that we have had no control over i.e. our race, gender, place of birth etc.

This leads me to another point after a certain age, religious identities are usually chosen, and so it is not the same as a racial or gender identity, which is something that you are born with.

I think that the differences do not have to mean "everything". Those differences can be what you pin your identity on or they could not be. Maybe that is a sign of a "progressive and open" society, that the differences I choose to identify myself with, are chosen by me and not enforced upon me.  Jigna