She’s been
blogging, tweeting and writing cookbooks for nearly a decade now, giving us
genius tips for saving money and reducing food waste, including making soda
bread out of sour milk, or fashioning a delicious meal out of broccoli stalks.
There’s
always been an audience for her cheap and delicious recipes, but with the
cost-of-living crisis growing, it feels like there’s more of a need than ever.
Her latest
cookbook is called Thrifty Kitchen, featuring over 120 wallet-friendly recipes
– including pear and cinnamon buns, potato and egg curry, corned beef chilli
and mincemeat bread pudding.
Risotto
with peas and lettuce
Ingredients:
(Serves 4)
300g rice
1tbsp oil
or baking spread
2 stock
cubes dissolved in 750ml boiling water or 750ml chicken or vegetable stock
2tbsp lemon
juice
200g frozen
peas
A pinch of
pepper
¼ head of
lettuce
Method:
1. Grab a
wide, shallow-based non-stick saucepan and pop it on the hob. Shake in your
rice and add the oil or baking spread, then turn up the heat to gently toast it
at the edges for a minute or two.
2. Add a
splash of stock, and stir well to stop the rice from sticking and burning. Add
a splash more. When it has been absorbed, add a splash more, and repeat until
two-thirds of the stock has been used. This may seem laborious, but to me it is
one of the joys of making a risotto; the ability to stand still for 20 minutes
and lose myself in the methodical stirring and rhythmic hypnosis of a
repetitive, gentle task. When the rice is starting to swell and almost all of
the stock is absorbed, splash in the rest, along with one tablespoon of lemon
juice.
3. Add the
peas and pepper, and stir well. Finely slice the lettuce and set to one side;
you will fold this through (gently stir it in) right at the very end, as do it
any earlier and you will end up with a soggy rotten mess!
4. When the
risotto is finished – that is, the rice is soft and sitting in a sticky, creamy
liquid, bejewelled with bright green peas – remove it from the heat. Gently
fold in the lettuce to wilt it, dash over the rest of the lemon juice and an
extra smattering of pepper, and serve immediately for best results.
To keep:
Leftovers will keep in the fridge for up to three days, but because of the rice
content must be cooled completely before refrigerating and then be reheated
until piping hot. This can also be frozen for up to three months, then defrosted
and heated until piping hot
Veg-peel
fritters
Ingredients:
(Serves 4)
400g mixed
root vegetables and peels
1 large
onion
1 egg
3tbsp flour
70g cheese,
grated
Salt and
black pepper, to taste
Oil, for
frying
Method:
1. First,
make sure your peels are clean – if they’re a bit mucky, bring a pan of water
to a vigorous boil, salt it very generously, and drop them in for a minute or
two to blanch and loosen the soil. Drain and spread onto a clean, flat tea
towel, and rub dry vigorously to remove any stubborn bits. Plunge straight into
a bowl of cold water to stop them from cooking any further – you don’t want
them to be too far gone in comparison to your veg, else the fritters will cook
unevenly.
2. Finely
slice your peels, and grate the veg. Then peel and finely chop the onion and
place it with the veg and peels into a large mixing bowl.
3. Crack in
the egg and mix well, then add the flour and cheese and mix well to combine. If
it needs a hand sticking together, add a tablespoon of cold water and mix
again.
4. Heat a
little oil in a frying pan, and add a tablespoon of the fritter mixture.
Flatten with the back of a spoon – the thinner they are, the faster they will
cook and the crisper they will be. Fry on each side until golden and crisp.
Remove from the pan and keep warm.
5. Repeat
until all the fritter mixture has been used. To keep each batch warm as you
cook the rest, put them in the oven, heated to the lowest temperature.
6. I serve
these for breakfast with sausages and a poached or fried egg, as a sneaky pile
of vegetables and vitamins to start the day, hidden in a tasty Jackson
Pollock-esque hot and crispy disguise.
To keep:
These freeze brilliantly and can be kept for up to three months – you can
freeze either the fritter mixture or the cooked fritters. Allow to defrost
completely in the fridge for a few hours before cooking or heating through to
serve.
Apple
Bircher
Ingredients:
(Serves 2)
1 medium
apple
50g
porridge oats or muesli
150ml milk
75g natural
yoghurt
Nuts or
seeds, to top (optional)
Method:
1. First
grate your apple coarsely, including the skin, into a decent-sized mixing bowl.
2. Add your
oats or muesli, then the milk and yoghurt, and stir everything well to combine.
Divide it between two pots or jars and top with the nuts or seeds, if you have
any to hand. Pop the pots in the fridge overnight, or for four hours, and enjoy
cold.
To keep:
These can be made up to two days in advance but I wouldn’t recommend leaving
them any longer than that due to the fresh apple used, as it will start to go
brown and not look very appetising. The recipe is not particularly amenable to
freezing due to the dairy content. It will freeze and thaw if you’re determined
to do so, but may split in the thawing process. If this happens, it’s still
fine to eat, just give it a really vigorous stir to bring it back together.
Thrifty
Kitchen by Jack Monroe is published by Bluebird, Photography by Patricia Niven.
Available now.