Thursday, March 21, 2013

Beef Wellington

So for Christmas (this is a great way to start a spring blog post), my Dad and I attempted Gordon Ramsay's Beef Wellington. Why post now? I said I would. Also, this would be delish at Easter.
Ramsay's Christmas dinner special is captivating. The dish seems complicated because there are a lot of steps. I suppose it is sort of complex, but not hard if you take one step at a time and keep your head about you in the face of pastry. You don't even have to make the pastry, just roll it.

Prior to pastry here's how it's laid out.
Undone
Inside you have your braised beef, which is then covered in mustard. Around that is the mushroom-spice mixture. The mushrooms are spread out over a blanket of prosciutto.
 
Tucked In
This is all prepared on a sheet of plastic wrap so it can be tightly wrapped and left to rest.
Piggy in a Blanket
After it's rested, remove the plastic. Roll out the pastry and wrap it up. Watch the Gordon Ramsay video 10 times to master his technique for scoring the top. Give up. Score it however and put it in the oven.
Meanwhile you can open presents. I mean, hunt for eggs.

Good Idea
 The most challenging part would be knowing when it was done. This wasn't my job so I have no helpful advice.
Pretty in Pink
I'm not sure if you can tell but it tastes really good. We served it with Indian style brussel sprouts, which are pictured here in all their neon glory.
If you add enough ingredients you can't even tell they're brussel sprouts!
Happy Easter Everyone!


Sunday, March 17, 2013

Head-bored

After years of living in my rented apartment like a squatter, I've finally decided to hang some things on the walls. Previously the only reason I hung pictures on the wall was because they didn't fit in the closet. It is not that we don't like where we live, or think that we will be leaving shortly. I have never decorated it because it's not the sort of place you would want to decorate.
One day, probably a  Friday, I decided to Make an Effort. I wanted a headboard, I wanted a project and I didn't want it to cost a lot.
We went to the home reusable store and bought some ceiling tiles. Not just any ceiling tiles. These were from Jasper block, a 100 year old building. A piece of local history!
Covered


I had to get the paint off and enlisted unsuspecting relatives to make the job easier. I used a gel paint remover and a plastic spatula.
Naked
The colour underneath is beautiful. I would love to hang these against a red wall. Unfortunately my walls are white. I spray painted the tiles copper. The original plan was to wipe them with a dark brown, over top of the copper to give them more depth. Then I just wanted them up and was too impatient to follow through.
Oooh


Links
http://www.homereusables.com/dev/