I
happened to watch a little bit of Saturday Kitchen the other week, and they
were raving on and on about Jersey Royals. To me potatoes, whether they’re from
the Basics range or Taste the Difference, taste pretty much the same though,
for aesthetic reasons, I do like it when they’re nice and yellow inside. Well
anyway Jersey Royals were on offer in Sainsbury’s so I decided to buy a bag and
use them to make the Chard and new potato curry (RC Veg, p.24). It was Theo’s
birthday last week and I thought it would make a nice Birthday tea (followed by
an M&S Lemon Tart). Although it was very easy finding Jersey Royals tracking
down some chard proved tricky. They certainly don’t stock chard in our
Sainsbury’s, so Tristan and I trekked down Mill Road on a mission.
I started at Al-Amin, the largest grocer’s on
Mill Road and infamous for its owner who ran for the position of Cambridge
University’s Chancellor when Sainsbury’s expressed an interest in the site
opposite (Lord Sainsbury was also running to be Chancellor and did, in the end,
win the majority of the votes), but the guy at the till clearly hadn’t heard of
the stuff. According to Wikipedia chard has a variety of names: Swiss chard, silverbeet, perpetual spinach, spinach
beet, crab beet, bright lights – but I’m pretty sure that it
wasn’t lurking with the spinach and lettuce with this name or any other in
Al-Amin, or indeed in Arjuna where they also sell a variety of greener than
green green veg.
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Garlic, chilli and ginger being after bashing |
Tesco doesn’t stock chard either – when you type it
into the search engine the website helpfully asks: do you mean ‘hard’? and
brings up a selection of Hard Skin and Nail Files and Hard Skin Remover – not quite
what I was looking for. So where can you buy the stuff? Well, certainly in
Waitrose where chard appears in their ‘Limited Selection’ range (chard is in
season in April and May so I suppose they might only sell it in those months.) With
Waitrose being so far away I ended up substituting chard for kale which Hugh himself
recommends. I don’t find kale all that interesting to eat but the dish was very
enjoyable. The potatoes were as yellow as the pudding to follow and all the
flavours came together in a very satisfying way. It was perhaps a bit too hot
for my liking so I’d use half a chilli next time rather than a whole one. I
would certainly try and make it with chard too as, having learned how
nutritious the stuff is, I am determined to find some!
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Tasty, though a little too hot |
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