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Saturday

Sunday Suppers

Sunday is my favourite day of the week, and it holds a very special place in my heart.  It's the one day of the week I feel like waking up late is justified, barely leaving the house it also completely justified, and eating far too much is pretty much mandatory.  This is the day where I get most joy out of cooking, I think, because I know that nothing special is needed.  On a Sunday, I don't think that anyone wants to eat anything too adventurous, but instead, something soothing.  What I want to eat on a Sunday is something that's going to help me recover from the weekend, fill my belly and send me to sleep.  Those Sunday suppers are an incredible treat, because I feel like rarely is eating so leisurely.  There's no rush, there's nowhere we need to head off to, except perhaps to watch the killing recorded from Saturday night, and a big meal in the early evening is the very best way to fortify yourself for the week ahead, and this is one of my favourite menus for such an evening.






Fish Pie
for four

500g smoked haddock
500g mixed seafood, cooked
a splash of white wine
2 bay leaves
500ml whole milk
50g butter
four tablespoons of plain flour
a handful of parsley, chopped
700g floury potatoes, peeled and in chunks.
some milk and butter

Heat the oven to 200°c.


Put the smoked haddock in a saucepan with the milk and bay leaves.  If the fish isn't covered, add some water until it is.  Simmer for a few minutes, until you can pull the flesh from the skin.  Take off the heat.

Cook the potatoes in a deep pan of salted water.  Simmer them until tender, drain in a colander and leave to steam for a good few minutes.  Mash with plenty of butter and a few tablespoons of the haddock cooking liquor.

Melt the 50g of butter in a big pan, stir in the flour and let it cook until it is slightly brown and nutty.  Add the wine and 500ml of the haddock cooking liquor.  Let it simmer, stirring regularly, for around ten minutes, until it coats the back of a spoon and doesn't taste floury.

Skin the haddock and add to the sauce with the seafood and the parsley.  Season with pepper and salt if it needs any.

Spoon into a oven proof dish, or a pie dish, or a big casserole pot, and layer the mash on top.

Bake for about fifty minutes, and serve with peas.






Apple Tart
enough for six

a 340g sheet of puff pastry
four apples, granny smith work well
a knob of butter, melted
a few spoonfuls of caster sugar

Heat the oven to 200°c.


Roll the pastry until it is really thin and use it to line a tart tin with a removable base.  Prick the bottom all over with a fork.

Peel and core the apples, then slice them thinly.  Lay them in concentric circles on the pastry.  Brush them all over with the melted butter and sprinkle them the sugar.

Bake for twenty minutes and serve, cream or ice cream is always good with this.