Tag: good

Gordon Ramsay & Holly: L.A. Shoppers “Gordon Ramsay…

Gordon Ramsay & Holly: L.A. Shoppers

“Gordon Ramsay and his 12-year-old daughter Holly went do do some shopping at The Grove in Los Angeles, Calif. on Monday (April 8). The celebrity chef held her hand while she carried her Topshop purchases.

Ramsay – who also has Matilda, 10, Megan, 14, and 12-year-old Jack tweeted a photo of the girls at a restaurant the next day.

He wrote: “Dinner with 3 tough food critics @Mozza de

In an interview last year the Hell’s Kitchen star talked about parenting the children with wife Tana.

“I had a pretty dour upbringing, so having children gives you that chance to reposition the family memoir. I remember Nigella Lawson saying to me that she was never going to leave her kids anything in her will – they’ve got to work for it and they’re going to get nothing until they’re 30 or 35. The pressure on them today is so hard.”

He added, “I like the responsibility of having kids and I think being a good parent is something you need to work at.I think that’s where Tana almost comes into a league of her own, because she’s so focused. We break them down into four little individuals as opposed to categorizing them like, ‘You’ve all got to do this’ or ‘You’ve all got to do that’.”

Gordon Ramsay’s Cottage Pie With Guinness Recipe To serve…

Gordon Ramsay’s Cottage Pie With Guinness Recipe

To serve 6 you will need:

a large pie dish
2 tbsp olive oil
900g good quality (low fat) minced beef
sea salt and black pepper
3 medium onions, peeled and finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
a few thyme sprigs, leaves only
2 nice fat plum tomatoes, chopped
2 tablespoons of tomato purée
330ml bottle of Guinness
5 tablespoons of Worcestershire sauce
300ml chicken stock (I used fresh home made chicken stock) but you can use a Knorr stock cube
1 kg floury potatoes, such as Maris Piper or King Edward, peeled and roughly cubed
50g butter a handful of grated cheddar, plus extra for the top of the pie
1 large egg yolk
plus a good handful of cooked peas and carrots if you fancy

How to do it:

Put a large frying pan over a high heat and add a thin layer of olive oil. Season the mince with salt and pepper and fry, stirring, in two or three batches, until nicely browned.

Drain off any fat, although you shouldn’t really have worth worrying about if you used good quality mince.

Put the cooked mince into a bowl and set aside.

In the same pan you just used, put it over a medium-high heat and add a little olive oil. When it’s nice and hot, fry the onions, with the garlic for a few minutes until until soft and golden.

Now add the thyme and cook for another minute or so.

Add the browned mince, tomatoes and tomato puree. Stir constantly for 4-5 minutes.

Add the Guinness and Worcestershire sauce and boil until the liquid has reduced by half. Pour in the stock and return to the boil.

Turn the heat down and simmer for 20-25 minutes, by which time the mixture should be lovely and thick and glossy.

Continue to simmer for another 5-10 minutes if it doesn’t seem quite thick enough. Once done remove it from the heat.

Preheat the oven to 180C/350F or Gas 4

Meanwhile, add the potatoes to a pan of salted water, bring to the boil and cook until tender. Drain and return to the hot pan for 15 seconds or so, to dry out, then take off the heat.

Pass the potatoes through a potato ricer back into the pan or mash smoothly. Mix through the butter, cheese and egg yolk.

Taste and adjust the seasoning.

Put the cooked peas and carrots into the bottom of the dish if you are using them and then spoon the mince mixture on top.

Spoon the mashed potato on top and rough up the surface with a fork.

Grate over some extra cheese and bake in the oven for about 30 minutes until bubbling and golden brown.

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How Not to Make Roasted Pork Loin with Grapes and Rosemary Cream Sauce

Well, you can’t win them all. This perfectly fine looking pork roast was the victim of a few easy-to-make mistakes, and hopefully by watching this you’ll avoid such mishaps in the future. In exchange, you’ll have to promise not to make fun of me.


The first, and most obvious error was way too much freshly minced rosemary. I always tell people to be super-careful about adding this resinous herb. I wasn’t paying attention, and just added what I had chopped without thinking, and it was pretty much all over at that point.

Adding cream helped nothing, and only made the herbaceous reduction more caloric and offensive. I probably could have added some lemon, mustard, horseradish, or other heavy-hitting condiment, but by that time nothing was going to unrosemary this train wreck.

On the bright side, the grapes were really good, and even after 30 minutes in the oven, had a juicy, still-firm texture. Their warm sweetness went very well with the meat. So, I hope you watch, critique, and maybe adapt this potentially amazing recipe into something worthwhile. Enjoy!

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