Tag: mice

Bread mice with spinach pesto and sticks with cooked ham – Italian Cuisine


To cheer up the afternoon snack and offer the little ones a fun novelty, focus on an original combination and the sympathy of one of the most beloved characters, Mickey Mouse!

What a bore the usual snack, who knows how many times you've heard it from your children, tired of the same unimaginative proposals. It is not always easy to invent combinations able to amaze and bring new energy to children, which fatigued by the scholastic commitment often just to snack unleash the most insistent whims.

And then we must not forget the fundamental importance that the mid-afternoon snack has in feeding the little ones: one well calibrated snack it can in fact have positive effects on mental efficiency, on the ability to concentrate and on eating behavior at subsequent meals. It is clear how it is for children never skip this meal and indeed prefer tasty products but above all able to supply the correct caloric needs to the body and the right nutrients.

We offer children a tasty snack that is at the same time balanced, fun and original, such as new ones Citterio Junior Snacks, soon available in stores. From the collaboration with Cucina Disney a new line of snacks was born: sticks with cooked ham and turkey breast sticks low in fat, gluten and milk derivatives. It is also a snack that is very comfortable to carry, ideal to be consumed at school or on an outing, given its 4-hour storage time outside the refrigerator.

We suggest a merry and delicious combination, a spinach pesto in which to dip the sticks with cooked ham, together with a Mickey Mouse toasted bread. Because if it is true that at the table "even the eye wants its part" it is even more true that for the little ones it is also important the joy that comes from such an original dish. And now let's see if anyone will even say "what a bore your usual snack!"

For 4 people
Preparation time: 20 minutes
Difficulty level: easy

Ingredients

6 slices of cereal bread,
200 g of salad spinach,
120 g of sticks with Citterio ham,
80 g of cherry tomatoes,
40 g of pine nuts,
30 g of Parmigiano Reggiano,
2 sprigs of parsley,
half a lemon,
extra virgin olive oil,
salt

Method

Wash and dry the spinach and then transfer them to the mixer together with the previously lightly roasted pine nuts, the chopped Parmigiano Reggiano, 3 tablespoons of oil, a pinch of salt and the juice of half a lemon. Blend everything until you get a thick and homogeneous sauce and transfer it to 4 small bowls.

Clean the tomatoes, wash them, dry them and cut them into 4 slices.
Lightly toast the slices of bread in boxes and make from each one 2 croutons in the shape of a Mickey Mouse head (use a cookie cutter) and serve them with the Citterio ham sticks, the spinach sauce, the cherry tomatoes and decorate as you wish with leaflets of parsley.

Enjoy your meal, both young and old!

Egg and potato pie

We have got a mouse.

I say that like this is a new thing. We’ve actually had a mouse for ages. And when I say mouse, I dearly hope I do mean mouse, singular, not mice, plural. It’s hard to tell, mice look similar. And if there are two mice living in this house, it’s highly likely they are related and therefore even more indistinguishable.

The reason I mention it only now is that up until a fortnight ago, only other people had ever seen this mouse and I, of course, dismissed the sightings as fanciful imaginings of hysterical people.

“Okay,” I would say, “if there’s a mouse, where’s the mouse poo?” But then one evening when my husband was watching football, I was sitting right here at the kitchen table, writing, and out from under the oven came a small, sleek mouse with a twitchy nose, beady eyes and very large ears.

It was indescribably cute.

Then it saw me and disappeared like lightning, leaving, in terror, a trail of poo behind it.

I didn’t say anything to my husband, because my husband thinks we should get Rentokil in and I do not want this. I do not want to set glue traps or lay down some sort of ghastly poison that causes the mice to die slowly from internal bleeding. Neither do I want to get a cat. I like cats, but there are too many cats already on our street already and they kill all the birds. I have never been ok with death. I don’t like it and I don’t want it around me. I certainly don’t want to be party to it.

I have purchased, online from somehere that calls itself “Tooled-Up” a humane mousetrap but when I catch and release this mouse on to Hampstead Heath I fully expect another one to replace it.

Anyway, aren’t mice inevitable? These old London houses with their mouse-sized gaps everywhere and rubbish aplenty – surely every building, except hermetically-sealed new builds, has got a mouse somewhere. Rather than issue a mouse holocaust, we should all just try to get along.

(Incidentally, my sister in law told me that she heard on the radio that there is an influx of mice at the moment because it has been so rainy – the mice flee the flooding sewers and take shelter under, for example, ovens in North London. She has the same attitude to mice as me: live and let live.)

Anyway I know why we have got a mouse. It’s because of Kitty. Or rather, it’s because of me. It’s because I allow her to roam freely round the ground floor carrying a variety of brittle foodstuffs, which rain little mouse-snack-sized crumbs hither and thither, which, later on, the mouse posts into its gob with both hands. I have seen it with my own eyes, while sitting on the sofa watching Breaking Bad and eating Green&Blacks.

The only thing to do is vacuum the entire ground floor every night before bed. I do not wish to starve the mouse, you understand – merely think that it might have better luck elsewhere until the sewers dry out and it can return to its natural habitat.

Speaking of natural habitats, mine is carbohydrate-based. I have been dieting like mad recently because I am still so traumatised by being fat while pregnant (yes, after 17 months. That’s how fat I was). But recently, I have fallen off the starvation waggon and have been scoffing like my little mouse friend. It’s partly because I am trying to have another baby and think maybe if I’ve got a bit more meat on my bones it might help.

Incidentally, I know what you’re thinking: you’re thinking – why are you trying to have another baby when all you do is complain on and on about how awful having children is? And my answer is this: Kitty needs a little buddy. If she didn’t need a little buddy I wouldn’t do it. No way. The thought of doing it all again makes me feel quite ill but at least I only have to do it once more. Then I can wash my hands of the whole sorry business and concentrate on dieting until I’m so thin a stiff breeze would blow me over.

But until then, here is a terrific recipe for egg and potato pie that my husband makes when we’re feeling skinny and virtuous enough to risk letting such things pass our lips.

Giles’s egg and potato pie
for 4

3 large floury potatoes
4 eggs
butter – about 100g
salt and pepper

1 Peel and boil the potatoes whole for 15 minutes but stop boiling if they look like they’re falling apart, as floury potatoes are so wont to do. Boil the eggs for 7 minutes, cool and peel.

2 Slice the potatoes and the eggs. This is a reasonably fiddly job – especially with the eggs. If you have a purpose-made egg slicer, this is the time to extract it from the back of that drawer, wipe the grease off and deploy it.

3 Butter the bottom of a baking dish, then cover with a layer of potatoes. Dot with butter and season. Then add a layer of sliced egg. Repeat this until you have used up all your egg and potato.

DO NOT fret if this all looks a bit of a mess, it is an imprecise dish and will taste terrific no matter how it looks.

4 Put in the oven for 45 mins at 180

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