Focaccia and nettle soup

It was the baking group again today, though they were slightly thinned out by holidays. It’s always good to see them because they are a happy lot. This is good when you’re baking (as some of my attempts have been horrendous and several, despite exhortations to “re-use the dough” have ended up in the bin – sometimes scraped from my fingers, and sometimes propelled with at speed). The fact that Focaccia was bread of the day was a bonus. It always smells so good.

I wasn’t baking today – I lost my baking mojo a while back and my enthusiasm has faded. I need to start getting it back now, particularly as several schools have been asking for bread making as an option when they come to visit. The smell of freshly baked focaccia and rosemary is just the sort of thing to bring back that enthusiasm. Not that I’m overly enthusiastic about the school sessions – it can be a bit of a dull day for the kids when you keep dragging them back into the kitchen for the next stage.

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That reminds me, I have a teacher to ring back.

At the end of the session I gave out nettle soup. One or two slunk out without taking any (though I bear no grudges) but several drank it cold there and then and the rest took pots home with them. I’m easy with foraging and can take it or leave it, but it’s good to produce food from found ingredients and to introduce people to new experiences. It’s also, as somebody once said in a book, good to eat foraged food once in a while because it gives you a range of nutrients. However, there are reasons that we eat spinach instead of nettles, with the stings being just one of them.

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I have actually set myself a target of learning something new every day this year. My learing for today was that I didn’t know how to spell focaccia. In fact I just had to check it after writing that.

Finally, can anyone tell me how ro swirl cream into soup and have it still look good by the time you’ve switched your camera on. In an effort to raise my game last night I swirled the cream, sprinkled the freshly picked chives and took this picture that looks like a curdled face.

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5 thoughts on “Focaccia and nettle soup

  1. Pingback: Look What Julia Brought Home | quercuscommunity

  2. jjackson2014

    Reduce your cream till it is quite thick ( make sure this is at a gentle simmer) then place in a pouring bottle with a small nozzle. Then just squeeze on in a circle motion. Hope this helps it is what we used to do in my restaurant.

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  3. katechiconi

    For the purposes of swanky food photography: soup and cream both cold. Run the cream into the soup slowly and gently, over the back of a spoon, which will reduce the speed at which it hits the soup and give you a nicer surface swirl rather than sinking. Have the camera on a tripod, switched on and already focussed. Much more light than you think you’ll need. Nettle soup’s very tasty so long as you use good stock!

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