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Monday, June 19, 2023

Yotam Ottolenghi's recipes for cooking with summer fruit - The Guardian

There’s only one thing I love more than eating summer fruit, and that’s cooking with it. When it’s perfectly ripe, it brings so much to the table: colour, succulence, sweetness. Berries are perfect for being used just as they are, in all sorts of salads or in a salsa to pair with rich things such as creamy cheese or rich, red meat. Larger stone fruit such as peaches, meanwhile, often need a bit of help to show off their full glory, but that’s nothing a bit of roasting or grilling won’t tease out.

Cucumber and berry salad with urfa and sesame (pictured top)

This quick, refreshing salad is all I really want to eat – and “cook” – on a hot summer’s day. I’ve used seasonal summer berries here, but by all means swap them out for some stone fruit, if you prefer. Eat with a spoon, so you can lap up all the dressing.

Prep 15 min
Assembly 10 min
Serves 2-4

1 cucumber (250g), peeled and cut into rough chunks
½ small red onion, peeled, halved and thinly sliced (40g net)
150g strawberries, hulled and halved, or quartered, if large
65g raspberries
45ml olive oil
¼ tsp toasted sesame oil
, plus ¼ tsp extra to serve
3 tbsp fresh lemon juice (from 1-2 lemons)
1 tbsp maple syrup
Flaked sea salt
20g rocket

¼ tsp urfa chilli
1 tsp sesame seeds
, toasted

Put the cucumber, onion, berries, both oils, lemon juice, maple syrup and a teaspoon of flaked salt in a large bowl, toss gently to combine, then leave to macerate for three to five minutes.

Transfer the cucumber mixture to a lipped platter, leaving one tablespoon of the dressing behind in the bowl. Put the rocket in the bowl, stir to coat with the dressing, then scatter on top of the cucumber and berry salad. Sprinkle over the remaining quarter-teaspoon of sesame oil, the urfa, sesame seeds and a good pinch of flaked salt, and serve.

Roast pork tenderloin with cherry and chipotle salsa

Plump, in-season cherries make a glorious salsa that works wonderfully with spiced pork. If you like, make this an even quicker midweek meal by swapping the loin for some chops.

Prep 25 min
Marinate 20 min+
Cook 25 min

For the spiced pork
½ tsp ground allspice
1 tsp smoked paprika
1 tsp garlic powder
¼ tsp caster sugar
Fine sea salt and black pepper
1 pork tenderloin
(about 500g) trimmed of any excess sinew, then cut in half widthways
2 tsp sunflower oil
25g unsalted butter

For the cherry salsa
250g cherries, stoned and roughly chopped (225g)
¼ tsp caster sugar
1 tsp wholegrain mustard
¼ tsp chipotle flakes
1 banana shallot
(40g), peeled and finely diced
1 red chilli (10g), stem removed, then finely diced (if you prefer less heat, remove and discard the seeds and pith)
2 tbsp lime juice (from 1-2 limes)
10g fresh coriander, roughly chopped

First, marinate the pork. In a small bowl, combine all the spices with the sugar and half a teaspoon of salt, rub the mix evenly all over both pieces of pork, then leave to marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes (or in the fridge overnight).

Mix all the salsa ingredients in a small bowl with an eighth of a teaspoon of salt and set aside.

Heat the oven to 200C (180C fan)/390F/gas 6, and put a large, ovenproof frying pan on a high heat. Once it’s hot, pour in the sunflower oil, then sear the pork on all sides for six minutes in total. Add the butter to the pan, then baste the pork with the melted butter until it’s foamy and caramelised. Transfer the pan to the oven for five minutes, turning over the pieces of pork once halfway, then remove, cover with foil and leave to rest for eight to 10 minutes. (If you prefer your meat medium to well done, leave it in the oven for another minute or two).

Cut the pork into ½cm-wide slices, arrange these on a lipped platter, then spoon over the butter from the pan and a third of the cherry salsa. Serve with the rest of the salsa in a bowl on the side.

Roast peaches with fennel croissant wafers

A beautifully ripe and perfumed peach is a standalone dessert in its own right, but when you have not-quite-ripe (or not-quite-unripe) ones, I roast them to help bring out their sweetness. The croissant wafers I serve with them here are a fun way to use up stale croissants. If you like, make them the day before and store in an airtight container to keep their crispness.

Prep 25 min
Freeze 20-30 min
Cook 30 min
Serves 4

4-5 peaches (400g), stoned and cut into quarters or sixths
70g caster sugar
⅛ tsp flaked sea salt
100ml rosé or white wine
1¼ tsp fennel seeds
, lightly ground
2 sprigs fresh basil
1 vanilla pod
, split in half lengthways and the seeds scraped out (reserve the empty pod)
1 lime, zested with a vegetable peeler

For the croissant wafers
2 stale croissants, frozen for 15-20 minutes, to help with cutting
30g caster sugar

For the yoghurt cream
120g double cream
120g
Greek yoghurt

Heat the oven to 240C (220C fan)/475F/gas 9. Put all the peach pieces in a medium oven tray with the sugar, salt, wine, a quarter-teaspoon of fennel seeds, the basil, vanilla pod and lime zest, roast for 15 to 20 minutes, until the fruit is starting to brown at the ends and the liquid in the tray is bubbling, then remove and set aside.

Turn down the oven to 200C (180C fan)/390F/gas 6. With a serrated knife, cut off and discard the pointy ends from each croissant, then cut the rest widthways into 1cm-thick slices. Put the sugar in a small, shallow bowl, dip in both sides of the croissant slices, to coat, then arrange on a baking tray lined with greaseproof paper. Sprinkle the remaining teaspoon of fennel on top, lay another sheet of greaseproof paper and a second baking tray on top, then bake for six to seven minutes, until golden and crisp. Remove and put on a rack to cool.

Meanwhile, make the yoghurt cream. Whisk the cream to soft peaks that retain their shape, then fold in the vanilla seeds and yoghurt. Cover and refrigerate until needed.

Divide the yoghurt cream between four bowls and spoon the peaches on top, followed by their pan juices. Serve each portion with two or three croissant wafers alongside.

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