Grimsby Telegraph

Expert tips from the Berry best

Mary Berry is back with a new series and cookbook, Love To Cook. ELLA WALKER gets some top advice

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DAME Mary Berry has worked in the food industry for more than five decades and is always keen to keep learning.

The 86-year-old’s new TV series and accompanyi­ng cookbook, Love To Cook, sees her get to grips with preserved lemons and white miso, and she’s intent on bringing home cooks along with her.

“I enjoy so much the teaching side,” says the Bath-born food writer and presenter, adding that, “Every recipe is achievable. It’s not too many ingredient­s, and they’re the sort of recipes that your family will go through.”

Trained at Le Cordon Bleu and with aeons of experience to back her up, when you speak to her, Mary can’t help but share tips and tricks for making the most of your food – whether you buy it or grow it yourself.

Here’s a handful of her best hacks...

Buy a pot (of basil) in your supermarke­t and then nip out the tops, divide them up and spread them out in the garden. They’ll grow well, or spread them out on the windowsill, so you’ve got more plants

Grow your own lemons – and prune that lemon tree

Mary has a lemon tree she “cherishes” – but she does have an edge: “I look round at other people who have lemon trees and they don’t prune it. I snip away at it in the summer in the growing season.

“It’s a lovely shape and very dense now, wonderful green. I feed it and it’s in a very sunny spot.” It’s going into the greenhouse wrapped up for winter, but she says “the other thing you have to do is to pick the fruit. If you leave all the fruit on it, it doesn’t bother to turn the flowers into fruit.”

Sow potatoes in big buckets

In the new series, Mary meets a celebrated allotmente­r, Terry, who taught her a few things about growing potatoes. “He grew potatoes, as I do, in big plastic bins,” she explains.

“I said, ‘I’m waiting for the flowers on my potatoes’. He said, ‘ You don’t want to do that, you want to put your hand down the side and see whether there’s any’.

“So he put his hand down the side of his potatoes, no flowers on them, and up came little tiny potatoes and it was beautiful.”

Multiply your supermarke­t basil

Mary gets through a lot of basil in her kitchen – and she doesn’t keep it in the fridge, because it likes to be warm.

“If you don’t want to sow seeds, you can buy a pot in your supermarke­t and then nip out the tops, divide them up and spread them out in the garden,” she recommends. “They’ll grow well, or spread them out on the windowsill, so you’ve got more plants.”

Make fresh herbs last longer

Mary grows her own tarragon, sage, basil and rosemary, and is adept at keeping them fresh.

“I put my herbs in a jug or a jam jar and slip a poly bag over the top and keep them in the fridge,” she explains. “They’ll keep very well. Parsley, whether you grow flatleaf or ordinary parsley, it doesn’t matter, they’re a very similar flavour – they will keep well if you’ve put the stalks in water.”

Keep your roasting tin sparkling

Washing up as she goes is classic Mary Berry, but if you’ve got a pan that really won’t shine, she has a back up plan.

“If you have a really burnt dish that you’ve been roasting in, put a dishwasher tablet in it and pour boiling water on it and leave it overnight. You’ll be amazed how easily it comes off.”

Why cauliflowe­r is a bargain

Love To Cook goes big on vegetables, and Mary is a particular fan of cauliflowe­r: “A cauliflowe­r to me is such a good buy. You can roast it, cut thick slices from it, you can fry it, and any of the bits that fall off round the outside, you can stir-fry.”

How to cut waste

Fully aware of the need to reduce kitchen waste, Mary makes “compost from everything that’s not cooked”, she says, and she’s also a big fan of using re-usable plastic boxes that have often had something else in.

“I then wash them and use them again. I use beeswax paper for wrapping, it clings to itself and you can use it again.”

On getting the right level of heat

Everyone knows what spice level suits them. “My young (family) like chillies so that they jump when they eat them,” says Mary.

“In the recipes, I always suggest a small amount. And if you want to add more, do. And spices – I love spices, I love curries. But I think you have to temper them to your family.”

Love To Cook by Mary Berry is published by BBC Books, priced £26. Photograph­y by Laura Edwards

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of the Kitchen,
Mary Berry has more tips and
recipes to share
Doyenne of the Kitchen, Mary Berry has more tips and recipes to share
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