Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Quick leftovers supper to make you proud of W

-

Phone: Opening hours: Children: Disabled access: Yes - and if you in book advance the pub will try to fit you on a table nearest the access door The bill: £108.45 for four people including drinks Would you go back?

I’m a very smug bugger at this time of year, as much of our shopping has been done, presents wrapped and dispatched, food ordered and prepped, and we can both relax a little and start to enjoy the festive season.

Tracy and I are good planners, and pick up presents for people as we see them through the year, and we always have a shopping cut-off limit somewhere around the middle of November, after which the centres of towns and cities and the large shopping centres are very much off-limits. It makes life far less stressful.

I also use the internet a great deal. It’s what it was made for, I reckon. And so, with most of us just about ready, and with our fridges groaning with supplies for several months, we really ought to turn to the subject of leftovers. Because I’d estimate that most of us have, as usual, overdone it to a massive degree, and we’ll have plenty left after the festivitie­s.

Of course we needed two ham joints, and sure, there were only four of you for Christmas lunch but a 10-berth turkey just seemed to be the right decision. In most fridges there will surely be clingfilm-covered bowls of sprouts, huge Christmas puddings with just one slice removed (they all went for the pavlova), and a plate crammed with turkey under a layer of foil.

If your house is anything like mine, you will also be faced with a Matterhorn of unused cheese, either bought in a blind panic (because, somehow, in our confusion we thought that, after the salmon starter, roast turkey and trimmings and two puddings, we still might be able to find room for several large pieces of cheese!) or given as a gift.

Of course, some of this cheese will find its way into sandwiches, toasties and omelettes, but we can often find ourselves throwing a fair amount away simply because it’s been hanging around for too long.

Food waste has been a hot topic this year, quite rightly, so let’s do our bit and not waste all this marvellous cheese.

So, what do we do with it all? Well, for one thing, we can grate it, mix it together, and pop it in the freezer in handy bagged-up portions. Then, when we need to knock up a quick cauli cheese, omelette or quiche, we can simply use the ready-grated cheese from frozen. It works brilliantl­y, and there’s none of that fridge-door speculativ­e sniffing of lumps of Cheddar, thinking how old it might be and whether we’ll poison the family or not.

Secondly, we can make something quick, easy and different, and here’s where this week’s recipe comes in. We’re making spaetzle. A very simple noodle or pasta originatin­g in Alsace, spaetzle (or spätzle) appear all across central Europe in various forms.

Particular­ly favoured in the mountainou­s regions of France, Germany, Austria, Switzerlan­d and Italy, they are wonderful little doughy strips or nuggets which are excellent for swooshing through sauces or baking into formidable supper dishes.

They can be served fresh from their pan of boiling water, but I prefer mine sizzled in a little hot butter, where they become golden and crunchy-edged, adding a little extra bite to proceeding­s. With our spaetzle we’re using our leftover cheese (the choice is up to you entirely, but hard cheeses like Gruyère and Cheddar work well, as do Brie and Camembert) to make a simple Mornay sauce, and adding a little bacon for extra flavour.

Serve with a crisp salad and you have a quick leftovers supper you can be proud of.

Well, it only leaves me to wish you all a very Merry Christmas. I hope you all have a lovely time wherever you are.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom