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Recipe: Smashed Purple Sprouting with Poached Egg on Sourdough

April 2, 2022 Tia Tamblyn

I’ve struggled to know what to call this; ‘Early Spring on Toast’ seems the most simply explained, although it doesn’t speak to the ingredients! I wanted to create topped-sourdough breakfast / brunch dish that could take the place of avocado on toast - delicious, but imported. I was very excited to see our purple sprouting plants produce another batch of tender stems and wanted to incorporate them, accompanied by other ingredients that are available in the garden and hedgerows in early Spring. At this time of year (late March) it’s known to be hard to find local ingredients - there’s a promise of much to come, heralded by the arrival of clumps of wild garlic; but little has got going yet.

This recipe also embraces zero waste principles, utilising not only the very tops of the stems but leaves and some of the firmer stalks that might often be discarded; they are quickly roasted then blitzed along with the other ingredients.

I prepared this as I shared brunch with Jeffrey Robinson of The New Yard Restaurant in West Cornwall. You can listen to our conversation on sustainable cooking within the restaurant industry via Episode 13 of my podcast, Breakfast & Beyond.

Enjoy!

Recipe: Smashed Purple Sprouting & Poached Egg on Sourdough

Serves 4

Ingredients:

  • 150g purple sprouting broccoli - use the heads, stems and leaves

  • 50g hazlenuts

  • Small handful wild garlic leaves

  • 1 large lemon

  • 1 tsp rose harissa

  • Couple of splashes cider vinegar

  • Small handful parsley (or other garden herb)

  • 2 tbsp olive oil, plus a little more for drizzling

  • 2 tbsp ricotta

  • Salt & Pepper

  • 4 slices sourdough (or alternative bread)

  • 4 eggs (at room temperature)

  • To garnish: hedgerow leaves and flowers of your choice eg wild garlic flowers and leaves, sorrel


Method:

  1. Preheat oven to 180C.

  2. Roughly chop the purple sprouting broccoli (heads, stems and leaves) into bite-size pieces, spread out on a large baking tray. Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper. Place in the oven for 5 minutes then remove (when vibrant green colour), turn off the oven and set aside to cool.

  3. Roughly chop the hazelnuts, toast for a few minutes in a small, dry frying pan, shaking regularly, until just starting to turn golden. Remove from heat and set aside to cool.

  4. Once cool, put most of the hazelnuts into a food processor, setting a few aside for garnish. Blitz those in the food processor for about one minute, until resembling breadcrumbs. Add the cooled broccoli, blitz again.

  5. Grate the lemon rind into the food processor, then add the lemon juice. Set aside a few wild garlic leaves for garnishing, roughly tear the rest and add to the food processor. Add the harissa, the small handful of parsley, 2 tbsp olive oil and a dash of vinegar. Blitz again until well combined. Add the ricotta, blitz again and season with salt and pepper. You can adjust the consistency if you would like to with olive oil and/or lemon juice. Set aside.

  6. Bring a pan of water to simmer, add a dash of vinegar. Keeping the pan at a simmer, crack the eggs in one at a time. Keep the pan simmering, you will likely need to turn up the heat slightly once the eggs are in. Set your timer for 4 minutes. Prepare a plate with kitchen roll on top, that the eggs will be placed on when they come out of the water.

  7. While the eggs are poaching, toast the sourdough slices. When toasted, lay on plates and drizzle with olive oil. Spoon the smashed broccoli onto the toast, so there’s a thick layer on each slice.

  8. When the eggs are done, remove with a slotted spoon onto the kitchen roll. Lightly lay another piece of kitchen roll on top to remove excess water. Then place an egg on top of each piece of toast.

  9. Garnish each plate with the remaining wild garlic leaves, toasted hazelnuts plus any other seasonal flowers or leaves such as sorrel or wild garlic flowers. Crack pepper on top and serve.

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In Botelet, Breakfast & Beyond, Cornwall, Food, Recipe, Seasonal eating, Sustainable living Tags recipe, spring recipe, Wild garlic, Purple sprouting broccoli, poached egg, sourdough, Breakfast recipe, Brunch, Lunch, Cornwall, Breakfast & Beyond, New Yard Restaurant, Botelet, Summary 1
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Recipe: Wild Garlic & Rhubarb Pesto

April 23, 2020 Tia Tamblyn
Wild garlic pesto

With wild garlic in abundance right now, pesto is a classic go-to for making use of a bountiful harvest. I picked a good few handfuls of wild garlic whilst on a walk with the children but upon returning home realised that I didn’t have any lemons; and knew that lockdown regulations (and eco morality!) wouldn’t permit a trip out simply for a lemon or two. So I decided to use rhubarb from the veg patch as a substitute for lemon, offering tangy flavours and softening textures once cooked down. The recipe below was put together by using up what was available in our larder in addition to the wild garlic and rhubarb, cheese could be added for a more traditional version. Pestos are so adaptable, play around with the recipe according to availability and preferences.

I used the pesto to make a tart for Easter day lunch, topping with seasonal roasted vegetables and feta cheese. We’ve also had it as an accompaniment to baked potatoes; on pasta; and with quinoa and a selection of use-up veggies.

The creation of this recipe seems to me to represent a microcosm of what lockdown can offer us; changing our habitual patterns of food preparation so that instead of buying new and making lots of small trips for food (especially if they involve driving, as is the case for us), we become more accustomed to using up what we have, not relying on imported fresh products to the same extent that we are used to, and forcing our hand at eating more seasonally.

I hope you enjoy - feel free to amend the recipe in order to use up what you have available
Tia x

Recipe: Wild Garlic & Rhubarb Pesto

Makes approx 8 portions

Ingredients

  • 100g wild garlic leaves, washed and dried

  • 300g (trimmed weight) rhubarb, washed & chopped into small pieces

  • 1 tbsp honey

  • 150ml apple juice

  • 20ml apple cider vinegar

  • 100g combination of seeds and nuts, according to availability. I used sunflower and pumpkin seeds, almonds, cashews and brazil nuts.

  • 4 tbsp olive oil (approx, you may wish to amend this depending upon how you

  • Sea salt and pepper

Method

  • Place the chopped rhubarb in a saucepan with the honey, apple juice and cider vinegar. Simmer until soft, approx 10 mins then remove from heat and set aside.

  • Place the nuts and seeds in a saucepan and toast lightly until just turning brown and starting to making a popping noise. Remove from heat and set aside.

  • In a blender, whizz up firstly the wild garlic leaves then add in the nuts and seeds, rhubarb mixture and olive oil. Blend until smooth then season with salt and pepper to taste.

  • Use fresh, or place in a jar or container and keep in the fridge for a few days. If placing in the fridge, add another drizzle of olive oil on top of pesto before placing lid on jar, to help it keep.

Foraging guidelines
Do remember to follow responsible foraging guidelines, ensuring you only take plants when there is a plentiful supply, just picking what you need, and never taking the roots.  Seek permission before foraging on private land.  It’s a good idea to check foraging guidelines before setting out, see for example Wild Food UK’s Foraging Code.

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In Recipe Tags Recipe, Wild garlic, Wild garlic & rhubarb pesto, Seasonal eating, Seasonal living, Foraged food, Summary 3
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