Did you know: Mother's Day began being celebrated in the UK way back in the 17th Century, long before the American version of Mother's Day was conceived.
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday in Lent. Traditionally it was the day when children, mainly daughters, who had gone off to work in domestic service, were given the day off to visit their mothers.
Happy Mother's Day all you Mums.
Here are a couple of simple ideas that even budding young chefs can get involved in to help celebrate a weekend of 'mummyness'.
Dippy Eggs Florentine
The recipe uses: 1 large slice of ham; 8 small spinach leaves; 8 cherry tomatoes; 4 eggs; a handful of grated cheese; and buttered toast cut into dipping soldiers. With a grown-up's help, turn the oven on to 180C to warm up while you line 4 ramekins up. Cut ham and spinach into strips with a pair of scissors and add evenly to the ramekins.
Now the messy bit - scrunch up the tomatoes in a bowl with your fingers and spoon two with the juice into each ramekin. One by one, break the eggs into a bowl, check for shell pieces and tip into the ramekin, then the next egg etc. Now, sprinkle the grated cheese on top evenly and put the ramekins on a baking tray in the over for 15 minutes or so until the egg whites have cooked. Mum will love them.
Thanks to BBC Good Food for this. Click on the image (or here) for this and other Mother's Day ideas, including this delicious Lemon Curd and Blueberry Cake - you'll love it Mum.
Click here for the official Red Nose website |
Red Nose Day - 24 March
What better reason to get baking than to raise a penny or two for Red Nose Day.
Join the thousands of families, schools and clubs who will be baking, selling and sharing to raise monies for good causes - and to have great fun in the process.
Stokes staff, family and friends will be baking like mad, ready for the big day. Over the coming weeks we'll try to share some of our favourite ideas and recipes with you.
We'd like you to share your ideas with our growing network friends: tweet here, or post here.
As usual, 'Aunty' (the BBC) has some great 'cake sale recipes' on the BBC Good Food website. Just click the link here for loads of fun ideas.
Lemon & Poppy Cake
You'll need: 175g softened butter; 175g caster sugar; 200g self-raising flour; 4 lemons zested; 2 tbsp Stokes Lemon Curd; 3 eggs; 2 tbsp poppy seeds; a 125g pot of natural yogurt. For the icing: 200g icing sugar; 3 tbsp lemon juice; 1 tbsp Stokes Lemon Curd.
Heat the oven to 180C / Gas 4. Grease and line your cake tin. Beat the butter and sugar until fluffy, then beat in the rest of the ingredients. Spoon into the tin and bake for 40 minutes. Cool and set aside.
For the icing, beat the lemon juice and curd into sifted icing sugar. Add more juice if it's not runny enough and pour over the cake.
Fundraising foodies
If you are getting ready to raise money for Red Nose Day and baking is part of your fundraising plans, you'll find lots of ideas and recipes at AllRecipes.
Just click on the fun looking raspberry and almond shortbread biscuits on the left.
For the jam, why not use Stokes Raspberry Extra Jam.
Support your local butcher
Last week was National Butchers' Week, but every day could and perhaps should be National Butchers Day - the perfect excuse for a lovely roast, or one of their own ready meals.
Good butchers no longer just chop it and chill it. They and supermarket butchers have to contend with aisle upon aisle of ready made oven-ready and microwave meals for busy families.
Your local butcher will be making trays of delicious meals ready to pop in the oven, all skillfully made with good quality meat.
Oh for a succulent Turkey roast; perhaps a delicious shoulder of Pork; or a leg of lovely Lamb ... pass the Stokes.
Stokes Redcurrant Jelly
It's rich, dark, smooth jelly oozing with flavour from the very high fruit content (53% pureed redcurrant). Great with roast chicken, lamb or duck and just as good in a cold meat sandwich.
A good spoonful in the gravy gives it a luscious sweetness. Slice open and simmer a green chilli in the gravy until the bite balances the sweetness for the perfect pour.
Stokes Bramley Apple Sauce
This is a traditional apple sauce made, of course, with British Bramley apples and a dash of British dry cider for a simple delicious twist. A firm favourite for roast pork.
Sauté onions and apple slices in butter with a hint of cinnamon until soft. Add flour for a roux, build up the gravy with chicken stock and add two good spoons of Stokes Bramley Apple Sauce - it's a must try.
Stokes Mint Sauce
Our classic mint sauce is a delightful blend of garden mint and white wine vinegar, with unrefined raw cane sugar for a simply delicious recipe of this traditional sauce for lamb.
Pop it into your gravy for minty acidity or mix with Stokes Real Mayonnaise to spoon into piping hot new potatoes.
How's your crackling
Click on the image for larger print, give it a go and we hope you'll crunch safely this weekend.
These are just some of Stokes relished, jams and sauces that love roasts and bring cold cuts to life next day.
It's all about taste
It's not just 'tomato ketchup', it's Stokes Tomato Ketchup with 200g of Mediterranean ripened sweet tomatoes simmered into every 100g of award-winning ketchup.
It's not just mayonnaise, it's creamy, lush Stokes Real Mayonnaise with British free range eggs and wonderful Koroneiki Extra Virgin Olive Oil. Our free range eggs may include eggs from free range hens currently kept indoors for animal health reasons.
The whole Stokes concept was conceived through the desire for ‘taste’. Not just good taste, but truly, honestly, passionately great taste.
Instead of spooning your mayo onto your chips, salad or new potatoes, try this:
Bloody Mary Rose Sauce - Mix 1 part Stokes Real Mayonnaise to 2 parts Stokes Bloody Mary Ketchup. Perfect as a prawn cocktail. Delightful as a dip.Classic Devilled Eggs - Halve hard boiled eggs and scoop out the yolk. Mash the yolks with mayo, Stokes Classic English Mustard and parsley until smooth. Pipe into egg white half’s and sprinkle with paprika for delicious ‘Devilled Eggs’.Easy peasy mayo biscuits! Mix together 2 cups of self-raising flour, 1 cup of milk and 6 tablespoons of mayonnaise. Spoon the mixture onto a baking tray and bake for 12 minutes.
Instead of dolloping your ketchup onto your bacon butty, bubble 'n' squeak or omelette, try this:
Add Stokes Creamed Horseradish Sauce to ketchup for a tangy treat with hot dogs.Spoon ketchup into your meatball mix for deep rich tomato flavours.Heat a tin of cannelloni beans, tinned chopped tomatoes, a glass of red wine, Italian herbs and reduce. Add 2 parts ketchup to 1 part Stokes Original BBQ Sauce for healthy homemade smoky beans.
March Hares, Daffodils and Tasty Treats
We will be back next week with more ideas for Red Nose baking, and Mother's Day and the fast approaching culinary calls of Easter.
Simple, honest, delicious
FOOD MADE BETTER
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