Recipes so tasty that we want to share. 2026

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Comments

  • ClarenceClarence Shipmate
    To cheer me up after saying goodbye to our beautiful dog, @Foaming Draught bought me Nigel Slater’s “A Thousand Feasts”.

    Slater describes trying a dessert in Japan that he expected to be horrendous, but was the opposite. I’m now determined to try:

    Crème caramel, topped with a ball of vanilla icecream, with a hot espresso poured over.
  • LatchKeyKidLatchKeyKid Shipmate
    Sounds like an addition to affogato.
  • AravisAravis Shipmate
    Does anyone have a recipe for hot cross buns? I tried one in the bread maker manual (just did the dough in the bread maker); they were nice, but more like rock cakes. I did use milk rather than water and milk powder, as we didn’t have any milk powder, but otherwise stuck to the recipe.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    As it happens, I’ve just had my coffee with the next-to-last of the hot cross buns I made Saturday. I use Paul Hollywood’s recipe, and they always get compliments.


  • la vie en rougela vie en rouge Purgatory Host, Circus Host
    I use this as a base. It's not a hot cross bun recipe as such but very similar. I mash it up with bits of Felicity Cloake's recipe. I start by heating up the milk and infusing it with spices (saffron, nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon, ginger). For the fruit, I use raisins, currants and orange peel. I add a cross on top with a flour and water paste. Less is more for this bit (it's not nice to eat if the flour paste is too thick). At the end I brush with a sugar syrup for a shiny finish.
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    On the subject of Lancashire cooking my mother, a Bury lass (her words), made meat and potato pie. The used leftover beef from the Sunday roast. She would buy a decent piece of beef, slice it very thin and get four meals out of the Sunday joint.
  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Shipmates from southern US states, I'm thinking of making Jambalaya. It has prawns (shrimps), so I worry that it might not last more than a day, or freeze well. What's your experience/recommendations?
    I’m Southern but not Louisianan, so don’t take my word as definitive. (That said, I have eaten and made a lot of jambalaya in my time. :lol: )

    In my experience, shrimp (prawns) are not an expected ingredient in jambalaya; jambalaya with shrimp is the exception rather than the rule. I associate shrimp in jambalaya with restaurants trying to fancy it up. The “sine qua non meat” is andouille or a similar kind of sausage. There’s often chicken or pork too. Traditionally, I think, it was whatever the cook had at hand. All of which is to say, if it makes things easier for you, you can omit the shrimp without sacrificing authenticity.

    That said, I totally get it if you want to include shrimp. If you do, I’d either plan on cooking an amount of shrimp that will leave no leftovers, and plan for the leftovers not to include any shrimp (or to cook more shrimp for the leftovers). Even if the shrimp doesn’t go bad in the fridge, it’ll get tough and leathery.

    Good luck! And please let us know how it goes.


    Thankyou Nick, I took your advice and pan fried a few prawns separately and plonked them as a garnish on the otherwise prawn-less jambalaya.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Looks delicious - I confess I'd have thought prawns were essential for a Jambalaya.

    You learn something every day!
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Shipmates from southern US states, I'm thinking of making Jambalaya. It has prawns (shrimps), so I worry that it might not last more than a day, or freeze well. What's your experience/recommendations?
    I’m Southern but not Louisianan, so don’t take my word as definitive. (That said, I have eaten and made a lot of jambalaya in my time. :lol: )

    In my experience, shrimp (prawns) are not an expected ingredient in jambalaya; jambalaya with shrimp is the exception rather than the rule. I associate shrimp in jambalaya with restaurants trying to fancy it up. The “sine qua non meat” is andouille or a similar kind of sausage. There’s often chicken or pork too. Traditionally, I think, it was whatever the cook had at hand. All of which is to say, if it makes things easier for you, you can omit the shrimp without sacrificing authenticity.

    That said, I totally get it if you want to include shrimp. If you do, I’d either plan on cooking an amount of shrimp that will leave no leftovers, and plan for the leftovers not to include any shrimp (or to cook more shrimp for the leftovers). Even if the shrimp doesn’t go bad in the fridge, it’ll get tough and leathery.

    Good luck! And please let us know how it goes.


    Thankyou Nick, I took your advice and pan fried a few prawns separately and plonked them as a garnish on the otherwise prawn-less jambalaya.
    Sounds like a delicious approach!

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