I was recently sent a copy of Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s
new book: River Cottage Light & Easy. From the title it sounds like a regular,
traditional style cookbook from a much loved chef – yes? However, there is a
twist to this cookbook. Every recipe is both wheat and dairy free!
Now, from any other chef I would probably have rolled my
eyes and mumbled something about jumping on the ‘special diet band-wagon’, but
not from Hugh, instead I was intrigued and excited. Hugh has done a great deal
to raise food awareness in recent years, both with battery farmed chickens and
sustainable fish. He also did a recent series where he went veggie for a few
months in order to highlight the gloriousness and versatility of vegetables. I
have always loved his recipes and tv programmes which focus on local, seasonal,
fresh produce and so was excited to see what his new book would bring to the
table.
While every recipe in the book is wheat and dairy free, they
are not always guaranteed to be gluten free, as quite a few of them do use rye
flour, or ingredients containing gluten such as Worchester sauce. That said I
should think 85-90% are also gluten free which is fantastic. The approach to
the book is recipes that are ‘Light’ and ‘Easy.’ This by no means this is a low
fat or weight loss book. Instead the term ‘light’ is used to represent food
that is fresh and light on the digestion. You know if you eat a lunch of soup
and salad compared to a heavy stodgy pie and mash, you feel more light, alert
and full of energy. This is the premises behind this book, food that is
delicious, fresh and energy boosting. Again, why wheat and dairy free? In the
intro in the front of the book, Hugh reveals why he has chosen to go down this
route. A few years ago he was diagnosed with high cholesterol and rather than
go on statins, he decided to control his cholesterol through diet, by reducing
the amount of dairy he ate. He still wanted to enjoy the wide range of foods
and recipes he loved and so began experimenting with alternative non-dairy
ingredients and found a whole new set of ingredients and flavours opened up to
him, almond milk and rapeseed oil etc. At the same time he began looking more
into ancient grains and alternative cereals to wheat which opened up
ingredients such as buckwheat, quinoa and rye. He says he never excluded wheat
and dairy from his diet and does not encourage people to do that either, merely
to open your eyes and your tastes buds to the range of different alternatives
out there, and discover some new delicious, nutritious recipes along the way.
This is something I agree with wholeheartedly and was so excited to try out a
few recipes!
The book is filled with recipes for all occasions, from
breakfast, main meals including meats, fish, veggie and not forgetting
desserts. Each recipe is beautifully laid out and is accompanied by a tempting
looking photo. The recipe that caught my eye was for a savoury porridge with
baked onions. Hugh described this as a lighter version of risotto and as
porridge is one of my favourite comfort foods I was intrigued to try it myself.
White rice is high on the glycemic index and quite low in fibre meaning you
will have a quick rise in energy followed by a crash in energy soon afterwards.
Oats on the other hand are high in fibre and low on the glycemic index meaning
they will keep you feeling fuller for longer with more sustained energy. Oats
have also been shown to help lower cholesterol so it’s a win-win.
As the weather last weekend was rather wet and dismal, I
decided a big bowl of comforting savoury porridge was just what was called for.
I didn’t have any large onions for roasting, but I did have plenty of mushrooms
and so decided to use those instead.
I love the woodsy earthy flavour mushrooms bring, and they
worked so well with the porridge/risotto. Both risotto rice and oats contain starch
that are released during cooking, while help thicken up the surrounding liquid
to create a thick, creamy and comforting dish. The other bonus with oats is
that unlike rice, they are ready in just a few minutes meaning the whole recipe
only took me about 15 minutes from start to finish. Perfect!
I fried the mushrooms off first, before adding the oats and
giving them a gentle toast in the pan before adding veg stock. This created a
fabulous dark earthy flavour and colour to the porridge. It looked so autumnal
and comforting. I added garlic and thyme which always enhance the flavour of
mushrooms.
I know lots of people serve risotto with a grating of
parmesan, but of course that was off the menu here. Instead grate over a few
toasted nuts (I chose almonds) for a nice visual appearance and subtle nutty
undertone which went so brilliantly with the woodsy mushrooms. I also added a dried
sage leaf at the end, which also enhanced the savoury comforting flavour of the
oats and mushrooms.
This was such a delight of a meal. Warming, comforting,
creamy, thick oaty risotto with a slight bite to the oats and intense woodsy
mushrooms with their strong savoury umami flavour. It was fabulous. I enjoyed
it so much I would have no qualms serving this up to friends and the fact it
was ready in a mere 15 minutes means its perfect mid week meal food. Hugh calls
it a savoury porridge, which it is, but I think Oat-otto sounds more fun.
Fresh, light, easy, comforting, nutritious and delicious.
What more could you want from meal!? I enjoyed it so much I’m not sure I’ll
ever make risotto with rice again. I can’t wait to try out some of the other recipes.
Giveaway!
Now if you weren’t excited enough to try the recipe below,
then I am thrilled to be able to give you the chance to win a copy of the book
for yourself! To enter just leave a comment below and tell me how you would
flavour your own Oat-otto – keeping to the wheat and dairy free theme.
Only 1 entry per person. The giveaway will close at midnight
Friday 17th October with the winner picked at random. Entrants must
be a UK
resident and must leave me a way to contact you, within your comment, should
you win. Best of luck.
I’ve given you my version of Hugh’s recipe below. For his
Baked Onion version, you’ll have to buy the book (or win a copy)!
Mushroom Oat-otto: Savoury Porridge
(Recipe adapted from River Cottage Light & Easy by Hugh
Fearnley-Whittingstall)
Ingredients
1 tbsp rapeseed oil
250g chestnut or white capped mushrooms
1 red onion
3 springs fresh thyme
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
350ml vegetable stock
80g porridge oats (I used gluten free oats)
10 skin on hazelnuts or almonds
Salt & pepper
Thyme or dried sage to serve (optional)
Method
Heat the oil in a large frying pan. Slice the mushrooms and
red onion and add to the pan. Strip the thyme leaves off their stalk and
sprinkle over the mushrooms along with the garlic. Cook until the mushrooms and
softened and are a light golden brown colour around the edges.
Heat your stock in a jug and have close to hand.
Add the oats to the pan and stir to mix them through the
mushrooms, allowing them to absorb any of the juices.
Add a third of the stock and allow to simmer, stirring often
until the stock is absorbed. Pour over half the remaining stock and again cook
until the liquid is absorbed. Add the rest of the stock and allow to simmer
until the oats are softened and have broken down to create a thick creamy
textured porridge/risotto. Season generously with freshly milled pepper and a
pinch of salt to taste. (Add a little extra water if you want a thinner
texture).
Set aside 2 of the nuts before chopping the rest and
stirring into the oat-otto.
Spoon into warm bowls and grate the 2 reserved nuts over the
top using a very fine grater, this gives a parmesan cheese appearance and
provides a lovely nutty aroma and taste.
Garnish with some extra sprigs of thyme or sage leaves.
Eat and enjoy
Serves 2
6 comments:
I would use one of the pumpkins we grew this year, roasting it first with fennel seeds then added cubes as the oats-otto cooked.
What a tasty meal! I would pop in cubes honey-roasted butternut squash, fresh from the garden and some roasted pumpkin seeds all herbed up with a little fresh chopped oregano or basil.
I've never used porridge oats for a savoury dish - interesting!
This looks yummy and I'm intrigued to try it, though still find the idea of savoury porridge a bit funny! I think I would probably spice mine up a bit with some curry powder and tumeric, and add spiced butternut squash and fresh spinach with chopped fresh coriander :) Hey, if you're gonna go with savoury porridge, why not make it spicy too!? :)
Looks like an interesting breakfast - I tried savoury porridge once with peas and liked that. I would probably sprinkle a bit of nutritional yeast flakes over the porridge as I love their flavour. I have river cottage veg and really need to cook from it more as I quite like the look of it - is the light and easy got a lot of vegetarian recipes?
I am interested that you are using gf oats. I was recently told by someone in a forum that coeliacs had to be tested for oat sensitivity before eating even GF oats. Have you had an oat test or heard of this?
Hi Johanna,
There is not a specific test to give someone in regards to oats. Oats are naturally gluten free but they are often grown and milled in facilities or fields containing wheat. This contaminates them with gluten, making standard oats unsafe for people with coeliac disease.
Gluten free oats must be grown, harvested and packed in dedicated facilities and fields and tested for gluten before being allowed to be declared as gluten free or pure oats.
However, oats contain a protein called avenin which has a similar genetic make up to gluten. Some people with coeliac disease are sensitive to this (its not actually gluten). Due to this, newly diagnosed people are recommended to not eat gluten free oats for the first 1-2 years to allow the gut to completely heal. You are then recommended to introduce them into your diet slowly and see if you are able to tolerate them without any adverse symptoms.
Most people with coeliac disease can eat gluten free oats without a problem.
I now do eat gluten free oats, although I didn't for over 2 years after being diagnosed.
Hope that helps!!
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