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Watercress and Lettuce Salad

From: Linda McCartney’s Home cooking, p. 78

A fresh salad with sharp watercress and lettuce, with a mustard vinaigrette.

I had never actually tried watercress and it has been on my mental shopping list since I started my “cook all of Linda’s recipes project”. Yesterday, I visited a huge farmer’s market in central Hamburg with my daughter and found- watercress! I loved its sharpness and crunch and will certainly keep it on my mental shopping list 🙂

I thought that the onion and garlic were too dominant in the dressing and I would recommend using a very simple vinaigrette with mustard, olive oil and white wine vinegar for this salad.

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Linda's recipes

Rice in Tasty Vegetable Stock

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 118

This is a recipe for a vegan risotto with mushrooms. Reliable, easy to make and very tasty. Great to accompany a salad or main course.

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Beefless Pie

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 85

A traditional beef pie without the beef 🙂 TVP gives a beefy texture and all meat-eaters around the table loved the pie.

I thought that the recipe relies to heavily on TVP and I was worried that there might not be enough taste in the filling. So I added half a bulb of fennel, 3 sticks celery and one carrot (all finely chopped) to the filling. I also used a glug of red wine for the sauté and flavoured the filling with a dash of Worshestershire Sauce. This gave a wonderful taste and also more filling to be enjoyed.

Vegan: Make sure your pie-crust ist vegan.

Gluten-Free: Use a gluten-free pie crust (e.g. my recipe for shortcrust pastry).

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Greek Beefless Stew

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 100

A stew with vegetable burgers and potatoes, cooked in tomato-flavoured vegetable stock.

This stew needs a more interesting and balanced flavour. The cinnamon is too dominant, and adding some bay leaves and juniper berries gives a deeper flavour. I think that adding some chopped green peppers to the stew would be good.

Gluten-Free: Make sure the burgers you are using are gluten-free.

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Bisque of Mushroom

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 52

A creamy soup with an intense mushroom flavour and nice texture. It can be served as a starter or with bread and a salad as a light lunch. Serves 6-8 as a starter and 4 as a main course.

I reduced the butter to 25g for the white sauce and 15g for the mushrooms, and took 100g of cream.

Vegan: Both milk and cream can be substituted for plant-based alternatives. I used oat milk and oat cream and the taste was very balanced. The non-vegans at the table did not notice they were not eating dairy and enjoyed the soup very much.

Gluten-Free: For best results, use rice flour.

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Aubergine Caponata

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 81

A cold dish with sautéd aubergine, celery, onion, capers, and olives, stewed in tomato sauce.

This is a great dish for a warm day. It needs to be prepared in advance, which means there is no work on the day it is served 🙂 .
We had my brother-in-law and his family around and enjoyed our lunch in the garden in lovely spring sunshine. I had also prepared a Cottage Cheese Pie (p. 96) which went very well with the Caponata. Serve with a salad or steamed vegetables (we had some crisp asparagus salad- yummy!).

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Almut's recipes

My Gluten-Free Shortcrust Pastry

It would not be possible to cook some of Linda’s recipes without a good shortcrust pastry. I found it very tricky to create a good gluten-free shortcrust pastry- in some cases the pastry was too soft and would literally melt into the pie filling. In other cases it was too flaky and could not be removed from the pie dish. Blind-baking proved difficult, too, as some pastry would stick to the greaseproof paper, making it impossible to remove the paper without destroying the pastry.
So I have been experimenting for a while and have come up with a recipe that seems to be working well for both sweet and savoury shortcrust pastry. I think it is most important to get the flour mix right and to add some ingredients that will bind the dough and make it supple and easy to work with.
Using one egg as a binder works great, but if you want a vegan shortcrust pastry, omit the egg and use more plant-based yoghurt or one tbsp. ground flaxseeds and 2 tbsp. cold water.

Ingredients (for one pie dish; double the amount for a two-crust pie):
100g hard margarine or vegetable suet
(I used organic margarine from Allsan),
100g soya flour (try roasted soya flour for a savoury pie to add more flavour),
100g gluten-free flour (I used Plain White Flour from Doves Farm),
1tsp. xanthan gum,
2tsp. psyllium husks,
a good pinch of salt (for sweet pastry, use a small pinch of salt and 1 tbsp. sugar),
1 egg, beaten,
1 tbsp. plant-based yoghurt (amount varies as the flour tends to absorb different quantities of liquid, depending on quality, ingredients and humidity).

Method:
Cut the margarine into small pieces and place into a mixing bowl. Add the flours, xanthan, psyllium husks, and salt (and sugar for sweet pastry) and rub together using your fingertips. It should resemble fine breadcrumbs. Now add the beaten egg and quickly work together to form a supple dough. Add as much yoghurt as needed to make the dough soft enough to be rolled out but not sticky. Roll the dough into a fat saussage shape and store for at least half an hour in an airtight container in the fridge.

To line the pie dish, I find it easiest to use the saussage-shaped dough. Slice the dough into 1.5 cm thick rounds and line the greased pie dish with the slices, overlapping slightly at the sides. Using your fingers, press down the slices so they will spread out to cover the whole pie dish. If you have the time, refrigerate the lined pie dish for another half hour or put into the freezer for 15 minutes. This will help the dough to not sink down at the sides when baking.

Line the inside of the pastry shell with greaseproof paper, gently press to the sides, and fill with dried beans or rice. Blind-bake in a pre-heated oven at 180°C for about 15 minutes until the pastry starts to colour a little. Remove from the oven and take out the beans or rice and the paper (if you are really good with your hands, you can take the edges of the paper and carefully lift out the paper filled with the beans/rice. It might be safer to spoon out the beans/rice and then remove the paper, though…).
Add your filling and continue baking according to the recipe.

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Jerusalem Artichokes in Lemon Parsley Sauce

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 138

Mashed jerusalem artichokes with herbs, lemon and butter.

This is actually the first time I have used jerusalem artichokes and thought they were amazing. I bought them in our local health-food store and thought that they felt a little old and gummy. Cooking them returned their crispness and preparing them as a mash seemed to be a lovely way of enjoying them. My family had never tasted jerusalem artichokes before and liked them straight away. Best served with any main dish and gravy.

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Linda's recipes

Courgettes with Apples

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 136

Gently cooked courgettes with onion, apple and fresh tomato pieces.

This veg dish looks very bright and colourful and is an attractive side dish. The courgettes harmonize well with the tomato, onion and parsley and the apple gives a nice sweet contrast. It is a dish that might seem unusual but I can imagine that it would find approval…

The recipe suggests to blanche the courgettes before adding them to the sautéed onions, apple and tomatoes. I chose to add them unblanched and liked the fact that they retained some of their bite.

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Noodles German Style

From: Linda McCartney’s Home Cooking, p. 113

As a German, I was curious what noodles “German Style” were. It turned out that they were plain noodles with fried mushrooms and some breadcrumbs added before serving. A quite plain dish that is quick to make- great for lunch emergencies with tired children.
You could try spicing it up a little by adding some chopped chillies.

Vegan: Make sure the noodles you use are vegan.

Gluten-Free: Use gluten-free noodles and breadcrumbs.