Showing posts with label keep it vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label keep it vintage. Show all posts

Lentil Pie with Feta & Thyme Mash

4 February 2015


This Lentil Pie with Feta & Thyme Mash is my go-to comfort food at this time of the year. Growing up, Shepherd’s Pie was one of my mum’s specialities that made regular appearances on the kitchen table much to my delight. This is my vegetarian, slightly tweaked version.


The hearty lentil base made from onion, garlic, carrots and a rich tomato and herb sauce is topped with a creamy thyme mash with a surprise salty-feta hit. It’s a great combination. As well as tasting good it’s a practical recipe too: it can easily be portioned up and frozen, ready for an effortless TV supper for one. Likewise, serve it with a side dish of sautéed kale or a spinach salad and it can pass as an elegant dinner party main course (I know, I’ve done so successfully on many occasions). Also, its always goes down well with the kids, which is never a bad thing.




Feel free to substitute some of the ingredients for what you have to hand. I very rarely make this recipe exactly the same twice. If I have rosemary on the balcony I use that instead of thyme. If I have some goats cheese in the fridge then that can happily replace the feta. Likewise with the vegetables, feel free to throw in a few zucchini in place of the carrots if that is what you have.


You may have noticed the beautiful tiles that I had the joy of shooting with in this post. They are from Lindsey Lang - thanks so much for the loan Lindsey. Lindsey is one hell of a talented lady who in addition to her flooring collection also has a gorgeous range of kitchen textiles and has just designed some beautiful towels for John Lewis. Do seek her designs out. Also, I must extend out my thanks to Simone at Keep It Vintage who often allows me to borrow some of her lovely products for my shoots. This girl has a real eye for picking out some must-have vintage and retro pieces. The enamelware, textiles and the bowl in the last image (below) came from her treasure trove of a shop.

Lentil Pie with Thyme & Feta Mash.
Serves 6 – 8

For the lentil base:
Olive oil
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
3 carrots, peeled and diced
350g ready to eat / pre-cooked Puy Lentils
400g tin of chopped tomatoes
1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
80ml red wine (optional)
Fresh thyme, leaves stripped from several stems
1 tsp of dried oregano
1 tsp dried basil
150ml vegetarian gravy (made to a fairly thick pouring consistency)
For the mash:
5 good-sized potatoes (approx 225g)
Olive oil (approx 80ml)
Fresh thyme, several sprigs
150g feta cheese
Parmasen, dried Basil, Nigella seeds (optional – to finish the dish)
Coarsely ground black pepper & sea salt to season

Heat a little oil in a large pan and sweat the carrots and onions on a low-med heat until slightly softened (5 – 10 mins), then add the garlic and continue to cook for a minute or two longer.

Next add the lentils, followed by the tinned tomatoes, vinegar, wine and the fresh and dried herbs. Stir and then slowly add the gravy, adding a little hot water if the overall consistency is too thick. Turn the heat down a little and cover the pan loosely with a lid and let it gently bubble away, filling your kitchen with the most delicious aroma. You want the carrots to be tender and the flavour of the sauce to come through. 15 – 20 minutes should do it, but keep your eye on it, adding a little water if the mixture starts to dry and taste as you go to check its progress. Season with black pepper and a little salt should you wish. When the base is done, turn off the heat and keep to one side.

While the lentil base is cooking, you can start your mash. Peel and chop your potatoes into equal-sized pieces and add to a pan of water. Cover the pan with a lid and bring to the boil, then turn the heat down to medium and simmer for approx 10 mins or until the point of a knife effortlessly slips through the potatoes. Drain and set to one side.

Taking a small bunch of thyme or several sprigs, strip off the leaves and add to the potatoes. Next drizzle in your oil, a little at a time, and start to mash your potatoes (I use a hand whisk for this). You may not need all the oil or you made need a dash more. Once your mash is smooth, crumble in the feta and gently fold through and season with some black pepper.

Preheat your grill to high. Decant your lentil mixture into an oven dish (or individual dishes) and top with the mash. A light grating of parmesan cheese, a dusting of dried basil and a sprinkle of Nigella seeds is a nice finishing touch, but by no means essential. Pop the pie under the grill until the top is golden. Serve as it is, or with some vegetables of your choice. Enjoy.

Note: if you want to make this ahead of time, you can do so. Just cover the cooled pie with foil and place in the fridge. When ready to eat, remove the foil and pop it into an oven pre heated to 200°C and bake for 25 -30 mins or until golden and heated through.








Cakes & Cherries

28 February 2014




Just a post to share some photographs I took earlier this week when the sun came out and I managed to carve out some time for just me and my camera. To make the most of this window of me-time I bought in some food, rather than prepare it myself. The props were kindly loaned to me by Keep It Vintage, a gem of a shop up the road from me in sunny Hove.

A Recipe For Heart Home: Pineapple Upside-Down Cake

13 June 2013

Regular readers may recall the Pineapple Upside-Down Cake I baked for the food photography workshop I recently undertook. Well, I finally got around to writing up the recipe, and as of today it is over on the lovely Heart Home blog.

Ooh, and incase you were wondering where that cheerful floral tea set comes from, it's from a little gem of a local shop called Keep It Vintage. I can't pass its shop front without pressing my nose up against the window - its wares are as tempting as that second slice of cake.

A Sneak Peek of What's To Come

14 May 2013




I hadn't planned to say anything until everything was in its proper place (these things always take longer than expected), but I can't wait any longer - I'm going to let you in on what I've been up to recently with Buttercup days.

Buttercup days will start to subtly change its focus becoming more refined in its content. Specialising in food is the most natural (and obvious) path for it to take. More often than not my posts are food related and my growing portfolio of freelance writing has also channelled itself into food. The over all identity and familiarities of the blog will remain and there will still be a smattering of ad-hoc posts that sit comfortably with the elements of Buttercup days that focus on family, occasion and nostalgia. The changes in content will be delicate, and possibly had you not read this post, you would be non the wiser. However, what I hope you will notice within the next month or so is the new look that Buttercup days will be donning. There will be a brand new logo and an altogether cleaner look which will allow the images to stand out proud.

Imagery is the other area of the blog that I am currently tackling. Until now I took images using either my phone or a rather dated camera that we used for holiday snaps. Both options, it is fair to say, had their limitations. So, I bit the bullet and bought myself a 'proper' professional camera on Ebay and recently undertook a crash course in food photography with the talented Brighton photographer Emma Lucy, who has shot some of my work in the past for magazines. I am now just practising at every given opportunity and honing any underlying photography skills I may have hidden somewhere. It will no doubt be a work-in-progress. The images on this post are from that first shoot. I'd like to say a huge thank you to both Emma for setting me on my way and to Keep It Vintage for the loan of all the lovely props.

P.S. I will be running the photographed recipes over the coming weeks: pineapple upside down cake with honey & pistachios | rhubarb french toast | fig & goats cheese salad.