When cooking plant-based dishes, it’s important to remember the protein content. Split peas or lentils are a great source of protein, and this soup not only looks beautiful and tastes delicious but is also great as a light lunch served with warm, crusty rye bread. Serves 4.
This dish is a family favourite as it is so tasty and reminds us of Italy, where sage is an important ingredient in many pasta dishes. We go big on sage at home, but if you don’t have any to hand, you can always substitute with parsley or other herbs. Serves 4.
This little chocolate pudding really packs a punch and has the advantages of extra virgin olive oil and dark chocolate � both highly beneficial ingredients on the Blood Type Diet, which we follow at home. The delicate rose sorbet is a lovely palette cleanser and balances the chocolate perfectly.
For the chocolate pots:
For the sorbet:
For the chocolate soil:
To make the rose sorbet
To make the chocolate soil
As the chef and proprietor of in Devon (together with wife Olive), Hugo Guest brings an artisanal approach to his cooking.This is a recipe that was handed down Hugo by his dad, who takes on the annual task of making gallons of marmalade at the start of the year when Seville oranges are briefly in season. This method avoids the hassle of squeezing orange juice and scraping out pith and pips. Preparing the fruit overnight softens it, making it easier to cut and, ultimately, saving time. Hugo and his family also make limoncello around the same time, and adding a few tablespoons to the marmalade elevates this classic recipe.
The next morning
What you'll need:
What you'll need:
What you'll need:
What to do
What you'll need:
What to do:
The combination of early broad beans, radishes, asparagus, wild garlic and a heady mix of mustard salad leaves showcases the best ingredients spring has to offer. The addition of fresh curd cheese brings a little decadence and is a nice contrast to the rest of the dish.
For the wild garlic dressing/pesto:
Bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Add the shelled broad beans and asparagus and cook for a minute and a half. Drain and rinse with cold water to stop the cooking process. Set aside.
In a large salad bowl, combine the sliced radishes, asparagus pieces, broad beans and mustard salad leaves.
To make the wild garlic dressing, add the wild garlic leaves, pine nuts, grated Parmesan cheese and lemon juice to a food processor. Pulse a few times to roughly chop the ingredients, then, with the food processor running, slowly drizzle in the olive oil until you reach a smooth and creamy consistency. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Drizzle as much or as little of the wild garlic dressing as you’d like (leaving a little for topping at the end) over the salad, and toss again to evenly coat the ingredients.
Divide the salad among four plates, then top each one with a generous sprinkle of fresh Jersey curds, and a few extra spoonfuls of the wild garlic pesto dressing. Serve immediately.
Pollock is a sustainable but equally delicious alternative to cod or haddock, and lends itself perfectly to this recipe. The lentils act as a blank canvas for lots of yummy things to be cooked through them: a base soffritto of onion, celery and carrot remains constant, however the spring greens can be replaced by any other seasonal vegetable. A punchy aioli ties this dish together nicely.
For the aioli:
Preheat the oven to 160°C.
To make the aioli, blitz together the egg yolks, finely grated garlic, Dijon mustard and a good pinch of sea salt in a food processor. While the motor is running slowly, drizzle in the olive oil in one continuous stream to create a stiff emulsion. When the mixture thickens, finish with lemon juice and additional salt if needed.
To a saucepan, add the lentils, water, bouquet garni and whole garlic cloves, along with the chopped onion, carrots and celery. Season well with salt (you want the water to flavour the lentils as they cook). Bring the mixture to a gentle simmer, then reduce the heat to low. Cover the pan and allow the lentils to cook for about fifteen–twenty minutes, or until they’re partially done.
Remove the bouquet garni and garlic cloves. Stir in the shredded spring greens and lemon zest. Continue to cook for a few more minutes until the spring greens have wilted, then transfer the lentils and greens to a suitable baking dish.
Drizzle the pollock fillets with olive oil and season with a good pinch of flaky sea salt, then place them on top of the lentils and greens.
Roast for approximately twelve minutes, or until the pollock is just cooked through (you can tell if it’s done when the skin peels off with ease). Allow the fish to rest for a few minutes.
To serve, spoon a generous portion of the lentils and greens onto each plate and top with a roasted pollock fillet. Finish with a dollop of aioli and a generous scattering of chopped parsley and dill.
This pudding holds a special place in our hearts as it was one of our first puddings at Glebe House when we opened. It combines tangy rhubarb jelly, a layer of booze-soaked sponge, creamy custard and fluffy whipped cream. You can swap in shop-bought savoiardi biscuits (otherwise known as lady’s fingers) to save time.
For the rhubarb jelly:
For the savoiardi biscuits:
For the custard:
To top the trifle:
To make the juice for the jelly (start a day before):
To make the savoiardi biscuits:
Preheat the oven to 175°C. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
Beat the egg yolks, sugar and vanilla extract together until creamy and pale yellow. In a separate bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff peaks form.
Gently fold the egg whites into the egg yolk mixture. Sift the flour over and fold until well combined.
Transfer the batter to a piping bag fitted with a large round tip. Pipe long, finger-shaped biscuits onto the baking sheet. Dust with icing sugar.
Bake for twelve to fifteen minutes or until the biscuits are lightly golden. Allow them to cool completely.
Pour the cream into a saucepan. Split the vanilla pod and scrape out the seeds, adding them to the cream. Bring the cream up to a boil and turn off the heat.
At the same time, fill another saucepan about one-third of the way full with water, and bring it to a simmer over a medium heat. Find a heatproof bowl that fits nicely over the saucepan, making sure the bottom of the bowl doesn’t touch the water. This will be your bain-marie.
In your heatproof bowl (off the heat), whisk together the eggs, yolks and sugar until well combined and smooth.
Gradually pour the hot cream into the eggs and sugar, whisking constantly as you do so.
Place the heatproof bowl over your saucepan of simmering water and continue whisking your custard until it thickens. This should take ten to fifteen minutes. Once the custard coats the back of a spoon, remove it from the heat.
Allow the custard to cool, covered, at room temperature, then transfer to the fridge until you’re ready to assemble the trifle.
Start by soaking the biscuits in the sweet dessert wine, then use them to create the first trifle layer in the bottom of your chosen dish � no deeper than a quarter of the bowl’s overall depth.
Now for the jelly. Soak the gelatine leaves in cold water for about ten minutes. In the meantime, take the rhubarb juice you made earlier � you should have about 600ml (if not, top it up with the extra orange juice) � and warm half of it to a low simmer. Squeeze out the water from the gelatine and whisk it into the warm liquid, then add the rest of the rhubarb juice.
Lay the poached rhubarb and strawberries (leftover from making the juice) on top of your sponge layer, then gently pour over the jelly mixture. Place the half-assembled trifle in the fridge until the jelly has set (this will take about three to four hours).
Once set, take the trifle out and pour over the custard. Chill in the fridge again for a couple of hours until set further.
When you’re ready to serve, whip the cream, vanilla and icing sugar together until soft peaks form, and either pipe or spoon the mixture over the top of the trifle. Finish by sprinkling with the toasted flaked almonds and freshly diced strawberries.
Put aside tenminutes for prep and 15 minutes for cooking
Makes enough for four
Preheat the oven to 180°C (160°Cfan, gas mark 4). Lay out your rolled puff pastry, keeping it on the parchment paper, and cut out four sections � each one 11cm x 8cm.
Peel, quarter and remove the core from your apples and slice each quarter lengthways as thinly as you can to get multiple slices.
Place them, overlapping, on each pastry piece to cover them entirely, except for a 0.5cmborder around the edges.
Do the same thing again so you have two layers of apple slices on each rectangle of pastry.
Now, take a small saucepan and heat the apricot jam withthe water.
Once warm, brush the apples with the jam. Make sure you leave the pastry edges otherwise they’ll burn.
Pop the tarts onto a baking tray and cook for 15 minutes until the apples are tender and the pastry is golden brown.
When they’re out of the oven, dust each one with cinnamon and tumble the fresh blackberries on top.
Pack a small pot of clotted cream or crème fraîche � these tarts are delicious on their own, but go really well with something soft and creamy too.
For those evenings when you just have a few friends popping by, when you need something bite-size to hand round at a get-together, or you’re looking for a recipe to serve as the prelude to the main event, it’s good to have a few smaller dishes up your sleeve. Like these smashed butternut, roasted garlic and pomegranate croutes. The recipe below is enough to make ten to twelve small slices of squash-topped toast.
This recipe was originally created for our sixth volume of Stories by the Somerset-based chef Sam Wylde, owner of .
]]>It’s always good to have a little something on hand for when friends or family unexpectedly stop by � which seems to happen all the more in the bonhomie of the festive season. And even better when that little something is homemade. Light, fluffy and delicately flavoured with orange and ginger, these madeleines will hit just the right sweet spot alongside a cup of tea. Makes enough for 12.
Use a touch of the butter to lightly grease the madeleine tin. If you have some plain flour in the cupboard, sprinkle a small amount over the moulds too to make it as easy as possible to ease the madeleines out of the tin later.
In a mixing bowl, whisk the eggs and sugar together until they’re pale, fluffy and a little frothy.
In a separate bowl, combine all of the remaining ingredients, then fold them into the egg and sugar mixture to create a smooth batter.
Leave the batter to sit for half an hour, and in this time, make sure your oven is preheated to 200°C (180°C fan) or gas mark six.
Spoon just less than a tablespoon of mixture into each madeleine hole. Bear in mind that they’re going to rise, so you’re not looking to fill them to the top.
Bake in the oven for eight–ten minutes until golden brown, and if you can, serve them warm.
This recipe was originally created for our sixth volume of Stories by the Somerset-based chef Sam Wylde, owner of .
]]>Sometimes known as ‘poor man’s parmesan�, and sprinkled on many pasta dishes, pangrattato is Italian for fried breadcrumbs. In this recipe, the pangrattato gives an added kick to a classic rustic pasta dish with the addition of spicy chilli and garlic.
Serves: 4For the orecchiette with kale
For the spicy pangrattato
For the pangrattato, blitz the bread in a food processor until fine crumbs are formed.
Add the olive oil, chilli and garlic to a large frying pan and set over a medium heat. Tip in the breadcrumbs and stir to coat then cook, stirring constantly to ensure the breadcrumbs toast evenly, for about 8 - 10 minutes until the breadcrumbs are golden and toasty. Tip onto a baking tray lined with kitchen paper and set aside.
Place a pot of boiling, salted water over a high heat and cook the orecchiette according to the packet instructions.
In a large frying pan add the olive oil, anchovy fillets and garlic and heat, slowly, until the garlic is fragrant and the anchovies have broken down. Add the chilli flakes, kale and cook for about 5 minutes, until the kale has wilted.
Add in the cooked orecchiette along with a ladleful of the pasta cooking water and toss to emulsify everything and coat the pasta.
Serve in pasta bowls sprinkled with the pangrattato.
It’s the crunchy crumbs that take this to a new level and they keep really well so try making double or even triple the recipe and keeping the rest in a sealed container for up to a week to sprinkle on top of your pasta, salads or even sprinkled over your morning bacon and eggs!
Serves: 4For the salad
For the caesar dressing
For the spiced breadcrumbs
Put the baby gem and pecorino into a large serving bowl.
Blend all the ingredients for the dressing together, season to taste and set aside.
For the spiced breadcrumbs, heat the oil and butter in a large frying pan over a medium heat. Add the garlic, paprika, lemon zest and breadcrumbs, toss to combine and fry until golden and crispy. Tip into a bowl and toss with the parsley.
Drizzle the dressing over the salad leaves and sprinkle with the breadcrumbs and serve.
The tartness of the blackberries (which can be fresh or frozen) and zing of the lemons in this warming pudding are offset by the sweet, fluffy sponge mix. The perfect comforting finale to a family Sunday lunch.
Serves: 4-6
Time: 50 minutes
This is the perfect plant-based main. Slow roasted wedges of aubergine and butternut squash are tossed with chilli, thyme, and za’atar, then layered with crispy maple lentils and spicy garlic yoghurt. Makes enough for four
For the slow roasted aubergine
For the crisply lentils
For the roasted garlic yoghurt with harissa
This jewelled wild rice salad is packed with delicious flavours, including spring onions,pomegranates, maple, and cinnamon. It’s very easy to make, making it a versatileside dish you’ll return to again and again. Makes enough for four.
For the salad
For the dressing
Nothing beats a hot fruity crumble ona cold day. With hints of cinnamon, vanilla, maple, and almond, this beautiful plum and blackberry crumble looks and tastesabsolutely amazing.Makes enough for four.
For the fruity filling
For the crumble
In the easy-to-follow recipes below� created by Sam Wylde, our go-to local chef ofin Frome � you’ll find four dishes that work beautifully together for lunch or a light supper. Try serving the toasts as an appetiser, or for a smaller plate, you could serve them with one of the other dishes, like the green beans. Mix and match, pass them around, and tuck in. They all serve up to six people.
When you’re playing host for a special occasion, it’s always a good idea to have a few recipes under your belt that you can make in advance so you’re not spending all your time in the kitchen the next day. This berry pavlova is just such a dish, and is one of our go-tos for spring and summer gatherings. If you’re making it the night before, follow steps one–four, then continue with step five just before you serve. You can also use whatever berries are in season or, if you’re making it in early spring, thawed frozen ones from last summer.
Makes enough for six (with extra for seconds)
Put aside: about 50 minutes for prep and an hour for cooking
July’s arrival heralds the start of peach season. And while there’s nothing quite like a perfectly ripe, fresh peach straight from the fruit bowl (or, if you’re very lucky, the tree), a little heat, a touch of sweetness, and a smidgeon of spice can transform a handful of peaches into a simple but special pudding � or, in this case, breakfast. Just the thing for slow summer weekend mornings, this recipe can also be found on the menu at our Bath café,.Makes enough for four people.
For the peaches
If you’re ever in Bath, we’d love to see you at for brunch, lunch or afternoon tea. But if you’re further afield, we also regularly share our café recipes over on .
Cook the couscous according to the packet instructions (normally this is about ten minutes) until it’s al dente. Once that’s done, rinse it and drain off any excess water.
While the couscous is cooking, trim the broccoli and asparagus and cook these in boiling water for about two minutes, before quickly removing and plunging into ice cold water to stop the cooking. You want them to keep their greenness and bite.
Slice the radish as finely as possible and set aside.
For the dressing, place the wild garlic (or spinach) in a bowl and pour boiling water over so the leaves wilt. Remove from the water and rinse under cold water before draining. Place in a food processor with the basil leaves, the zest of the lemon and about two tablespoons of olive oil (add the garlic clove at this stage too if you’re using spinach). Blitz to a smooth paste and season with salt and pepper.
Add all the vegetables to a large serving bowl and toss together with a couple of tablespoons of the dressing. Check the seasoning and serve.
Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C fan/gas mark four.
Cut the cauliflower up into small florets, including any of the outer leaves that aren’t too tough.
Toss together on a baking tray with the turmeric, a tablespoon of olive oil and a generous pinch of salt and pepper.
Roast in the oven for about 20 minutes or until the cauliflower florets and leaves begin to colour.
In a small bowl, zest the lemon and add in its juice, two tablespoons of olive oil and a teaspoon of honey. Season with salt and pepper and set aside.
Place the baby leaves in a salad bowl, top with the cauliflower and dress with the lemon vinaigrette. Give everything a good stir and serve.
Should you be planning a day trip to the beautiful city of Bath, do stop by for a bite to eat. You’ll find the café right next door to Neptune Bath.
Swap the rainbow trout for goats� cheese or oven-roasted tofu if you’re following a vegetarian or plant-based diet.
2 fennel bulbs
2 jars of good quality butter beans
100g podded broad beans
100g samphire
For the salsa verde:
100g mixed herbs (parsley, chive, coriander,
basil and mint all work well together)
1 garlic clove grated
The zest of 1 lemon
1 tbsp of capers rinsed
100ml extra virgin olive oil
Sea salt and cracked black pepper
Butter beans might not grow in Britain, but they’re still a really great source of fibre, protein and vitamins, and like all legumes, are wonderful for the soil too. Choose the best you can find � we love the Queen Butter Beans from Bold Bean Co. They’re a heritage variety that’s full of flavour and are jarred, rather than tinned, which involves slower cooking to preserve those nutrients.’�
At our Bath café, the menu is always changing with the seasons. From our brunch menu, which has just had its spring refresh, to the tarts, soups and salads on our lunch menu that vary week by week and day by day depending on what ingredients are at their best from our partner farms that morning. This tart celebrates the British asparagus and wild garlic seasons, and is perfect for both picnics and garden lunches as it can be eaten hot or cold. We’ve found it’s plenty to feed six-eight with a salad on the side.
A ready rolled sheet of puff pastry
8 free range eggs
75ml whole milk
A handful of wild garlic (or 100g spinach and a clove of garlic)
250g asparagus
150g soft goats� cheese
A small handful of basil, finely chopped
Salt and pepper
Olive oil
Baking beans
Greaseproof paper
A 30cm tart case with loose base
Take care when foraging for wild garlic: make sure it isn’t near a road or directly next to a path. If you can’t find wild garlic, you can easily swap it out for spinach and a clove of garlic � just sauté these after you’ve cooked the asparagus before you add them to the tart.
Planning a trip to Bath?Be sure to pop by for delicious and nutritious dishes to take away or to enjoy on our terrace.