Bubbles!

The very thing for running around in the sunshine after.

  • 40ml cheap, runny washing up liquid (the thicker ones might be better for washing up, but they make smaller bubbles so…)
  • 200ml water
  • 10ml glycerine
  1. Mix these ingredients together well
  2. Test the mixture by creating a large bubble – bend a clean metal coat hanger into a roughly circular hoop and dip the hoop in the mixture and lift it out. A thin bubble film should be suspended in the hanger which, if you swing the hanger around in an exuberant circle, should make a big bubble.
  3. If no film forms on the hanger, add some more detergent and mix together again. If a good-sized bubble doesn appear when you swing around, add a little more glycerine.

Essentially you can make any amount with the proportions 4 parts detergent / 20 parts water / 1 part glycerine

Hot toddy

The ultimate throat-soother for the covid- or other lurgy-ridden

  • 2 tbsp whisky
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1 heaped tsp honey
  • 1 pinch cinnamon
  1. Put all the ingredients into a mug and top up with boiling water
  2. Stir well and drink while it’s still piping hot

Jollof rice

I overheard a man and woman talking as they walked down Tottenham Court Road the other day, and the man said “my mum’s love language is jollof rice”. And I feel as though that is such an incredible endorsement of that woman and her cooking. This version is like a savoury expression of love. Complex, but worth it. Feeds 4

  • 250g basmati rice 

For the broth

  • 1 l water
  • 2 chicken stock cubes
  • 1 tsp white peppercorns
  • 2 heaped tsp medium curry powder
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • 2″ piece fresh ginger, thickly sliced
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 tbsp fish sauce

For the ata (base sauce)

  • 2 red peppers, roughly chopped
  • 3 tbsp veg oil
  • 1 onion, peeled and finely diced
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • 3 tbsp tomato puree
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1-2 tbsp hot sauce
  1. Put the broth ingredients in a heavy-based saucepan and bring to a boil
  2. Then turn down the heat and cook for 30 mins with the lid off
  3. Meanwhile, puree the diced peppers with a hand blender or a mini processor until smooth, then scrape into a frying pan 
  4. Dry fry over medium heat, stirring regularly, for around 15-20 mins until reduced to a thick, deep red paste
  5. Scoop the paste out into a bowl and rinse the pan, then return it to a medium heat with the oil, and add the onion
  6. Sauté for 8-10 mins until the onions start to caramelise
  7. Add the garlic, tomato puree and smoked paprika, stir and fry for a couple of mins then add the red pepper paste and the hot sauce
  8. Combine gently and cook for a further 5-10 mins, stirring occasionally, then take off the heat.
  9. Fish the peppercorns, ginger and bay leaves out of the stock and bring it back to the boil
  10. Stir in the ata and simmer for 5 mins
  11. Then tip the rice into the saucepan, stir well, bring to the boil, then cover and leave to cook for 10 mins
  12. Turn off the heat and leave the pan covered without touching it for a further 5 mins

Serve with grilled chicken and cabbage slaw. The rice is the star of the show here!

Gluten free chocolate fudge pudding

A gluten free, slightly-adapted version of a dessert from the brilliant and incredibly talented Ravneet Gill. This has all the rich fudginess of a decadent pudding with none of the dry crumbliness that you often get with GF food. Feeds 2 generously

  • 30g soft light brown sugar
  • 50g dark chocolate, broken into pieces
  • 2 eggs
  • 60g caster sugar
  • 50g greek yoghurt
  • 35ml veg oil
  • 80g gluten free plain flour (and of course with regular flour if you don’t need it to be gf)
  • 15g cocoa powder
  • ½ tsp bicarb
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • A pinch of salt
  1. Pre-heat the oven to 160C fan (180C) and stick the kettle on
  2. Mix the brown sugar and chocolate in a small bowl with 50ml boiling water
  3. Warm in the microwave for 30 seconds to ensure the chocolate is melted and sugar is dissolved, stirring to combine
  4. Scrape this oozy mixture into the base of an enamel or ceramic baking dish
  5. In a mixing bowl, whisk together the eggs and caster sugar until pale and voluminous
  6. Add the yoghurt, oil and 3 tbsp water and continue to whisk until thick and smooth
  7. In a separate bowl, combine the gf flour, cocoa powder, bicarb, baking powder and salt
  8. Then just add the dry ingredients to the wet and stir together into a smooth batter
  9. Pour this gently and evenly over the sauce in your baking dish
  10. Seal the dish with foil and then place it into a larger roasting tin
  11. Pour boiling water into the large roasting tin around your pudding, until it’s about halfway up the side (possibly easier to do this while the double-tin situation is already sitting on the oven shelf)
  12. Transfer into the oven (very carefully!) and bake for 40 mins
  13. Remove from the water bath and leave to cool for 5 mins
  14. Serve with custard or vanilla ice cream. You’re going to be so happy you made this

Peanut, chocolate and date balls

Once you’ve stopped sniggering about balls, I can confirm that these are lovely, snacky delights for when you want something sweet but wholesome – they are naturally sweet, gluten free and packed with slow release energy ingredients. Makes about 15, depending how chunky you make them

  • 100g dark chocolate
  • 4 tbsp rolled oats
  • 4 tbsp roasted unsalted peanuts
  • 200g medjool dates, pitted
  • 3 tbsp natural peanut butter (no added salt or sugar
  • 1 heaped tbsp flax seed powder
  • ¼ tsp salt
  1. Melt the chocolate in a bowl in the microwave – on high for 30 seconds at a time
  2. In a mini food processor, whizz up the oats and peanuts until the peanuts are nubbly and chopped, but not completely disintegrated. Tip into the melted chocolate
  3. Add the dates to the mini food processor and whizz them up too. Then laboriously scrape the resulting goo into the bowl to join the chocolate, oats and peanuts
  4. Add the peanut butter, flax seed powder and salt. Mix well
  5. Roll the thick mixture into 10p-sized balls using your fingers
  6. Put onto a plate and chill in the fridge for at least an hour
  7. Prise them off the plate (or maybe think ahead and line the plate with baking paper to avoid this) and pop them in a jar. Probably best to keep in the fridge to stop them going soft if it’s warm outside