Nigel Slater’s recipes for baked peppers and blueberry compote (2024)

The local greengrocer’s, where I do much of my shopping, display their fruit and vegetables with an extraordinary generosity. Precarious piles of peppers, a small mountain of aubergines, tray upon tray of tomatoes – crisp and green, golden-shouldered, tiny orange varieties – sit next to rows of asparagus and short, sweet cucumbers. Mint, dill and parsley are sold in fat bunches and they are good, too, for curry leaves, lemongrass and my beloved coriander. These are the most reliable shops to come to for a ripe watermelon in summer and rust-speckled apricots that don’t taste of cotton wool.

I arrive home with peppers, fat and glossy, each one large enough to carry a cargo of minced pork with rosemary and garlic or mushrooms and tarragon, neither of which I have. There is a block of tofu, the fragile, silken variety, to soak up the fruity notes of the olive oil, the salty olives and the tomatoes. The juice that sat in the hollows of the roasted peppers was so good we sponged it up with pieces torn from a white loaf, its soft crust freckled with sesame. This recipe started out with feta in place of the tofu, but I wanted something softer and less salty, and anyway, we eat more than enough cheese in this house.

The first gooseberries of the year will be along shortly. Until then, there is rhubarb and blueberries for breakfast. If rhubarb would take in my garden (I have tried and failed many times) it would make a cheap breakfast fruit, the stalks chopped and piled in a saucepan with a little sugar and water and simmered for five minutes until its juices turn rose pink. Instead, it is served in small amounts, the same way I do a compote of blueberries, in vivid pools with yoghurt or kefir, or trickled over French toast. Brioche is particularly good for this, torn in half and dunked into milk and beaten eggs, then fried until its cut surfaces are crisp and gold. Some cooks add sugar to the batter, but I find it burns too easily, so add instead a dusting of icing sugar just as the bread comes from the pan, crisp, sweet and hot, ready to meet the warm fruit, served with extraordinary generosity.

Baked peppers, tofu and tomatoes

I would use silken tofu for stuffing the peppers. Its light, panna cotta texture is good with the sweet flesh of the roasted peppers. If tofu isn’t your thing, I suggest using feta cheese, crumbled into large pieces. You can add coriander here if you wish – it is particularly at home with the tofu, olives and tomatoes. Use it in place of, or in addition to the chives. You’ll need bread for the juices. Serves 3

red peppers 3
silken tofu 500g
cherry tomatoes 250g
olive oil 100ml
green olives 10
chives 10
parsley 2 tbsp, chopped

Set the oven at 200C/gas mark 6. Halve and seed the peppers. Put them, cut side up in a baking dish or roasting tin. Divide the tofu evenly between the peppers. Cut each of the cherry tomatoes in half and add them to the peppers, tucking them in with the tofu. Pour some of the olive oil into each of the peppers. Season with black pepper and a little salt.

Bake the peppers for an hour or until they are truly tender.

Stone and roughly chop the olives and put them in a small mixing bowl. Finely chop the chives and mix them with the olives. Remove the parsley leaves from their stalks, roughly chop and toss with the olives and chives.

Scatter over the peppers as they come from the oven and serve.

French toast with blueberries and maple syrup

Nigel Slater’s recipes for baked peppers and blueberry compote (1)

If French toast – such a delight for Sunday breakfast – is to be crisp outside and marshmallow-soft within, we need a soft, open-textured bread, such as brioche. I use brioche buns if I can get them, if not 2cm thick slices from a brioche loaf. Watch the buns carefully as they cook, lifting them as they fry with a palette knife to check their progress. The lighter, fluffier and thicker the bread the better the toast. You could serve it with cream – double and lightly whipped so it stands in soft mounds on the hot toast. Serves 2

eggs 2
milk 180ml
orange small, zest of 1
ground cinnamon a pinch
brioche style buns 2
butter 50g
icing sugar

For the compote:
blueberries 250g
maple syrup 100ml

Put the blueberries and maple syrup into a stainless-steel or enamelled saucepan. Warm the fruit and syrup over a low heat for about 7 or 8 minutes until the berries are just starting to burst. Leave to simmer for a few minutes until the syrup starts to thicken.

Beat together the eggs and milk. Finely grate the zest from the orange and stir into the eggs and milk with a pinch of cinnamon. Tear each brioche bun in half horizontally. Push the brioche down into the egg and milk mixture and press gently until it is thoroughly soaked. Leave for 10 minutes.

Warm the butter in a shallow, nonstick pan. When small bubbles appear on the surface, lower the pieces of bread into the pan, torn side down, and leave for 3 or 4 minutes until the underside is golden. Carefully turn the bread with a palette knife and let the other side colour, adjusting the heat to ensure that the butter doesn’t burn.

Remove the bread from the pan and drain briefly on kitchen paper, then divide between two plates. Dust over a little icing sugar, then spoon over some of the blueberries and their syrup.

Follow Nigel on Twitter @NigelSlater

Nigel Slater’s recipes for baked peppers and blueberry compote (2024)

FAQs

How do you make Nigel Slater tomatoes? ›

Chop them finely and add to 3 tbsp of olive oil. Season with a generous grinding of salt and pepper. Trickle the seasoned oil over the tomatoes. Bake for about 45 minutes until the tomatoes are soft and their skins are a little dark and even caramelised where they touch the tin.

Do you have to boil peppers before stuffing them? ›

The peppers need to be par-cooked before filling so that they cook through. Many recipes call for boiling the peppers first, but I prefer to roast them – more flavor and less cleanup!

What is a fancy name for stuffed peppers? ›

The chile relleno, literally "stuffed pepper", consists of a roasted and peeled/skinned green pasilla or poblano pepper stuffed with cheese (traditionally queso fresco) and, occasionally, minced meat, covered in an egg batter, and fried.

Why do they fry green tomatoes and not red tomatoes? ›

Green tomatoes are more firm and crisp than ripe red tomatoes. They will hold up better while being fried, and they won't turn into a mushy mess. A ripe tomato is very soft and will likely fall apart during the breading or frying.

How do you roast root vegetables Nigel Slater? ›

Roast winter roots and lemon cannellini cream
  1. carrots, parsnips, Jerusalem artichokes 1 kg, total weight.
  2. beetroots 4, small.
  3. olive oil 3 tbsp.
  4. ground cardamom 1 tsp.
  5. ground coriander 1 tsp.
  6. cumin seeds 1 tsp.
  7. garlic 3 cloves.
Feb 18, 2024

How to make pesto Nigel Slater? ›

Place basil leaves and garlic in food processor or blender and process until leaves are finely chopped. Add nuts and process until nuts are finely chopped. Add cheese and process until combined. With the machine running, add olive oil in a slow, steady stream.

What does pepper pair with? ›

Anything that has ginger, cardamom, allspice, cinnamon, or clove—like Chai-Spiced Snickerdoodles—can get a nice little boost from pepper.

What does well with peppers? ›

Both sweet and hot peppers benefit from companion planting (much like their fellow nightshade, the tomato). In fact, herbs like basil, chives, and oregano, along with vegetables such as carrots and onions, are excellent choices for companion planting with peppers.

What goes good with bell peppers as a snack? ›

Bell pepper snack ideas
  • Healthy Snack Recipes with Peppers | Food Faith Fitness. ...
  • Low Carb Bacon Ranch Bell Pepper Poppers. ...
  • Bell Pepper Nachos. ...
  • Bell Pepper Sandwich. ...
  • Bell Pepper Sandwich (Ditch the Bread!) ...
  • Viral Sweet Pepper Salad. ...
  • Cream Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Melvina Ondricka

Last Updated:

Views: 5955

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (68 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Melvina Ondricka

Birthday: 2000-12-23

Address: Suite 382 139 Shaniqua Locks, Paulaborough, UT 90498

Phone: +636383657021

Job: Dynamic Government Specialist

Hobby: Kite flying, Watching movies, Knitting, Model building, Reading, Wood carving, Paintball

Introduction: My name is Melvina Ondricka, I am a helpful, fancy, friendly, innocent, outstanding, courageous, thoughtful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.