Today, two mince recipes that I hope you will use over and over again. This cottage pie is worth making in batches and keeping in the freezer. It is a great recipe if you want to make sure the children eat their vegetables.
You could also use celery, and leeks work very well too.
The cheesy mash looks well and tastes great and there are so many great Irish cheeses to try with it.
I always enjoy these beef burgers with a Mediterranean twist.
Tzatziki is a sauce that visitors to Greece and Turkey will be familiar with. It is a refreshing dip or sauce and is very popular and now easily available in cartons in supermarkets.
Or you could try Irish yoghurt. I spent a great day at the Dunne family farm in Enniscorthy recently where they produce Killowen from their own herd.
I met brother and sister team Pauline and Nicholas, and Nicholas’ wife Judith. They are the second generation producing the yoghurt range.
Killowen recently won a gold medal at the Blás na hÉireann awards and their natural yoghurt is now available in the Simply Better range.
Happy cooking.
Cottage pie
Serves four to six
1 tbsp rapeseed oil
450g (1lb) lean minced beef
1 onion, finely chopped
4 carrots, diced
2 celery sticks, finely chopped
1 garlic clove, crushed
2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
300ml (½ pint) beef or chicken stock (from a cube is fine)
1 tbsp tomato purée
1 tsp chopped fresh thyme
100g (4oz) frozen garden peas, thawed
1 tbsp chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
For the cheesy mash:
900g (2lb) floury potatoes, such as Rooster or Maris Piper, peeled and cut into cubes
50g (2oz) mature Cheddar cheese, grated
25g (1oz) butter
100ml (3½fl oz) milk
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
Buttered peas, to serve
Mediterranean pitta beef burgers
Serves four
500g (11/4lb) lean minced lamb
4 white pitta breads
200g (7oz) carton red pepper and feta dip
200g (7oz) packet spinach, watercress & rocket salad
2 ripe tomatoes, sliced
200g (7oz) carton tzatziki
½ cucumber, cut into batons
Lemon wedges, to garnish