Mark

Mark

Mark Bradford was born in Australia in 1966 and has lived on a damp, cold island off the coast of France since 1970. Educated in the State School System (proudly), his teachers unanimously agreed he had raised indolence and mediocrity to world-class levels.

In sport, he excelled at outrunning the bigger kids to avoid a regular hiding. These traits have seen him through several aimless career changes and now, in his 50s, he finds himself wondering what he will do when he grows up.

But, he loves his family and he can cook a bit.

Follow him at www.bradfordfamilycookbook.uk

To Josh, Sam, Megan and Lily,

This isn’t meant to be replacement for buying proper books. If any of you are at all interested in cooking then I’m sure you’ll buy loads just like I have. But this is to give you the basics all in one place: something to take to college or your first flat or wherever and make a start. I’ve cooked a lot of stuff – a lot of nice stuff and a lot of crap stuff – and this will just condense what I’ve learnt from the good and the bad to give you a head start.

Don’t treat these recipes as Gospel – if you like more of something than I’ve used just add it, if you don’t like an ingredient chop it out or use something else. Love Tabasco? Put it in everything – why not? However, whatever you do with the ingredients, it is worth taking on board the learning points and technique advice – it saves time and gives better results.

Equipment

This sounds obvious but is the most important thing. Using the wrong pan or knife can be time-consuming, make life difficult and even sometimes be dangerous but here’s the thing: You need a lot less stuff than you think:

  • A good sharp cook’s knife with a 6-8” blade. You are more likely to cut yourself with a blunt knife believe it or not so keep it sharp
  • A good long bread knife
  • A sharp thin long carving knife
  • Scissors
  • A small sharp knife for cutting fruit etc
  • A peeler. You can do this with a knife but why make extra work for yourself?
  • Pans. You get what you pay for (more or less) but avoid aluminium – there’s a reason they’re cheap. Stainless steel is cool because they go on the heat but you can also put them in the oven. Don’t go for wooden or plastic handles – plain steel is best. Enamelled stuff like le Creuset pans look cool but weigh a ton and cost a fortune. And they also always have a spout so the lid doesn’t fit properly.
  • A casserole dish with a lid (le Creuset are really good at these – cast Iron ones are great because they go on the hob, the earthenware ones are good for the oven but don’t go on the heat)
  • Gratin dishes of different sizes – earthenware
  • A cheese grater – the box type that has different sized holes on different sides
  • Roasting tins. These are either steel or aluminium. You get what you pay for but none are that expensive so if you buy cheap ones then just be prepared to chuck them when they are spent.

That’s about it

 

Everyone thinks their recipe is the best.

But they’re wrong. This is.

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