Recipes

Sticky chicken tulips, prunes, smoked bacon, toasted pecans and star anise
There was so much interest when I posted this pairing from 67 Pall Mall's new book Wine and Food in my Match of the Week slot recently that I had to follow up the the recipe from chef Marcus Verberne.
Master Sommelier Ronan Sayburn who collaborated with Marcus on the book introduces the recipe.
Madeira is one of the most wonderfully complex wines you will ever taste, but it’s often left to the end of the meal, or served with cheese. We wanted to do something different with it. This sticky chicken dish works very well, as the intense flavours in the Madeira need to be paired with punchy ingredients. It’s a fun bar snack or pre-dinner nibble.
The sticky glaze is infused with the most prominent flavours present in aged Madeira, such as smoky bacon, prunes, honey and nuts, with the complementary spices of star anise and cinnamon. This is the perfect example of what we endeavour to achieve at the Club: to create dishes to match the flavour notes of a certain wine, resulting in a memorable synergy between the two.
Sticky chicken tulips, prunes, smoked bacon, toasted pecans and star anise
Serves 4 as an appetiser
16 chicken wing ‘drumsticks’, ordered from the butcher
600ml chicken stock
8 star anise
2.5cm cinnamon stick
50g pitted prunes
40g pecans
1 tbsp honey
4 smoked pancetta rashers, finely chopped
2 tbsp groundnut oil
80ml Madeira
1 tbsp soft brown sugar
Salt
To prepare the chicken tulips, using the heel of a heavy cook’s knife, assertively chop the small knuckle off the end of each wing drumstick to reveal the bone. Pull back the flesh from the drumsticks, turning it inside out to reveal the bone in its entirety.
Place the chicken tulips into a small saucepan and cover with the stock. Add the star anise and cinnamon and season well with salt. Over a medium heat, bring to the boil, skimming off any impurities that collect on the surface with a ladle. Once it is boiling, drop in the prunes and remove from the heat. Allow to cool and infuse for 30–40 minutes.
Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 170°C.
Place the pecans on a small oven tray and toast for 5 minutes or so. Remove the tray from the oven, drizzle over the honey and mix, coating the nuts in the honey, then return to the oven for a final 2–3 minutes. Remove from the oven, mix them again, then allow to cool.
Once the stock has cooled, strain the chicken through a sieve over a bowl to collect the cooking liquor. Remove and discard the star anise and cinnamon; they have done their job.
Place the chicken tulips on kitchen paper to dry. Chop the softened prunes very finely to create a paste.
To finish the chicken, preheat a non-stick frying pan over a medium heat.
Fry the chicken tulips and pancetta in the groundnut oil until the pancetta is crispy. Deglaze the pan with the Madeira and add the brown sugar and prune paste. Toss the tulips in the pan to coat, then pour in 150ml of the reserved stock. Stirring regularly, reduce the stock to a sticky caramelised glaze, with a consistency that coats the chicken. Place the tulips on a serving platter and coat with the glaze.
Roughly chop the honey-roasted pecans and sprinkle them over the top.
Serve with a finger bowl and plenty of napkins.
What to drink;
Ronan suggests:
Sercial, Blandy’s Vintage Madeira
Sercial, D’Oliveiras Vintage
Verdelho Terrantez, Blandy’s

Seamus Mullen's kale salad with apple, toasted pecans and yoghurt and dill vinaigrette
I've never really 'got' kale but this delicious salad would convert anybody. AND it's healthy too!
I've added some notes about how they've adapted the recipe at Mullen's restaurant Sea Containers. Given that fresh herbs are scarce and expensive at this time of year you might also want to cut back on the number you use (apart from the dill).
Kale salad, apple, toasted pecans and yogurt and dill vinaigrette
Serves 4
1 bunch Cavalo Nero, Dinosaur kale or Tuscan kale
A handful of dandelion leaves if available
1 oz spiced, caramelized pecans*
1 apple, thinly sliced (they used Golden Delicious, apparently)
1 small serrano chile, sliced as thinly as possible
1/2 an avocado, cut into 1/2” pieces
2 oz yogurt and dill vinaigrette (see below)
a good handful of fresh herbs - Mullen recommends cilantro (coriander), basil, dill and mint. Gus, his sous chef, used chives, parsley and chervil

For the yogurt and dill vinaigrette:
1/2 cup (4 fl oz) full fat yogurt or kefir
1 clove garlic, grated
6 tbsp fresh dill
zest and juice 1 lemon
1 tbsp champagne or moscatel vinegar
1 tsp honey
1 cup (8 fl oz) extra virgin olive oil
salt
fresh ground pepper
Combine all ingredients except oil, whisk together, then drizzle in oil until emulsified.
Process
Strip the leaves off the stalks and cut the kale into a paper thin chiffonade. Combine all the ingredients, season with salt and pepper and plate in a small bowl (see above. (I suspect you need to let it rest for half an hour or so to soften as you do a slaw.) Garnish with fresh herbs and fresh cracked pepper.
* in the recipe Mullen says "toasted in brown butter, tossed in sugar, cayenne, ground coriander and sea salt" but his chef Gus says he dips the nuts in whisked egg white, rolls them in a mixture of onion and garlic powder, cayenne, curry powder, salt and turmeric then roasts them briefly at 165°C. Or use any spiced nuts recipe you like. Or buy them ready made.
What to drink: I found an Austrian grüner veltliner paired very well with this but so would an apple juice. (See my pairings for kale).
Obviously the picture at the top of the page looks more stylish but yours - and mine - will look more like the dressed salad in the bowl.
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