Tag: Food Festival

Tomahawk Steak with Mechouia Salad

St Ives Food Festival is always such a great weekend. Taking place in mid-May, this food festival on Porthminster Beach has the most incredible backdrop for the chefs lucky enough to be invited to demonstrate a recipe on the Asado Fire Pit stage.

On Sunday 14th Rupert shared with the crowd how to make mechouia salad, a fantastic traditional Tunisian dish of grilled Mediterranean vegetables that goes incredibly with barbecued meats or works as a stand-alone dish. It’s a frequent favourite at our Wooodfired Cooking courses!

tomahawk steak and mechouia salad

Mechouia (also known as slata mechouia in Tunisian Arabic) has a base of char-grilled tomatoes, onions, peppers, chillis and garlic, which are coarsely chopped and seasoned before being dressed with olive oil. Rupert cooked a tomahawk steak over the coals, serving it medium-rare, sliced over the mechouia.

Cook your steak to your preference, remembering to oil your steak (whether or not you use a pan) and, once placed on the grill, not to move it until you come to turn it. And, of course, rest it before slicing and serving!

rupert cooper demonstrating how to cook a tomahawk steak at st ives food festival

Here’s how to make the mechouia to serve it on:

Ingredients

4 Medium Tomatoes

2 Red Peppers

2 Large Jalapeno Peppers

2 Small Onions, the outer paper leaves removed

1 Teaspoon Caraway Seeds

½ Teaspoon Coriander Seeds

2 Cloves Garlic, finely minced

¼ Cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil

1 Tablespoon red wine Vinegar

Salt and Pepper to Taste

Method

Using either a grill or BBQ fire, char the outsides of the tomato, peppers, and onions until they’re completely blackened and blistered, turning frequently to char all sides. You can put the onions directly into the coals of the fire. Place the vegetables in a large bowl and cover with plastic wrap to allow them to steam in their own heat for 15 minutes.

Peel the char off of the vegetables, coarsely chop them and place them in a bowl.

Toast the caraway and coriander seeds in a dry pan for a few minutes until they become fragrant. Grind them into a powder in a spice grinder or a mortar and pestle.

Add the spices with the olive oil and vinegar to the chopped vegetables and stir well. Salt and pepper to taste.

Header image by Nik Read, article images by Sam Buckle. Thanks to both for sharing their work with us.

As part of last week’s Roseland Festival, Rupert had the pleasure of teaming up with Roseland Market Garden to host a long-table garden supper in their polytunnel for forty lucky diners on Thursday May 4th. The menu consisted of Roseland Market Garden’s spring seasonal vegetables and delicious home-reared, grass-fed hogget from the farm, all enjoyed sat at a table laid down the centre of their polytunnel in the heart of their veg patch.

produce in wooden crates at roseland market garden

“The mission: to connect our guests with the finest of produce, reared and grown in the very fields we are dining in. A truly beautiful and unique concept. Mission accomplished.”

Jamie Hext, Roseland Market Garden
garden supper srved on a long table laid in a polytunnel at roseland market garden for the roseland festival

“What an amazing and unique experience Everything looked lovely and the food was fantastic, especially that lemon posset pudding!”

Josh Hoole, Roseland Festival Vice Chair, Publicity & Events Co-Ordinator
main dishes at the philleigh way and roseland market garden polytunnel garden supper event

Whipped feta crostini – dukka
Baba ganoush flatbread
Charcuterie

~0~

Griddled mangetout – olive oil – smoked paprika
Anchovies, orange, raisins & pine nuts
Carwarthen spinach saag aloo & pickled ginger

~0~

Smoked hogget, cavolo salsa verde served with sprouting garlic & roasted onions/squash

~0~

Lemon posset, ginger crumble & black fruit sauce

On the weekend of the 21st-23rd April, the small harbour town of Porthleven on the south coast of Cornwall once again played host to an epic food festival. For one weekend in April every year, the harbourside and the park at the centre of the small town are taken over by marquees, stages and stalls, and food lovers from across the country arrive for a weekend of inspiring food and drink featuring the best chefs and producers from Cornwall and beyond. Philleigh Way’s Rupert Cooper had the honour of compering the festival’s Chef’s Theatre stage alongside the festival’s chef patron Jude Kereama on Friday, introducing the presenting chefs, talking the crowd through their recipes and lending an extra pair of hands when needed.

looking down on porthleven and the harbour during the food festival

The big ticket event for Porthleven Food Festival this year however was the Feasts At The Net Loft, hosted by Rupert. He had a busy weekend! Held in the beautiful and characterful old Net Loft on the harbourside with views out across the fishing boats, Rupert hosted a three-course feast on the Friday and Saturday nights and then a special Sunday lunch. The Friday feasts featured dishes from friends and acclaimed chefs Jude Kereama, Guy Owen, and Andrew Tuck (who’ve all competed on the hit BBC Two TV programme Great British Menu) paired with a wine flight selected by sommelier Elly Owen, and on Sunday it was all about the seasonal roast.

long table laid for feast at the net loft by rupert cooper at porthleven food festival

Friday & Saturday Feast Nights

Black & blue onglet, parmesan, pickled jalapenos, watercress – Andy Tuck
Slow cooked Catalan style charred octopus
Grilled asparagus with Cornish yarg dressing (v)
Wild pesto & sourdough crackers (v)
~0~
Bread – trufle butter – dips (v)
~0~
Kota Kai Pork Char Sui with grilled Asian greens – Jude Kereama
Spring vegetable orzo – mojo verde with smoked onions (v)
BBQ Hispi cabbage with feta & onion – Guy Owen (v)
Roasted potatoes with confit garlic (v)
~0~
Rhubarb & Cornish fairing cheesecake, roasted rhubarb with stem ginger & Cornish Gin (v)

sharing starters at a net loft feast at porthleven food festival

Sunday Lunch

Spring minestrone (v)
~0~

Smoked & roasted Cornish Pork served with traditional roasted vegetables, stuffing & cider gravy
Or
Veggie Pie served with traditional roasted vegetables, stuffing & veggie gravy (v)
~0~
Rhubarb & seasonal fruit crumble, served with Rossa’s clotted cream (v)

evening stalls and food tents at porthleven food festival

Images by Here Now Films for Porthleven Food Festival.

St Ives Food & Drink Festival took place on Porthminster Beach on the weekend of September 17th, 18th and 19th. Whilst it rained on the Friday, by Sunday when I was hosting the Asado Pit Chef’s Stage, out on the sand with St Ives Bay and Godrevy Lighthouse as our backdrop, the sun had come out and we had a glorious day on the sand.

st ives food and drink festival on porthminster beach
Photo by Adam Sargent

I spent most of the day up front with a microphone in my hand, alongside some amazing chefs like Jeffrey Robinson, the owner and executive chef of the New Yard Restaurant, The Idle Rocks’ head chef Dorian Janmatt, and Simon Hulstone of The Elephant in Torquay. I had a lovely catch up with Porthminster Beach Café’s chef de patron Mick Smith and we spoke about collaborating on some future projects (watch this space) and I even managed to squeeze in a demo of my own!

Photo by Adam Sargent

If you didn’t get a chance to get down to St Ives for this year’s event then I’ll share the recipe for my demo dish below, which I can best describe as “posh kebabs”, and be sure to mark your diary for next year’s event. There really is no other food festival quite like this one!

posh venison kebabs cooked at st ives food festival
Photo by Michelle Nash

Flatbreads with venison, beetroot relish, tahini yoghurt, smoked mushroom and burnt leeks.

As I was cooking on the Asado Pit Chef’s Stage, I was cooking over fire. Therefore, these instructions are for cooking on your barbecue, but you can adapt to cook it inside on your hob. I cooked venison loin from Westcountry Premium Venison – I’ll repeat it later, but that’s because it’s important: DON’T OVERCOOK YOUR VENISON! It’s really lean so you want it no more than medium-rare. Ok, here’s the recipe:

First up, to make the flatbreads get a mixing bowl and use a spoon to mix together 350 g self-raising flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder and 350 g natural yoghurt, then use clean hands to pat and bring everything together.
Dust a clean work surface with flour, then tip out the dough.
Knead for a minute or so to bring it all together (this isn’t a traditional bread recipe, so you don’t need to knead it for long – just enough time to bring everything together). Put the dough into a floured-dusted bowl and cover with a plate, then leave aside for a while.
Dust a clean work surface and rolling pin with flour, then divide the dough in half, then divide each half into 6 equal-sized pieces (roughly the size of a golf ball). With your hands, pat and flatten the dough, then use a rolling pin to roll each piece into 12cm rounds, roughly 2mm to 3mm thick.
Cook each flatbread on the grill for 1 to 2 minutes on each side, or until bar-marked and puffed up, turning with tongs. Brush the flatbreads all over with herby garlic butter or oil as they come off the griddle.

cooking flatbreads

To make the beetroot relish, grate or finely shred beetroot and mix with red wine vinegar, sugar and mixed spice, then set aside until later.

I smoked the mushrooms by placing them on the grill and covering them with a metal bowl (or you could use a lid) to retain the smoke and moisture.
Cook the leek “dirty” directly on the coals, and once softened you can strip back as much or as little of the charred outer leaves as your like.

cooking leeks

Take your venison and cook that dirty too, putting it straight onto the coals. Venison only needs a couple of minutes – cooking it any more than medium rare will make it tough and leathery as it’s such a lean meat. Don’t overcook it! Take the meat off the coals and rest it in a warm place until you assemble your kebab.
If cooking inside on your hob, simply cook your leeks and venison in a very hot pan.

cooking venison dirty directly on the coals

To make the tahini yoghurt mix one part tahini with four parts yoghurt, a crushed clove of garlic and a pinch of salt.
Gently cook off the beetroot relish in a hot pan for a few minutes.

chef rupert cooper cooking at st ives food festival
Photo by Michelle Nash

Bring it all together by slicing your venison, then pile a bit of everything into a flatbread and tuck in!

posh venison kebab

Over the late August Bank Holiday weekend, we were lucky enough to be cooking for crowds of happy festival-goers at the amazing Big Feastival, on Alex James’ Farm in The Cotswolds.  This year was the festival’s 10th birthday, and was two years in the making having been cancelled last year.  That extra long wait only made it more the sweeter, though, and it was an amazing event to be a part of.

We were invited to host the Feast On The Farm tent for the weekend, which was the festival’s sit-down dining offering.  For a festival that’s all about food and music, this was a real honour.  We served breakfast, lunch and dinner all three days of the festival, feeding an estimated 500 hungry people over the long weekend.  Our menu was a celebration of Cornwall, featuring a selection of produce from some of the great growers, farmers and fishermen that we are lucky enough to have on our doorstep.  If you want to see what we cooked up for folks, and what Cornish produce we championed, then scroll on down to see the menus.

chef rupert cooper at the Philleigh Way feasting tent at the 2021 Big Feastival

A huge thanks to The Big Feastival’s arts and entertainment director Felicity for inviting us to host the feast tent, and to the crew of Cornish champions who travelled up to cook and host alongside me.  Keith, Molly, Tom, Gee, Sam, Liz, Louise, Libby, Alex, Alice, Tom, Bambi, Gemma and Paige, you were incredible.  It was a full-on weekend, and so much fun, and I hope that we’ll be invited back next year – I’ve already got ideas for how we can make things even more special. 

Check out a few photos from the weekend, shot by The Big Feastival’s own Felicity @taste_felicity and Gemma (@muthaflunka) from our team. 

tables laid in the Philleigh Way feasting tent at the 2021 Big Feastival
portico outside asado kitchen at the Philleigh Way feasting tent at the 2021 Big Feastival

Breakfast on the Farm

Gorse Bakery Cinnamon Bun

St Ewe Eggs Shakshuka with Focaccia (optional Cornish Black Pudding)

Homemade Granola

Coffee & Juice

drumbecue at the Philleigh Way feasting tent at the 2021 Big Feastival

Feast On The Farm

Starters

Cornish Carrot Dip with Crackers and Nigella Seeds

Smoked Mackerel Pate & Pickled Shallots

Cornish Charcuterie

Handmade Flatbreads

Mini Pasties

Porthilly Oysters with Mignonette Dressings

~0~

Porthilly oysters at the big feastival 2021

Main Course

Smoked Striploin Cornish Beef

Smoked Squash with Sage & Roasted Apple (V)

Cornish Mid Potatoes

Salsa Verde

Burnt Heritage Tomatoes & Spring Onions with Mustard Dressing

~0~

beef striploin served by Philliegh Way at the big feastival

Dessert

Cornish Mess

(Wild Gorse Meringue, Mead-Stewed Fruit with Cornish Rose & Smoked Honey served with Rodda’s Clotted Cream)

Wishlist 0
Continue Shopping