If you're quick you can still catch the wild garlic season. They say once the flowers appear it is past it but I picked some in Jesmond Dene on Friday, the flowers were just beginning to bud, and as long as you get the fresh little leaves from the base it is still delicious. The bigger leaves are beginning to get a bit tough. You will know when you've found it as it is pretty pungent, a green leafy garlic smell filling the air...
My latest supperclub was a rustic French affair on Friday in the lovely tasting room at Carruthers and Kent. I served the wild garlic as part of the main course in a Spring Stew, cooked in butter with baby onions, asparagus, peas and courgettes, it was delicious alongside Confit duck and Pomme Anna, and went down a treat, thankfully...
I also made this little loaf last weekend in the Lake District where the wild garlic has only just appeared so you have a little longer over there. It is a very simple loaf that I saw Lorraine Pascal making on one of her programmes ages ago. I made a
Red Pepper, Thyme and Anchovy Damper loaf a while ago which was delicious, so thought I'd give it a go with fresh wild garlic.
For this version I just made a little loaf so double the amounts if you want a larger loaf. To start heat your ove
n
to 200°C
and mix 225g of self raising flour with quarter of a teaspoon of
salt, a teaspoon of extra virgin olive oil. Add 110ml of water and mix everything
thoroughly until you are left with a ball of dough. Knead briefly until it is combined and smooth.
Dust your work surface
with some flour and flatten out the ball of dough into a circle. I
finely chopped a large handful of wild garlic. You could use any combination of fillings
you fancy really; chopped green or black olives, roast soft garlic,
diced chorizo, roasted tomatoes. Pile your filling into
the centre of the dough and start to fold the edges over the top
until it is sealed. Turn the dough over and knead it to distribute
the wild garlic. The aim is a ball of
dough with the filling mixed through evenly inside. Once you have it under
control flatten it out a bit and squash the handle of a wooden spoon
into it to create triangular segments.
Finally bake in the
oven, Lorraine said 35 minutes for her olive version, mine took about 40 minutes, if you use wetter fillings it takes longer again. It should be golden and risen and sound hollow on
the bottom when tapped.
So green bread is a little strange visually, but it was delicious! It was TLI's birthday so we took it on a walk up the valley armed with a picnic basket and some fizzy wine. A thick piece of cold butter went perfectly with the bread, it tastes like garlic bread, funnily enough, but fresh and mild. Give it a go if you come across a patch while it lasts...