What Makes A Great Pizza?

August 21, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

PizzaThere’s no doubting that pizza is one of the most popular types of food in the world whether you’re picking one up from your local Clapham takeaway or dining out a restaurant. Given it’s so popular you’d be mistaken in thinking pizza’s been eaten in the UK for centuries but in fact Brits have only been enjoying the dish in their own country since after the second world war.

Despite its relatively short history in food terms (the first shop selling the dish opened in 1738), pizza has become the most widely eaten dish across the planet with billions of slices sold each year. Although the people of Europe and North America consume the most, every continent and country has a love of a good pizza. Asia is now closing in on America in terms of the revenue generated from demand for the dish.

Toppings vary depending on where in the world you are and they typically reflect regional tastes and cultural preferences. If you find yourself in India, you can expect the locals to have toppings such as mutton, cottage cheese (known as paneer) and pickled ginger. The Russians like a fish combination of sardines, mackerel, salmon, red herring and tuna. Japanese people like a pizza topped with eel, squid, mayo, potato and bacon. Take a seat at a local Clapham pizza restaurant and you’ll find most British diners enjoying pepperoni with extra cheese. Of course just because these toppings are considered the most popular in each country, doesn’t mean that’s what you have to order.

The beauty of the dish is that no matter what your food tastes, there are many ways and unlimited topping combinations to ensure you can have a delicious meal. The basic constituents have remained consistent as bread base, tomato sauce and cheese, but even these elements have been developed and improved by restaurants in different countries. Changes to the type of cheese, the tomato sauce and even how the dough for the base is made produces remarkable and delicious results.

Pizza is also considered a healthy food when the ingredients are well balanced and the cooking method is correct. Depending on the use of toppings it can provide a nutritious meal largely because of the health benefits of tomatoes, vegetables, olive oil, garlic, herbs and spices. These elements form the basis of the ‘Mediterranean diet’ which is considered to be the healthiest in the world. This is due to the ingredients containing antioxidants which help prevent chronic diseases such as cancer. In fact, recent studies have shown pizza can be beneficial in reducing rates of throat, skin and colon cancer.

So what makes a great pizza? Well, we all have our favourite toppings and preferred bread base whether its thin, deep pan or stuffed crust. However, you have to base a good pizza on the original recipe created by the Neapolitans in Italy because everything else is just personal preference. The base should light with a chewy crust and the dough made by hand each day. Top it with a sauce made from the best crushed tomatoes, fresh mozzarella (from cow’s milk) and basil. Ideally it should then be cooked in a brick or wood-fired oven which can achieve a high temperature (900 degrees or more). Get this right and the pizza emerges with a light, sumptuous, and slightly charred base with oozing cheese and a tangy, fragrant sauce. Perfect.

The ‘Eco’ Friendly Clapham Restaurant

August 21, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

PizzaWhat does good eating mean to you? Is it the quality of the food, good service and a great atmosphere? Perhaps the provenance of the ingredients is high on your list of priorities when dining out. Maybe you look for a healthy menu or the ‘green’ credentials of the restaurant. Now, what if you could find a Clapham Common restaurant that caters to all of those criteria? Well, there is one, and it’s aptly named ‘ECO’.

The healthy approach

This Clapham restaurant questions the way it sources ingredients, cooks them and then disposes of surplus waste. In doing so they’ve developed a healthy approach to eating and a healthy approach to the environment. When dishes are created fresh, the food looks and tastes better and with that comes a reputation for serving fantastic meals. And when a restaurant builds that type of reputation they naturally become the destination for discerning food lovers.

How food is grown, gathered and delivered is a high priority for cooking nutritious meals but today’s consumer is also looking for convenient menu options that are of the highest quality. The need to eat on the go, or when there’s no time to fit in a home-cooked meal, puts the emphasis on restaurants and takeaways to step-up and offer food that people really want. Unfortunately, the food in most high street establishments just doesn’t cut it.

At ECO, the provenance of ingredients is vital in creating fresh, delicious pizza and pasta dishes and preparing food the right way increases efficiency of output (to help reduce wastage and energy costs). As an example, the base of their famous ECO sourdough pizza is the lightest and healthiest in the country. Although created using a slow fermentation process, dough is prepared well before the torrent of orders come flooding in so the chefs can load pizzas into the ovens and have meals delivered to hungry customers quickly (but with an eye always on quality).

As a popular Clapham pizza restaurant they also take their responsibility to the local community and the wider population seriously. Rather than sending food waste from the cooking process (not from the customers’ plates because there’s rarely ever anything left!) such as peelings, bones and skins to landfill or incinerators, ECO operate an environmentally friendly program that sends it all to be bio-degraded. Now that’s socially conscious dining!

The ECO experience

Of course all the quality and convenience of the food is sometimes meaningless if service and atmosphere fall flat. Until you experience it, you’ll have to take the word of the local Clapham community and their understanding of good dining out.

Take a stroll to Clapham High Street and see for yourself how many people enjoy the ECO experience. If it’s not happy diners it’s happy children spending a Saturday morning at the restaurant’s unique kids pizza school. They really do cater for everything and everyone.

Myths About AGA Ovens – Part Two

August 21, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

Aga CookerWhen making a purchase the buyer should investigate all the options available and gen up on the pros and cons. The same goes for buying an Aga cooker although an Aga should be considered more of an investment than a purchase because it’s likely to be in your possession for a lifetime. As a range cooker it is quite simply second to none and any current owner will tell you they can’t live without it.

While researching which model to buy – whether it be a heat storage gas range cooker or a a duel-fuel – you’ll find plenty of positive reviews, but also a few negative ones. The fact is, not everyone will extol the virtues of an Aga but a lot of the opinions you’ll read are based on misinformation or from poor operation of the appliance. Many myths can be dispelled by learning how to operate the cooker correctly and the best way to learn is to book yourself on an Aga demonstration.

Some of the common misconceptions about Agas are listed, and answered, below.

They’re dangerous if you’ve got kids. The hotplates are always on and give no indication or warning so horrible burns can occur.

It’s true they’re always on but you’re aware of that because it gives off heat. The same goes for the hotplate so if a child lifts the lid they will feel the heat from it. If your child is tall enough to lift the lid, chances are they’re at an age when they know hot things can burn.

You’ll have to throw out all your old pots and pans. Agas need flat-bottomed, thick base cookware and will ruin anything that isn’t.

This isn’t true. Aluminium and stainless steel pans work fine and don’t have to have a thick base. Most pans these days are flat-bottomed anyway but if yours aren’t they’ll still be okay. Of course, if you’re buying a quality oven it’s a good idea to include some quality Aga cookware.

The hotplates are so large but you can only really get one pan on satisfactorily. What if you need to put more pans on?

Owning an Aga does require you to learn new ways of cooking and that includes relying less on the hotplates and more on the ovens. An Aga cookery demonstration will teach you how to do this. However, if you prefer cooking with pans there are other models available that will provide up to six gas burners.

You can’t control the temperature so all your old cookbooks become redundant. You have to buy Aga cookery books.

Not at all. You’ll learn where to find the different temperatures of the ovens. For example, slow cooking is done in the simmering oven, pie crusts are best on the floor of the top oven and the roasting oven changes temperature from top to bottom. Once you know where to put things, you can use your old cookbooks as well as your new ones.

There’s no timer. What if you want to have something ready for when you return home?

That’s true about the timer, but you can slow cook your dinner so it’s ready when you get in. And don’t forget, the oven will already be up to temperature so when you come in from work there’s no pre-heat waiting times and you can start cooking immediately.

Clapham Pizza – The Healthy Option

July 27, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

Clapham Pizza If you drew up a list of health foods would pizza be on it? Well, according to scientific research, the Italian dish has emerged as a healthy dietary option with further news that it could help play a part in preventing some types of cancer. Of course we’re not talking about the fully loaded fat-laden cheese fest you get from the large high-street restaurants. The healthy choice is to be found at the more discerning eateries such as Clapham pizza restaurant ‘ECO’.

The food facts

Let’s take a look at some of the facts. On average, a large slice of pizza from the big chain restaurants contains around 300 calories (a meat lovers’ slice can push 480!). Now consider that you get about eight slices and the calorie count hits four figures. Ever ordered a takeaway and found it slopping around in the cardboard box? That’ll be the high levels of fat. Ever felt incredibly thirsty after devouring a takeaway pizza? That’ll be the high levels of salt. So, you can easily eat most of your daily calories in one sitting and fall the wrong side of your daily salt intake. Not good for health.

The big culprits are cheese, the oils used for cooking, meat toppings (particularly pepperoni which is 80% fat) and the dough base. While the dough contains carbohydrates, which play a role in digestion, it’s typically made with unhealthy high gluten flour and the carbs from the bread and crust turn into sugar and eventually into fat.

Hopefully you’re starting to realise how too much of bad thing is…well, bad. But there’s no need to deny yourself one of life’s pleasures, you just need to “takeaway” a different approach. And as one of the great Clapham takeaways, ‘ECO’ ticks all the right boxes.

Read more

Aga Cookery Demonstrations

July 9, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

Aga Cookery Demonstrations If you’re considering buying an Aga, or perhaps you’ve recently bought one or inherited one, then it’s a good idea to book a place at an Aga cookery demonstration.These events are run in showrooms and locations up and down the country to help prospective owners, current owners and even experienced users to gain a better understanding of how to cook with these iconic ovens.

Agas are among the easiest and most versatile cookers on the market with a range of features that will help you prepare great food for family and friends. There is a wide range of models to choose from to suit the needs of any home and lifestyle. The latest models come in a variety of fuel options including gas, oil, electric and duel-fuel. Depending on the size of your kitchen you’ll also find an oven that will fit the space available from the larger six-burner, four-oven range cookers to the compact four-burner, 2-oven cooker.

Discovering exactly what an Aga oven can do is time well spent particularly if you’ve yet to invest in one. These famous cookers are likely to last you a lifetime but the initial financial outlay is high so it’s prudent to find out what you can expect from it. Seeing one in a showroom will give you some basic operational knowledge but to a get a true indication of all the benefits it’s best to see one in action.

Read more

Eating Out at a Clapham Restaurant

May 22, 2010 · Filed Under Food & Drink · Comment 

Clapham Restaurant London is such a diverse city and there are few areas of the capital that represent this better than Clapham. The diversity is evident in the culinary specialities you’ll find at the many Clapham restaurants around the Common and High Street. There is something to cater for every taste and budget with a plethora of eateries such as family friendly restaurants, luxury dining, child-orientated menus, tiny cafés or welcoming bistros offering somewhere to have a relaxed Saturday afternoon lunch with friends.

Dining out in Clapham

Clapham is a district of South London in the borough of Lambeth and most well known for vast 220 acre open space of Clapham Common. The highly cosmopolitan mix of local residents include creative types, academics, city bankers and university students. The historic old town has a village-like atmosphere and the vibrant high street is home to some of the best restaurants in the city.

Read more