Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (2024)

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Rick Stein

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Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (1)

Rick Stein has written more than 25 cookbooks, but this is the first to celebrate his all-time favourite home-cooked meals.

Any other year, British restaurateur and peripatetic TV presenter Rick Stein might have been living out of a suitcase while seeking recipe inspiration far and wide, as he has while making cooking shows in India, France and around the Middle East. But being grounded in Cornwall for much of 2020 gave Stein the time and the opportunity to think about the pleasures of home cooking.

His latest cookbook, Rick Stein At Home, celebrates the meals that come up trumps when he's at home – not fancy dinner party pieces but the dishes he puts on the table when friends and family are around, using local ingredients as well as what he happens to have in the fridge.

Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (2)

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Cornish briam

The thought behind this recipe was to come up with a dish that uses all the vegetables currently grown by the farmers who supply our Cornwall restaurants in late August – things like carrots, zucchini, broccoli and new potatoes. Ross Geach at Trerethern Farm, also known as Padstow Kitchen Garden, grows wonderful vegetables on his land overlooking the Camel estuary. The view alone makes you feel the vegetables will taste really special, which indeed they do. I cooked this for a sequence in my Rick Stein's Cornwall series, having remembered a lovely slow-cooked vegetable dish called briam from the island of Corfu, and it works a treat. As our local vegetables don't perhaps have the intense sweetness of Mediterranean produce, I added some chilli and feta to give it a bit more oomph.

INGREDIENTS

  • 150ml olive oil, plus extra for greasing
  • 500g waxy new potatoes, peeled and cut lengthways into 5mm slices
  • 400g carrots, peeled or scrubbed and sliced lengthways
  • 2 large zucchini (about 400g), sliced lengthways
  • 1 large onion, peeled and sliced
  • 5-6 garlic cloves, peeled and sliced
  • 300g broccolini
  • 4 large tomatoes (or 6 medium), thickly sliced
  • 1 red or green finger chilli, sliced
  • handful flatleaf parsley, chopped
  • a few thyme sprigs, leaves stripped from the woody stalks
  • 200ml passata
  • 100g feta, crumbled
  • salt and black pepper

METHOD

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  1. Preheat the oven to 170C fan-forced (190C conventional). Grease a roasting tin or a shallow, lidded casserole dish with oil. Spread the potato slices in a single layer and season well with salt and pepper.
  2. Layer the carrots on top, then the zucchini, then the onion and garlic, seasoning each layer with plenty of salt and pepper.
  3. Scatter over the broccolini and cover it with tomato slices. Add the chilli, herbs and a final sprinkling of salt and pepper. Pour over the passata and the olive oil.
  4. Cover the roasting tin tightly with foil or put a tight-fitting lid on the dish and place in the oven for about 1¼ hours. Sprinkle over the crumbled feta and return the tin to the oven, uncovered, for a further 15-20 minutes.
  5. Allow it to cool slightly before serving as a side dish or as a main with crusty bread or rice.

Tip You can use any late summer vegetables you have for this dish.

Serves 6-8

Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (3)

Vietnamese poached chicken salad with mint and coriander

What appeals to me about this salad is the combination of lightly poached chicken, bean sprouts, spring onions and herbs with roasted chopped nuts and sesame seeds, and the slightly gloopy fish sauce, lime juice and chilli dressing.

INGREDIENTS

  • 50g root ginger, peeled and sliced
  • 4 small skinless, boneless, free-range chicken breasts
  • ½ large cucumber
  • 8 spring onions, trimmed, halved and shredded
  • 150g fresh bean sprouts
  • small handful mint, leaves torn into small pieces
  • small handful fresh coriander sprigs
  • 1 tbsp sesame seeds, lightly toasted
  • 60g roasted, salted peanuts, finely chopped

Dressing

  • 4 tbsp Thai fish sauce
  • 2 tbsp red wine vinegar
  • 2 tbsp lime juice
  • 2 tbsp light soft brown sugar
  • ½ tsp cornflour
  • 1 medium-hot red chilli, finely chopped
  • 1 garlic clove, finely chopped

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METHOD

  1. Put the ginger into a large, shallow pan with a litre of water and bring to the boil. Add the chicken breasts and leave them to simmer for 5-6 minutes. Turn off the heat and leave the chicken to cool in the liquid.
  2. For the dressing, put the Thai fish sauce, vinegar, lime juice and sugar into a small pan and bring to the boil. Mix the cornflour with a teaspoon of water, stir this into the pan and simmer gently for 1 minute. Remove from the heat and leave to cool, then stir in the red chilli and garlic.
  3. For the salad, peel the cucumber, cut it in half lengthways and scoop out the seeds with a teaspoon. Cut the flesh into 5cm-long matchsticks and add them to a large bowl with the spring onions, bean sprouts, mint and coriander, then toss together.
  4. Lift the chicken breasts out of the poaching liquid and pull them into long chunky strips. Add these to the salad bowl and mix gently. Serve the salad with the dressing drizzled over the top and scattered with sesame seeds and chopped peanuts.

Tip When peeling ginger, use the bowl end of a teaspoon to scrape the skin off. It's much easier than using a peeler.

Serves 4

Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (4)

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Chicken and prawn stir-fry with black bean sauce and coriander

I can't claim this is an authentic Chinese recipe. It's just something I make because the flavours of the black bean sauce, Chinese five-spice and plenty of chilli appeal to me. I often cook this dish with strips of pork tenderloin, but most popular with my family is this chicken and prawn version. The cooking of the vegetables is a bit arbitrary; all you need to ensure is that they retain plenty of crunch. My stir-fries vary – sometimes I use baby corn, sometimes zucchini. It's really down to what you have in the fridge.

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 x 1.3kg free-range chicken, boned and skinned, or 2 chicken breasts, 2 thighs and 2 drumsticks, boned and skinned
  • 45ml sunflower oil
  • 4 garlic cloves, chopped
  • 10cm root ginger, peeled and sliced or grated
  • 2 tbsp black bean sauce
  • ½ tsp Chinese five-spice
  • 60ml Shaoxing wine or dry sherry
  • 30ml soy sauce
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 red pepper, sliced
  • 2 red chillies, sliced
  • 100g green beans, topped and tailed and cut in half
  • 100g snowpeas
  • 100g button mushrooms, sliced
  • 100g raw peeled prawns
  • 100g bean sprouts
  • 1 tbsp cornflour, mixed with a little water
  • 30g coriander, roughly chopped
  • 1 bunch spring onions, trimmed and sliced diagonally

To serve

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  • steamed jasmine rice
  • chilli oil or soy sauce

METHOD

  1. Cut the chicken into finger-sized pieces. Heat 3 tablespoons of the oil in a wok over a high heat. Add the garlic and ginger and stir-fry until fragrant and golden. Add the black bean sauce, Chinese five-spice, Shaoxing wine or sherry, soy sauce, salt, sugar and chicken, then fry until the chicken is browned but not fully cooked through. Remove the chicken pieces with a slotted spoon and keep them warm.
  2. Add a little more oil if needed, then the red pepper, chillies, green beans, snowpeas and mushrooms. Cook for a minute or so, then put the chicken back in the wok and add the prawns, bean sprouts and 100ml of water. Let the mixture bubble, add the cornflour paste and cook until the chicken is cooked through and the sauce has thickened to a silky, clear honey-like consistency that clings to the chicken. Stir in the coriander and spring onions and remove from the heat.
  3. Serve with steamed jasmine rice and chilli oil or soy sauce.

Tip When making this, keep the chicken bones for stock and the skin for delicious crispy chicken skin snacks.

Serves 6

This is an edited extract from Rick Stein at Home by Rick Stein, published by BBC Books $55. Photography by James Murphy. Buy now

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Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook (2024)

FAQs

Three of Rick Stein's all-time favourite home-style recipes from his new cookbook? ›

About the Author

As well as presenting a number of television series, he has published many best-selling cookery books, including French Odyssey, Coast to Coast, Far Eastern Odyssey, Rick Stein's Long Weekends and Rick Stein's India.

What recipes are in Rick Stein at home? ›

Recipes
  • Poached salmon with mayonnaise, new potatoes and cucumber salad recipe. ...
  • Carrot, beetroot and red onion tarte tatin recipe. ...
  • Cheese, potato and spinach filo pie recipe. ...
  • Matar Kulcha recipe. ...
  • Paneer Jalfrezi recipe. ...
  • Pad Thai with tofu recipe. ...
  • Chocolate profiteroles with crème pâtissière recipe.

What are other books by the author of Rick Stein at Home Recipes Memories and Stories from a Food Lover's Kitchen? ›

About the Author

As well as presenting a number of television series, he has published many best-selling cookery books, including French Odyssey, Coast to Coast, Far Eastern Odyssey, Rick Stein's Long Weekends and Rick Stein's India.

How many cookbooks has Rick Stein written? ›

Founder, Co-owner and Chef

Rick Stein is a British chef, restaurateur, cookery book author and television presenter. He has written over 25 cookery books, a memoir and made over 30 programmes including 12 cookery series. In 2018 Rick was awarded a CBE for Services to the Economy.

Where does Rick Stein go in Cornwall? ›

Rick's latest travels around Cornwall include yet more special places to add to your bucket list. From Bude in the north to Sennen in the south and lots more en-route, choose your favourites inspired by Rick Stein's Cornwall and book to stay with us in Padstow.

How did Rick Stein lose weight? ›

He said: "I'm always dieting because I like eating so much — so I need to have periods when I cut back. I retreat to my cottage in Padstow and spend a lot of time cooking tiny meals. I also eat with chopsticks because it means you put smaller pieces in your mouth and tend to eat less as a result."

Why hasn t Rick Stein got a Michelin star? ›

His menus include dishes ranging from fish and chips to lobster - plates which he claims are not deemed 'deluxe' enough to be recognised by the restaurant reviewer. 'I'm a bit anti Michelin guide food', he said.

What is the oldest surviving book of recipes? ›

The first recorded cookbook that is still in print today is Of Culinary Matters (originally, De Re Coquinaria), written by Apicius, in fourth century AD Rome.

How do you find a novel you forgot the name of? ›

Table of contents
  1. Take a Moment to Remember.
  2. Try One of These Sites. Google Books. Amazon's Advanced Book Search. BookBub. Library of Congress. GoodReads. WhichBook. Reddit. Quora.
  3. Put Out a Call on Social Media. Social Media Groups.
  4. Ask Your Local Librarian or Book Store Employee.
  5. Sleep On It.
Aug 2, 2023

How do I find a book I forgot the author and name? ›

There are several other book databases you can find as well, such as Book Finder, Word Cat, LibraryThing, Book Sleuth, Goodreads, Amazon's Advanced Book Search, and Library of Congress.

Which chef has written the most cookbooks? ›

Barbara Grunes is the most published cook book writer in history putting the Midwest on the culinary map and making flour-less chocolate cake a household phrase.

Who owns Rick Stein? ›

The business is still very much family run with Rick and Jill working with their three sons, Edward, Jack and Charlie. Eat with us We have four restaurants in Padstow, The Seafood Restaurant, St Petroc's Bistro, Rick Stein's Café and Stein's Fish & Chips.

What restaurant does Rick Stein own? ›

Rick Stein's Seafood Restaurant in London

Located on the banks of the River Thames, along from Richmond, our restaurant delivers some pleasing peace from fast-paced London life with timeless views and a nod to our Cornish homeland.

What food does Rick Stein not like? ›

It is as close to a rustic idyll as you might find in an inner suburban restaurant, and Rick Stein is just telling me about the worst thing he has ever eaten. Surströmming.

Where does Rick Stein currently live? ›

Rick spends a lot of his time at home in Padstow, Cornwall and the coastal home is also the perfect place to film his television programmes. The chef and seafood master has generous worktop space in his kitchen including a huge island in the centre of the room.

Where does Rick Stein stay in France? ›

And, if you really want to delve into the local lifestyle, the owners of Maison Sebastien can organise tours and treks, or even sessions with a local yoga teacher. So basically, there are a million and one reasons why we (and Rick, we're sure) love Maison Sebastien – but don't take our word for it.

What type of food does Rick Stein cook? ›

Rick Stein is a British chef, restaurateur, and television presenter known for his cooking shows and cookbooks. He has been a prominent figure in the culinary world for several decades. Stein is known for his passion for seafood and has made a significant impact on the popularity of British seafood cuisine.

How to make mayonnaise Rick Stein? ›

1) Put the whole egg, vinegar, mustard and salt into a food processor (if you haven't got one a bowl will be fine for a more manual method) and whisk together. 2) Start adding the oil very slowly, literally a drop at a time at first. If you go too quickly, your mayonnaise will split.

What type of cuisine does Rick Stein cook? ›

Rick Stein
Rick Stein CBE
Children3
Culinary career
Cooking styleAsian, Australian, European
Websiterickstein.com
5 more rows

Is Rick Stein's son a chef? ›

Jack is our Chef Director overseeing our restaurant menus. Born in Cornwall, Jack is the middle son of Rick and Jill Stein. His love for the hospitality world, in particular the kitchen and food-side of things, was apparent from a young age.

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