Chèvre of Choice – French Goat’s Cheese

 
Chèvre of Choice – French Goat’s Cheese

French goat’s cheese – called chèvre – is a winning ingredient all year round. Here Sophie Wright presents some of her favourite recipes

Grilled goat’s cheese mini-log and walnut pesto ciabatta

Preparation: 20 minutes
Cooking: 10 minutes
Makes 1 sandwich

Ingredients

75g French goat’s cheese from a mini-log
1 ciabatta roll
1 handful rocket
1 courgette
1 tbsp olive oil
Salt and pepper
1 lemon
For the pesto
50g walnuts
1 small bunch basil, leaves only
1 small bunch fl at leaf parsley
50g grated parmesan
75ml extra virgin olive oil
Juice and zest 1 lemon
2 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
Salt and pepper

Method

 Start your sandwich by first making the pesto. This can be done up to a week in advance.

 Take the parsley and basil leaves and place in a food processor along with the chopped garlic, walnuts, parmesan, olive oil and lemon zest. Blitz to a chunky paste, before adding the lemon juice, salt and pepper. Make sure you taste it for seasoning. You may need a squeeze more lemon.

 Heat up a griddle pan to the highest setting.

 Slice the courgette very thinly. I prefer to do this using a swivel-head peeler so you get very thin ribbons but a knife will do the job. Coat them in olive  oil, season with salt and pepper and lay them on the hot griddle pan. Leave them to cook until bar lines start to appear, turn them over, add a squeeze of lemon juice and leave to cook on the other side for about the same length of time.

 While the courgettes are cooking, cut the ciabatta in half, drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with a little sea salt. Lay the bread cut side down onto the griddle pan and allow to char for a few minutes.

 Spread both sides of the warmed bread with the walnut pesto.  Once the courgettes are cooked, lay them onto the pesto-covered ciabatta and crumble over plenty of goat’s cheese, drizzle with yet more olive oil and place under a hot grill until the cheese starts to melt and bubble.

 Once cooked, lay on plenty of rocket, place the two halves of the sandwich together and eat straight away.

Spreadable fresh French goat’s cheese, vanilla and orange terrine with Amoretti biscuits, poached apricots and vanilla syrup

Preparation time: 25 minutes
Cooking time: 10 minutes
Serves 6
400g spreadable fresh French goat’s cheese
20 Amoretti biscuits
6 tsp Grand Marnier or any other orange liqueur
400mls double cream
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
Zest of 2 oranges
125g icing sugar
6 apricots, cut in half and de-seeded
1 stick of cinnamon
1 vanilla pod, split
150g sugar
300mls water

 Blitz the Amoretti biscuits to a fine  crumb and put 1 tsp into the bottom of six small serving glasses.

 Drizzle with a tsp of Grand Marnier.

 Pour the double cream into a mixing bowl and whip with the icing sugar until semi firm peaks form. Add the vanilla bean paste and orange zest. Once whipped, add in the French goat’s cheese and beat until smooth and slightly aerated. This can be done easily with an electric whisk. Place 2tbsp of the cream and French goat’s cheese mix on top of the Amoretti biscuit crumbs.

 Sprinkle with more Amoretti, top with another 2 tbsp of the cheese mix and finish with a final layer of the biscuit crumb. Place into the fridge to set while you poach the apricots.

 To poach the apricots, pour the sugar and the water into a small saucepan along with the split vanilla pod and cinnamon stick. Bring to the boil and simmer for 10 minutes before adding the halved apricots and cook for 5-10 minutes until tender, but not falling apart. Leave the apricots to cool in the syrup before removing them. Remove the skins if they look like they will come off easily. Strain the syrup and keep until you’re ready to serve.

 When ready to serve, heat the apricots in the strained syrup and place next to the set cheese dessert and drizzle the apricots with a little of the syrup.

Originally published in FrenchEntrée Magazine.

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