The Bachelor Kitchen

Great food that's easy to make.

The Bachelor Kitchen is all about great food that's easy to make with a minimum of fuss and cleanup. I'll be posting favourite recipes on a regular schedule. Please join me!
  • Posted on

    Cowboy stew is a perennial of the American Old West originating from Texas. This is a delicious and hearty stew that you can enjoy whether you're on the trail or at home.

    Cowboy stew in a heavy iron cooking pot

    View on YouTube

    Ingredients - 1 brown onion, chopped - 2 chillis, sliced - 6 slices bacon, thick cut - 250g keilbasa, kransky or other continental sausage, cut into 1/2 to 1 inch slices - 500g minced beef - 3 garlic cloves or equivalent - 3 tablespoons white flour - 1 tablespoon cummin - 1 tablespoon chilli powder - 1 teaspoon salt - 1 teaspoon black pepper - 500ml liquid chicken stock - 500g ranch-style or chili beans with liquid - 500g sweet corn, drained - 500g diced tomatoes - chopped parsley for garnish - optional: cornbread for the side

    Instructions 1. In a heavy cast iron pot, cook the bacon over medium heat until it begins to crisp and brown (5 to 7 minutes). 2. Add the sausage and cook further until it begins to brown. 3. Add the beef, onions, chillis and garlic, and continue to cook until the beef begins to brown. 4. Add the flour, cummin, chilli power or flakes, fresh chillis, salt and pepper, and cook until the flour begins to crisp. 5. Add the chicken stock, beans, diced tomatoes and corn. Increase to a high heat until the stew begins to boil. 6. Reduce to a simmer, put the lid on, and cook for an hour. 7. Serve in a bowl with parsley garnish. Optionally pair with cornbread or some other good bread.

    Servings Four

    Storage Keep the soup in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 48 hours.

  • Posted on

    The humble Cottage Pie is a perennial of economical cooking dating from the 18th century in Ireland and Great Britain. Made from easily sourced ingredients and easy to prepare, it fed laborers and peasant farmers on a budget. For a traditional Shepherd's Pie, use lamb instead of beef.

    enter image description here

    View on YouTube

    Ingredients - 1 brown onion, chopped - 1 kg mashed potato (see below) - 500 g beef mince - 500 g mixed vegetables (such as carrots, peas, corn, celery) - 500 ml beef stock - 2 tablespoons plain flour - 1 tablespoon tomato paste - 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce - butter or oil for cooking

    Instructions 1. Heat oil or butter in pan on medium-high heat. 2. Add vegetables and chopped onion and cook for 5 minutes. 3. Add mince, mix together with vegetables, and cook for another 5 minutes. 4. Add the flour, tomato paste, Worcestershire sauce, and beef stock. Stir thoroughly. 5. Bring to a boil, then reduce to medium-low heat and cook for 30 minutes. 6. Meanwhile, pre-heat over to 200 C. If you intend to make your own mashed potatoes, follow the steps below now. 7. Once the beef sauce is cooked, spoon it into an oven dish, then cover it with the mashed potato. Bake for 20 minutes. 8. Serve immediately.

    Mashed potato Mashed potato can be bought pre-made or as a powder. Alternatively, you can make it yourself for a truly authentic meal. Take 800 grams potatoes, cook in salted boiling water for 15 minutes, drain, return to pan and add 40 grams butter and mash with a potato masher or fork. Add 125 ml milk and stir until combined.

    Servings Four.

    Storage Keep the soup in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 48 hours.

  • Posted on

    This easy to make recipe for beef and potato soup with green beans is a great example of peasant food from Central Europe, especially Germany and Austria. Known as GrĂ¼ne Bohnensuppe, it's a functional and seasonal meal which serves as a great winter warmer.

    In rural German farming communities, the soup was designed to utilise whatever was fresh in the home garden during the late summer and early autumn harvest. Because it was peasant food, the baseline ingredients were cheap, carbohydrate-dense, and easily accessible.

    The base is green beans paired with potatoes and onions. For protein, farmers would throw in scraps of smoked bacon (Speck), ham hocks, or leftover beef chunks that were available to give the broth depth and fat.

    In this recipe, we'll be using casserole beef, which is cheap and commonly available from supermarkets, along with thyme and peppercorns for additional flavour.

    Beef and green bean soup

    Open in YouTube

    Ingredients - 1 kg braising or casserole beef - 2 onions, chopped - 1 litre vegetable stock - 2 large potatoes (or several smaller ones), peeled and diced - 500 g green beans, trimmed and cut into small pieces - 2-3 sprigs of thyme - salt and pepper - cooking oil - (optional) parsley - (optional) dark bread such as rye

    Instructions 1. Heat the oil in a pan. Add the beef and season with salt and pepper. 2. Cook until the beef begins to brown then add the onions and cook until the onions begin to soften. 3. Add the thyme and stock. Bring to a boil, then simmer over medium heat for 40 minutes. 4. Add the potatoes, bring back to the boil, then cook for a further 15 minutes. 5. Add the green beans and cook for a further 5 minutes.

    Serving Dish the soup into a bowl and sprinkle with parsley. Serve with a dark bread such as rye.

    Servings Four.

    Storage Keep the soup in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 48 hours.

  • Posted on

    The Reuben sandwich is a classic of American deli culture. It's origins are controversial with multiple claims relating to its creation, however in 1956, Fern Snider, a chef working at the Blackstone Hotel in Omaha, Nebraska, entered her Reuben recipe into the National Sandwich Idea Contest, taking the first prize and winning a car. This is the recipe which formalised the Reuben as we know it today.

    A Reuben sandwich.

    Open in YouTube

    Ingredients 2 slices good quality bread such as rye or wholemeal 2 slices good quality sliced cheese, ideally Swiss 1 large slice corned beef 1 tablespoon sauerkraut Russian dressing optional

    Instructions 1. Butter the bread, then place the cheese, corned beef and sauerkraut. 2. Heat a frying pan to medium-high heat and add butter or cooking oil. 3. Place the sandwich in the pan. Cook on medium heat until the bread is toasted, then turn over and repeat on the other side. 4. Cook until the contents of the sandwich are warm and the cheese is melting. 5. Remove from the pan, slice in half, and eat.

    Airfryer method Prepare sandwich as above then cook in airfryer at 200C (390F) for five minutes.

    Servings One

    Storage Eat immediately.

  • Posted on

    This week's recipe is a cold weather favorite of mine and never fails to warm me up - Sauerkraut with apple, bacon and sausage. Sauerkraut is popular in all German speaking areas and is often served with a variety of meats. This particular recipe borrows from Bavarian tradition in that it adds apple for sweetness and additional flavor.

    Cooked sauerkraut on a plate

    Open in YouTube

    Ingredients - 1kg sauerkraut - 1 tablespoon caraway seeds - 1 apple, diced - 250g bacon, cut into 3cm pieces - 1 large onion, chopped - 680g continental sausage, cut into 2cm slices

    Instructions 1. Place the sauerkraut, diced apple, and caraway seeds into a large pot or saucepan. Stir well. Bring to a simmer, then reduce to low heat and cook for two hours. 2. Place bacon and onion into a frypan or skillet over medium heat and cook until onion is soft and bacon begins to cook, about ten minutes. Stir the mixture into the sauerkraut. 3. Brown the sausage in the remaining bacon grease (add more butter or oil if needed) until sausage begins to brown, about ten to fifteen minutes. Stir the sausages into the sauerkraut. 4. Preheat an oven to 165 C. Prepare a baking dish with grease paper or cooking spray. Spoon the sauerkraut mixture onto the baking dish. 5. Bake in the oven at 165 C for one hour.

    Servings Four

    Storage Keep in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 48 hours.

  • Posted on

    Hello and welcome to our very first recipe here at the Bachelor Kitchen. To kick things off, I'm making a mixed seafood gumbo from deep south Cajun country, Louisiana, USA.

    Gumbo is delicious, heartwarming, and easy to make!

    Open in YouTube

    Cajun cuisine is a rustic, deeply flavourful style of cooking developed by the Acadians who were exiled from Canada in the swampy, fertile bayous of Luisiana. Characterised by a rich blend of French, African, and Native American culinary traditions, the foundation of the cousine relies on a "holy trinity" of chopped onion, capsicum, and celery, which is slowly cooked down with fat and flour to form a dark roux.

    This hearty stew contains seafood and sausage spiced with cayenne, paprika, oregano, and parsley.

    Ingredients - 1 cup rice - 1 clove garlic - 1 onion, peeled and chopped - 1 capsicum (red preferred, green is okay) sliced - 2 celery sticks, washed and chopped - 250g chorizo sausage sliced into 2cm sections - 250g mixed seafood - 400g diced tomato - 400g sliced okra - 500ml fish stock - 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper - 1 teaspoon oregano - 1 teaspoon black pepper - parsley to garnish

    Instructions 1. Begin by making the rice. Let it cook while you make the gumbo. 2. In a saucepan with a lid add cooking oil and put it on medium heat. 3. Add the onion and celery. Let it cook until the onions begins to soften. 4. Add the garlic, black pepper, and cayenne. Optionally add paprika. 5. Cook for two minutes then add the capsicum and oregano. 6. Mix thoroughly. Bring to boil. Then reduce heat to low and simmer for 40 minutes. 7. Add seafood and simmer for further 5 minutes. 8. Serve rice and gumbo garnished with parsley.

    Servings Three to four.

    Storage The gumbo will keep for 48 hours in the fridge or can be frozen for up to two months. The rice should be made freshly each time.