Ken Natton
Veteran
I keep encountering recipes that I really fancy having a go at, but that call for some obscure ingredient that seems to be very difficult to get.
A good example, I have seen a couple of different recipes recently that call for fennel seeds. That’s not obscure you say. I understand that it’s quite a common ingredient in Italian cooking. I spent a frustrating afternoon searching nearby higher end supermarkets without success. I have found a website that offers them, but its intended customer base is Italian restaurants and it sells them by the kilo. I have picked up a hint that I might be able to get them in Holland and Barretts – but is that really the only option? Actually, fennel itself is not that easy to come by and I recall seeing Rick Stein do a monkfish recipe that called for fennel leaf. He didn’t mention his source. I have a note of the recipe, but I have never actually cooked it.
Another good example of a very different kind is rose veal. Again, seen a few different suggestions of things to do with rose veal recently. Supermarkets don’t sell it. Again, the only source I have found is a website, and maybe that is a reasonable source in this case. Is the only alternative to that farmer’s markets or such like? I have even looked for it in a couple of farm shops that I have happened by but didn’t find it.
Another recent Rick Stein recipe called for Italian pork sausage meat. British sausage meat has too much rusk and, according to Rick, won’t work for that recipe. I suppose that I am not exactly certain what distinction is being drawn between pork mince, and pork sausage meat without rusk. Is it just a question of the cut of meat used? Or the degree of pulverisation maybe? Anyway, back to the main point – where do I get Italian pork sausage meat? The same website selling the fennel seeds had it. Is that my best option?
I am just interested in people’s comments about their approach to finding less mainstream ingredients. Is it all about sourcing them online? Are farmer’s markets a reliable source? I suppose the real thing I am looking for is how to avoid the frustration of losing lots of time in fruitless searches.
A good example, I have seen a couple of different recipes recently that call for fennel seeds. That’s not obscure you say. I understand that it’s quite a common ingredient in Italian cooking. I spent a frustrating afternoon searching nearby higher end supermarkets without success. I have found a website that offers them, but its intended customer base is Italian restaurants and it sells them by the kilo. I have picked up a hint that I might be able to get them in Holland and Barretts – but is that really the only option? Actually, fennel itself is not that easy to come by and I recall seeing Rick Stein do a monkfish recipe that called for fennel leaf. He didn’t mention his source. I have a note of the recipe, but I have never actually cooked it.
Another good example of a very different kind is rose veal. Again, seen a few different suggestions of things to do with rose veal recently. Supermarkets don’t sell it. Again, the only source I have found is a website, and maybe that is a reasonable source in this case. Is the only alternative to that farmer’s markets or such like? I have even looked for it in a couple of farm shops that I have happened by but didn’t find it.
Another recent Rick Stein recipe called for Italian pork sausage meat. British sausage meat has too much rusk and, according to Rick, won’t work for that recipe. I suppose that I am not exactly certain what distinction is being drawn between pork mince, and pork sausage meat without rusk. Is it just a question of the cut of meat used? Or the degree of pulverisation maybe? Anyway, back to the main point – where do I get Italian pork sausage meat? The same website selling the fennel seeds had it. Is that my best option?
I am just interested in people’s comments about their approach to finding less mainstream ingredients. Is it all about sourcing them online? Are farmer’s markets a reliable source? I suppose the real thing I am looking for is how to avoid the frustration of losing lots of time in fruitless searches.