Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (2024)

At the weekend, unsure of justwhat everyone will want for breakfast, I tend to hedge mybets. A few muffins, muesli, fruit and something extremely filling such as porridge for cold days. Iam also likely to have the ingredients for a fruit smoothie to hand and something for a toasted sandwich.

Sweet muffins don't quite seem right for breakfast. It feels as if I am starting my day with a fairy cake. I have been working on a savoury version with apple, cheese and ham that seems just right for a Saturday morning. A really late start is more likely to be the time for a toasted sandwich. The sort of thing you could call breakfast or lunch. The blender takes breakfast in its stride. Smoothies of blueberries and raspberries often appear during the week, and sometimes end up in a bowl rather than a glass, with slices of banana, whole fruits and sometimes toasted oats. And I have always found plenty of takers for homemade beans on toast, rich with tomatoes and bacon.

Smoothie in a bowl

This looks like a classic fresh fruit smoothie, but it isn't – it's dairy free.

Makes 2
blueberries 150g
raspberries 100g
bananas 2
pumpkin seeds a handful
rolled oats a small handful

To serve:
berries a few

Put the blueberries, raspberries and one peeled banana in a food processor and blitz till fairly smooth. I like it to retain some of the texture of the fruit.

Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (1)

Pour into two small bowls. Toast the pumpkin seeds and oats for a few minutes till fragrant, then tip them over the purée. Add half a sliced banana and a few berries to each bowl and serve.

Beans on toast

A little more trouble than opening acan, but much more satisfying.

Serves 4
lardons, cubed bacon or pancetta 200g
onion 1
rapeseed or olive oil a little
celery a rib
carrots 2 small to medium
chopped tomatoes 2 x 400g
canned beans (pinto, haricot, broad beans etc) 2 x 400g
black treacle 1 tsp
loaf of sourdough a lump

Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (2)

Fry the lardons in a deep-sided pan over a moderate heat. Peel and roughly chop the onion. When the lardons and their fat are golden, add the onion, together with a little rapeseed or olive oil if there seems to be too little fat in the pan, then chop the celery and carrots and add to the pan, and leave to cook for a full 5 minutes till fragrant and starting to soften. Add the tomatoes, simmer for 10 minutes, then stir in the beans and simmer for a further 10 minutes, then season with treacle, a little black pepper and salt.

Warm the bread in the oven, tear into chunks and serve with the beans.

Cheese, ham and apple muffins

Any firm, deeply flavoured cheese is good for this – a proper aged farmhouse cheddar will do nicely. Iuse Spenwood, a fruity, firm cheese available at some specialist cheese shops and it works a treat. Whatever, you need a cheese with a bit of clout.

Makes a dozen
plain flour 275g
caster sugar 1 tbsp
baking powder 2 tsp
eggs 3
yoghurt 175ml
cooked ham 200g, chopped
apple a small one, grated
firm, mature cheese such as Spenwood 75g
grated cheese a little to finish

You will also need 12 medium-sized bun tins; paper muffin cases

Line 12 medium-sized bun tins with paper muffin cases. Set the oven at 200C/gas mark 6. Put the flour, sugar, baking powder and a little salt in a bowl, mixing together thoroughly. In a separate bowl, break the eggs and lightly beat them, stir in the yoghurt, the chopped ham and the grated apple. Cut the cheese into small dice, fold into the yoghurt mixture then lightly mix with the dry ingredients. Take care not to over-mix, which will knock the air out of the batter.

Divide the mixture between the 12 cases, grate over a little grated cheese, then bake for 25 minutes till risen and pale gold. Allow to cool down a little before eating, but eat the same day.

Toasted mushroom sandwich

Makes 1 large sandwich
small mushrooms 100g
olive oil 2 tbsp
sourdough bread 2 thin slices
grated cheese 4 tbsp

Slice the mushrooms thinly, almost like paper. Warm the oil in afrying pan and add the mushrooms, season with salt and pepper and cook for 10 minutes or so over amoderate heat till soft. Using a draining spoon, pile them on to one of the slices of bread. Scatter over the grated cheese. Place the second piece of bread on top and press down lightly.

Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (3)

Wipe the pan out lightly with kitchen roll – you need a thin film of oil to fry the sandwich – then place the sandwich in the pan, letting it cook for a few minutes till the bread is golden and the cheese is starting to melt. Turn the sandwich and cook the other side. Perfection is when the bread is lightly crisp, the mushrooms soft and the cheese oozing.

Sausage and egg hash

Serves 2
potatoes 2 medium
onion 1 medium to large
oil such as rapeseed a little
large Cumberland-type sausages 275g, or 4 large butcher's sausages
eggs 2 large

Grate the potatoes coarsely. I find the long shreds you get from a food processor better than the short ones from a Microplane. Peel the onion, sliced finely, add the potato and season.

Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (4)

Warm a thin film of oil in a heavy-based, shallow pan. It should be quite hot. Add the potatoes and onions, let them colour on the underside then turn over. Remove the skin from the sausages, break into short chunks and add to the pan. As they turn golden, cook the other side; tip off excess fat.

Break the eggs into the pan and let them cook for a few minutes till the whites have set but the yolks are still runny. Stir the eggs into the potato mix and serve immediately.

nigel.slater@observer.co.uk

Nigel Slater's breakfast recipes (2024)

FAQs

How do you make Nigel Slater's porridge? ›

Make the porridge. Warm the milk and water together in a nonstick pan over a moderate heat, stir in the oats, together with a pinch of salt, then keep stirring for a full 5 minutes until you have a rich and creamy porridge.

Is Nigel Slater a chef or a cook? ›

Author, diarist, programme maker and cook, he remains very much an amateur in the kitchen. Nigel is not and never has been a professional chef. His food is simple, understated, handcrafted home cooking. He believes there is something quietly civilizing about sharing a meal with other people.

Why do Scots put salt in porridge? ›

Many people argue that it must be salt to give balance to the porridge and correct the flavour, while others favour sugar to sweeten it up. The argument for using salt is that it is a test of Scottishness and it is only the Sassenachs who would put sugar on their porridge!

What is Viking porridge? ›

The Vikings had several options, when it came to making porridge. It could be made from barley, oats, buckwheat or millet. They mixed berries and apples into the porridge to add sweetness. Porridge was typically part of the daily food intake, especially that of the poor.

Is Nigel Slater a vegetarian? ›

Although not strictly vegetarian (the bottom line for me will always be that my dinner is delicious, not something that must adhere to a set of strict dietary rules) much of my weekday eating contains neither meat nor fish.

Has Nigel Slater got a restaurant? ›

Nigel is not a chef and has no restaurant or commercial connections. His food is understated, handcrafted home cooking that is easy to accomplish and without a trace of what he affectionately calls 'celebrity cheffery'. He is not fond of fussy food and prefers simple suppers made with care and thought.

Where is Nigel Slater's simple cooking filmed? ›

Nigel Slater demonstrates straightforward, down-to-earth cooking, filmed at his home vegetable patch and on friends' allotments, taking us through a week's worth of simple suppers.

Can you just add boiling water to porridge sachets? ›

Simply empty your sachet into a bowl or mug, pour over boiling water and leave for a few minutes until your porridge looks just right!

Is Mcdonald's porridge made with milk or water? ›

Porridge made with organic British semi-skimmed milk and wholegrain jumbo oats.

How to make the nest porridge? ›

Wash and soak rice in water for 1/2 hour. Cut the salted duck egg and century egg into cube size. Cook the soaked rice for 15 mins, add the minced lean meat and soaked birdnest for another 15mins over low heat. Once the rice is fully cooked till congee add the cut salted duck egg and century eggs.

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