Harts of Stur Kitchen Issue 5, Christmas 2017 | Page 55

kit Instant Expert T H E Christmas Dinner Lesley Waters The Celebrity Chef Season’s Eatings SHINY & SHARP Lesley Waters has some top tips that’ll help you enjoy a stress-free and delicious Christmas dinner How about vegetables? What are your favourite trimmings? Do you have any time-saving tips? Get everyone on board. Don’t just work yourself into a frazzle in a kitchen – that’s bonkers. Put on some nice jazz, people can have a glass of fizz and it’s fun. Don’t put it all on you. I look after the bird and everyone else does everything else. If you really want to save time, get all your veg parboiled the day before, get all your sauces made, the stuffing and pigs in blankets done. Do you have any top tips for cooking turkey? I like turkey very much, it’s delicious. You’re far better to have a smaller bird that will cook quicker and won’t go dry. Sometimes, with those big birds, the thighs can take ages to cook and the breast goes dry. I generally stuff it with apricot and pistachio stuffing. It’s quite traditional – streaky bacon over the breast, salt and pepper, lots of butter and a little bit of olive oil. I always do a nut roast too. Cranks’ nut roast is really nice! And I do a ham that’s baked on apples and cider, and it is delicious. You can have that cold on Boxing Day, too. What sauces should we serve with Christmas dinner? We always make a raw cranberry relish – it’s an American recipe. You cut up a whole orange and whizz it up, the pith, skin, everything. Then you add fresh cranberries and whizz those in, and then you add a little bit of icing sugar, a little bit of olive oil, salt and pepper and whizz that up. It’s like a salsa, and it is fabulous. Christmas Dinner is quite heavy, so it’s good to have something fresh. I also love proper bread sauce with cardamom and nutmeg, so it’s slightly spicy. For potatoes, I sometimes do what my Grandmother does, which is parboil them until they go flaky on the outside, put them in a colander and give them a shake. I cook them in butter and rapeseed oil, and she used to sprinkle over just a little bit of seasoned flour, and it makes them go ever so crispy. I roast carrots, parsnips and butternut squash in olive oil, salt and pepper, squeeze lots of orange over them and put the orange halves in. I stir-fry shredded sprouts and finish them with butter and nutmeg. Knife Wizard Domestic Electric Knife Sharpener RRP: £84.95 Harts Price: £79.94 What would you have for pudding? I don’t do a traditional Christmas Pudding because I find it too heavy. We have this thing called an instant Christmas pudding, and you can make it before or on the day and it’s more like a carrot cake – it’s got apricot, sultanas and grated carrot in it. It hasn’t got any suet, and it’s quite light. I’ll always do something chocolatey for the kids. How do you ensure you’re not too full? We have