Spooky Bakewell tart by @tabbonizio for Halloween lunch today! @ballymaloecookeryschool

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ballymaloecookeryschoo- lSpooky Bakewell tart by @tabbonizio for Halloween lunch today! 🕷️ 🎃 @ballymaloecookeryschool1h
Blackberries are such a delicious fruit and well worth freezing, to use all year round @rorysfood #learnatballymaloe
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ballymaloecookeryschool- Blackberries are such a delicious fruit and well worth freezing, to use all year round.
#learnatballymaloe #cookingisfun #ballymaloecookeryschool1d
_mariaharte_Currently making blackberry and sweet geranium jam from a jackpot of blackberries on my evening stroll! 🌞
Blackberry and Apple jam – home grown and foraged locally @ballymaloecookery
Helena with @rorysfood rhubarb,coconut and pistachio cake @ballymaloe ☘️🇮🇪
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ballymaloecookeryschool- 12-week student Helena with her beautiful rhubarb, coconut and pistachio cake, fresh out of the oven.
#rhubarb #cook #chef #ballymaloecookeryschool #organic #cake #food9h

Blackberries are such a delicious fruit and well worth freezing, to use all year round @rorysfood #learnatballymaloe
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ballymaloecookeryschool- Blackberries are such a delicious fruit and well worth freezing, to use all year round.
#learnatballymaloe #cookingisfun #ballymaloecookeryschool1d
_mariaharte_Currently making blackberry and sweet geranium jam from a jackpot of blackberries on my evening stroll! 🌞
And that’s a wrap on 3 dreamy months at @ballymaloecookeryschool 🌱🌞 by Issy Brooks
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- And that’s a wrap on 3 dreamy months at @ballymaloecookeryschool 🌱🌞
Rory O’Connell’s Summer spinach with garlic, chilli and lemon with thanks to Rachel Allen
Wash the destalked spinach in several changes of cold water, then allow it to drain in order to remove as much of the water as possible.
Place a wide, low-sided, heavy saucepan or frying pan on the heat and add the olive oil. Immediately add the peeled thinly sliced garlic, and cook gently until the olive oil gets hot and the garlic colours slightly. Add the crushed dried chilli or the chilli flakes, whichever you are using, and cook for a few seconds – the garlic should now be golden.
Increase the heat and add the drained spinach, being careful because it will hiss and spit a bit. Cook the spinach, turning it constantly, then season with a little salt and freshly ground black pepper.
Add the lemon juice and zest, and stir them in. Pull the pan off the heat and taste. Correct the seasoning and serve the spinach immediately in a hot dish. The spinach can also be removed from the pan when it is cooked, spread out flat to cool, and served later at room temperature.
Garlic Recipes:
Darina Allen and Rory O’Connell’s Christmas Mincemeat recipe passed down in Myrtle Allen’s family for generations #Ballymaloe

Here are three delicious options, the first is the classic Mincemeat recipe passed down in Myrtle Allen’s family for several generations. Of course, it contains suet so it’s moist and juicy and best eaten hot. The second, Emer Fitzgerald’s Mincemeat is vegetarian, it doesn’t include suet or butter and is also gluten free. The third, Brandy Mincemeat, does not include suet either, but does have butter.
Ingredients
- 2 cooking apples, e.g. Bramley Seedling
- 2 organic lemons
- 450g (1lb) beef suet (see P.00)
- pinch of salt
- 110g (4oz) candied citrus peel (preferably homemade)
- 2 tablespoons Seville orange marmalade
- 225g (8oz) currants
- 450g (1lb) sultanas
- 900g (2lbs) Barbados sugar (moist, soft, dark-brown)
- 62ml (2 1/2fl oz) Irish whiskey
Method
Makes 3.2 kilos approx. Makes 8-9 pots.
- Core and bake the whole apples in a moderate oven, 180°C/350°F/gas mark 4, for 30 minutes approx. Allow to cool. When they are soft, remove the skin and pips and mash the flesh into pulp.
- Grate the rind from the lemons on the finest part of a stainless steel grater and squeeze out the juice and stir into the pulp. Add the other ingredients one by one, and as they are added, mix everything thoroughly.
- Put into sterilized jars, cover and leave to mature for 2 weeks before using. This mincemeat will keep for a year in a cool, airy place.
Rory O’Connell’s Tuscan Apple, Lemon & Almond Cake

Food on RTÉ
@RTEfood
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Crisp on top and full of plump, juicy apples, this Tuscan tart is simply delicious.
Celebrity Chef
I am never quite sure if I should be calling this a cake or a tart but in any event, it is delicious and quite easy to make.
Ingredients
I am never quite sure if I should be calling this a cake or a tart but in any event, it is delicious and quite easy to make.
The origins of the recipe are from Tuscany in Italy but I like to use highly perfumed Irish dessert apples when in season. Look out for some lesser known but very delicious Irish dessert apples such as Irish Peach and Ardcairn Russet.
Serves 8
- 10g butter melted for greasing the parchment paper
- 4 dessert apples
- Finely grated zest of 2 lemons
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 250g caster sugar
- 2 eggs
- 150ml cream
- 110g butter melted and cooled
- 125g whole almonds, blanched, peeled and ground to a fine powder in a food processer or ground almonds
- 110g plain flour sieved
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder sieved
- 100g of apricot jam
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice, warmed and sieved
- 2 tablespoons of chopped sweet geranium leaves ( optional)
Method
- Preheat the oven to 180c / 350 f / gas 4
- Line a 28cm flan ring with a removable base with a disc of parchment paper. The paper should in one piece cover the base and sides of the tin and come up 1cm above the edge of the tin. Brush the paper with a little melted butter.
- Peel, core and quarter the apples and slice into c 3mm slices. Mix with the lemon zest. Whisk the vanilla, sugar, and eggs to a thick and light consistency similar to a batter. Whisk in the cream and cooled melted butter. Fold in the almonds, flour and baking powder. Add ¾ of the sliced apples, being careful not to break the apple slices.
- Pour the mixture into the prepared flan ring and gently smooth over the surface. Scatter the remaining apples over the surface and sprinkle with 1 dessertspoon of caster sugar.
- Place in the preheated oven and cook for 20 minutes. Reduce the temperature to 160c etc and cook for a further 40 minutes by which time the tart will feel gently set. It may be necessary to cover the tart during the cooking with a sheet of parchment paper if the tart is getting too dark.
- Remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly. While the tart is still warm, Paint the surfaced with the warm sieved apricot jam to achieve a glossy glaze and if using the chopped geranium, sprinkle on immediately after glazing the tart.
- Serve warm with softly whipped cream.





Serves 4-6.
You will need:
1kg (2lb 3oz) spinach leaves, stalks removed
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 large cloves of garlic, peeled and very thinly sliced
1 dried chilli, crushed into small pieces, or a pinch of chilli flakes
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Juice and zest of 1 lemon