Miss Dahl's Voluptuous Delights by Sophie Dahl

    • Categories: Egg dishes; Breakfast / brunch; Cooking for 1 or 2; Fall / autumn; Vegetarian
    • Ingredients: portobello mushrooms; eggs; tarragon; soft goat cheese
    show

Notes about this book

This book does not currently have any notes.

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Tawny granola

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Very easy and flexible recipe. Love using whole almonds in this recipe.

  • Squid salad with chargrilled peppers and coriander/cilantro dressing

    • aberne on July 27, 2012

      This is really delicious. Be sure not to put too much squid in the pan at once, otherwise it goes all rubbery and watery. Quite simple, and great with crusty bread to sop it all up.

  • Baked eggs with Swiss chard

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      The recipe serves 2 however I greedily ate this all by myself. If this was served with toast though it should definitely be shared! I read "chopped" onion as diced however if I had paid attention to the photo I would have used sliced which I think would work better. I substituted feta for the goats cheese.

  • Peasant soup

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      5.14 Doubled - but only had 1 can of beans. Scrummy - tasty and full of goodness.

  • Pear and ginger muffins

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      I made lots of substitutions however the end result was still lovely. Recipe suggests using pear puree however I quickly pan fried 2 chopped pears to use as a replacement. In addition I replaced the spelt flour with 3/4C plain flour & 1/2C wholewheat flour; substituted half the honey for brown sugar; and used 2 whole eggs instead of 4 egg whites.

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      6.13 Stodgy

  • Scrambled eggs with red chillies and vine tomatoes

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Nice to eat on a cold morning, serve with wholegrain toast. Recipe suggests roasting small vine tomatoes before scrambling the eggs however I was too impatient for this. I pan fried a roughly chopped large tomato with the olive oil and emptied onto a plate before cooking the chilli and adding the eggs into the pan to scramble.

  • Grilled bananas with Greek yoghurt and agave

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Delicious with honey for breakfast (skipped the rum).

  • Warm winter vegetable salad

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      5.13 Didn't have parsley. Dressing yummy but strong go easy. 5.14 Yum again!

  • Pasta puttanesca

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      5.13 Yum and super easy. 5.14 Added 3tbsp capers - prefer Nigella's method.

  • My dad's chicken curry

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      7.14 Thickens in the last 2 minutes. 1 x dry, de-seeded thai chilli was plenty of heat for H. Ok - for a quick easy curry.

  • Chicken stew with green olives

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      5.15 Average

  • Cinnamon roast peaches with vanilla yoghurt

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Yum! Definitely be greedy and eat two of these.

  • Quinoa salad with tahini dressing

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      2.14 Ok - dressing quite different.

  • Warm ratatouille

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      3.15 Scrummy - didn't add coriander and used jarred peppers.

  • Coconut curry with prawns/shrimp

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      6.13 Would be great in deep noodle bowls. Lime juice - essential. Scrummy - I loved. H didn't like the prawns. Great girly lunch.

  • Baked apples

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Small red apples worked well. To serve, I added a few spoons of ricotta, sprinkled over the leftover topping and spooned some of the cooking water over the top.

  • Lemon Capri torte

    • Astrid5555 on October 28, 2012

      Expected a fluffy cake as pictured in the book, however turned out disappointingly dense. Lemon lovers will nevertheless like it.

  • Clover's Carnation milk jelly

    • ithyt on August 31, 2015

      6.15 Quick and easy - kids loved. Could use as a decoration/garnish in a shot glass.

  • Blackberry and apple crumble

    • ithyt on April 24, 2016

      4.16 Slightly adapted - Used just apples with a Butter Puff Pastry base. Fantastic with Wholemeal Spelt Flour. I pre-cooked the apples with caster sugar which made them very rich - not necessary. Would definitely make again healthier version without the pastry base and without cooking apples in sugar first :)

  • Cardamom rice pudding

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      This was quite delicious - sort of like an Indian pudding and sweet but not overpoweringly so. I made a couple of changes by using ground cinnamon, ground coriander, currants and chopped almonds.

  • Banana bread

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Tastes great straight out of the oven with lashings of butter. Make sure the bananas are mashed very well. If you have any left after two days it still tastes lovely.

  • Orange yoghurt and polenta cake

    • Melanie on March 07, 2014

      Very easy to put together, interesting texture - I was a fan.

You must Create an Account or Sign In to add a note to this book.

Reviews about this book

  • 101 Cookbooks by Aran Goyoaga

    ...such a beautifully styled and photographed book. I love the British and slightly Scandinavian aesthetics... It is seasonal, light yet hearty, healthful and did I say beautiful?

    Full review
  • ISBN 10 0007281315
  • ISBN 13 9780007281312
  • Published Feb 02 2012
  • Format Paperback
  • Page Count 288
  • Language English
  • Countries United Kingdom
  • Publisher HarperCollins Publishers
  • Imprint HarperCollins Publishers Ltd

Publishers Text

Sophie Dahl, one of the most beautiful and stylish women on the planet, shares delicious secrets from her slinky kitchen. With 100 delectable recipes for each season, as well as funny and touching stories from her amazing life, this luscious and beautifully illustrated book is set to become a cookery classic. Sophie Dahl has been both round as a Rubens and as sylphy as a sapling, through trial, error and an episode in India which needn't be discussed in detail with anyone. She lived out the latter part of her adolescence in public, and so her puppy fat, which should have been a tender family joke, became fuel for national debate. At the time this was crippling to her, and one of the reasons she moved to another country. Flirting with every food fad from Atkins to raw food, she has had both misadventures and victories in her quest to have a sound healthy relationship with food. Now in her twenty-ninth year it is suddenly simpler: Sophie cooks and eats, and does both with gusto. It can be lonely and confusing navigating food, particularly with the standards of beauty and weight that are thrust upon us by advertisers. Sophie aims to debunk some of the horrible punishing diet myths, and replace them with compassionate common sense, anecdotal stories and a lashing of healthy recipes. This is a book that doesn't encourage guilt or monastic deprivation, but celebrates the joy in food and eating. Original, funny, quirky with a bit of whimsy, this glorious book is full of memoir, anecdote and delicious recipes, scattered with lovely Matisse-like line drawings that slope off the page.

Other cookbooks by this author