Showing posts with label sebbyholmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sebbyholmes. Show all posts

Monday, 19 November 2012

Traditional Macaroni Cheese (as appeared on studentrecipes.com)




(serves 4 people)

Recently I was thinking about my favorite things to eat  during my time as a student. This has to be it - simple, delicious and never gets boring (well to me anyway). Give this a go with some garlic bread and salad.


Ingredients

·         -250g / 9oz Macaroni.
·         -40g / 1, ½oz Butter.
·         -40g / 1, ½oz Plain Flour.
·         -500ml / 1pint Milk.
·         -250g /9oz Grated Cheddar.
·         -50g / 2oz Grated Parmesan.
·         -Salt and Pepper, pinch of both.

You Will Need

Boiling Pan, x 1 (big enough to fit the macaroni in).
-Boiling Pan, small, x 1 (for the cheese sauce).
-Colander, x 1.
-Knife, x 1.
-Chopping Board, x 1.
-Wooden Spoon, x 1
-Cheese Grater, x 1.

Method

1.       Fill a boiling pan with enough water to submerge the macaroni and then bring to the boil. Once boiling, add the macaroni and turn the heat down to a simmer and leave for around 10 – 12 minutes, until el dente (this is when the pasta is cooked throughout but still has a slight toughness which allows for a bite whilst eating). Once ready remove using a colander and drain well.

2.       In the meantime melt the butter in a small boiling pan on a medium heat. Once melted mix in the flour to make a roux (this is a clumpy, doughy mixture that liquid can be added to to make a white sauce). Next, slowly add the milk bit by bit whilst stirring continuously until all the milk is used and you are left with a thick, pourable white sauce.


3.       Lastly, add the grated Cheddar cheese and Parmesan to the white sauce and continue stirring until combined. Mix the cheese sauce in with the macaroni, season to taste and then enjoy.





Thanks for reading and I hope you enjoy my recipe if you want some choices for serving suggestions then check out my recipes on the 'student recipes' site by following this link.

Monday, 20 August 2012

Swapping pens for pans (Featured in Mouth)


Mouth is preparing to scream school’s out and spend summer sipping sweet ciders beside smoking barbecues. But spare a thought for KU student Sebastian Holmes, who will instead be spending the summer coping with epic temperatures while he slogs it out in the kitchen.



The media and cultural arts student, originally from Oxford, will swap pens for pans and work at the King’s Arms Hotel and Restaurant in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, with a small team of chefs cooking up 120 covers a day. The 22 year old, who is in his final year at Kingston, has worked at the King’s Arms, which has a grade one rosette, for the last seven years during breaks from studying and travelling.
But the student isn’t just a glutton for punishment, his part time work is actually all part of a master plan to become a food journalist. Sebastian decided that this was his vocation when he travelled for eight months through Fiji, New Zealand, Thailand and Australia. Originally he debated whether travel journalism or food journalism was for him but settled on the latter as he already had years of experience as a chef.
He began working with food from the age of 13, in an Oxfordshire kitchen when a family connection led him to a chef position. Before Sebastian knew it he was serving hundreds of customers a day and had developed a passion for food and plenty of skills. “I felt that I was pretty good so I worked in a few busier kitchens, though only part time as I was at school,” says Sebastian. Sebastian then met the head chef at the King’s Arms who gave him a job. “The standard of food at the King’s was leagues above anything I had previously been involved in, so god knows why he gave me the chance,” he says.
The foresighted individual feels that returning to the King’s Arms every summer is something he must do, not only to fund his education, but to keep his culinary skills in check. He feels his part time job keeps him on his toes, as he is constantly thrown in at the deep end when he returns to the hotel because he is expected to be a fully fledged member of the team on each return.
Also part of the master plan is the student’s successful food blog www.livelikeastudenteatlikeaking.blogspot.com, on which Sebastian posts recipes and ideas, often inspired by student budgets. He also freelances, writing recipes and articles for a number of publications. Most recently Sebastian was commissioned by a publication to live on a budget of £54.54 for a week, which is the same budget an under-25 on benefits is likely to live on. The chef also intends to have a recipe book published within the next five years.
Sebastian hopes that his course in media and cultural studies, his published work and experience in the kitchen will take him one step closer to his dream job. He says: “My degree will do me favours but my extracurricular activities will make me stand out on paper.”

Written by Cara Louise Lawson