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EGG, WATERCRESS, RADISH AND OLIVE SALAD
Egg, watercress, radish and olive salad
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How to:

Cure olives

Good things take time and we believe olives taste better the longer they take to cure. Annalien van der Colff of Rhebokskraal Olive Estate offers these curing tips:

For kalamata-style olives, use black olives - the picking season is from April to June and you can buy unpickled olives directly from farms. Place them in fresh water for three weeks, stirring once a day and rinsing once a week.

Place in a weak salt solution (150g salt to 5 litres or 20 cups water) for the next two weeks, and in a slightly stronger solution (200g salt to 5 litres or 20 cups water) for two weeks after that. For the final two weeks, place in a solution of 250g salt to 5 litres (20 cups) water.

Set aside for four months. Rinse then place in a solution of 250g salt to 5 litres (20 cups) water. Leave for another four months. Taste.

If satisfied, leave in vinegar for 12 hours then bottle in a solution of 250g salt to 5 litres (20 cups) water and 250ml (1 cup) brown vinegar. The result is juicy olives, loose around the pip and ready to be used with herbs and spices.



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Recipe by: Abigail Donnelly
Serves: 4
Dietary considerations: Low carb / Fat conscious / Health conscious / Dairy free
Category: Vegetarian / Easy / Quick
Prep time: 20 minutes
Cooking time: 6 minutes (for the eggs)
Ingredients:
24 black olives, pitted
4 T extra virgin olive oil
3 T Italian parsley, chopped
toasted pita breads, to serve
6 radishes, grated finely
watercress, to serve
12 quail eggs or 4 eggs, hardboiled and peeled
chives, snipped
salt and freshly ground pepper
Cooking instructions:

In a blender, combine the olives with the olive oil and parsley to form a loose paste.

Spread the paste on the pita breads and pile on the radish, watercress, eggs and chives.

Season to taste.

Per serving: 1001.5kJ, 7.2g protein, 22.7g fat, 5.6g carbs

Wine: Waterford Pecan Stream Sauvignon Blanc 2007


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Useful Tools

conversion table

½ t = 2 ml
1 t = 5 ml
1 T = 15 ml
½ cup = 125 ml
1 cup = 250 ml

Fahrenheit - Celsius

Subtract 32, then multiply by 0.56

Celsius - Fahrenheit

Multiply by 1.8, then add 32




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