Lifestyle

Festive food made easy

Take the stress out of cooking this Christmas. With starters, mains, and desserts, we have your Christmas menu all wrapped up!

For most South African hosts and hostesses, the festive season is synonymous with spending hours in the kitchen slaving away at the hot stove – as if the summer heat isn’t enough – only for friends and family to gobble the royal feast down in ten minutes!

Chef Samantha Stone, qualified chef and Group F&B Development Manager for First Group Hotels and Resorts says that she believes that hosts and hostesses need to be able to enjoy the festivities as much as their guests, “I, for one, have no desire to spend every minute in the kitchen checking that I haven’t burnt something to a crisp. Sipping summer cocktails sounds a lot more enticing! After all, we all deserve a break to make lasting, magical memories with our friends and families, right?”

Chef Stone shares her go-to, easy-peasy three-course Christmas recipes that will have you throwing off your apron and spending less time in the kitchen this Festive season.

Starter: Peach, nut brittle and prosciutto salad

The perfect summer, guilt-free salad packed with flavour and guaranteed to impress your guests.

Serves 4

Ingredients

  • 300g of your favourite salad pack mix (I love the Italian mix)
  • 2 peaches – pitted and sliced into wedges (optional: sear on a dry hot griddle pan until slightly charred)
  • +- 100g soft cheese, cut into bite-size pieces (brie, blue cheese or camembert)
  • 70g Prosciutto – roughly torn to resemble slithers
  • 50g Nut Brittle, roughly chopped (any nut brittle will do, we used pecan nut brittle)

Method

Simply start with your salad greens and layer on your peaches, prosciutto, and soft cheese and sprinkle over the roughly chopped nut brittle. It’s really that easy.

Tip: This salad can be made the day before, just leave out the nut brittle and sprinkle over when ready to serve.

Main course: Insanely easy and hassle-free glazed gammon

Serves 6 – 8

Ingredients

  • 1 medium gammon ± 1.7kg
  • 2 dried bay leaves
  • ½ onion
  • Cloves to taste

For the glaze

  • 150g Orange Marmalade
  • 150g dark brown sugar

Method

  1. Add the bay leaves and onion to a pot of lightly seasoned simmering water.
  2. Place the gammon into the water and simmer for 1 hour, checking the water level every 20 minutes or so. Top up with boiled kettle water when needed.
  3. Once the gammon is ready, set it aside and allow to rest for 30 minutes.
  4. Preheat your oven to 1700C
  5. If your gammon has the rind on, now is when you need to remove it and trim off any excess fat.
  6. Score the gammon and pierce with whole cloves – as many as you like.
  7. Place the gammon into a roasting tray lined with greaseproof paper.
  8. Spoon over the marmalade and spread it over the gammon with the back of a spoon and sprinkle over the dark brown sugar.
  9. Place in the oven, on the middle rack for +- 20 – 25 minutes or until the glaze and sugar have caramelised.
  10. Remove from the oven and allow to cool down to room temperature before carving.

Tip – This gammon is best served at room temperature. If you’re lucky enough to have any leftovers, it makes the most amazing cold meat rolls for lunches the next day.

Dessert: Oh-so-easy gingerbread Christmas trifle

In Samantha’s family, they want to be traditional, but they also want their bread buttered on both sides. They want the good stuff but without all the labour that goes into it. This is how Samantha’s Gingerbread Christmas Trifle was born, it’s packed with flavour and everybody, including the kids, will absolutely love it.

Makes 6 individual portions

 Ingredients

  • 1 tea loaf good quality Gingerbread – sliced into 1cm thick slices (optional: drizzle with brandy or Triple sec for a more indulgent pudding for the adults)
  • 250ml fresh whipping cream, unsweetened – whipped to a soft peak
  • 500ml vanilla custard
  • Ground cinnamon – to dust over the top

Method

  1. Start by putting a layer of Gingerbread at the bottom of your glass and spoon over a layer of vanilla custard and then a layer of whipped cream.
  2. Amount of custard and whipped cream is entirely up to you, it all depends on how many layers you are wanting.
  3. Repeat the layering process – with the final layer being whipped cream at the top.
  4. Dust with ground cinnamon and serve.

Tip: Best made the day before. Cover with cling wrap and refrigerate. Dust with ground cinnamon just before serving.  

 

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I'm an experienced writer, sub-editor, and media & public relations specialist with a demonstrated history of working in the media industry – across digital, print, TV, and radio. I earned a diploma in Journalism and Print Media from leading institution, Damelin College, with distinctions (Journalism And Print Media, Media Studies, Technical English And Communications, South African Studies, African & International Studies, Technology in Journalism, Journalism II & Practical Journalism). I also hold a qualification in Investigative Journalism from Print Media SA, First Aid Training from St John’s Ambulance, as well as certificates in Learning to Write Marketing Copy, Planning a Career in User Experience, and Writing a Compelling Blog Post.
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