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Tastemade with Highland Park Wild Food Recipe

VEGAN SMOKED MUSHROOMS WITH HIGHLAND PARK INFUSED CREAM

Cooking time
20 minutes
Prep time
10 minutes
Serves
2 people

Giving Veganuary a try this month? We’ve got just the delicious dish for you. Try our vegan take on Genevieve Taylor’s smoked mushroom with Highland Park infused cream -an extraordinary contrast of complex flavours and textures.

Ingredients

75g vegan butter
400g foraged mixed mushrooms, wiped clean (field, ink and blewit mushrooms are all ideal)
2 cloves garlic, peeled and finely chopped
150ml double plant cream
A handful of foraged herbs, roughly chopped (around 8-10g of picked leaves such as wild thyme, chigweed, borage or wild watercress are all ideal – leave a few for the garnish)
3-4 slices of Orkney sourdough (or any good quality – or homemade! – sourdough bread)
Sea salt

For the garnish

A drizzle of Scottish heather honey
50g Dairy Free Wensleydale
A few foraged herbs, reserved from above

Equipment

A fire table with grill surfaces
A fire-proof frying pan – no plastic or wooden handles, and NOT non-stick!
Skewers for the mushrooms
Cloche for smoking – an old metal bowl works fine
Small wooden spoon and basting brush

Method

1. Light a wood fire or charcoal barbecue. Once it’s ready to cook on, set your fire-proof frying on the grill bars over the fire and drop in the butter. Once melted, pull the pan off to the side, away from the heat.

2. While the butter is melting, tear (rather than slice) the mushrooms into large, bite-sized pieces to create lovely craggy edges that allow the smoky flavours to be absorbed into the mushroom flesh. Thread the mushroom pieces onto skewers – using two skewers prevents them spinning around when you turn them – and brush generously with melted butter, using the basting brush, and sprinkle with a little sea salt.

3. Set the skewers onto the grill bars, positioned a little bit away from the fire so the mushrooms cook at a medium heat and cover with a cloche to trap the smoke. (If you’re grilling with charcoal, you’ll need to add a little wood to create the smoke – choose fist-sized chunks rather than chips and add one or two to your fire.) Leave the mushrooms to gently grill and smoke until soft and lightly caramelised. Depending on the heat, this will take about 20 minutes; turn the skewers over half-way through, re-covering with the cloche.

4. While the mushrooms are cooking, slide your fire-proof fire pan with the remaining melted butter back over the fire and add the garlic, allowing it to fry over a medium heat for about a minute – just long enough for its delicious scent to waft up from the pan. Pour in the whisky and let it reduce for a few minutes, stirring occasionally, until thick and syrupy. Now pour in the cream and most of the chopped herbs (leaving a few for a garnish) and stir over a medium heat for a few minutes until it thickens.

5. While the sauce is cooking, grill the sourdough slices over a high heat until toasted. Rest on a board and then cut each slice in half and divide between two plates. Slide the mushrooms off the skewers and onto the toast and spoon the sauce over them. Garnish with the reserved herbs, crumbled Grimbister cheese and a drizzle of honey. Tuck in and enjoy while it’s hot!

Pairs with

Unboxed view of Highland Park 12 Year Old Single Malt Whisky

12 Year Old

ABV : 40% | Volume: 700ml

Spicy and well-rounded, packed with the flavours of sun-kissed oranges, rich spiced fruitcake, molten heather honey and aromatic peat smoke

Discover more