The Circus Gardener's Kitchen

seasonal vegetarian recipes with a side helping of food politics

beer battered halloumi with chips and “mushy” peas

beer-battered-halloumi-with-chips-and-mushy-peas jump to recipe

In June last year, during one of the lighter moments of Britain’s rather squalid EU referendum campaign, “leave” campaigner Nigel Farrage led a flotilla of fishing boats up the Thames, calling on Britain to “take back our waters” and to “stop giving away our fish”.

However, his flotilla was ambushed by a rival flotilla, led by “remain” campaigner Sir Bob Geldoff wielding a megaphone and yelling out such memorable taunts as “you’re a fraud, Nigel” and “you’re no fisherman’s friend”.

Of course, the truth is that it is the fish, not the fishermen, who are most in need of a friend.

Across the globe, fish populations are in steep decline. Since the 1960s stocks of tuna, swordfish and marlin have fallen by 90%. More recently conservationists warned that the once ubiquitous sardine is now being driven to extinction as a result of overfishing off the African coast.

For all its faults (and there are plenty, for example the outrageous practice of dumping dead fish back into the sea), the European Union’s Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) at least represented a serious attempt to tackle overfishing within the EU’s boundaries. In the fourteen years of the CFP’s existence it has even led to a recovery in stocks of some fish species, including North Sea cod.

Outside the EU and without regulation, the alternative would be to leave fishing decisions to “market forces”, allowing greed to dictate how much fish can be caught. Hugely damaging practices like bottom trawling, which yields huge catches but destroys habitats and breeding grounds, would almost certainly become more prevalent.

And if we do return to overfishing beyond the oceans’ recovery limits then all too soon our fishermen will no longer have a livelihood to protest about.

harvested potatoesharvested peas
green-split-peashalloumi

This recipe is the culmination of a lengthy period of research and experimentation.

I first came across the idea of using halloumi in a vegetarian version of fish and chips many years ago at the brilliant Terre a Terre vegetarian restaurant in Brighton, UK.

For the past couple of years I have experimented with various other ingredients, including paneer and tofu, but there is something about the texture and slightly salty flavour of halloumi that makes it just right for this dish. Char-grilling the halloumi before deep frying it gives it an additional dimension of flavour.

The secret behind crispy, light batter lies in the alchemy between very hot oil and very cold batter. Using ice-cold beer in the latter produces perfect results, but ice-cold sparkling water would work just as well.

Ingredients

for the beer battered halloumi

two 250g blocks halloumi
40 g corn flour
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
125 g plain organic flour
1 tsp baking powder
225 ml ice-cold beer or sparkling water (put it in the freezer for 15 minutes before using)

for the “mushy peas”

150 g green split peas
2 cloves garlic, peeled and roughly chopped
200 g fresh or frozen peas
5 g fresh mint leaves
½ tsp sea salt

groundnut oil for deep frying

to serve

300 g triple cooked chips (recipe here)
lemon wedges

Method

1. Place the green split peas in a saucepan with the garlic and 350 ml water. Place over a medium heat and bring to a simmer, stirring occasionally. Reduce the heat to maintain a low simmer, place a lid on the pan and cook for a further 50 minutes or until the split peas are soft. Strain through a fine sieve, but retain the cooking liquid. Place the fresh or frozen peas in a separate pan and cover with water. Bring to the boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Add the mint leaves, stir, and cook for a further minute. Remove from the heat and strain through a fine sieve. Place the peas and mint, together with the sea salt and split peas in a food processor. Add a couple of tablespoons of the reserved cooking liquid and process in short bursts until you arrive at a mixture that has the texture of mushy peas. Set to one side.

2. Pre-heat the oven to 130°C (250°F, gas mark ½). Place the cornflour into a bowl. Cut the blocks of halloumi into four pieces, across the width. Slice each of these pieces into 3 thin slices, again across the width. Place a ridged frying pan on a medium heat. When the pan is very hot, brush the halloumi on one side with olive oil and place in the pan. We are only char-grilling one side, so cook for 3 minutes or until the halloumi has chargrilled bars across the underside. Remove from the pan and drain on kitchen paper. Once cool, roll the halloumi in the cornflour until lightly dusted, brushing off any excess. This will help the batter to stick.

3. When you are ready to batter the halloumi, fill a deep pan with groundnut oil to a depth of 5-6cm and place over a high heat. Quickly whisk together the flour, baking powder and ice-cold beer into a thick batter. Dip the pieces of halloumi into the batter and add to the pan. You will need to do this in batches to avoid overcrowding the pan and reducing the temperature of the oil too drastically. Cook the halloumi for 2-3 minutes on each side or until the batter is crispy and golden. Briefly drain on kitchen paper then place on a baking tray in the pre-heated oven until you have cooked all of the halloumi.

4. To serve, place 2-3 pieces of battered halloumi on each plate, along with a serving of triple cooked chips and a spoonful of “mushy peas” and lemon wedges

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20 replies

  1. This is an interesting concept. I absolutely love halloumi cooked on the BBQ or in a frypan but battering it is a totally new idea to me.

    Your post made me realise just how big the overfishing problem is too, such a sad and shortsighted mindset to put profits over sustainability.

  2. This dish looks so delicious, I would love to try it and I’m so hungry after reading this post 😀

  3. Fantastic recipe, and great point about over fishing – I’m going to try and use the lovely batter in your recipe with firm, pressed tofu.

    • Thank you. Good luck with the tofu: having tried it myself I do think it will need some punchy flavour to lift it. Steve

      • Thanks Steve … ever since I switched from Veggie to Vegan I’ve really missed Halloumi, which was my non-melting go-to for everything 🙂 I found a recipe where the author coated the tofu in a seaweed wrapper to add punch, so I might try that out, but with your batter 🙂

  4. Not just how much is fished, it’s how it’s fished too, very damaging for the ecosystems, need to bring this home to more people! Great recipe

  5. What a great idea for halloumi! I love cooking it in a dry pan and seasoning with roasted red peppers, but your method takes it to a whole new level. Awesome and I’m going to try it soon.

  6. Excellent comment about overfishing. We probably already past the point of no return with wild fish population. So a big thank you for this brilliant’y creative dish. Be sure to invite me next time you’re working on a food experiment.

  7. Sustainability of fish stocks has been high on the agenda here in Australia too, and with the fish farming industry coming under fire for pollution and unethical feeding practices, fish is now a sometimes food for me. Not sure I’d like haloumi coated in batter, but a big bowl of fat, handcut chips made with freshly dug spuds would keep me happy

  8. Wooow this looks mouthwatering! My favorite cheese is hallomi

  9. Sorry to ask, but how much cornflour is needed?

    • Hi Kiera. You’ve spotted an omission in the ingredients list, so thank you! You’ll need around 40g of cornflour, enough to lightly dust the halloumi. This then helps the batter to stick. I will amend the recipe to make this clear. Steve 🙂

  10. So happy to have found a recipe for the wonderful peas we had while in London several years ago. And also to discover a vegetarian option for the fish part. Thank you!!!

  11. I’ve just tried it and the recipe worked so well!

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