Ancestral Christmas Dinner
A primal feast for a modern Christmas. This year, honour the past with dishes that celebrate the art of ancestral cooking.
Start with courgettes transformed into vessels for rich, savoury beef. Move to a show stopping rack of lamb infused with rosemary and olive oil and end with a panna cotta that’s as indulgent as it is restorative. These are the kind of dishes that carry the weight of ancestral wisdom, simple, nutrient dense, and undeniably satisfying. Let this be the year your table tells a story: a feast that honours the season, the land, and the people gathered around it.
Beef Stuffed Courgette Boats
Start your Christmas dinner with a dish that's as delightful to the eyes as it is to the taste buds: ground beef and tomato courgette boats.
These courgette boats elevate the humble into the extraordinary. Packed with grass-fed beef, caramelised onions, and just the right touch of herbs, they’re a flavour-packed nod to the ancestral wisdom of pairing wholesome vegetables with nutrient-rich animal foods. Light yet satisfying, they set the tone for the richness to come
Serves 4
Ingredients
- 6 courgettes
- 500g organic beef mince
- 1 white onion - finely chopped
- 3 garlic cloves - crushed
- 2 tbsp Italian herbs mix
- 1/2 can (400g) tomato passata
- 1 tbsp tomato puree
- Salt & pepper to taste
- Olive oil or butter for cooking
Serve with: a generous sprinkle of grated parmesan cheese
Method
- Cut the courgette length way. Using a teaspoon scoop out the middle flesh.
- Drizzle the courgette “boats” with some olive oil and some salt.
- Rub everything really well and place them on a large tray in the oven at 200 degrees Celsius for 20 minutes.
- In the meantime make the filling: add a generous drizzle of olive oil to a frying pan on a medium heat.
- Once hot add in the chopped onion. Cook for 8-10 minutes until the onion starts to caramelise.
- Add in the Italian herbs and garlic. Cook for 1 more minute.
- Add in the mince and using a spoon break it down until it’s incorporate it with the onion and seasoning.
- Cook for 5 minutes then add in the tomato passata and tomato puree. Mix really well and cook for 5 more minutes.
- Remove the courgettes from the oven and stuff them with the mince mixture.
- Place them back in the oven for 8 minutes until slightly crispy on top.
- Generously sprinkle with some parmesan cheese (the more the merrier) and place them back in the oven for the final 2-3 minutes.
- Serve while still hot.
Rosemary Roasted Rack of Lamb
The centrepiece of this feast, a rack of lamb roasted to perfection, is as striking to the eye as it is to the palate. Infused with the earthy aroma of fresh rosemary and a olive oil, the lamb develops a golden crust while remaining tender and juicy inside. This dish is a testament to the beauty of simplicity, just a few ingredients transforming a pasture-raised cut into something unforgettable.
Serves 4
Ingredients
- Organic or free range 6-bone rack of lamb
- A few sprigs of rosemary
- 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- A generous pinch of salt and pepper
Serve with: vegetables of your choice and gravy
Method
- Pick the rosemary and chop very finely
- Add it to a bowl together with the olive oil, salt and pepper.
- Mix everything together and rub well the marinade on the rack on lamb. Cover and let the lamb marinade in the fridge ideally overnight or for at least 3 hours.
- Preheat the oven at 200 degrees Celsius.
- Place the rack of lamb in a baking tray and roast it in the oven for 20-25 minutes (20 minutes for a more rare finish or 25 minutes for well done)
- Remove from the oven and let the lamb rest for 10 minutes before slicing into chops.
- Serve with gravy and vegetable of your choice.
Panna Cotta with Spiced Cranberry Compote
Gelatine is more than a natural thickener, it’s packed with glycine, proline, and glutamine, amino acids that support digestion, repair the gut lining, and promote healthy skin, hair, and joints.
Topped with a spiced cranberry compote, this dessert strikes the perfect balance of sweet and tart, indulgence and tradition, a final bite that lingers long after the plates are cleared.
Serves 4
Ingredients
- 3 gelatine sheets
- 400ml double cream
- 150ml raw milk
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 tbsp raw honey
- 2 tbsp Organised
For the cranberry compote:
- 300g fresh cranberries
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 heaped tbsp raw honey
- A knob of butter for cooking
Method
- Add the gelatine sheets to a bowl with cold water and soak them for 5 minutes.
- Add the cream, milk, vanilla extract, honey and Organised to a pan on medium heat.
- Stir everything together and bring to a gentle simmer, then remove from the heat.
- Take the gelatine out of the cold water and squeeze out excess water.
- Add the gelatine sheets to the pan and mix everything together until the gelatine has completely dissolved.
- Lightly grease 4 ramekins with some butter. Divide the mixture into them and place them in the fridge to set for at least 6 hours or ideally overnight.
- To make the cranberry compote add a knob of butter to a pan on a medium heat.
- Once completely melted add ins the fresh cranberries. Stir everything together and cook for 5 minutes until they start to pop.
- Add in the cinnamon and honey. Stir to combine and cook on a low heat for 10-15 minutes until you have a jammy kind of consistency. Add a dash of water if needed.
- Remove from the heat and leave it to cool down completely.