Mice in Jackets by Annabel Karmel

Mice in Jackets by Annabel Karmel

by Annabel Karmel |
Published on

Preparation Time

1 hour 30 minutes

Serves

4

Ingredients

  • 4 medium baking potatoes (approx 225g each)

  • a little vegetable oil

  • ½ medium butternut squash (approx 300g)

  • 40g butter

  • 40g fresh grated parmesan cheese

  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard

  • 2 tbsp milk

  • 40g grated Cheddar cheese

  • 4 small cherry tomatoes

  • Chives

  • 4 radishes

  • Raisins

  • Spring onions

  1. Prick the potatoes in several places, place on a baking tray and brush all over with the oil. Bake in an oven pre-heated to 190C (375F) for 1 to 1 ¼ hours or until they feel soft when pressed.

  2. Cut a medium butternut squash in half, scoop out the seeds and brush with a knob of melted butter bake in the oven for about 40 minutes or until tender.

  3. When cool enough to handle, cut the tops off the baked potatoes and scoop out the flesh. Scoop out the flesh of the cooked butternut squash and mash together with the baked potato flesh, mustard, parmesan, milk and butter. Season with a little salt and pepper. Put the mixture back into the potato shells, cover with the grated Cheddar and cook under a pre-heated grill for a few minutes until golden.

  4. Fix a small cherry tomato into each of the potatoes using a cocktail stick for the noses. Add some short lengths of chives for the whiskers – you can tuck these behind the tomato. Decorate with halved radishes for the ears, raisins for the eyes and spring onion for the tails.

For those busy days stock-up on ‘Annabel’s Favourites’, a brand new range of nutritionally balanced frozen meals for children. Inspired by her popular cookbook recipes, they are low in salt and a tasty way towards their 5-a-day. Find them at Tesco (RRP £1.75) www.annabelkarmel.com

Just so you know, we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website - read why you should trust us
How we write our articles and reviews
Mother & Baby is dedicated to ensuring our information is always valuable and trustworthy, which is why we only use reputable resources such as the NHS, reviewed medical papers, or the advice of a credible doctor, GP, midwife, psychotherapist, gynaecologist or other medical professionals. Where possible, our articles are medically reviewed or contain expert advice. Our writers are all kept up to date on the latest safety advice for all the products we recommend and follow strict reporting guidelines to ensure our content comes from credible sources. Remember to always consult a medical professional if you have any worries. Our articles are not intended to replace professional advice from your GP or midwife.