How To Make Shop Bought Food Look Homemade And Fool All Your Friends

It's not like you've actually got time to cook for them is it?

10

by Stevie Martin |
Updated on

You know the drill: you’re over-worked, underpaid and when you were pissed at your mate’s swanky dinner party last month (she’s got a proper job that doesn’t leave her crying in NatWest), you said you’d host the next one. And it’s tomorrow. And you don’t have the time, energy or joy in your heart to do anything other than stomp about your flat spitting about how there are more important things in life than being able to make soufflé. Or know what soufflé is.

From cakes to lasagne to curries and coq au vin, there’s a way you can throw a dinner party (or rise to that effing 'bring a dish' challenge) with next-to-no preparation and zero cooking involved, leaving you able to both enjoy yourself and, crucially, get drunk. It involves ready meals and a little something I like to call 'Lying To Your Friends'.

NB: If you throw a dinner party for 16 people, this isn’t going to work and will cost you billions. The following is suitable for small dinner parties or those horrific 'hey lovelies, why don’t you all bring a dish? It’ll be super-fun!' scenarios that you forgot about until it’s way too late.

Entrée: Soup

Preparation time: As long as it takes to heat some soup

Top tip: Prepare the soup just before your friends are about to arrive, while drinking wine out of a box from Iceland (shop, not country). Or any wine. I just really love the boxed stuff, you know? If you take it out of the box ,it’s a silver bag and looks like space food for astronauts, except it’s a floppy bag of wine for poor people with taste buds damaged from years of two-for -£5 deals.

*Ingredients: *

Cartons of the chunkiest Italian-style soup you can find.

The same number of cans of cheap chopped tomatoes

Some herbs. I don’t know, I’m not a botanist. Basil? If all else fails, go for the enigmatic Mixed Herbs Value Tub.

Black pepper

Method:

  1. Pour soup into a pan along with the chopped tomatoes to bulk it out (look, cartons of soup are expensive when you’re feeding six people). In terms of ratio, I’d go for one less can of chopped tomatoes than carton of soup, but just do what you feel.

  2. Put the herbs in.

  3. Put loads of pepper on it.

  4. Heat it up and serve. If you’ve got Parmesan in the cupboards, then go totally ballistic, but otherwise the soup itself should be fine.

  5. Cute thing to say while serving: 'The original recipe was a bit too creamy for my taste, so I decided to go a bit off-piste' (cue soft, tinkling laugh)

Main: a curry

Preparation time: However long it takes to heat a curry up

Top tip: Put this in the oven as you’re bringing the starters out and, for God’s sake, hide the boxes. Maybe cut out the cooking time beforehand and keep it in the cupboard for referral purposes – allowing you to quickly conceal if someone wanders in to 'help')

Ingredients:

Ready meals (go to Iceland – again, shop not country – for the really cheap stuff, otherwise you’ll end up spending £500k, and buy lots of the same one)

Rice (a packet of white or basmati or brown rice, you’re going to chuck out any rice that comes with the ready meal because that's a dead giveaway)

Fresh coriander

More chopped tomatoes

Any vegetables you want, such as an onion

Method:

  1. Put the curries in an oven-proof dish with a few cans of chopped tomatoes and cover with cling film, then stab the cling film and cook for as long as it says on the packet (pour curries into the ovenproof dish well before friends arrive to conceal shameful truth that you bought it).

  2. Fry a few onions/veg in olive oil and a bit of coriander.

  3. Boil up some rice (half a cup per person is the usual serving)

  4. When the curry is done (check it’s piping hot all the way through – you might have to put it back in again for a bit longer because of the sheer bulk) mix the onions/veg in.

  5. Serve on plates then chop coriander and sprinkle over individual meals.

  6. Laugh maniacally.

Cute thing to say while serving: 'Let me know if you want any more fresh coriander, I’ve got some left over (plus laughter reminiscent of waves breaking on the shore)

Main: Posh macaroni cheese

Preparation time: However long it takes to heat pasta in an oven

*Top tip: *Don’t worry if you can’t afford to buy loads of cans of mac and cheese – just buy a few and then bulk it up with shitloads more cheese and pasta (if you don’t have macaroni, just throw in some bowties or whatever and people will think you’re a kook).

Ingredients:

Cans of macaroni and cheese

Red cheese/white cheese

Parmesan

Some sort of herb. Basil?

Some bread

Method:

  1. Put macaroni in a pan and grate loads of cheese on it (not the Parmesan).

  2. Put the herbs in.

  3. Make some toast (trust me).

  4. Put in an oven dish and cover it, and I mean COVER IT, in Parmesan and scrape the toast all over it too.

  5. Bake until the Parmesan is all crispy and hard.

  6. Do a dance that involves you sticking your middle finger up at a recipe book, and serve while hot.

Cute thing to say while serving: 'I hope the breadcrumbs have crisped! Last time I cooked this, I put way too much béchamel in… *(plus snort- laugh)

Dessert: Classic Victoria sponge

Preparation time: HAHAHAHA

Top tip: Don’t go too mental with the bashing. For more info on the bashing, see below.

*Ingredients: *

A nice Victoria sponge cake, like, a fancy one from M&S

Some jam

Some sugar

Method:

  1. Take the top layer of the cake off and put an inordinate amount of jam in the middle so it squoodges (yes, this is a verb) out of the sides when you replace the layer.

  2. Get a fork and piss about with the edges of the sponge so it looks a bit dog-eared and shit.

  3. Cover it in sugar.

  4. Pre-slice it so people don’t see that the sponge is very uniform and perfect. In fact, pre-slice it really wonkily to add to the effect.

Cute thing to say while serving: 'Oh god I overdid it with the jam, and it came out all messy I’m so embarrassed (plus an overdid it with the jam laugh).

I could go on, but you get the idea – this formula (put herbs on it, add something to bulk it up and smash it about a bit) works with pretty much everything you can get your hands on at a supermarket. And don’t forget: if someone looks like they might question you, simply cause a diversion by crying, throwing a glass at the wall or – in the most extreme cases – mooning.

Bon appétit.

Follow Stevie on Twitter @5tevieM

This article originally appeared on The Debrief.

Just so you know, we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website - read why you should trust us