Saturday, 24 December 2011
Thursday, 1 December 2011
FOOD BLOGGERS UNPLUGGED
I've been tagged! At first I was so excited and pleased to have been tagged and then I turned chicken and was daunted by the whole thing, well, I've put it off long enough, so here goes. Oh, by the way, this was started by Susan from A Little Bit of Heaven on a Plate who tagged five bloggers, who in turn tagged five more and so on, I've been tagged by Jude from A Trifle Rushed - thank you Jude :-)
What or who inspired you to start a blog?
Difficult to say really, I've been reading blogs for a couple of years, but it wasn't until I thought about writing a book that I decided writing a blog would be good experience and would also be a way of knowing whether I could write and whether anyone would find it interesting.
Who is your foodie inspiration?
There are a few - Delia, Nigella, Tamasin (Day-Lewis), Nigel (Slater) and Vanessa Kimbell - she has managed to achieve with her book what I am still day dreaming about!
Your greatest, batter-splattered food/drink book is?
It used to be Delia's Complete Cookery Course, but was overtaken by Nigella's How to Eat, although I have to admit Delia's book is still like a kitchen encyclopaedia in that you can turn to it to find out how to cook something you've never cooked before (I'm thinking vegetables here really). But I also use Tamasin Day Lewis's Kitchen Bible quite a lot.
Tell us all about the best thing you have ever eaten in another country, where was it, what as it?
This is a difficult question, because the simple answer is "I don't know - nothing stands out", however, I would say that the first time I tasted a Pavlova in Australia in the 1970's could possibly be it. I had never tasted Pavlova before and was so surprised and delighted with it with it's drizzling of passionfruit (another new food at the time) I had to have a second helping!
Another food blogger's table you'd like to eat at is?
Well I could say my sister's table (Magnolia Verandah) but I know her food and know I love eating at her table so if I choose someone whose table I haven't eaten at it would be Jude's from A Trifle Rushed.
What is the one kitchen gadget you would ask Santa for this year (money no object of course)?
Well, money no object would be a Kitchen Aid mixer or failing that a Kenwood K-Mix or failing that some new bowls for my existing Kenwood Chef which has been handed down to me by my mother - the bowl is so heavy I'm sure a metal bowl would be much lighter.
Who taught you to cook?
What's the expresssion "it takes a whole village to bring up a child"? I'm sure I've got that wrong but can't think what the exact expression is.
I would say initially my mother, although she was rather keen on helpers only in the kitchen - she wasn't very keen to hand over the reins so much of what I learnt was by stirring when told to, spooning when told to etc. Then I would say to some extent I taught myself by collecting and reading cookery magazines and books and experimenting, then I would say my Turkish sister-in-law has taught me quite a lot of turkish dishes plus I devour cookery programmes on the television - so, lots of people taught me is the short answer!
I'm coming to you for dinner, what's your signature dish?
I like to make dinner as easy as possible when I have guests, I don't want to be stressed out in the kitchen I want to be able to talk and drink along with everyone else, so I would opt for either a roast Chicken with rice (turkish style) and salad or chicken thighs cooked in the oven with red peppers and onions, sprinkled with olive oil, thyme and pepper, again with rice and salad - it's easy and very tasty. Of course for frequent guests I'll be more adventurous.
What is your guilty food pleasure?
Where to start? Every so often when I'm paying for petrol I will peruse the chocolate counter and buy a fudge bar, I don't know what it is about them that I love so much, but I do. I could also destroy a large bowl of custard all by myself and it can be from a carton too - I'm not fussy!!
Reveal something about yourself that others would be surprised to learn.
I'm a bit unsure of this one - should it be something other bloggers don't know about me or something no-one at all would know, hmmm? I'll go for bloggers I think, the other option might seem more like confession time and I don't want to lose readers before I've gained them ................... only joking I don't have anything to confess here. So, I would say, I went to live in Australia when I was 18, and was planning to stay for three months - two and a half years later I came home, only to return after a year (and gaining my permanent residence visa) - stayed for another two years or so, came home for a year, went back and finally came home in December 1988 - have only returned for a holiday since then. I miss it though.
So, finally finished and I have to tag five other food bloggers with these questions ............. like a hot potato ............ pass it on! They in turn must tag five more food bloggers. So here they are:
Denise at Magnolia Verandah - http://magnoliaverandah.blogspot.com/
The Cookie Jar - http://thecookiejar4.blogspot.com/
Alessandra Zecchini - http://alessandrazecchini.blogspot.com/
beatriceviolet - http://katebeatriceviolet.blogspot.com/
Pistachio and Rose - http://pistachioandrose.blogspot.com/
Good luck and I look forward to reading your blogs - if you have time to write one of these!
http://atriflerushed.blogspot.com/
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Let's Make Christmas Fortnum & Mason Gift Swap
I cannot believe tomorrow is the day for the Let's Make Christmas Gift Swap at Fortnum & Mason - organised by Vanessa Kimbell (http://www.prepped.co.uk/). I've been so looking forward to it and been dithering about what to make. I finally made a decision and here it is WHITE CHRISTMAS MUD CAKES.
Of course, the main reason for the indecision is the added problem of transporting the gift on the train - not quite the same as serving up cake or cakes at home. So the cakes I finally decided on look nothing like they do in the recipe book, which is a Marks & Spencer recipe book called Christmas, in the book the cakes are baked in pudding moulds and turned out before having a topping which is cone shaped. Not the best thing for transporting, so I had to make some changes. First I made the cakes in silver cupcake cases and the topping I piled on top and left it to set before a dusting of icing sugar and edible glitter.
Here's how they were made:
125g butter, chopped coarsely
125g white eating chocolate chopped coarsely
150g caster sugar
160ml milk
105g plain flour
35g self raising flour
2 eggs
Preheat oven to 160C/140C fan assisted. Fill a 12 bun muffin tin with paper cases or grease eight 180ml pudding moulds.
Stir butter, chocolate, caster sugar and milk in medium saucepan over low heat until smooth. Transfer to medium bowl, cool for 10 minutes. Whisk in sifted flours, then eggs. Spoon cake mixture into cake cases or moulds (if in moulds place on oven tray).
Bake cakes for about 30 minutes. If baking in moulds turn the hot cakes upside down (still in mould) onto baking parchment-lined tray; stand overnight. Otherwise place cakes in papercases on a rack to cool.
White Christmas Topping:
120g white eating chocolate chopped coarsely
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
30g rice crispies
100g marshmallows
35g coarsely chopped unsalted pistachios
35g coarsely chopped dried cranberries
Stir chocolate and oil in small saucepan over low heat until smooth. Combine rice crispies, marshmallows, nuts and fruit in medium bowl, stir in melted chocolate mixture and pile on top of the cakes.
Place cakes in the fridge for at least ten minutes before dusting with icing sugar.
I made a few extra for taste test purposes you understand - they are rather yummy - even if I do say so myself. I just hope the recipient of my gift thinks so too.
http://www.prepped.co.uk/
Oh dear - not a very good photograph ! |
Of course, the main reason for the indecision is the added problem of transporting the gift on the train - not quite the same as serving up cake or cakes at home. So the cakes I finally decided on look nothing like they do in the recipe book, which is a Marks & Spencer recipe book called Christmas, in the book the cakes are baked in pudding moulds and turned out before having a topping which is cone shaped. Not the best thing for transporting, so I had to make some changes. First I made the cakes in silver cupcake cases and the topping I piled on top and left it to set before a dusting of icing sugar and edible glitter.
Here's how they were made:
125g butter, chopped coarsely
125g white eating chocolate chopped coarsely
150g caster sugar
160ml milk
105g plain flour
35g self raising flour
2 eggs
Preheat oven to 160C/140C fan assisted. Fill a 12 bun muffin tin with paper cases or grease eight 180ml pudding moulds.
Stir butter, chocolate, caster sugar and milk in medium saucepan over low heat until smooth. Transfer to medium bowl, cool for 10 minutes. Whisk in sifted flours, then eggs. Spoon cake mixture into cake cases or moulds (if in moulds place on oven tray).
Bake cakes for about 30 minutes. If baking in moulds turn the hot cakes upside down (still in mould) onto baking parchment-lined tray; stand overnight. Otherwise place cakes in papercases on a rack to cool.
White Christmas Topping:
120g white eating chocolate chopped coarsely
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
30g rice crispies
100g marshmallows
35g coarsely chopped unsalted pistachios
35g coarsely chopped dried cranberries
Stir chocolate and oil in small saucepan over low heat until smooth. Combine rice crispies, marshmallows, nuts and fruit in medium bowl, stir in melted chocolate mixture and pile on top of the cakes.
Place cakes in the fridge for at least ten minutes before dusting with icing sugar.
I made a few extra for taste test purposes you understand - they are rather yummy - even if I do say so myself. I just hope the recipient of my gift thinks so too.
http://www.prepped.co.uk/
Monday, 7 November 2011
Quote, Quote, Quote ..............
There's no significance to the picture above, other than that we had afternoon tea there when we were in Cyprus last year! I just felt that this post needed a picture of some kind to brighten it up.
So, I was looking through a pastry book when I came across some good tips -
"A Carpenter's rule is, Measure twice, cut once. A pastry chef's rule is, Scale twice, make once."
"Pastry Chefs are always well organised, specific, reliable and calmer than cooks."
"Organisation, cleanliness, and planning are 50 percent of a successful recipe."
"Musicians have an adage that translates well to pastry chefs: Amateurs play a piece until they get it right, while professionals play it until they can't get it wrong. Discipline gives the pastry chef the willingness to practice until it is impossible to fail."
All the above quotes are by Jacques Torres, Dean of Pastry Arts, The French Culinary Institute.
I love a good quote for afternoon tea!
Wednesday, 2 November 2011
The Easiest Cake in the World .........
Clementine Cake
This is so easy and quick to make I don't know why I don't make it more often - and having tasted it again after such a long time I'm thinking we can have another one next week but will cover it with a chocolate ganache. Which then leads on to it being like a chocolate orange and just perfect for Christmas! Oranges are a very christmassy fruit both for its scent and flavour and I think this would make a perfect cake for Christmas, as I said with a chocolate ganache and perhaps some frosted fruit on top for decoration.
I had a slice for breakfast yesterday morning! I just couldn't resist and apart from the sugar - it's a healthy option (well, that's my excuse anyway).
It was lovely for afternoon tea yesterday after school - the girls ate it with a slice of cheese! I don't know why, but they like it that way!
This is so easy and quick to make I don't know why I don't make it more often - and having tasted it again after such a long time I'm thinking we can have another one next week but will cover it with a chocolate ganache. Which then leads on to it being like a chocolate orange and just perfect for Christmas! Oranges are a very christmassy fruit both for its scent and flavour and I think this would make a perfect cake for Christmas, as I said with a chocolate ganache and perhaps some frosted fruit on top for decoration.
Anyway, the ingredients are:
4 - 5 clementines (about 375g total weight)
6 eggs
225g sugar
250g ground almonds
1 heaped teaspoon baking powder
Put the clementines in a pan with cold water and bring to the boil - then simmer for 2 hours. Drain and then cool. Once cool cut in half and remove any pips. Place the whole fruit - skin, pith, fruit into a food processor and blitz until it is pulped completely.
Preheat your oven to 190C and butter and line a 21cm springform tin (I used a loose bottomed tin).
Now - at this point Nigella says not to use the processor for the remainder of ingredients, but I have to say I did put everything in the processor, one ingredient at a time, pulse, put in the next ingredient until it was all completely mixed and there were no pieces of clementine skin visible - apart from tiny little flecks.
Pour the batter-like mixture into your tin and bake for an hour.
Nigella suggested covering with a piece of foil or greaseproof after about 40 minutes to stop the top from burning - I did this with some greaseproof but I don't think I did it soon enough - as you can see, the outside is slightly singed - although the taste is unaffected.
Once taken out of the oven leave to cool on a rack in its tin until the cake is cold.
I had a slice for breakfast yesterday morning! I just couldn't resist and apart from the sugar - it's a healthy option (well, that's my excuse anyway).
It was lovely for afternoon tea yesterday after school - the girls ate it with a slice of cheese! I don't know why, but they like it that way!
I think I might send this to Ren Behan for the Simple and in Season/Fabulicious Food! competition.
Oh, and just so that you know, this recipe was taken from Nigella Lawson's How To Eat.
Monday, 31 October 2011
This And That ................
Well, in response to my previous post today, my sister has emailed me to explain how I should link up with other blogs - I think I've got it now!
On the annoying front, the battery in my camera went flat last night whilst trying to photograph some fairy cakes that my younger daughter had made and decorated for a table party at school lunchtime today - 36 fairy cakes, one each for the whole class plus some extra invitees! Because of the nature of the decoration we had to use three containers this morning to transport them to school, I do have some large flat boxes that are perfect for this number of fairy cakes, but she was insistent that it would not fit in her locker! Hence the three smaller containers.
We used some orange candy melts for the decoration of several of the cakes which gave me the opportunity to use my new gadget - the chocolatiere from Cadburys. Hmm, not sure if I like it really. It did the job, easier than messing about with a saucepan of water and a bowl balanced on top, but, it doesn't hold very much, so we had to melt twice. Think I should have bought a proper pan to sit atop the saucepan of water. The handle on the little pan bends back and forth - not sure that it is supposed to do this, I think it's just that the metal is so soft it bends - hope this doesn't mean that the handle will eventually drop off! I'll just have to wait and see.
So, I have no photographs to share, although the batteries are charging as I write but will still need a few more hours. My daughter took some photographs with her camera but that has gone to school with her so no luck there.
I have plans for so much today. I have some clementines cooling after having simmered for two hours - these are for a clementine cake a Nigella recipe from How to Eat, I love this cake and haven't had it for a long time - the clementines remind me of pumpkins, well at least mini pumpkins and of course are in season, so its win win all round.
Being Samhain - the medieval festival which marked the end of the harvest - the end of the "lighter half" of the year and beginning of the "darker half" of the year, which coincides with All Saints Day tomorrow and All Souls Day on Wednesday I thought I would bake some biscuits for both days. Apparently in medieval times there was an element of a Festival of the Dead attached to their festivities and the bones of slaughtered livestock would be thrown into the flames of bonfires. I have found two recipes - one for All Souls' biscuits which are brittle and dry like old bones (which ties in nicely with the animal bones being thrown into the bonfire) - these are eaten all over Italy on 2nd November - their Italian name ossa dei morti means bones of the dead! Lovely. The biscuits for All Saints' Day tomorrow are sweet pastry beans - again an Italian recipe that are traditionally made for All Saints' Day - I'll show you when they are made and hopefully my camera is re-charged. Both recipes are from Ursula Ferrigno's La Dolce Vita - I love this book and find it so inspiring, don't know what I would do without it.
On the annoying front, the battery in my camera went flat last night whilst trying to photograph some fairy cakes that my younger daughter had made and decorated for a table party at school lunchtime today - 36 fairy cakes, one each for the whole class plus some extra invitees! Because of the nature of the decoration we had to use three containers this morning to transport them to school, I do have some large flat boxes that are perfect for this number of fairy cakes, but she was insistent that it would not fit in her locker! Hence the three smaller containers.
We used some orange candy melts for the decoration of several of the cakes which gave me the opportunity to use my new gadget - the chocolatiere from Cadburys. Hmm, not sure if I like it really. It did the job, easier than messing about with a saucepan of water and a bowl balanced on top, but, it doesn't hold very much, so we had to melt twice. Think I should have bought a proper pan to sit atop the saucepan of water. The handle on the little pan bends back and forth - not sure that it is supposed to do this, I think it's just that the metal is so soft it bends - hope this doesn't mean that the handle will eventually drop off! I'll just have to wait and see.
So, I have no photographs to share, although the batteries are charging as I write but will still need a few more hours. My daughter took some photographs with her camera but that has gone to school with her so no luck there.
I have plans for so much today. I have some clementines cooling after having simmered for two hours - these are for a clementine cake a Nigella recipe from How to Eat, I love this cake and haven't had it for a long time - the clementines remind me of pumpkins, well at least mini pumpkins and of course are in season, so its win win all round.
Being Samhain - the medieval festival which marked the end of the harvest - the end of the "lighter half" of the year and beginning of the "darker half" of the year, which coincides with All Saints Day tomorrow and All Souls Day on Wednesday I thought I would bake some biscuits for both days. Apparently in medieval times there was an element of a Festival of the Dead attached to their festivities and the bones of slaughtered livestock would be thrown into the flames of bonfires. I have found two recipes - one for All Souls' biscuits which are brittle and dry like old bones (which ties in nicely with the animal bones being thrown into the bonfire) - these are eaten all over Italy on 2nd November - their Italian name ossa dei morti means bones of the dead! Lovely. The biscuits for All Saints' Day tomorrow are sweet pastry beans - again an Italian recipe that are traditionally made for All Saints' Day - I'll show you when they are made and hopefully my camera is re-charged. Both recipes are from Ursula Ferrigno's La Dolce Vita - I love this book and find it so inspiring, don't know what I would do without it.
What Am I Doing Wrong ...........
I must get myself some tuition on linking my blog to others - here I was thinking I had entered my Apple Bread Pudding into the Pink Whisk competition - when all along .......... I hadn't !
Saturday, 29 October 2011
Chocolate Melter
I have just finished opening my latest gadget and feel a little like a child at Christmas! So here are some pictures - I'm so excited, can't wait to use it (pathetic I know).
I first spotted this little gem on The Pink Whisk blog, then on A Trifle Rushed's blog. I have been painting my parents' hall, stairway and landing all week so decided I was due a little treat - or as my eldest daughter would say "treat yourself". I can't wait to use it now, think I need a trip to the supermarket for some chocolate and coloured chocolate melts!
I first spotted this little gem on The Pink Whisk blog, then on A Trifle Rushed's blog. I have been painting my parents' hall, stairway and landing all week so decided I was due a little treat - or as my eldest daughter would say "treat yourself". I can't wait to use it now, think I need a trip to the supermarket for some chocolate and coloured chocolate melts!
Tuesday, 25 October 2011
Let's make Christmas
If you've been reading my other blog - The Christmas List - you will know that I have been advocating home made gifts for Christmas, so it was with great delight that on reading Vanessa Kimbell's blog Prepped - http://www.prepped.co.uk/ on 11th October, she too was suggesting the same. In fact she did more than suggest making gifts for Christmas, she was even holding a competition. So, it was time to get started and although the recipe below makes a great gift, now is too early to be making them, which does mean having to eat them and make some more - such a trial.
Chocolate Cake Balls, decorated to resemble christmas puddings. I have made these on so many occasions and decorated them in so many different ways with chocolate, but was inspired to decorate these as puddings when I saw the little sprigs of holly in my local Icing shop recently.
Here's how I made them.
First you need to make a chocolate cake -
150g unsalted butter, softened
150g golden caster sugar
3 free-range organic eggs, beaten
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
125g self-raising flour
25g cocoa powder - sifted with the flour
1 tbsp orange juice
Preheat the oven to 200C/fan 180C/gas 6. Grease a 15cm (6in) square cake tin with some butter and line with baking parchment.
Beat together the sugar and butter, gradually add the beaten egg and continue to mix. Add the vanilla and then the flour/cocoa mixture until smooth and finally add the orange juice.
Put the mixture into the tin and bake for 25-30 minutes. Leave to cool completely.
When cool, crumble the cake into a large bowl.
In the meantime make the butter icing as follows -
75g butter, softened
150g icing sugar, sifted
25g cocoa powder, sifted
1tbs milk
Beat the butter in a bowl until soft, add half the icing sugar and fork through until absorbed by the butter, then add the other half of the icing sugar and cocoa powder and for through again, once absorbed mix with a wooden spoon until smooth. Add the milk and mix well.
Add the butter icing to the crumbled cake and mix well until the mixture forms a ball. Take small pieces of mixture and form into balls. Leave to set - preferably in the fridge.
Make the chocolate topping by melting 150g of good quality white chocolate in a bowl over barely simmering water until melted - be careful not to melt for too long because white chocolate is notorious for going grainy.
Place the cake balls on a wire rack which is standing on a baking tray and then drizzle the chocolate over them a teaspoonful at a time. The chocolate needs to run slightly down the sides of the cake balls. Finally decorate with a holly sprig or other decoration of choice. Place in the fridge until the chocolate has gone hard and then transfer each cake ball to a small paper case - in this instance I used silver foil cases.
Finally, I placed them in a box which I had lined with tissue paper.
http://www.prepped.co.uk/
Chocolate Cake Balls, decorated to resemble christmas puddings. I have made these on so many occasions and decorated them in so many different ways with chocolate, but was inspired to decorate these as puddings when I saw the little sprigs of holly in my local Icing shop recently.
Here's how I made them.
First you need to make a chocolate cake -
150g unsalted butter, softened
150g golden caster sugar
3 free-range organic eggs, beaten
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
125g self-raising flour
25g cocoa powder - sifted with the flour
1 tbsp orange juice
Preheat the oven to 200C/fan 180C/gas 6. Grease a 15cm (6in) square cake tin with some butter and line with baking parchment.
Beat together the sugar and butter, gradually add the beaten egg and continue to mix. Add the vanilla and then the flour/cocoa mixture until smooth and finally add the orange juice.
Put the mixture into the tin and bake for 25-30 minutes. Leave to cool completely.
When cool, crumble the cake into a large bowl.
In the meantime make the butter icing as follows -
75g butter, softened
150g icing sugar, sifted
25g cocoa powder, sifted
1tbs milk
Beat the butter in a bowl until soft, add half the icing sugar and fork through until absorbed by the butter, then add the other half of the icing sugar and cocoa powder and for through again, once absorbed mix with a wooden spoon until smooth. Add the milk and mix well.
Add the butter icing to the crumbled cake and mix well until the mixture forms a ball. Take small pieces of mixture and form into balls. Leave to set - preferably in the fridge.
Make the chocolate topping by melting 150g of good quality white chocolate in a bowl over barely simmering water until melted - be careful not to melt for too long because white chocolate is notorious for going grainy.
Place the cake balls on a wire rack which is standing on a baking tray and then drizzle the chocolate over them a teaspoonful at a time. The chocolate needs to run slightly down the sides of the cake balls. Finally decorate with a holly sprig or other decoration of choice. Place in the fridge until the chocolate has gone hard and then transfer each cake ball to a small paper case - in this instance I used silver foil cases.
Finally, I placed them in a box which I had lined with tissue paper.
http://www.prepped.co.uk/
Monday, 10 October 2011
Apple Bread Pudding
The Pink Whisk http://www.thepinkwhisk.co.uk/ is holding a challenge this month for a recipe to include apples - preferably Pink Lady apples but can also be any apples you like. I had a couple of apples left from the tree in the garden but thought they might be a bit sour so I decided to use Pink Lady. Had a bit of a think about which recipe I could include, which was a little difficult because my Apple Cake has already been featured in this blog, hmmm, what to make? I decided it was time to get out the books and have a look and I found the perfect answer in Ursula Ferrigno's book La Dolce Vita - there it was, already bookmarked to be made at some stage - Apple Bread Pudding.
Ingredients:
175g (6 oz) caster sugar
85g (3 oz) raisins
2-3 thsp brandy (I substituted Muscat Wine because I don't like brandy)
12 slices day-old bread or cake
350 ml (12 fl oz) milk
5 apples
3 eggs
pinch of salt
85g (3 oz) unsalted butter
I began by dissolving 85g of the sugar in 125ml water and heated gently until it was all dissolved, then brought it to a boil and kept it boiling until it changed colour to caramel. Took it off the heat and immediately poured it into my cake tin - 23cm (9in) ring mould.
Then I put the raisins in a bowl and poured over the Muscat Wine and left it to soak for a while - approximately half an hour.
Next I broke up the bread (I used ordinary white bread from the supermarket) into a bowl and poured over the milk, found I needed a little more milk than suggested above in order to cover all the bread, which soaked it all up. I left that to soak for about half an hour also.
Then I peeled and sliced the apples thinly.
Next I turned on the oven to 180C (350F/gas mark 4).
I whisked together the sugar, eggs, salt and butter until well mixed, added the raisins with the wine, the apple slices and finally the bread and mixed it thoroughly by hand!
I then poured the mixture into the cake tin, spread evenly.
I then placed the cake tin into a large roasting tin and filled it with boiling water until it came half way up the side of the cake tin. Placed it in the oven for 45 minutes until it was done.
When it had cooled sufficiently I turned it out onto a large plate.
It was best served warm, but cold was okay too!
http://www.thepinkwhisk.co.uk/
Delicious.
Ingredients:
175g (6 oz) caster sugar
85g (3 oz) raisins
2-3 thsp brandy (I substituted Muscat Wine because I don't like brandy)
12 slices day-old bread or cake
350 ml (12 fl oz) milk
5 apples
3 eggs
pinch of salt
85g (3 oz) unsalted butter
I began by dissolving 85g of the sugar in 125ml water and heated gently until it was all dissolved, then brought it to a boil and kept it boiling until it changed colour to caramel. Took it off the heat and immediately poured it into my cake tin - 23cm (9in) ring mould.
Then I put the raisins in a bowl and poured over the Muscat Wine and left it to soak for a while - approximately half an hour.
Next I broke up the bread (I used ordinary white bread from the supermarket) into a bowl and poured over the milk, found I needed a little more milk than suggested above in order to cover all the bread, which soaked it all up. I left that to soak for about half an hour also.
Then I peeled and sliced the apples thinly.
Next I turned on the oven to 180C (350F/gas mark 4).
I whisked together the sugar, eggs, salt and butter until well mixed, added the raisins with the wine, the apple slices and finally the bread and mixed it thoroughly by hand!
I then poured the mixture into the cake tin, spread evenly.
I then placed the cake tin into a large roasting tin and filled it with boiling water until it came half way up the side of the cake tin. Placed it in the oven for 45 minutes until it was done.
When it had cooled sufficiently I turned it out onto a large plate.
It was best served warm, but cold was okay too!
http://www.thepinkwhisk.co.uk/
Delicious.
Sunday, 9 October 2011
What Am I Doing Wrong?
Just a small query that I hope someone can help me with - Cupcake Cases. Why is it that when I bake cupcakes my cake cases lose their colour and become slightly translucent? I had some cake cases once that didn't do this and of course the foil cases remain the same. I am rather baffled and would appreciate some advice on the matter.
Thank you.
X
Thank you.
X
Macmillan Coffee Morning
Our Macmillan Coffee Morning was held yesterday on Friday morning, being postponed from last Friday due to a funeral being held in our Church (coffee morning is held in the Church Hall behind the Church). I had lots of ideas as to what I would make but due to lack of time ended up making two cakes that were quite easy.
The first was Seed Cake - very easy and I have blogged this recipe before (so I won't bore you with it again).
The second was Chocolate Banana Cake - a lovely thick cake that I have made a few times before, but didn't have time for the chocolate frosting so took it as it was!
The recipe was taken from Books for Cooks Book No. 8. I tweaked the recipe slightly by using cocoa powder instead of grated chocolate - this recipe serves 8.
Cake Ingredients:
160ml (5 1/2 fl oz/ 2/3 cup + 1 tbsp) milk
2 teaspoons lemon juice
450g (15oz/1 cup) mashed very ripe banana (this can be anywhere from 2-4 bananas, depending on size)
300g (10 oz/2 cups) plain (all purpose) flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
salt
150g (5oz/1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened
225g (7 1/2 oz/1 1/4 cups) caster sugar
1/2 tsp natural vanilla extract
3 organic eggs
100g (3 1/2 oz) dark chocolate, finely chopped (chill it first if it's a hot day)
N.B. I didn't use chopped chocolate but instead used 2 oz cocoa powder and 8 oz plain flour
Frosting Ingredients:
200g (7 oz) dark chocolate, broken into pieces
160g (5 1/2 oz/ 3/4 cup) icing sugar, sifted
125ml (4 fl oz/ 1/2 cup) sour cream
Heat the oven to 170 C (325F) Gas 3 (electric fan assisted ovens should be set at 150C). Butter a 24cm (9 1/2 inch) springform cake tin and line the base with baking parchment.
Place the milk and lemon in a bowl and let stand for 10 minutes to sour the milk, then stir in the banana.
Sift together the flour (and cocoa if using), baking powder and soda with a pinch of salt. In a large mixing bowl, beat together the butter, sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Add one third of the flour mix to the creamed mixture and gently beat in. Add one third of the banana mixture and gently beat in. Alternately add the remaining flour and banana until just combined. Gently fold in the chocolate (if using) until evenly combined with no trace of flour, then spread evenly over the base of the buttered and lined tin.
Bake until the sides of the cake have pulled away from the tin and a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean, about 1 hour 10 minutes.
Transfer to a wire rack and leave to cool for 15 minutes. Run a knife around the sides of the cake to loosen before turning out on to the rack and leaving to cool completely.
Make the frosting when the cake has cooled. Melt the chocolate, either in a microwave or in a bowl over a pan of barely simmering water, and stir until smoothly combined. Let cool slightly. Gradually beat in the icing sugar until smooth with no trace of sugar. Stir in the sour cream until thick, smooth and glossy. Use immediately: spread over the completely cooled cake.
There were some lovely offerings at the coffee morning and I naughtily had two slices of cake with my coffee - a coffee and walnut with cream cheese icing and a slice of chocolate guinness cake which had a cream topping ........... mmmmmmmmmm!
The first was Seed Cake - very easy and I have blogged this recipe before (so I won't bore you with it again).
The second was Chocolate Banana Cake - a lovely thick cake that I have made a few times before, but didn't have time for the chocolate frosting so took it as it was!
The recipe was taken from Books for Cooks Book No. 8. I tweaked the recipe slightly by using cocoa powder instead of grated chocolate - this recipe serves 8.
Cake Ingredients:
160ml (5 1/2 fl oz/ 2/3 cup + 1 tbsp) milk
2 teaspoons lemon juice
450g (15oz/1 cup) mashed very ripe banana (this can be anywhere from 2-4 bananas, depending on size)
300g (10 oz/2 cups) plain (all purpose) flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
salt
150g (5oz/1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened
225g (7 1/2 oz/1 1/4 cups) caster sugar
1/2 tsp natural vanilla extract
3 organic eggs
100g (3 1/2 oz) dark chocolate, finely chopped (chill it first if it's a hot day)
N.B. I didn't use chopped chocolate but instead used 2 oz cocoa powder and 8 oz plain flour
Frosting Ingredients:
200g (7 oz) dark chocolate, broken into pieces
160g (5 1/2 oz/ 3/4 cup) icing sugar, sifted
125ml (4 fl oz/ 1/2 cup) sour cream
Heat the oven to 170 C (325F) Gas 3 (electric fan assisted ovens should be set at 150C). Butter a 24cm (9 1/2 inch) springform cake tin and line the base with baking parchment.
Place the milk and lemon in a bowl and let stand for 10 minutes to sour the milk, then stir in the banana.
Sift together the flour (and cocoa if using), baking powder and soda with a pinch of salt. In a large mixing bowl, beat together the butter, sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Add one third of the flour mix to the creamed mixture and gently beat in. Add one third of the banana mixture and gently beat in. Alternately add the remaining flour and banana until just combined. Gently fold in the chocolate (if using) until evenly combined with no trace of flour, then spread evenly over the base of the buttered and lined tin.
Bake until the sides of the cake have pulled away from the tin and a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean, about 1 hour 10 minutes.
Transfer to a wire rack and leave to cool for 15 minutes. Run a knife around the sides of the cake to loosen before turning out on to the rack and leaving to cool completely.
Make the frosting when the cake has cooled. Melt the chocolate, either in a microwave or in a bowl over a pan of barely simmering water, and stir until smoothly combined. Let cool slightly. Gradually beat in the icing sugar until smooth with no trace of sugar. Stir in the sour cream until thick, smooth and glossy. Use immediately: spread over the completely cooled cake.
There were some lovely offerings at the coffee morning and I naughtily had two slices of cake with my coffee - a coffee and walnut with cream cheese icing and a slice of chocolate guinness cake which had a cream topping ........... mmmmmmmmmm!
Wednesday, 5 October 2011
The Great British Bake Off
I am feeling quite sad that this series is over - I started off feeling that judging cakes was a little harsh and ended being almost addicted to it! Congratulations to Jo who created some beautiful cakes last night. But to be fair Holly and Mary Anne did exceedingly well also - obviously we could only go on sight and not taste.
At least we have Lorraine Pascale's new series to keep us going!
At least we have Lorraine Pascale's new series to keep us going!
Saturday, 1 October 2011
Afternoon Tea Doesn't Always Have To Be Sweet !!
Instead of having something sweet for afternoon tea today I decided to make some soda bread - the easiest bread in the world to make!
The recipe was taken from The River Cottage Family Cookbook by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Fizz Carr and is a great book for children and adults alike.
Ingredients:
A little olive oil for greasing the baking sheet
250g Plain Flour
1 level teaspoon salt
1 level teaspoon Bicarbonate of Soda
2 teaspoons of Soft Brown Sugar
225ml Live Yoghurt or Buttermilk (we used yoghurt)
Preheat the oven to 230C and then grease the baking sheet.
Sift the flour, salt and soda into a mixing bowl and then add the sugar.
Stir in the yoghurt or buttermilk at first with the wooden spoon then bringing it all together into a doughy mass with your hands (my daughter loves this bit). It should feel firm, not sticky (I may have overdone the yoghurt because I had to add more flour at this stage because it was too sticky).
Knead the dough lightly in the bowl for about half a minute, until smooth, then shape it into a ball, as deep as you can make it. Place it on the greased baking sheet. Slash a deep cross in the top of the loaf with the sharp knife. This will allow the bread to open out as the soda starts to work and expand the dough.
Bake in the hot oven for about 12 minutes, then turn the oven down to 200C and cook for another 15-20 minutes, until the base of the bread sounds hollow when you tap it.
We ate it with lots of salty butter and hot tea - mmmmmmm.
Next time I will make it with half wholemeal and half plain flour and add a tablespoon of porridge oats - as suggested in the book.
The recipe was taken from The River Cottage Family Cookbook by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Fizz Carr and is a great book for children and adults alike.
Ingredients:
A little olive oil for greasing the baking sheet
250g Plain Flour
1 level teaspoon salt
1 level teaspoon Bicarbonate of Soda
2 teaspoons of Soft Brown Sugar
225ml Live Yoghurt or Buttermilk (we used yoghurt)
Preheat the oven to 230C and then grease the baking sheet.
Sift the flour, salt and soda into a mixing bowl and then add the sugar.
Stir in the yoghurt or buttermilk at first with the wooden spoon then bringing it all together into a doughy mass with your hands (my daughter loves this bit). It should feel firm, not sticky (I may have overdone the yoghurt because I had to add more flour at this stage because it was too sticky).
Knead the dough lightly in the bowl for about half a minute, until smooth, then shape it into a ball, as deep as you can make it. Place it on the greased baking sheet. Slash a deep cross in the top of the loaf with the sharp knife. This will allow the bread to open out as the soda starts to work and expand the dough.
Bake in the hot oven for about 12 minutes, then turn the oven down to 200C and cook for another 15-20 minutes, until the base of the bread sounds hollow when you tap it.
We ate it with lots of salty butter and hot tea - mmmmmmm.
Next time I will make it with half wholemeal and half plain flour and add a tablespoon of porridge oats - as suggested in the book.
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
Fairy Cakes
I had to go to a meeting last night and so rushed off at 7.30 p.m. leaving younger daughter claiming that she wanted to make cakes.
Well, she is twelve and she has had lots of experience from being my trusty little assistant, so I left her to make her own cakes. I was pleasantly surprised when I came home later to a nice cup of tea and a fairy cake.
She had a little trouble with the consistency of the icing, but that comes with practise and experience, but other than that - I think I had better watch out!
They tasted great and as the Judges on The Great British Bake Off would say - they had the right consistency, they were not dry, nor overcooked, nor undercooked - perfect.
I watched The Great British Bake Off last night (recorded whilst I was out and watched when I got home with my tea and fairy cake) - whilst I do hate the way that the competition takes cakes, puddings and pies so seriously - I do find this programme compelling and look forward to it each week. Just sorry that next week is the last one!
Hmm, I'm thinking about another fairy cake with my morning coffee - think my daughter might notice that their numbers are dwindling.
Well, she is twelve and she has had lots of experience from being my trusty little assistant, so I left her to make her own cakes. I was pleasantly surprised when I came home later to a nice cup of tea and a fairy cake.
She had a little trouble with the consistency of the icing, but that comes with practise and experience, but other than that - I think I had better watch out!
They tasted great and as the Judges on The Great British Bake Off would say - they had the right consistency, they were not dry, nor overcooked, nor undercooked - perfect.
I watched The Great British Bake Off last night (recorded whilst I was out and watched when I got home with my tea and fairy cake) - whilst I do hate the way that the competition takes cakes, puddings and pies so seriously - I do find this programme compelling and look forward to it each week. Just sorry that next week is the last one!
Hmm, I'm thinking about another fairy cake with my morning coffee - think my daughter might notice that their numbers are dwindling.
Sunday, 25 September 2011
Friday, 23 September 2011
Peggy's Apple Cake
Well, I finally made that apple cake for my mother (Peggy) and here is how I did it:
7 oz Self Raising Flour
Half teaspoon of Baking Powder
5 oz Butter
3 oz Caster Sugar
2 Eggs
1 lb Apples - peeled and sliced
2 tbs Granulated Sugar
2 tbs Apricot Jam - heated enough to loosen
Cream the sugar and butter together. When light and fluffy add the eggs (whisked) gradually. When the eggs have been incorporated add the flour and baking powder a tablespoonful at a time.
Spread two thirds of the mixture into a prepared tin (in my case I used an 8 inch round loose bottomed cake tin that is approximately 4 inches deep which I buttered and placed a disk of baking parchment on the bottom. However, this cake is not very deep so a variation of what I used would be just as good).
The apples should already be peeled and sliced - place these on the cake mixture evenly and sprinkle with the granulated sugar. Dot the heated jam over the apples - although the recipe calls for apricot jam I used strawberry, simply because I had run out of apricot! Then drop the remaining mixture by teaspoons all over the apples.
Bake at 180 C for 55 minutes until golden brown. Take out of tin when cold.
The cake mixture is quite dry - however this is as it should be because the apples will add moisture.
The first photograph shows my mother's Kenwood Chef which she gave to me a couple of years ago. It was puchased in the seventies - as you can tell! This recipe is also from that time - hence the imperial measurements.
7 oz Self Raising Flour
Half teaspoon of Baking Powder
5 oz Butter
3 oz Caster Sugar
2 Eggs
1 lb Apples - peeled and sliced
2 tbs Granulated Sugar
2 tbs Apricot Jam - heated enough to loosen
Cream the sugar and butter together. When light and fluffy add the eggs (whisked) gradually. When the eggs have been incorporated add the flour and baking powder a tablespoonful at a time.
Spread two thirds of the mixture into a prepared tin (in my case I used an 8 inch round loose bottomed cake tin that is approximately 4 inches deep which I buttered and placed a disk of baking parchment on the bottom. However, this cake is not very deep so a variation of what I used would be just as good).
The apples should already be peeled and sliced - place these on the cake mixture evenly and sprinkle with the granulated sugar. Dot the heated jam over the apples - although the recipe calls for apricot jam I used strawberry, simply because I had run out of apricot! Then drop the remaining mixture by teaspoons all over the apples.
Bake at 180 C for 55 minutes until golden brown. Take out of tin when cold.
The cake mixture is quite dry - however this is as it should be because the apples will add moisture.
The first photograph shows my mother's Kenwood Chef which she gave to me a couple of years ago. It was puchased in the seventies - as you can tell! This recipe is also from that time - hence the imperial measurements.
Wednesday, 21 September 2011
Cakes in Mugs!
Earlier this week The Pink Whisk - http://www.thepinkwhisk.co.uk/ showed us how to make cakes in mugs!
I had to try them, so after school yesterday we had a go - surprisingly very easy and tasted good too.
We made both the chocolate and the jam sponge (only photographed the chocolate cakes) - they were more like puddings than cakes and were very filling - when we make them again I would make them for after dinner rather than before because no one wanted dinner after eating these! Some we had with custard and some with cream.
Worth making - if only for the novelty value - but did actually taste good!
I had to try them, so after school yesterday we had a go - surprisingly very easy and tasted good too.
We made both the chocolate and the jam sponge (only photographed the chocolate cakes) - they were more like puddings than cakes and were very filling - when we make them again I would make them for after dinner rather than before because no one wanted dinner after eating these! Some we had with custard and some with cream.
Worth making - if only for the novelty value - but did actually taste good!
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