Showing posts with label kitchen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitchen. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 May 2013

Spicy Gingerbread Custard Creams

It's coming to the end of my academic year, and I wanted to make something for my teachers as a sort of 'thank you'. Inspired by an idea of lots of spice going into gingerbread, I thought - how about spicy gingerbread? It turned out very well, and I embossed the tops with a special tool used to emboss letters. Makes about 30 sandwich biscuits. 

Ingredients

For the Biscuits 
113g Softened Butter
75g Granulated Sugar
165g Dark Brown Muscavado Sugar
1/4tsp Bicarbonate of Soda
1/2tsp Salt
3tsp Ground Cinnamon
3/4tsp Ground Nutmeg
1/2tsp Ground Ginger
1/4tsp Ground White Pepper
1/4tsp Ground Black Pepper
1 1/2tsp Vanilla Extract 
235g Plain Flour
1 Egg, Beaten
Chilli Powder

For the Filling
25g Softened Butter
1.5tbsp Instead Custard Powder
100g Icing Sugar, sieved
1/2tsp Vanilla Extract 
2tsp Milk

Method 
1. Cream the butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Add all the other dry ingredients except the flour, and mix until properly incorporated.

2. Slowly add the beaten egg, mixing between each addition, then add the flour, and fold in. Collect up all the dough and wrap in cling film. Refrigerate for 20 mins. Preheat oven to 190C/fan 170C.

3. Take a lump of dough, and roll out on a floured surface to about 1/2cm in thickness and using a cookie cutter, cut out cookies, and using a palette knife, transfer onto a lined baking tray. Rub a little chilli powder into each biscuit, and place batch in the oven for 9-10 mins. In the meantime, roll out and cut another batch. Once cooked, leave for 2 mins, then place on a wire rack. They will be soft and will harden when cool, so be careful.

4. To make the filling, cream the butter until light, and slowly add the custard powder and sugar. Add the vanilla and mix until well combined. Add more milk/icing sugar until you achieve a thick paste texture. Spread a dollop on one, leaving a bit on the edges without, and place another on top, wiggling it to spread the filling around the entire biscuit. 

Enjoy :)


Monday, 25 February 2013

Grandma's Gingerbread

Sometimes it's better to go back in time for the best recipes. Originally my grandma's, this bake is simple and delicious, but it can get messy with the golden syrup! I decided to add the topping though, to give a crunch, and really bring through the flavour of the ginger. Serve with butter. 



Ingredients

330g Plain Flour
50g Caster Sugar
210ml Golden Syrup
2tsp Mixed Spice 
1tsp Ground Ginger
3/4 tsp Baking Powder
230g Butter
2 Eggs, Beaten
1tsp Bicarbonate of Soda

For the Topping
25g Light Muscavado Sugar
25g Flour
25g Oatmeal
1tsp Ground Ginger
35g Cold Butter, Diced

Method
1. Preheat oven to 160C, and line a standard size loaf tin. Place the butter and the syrup in a small saucepan on a low heat until all the butter has melted. Leave for a minute to cool.

2. While the butter is melting, sift the flour, sugar, mixed spice, ginger and baking powder into a bowl, and set aside.

3. Add the syrup mix into the sieved ones and mix together. Then gradually add the eggs, beating well after each addition. Mix the bicarb and 1tsp boiling water, then add to the cake mix.

4. Place in the oven, and set the timer for 20 minutes. Meanwhile make the topping by combining all of the ingredients in a bowl, and rubbing it between your fingers until it resembles breadcrumbs. After 20 minutes sprinkle a thin layer on top of the loaf.

5. Put back in the oven for another 25-30 mins, or until a darkish brown, and a skewer comes out clean. Serve with butter and enjoy :)



Friday, 14 December 2012

Jam Doughnuts

It's the holiday season, so I decided to add a suitable recipe. Contrary to popular belief, these can be made without a deep fat fryer, all you need is a deep pan, a candy thermometer, and 2 bottles of vegetable oil, and hey presto you have a deep fryer. These taste incredible, though make 20, so feel free to halve the quantities. 
 
 Ingredients

500g Strong White Bread Flour
50g Caster Sugar
40g Unsalted Butter, Very Soft
14g Dry Instant Yeast
10g Salt
2 Large Eggs, at Room Temperature, Beaten
150ml Lukewarm Milk
130ml Lukewarm Water

1 Jar Strawberry Jam
Caster Sugar, For Rolling

2 Large Bottles Vegetable Oil, For Frying

Essential Equipment

Slotted Spoon
Fillable Squeezy Bottle or Piping Bag

If you don't have a deep fat fryer:
Deep Saucepan
Sugar Thermometer/Probe

Method
1. Put the flour, sugar, butter, yeast, salt, eggs, milk, and 100ml of the water into a large mixing bowl, and with your hands, combine to form a firm but not hard or dry dough. 

2.Slowly add the rest of the water, working it into the dough, then gently work the dough for 4 minutes in the bowl - or use the dough hook on a free-standing mixer at a low speed. The dough should be soft and start to get a bit stretchy but not sticky.

3. If using an electric mixer with a dough hook, put it on a medium low speed for 10 minutes, otherwise turn the dough on lightly floured work surface and knead for 10 minutes to make a very smooth and quite elastic dough. Clean and lightly oil the mixing bowl and place the dough into it, and cover with a damp tea towel. Leave to rise at room temperature for an hour.

4. Once risen, whilst the dough is still in the bowl, give it a light punch, or 'knock back', turn onto a lightly floured surface and divide into 20 equal balls. Place them onto lightly floured trays, slightly spaced out, and leave to rise for another hour.

5. Toward the end of the rising time, heat the oil in a deep fryer or deep saucepan to 180C. Once risen, if the doughnuts have slightly flattened, roll them into balls before carefully dropping a few at a time into the oil. Leave to go golden brown on one side before turning. It will only take around 3-5 to brown, so pay attention to them.

6. As soon as one is done, take it out with a slotted spoon to remove excess oil, and immediately roll in caster sugar. Leave to cool completely.

7. Whilst waiting for them to cool, sieve the jam to remove seeds and lumps, and place into a squeezy bottle or piping bag fitted with a plain nozzle. Once cooled, make a deep cut using a small knife in each of the doughnuts and fill with jam.

Enjoy :)





Saturday, 22 September 2012

Simple Boozy Chocolate Truffles

Perfect as decorations for cakes, gifts, or an indulgent dessert, these are great! For a non-adult version, remove the Cognac (they still taste as good). Can be quite tricky to get the ganache right, but the rest is simple. Makes approx. 18 (depends on how big you want them)





Ingredients

100g Dark Chocolate (70% Cocoa Solids Minimum)
100ml Whipping Cream
2tbsp Cognac
Cocoa Powder

Method
1. Make sure the chocolate is at room temperature, then chop the chocolate into very small pieces, and place into a heatproof bowl.

2. Heat up the cream in a saucepan right its about to boil, and pour over the chocolate. Stir a little (but not too much, or it will separate) until the chocolate is completely melted. Be patient with this, as it might take a while (if the mix goes cold and the chocolate still hasn't melted, pour a few centimeters of very hot water into a larger heatproof bowl, and place the smaller one inside for a bit).

3. Stir in the cognac, and place the bowl in the fridge. Leave to set until the consistency resembles a thick chocolate mousse.

4. Cover a large chopping board with a thin layer of cocoa powder, and take a small scoop of the chocolate mix, and roll into a ball in your hands. Next, roll it in the cocoa powder until completely covered, then place on a dish

5. Repeat until all the mix is used up. Store in the fridge and enjoy :)

Monday, 3 September 2012

Cookies 'n' Cream Muffins with Homemade Marshmallow Fluff Icing

I don't think I have met one person who doesn't like oreos; so this recipe will suit everyone! Minus my tweaks, the original recipe was from the 'Primrose Bakery', and is the best cookies n cream cupcake/muffin recipe I have found yet, and it works great with the marshmallow fluff icing! It makes around 18 muffins(use a muffin tin, not a cupcake tin). The Marshmallow Fluff recipe makes a lot, so once you've finished icing, store the remaining fluff in the fridge to eat with toast, or use in cakes, drinks etc.                                                             























Ingredients


Cupcake Mix (the 'Cookie')
115g Dark Chocolate
85g Butter
175g Light Muscavado Sugar
2 Eggs (separated)
185g Plain Flour
3/4tsp Baking Powder
3/4tsp Bicarbonate of Soda
Pinch of Salt
250ml Semi-Skimmed Milk
1tsp Vanilla Extract

Marshmallow Fluff Icing(the 'Cream')
120g Granulated Sugar
80g Golden Syrup
1.5tbsp Water
2 Egg Whites
1/2tsp Vanilla Extract

1 Pack of Oreos 

Method
1. Preheat oven to 190C/fan 170C/gas mark 5. Line a 2 12 hole muffin tins with about 18 muffin cases (if you only have one tin, you can bake them in batches).

2. Melt the chocolate in a heatproof bowl over simmering water, or in the microwave. Leave to cool for about 2 minutes.

3. Cream the butter and sugar in a stand mixer until pale and smooth, then slowly add the egg yolks bit by bit and beat well. Once combined, add the melted chocolate and beat well again.

4. Sift the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and salt into a medium mixing bowl and mix together until combined. Measure the milk into a jug and stir in the vanilla extract.

5. Gradually add alternate amounts of the dry floury mix and the milk mix into the creamed butter/sugar/chocolate mix, beating well between each addition.

6. In a clean bowl, using a handheld electric whisk, whisk the egg whites until stiff peaks have formed. Then, using a spatula or a metal spoon, fold in the egg whites into the batter until thoroughly combined.

7. Using two spoons, spoon the batter into the cases, filling them about 2/3 of the way up, and bake for around 20 minutes (you'll know if you put the right amount of mix in if it's ready in exactly 20 minutes), or until when you stick a skewer in one, it comes out clean. If you don't have two muffin tins like me, cooking in batches might take a while, so start on the icing once the first batch is done.

8. For the marshmallow fluff icing, put the sugar, golden syrup and water into a pan, and cook on a high heat for about two minutes until the mixture thickens and turns golden (it will resemble caramel).

9. Whisk the egg whites until soft peaks form, then keep beating while slowly adding the hot sugar mixture. Don't worry if your whites lose their stiffness.

10. Continue beating at a higher speed until the mixture becomes thick, glossy and cool. Towards the end, add the vanilla extract. 

11. Wait about 10 minutes for the muffins to cool a bit before adding the icing, then spoon on a small dollop onto each muffin, and smoothen out with a small palette knife, or a round-ended knife.

12. Chop your oreos into quarters, and save the crumbs. Place two quarters on each cake, and sprinkle the remaining crumbs around them. 

And as always, enjoy! :)



Monday, 28 May 2012

Double Chocolate Dipped Strawberries

Summer has finally come to England, and there's no better way to celebrate it than strawberries. This delicious and indulgent dessert looks as good as it tastes, and is much easier than you may think. For the adults out there, add some liqueur to the melted dark chocolate for an extra boozy kick. Also, i recommend cutting the stalks off, and chilling the strawberries before starting. I've written approx. for the chocolate, as it depends how much you use per strawberry. If you don't want to have the dark chocolate, skip to halfway step 3.

 Ingredients

1 punnet strawberries
Approx. 50g Dark/Plain Chocolate
Approx. 25g White Chocolate

Method

1. Wash and dry the strawberries, and melt the dark chocolate. Once melted, pour into a ramekin.

2. Dip each strawberry into the chocolate about 1/2-3/4 of the way, and let all the excess chocolate drip off into the ramekin. Place with the chocolate facing up onto a sheet of greaseproof paper.

3. Let the chocolate set completely (if in a rush, put them in the fridge to set), and melt the white chocolate.

4. Hold a strawberry from the bottom over the pan/bowl of white chocolate. Take a small spoon of white chocolate, and let some drip off until the stream is thin. 

5. While moving the spoon around the strawberry, let the chocolate drip onto it, and enrobe the strawberry. WARNING: do not try to scrape off failed attempts of white chocolate from the dark base layer; the liquid white chocolate will melt some of the chocolate below, and you'll end up with a smudged mess.

5. Again, let the chocolate set, and let them come to room temp. before serving.



Saturday, 31 March 2012

Halloumi Pasta

One of my absolute favorite recipes, originally found on the bbc food website, and originally created by Tony Tobin, and changed a bit by me. Every time I say I am making it, my sister goes crazy! It's a fantastic dish, though I would say to leave some time for chopping up and preparing the ingredients. Serves 4.


      Ingredients

4 tbsp olive oil
1 and ½ red onions, finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
A pinch of dried chilli flakes
250g halloumi, cut into cubes (make them not too small - they'll melt)
4 tomatoes, seeds removed and finely chopped
425g penne pasta 
4 tbsp chopped fresh basil
A squeeze of tomato puree


Method
1. Boil some water in a big pan and add the pasta, cooking it for as long as the packet says

2. While this is happening, heat the olive oil in a frying pan until you can feel the heat when placing your fingers near. Add the onion, garlic and chilli flakes and fry until the onions have softened.

3. Add the halloumi and fry until golden (don't worry if it melts, just chop it up and separate it with a wooden spoon in the pan). Add the tomato puree.

4. Add the finely chopped tomato and basil, and mix on a low heat for a few minutes.

5.Add the sauce-thing to the pasta, season and serve.

Wednesday, 28 March 2012

The Ultimate Bakewell Tart

One of my favorite recipes, devoured within a week in my house, the 'Ultimate' Bakewell Tart. Pinched from 'The Best of British Cookbook' with a few of my tweaks, this summer recipe is incredible. A Bakewell Tart is basically sweet shortcrust pastry, jam, and then an almond sponge. In this recipe things like lemon icing and a mixture of jams are added.





















Ingredients

Sweet Shortcrust Pastry
175g Plain Flour
A Pinch of Salt
2tbsp Caster Sugar
115g Butter, Chilled and Diced
1 Egg Yolk, mixed with
2tbsp ice-cold Water
4tbsp Raspberry or Strawberry Jam (or a mix of both)

Almond Sponge
65g Softened Butter
65g Caster Sugar
1 Egg, At Room Temp
35g Self-Raising Flour
1/2 tsp Baking Powder
55g Ground Almonds (if you don't have, just put 50g blanched almonds in mortar + pestle and grind, or put in a food processor)
A Few Drops of Almond Essence


Lemon Icing
50g Icing Sugar
1/2 tsp Lemon Juice
1/2 tsp Cold Water


Some Blanched Almonds (to sprinkle on top)

Method

1. For the pastry, sift the flour, salt and sugar into a large mixing bowl. Add the diced butter and rub in, until the consistency is as fine as breadcrumbs.

2. Add the egg yolk bit by bit while mixing with a palette knife to form a dough. You're looking for a slightly sticky dough, maybe a bit crumbly. If it's looking too crumbly and dry, add water, and if too sticky, add flour.

3. Wrap the dough in clingfilm and chill for 20 mins, heat the oven to 180C/350F/gas 4. Take out a 22cm flan tin.

4. While the dough is chilling, put all the ingredients for the sponge in a bowl, and mix with an electric whisk for as long as possible until thoroughly combined, and much lighter than it started. 

5. Take out the dough, and roll out on a floured surface to a circle about 28cm across (it doesn't matter if it's not perfect) and line tin with the dough. If there is any dough hanging off the edges, roll your rolling pin along the edges of the tin, taking off any excess dough. Use this excess dough to cover any gaps in the tin.

6. Prick the base with a fork, spread with jam (it may not look enough, but if you put too much, the sponge will get ruined), and evenly spread the sponge mix on top (it's not the end of the world if some jam mixes with the sponge, but try to keep that to a minimum).

7. Bake in the heated oven for 30 mins, or until a skewer comes out clean from the sponge. Leave to cool completely and take out of the tin.  


8. For the icing, sift the icing sugar into a bowl and mix in the lemon juice and water. You want the consistency of a thick paste, so add icing sugar and water when appropriate.


9. Pipe/Spread the icing on however you want! I like to do it in lines, but you could do a lattice, swirls, or just spread it on.


10. Sprinkle some blanched almonds on, and enjoy :).

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Millefeuille (Layer Cake)

Sometimes I find the best recipes come from the old, traditional books. In one of my grandma's dusty, ancient book of bakes, I found a recipe for this treasure: Millefeuille (more commonly known as cream slices). You can make it out of puff pastry; I'm going to put the recipe for rough puff (a more simple and faster type) but there is still nothing wrong with just buying frozen puff pastry.



               Ingredients

For the Rough Puff:
A squeeze of lemon juice
9 oz. Plain Flour (sifted)
6 oz. Cold, Cubed Butter/Lard
Cold Water


For the Filling:
1 Medium-Sized Carton Whipping Cream/Double Cream (or just a can of whipping cream)
Sugar
1/2 Jar of Raspberry/Strawberry Jam

For the Glace Icing:
Icing Sugar
Water
Cocoa Powder (optional)

Recipe
1. Line a baking tray, and heat oven to 220C/Fan 200c/Gas 7. Mix the butter with the plain flour well, but being careful not to break the cubes of butter. Add the lemon juice while stirring, still not breaking the butter, then slowly, bit by bit add some cold water, all the time mixing, yet still not breaking up the butter, until you get a stiff dough. If the dough is too sticky, add more flour.

2. While handling the dough as little as possible, roll the dough out on a floured surface into an oblong shape three times it's width. If you see the lumps of butter really melting, or if it's sticking too much, refrigerate wrapped in cling film for half an hour. 

3. Fold the top third of the dough down, and the bottom third over it, and rotate 90 degrees. Roll out to the oblong shape again, and repeat at least 3 more times. Leave aside wrapped in grease proof paper for half an hour before the next step.

4. Roll dough out on floured surface into a rectangle about 1cm thick, 6'' across, and the length of your tray (you may have to cut your dough so it fits). Place your dough on the tray and cut into 2'' strips across, and keeping them together, and put in the oven until golden brown, and bubbles can be seen on the surface. Leave to cool.

5. If using cream from a carton, add some sugar (but not too much - taste as you are doing it) and whisk until stiff. Then, once the pastry is completely cooled half each strip. Gather the strips in groups of three, and spread two of each group with jam (only on one side). Then spoon some cream onto the two, and sandwich together with the third.

6. Once finished arranging your Millefeuille, mix some icing sugar with a few drops of cold water to form a thick paste. Spread over the tops of your Millefeuille, and if needed make more. You can also make a small batch of chocolate icing, by adding some cocoa powder, and then to make a little motif, spread it in lines over the white icing, then cut through it with a toothpick.

Monday, 13 February 2012

Egg Separator

'Gone are the days of egg yolk being passed over eggshells'


Today I would like to share something that has made my life so easy. Don't be fooled by the simplicity, it's an incredible kitchen gadget. You crack an egg into it, and it leaves the yolk on top, letting the white drain into a bowl. It saves time and effort, and is really worth the cheap price tag. I recommend getting a stainless steel one, because the others are hard to wash. 
I don't know what brand my one is, but this one looks similar.