Wow, so I've missed a couple of weeks, where did the time go!
Good news is that after putting on a bake sale at work we raised £233 for my friend's earthquake efforts. She and her team are making santitation packs for the people who have been displaced by the earthquake. If you're interested in seeing their efforts or donating to the cause you can do that here:http://www.kgnepal.com.np/health-relief
In the meantime, here in the UK, after baking (and eating) an epic amount of cake it's time for salad.
So today we have fennel and radish salad with spiced lentil, which I ate with chicken baked with crushed pineapple.
Ingredients
1 Fennel bulb
7 radishes
handful of dried lentils
cajun spice
Lime juice
Method
Thinly slice the fennel and radishes, save the fennal leaves from the top to garnish the salad. Cover the chopped vegetables in lime juice and set aside to marinade together while you cook the lentils and chicken.
Boil the lentils in salted water, drain and pour onto a baking tray. Cover the lentils in cajun spice and a bit of salt and bake in the oven until they are crispy.
Put the chicken breast onto a piece of foil and cover with crushed pineapple pieces from a can, bring the edges of the foil together but don't totally seal it and put it in the oven for 20 minutes until the chicken is cooked through. Open this up for the last 5 minutes to give the top a chance to brown.
sprinkle the lentils over the salad with the fennel leaves and serve with the chicken.
The best antidote to cake.
Sunday, 17 May 2015
Saturday, 25 April 2015
Remembering Patan
So a few
weeks ago I mentioned a print by an artist, Chitra Merchant, that I have bought
it for my living room.
One of the reasons I loved the print so much was that it
reminded me of my last night in Nepal, in Bhaktapur, Patan square, Kathmandu.
Today I woke up to the awful news that Kathmandu had been hit by a huge
earthquake and one of my favourite places, Patan/Durbar square was effectively
gone. The friend we had gone out to visit is still out there and was actually
living in Patan at the time the earthquake hit so the pictures of the flattened
square really scared me. She was ok, she’s with her family. I know that many
many people are have been hurt and killed and still more are missing so all my
thoughts are there with them.
Patan was
one of the most beautiful places I have ever been and now, with who knows what
damage done and some heritage lost forever, my photos and memories are all the
more important to me. Here are just a few of my favourites, I’m going to keep
hoping that we’ve seen the worst of the damage and the death toll doesn’t get
any higher.
Sunday, 12 April 2015
Sunday bakes - 'More sunshine please' madeleines
This week I'm making an attempt at one of my favourites, madeleines. I've never made them before, and I know they can be tricky so I was a bit nervous about giving them a go. It's important that they are light and fluffy so I was extra careful to beat in as much air as possible and be gentle with the mixture.
Ingredients
2 eggs
100g/3.5oz caster sugar
100g/3.5oz plain flour
100g/3.5oz butter, melted and cooled slightly
juice and zest of one lemon
3/4 tsp baking powder
Method
Whisk up the eggs with the sugar until light and frothy and then gently whisk in the rest of the ingredients.
Leave the mixture to sit for 20 minutes.
Heat the oven to 200 and then brush a little extra melted butter into the madeleine moulds and sprinkle a little extra plain flour as well. Tap out any excess and spoon the mixture into the moulds gently.
Bake for 10 minutes until the madeleines are golden brown and cooked all the way through.
Now to sit in the sunshine, with a glass of something, a good book and a plate of fresh madeleines.
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Sunday bakes - 'They don't make egg-shaped moulds' easter cake
For Easter sunday I wanted to make a 'show stopper' and what better shape for Easter than an egg. But unfortunately they don't seem sell egg shaped cake moulds, so I had improvise with a pudding dish.
Whilst this cake lasted long enough to eat, the bottom half was starting to look a little bulbous, I think there is a good reason why there aren't egg-shaped cakes.
So make this cake if you are planning on eating is quickly (in the next few days).
Ingredients
Cake mix - make 2 batches, each with the following:
120g/4.5oz Self-raising flour
140g/5oz Caster sugar
pinch of salt
40g/1.5oz stork/butter
120ml milk
1 egg
1/4 tsp flavouring
Marzipan
Fondant icing
Icing lace powder
Black cherry jam
Method
For each of the cake halves beat the sugar and butter togegther until light and fluffy, then add the egg and beat again. Sift in the flour and mix gently at first, then gradually add the milk, salt, and the flavouring, beat togegther to make a light sponge batter. For the top layer I added vanilla flavour but for the bottom I added almond, to go with the cherry jam and marzipan.
Pour one batch of cake mix into a pudding dish, lined with buttered tin foil and cover with some more tin foil with a pleat in. Put into a roasting tin half filled with water and bake on a low heat until it is cooked all the way through (use the skewer test to check). Take the tin foil off the top for the last 10 minutes of cooking to crisp up the top, it will help keep the structure of the cake strong. Do this for both halves of the cake.
Once the cake has cooled tip them out onto a plate, put one small side down on the plate, cover with jam and then invert the other side and place on top. The pudding dish will have had a flat bottom so this should balance.
Cover the now egg-shaped cake in jam, then a thin layer of marzipan before putting on the fondant icing. I've found that rolling out the marzipan and fondant onto cling film will make transferring the rolled out icing onto the cake much easier and the surface much smoother. You can also rub down the surface to smooth out any folds without getting too sticky.
I have a collection of the powdered icing paints, but you can mix them with water to make icing paints. I mixed up three colours and painted them over the surface to make a bright watercolour effect.
You can buy the silicone mould for the icing lace online as well as the special icing sugar. you mix up the powder with water and spread over the mould, taking care to scrape off as much excess as possible.
It will dry out overnight or over a few hours but you can speed up the process by placing in a very cool oven. Don't leave in the oven for too long because it will become brittle.
Peel out of the mould and lay over the cake. I ran pieces of wire down one of the pieces and folded up to make a bow to sit on top.
Happy Easter bakers!
Whilst this cake lasted long enough to eat, the bottom half was starting to look a little bulbous, I think there is a good reason why there aren't egg-shaped cakes.
So make this cake if you are planning on eating is quickly (in the next few days).
Ingredients
Cake mix - make 2 batches, each with the following:
120g/4.5oz Self-raising flour
140g/5oz Caster sugar
pinch of salt
40g/1.5oz stork/butter
120ml milk
1 egg
1/4 tsp flavouring
Marzipan
Fondant icing
Icing lace powder
Black cherry jam
Method
For each of the cake halves beat the sugar and butter togegther until light and fluffy, then add the egg and beat again. Sift in the flour and mix gently at first, then gradually add the milk, salt, and the flavouring, beat togegther to make a light sponge batter. For the top layer I added vanilla flavour but for the bottom I added almond, to go with the cherry jam and marzipan.
Pour one batch of cake mix into a pudding dish, lined with buttered tin foil and cover with some more tin foil with a pleat in. Put into a roasting tin half filled with water and bake on a low heat until it is cooked all the way through (use the skewer test to check). Take the tin foil off the top for the last 10 minutes of cooking to crisp up the top, it will help keep the structure of the cake strong. Do this for both halves of the cake.
Once the cake has cooled tip them out onto a plate, put one small side down on the plate, cover with jam and then invert the other side and place on top. The pudding dish will have had a flat bottom so this should balance.
Cover the now egg-shaped cake in jam, then a thin layer of marzipan before putting on the fondant icing. I've found that rolling out the marzipan and fondant onto cling film will make transferring the rolled out icing onto the cake much easier and the surface much smoother. You can also rub down the surface to smooth out any folds without getting too sticky.
I have a collection of the powdered icing paints, but you can mix them with water to make icing paints. I mixed up three colours and painted them over the surface to make a bright watercolour effect.
You can buy the silicone mould for the icing lace online as well as the special icing sugar. you mix up the powder with water and spread over the mould, taking care to scrape off as much excess as possible.
It will dry out overnight or over a few hours but you can speed up the process by placing in a very cool oven. Don't leave in the oven for too long because it will become brittle.
Peel out of the mould and lay over the cake. I ran pieces of wire down one of the pieces and folded up to make a bow to sit on top.
Happy Easter bakers!
Sunday, 29 March 2015
Sunday bakes – ‘Making out’ meringues
There is nothing sweeter that those first few kisses with someone you have really liked for a while and in the baking world there is nothing sweeter than meringues. These little cherry flavoured meringue kisses are light and crumble sweetly in your mouth from the first touch.
Ingredients
4 egg
whites
225g
caster sugar
1tsp
cornflour
½ tsp
white wine vinegar
1 cup of
cherries
Method
Heat the
cherries in a saucepan until they start to split then mash them against the
side of pan. Once the juices are reduced to a syrup, sift them and set aside
the juice for later.
Whisk the
egg whites up and a very clean bowl until they hold stiff peak. Gradually sift
in half the sugar whisking as you go. The mixture should thicken and get shiny.
Add in the cornflour and vinegar to give your meringues that gooey marshmallow
centre and whisk in the rest of the sugar.
Pour in
the juice but do not mix. Spoon the mixture into a piping bag with a large star
shaped nozzle.
The oven
should be heated to about 140°. Pipe the meringues onto a greased paper. To
make cute little meringue kisses hold the nozzle perfectly straight above the
paper and pipe in a steady stream. The juices should make a pretty ripple
pattern throughout.
Cook gently
on a low heat to dry and create that lovely crunch when you bite into each of
these kisses.
Sunday, 22 March 2015
Sunday bakes - 'Crappy week at work' carrot cake
This was
a tough week at work so today I wound down with a little baking before it
starts up again tomorrow. This recipe is actually from a cookbook that I have,
you can buy a copy of it here.
Ingredients
225g
self-raising flour
1tsp
baking powder
2 tsp
cinnamon
1 tsp
ginger
1 tsp
nutmeg
150ml sunflower
oil
3 eggs
200g
light soft brown sugar
400g
grated carrots
Zest 1 orange
60g
roasted chopped pistachios – plus extra for topping
Frosting
200g
cream cheese
75g icing
sugar
1.5 tsp
lemon juice
Zest 1
lemon
Method
Sift the
flour, baking powder and spices in together before beating the oil sugar and
eggs separately and combining the two sets of ingredients.
Add the
rest of the ingredients. Pour into a lined 20cm cake tin and bake at 180° for
an hour or until the skewer comes out clean.
Beat the
ingredients for the icing together until light and fluffy and then spread over
the cake with a palette knife, sprinkle the pistachio nuts over the top and eat
it all in front of friends with a vase full of sunny daffodils to yourself to
make your week a bit better.
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