Monday, March 30, 2009

Triple Malt Chocolate Cake

It's not that I have given up taking pictures - I've just been quite busy with work. Personally I don't like to cook anything that you can't see the finished result of first, but you'll have to trust me on this one. It is in fact a slightly altered version of this from Chow's website, and there's a picture there for reference.I cooked mine slightly less then they have recommended to get a fudgey brownie like consistency in the middle.
Triple Malt Chocolate cake

240g malted milk powder (like Ovaltine)
200g Plain flour
90g good quality cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
3 large eggs
230g caster sugar
160 ml vegetable oil
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
320 ml whole milk

To Frost:
1 big bag of Maltesers, coarsely chopped
Vanilla Malt Icing - see below

Heat the oven to 180C and arrange the rack in the middle. Line 2 8-inch cake pans (or one large brownie tin if you fancy a tray bake) with baking paper.

Combine malted milk powder, flour, cocoa powder, salt, and baking soda in a large bowl, and stir to combine.

Beat the eggs, sugar, oil, and vanilla in a separate large bowl, and whisk until combined and smooth. Add 1/3 of the flour mixture, and whisk until just incorporated. Add 1/2 of the milk, and whisk until smooth. Continue with remaining flour mixture and milk, alternating between each and whisking until all ingredients are just incorporated and smooth.

Divide batter evenly between the prepared pans. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean and the cakes start pulling away from the sides of the pans, about 4o minutes. Remove cakes from the oven and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before icing.

To Frost:
200g unsalted butter, at room temperature
350g icing sugar
3/4 cup malted milk powder
120 ml whole milk, at room temperature
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Cream the butter and sugar (use a whisk attachment) until mixture is light and whipped, about 3 minutes. Add remaining ingredients continue to whip at medium high speed until frosting is evenly combined and light, about another 3 minutes.

To frost, place a cake layer a cake plate. Evenly spread about 1/3 of the frosting over the top of the layer then stack the second layer on the top (pick the flattest side to face upward on the top), and evenly spread the rest of the frosting over the top and sides of the whole cake. Press the crushed Maltesers into the frosting around the sides of the cake and serve.

The only chocolate chip cookie recipe you will ever need

I'm skipping the usual preamble as these will speak for themselves. I've made them twice in 3 weeks they are so good.

Note: The dough needs at least 24 hours in the fridge - it's a must, though it does mean you can whip up the dough in a few minutes of spare time, to bake later in the week when you can.

Chocolate Chip Cookies

This is adapted from The New York Times recipe by Jack Torres.

Makes about 36 4-inch cookies

17oz plain flour

1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt

10oz unsalted butter (at room temp)

10 oz soft brown sugar (light)

8 oz caster sugar

2 large eggs (at room temp)

2 teaspoons natural vanilla extract

1 1/4 pounds bittersweet chocolate chips - at least 60% cocoa

Sea salt (optional - for sprinkling)


Sift flour, baking soda, baking powder into a bowl and the salt and set aside.

Cream butter and sugars together until very light, about 5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla.

Reduce speed to low, add dry ingredients and mix until just combined - only 5 to 10 seconds. Add the chocolate drops in and stir briefly to incorporate through the dough.

Wrap the dough in cling film or pop into a Tupperware container and refrigerate for 24 to 36 hours. The dough can be frozen if you don't want to use it all at once.

When ready to bake, preheat oven to 180C. Line a baking sheet with baking paper . Using a table spoon, scoop 6 mounds of dough (the size of small golf balls) onto baking sheet. Sprinkle lightly with sea salt (optional) and bake until golden brown but still soft, 12 to 15 minutes. Leave to cool briefly on the sheet before transferring to a wire rack to cool fully.

Variations: swap into 3oz of good quality cocoa powder for 3oz of the flour, and subsitute half the chococlate chips with Reeses peanut butter chips. Fantasic.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Blondies

I was meant to be making gorgeous chocolate chip cookies today, but in my foray to Wellcome to pick up a few bits and bobs, they didn't have the type chocolate chips I was after - what they did have was exactly the sort I didn't want, so I embraced serendipity, grabbed a few bags and opted to make some blondies. Truth be told I they were on my list of things to bake, but just not today. Maybe it's a sign.

So, not sure where you stand on the volume vs weight debate, but I'm definitely in the "cups are for people who don't really cook" camp - sounds militant I know, but one mans cup of flour is anothers US/UK/Aussie sized, humidity effected, quality varying ingredient. You can't go wrong with weight measurements, even if your scales are cheap and have been carted round the world, spilt on, dropped, wiped, dropped again and stashed unceremoniously in the cupboard. Whereas my forlorn plastic 1/2 cup (nationality unknown) is scratched to bits and doesn't fit into the necks of any of my jars. Anyway, as many recipes still use them, especially in the US, there are some excellent conversions here from a fantastic blog worth browsing.

So, the baking - Much as we all love a brownie, Blondies, unlike in real life, are a little more subtle that their brunette counterpart. The brown sugar makes for a light butterscotchy taste and are not as sweet as you would expect. I've put white choc chips in here, but your could skip them, or use milk chocolate or butterscotch chips instead.
Blondies
makes 12-16 bars

170g unsalted butter - melted

230g soft brown sugar
3 teaspoons vanilla extract

3/4 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon baking powder

2 large eggs (room temp, lightly beaten
)
150g plain flour

100g nuts, such as pecans or walnuts, coarsely chopped

160g good quality white chocolate chips (not chocolate-flavoured ones - big difference!)

Heat the oven to 180C.

Beat the melted butter and brown sugar in your mixer until smooth. Add vanilla then beat in the eggs until thoroughly mixed. Add flour, baking powder and salt, and fold in by hand (or with just a few quick turns on your mixer - no flour should be left showing, but don't beat it in, you want air). Stir in nuts and chips until just combined. Transfer batter to a baking try lined with baking paper, and bake until golden brown and set, about 25 minutes. Remove from the oven and place on a wire rack to cool completely before cutting.
As with brownies, you don't want to over cook them - no one is going to turn down a crisp topped, soft middled Blondie.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Banana Cake

Whilst I was knocking up the previous recipe, I spied a few sad looking bananas in my fruit bowl - way past the point by which I would usually eat them, but perfect for banana cake - the sweeter and mushier, the better. Bananas, oddly (to me anyway), freeze really well - and if you are so inclined, can be peeled, popped onto lollysticks and placed in the freezer for a summery icepop version of one of your five a day.

In the past, this type of loaf cake was eaten sliced and spread with butter, but it certainly doesn't need it. Brown caster sugar, if you have it, works very well - adds a hint of toffee flavour and in fact, if you make extra of the icing for the Sticky toffee pudding cupcakes, that would be excellent smeared over the top of this.

I did throw in the walnuts and cinnamon as it only adds to the flavour - and I did have some buttermilk left over in the fridge, so I used that instead of milk for a creamier taste.
Banana Cake

100g Butter
175g caster sugar
2 eggs (lightly whisked)
2 large or 3 small very ripe bananas, mashed
225g self raising flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 tablespoons milk or buttermilk
1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon (optional)
2 big handfuls of walnuts (optional)

Pre-heat oven to 180C

Cream the butter and the sugar together very well using your mixer (can you see a reoccurring theme here? This is the opening line to pretty much ALL my cakes, so you should know the drill by now). Add the eggs slowly, beating all the while. Turn your mixer to low and add the flour,baking powder and cinnamon (mix only briefly) then stir though by hand the mashed banana, walnuts, and milk/buttermilk. Pour into a lined loaf tin (a 2lb size) and bake in the centre of the oven at 180c for about 45 mins to an hour.
You will get a crisp surface to this one and a densish cake - test for doneness by inserting a skewer into the middle of the cake and if it comes out clean, the cake is done. As you can see from the pictures I used two smaller loaf tins - this is because it wasn't until I had started that I realised I couldn't find my loaf tin, but fortunately I had two small cardboard ones from a $10 store that I brought for cuteness value. These don't work brilliantly - cakes tins are metal for a reason (heat conducting properties) which is why I always sneer at those flash gaudy silicon molds everyone bangs on about - no thanks.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Sticky Toffee Pudding and Sticky Toffee Cupcakes

This is a proper rib sticking hearty affair that will definitely make you feel a bit too full afterwards. Now, I have done this as cupcake size portions, because although the original recipe says that it serves 8 (cooked in a retangular dish), I realized that my way gets 24 good sized portions with pretty presentation and gives you thrice as many overfed satisfied guests for your buck, so to speak. So, either pour your mixture into a large oven proof ceramic serving dish, or like me, divide the mixture between 24 lined cupcake moulds.

Having used cupcakes portions, and having a few left over, I discovered that this sponge delicious in it's own right, so this Friday I am experimenting with a cupcake version that can been eaten as a cake rather than pudding - the sponge freezes like a dream, so if you have any left over, be sure to hang onto them (and defrost them with a unceramonous blast in the microwave).
STICKY TOFFEE PUDDING

Date Puree
375g dates, with stones removed
375 ml water

Toffee Sauce
600ml cream
300g sugar
130g unsalted butter

Sponge
130g unsalted butter
375g soft dark brown sugar
3 eggs, lightly beaten and at room temperature
450g plain flour
10g baking powder (sifted into the flour)
3g bicarbonate of soda (sifted into the flour)

Plus creme fraiche or good vanilla ice cream to serve.

Preheat the oven to 180 C.
Make the date puree: Simmer the dates in the water over a low heat for 10-15 minutes until they are soft and the water has almost evaporated. Process them in a blender until they are smooth.
Make the sponge: In a food processor or mixer, cream the butter and sugar with the paddle on a medium speed until it is light and fluffy. Add the eggs slowly , taking care the mixture doesn't separate (add a bit of the flour with the eggs to prevent this). Then fold in the sifted flour mixture slowly until smooth. Finally, add the warm date puree and mix well. Transfer your mixture to your baking receptacle of choice and bake for about 50 minutes in a dish, or 25 minutes in cupcakes cases or until the sponge is firm to the touch.
Make the toffee sauce: Whilst your sponge is in the oven (or before if you want to do as much prep in advance), pour half the cream and the sugar and butter into a thick bottomed pan and mix well. Bring the sauce to the boil stirring with a wooden spoon, and continue until the sauce is golden brown. This will take a while but persevere. When it goes golden brown, remove from heat, allow to cool slightly, and then whisk in remaining cream.
To assemble: If you've made cupcakes, remove the papers and arrange on a serving dish (a slightly lipped one is fine). Pierce the sponge all over with a fine skewer and the cover with about a third of the toffee sauce. Return to the oven at 175C for 10 minutes to warm through then remove.
To serve: Put the remaining sauce in a jug and heat (in the microwave). As you remove the sponge from the ovem, drizzle with a little more sauce and the serve at the table with the left over sauce on the side - encourage people to help themselves to extra sauce with thier pudding and a big dollop of creamy ice cream.
Now, if you've made these, then the above is the follow-on recipe of choice, as all you need to do is pour the leftover caramel syrup into some cream and whisk over a bit of heat to get your toffee sauce - a much faster option and worth considering to make the most of leftovers.

STICKY TOFFEE PUDDING CUPCAKES Follow the recipe as above (without the sauce), making the sponge with date puree in cupcakes.

Make the icing as follows:
Using your mixer with a whisk attachment, beat 140g of butter and 280g of sifted icing sugar together (you may want to add a bit more to get a good consistency for pipping). Add a few tablespoons of caramel syrup (either one you made here or a shop brought one is fine) and continue to beat. Taste and if overly sweet, add a squeeze of lemon juice to calm it down.
Pipe onto you cooled cakes as desired.
Two treats from one recipe - I personally would use half as pudding and half as cakes, freezing the ones you don't use for later and recycling as required.

Naozen

After having walked past this sober looking place a million times, we decided to venture in. Great Japanese, simply set out with private rooms at the back, we sat at the bar and had spicy tuna roll, my favourite and served at perfect temperature - sake maki, special sauteed beef and tempura, two rice sets with 4 delicious crisp Asahi - not too much for two, just hit the spot. Well presented with an eye for detail, the meal was very good, however the bill was over HK$700 - which was a little surprising, as it was hardly the most adventurous of orders.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Red Velvet Cake

It's Valentines tomorrow and much as I don't embrace it, I did decide to take the opportunity to make lurid, E number laced cakes for Friday baking. Sugar hearts, pink food colour spray, a lot of food dye - the works.

I too baulked at the amount of red food colouring - personally I found the super cheap liquid one worked MUCH better than the expensive gel ones (and you need less). My kitchen is still covered with a fine film of tinted pink stickiness but the result was worth it. The hurriedly taken pictures don't do the kitsch cakes justice.

Next time, I'd be tempted to swap the baking soda/vinegar for good baking powder - much less hassle. I also passed on the original icing - although many recipes use a cream cheese frosting, the correct one is in fact a creamed butter/sugar whisked with warm milk and flour - it sounds pretty grim and indeed it was. In fact I started it and it looked and smelt so awful I had to reject it - there's times when this is completely acceptable - the incident where my profiteroles came out of the oven in perfectly spherical hard shiny ping pong ball like forms but welded to the baking sheet springs to mind - the whole lot went straight in the bin.
Anyway, I opted for a whipped meringue based icing that colours like a dream, holds a shape and comes from Nigella Lawson. The texture of this is just brilliant with the delicate sponge.
Red Velvet Cake:

250 grams sifted plain flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
15 grams Dutch-processed cocoa powder
115 grams unsalted butter, at room temperature
300 grams caster sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
240 ml buttermilk
2 tablespoons liquid red food coloring
1 teaspoon white distilled vinegar
1 teaspoon baking soda

Preheat oven to 175 C and line your muffins tin with suitable paper cases (I chose heart pattern ones, but as the mixture is very liquidy, the oil soaked through and obscured them, so metal silver ones may have been a better choice)

In a mixing bowl sift together the flour, salt, and cocoa powder. Set aside.

Beat the butter and the sugar until light and fluffy (about 3-5 minutes). Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Scrape down the sides of the bowl. Add the vanilla extract and beat until combined.

In a measuring cup whisk the buttermilk with the red food coloring. With the mixer on low speed, alternately add the flour mixture and buttermilk, in three additions, beginning and ending with the flour.

In a small cup combine the vinegar and baking soda. Allow the mixture to fizz and then quickly fold into the cake batter.

Working quickly, divide the batter evenly between the 12 cups. Bake in the preheated oven for approximately 15 - 20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center of the cakes comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack.

The Frosting
  • 2 egg whites
  • 4 tablespoons of golden syrup
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • Pink food colour (small amount, adjust as desired)
Sit a heatproof bowl over a saucepan of barely simmering water, and put all of the ingredients for the frosting, except for the vanilla and food colouring, into the bowl. Whisk everything with an electric beater until the icing becomes thick and holds peaks like a meringue. This will take about 5 minutes, so be patient.Take the bowl off the saucepan and onto a cool surface and keep whisking while you add the vanilla. Then keep whisking until the mixture cools a little - you should have firm stiff peaks by the end of it.

Fill a piping bag, and using a 1M tip (or other large tip), pipe your glossy frosting onto the top of the cooled cakes. Immediately cover with spray pink colour, sprinkles, hearts - what ever you have. There's no such thing as being OTT here.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Coffee Grinds Cake

One of the many pleasures of cooking is getting run your finger over then empty mixing bowl and taste the last vestiges of your hard work - and although I don't like the raw mixture, I can't get enough of this coffee icing

This is another variation on a simple sponge, that can turn into a yummy cakey treat (see here and here for previous versions). As I have said before, I know no-one uses ounces, but it does make this totally memorable - 1 egg per 2 oz of flour/sugar/butter and scale accordingly. And as we all seem to use electric scales, you can make the use of the lb/kg button for once and get an instant conversion. I've done a purists version, but you can add a handful of chopped walnuts to cake mixture for a bit of texture, or pop a few on top.

I've done a tray bake, but you could easily make cup cakes or two rounds which you can sandwich together with the thick unctuous icing.
Coffee Sponge
4 eggs (at room temperature)
8 oz each of butter, caster sugar, self-raising flour (all at room temperature)
1 tsp of baking powder
1 tsp of freshly ground coffee beans mixed into 2 tablespoons of boiling water

Fluffy Coffee Icing
4oz butter
8oz Icing sugar
1 tsp of freshly ground coffee beans mixed into 2 tablespoons of boiling water

Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy - it should go very pale.
Very very slowly add the eggs one at a time, with a tablespoon of the flour with each egg to stop the mix from separating. Once all the eggs are incorporated, add the two tablespoon of coffee to the mix. turn the mixer onto it's lowest setting and add the remaining flour and the baking powder until just folded in (don't beat - the folding in of the flour is to incorporate air into your mixture to get a fluffy cake). Turn this into a baking tin (about 10in x 6in) and bake at 180c for 20-25 mins

To make the icing put your butter, coffee, and sifted icing sugar into your mixer with a whisk attachment and beat until light and fluffy.

Remove the cake from the oven, turn out onto a rack and allow to cool before spreading a thick layer of icing over the top. Cut into squares or rectangles and serve.
Tip: cutting up a good sponge can be a nightmare - it's so soft and you get crumbs everywhere - so to prevent this, once you have iced your sponge, pop it into a large Tupperware container (I put mine on greaseproof paper on the lid and the box part over the top to save me having to try to lift it out again) and refrigerate for 30 mins to an hour. Remove and slice - it will be SO much easier as the sponge and the icing will be much more firm, though remember not to serve this cold - cold sponges have a horrid texture, make sure it's up to room temp before indulging.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Carbonara

Apols, as it has been a while - CNY, guests to name but a few lame excuses. And although I took A LOT of photos, none was of the food.

As we had guests it was the usual round of eating on the tourist trail - Red Pepper, Mak's noodles (a lot), The Dragon Restaurant on Gage Street (pigs on walls - real dead ones), Dim Sum in Stanley (Shu Zhai) and Happy Valley (Sing Woo Road), Duck at Peking Garden after the light show, as well as a pizza at Simpatico and hangover Burgers at Shake 'em Buns. We need to add a few more places on to the list and remove a few others. Much as I love duck pancakes, I've had it that many times I just can't face them any more.

Amongst all this, I did manage to do some cooking - a CNY feast of Char sui, garlic pak choi, cheung fun in XO sauce and chilli prawns with chive and garlic shoots, but a favourite was carbonara - perfect for a bit of comfort eating and I usually have all the ingredients in, so it's cheap and quick too. Don't get too hung up on the exact amounts - to be honest I often do this dish to use up cream and eggs and the sad looking Parmesan that lurks at the back of the fridge.
Carbonara for two

2 teaspoons of olive oil
1 packet of pancetta (I always have some in the freezer)
4 tablespoons cheapy muscat or similar (sounds specific, but it lasts as, unlike the usual white wine, no one is tempted to drink it neat. Ever.)
1 egg yolk
1 whole egg
3 tablespoons double cream
4 big tablespoons ish of fresh Parmesan
Enough linguine for two people (bog-standard dried DeCecco is perfect)

Fry the pancetta (from frozen is fine) in a small frying pan until golden. Add the wine to the pan and let it bubble off until you are left with about 2 tablespoons of oily wine and the crispy panchetta and remove from the heat.
In a jug, beat the whole egg, egg yolk, the cheese.
When the pasta is cooked, drain and return to it’s cooking pan and stir in the pancetta and juices. The add the egg mixture and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon and serve with some crispy garlicky bread, and a green salad if you need to feel a little less guilty.
It's back to to the low fat stuff this week after all that eating - I'll keep you posted....

edit: completely forgot that I did some excellent sticky toffee puddings as well that I need to write up at some point - we're eeking out the remains from the freezer, still good - warm and sweetly date-y (the fruit) - having been quickly defrosted in the microwave without the sauce.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Caramel Cupcakes (with Caramel Icing)

Friday Baking on a Thursday afternoon has become something of an tea drinking, diet coke sipping, magazine flipping institution here with the venerable 太 Haynes for company and taste testing, and I enjoy the chance flex my baking skills and dust off the mixer. This recipe is a version of Caramel Cake by Eggbeater

I've used cups below, as the conversion was a real pain - I'm not a fan as I can never work out if my rather battered plastic Ikea one (have lost the rest and am down to a forlorn 1/2 cup) is a US cup size or not. Anyway, half a cup (in my kitchen) is 125ml if that helps at all.

I had some golden caster sugar than I used for the sponge - it's adds a nice tone I think, but bog-standard white is fine. Please note that the cases are cup cake cases and not muffin cases - these are more of a dainty cake. Don't expect a mountainous rise either, these are quite subtle, and you'll get a nice flat top for your squeeze of icing.

Makes 24 (as per the picture)

Caramel Sponge:
140g unsalted butter at room temperature
1 1/4 cups caster sugar
1/2 teaspoon good quality salt (I grind up a bit of Maldon)
1/3 cup of Caramel Syrup (see recipe below)
2 eggs at room temperature
1/2 teaspoon of vanilla extract
2 cups of plain flour
1/2 teaspoon of baking powder
1 cup of milk at room temperature

Preheat oven to 175C.

Cream butter, sugar and salt until light and fluffy.
Slowly add the caramel syrup and beat until incorporated.
Add eggs and vanilla extract a little at a time, mixing well after each addition.
Beat mixture until light and uniform.


Sift flour and baking powder. Turn mixer to lowest speed and add one third of the dry ingredients. When incorporated, add half of the milk, a little at a time. Add another third of the dry ingredients, then the other half of the milk and finish with the dry ingredients. As there is a high proportion of liquid in the batter - watch carefully to see that the mixture doesn't curdle - Make sure you mix each addition well, before you add the next.

Remove the bowl from the mixer and use a spatula to do a few last folds, making sure batter is uniform. Spoon the mix into paper cakes case in a cupcake tin, making them about 2/3 to 3/4 full. Bake in the middle of the oven for about 15 mins until golden and springy to the touch.

Caramel Syrup:
1 cup caster sugar and 1/4 cup water
1/2 cup water (for "stopping" the caramelizing process)

Put the caster sugar and water into a small stainless steal pan (the high the sides the better). Turn on heat to highest flame. Allow to cook until dark amber.
When this colour is achieved, very carefully pour in one cup of water. The caramel will jump and sputter about! It is very dangerous, so have long sleeves on and be prepared to step back. Whisk over medium heat until it has reduced slightly and feels sticky between two fingers - Obviously wait for it to cool on a spoon before touching it, sugar burns are not good.

Caraml Butter Icing:
85g unsalted butter
500g icing sugar, sifted
2-3 tablespoons whipping cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2-4 tablespoons caramel syrup
sea salt to taste

Cook butter until brown. Pour through a fine meshed sieve into your mixer bowl fitted with a whisk attachment and allow to cool a bit before adding the sifted icing sugar a little at a time. When mixture looks too chunky to take any more, add a bit of cream and or caramel syrup. Repeat until mixture looks smooth and all icing sugar has been incorporated. Add salt to taste.
Note: I'm sure that in France you can buy jars of caramel syrup in the supermarche - might be worth an experiment to cut down on the time, 3rd degree sugar burns and oodles of left over syrup.

Edit: Keep the left over syrup - I popped mine in a jar in the freezer - but the fridge is fine, as if won't go off (like honey) and use it to make caramel icing or sauce as found here.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Madeleines

These were a first for me, I got to go out and buy a new cake tin - just to add to the piles of baking equipment I already have, including several sandwich cake tins, none of which seem to match.

These are surprisingly light - best straight out of the oven I think, a crisp outside with a light as a feather middle - the lemon is only a fleeting hint. These are Madeleines in their purest form - I know you can make every flavour under the sun but why gild the lily, non?
200g unsalted butter with about 2 tablespoons extra for greasing the tin
100g plain flour
4 large eggs
a pinch of salt

140g caster sugar
zest of one large lemon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Icing sugar to dust

Preheat oven to 180C

Melt the butter in a small pan over medium heat until it's brown, roughly 15 minutes. Strain (using a paper towel over a fine sieve) leaving a clear liquid. Set the butter to one side to cool, whilst you carry on as below.

Melt the remaining 2 tablespoons of butter in the microwave and use a brush to coat the tin - make sure you get in all the ridges.

Put the eggs and salt in the bowl of your mixer and whisk on high speed until thick - they should double or triple in volume (about 3 mins). Continue to mix on high speed, slowly add the sugar until mixture is thick and ribbony.

Take the bowl off the mixer and fold in the lemon zest and vanilla briefly. Add the flour, and gently fold in, then fold in the butter, only stirring enough to bring everything together.

Pour the batter into the molds, filling each mold 3/4 full. I used a jug filled with batter, as it's too runny for a spoon.

Bake the madeleines for 12 minutes ish or until the edges are golden brown. Remove from oven and unmold immediately. Cool on racks and dust with a little sugar.

Makes 2 -3 dozen.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Christmas - Rudolph Pie

Well, it's been all quiet on the Eastern front since the being of December as I have been back West, to London, for most of December.

I missed a tonnes of gorgeous Christmas cooking to be done - cooking in someones elses kitchen is never the same and you are always ferreting around in the back of cupboards/drawers praying there's a grater/scales/rolling pin that is the crux of the recipe you've already started making. However I did manage to bang out a fabulous Christmas Cake, a Christmas Eve dinner of Rudolph Pie with red cabbage and a Christmas Lunch with all the trimmings - sausages in bacon, roast potatoes crisped to perfection in goose fat etc etc.

The Rudolph Pie suggestion came courtesy of a friend who is always great with ideas as I struggled to come up with something Christmassy, that didn't resemble a roast dinner, was easy to put together for what was our main family meal of the season. It is a Nigella recipe, slightly altered.

Minced venison can be a really hard to find - online or from a game butcher is your best bet, and I got mine from Borough market - well worth the visit, even if it is just to check out my friend and all round goddess's fabulous Mushroom pâté stall. Also, don't get too bogged down in the exact measurements - the packet of porcini I got had 40g in it, so that's all I used, and the onions and carrots are easily whizzed up briefly in a magimix as it took me hours and a lot of running mascara to make it through them by hand.

You're going to need a big dish - 30cm/30cm at least - and this left over enough of the meat sauce to stir into fresh tagliatelle for E, who hates potatoes and freeze a small bit for future pasta dinners. Serve with some festive red cabbage and some greens if you must.
  • 50g dried porcini
  • 3 - 5 tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 white onions chopped
  • 3 large carrots chopped
  • 4 cloves of garlic peeled and minced
  • 500g button mushrooms, quartered
  • 1kg minced venison
  • 1kg minced pork
  • 2 tbsp flour
  • 6 tbsp Marsala
  • 2 tins chopped tomatoes
  • 2 tablespoons tomato puree
  • Worcestershire sauce to taste
To Top:
  • 3.5 kg potatoes, peeled and cut up into large chunks (no more than thirds)
  • 100ml full-fat milk
  • 100g butter
  • nutmeg
  • sprinkle of Worcestershire sauce

Pour 500ml of near-boiling water over the porcini mushrooms and leave to steep.Warm oil into very large thick bottomed pan and add the chopped onions, carrots and minced garlic. Cook stirring for about 10 minutes, sprinkling with the salt if the vegetables look as if they may burn.

Drain the porcini, reserving the soaking liquid, chop coarsely and add with the button mushrooms to the vegetable mixture. After about 5 minutes tip the whole lot out to brown the meat.

Add a little more oil to the pan then tip in the minced meats, breaking them up with a wooden spoon. Stir for about five minutes until the rawness has left them a bit, add salt - unstintingly - and then return the vegetable mixture to the pan.

Stir in the flour and add the mushroom-soaking liquid, tinned tomatoes, diluted puree, Marsala, 125ml water, and a few drops of Worcestershire sauce. Stir well, cover partly with a lid and reduce heat so that the mince bubbles gently, for about an hour.

Meanwhile boil the potatoes in a large pan of salted water until they are nearly ready. Boil until they are cooked to easily mashable tenderness, then drain and allow to dry slightly.

Warm the milk and melt the butter in the heat of the potato-pan. Mash the potatoes straight into this, grate in some fresh nutmeg and add salt to taste.

Put the mince into your large dish, then dollop the potato mash on top, spreading with a spatula, taking care to seal the edges to prevent the meat below from bubbling up in the oven. Fork lines over the top and sprinkle with Worcestershire sauce.

If you're cooking this straight away, about 10 minutes in a 225C oven should be enough to make it piping hot and crispily golden on top. If cooking from cold, about an hour in a 190C should do it.

I topped it with half a cherry tomato for a Rudolph nose effect. Rather annoyingly, there's no pictures as my camera has chosen to crash every time I attempt to take any photos - hopefully it will be up and running for the Friday baking.