Friday 23 January 2015

Hot Cross Bun Bread


January is a great time for a clear out and my baking cupboard is no different. This came about as I found a nearly full bag of strong bread flour and a load of packets of dried fruit with a little bit left in each. I have a bad habit of forgetting about them, buying new ones and then the vicious cycle starts. I do the same with packets of lentils but there are less opportunities to bake with them.
                                             
Anyway bread is amazing to make because you can whack anything into it. Really – just give it a whirl. I’ve used up nuts, seeds, almost used up brown sugar by shoving them in dough and baking the result. Bread is hard to get wrong. Yes you need to knead it but it really doesn’t take that long and you experience the fabulous result (well not me as I’m off gluten but you go crazy).

Ingredients
20g dried active yeast
1 tsp sugar
850g strong bread flour
5g salt
2 tbsp caster sugar
Dried fruit – sultanas, raisins, candied peel (I think I probably had about 200g in the end but it can take more)
1 tbsp mixed spice
600ml warm water (200ml boiling water and 400ml cold water)
1 egg, beaten

  1. Take 200ml of the water and put 1 tsp of sugar in. The sprinkle the yeast on top, mix and leave for about 10 minutes. A massive foamy top will develop which means the yeast is getting excited about making bread.
  2. Put the flour, salt, caster sugar, dried fruit and spice in a bowl and mix well.
  3. Add the yeast mixture and the rest of the water. Mix well to make your dough and use your favourite kneading method. One here uses dough hooks andthis one takes a while but requires very little labour from you.
  4. Once you’re at the second proving stage (the second time you leave it to double in size) either leave the dough as one big loaf or you can make two loaves by proving in loaf tins.
  5. Before baking, brush the top with beaten egg and then put in an oven heated to 180°C/GM 4. For one big one about 45 minutes should do, for the smaller loaves about 35 minutes.
  6. Obviously, as with all bread, it’s best eaten warm from the oven but it seemed to work well toasted as well.


Wednesday 21 January 2015

Chocolate Marshmallow Pie



I made this around Thanksgiving and it truly is an American pie. It came from Jamie's magazine and I have to say mine looks very much like the picture! I love how they use crumb bases, rather than faff around with pastry bases, most of the time. This appeals to me. Plus this pie allowed me to blowtorch marshmallows – always a pleasure.

This pie went to the top of the favourites list for many of my work colleagues, which is not to be sniffed at. It’s very rich so only a small slice is needed per person. I’d encourage you to make this is a pie dish as the heavy weight of it lends something to the whole experience. I’ve found that TK Maxx has great deals on bakeware and the one near me always had a selection of pie dishes in various sizes.

Ingredients

Base
225g digestive biscuits
1 tbsp plain flour
Pinch of salt
115g melted butter, cooled

Filling
75g plain flour
25g cocoa powder
Pinch of salt
75g dark muscovado sugar
100g butter
100g dark chocolate – no more than 60% cocoa
150ml cold water
1 egg

Topping
Make your own marshmallows – recipe here – or just buy a pack



  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C/GM4.
  2. Put the biscuits, flour and salt in food processor and pulse until fine. Then add the melted butter, whizz and put the resulting crumb in the pie dish (mine was 23cm). Chill for 20 minutes. (You can always bash the hell out of the biscuits using plastic bags and a rolling pin, doing the mixing in a bowl).
  3. Once chilled bake the base for 10 minutes.
  4. Now for the filling. Sift the flour, cocoa powder and salt into a bowl.
  5. In a saucepan put the sugar, butter (chop up) and chocolate (broken into pieces) with the water and heat gently until melted and smooth. Take off the heat, add the dry mixture and the egg, then mix together well.
  6. Pop in the oven for 10 minutes. Don’t worry when you take it out – it should look wobbly. It will firm up as it cools.
  7. Once cool, or just before serving, arrange the marshmallows on top and blowtorch!!! Serve.

Monday 19 January 2015

Gingerbread Biscuits


Before Christmas I went on an epic baking spree. My standard Porter Cake featured but I also made some gingerbread stars because a) gingerbread is super simple to make and b) I have some lovely star shaped cutters that my friend gave me. Stars are pretty much my favourite thing – second are fireworks and then balloons. However, enough about my love of fun things and on to the recipe.

Ingredients
250g butter
200g dark muscovado sugar (regular dark brown sugar can work)
4 tbsp golden syrup (buy the new squeeze bottle they do – it make it to easy)
4 tbsp maple syrup
600g plain flour
2tsp bicarb of soda
4 tsp ground ginger
2 tsp cinnamon
Zest and juice of 1 orange

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/GM6.
  2. Put the butter, sugar, golden and maple syrup into a saucepan and melt together. You want it to boil and then turn off the heat.
  3. In another bowl mix all the dry ingredients – flour, bicarb, spices and zest – and then stir in the butter mixture. If it’s too stiff then you can use some orange juice to bring it together.
  4. Lightly flour a surface and roll out the dough to about 5mm. Then start cutting. I used stars but any shape will work. Gingerbread hold their shape really well so suit being cut into shapes.
  5. Ideally put the shapes in the fridge for about 20 minutes before baking for 8-10 minutes. You want them to be going a little brown. They’ll harden outside of the oven as they cool.
  6. You can decorate these if you like but I tend to just want to eat them.


Saturday 17 January 2015

Blueberry Buckwheat Pancakes


Well it’s been a while since I posted but that hasn’t been because I haven’t been baking (I write this as if I think there are loads of people waiting with baited breath for my next post). Anyway I’m going to churn through the recipes I have done mainly because I use my blog as an online recipe book to consult if I’m food shopping.

So for something recent. I’m attempting to give up gluten. Mainly because I suspect I’m mildly allergic (yay for someone who likes baking). Now, I don’t really like recipes that attempt to do something with an alternative ingredient when really only wheat based flour will do. I think – you’ve given up gluten, just live without it. However I suspect that if you haven’t eaten gluten for years a cauliflower pizza base could start to be attractive. I’m not there yet. So I’m hunting around for things that work in their own right.

So on to breakfast. I’m been making overnight porridge with chia seeds during the week but at the weekend you want something a bit special. The Thew has been away doing various athletic endeavours so I’ve been left to my own devices. These have involved dancing round the flat to Uptown Funk, going out for pub lunches with my Kindle for company and making these.

Ingredients
120g buckwheat flour
Sprinkle of cinnamon (as much or little as you like)
Pinch of salt
½ tsp baking powder
1 egg
140ml milk
Blueberries - optional (or any berry)
Streaky bacon (cooked up and crispy)
Maple syrup

  1. Mix the flour, cinnamon, salt and baking powder together.
  2. Mix the egg into the mix.
  3. Using a fork slowly mix the wet into the dry to create a batter. The mix in the blueberries (as there is no sugar in the batter these add sweetness).
  4. Melt so butter (or oil) in a frying pan and dollop tablespoons of the mixture in. This makes about six of that size so I make half and keep the batter. (It is quite happy in the fridge for up to a week – leave the blueberries out if doing this).
  5. Fry for a couple of minutes on each side – the blueberries will hiss and pop but ignore them.
  6. Serve in a stack with the bacon on top and pour on that maple syrup.