Friday, 29 August 2014

Chocolate Cake in a Mug

This should have been a photo of the cake but it all went rather quickly at work

Yes you read that right. Cake you make in a mug. It’s not a new thing but I’ve finally tried it and it’s a success. The main thing is eating it when it’s warm as it doesn’t cool down well. You’ll also need a really big mug as it does rise up and can spill over or instead just divide the mixture between two mugs. 

This obviously isn’t going to be the best chocolate cake in the world but it isn’t half bad for something that comes out of the microwave.  You could also make it in a bowl and spoon it out to have with ice cream.

Ingredients

4 tbsp self-raising flour
4 tbsp sugar
3 tbsp cocoa powder
1 egg
3 tbsp vegetable oil
3 tbsp chocolate hazelnut spread (basically Nutella)
3 tbsp milk
Optional – squirty cream 

1.    Put all the ingredient in a mug and whisk together with a fork. Be sure the get everything mixed well.
2.    If making one mug put into the microwave on a plate and nuke for 2-3 minutes on your highest setting.
3.    If making two then pour half the mixture into another mug and nuke each one individually for 1 ½ - 2 minutes.
4.    Top with cream if you want.

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Bacon and Chocolate Chip Cookies (Primal/Gluten Free/Dairy Free)



Primal – sounds fairly basic and maybe a little bit cool huh? It’s apparently a diet. Not a ‘less not eat anything until we need to pass out and then have a small piece of cheese’ diet but one that looks at what we evolved to eat. Or something like that. It’s probably like the Paleo diet and the Caveman diet and anything else that basically doesn’t let you eat anything fun or anything that was invented in France – French bread, pastries, macaroons, croissants (some of these things may not have been invented in France but I can’t be bothered to research in this for the sake of this). 

I’m slightly suspicious of these kinds of restrictions on what you eat, mainly because it stops me eating chocolate and bread. The Thew follows a Paleo-esque diet. He eats an incredibly healthy diet so he can drink lots of alcohol and maintain fitness. Currently he is spending most evenings upside down in a handstand position against one of our walls. Hey – whatever works for you! 

My good friend Claire shared this recipe with me and, while I’m not sure about trying to recreate recipes using paleo/primal ingredients in place of good old butter and sugar, it was intriguing enough for me to give them a try. The original method I read is a bit lacking on details and the one thing you need to do with these kind of recipes is a good methodology if you have any hope in hell of making something that looks like the ‘real’ thing. Many people at work liked these, and they are ok, but I’d just rather eat a chocolate chip cookie made with brown sugar and wheat flour. I’m not sure what the bacon adds, other than a bit of salty taste, but I guess it’s to add protein. Anyway, if this is your thing, go knock yourself out! 

Ingredients

5 rashers of streaky bacon (I used M&S)
60ml of maple syrup (plus 125ml – see below)
2 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
125ml coconut oil (make sure it’s fairly well melted so room temp or melt it first)
125ml maple syrup
1 tsp bicarb of soda
1 tsp salt
300g ground almonds
200g dark chocolate chips 

1.    Preheat the oven the 190°C/GM 5.
2.    Dip the bacon in the maple syrup and bake for about 25 minutes. It may need longer. Put them on foil to save mess. Turn half way through and ignore how burnt the foil gets from the run off maple syrup. Cool, ideally on fresh foil or greaseproof paper. They are very sticky! Chop into bits.
3.    Whisk the eggs, vanilla, coconut oil and 125ml maple syrup together in a bowl. You want to goof frothy mixture as the eggs will add air to the mixture and help keep them light.
4.    In a large bowl mix the bicarb, salt and almonds. Add the egg mixture and whisk together.
5.    Add the chocolate chips and bacon bits stirring to incorporate.
6.    The put heaped teaspoons of mixture on a baking tray, leaving space between them. Flatten them out with the back of a spoon or spatula so they resemble a cookie shape.
7.    Bake for 11-12 minutes – you want them turning golden brown. Cool completely before serving.

Makes about 30.

N.B. I made these afterwards without the bacon and they worked well. The bacon definitely gives a good savoury/salty edge but it's not necessary.
 

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Enthusiasm Flapjacks


Sometimes I need to clear out stuff from my baking shelves so flapjacks are an ideal way to use up ingredients. The quantities below are a guide so feel free to experiment. 

The name comes from the most wonderful Lorna who, when I lived with her, used to make Enthusiasm Soup. So called because you put everything you've got into it.   

Ingredients
250g butter
200g brown sugar (or any sugar)
Good dollop of golden syrup or honey
200-300g mixture of dried fruit, nuts, seeds
400-500g oats 

1.    Preheat the oven to 180°C/GM4.
2.    Melt the butter in a large saucepan. While melting add the sugar and syrup/honey. Mix it all together.
3.    Take off the heat and add the fruit/nut/seed mixture and stir well. Then add the oats, stirring again. You don't want a wet mixture at the end just enough to coat everything to create a sticky mess.
4.    Line a large tin and tip the mixture in, smoothing out before putting in the oven for 20 minutes.
5.    Cool and cut into desired sized pieces. Let it cool properly as the butter need to solidify a bit at bind it all together.