Sunday, April 29, 2012

Apple Custard Cake

While I was rooting around my pantry cupboard looking for some pasta, I came across a tub of custard powder. It's been in there, unused, since Christmas time. It's not often we eat custard, so I started to consider what else I might use it for. A quick Google search offered much food for thought. From tarts to pies, I found plenty of inspiration!

After some consideration, I settled on an Apple and Custard Teacake recipe from a fellow blogger: http://tonicoward.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/apple-custard-teacake.html. It's an American blog, so the first thing I needed to do was to convert the recipe from cups, into grams. This reminded me that I really must buy myself some cups, so I can make American recipes more easily in future!




















Here's the ingredients in grams:

For the Cake:
150g butter
168g caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla
2 eggs
312g self-raising flour
300ml milk
3 apples, peeled cored and cut into 1cm pieces
1tbsp demerera sugar 
300ml custard (ingredients and recipe below) 

For the Custard:
2 Tbs custard powder
55g caster sugar
250g milk
20g butter
2 tsp vanilla

And here's how I did it, step-by-step:




1. Make the custard







2. Cream the butter, sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy






3. Whisk in the eggs (add a tbsp of flour, to prevent curdling)






4. Whisk until well combined






5. Spread half the cake mixture into a lined and greased 20cm square cake tin







(the remaining half of the cake mixture)







6. Spread the custard over the cake mixture






7.  Top with 2/3rds of the apple slices







8. Spread the remaining cake mix into the tin






9. Top with the remaining apple slices, and the Demerara sugar






10. Bake it in the oven for (in my case) 45 minutes. The recipe states 1.5 hours, but as you can see, mine was already a little crisp after just 45 mins!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Beef Strogonoff

This week I got some lovely, thin cut sirloin steak on my weekly food shop from Waitrose. I contemplated making a stir fry, but finally decided that what with all this rain and dreary weather, I really needed something more comforting, more creamy. I settled on Beef Stroganoff from BBC Good Food.

It's an easy recipe, it doesn't call for too many ingredients, and I happened to have all of them in my fridge or cupboard. Once everything was chopped, sliced, crushed and measured, it was simple and quick to sizzle it all up in my big frying pan. After around 10 minutes it was all done and on the table.

It looked good, but it was a little disappointingly bland, even though I seasoned generously and went a little overboard with the paprika. Would I make it again? No I wouldn't, I like my meals more flavourful than this was, and I'm not sure there was much I could do to give it more punch.

BBC Good Food - Beef Stroganoff

Monday, April 23, 2012

Chocolate Muffins (Adapted from Hummingbird Bakery recipe)

Another week, another cake to bake! Usually, around 6pm on a Sunday afternoon, I start to ponder the contenders for this weeks cake. I often find myself drawn to tried and tested options like Marble Cake, Lemon Drizzle and Chocolate Cocoa Brownies. But luckily I have you, reader, to motivate me to try something new.

Today, I whittled my shortlist down to Chocolate Muffins ala Hummingbird Bakery, a recipe that often tempts me with its delightful photography, but which, for some reason, I have never got around to trying until now.

So here goes. My experience with Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook recipes has thus far been disappointing. A past attempt to bake their stem ginger muffins (mmm... sounds like a surething, right?) resulted in an utterly depressing yield of lumpy, insipid and bin-worthy blobs of dough. So I was very careful this time to measure accurately, and follow the instructions very precisely (apart from dividing the recipe by two).

Chocolate Muffins (from Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook)

Firstly, I measured out all my ingredients. The recipe yields 12 muffins, but I only needed 5, so I divided the recipe by two.


First things first, I cracked one egg, into a jug with the sugar.


Next, I added the vanilla to the milk, in a separate beaker, and forgot to take a picture, sorry. Please imagine milk in a beaker.








Then, I whisked the eggs and sugar with my Kenwood hand whisk (godsend), for about 3 minutes.











I measured out the dry ingredients (flour, cocoa, salt and baking powder)in a bowl, ready for sifting.










Then I put them in the sieve...










... and sieved them.











Mix it all together, and you get a lovely chocolatey rich looking muffin batter. As always, be careful not to over stir muffin mixture, or they won't rise into those little mushroom domed wonders.







Into the muffin cases, and ready to bake!









I failed to take a photo of the finished product, but I will absolutely ask my other half to photograph one before he swipes the lot.

The final results were pleasing, and I'm happy to say trust in my Hunningbird Bakery cookbook has been restored. These were moist, yummy and chocolatey. Not at all dry, which is often the case with muffin recipes. Fantastic, I recommend you give them a go.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Chilli Con Carne + Cocoa

I received a recommendation recently to try a teaspoon of cocoa powder in my Chilli Con Carne, to give it extra depth.

I'd tried adding a block of chocolate before, but found my Chilli was much too sweet as a result.

This was a great tip however, the chocolate flavour added exactly the depth desired in a good Chilli Con Carne, but the bitterness of my 75% cocoa meant there was no unwanted sweetness.

Yum yum!

Leftovers for Lunch: Chicken and Mushroom Puff Pastry Pie

So, David Cameron "loves a hot pasty", but has introduced VAT @ 20% on these warm lunchbox treats nonetheless. For some, this may be cause for concern, perhaps it may even be the nudge you needed to start considering home-made alternatives?

Inspired, I set out to test a recipe that's been on my to-do list for a while: Chicken and Mushroom Puff Pie, from BBC Good Food.

Rarely does this happen, but I actually followed this recipe pretty precisely, and it turned out great.

All I did differently was:

1. Add 2 chopped leeks I had in the fridge, sliced thinly, and added to the pan just after the onions. Remember, be careful with leeks - unlike onions they do not benefit from browning.

2. Instead of making one large pie suitable for 4, I split it in two, and made one pie suitable for 2, and two personal pasties for (you guessed it) lunch the next day.

The main pie we ate for supper and it was delicious, rich and flavoursome. Surprisingly it wasn't too heavy either.

The pasties however, were not such a great success. i took a bit of a risk here, hoping that the puff pastry would survive being reheated in the microwave. Sadly, it resulted in warm, soggy, deflated and slightly rubbery pastry.

If I made this recipe again (and I would like to), I would make my pie for two, as I did here, but thin down the remaining mixture to make a delicious soup instead.