Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2013

Spicy Fruity Breadiness

I'm a bit erratic with recipes.

There are some dishes which I use the same recipe year in, year out like my coveted lemon meringue recipe, the family belgian biscuits, Nigella's snickerdoodles etc. Others - I try a variety of different recipes, never really getting emotionally attached to them. Easter Buns (Hot Cross Buns) fall into the latter category. 

The key Easter traditions in my family as I was growing up were that we had Hot Cross Buns on Good Friday and then a visit from the Easter Bunny on Easter Sunday. I don't know whether this was really the case or not, but in my memory those were the only days that we consumed those particular food items - none of this having a bit of munch from January onward. Even as a teenager I was very strict with this and refused to consume Easter Eggs before Easter Sunday! But I digress....

Hot Cross Buns on Good Friday, especially making them myself, is a tradition that I still love. Admittedly, I do gobble up some store bought ones in the lead-up as I really do like the spicy fruity breadiness of them. However, whenever possible I make them myself on Good Friday. 

Some years it is with the help of an electric bread maker, some years it is with a recipe that only has one rising. This year is a repeat performance of last year's experiment with a multipurpose bread recipe that I received from a friend's mother years ago. I loved them - I hope you do to! 

Happy Easter to you all!


Traditional Hot Cross Buns
(Based on Lynn Hutchison's Chatham Island Bread)

1/4 C Sugar
2 t Salt
20g Butter – melted
500ml Warm Water
1/4 C Milk Powder
1 T Cinnamon
1 T Mixed Spice
14g Dried Yeast
1 egg – lightly beaten
1/4 C Currants
1/4 C Candied Peel (can be ommitted)
1/2 C Sultanas
750g Flour
8g Bread Improver


Mix together Sugar, Salt, Butter, Water, Milk Powder, Spices and Yeast. Leave in a warm place for 10-20 mins (until frothy). Mix in the egg, the fruit and finally the remaining ingredients, turning onto the bench and kneading until the dough is elastic (about 10 -15 mins - when you press down with your fingers, the dough should bounce back). Pop into a bowl that is at least twice the depth of the dough's volume. Leave somewhere warm to rise until doubled. Punch down and shape into buns and place into a well greased baking pan, just touching each other. Leave to rise again. Once doubled, you can pipe crosses with a paste made of flour and water, or you can cut crosses into the top with the tip ofa sharp knife. Preheat oven to 210C. Bake until well browned and the buns sound hollow when tapped (sorry - I never recorded a time as I always do it by feel). Turn the oven off and glaze buns with sugar syrup (1 part sugar dissolved in 1 part water) and return to the oven for 5-10 minutes.


Chocolate Hot Cross Buns
3/8 C Sugar
2 t Salt
20g Butter - melted
500ml Warm Water
1/4 C Milk Powder
2 t (rounded) Cinnamon
1/2 t Ground Nutmeg
14g Dried Yeast
1 egg – lightly beaten
750g Flour
1/4 C Cocoa - sifted
8g Bread Improver
1 C Chocolate Chips (whichever strength that suits you)


Proceed as per Traditional Hot Cross Buns, but don't add the chocolate chips until after the first proving as they tend to melt.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Recipes of the Mystical Kind

I'm not entirely certain of what age I started baking.

I know it started with simple jobs like pressing down biscuits (cookies) with a floured fork or a recycled thread spool to give them an interesting pattern, but at some point I was allowed to do my own thing, unassisted. 


I suspect learning to bake well was something akin to osmosis. All the women around me baked very well and were always doing it. And they always encouraged “helpers”. Maybe my tendency of being somewhat literal helped as well. I wasn't inclined to do things that weren't stated in recipes. As an example, when I was 12 or 13 I was babysitting some children and the mother allowed me to bake some biscuits in her absence (clearly this wasn't in the Noughties). When she got home I told her that I had put the leftover dough in the freezer. When asked why there was leftover dough, I responded very matter-of-factly that the recipe had stated that it made 24 biscuits and consequently there were leftovers. I guess I must have made them quite tiny as well! 

 

As time progressed, I started collecting recipes. The year I turned 13, my Aunt gave me a blank recipe book so that I could do this. However, the little red book wasn't always on hand when I was procuring recipes. Sometimes I would take them down over the phone, other times I would be visiting somewhere and would end up with a scrap of paper. Because baking (and cooking in general) was somewhat formulaic to me, I ended up just jotting down ingredients and important details such as temperatures. I assumed that that the “method” would be clear to me just by looking at the ingredients. 


Just recently one of these oddly transcribed recipes has shown up. Judging by the memo cube paper that it is written on and the look of my handwriting, this one goes back a good 20 years – maybe even further. What is interesting is that I didn't even bother saying what the recipe was for. 


In the interests of passing down some useful recipes to my children, I figure it is probably a good thing to flesh these “skeleton” recipes out. This particular recipe seemed like a good place to start. 
  • So – what is the recipe for? I figure it is a chocolate cake. 
  • Why does it have two measures of milk? I have absolutely no idea, but I suspect one is for dissolving the baking soda in. 
  • Are the ingredients listed in order of use? Don't know – we'll soon find out!

Having decided this is a cake recipe, I then needed to decided whether I would use the creaming method or the sponge cake method where you whisk the eggs and sugar together (can you tell I don't know the proper name for that one). I chose the latter and knew as soon as I added the sugar to the eggs that this was the wrong decision. So if I make it again, here is the recipe that I will use:

Light Chocolate Cake 
2 cups Sugar 
225g Butter (softened) 
3 Eggs 
3/4 cup Milk 
2 cups Flour 
2 tablespoons Cocoa 
2 teaspoons Baking Powder 
1/2 cup Milk 
1 teaspoon Baking Soda 

Cream butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Beat in eggs, one at a time. Sift flour, cocoa and baking powder together and add alternately with the milk. Dissolve the baking soda in the second measure of milk and gently stir into the batter. Bake in a prepared pan (probably 20cm/8” - I don't know for sure as I didn't do my test bake in cake pan) 
Bake at 175ºC / 350ºF for 30 minutes or until done. 


If you do decide to mix it a different way (l actually melted the butter in my previous attempt), don't worry – the results are still quite acceptable.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Voula Made Me Do It

And the “Voula” in question will know exactly who she is.  

Why, oh why, do people ask for trusted recipes of yummy things that I like? And the yummy thing in question today is VERY YUMMY : GINGER KISSES

For the uninitiated, Ginger Kisses are a bit like those American Whoopee Pies that are all the rage at the moment – a nice gingery, cakey sandwich filled with a delightfully light and creamy filling. Yum, yum, yum!

So ….
…after very little encouragement or coercion, I decided to whip up a batch of Ginger Kisses before feeding the little people their dinner. 


I vaguely recall using a recipe from the NZ cooking “bible” the Edmonds Cookbook back in my younger years. I currently have two editions of this book and upon investigation neither of them contains a particularly satisfactory recipe. In fact, one of them doesn’t have a Ginger Kisses recipe at all. Go figure! (And so I wonder, yet again, what happened to my third copy of this all important book). 

Not to fear – I have another New Zealand wonder called Ladies, a Plate: Traditional Home Baking by Alexa Johnston. The all important Ginger Kiss recipe contained therein looked particularly luscious, so I decided to give it a burl (Voula, I consider this to be “taking one for the team”). 

The recipe which, very conveniently can be located at this link, is very simple and on the whole, uses what I would consider to be standard store cupboard ingredients. 

In keeping with the whole “traditional home baking” thing, I decided to spoon my mix onto the trays rather than piping them in smart regimental fashion. I like that whole rustic/imperfect look for what goes into my biscuit tins. 
 

They do spread a bit so next time (and there truly will be a next time) I will put a bit more space between them on the tray. 

Even without the filling the fast fingered thieving children loved them. In my opinion the filling is a little too sweet – perhaps measuring the vanilla a bit more carefully would have helped that, but the added ginger gives it a lovely kick. 


The verdict: definitely worth another shot. Mmmmmmmmmmm 

A final note to Voula:
If you want a taste test you had better get across town very quickly because I don’t think they are going to last long!

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Bake-arazzi

Housework that needs to be done:
  • Washing and Folding of Laundry
  • Put Away Clean Dishes
  • Tidy Living Areas
  • Mop Floors
  • Dusting
  • and as for that Desk! Well .....


But instead of doing that.....

I have been doing a bit of baking. Realistically a bit of baking isn't entirely unusual for me, but I tend to keep it reasonably simple unless I am making a celebration cake. Today I have pushed the boat out a bit as I am taking dessert over to the in-laws as they have family visiting from overseas. It's always nice to do something a little bit nice for a special occasion.

Filling the mini loaf tins


So the menu today involved Nigella Lawson's Mini Lime Syrup Sponges (available in her book "How to be a Domestic Goddess") and a chocolate/raspberry profiterole concoction I fondly refer to as "Chocolate Bards" - more on that another time.

Smoothing out the batter


Anyhow, the other thing worth noting is that Miss L (my darling 3 year old) is now the proud owner of a lovely purple camera - no other colour would do, of course! (Thank goodness the shop had a reasonably priced purple camera!!!) As soon as the battery was charged she was up and snapping. As I was baking there was some serious paparazzi action going on so today you are getting a few shots of a 3 year old's perspective of baking activities.


All ready for the oven


As you can see, she's not overly concerned about things like focus or composition, but I love how she likes getting right in on the action!

Miss L likes order (although it is not always easy to tell, given the trail of destruction she leaves in her wake). You can often find her rearranging the carefully merchandised displays in stores. Most of the time everything gets lined up in some regimented order that makes sense to her. So, when she realised my photo tent was out and there was baking to be photographed, off she went to set up a "shoot". I was delighted when I saw my chocolate choux buns arranged in the classic Miss L line up! 

Chocolate Choux Buns all in a row


I wasn't quite so delighted with the how the buns appeared in the resulting photograph. Thankfully I had taken my own pics of the finished product.

Choc Raspberry Profiteroles


And we all indulged happily ever after
.
Nigella's Mini Lime Syrup Sponges