Monday, February 6, 2012

Christmas stars

This is the traditional gift that we bake and give to our neighbours around Christmas time. It's a combination of plain shortbread and some spicy biscuits cut into variously sized stars. Then we wrap it in some pretty cellophane and tie the bundle up with a ribbon. Recipes are oldies-but-goodies out of the Edmonds cookbook (shortbread) and Alison Holst's big red book (spicy biscuits).

Shortbread
(to be inserted once I find my Edmonds cookbook again!)

Spicy butter biscuits
225 g butter
1 c brown sugar
1 egg
2 c flour
2 Tbsp cinnamon
1 Tbsp mixed spice

Cream softened (but not melted) butter in the mixer. Add remaining ingredients, mix to combine, then form into a roll 70 mm thick. Roll in plastic and refrigerate until firm.

Roll mixture out on floured bench and cut into desired shapes (like stars!) using cookie cutters. Bake at 180 degrees Celcius for 8-10 minutes until biscuits darken slightly. When cool, transfer from tray to an airtight container.

Rice paper rolls with Vietnamese dipping sauce

From way back at the November Bake Club, this is a version of the little rice paper rolls I made. This recipe suggests BBQ roast duck (which you can buy already cooked from Peking House restaurant on Kent Terrace) but I usually just use cooked chicken instead. This recipe came from the SBS website.

Peking duck and hoisin rice-paper rolls recipe

Created by


Ingredients

50 g cellophane noodles
½ roast duck, flesh removed and thinly sliced
75 g (½ cup) chopped roasted peanuts
2 tbsp chopped coriander
1 small carrot, finely grated
1 tbsp hoisin sauce
12 Vietnamese mint leaves, shredded
12 large rice-paper wrappers

Preparation

Place noodles in a large bowl and cover completely with boiling water. Stand for 5 minutes to soften, and then drain well.

Place noodles, duck meat, peanuts, coriander, carrot, hoisin sauce and Vietnamese mint in a large bowl and mix well. Season to taste.

Fill a large bowl with hot tap water, then soak the rice-paper wrappers one at a time until softened. Remove carefully and drain on absorbent paper or a tea towel. Lay the wrappers out flat, then place the filling on the bottom centre of each softened wrapper. Roll end up over filling, fold in the sides and continue rolling up to the top.

Serve with Vietnamese Dipping Sauce

Ingredients

2 tsp grated palm sugar
2 tbsp lime juice
60 ml (¼ cup) fish sauce
1 small red chilli, sliced
1 tbsp water

Preparation

Dissolve the sugar in lime juice. Add the fish sauce, chilli and water. Allow the flavours to infuse for 30 minutes before using.

Recipe from Everyday Cooking by Allan Campion and Michele Curtis with photographs by Greg Elms. Published by Hardie Grant Books.


Sunday, February 5, 2012

Candied orange peel

Well, after my nightmare day of flop cooking in January 2012, this was about the only recipe that flew! A great use for the left-over peel when the family are churning through the oranges in the warm weather.

4 oranges
3 cups sugar
1 cup water
sugar (for rolling them in) or chocolate (for dipping)

Harvest the peel from the oranges leaving a clean pith. I usually score each orange in half and then half again, then peel the orange quarter-by-quarter. Then slice into long strips of peel about 1/2 cm wide.

Place peels in a large saucepan and cover with cold water. Heat on high until boiling. Pour off the water. Repeat twice more.

Combine sugar and water in the saucepan and bring to boil over high heat for a couple of minutes. Add peels and reduce heat to simmer. Simmer until peels are translucent (30 minutes or longer).

Remove peels from syrup and roll in sugar if desired, and set on rack to dry (4-5 hours minimum or overnight). Work fast when taking peels out of syrup!

Once the peel is dry, you can dip them in melted dark chocolate and place on foil, wax paper, or a baking sheet to dry.

If you want to see some fantastic step-by-step photos of the process, check out Jennifer Yu's food blog "Use Real Butter".


Friday, January 27, 2012

Chocolate & cherry torta di nonna

by Celia Harvey from Cuisine magazine (issue #150)
Serves: 8Torta della Nonna ('grandma' s cake') is often made with a ricotta custard and pine nuts, but to refine its rustic nature a little I have replaced these components with a chocolate custard.

You could use sliced plums or peaches in place of the cherries

Sweet pastry
100g unsalted butter, cubed
300g flour
pinch of salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
100g sugar
1 egg
1 egg yolk
Butter and line a 24cm springform tin with baking paper.
Place the butter, flour, salt, baking powder and sugar in a food processor and pulse until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add the egg and yolk then pulse until the dough just comes together. Turn out and press the mixture together with your fingers – it doesn’t have to be too smooth.
Using your fingertips, gently press the pastry over the base and up the sides of the tin, working quickly so that the dough doesn’t become too warm. It is meant to be a rustic-looking tart shell, so don’t worry too much about making it perfect. Refrigerate while you are making the chocolate cream.
For the chocolate cream
150g caster sugar
4 eggs
3 tablespoons flour
500ml full-cream milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract or brandy
200g 70% dark chocolate, coarsely chopped
200g fresh cherries, stoned
Preheat the oven to 170°C. In a bowl, whisk the sugar and eggs together until thick and creamy, then whisk
in the flour.
Bring the milk to the boil in a saucepan then slowly pour it into the egg mixture, whisking well to combine. Stir in the vanilla then return the mixture to the saucepan and place over low heat. Add the chopped chocolate and cook, stirring, until the mixture thickens enough to coat the back of the spoon. It will thicken quickly, so take care to whisk constantly and keep an eye on it.
Pour the thickened custard into the chilled tart shell. Sprinkle the cherries over the custard then bake for 45 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely in the tin before carefully removing and cutting into slices.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

January 2012 - Almond Fingers

Great Bake Club today thanks ladies! Thanks heaps for hosting Julie :)

This is from Alexa Johnston's Ladies, A Plate - Traditional Home Baking.

Ingredients
115g flour
1/4 t baking powder
pinch salt
55g butter
115g sugar
35g ground almonds
1 egg, separated
1/4 t almond essence
60g icing sugar
40g chopped/slivered/flaked almonds

Method
  1. Sift the flour, bakingpowder and salt into a bowl and rub in the butter until it is well incorporated.
  2. Add the sugar and ground almonds and mix to a stiff paste with the egg yolk and 1-2 tsp of cold water if necessary. If you liek the favour of allmond essence, add about 1/4 tsp with the egg yolk.
  3. Make the paste into a rectangle, wrap in waxed paper and chill for about 10 minutes. Roll out on a floured board to a rectange about 6mm thick. (I lined a cake tin with baking paper, and pressed the paste out into the bottom of that instead of rolling it, then lifted the baking paper out and put it flat on a baking sheet.)
  4. Beat the egg white until stiff and then beat in the sifted icing sugar in spoonfuls to make a spreadable meringue. Dollop it onto the biscuit base and spread it out thinly to cover the whole surface - a small palette knkife is good for this. Sprinkle evenly with the additional almonds. Now a tip from Lois Daish: Leave the whole thing on the bench for an hour. The surface will dry a little and make cutting less of a sticky job.
  5. Turn on the oven and preheat to 180C.
  6. Use a sharp knife to cut the mixture into fingers, wiping the knife blade between each cut, then carefully lift the biscuits with a palette knife onto the prepared baking tray. Leave small gaps between them.
  7. Bake for 20-25 minutes, rotating the tray after 10 minutes. The meringue will be pale gold, the almonds slightly toasted and the almond pastry nicely browned underneath.
  8. Cool on a wire rack and store airtight. Makes about 32.