Friday 31 October 2014

Quick and Easy Cupcakes

A quick and easy cupcake recipe. It's the sort of thing I always have the ingredients for if the girls want to do baking. This one was passed on to me, but I believe that it is Nigella's recipe:



Cake ingredients

  • 125g unsalted butter
  • 125g caster sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 125g SR flour
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2-3 tbsp milk


Method

  • Preheat oven to 180 degrees (fan).
  • Blitz all the ingredients until smooth, except the milk, with electric mixer or in a food processor.
  • Add milk slowly until the mixture is a soft droopy consistency.
  • Spoon into cupcake cases until they are a third full.
  • Cook till risen, golden, bouncy and if you put a skewer in it comes out clean. (about 15 minutes)


Butter cream icing

  • 150g icing sugar
  • 75g creamed butter
  • A little vanilla extract
  • A little milk if it's too firm


Method

  • Blitz all ingredients together with your food mixer until it's smooth.
  • Add colouring if you like.
  • Spread over your cakes.
  • Add toppings etc.

Friday 24 October 2014

Fudge Slices - Traybake

When I was about 17 my after school job was looking after two early teenage girls. I would go to their house everyday after school until either their mum or step dad got home.

My little sister, Janis would also come to their house so that I could look after her too when my mum was working.

On Wednesdays we had half days at school, finishing before lunch. I got into the habit of buying Janis and I some lunch from a deli that was up the road from my school. We would have a roll each and a fudge slice. Their fudge slices were lovely. I don't think I had ever had them before and I don't really remember seeing them since until I was working in a school in Aberdeenshire.

At Mintlaw Academy, Aberdeenshire, the Business Studies classes would have to come up with an Enterprise Initiative every year. One year they came up with the idea of creating and publishing a recipe book. They invited all the members of staff to contribute a favourite recipe or two. I was very much into savoury cooking then, and  I added a Chinese recipe that I loved.

What was great about the book was that the recipes were tried and tested by home cooks. A lot of the recipes were family favourites, probably passed down from previous generations. Included amongst them was a recipe for fudge slices.

It had probably been 15 years since I had a fudge slice from the Deli in Currie, just up the road from the High School. But I thought these ones were a pretty good likeness. Regardless of whether or not they were the same, they were bloody delicious!

I've made this recipe A LOT, my mum now makes it and I've passed it on to Janis and my sister in law. I don't know anyone who doesn't like these. Elizabeth and Rebecca got one in her their lunches this week, and Jeff took some in to his work for his birthday.



I've made my own tweaks to get them just right.

Ingredients

  • 4oz soft margarine
  • 2tbsp sugar
  • 2tbsp golden syrup
  • 1 small tin of condensed milk
  • 9oz biscuits blitzed in the food processor
  • 1 pack of milk chocolate, melted to spread on top


Method

  • Melt the marg, sugar, golden syrup and condensed milk in a pan over a low heat.
  • Bring it to a gentle boil.
  • Let it boil for at least 5 minutes, until the colour has darkened to a caramel colour.
  • Take it off the heat and beat it with the electric beaters until it has thickened - when it's coming away from the sides of the pan. This will probably take about 5 minutes.
  • Add in the biscuits and mix well. The mixture should all come together like a dough.
  • Press and spread the mixture into a baking tray. I use a 30cm/20cm deep tray. I also line it in advance with clingfilm so that the edges are nice and smooth and it's easy to lift out of the tray to chop up when it's set.
  • Spread the melted chocolate evenly over the top.
  • Put it in the fridge to set.
  • Cut it into squares or rectangles, whatever takes your fancy. Small might be best because they are very morish!

Friday 17 October 2014

Candy Cake

I started thinking about having a Pinata type cake for Jeff's birthday after a conversation with Elizabeth about what Pinatas were. When I looked on the internet at other cakes like this, most seemed to cook the cakes in normal cake tins and hollow out the middle. I thought they often looked a bit messy once you cut into them.

On a recent shopping trip Jeff pointed out a cake tin where bakes the cake with a hollowed out shape of a heart in the middle to fill with mouse or ice cream or a different cake. He had seen it being used on Nerdy Nummies. I thought this would do the trick. So I ordered this one from amazon.



I also googled some images of cakes to get ideas for decorating the outside of the cake. I liked the idea of having sweeties on the outside but I didn't want it to be over the top, or too like the "I can't believe you made that cake".

And this is what I ended up with:


I had to redo my cake because there was not enough cake mixture to rise above the shape of the heart inside. And second time round I ran out of eggs, so I have a mixture of large and medium eggs. But the cake was really fluffy and moist that I might do the same next time!

Cake Ingredients:
  • 375g soft unsalted butter
  • 375g caster sugar
  • 3 large eggs, 3 medium eggs, one egg yolk (6 large eggs will probably do)
  • 375g SR flour
  • 2 tsp of baking powder
  • 1tsp vanilla extract
  • 3/4 tbsp milk
Method:
  • Preheat oven to 160 degrees
  • Grease the two baking trays
  • Mix all the ingredients except the milk together in the food mixer. I mixed them for about 5 minutes until the mixture was fluffy and airy. Then I slowly added milk until the mixture was a soft drooping consistency.
  • Add the mixture to the tins so that they cover the shape of the heart.
  • Cook till it golden and the sponge springs back when touched. About 25-30 minutes.
  • Leave them in the tins for a few minutes before popping them out of the tins and placing on a cooling wire.
When they cooled down I added sweets to the bottom layer of the cake. I used Haribo Starmix and some Tesco Jelly Beans. They had to be raised above the level of the cake because of the top half of the heart. I did not add enough. I felt that I could have tried to put a lot more in.


I would have liked there to have been more of a spilling out effect when the cake was cut. There probably would have been had there just been the jelly beans inside. Or if I had gone with smarties or skittles or something.


When served it didn't look very elegant because of the hole. But the taste made up for that.

Then I glazed the cake with some runny apricot jam, because I know that can be good for keeping the cake from crumbling when you add the icing.

Vanilla Buttercream Icing Ingredients (from Cupcakes from the Primrose Bakery)
  • 110g soft butter
  • 60ml semi-skimmed milk
  • 1tsp vanilla extract
  • 500g icing sugar
Method
  • Mix butter, milk, vanilla extract and half the icing sugar together until the mixture is smooth. Then gradually add in the rest of the icing sugar.
I spread half the buttercream icing onto the cake. Then put it in the fridge for about 20 minutes.
Then I spread the other half on.
I pressed skittles around the outside and put lolly pops on the top. Of course the lolly pops sang into the hollow of the heart, so more sweets inside would probably have given them more resistance then they could have stood up a little higher. But overall I was very pleased with the result. So was Jeff. And the girls actually went "wow" when they saw it.




Friday 10 October 2014

Food from the Magic Faraway Tree, Toffee Shocks

I've been trying to think of new ideas for the blog. And one idea was to do something with a book theme.

I read The Faraway Tree books (Enid Blyton) to the girls (well, mainly Elizabeth) a while back and they went down well. I think the repetitive nature of the books is great for younger children, it almost feels like a book of short stories, one for each land at the top of the tree! Elizabeth got to know the characters really quickly even if she didn't always remember what had happened last time in the story.

So I'm going to try to reproduce some of the food that is described in the books.

Elizabeth picked the Toffee Shocks to do first.

"Jo... munched a peculiar piece of toffee which seemed to get bigger in his mouth instead of smaller... Jo's toffee was now so big that he couldn't say a word. Then it suddenly exploded in his mouth, went to nothing, and left him feeling most astonished."

Well, as far as I know it's not possible to make toffees that get bigger and then explode into nothing, but I did decide to experiment with toffee and popping candy.

I followed this recipe for making the toffee. To be honest, it covers Bessie's homemade toffee description. It is the "best, sweetest, chewiest toffee" on it's own.

The problem with popping candy is that it's not so effective once it's been exposed to humidity and moisture. So I tried a few things.
  • a corner of popping candy at the bottom of the baking tray, so the toffee covered it
  • pressing the popping candy on the top of the set toffee
  • squishing some toffee flat then putting the popping candy on top, and rolling it up so that the candy is in the middle of the toffee
The last method seemed to be the best one. Although the candy doesn't pop as well as it would, I think that it gives a degree of *shock* to the toffees. Plus it wasn't an unpleasant texture in the toffee and it added a variety of flavour to the toffees.


My first attempt at making a 3D tree. This is something I will develop for the girls to do themselves, with a template. Next time I will use cardboard instead of paper!


The toffee shocks were the ones wrapped in baking paper. The unwrapped ones are the *Bessie* versions mentioned above.

Coming soon, Pop Biscuits and Google Buns.

I would love some comments, suggestions or ideas. Or just say hello to let me know you've been reading.

Friday 3 October 2014

Minnie's Empire

Elizabeth suggested making some Minnie Mouse biscuits to take to the childminder's house for their snack.


I made them the same way as I made the Strawberry Empires, using melted chocolate for the ears and face.

I have some black fondant icing and I know they would have looked better if I had used that instead of the chocolate, but I want the biscuits to taste nice, and I think too much fondant icing is just too sweet. Plus I know chocolate and plain icing go really well with this biscuit.