Saturday 9 June 2012

Crunchy Sausage rolls

These sausage rolls make a great evening snack whilst watching a movie. 


Ingredients


8 slices white Bread
100g grated Cheese
50g Softened Butter ( Not Melted )
Salt & Pepper
8 Chipolata sausages
1/2 teaspoon Mustard
16 Wooden cocktail sticks



Pre-heat 
oven gas mark 6 Elec 400°F 200°C



  • Remove crusts from the slice of bread
  • Roll each slice of the bread flat using a rolling pin
  • Mix together softened Butter, Cheese, Mustard, Salt & Pepper
  • Spread the mixture over each slice of bread
  • Roll a sausage up in each slice of bread and secure in two places.
  • Cut each roll in half making 2 pieces
  • Cover a baking sheet with baking parchment and place all of the sausage rolls onto the sheet.
  • Place in the oven and bake for 20-25 minutes.
Cool before serving



Pineapple & Cherry Ring cake

Pineapple & Cherry Ring cake


Pre-heat oven gas mark 4 Elec 350°F / 180°C


This cooks in a Kugelhopf pan 


Ingredients
432g can of crushed pineapple
200g Glace Cherries, Chopped
225g Self Raising flour
100g Butter
1 Egg
100g demerara Sugar
50g Icing Sugar
15g Crystallised Pineapple



  • Prepare the pan by greasing & flouring 
  • Drain pineapple, reserve juice, 
  • Chop 175g cherries saving 4 whole cherries for decoration
  • Sieve flour, add the butter and rub in butter until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
  • Beat egg 
  • Add sugar, crushed pineapple, chopped Cherries, egg & 60ml pineapple juice to rubbed in mixture. Stir Well to a soft sticky consistency.
  • Spoon the mixture into the prepared Kugelhopf pan.
  • Bake in the pre-heated oven for 50 - 55 minutes.
  • cool in the tin for 5 minutes and remove and cool on a wire rack.
  • Icing ~ Sieve icing sugar into a clean bowl, beat in 15ml of pineapple juice & drizzle over the cooled cake, cut the remaining 4 cherries in half and use to decorate with the crystallised pineapple.



Barbeque Spare Ribs

Gas Mark 5 Elec 375 °F / 190 °C

Ingredients
3lb Pork Ribs
6 tablespoons oil
2 medium onions diced
6fl oz water
3 tablespoons tomato ketchup
6 tablespoons brown sugar
6 tablespoons vinegar
3 teaspoons Worcester sauce
3 teaspoons Mustard
3 teaspoons Branston pickle
Salt, Pepper & Mixed herbs

  • Heat the oil in a pan, add the chopped onion & fry for 5 minutes until soft
  • Stir in the remaining ingredients & bring to the boil.
  • Arrange the ribs in an ovenproof dish, pour over half the sauce and cook uncovered for 45 minutes.
  • Remove from the oven & add the remaining sauce and cook for a further 30 minutes.
Serve with plain boiled rice.


MSK Lemon & Bergamot Pancakes



200g My Secret Kitchen Lemon & Bergamot Shortbread Mix
1 medium egg
110ml milk
Oil or butter (unsalted) for frying 

Put the Lemon & Bergamot Shortbread Mix into a bowl and make a well in the centre.  
Add the egg and milk into the well and whisk together thoroughly. 
Leave to stand for 10 minutes and whisk again. 
Heat a frying pan with a little oil (or unsalted butter) and using a dessert spoon, add spoonfuls of the batter into the hot pan.  
Cook for 1 -2 minutes until the edges start to curl and bubbles appear on the surface, turn and cook on the other side until fluffy and golden brown.  
Freeze any leftovers for emergency breakfast supply when you’re fed up of cereal or run out of milk!


Serve with MSK Maple Caramel Sauce,




My Secret Kitchen products are available via home parties & through the MSK blog / Website

Cherry Bakewell Loaf ~ My Secret Kitchen


Cherry Bakewell Bread


1 My Secret Kitchen Original Beer Bread Mix
50g ground almonds
50g caster sugar
50ml veg oil
2 tsp almond essence
100ml lemonade
100g glace cherries
125g icing sugar
20ml cold water


Preheat oven 190c and line a 1lb loaf tin.
Empty the bread mix into a bowl and add the ground almonds and sugar and stir together. 
Reserve 6 of the glace cherries and chop the rest in half and add to the dry ingredients and mix. 
Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients and add the vegetable oil, almond essence and lemonade. 
Mix thoroughly and quickly before putting in to the loaf tin and bake for 25 - 30 minutes. 
Make the icing by mixing the icing sugar with the water. When the loaf is cool, top with the icing and the reserved whole cherries.


This recipe came from the My secret Kitchen blog and I've now made it twice and it is absolutely beautiful, even after a week this was still beautifully fresh and luscious.

Cinnabon Cinnamon Rolls

Cinnabon Cinnamon Rolls. Photo by sutsenwu


Total Time:

Prep Time:
Cook Time:

1 hrs 10 mins

1 hrs
10 mins

Ingredients:


FILLING

ICING

Directions:

  1. 1
    For the rolls, dissolve the yeast in the warm milk in a large bowl.
  2. 2
    Add sugar, margarine salt, eggs, and flour, mix well.
  3. 3
    Knead the dough into a large ball, using your hands dusted lightly with flour.
  4. 4
    Put in a bowl, cover and let rise in a warm place about 1 hour or until the dough has doubled in size.
  5. 5
    Roll the dough out on a lightly floured surface, until it is approx 21 inches long by 16 inches wide.
  6. 6
    It should be approx 1/4 thick.
  7. 7
    Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  8. 8
    To make filling, combine the brown sugar and cinnamon in a bowl.
  9. 9
    Spread the softened margarine over the surface of the dough, then sprinkle the brown sugar and cinnamon evenly over the surface.
  10. 10
    Working carefully, from the long edge, roll the dough down to the bottom edge.
  11. 11
    Cut the dough into 1 3/4 inch slices, and place in a lightly greased baking pan.
  12. 12
    Bake for 10 minutes or until light golden brown.
  13. 13
    While the rolls are baking combine the icing ingredients.
  14. 14
    Beat well with an electric mixer until fluffy.
  15. 15
    When the rolls are done, spread generously with icing.
Read more: http://www.food.com/recipe/cinnabon-cinnamon-rolls-76864#ixzz1xJRbIb3O


Indulgent Eggnog

eggnog

Indulgent Eggnog Ingredients

6 eggs
2 + 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
2 cups whole milk
1 cup caster sugar
1/2 cup brandy
1/2 cup dark rum
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg, ground or grated (fresh is best)

Indulgent Eggnog Directions

Begin with pre-chilled ingredients for the greatest end result.
In a medium bowl, beat the eggs together hard until they're very frothy.
Add sugar and continue beating.
Sprinkle in nutmeg and vanilla.
Continue beating.
A little at a time, add in the whipping cream, continuing to beat.
Again, only a little at a time, beat in the milk.
Finally, beat in the rum and brandy.
Give your arms a break from all that beating by putting the eggnog in the fridge to chill for 1 or 2 hours.
Serve cold.

Steph's Chocolate Caramel Tarts

Chocolate Caramel Tarts

Tarts:


110g plain flour


1/2tsp baking powder


90g des. coconut


95g soft brown sugar


125g melted butter


1tsp vanilla

1) Mix all together and push into holes of mini muffin tins. Bake for 12 mins or until crisp 



and golden (180 deg)

Caramel filling - I just use carnation ready made caramel condensed milk 


2) Spoon into the cases and bake for further 5-8 minutes.

3) Cool for ten mins in tin, then remove to wire rack to cool

Chocolate topping:


200g dark choc - chopped


30 butter, cubed

4) Combine in bain marie and mix well, spread over top of caramel



The ideal pan for these is from Lakeland Mini Morsel pan

Jubilee Cupcakes

Jubilee Cupcakes
Chocolate cupcakes with White Chocolate Buttercream

The cupcakes are made from my favourite Chocolate Cupcake recipe which produces 16 very moist cupcakes.
Preheat Oven 170  °C/ 375 °F / Gas Mark 5


115g Good quality dark Chocolate
85g Unsalted Butter at Room temperature
2 large Eggs at Room temperature, Separated
175g Soft brown sugar
185g Plain Flour, Sifted
3/4 Teaspoon Baking Powder
3/4 Teaspoon Bicarbonate of Soda
Pinch of salt
250ml Semi skimmed milk at Room temperature
1 Teaspoon Vanilla Bean Paste.


  • Break the chocolate into pieces & melt, leave to cool
  • In a large bowl cream together the butter & sugar until the mixture is pale & smooth, which should take approx 4 minutes.
  • In a separate bowl and with clean beaters beat the egg yolks for a couple of minutes.
  • Add the egg yolks slowly to the creamed butter mixture and beat well.
  • Next add the cooled melted chocolate to the mixture & beat well.
  • In a separate bowl combine the flour, Baking Powder, Bicarbonate of Soda & salt.
  • Put the milk into a jug and add the vanilla Bean paste.
  • Add 1/3 of the flour mix to the chocolate mixture and beat well, pour in 1/3 of the milk and beat well, repeating until all of the ingredients are mixed well together.
  • In a clean bowl bowl with clean beaters, beat the egg whites until they form soft peaks, carefully fold into the batter using a metal spoon taking care not to beat the air out of the light mixture.
  • using an ice cream scoop fill the cupcake cases 2/3rd's full
  • Bang the tray firmly once on the worktop to ensure there are no large air pockets in the cakes & then place in the oven for 20 - 25 minutes
  • Do not open the oven until the timer sounds, check the cupcakes by inserting a cocktail stick into the centre of the cakes, if the stick comes out clean the cakes are ready, any moisture or stickiness on the cocktail stick and the cakes need returning to the oven.
  • Cool in the tin for 10 minutes and then place on a wire cooling rack until completely cool.

White Chocolate Buttercream

175g White Chocolate
22g Unsalted Butter at room temperature
1 tablespoon Semi skimmed Milk
1 teaspoon vanilla bean Paste
250g Sieved icing Sugar

  • Break the chocolate into pieces & melt, leave to cool
  • In a large mixing bowl beat the butter, milk, vanilla together, slowly add the sieved icing sugar and beat until thick and creamy.
  • Add the cooled melted chocolate and continue beating until you achieve the thickness for icing cupcakes, this should be stiff & spreadable.
If you are colouring icing i would suggest you use colouring paste added to the mixture with a cocktail stick, less is more, you don't want bright lurid coloured cupcakes.






Cake Pops ~ Jubilee

Jubilee cake pops 



Getting Started With Cake Pops 


Supplies book
The best i have found is one by Molly Bakes called cake pops, this is cheapest on Amazon. Isbn 9780224095228

Molly bakes also has a website and a facebook page, the designs and possibilites are endless. http://www.mollybakes.co.uk/

Cake sticks from ebay
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/170720590575?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1438.l2649#ht_500wt_922

Cake pop bags from ebay
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/110768860988#ht_560wt_922

Bag ties from ebay
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330637962559?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1438.l2649#ht_706wt_689

Candy melts for dipping - the cheapest i have found is hobbycraft at £2.99 a bag and they come in approx 10 different colours, most are vanilla flavoured but the also do mint choc and peanut butter.

Chocolate cake - these are like truffles
55g cocoa powder
250ml boiling water
120g unsalted butter, softened plus extra for greasing
200g caster sugar
200g self raising flower
1teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs at room temperature

Put the cocoa in a jug and pour in the boiling water and stir until fully combined and set aside to cool.

Preheat oven 190c gas mk5

For the next step either lightly grease and flour a 25cm round cake tin or i use the silicone cup cake cases as this reduces the cooking time, recipe make about 20 cupcakes, mixture filled 2/3rds of case.

Cream the butter and caster sugar together until pale and fluffy.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and salt.

Mix the vanilla into the creamed butter mix.

Add the eggs one at a time, mixing well. If the mixture starts to split add a sppon of the flour mixture as you start to mix each egg.

Pour in the dry ingredients and gently beat until combined.

Fold in the cooled cocoa mixture and mix until the colour is even.

Pour into the tin or cases and bake
Whole cake 45 - 60 minutes
Individual cakes 27- 30 minutes

Test using a cocktail stick or knife if the cocktail stick inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean, then they are cooked.

Cool in the tin for 20 minutes and turn out onto a cooling rack.

Chocolate frosting
120g unsalted butter, softened
200g icing sugar sifted
100g chocolate melted and cooled.

Cream the butter, gradually add the icing sugar and then the cooled chocolate until light and fluffy. Refrigerate for 30minutes before using.


Making the balls

Crumble all of the cake mixture into fine crumbs, add the frosting a tablespoon at a time and mix, keep adding and mixing untill you have a fudge like texture.
Wrap the mixture in cling film and chill for 1 hour.

Rolling the balls
Break off small amounts of the chilled mixture and roll into balls, i make approx 30. 
Place on a baking sheet covkered with greaseproof.
Chill for at least 30 minutes.

Putting the sticks in
Remove the tray of balls from the fridge
Melt the candy melts
Dip approx 1" of the stick in the melted candy melts and push one stick into each ball.
When finished chill for at least 10 minutes.

Covering the balls & decorating.
Re-melt the bowl of candy melts and add 2 teaspoons of cooking oil and stir well.
You can melt the candy melts as many times as you need.
Dip each cake pop into the candy melts and completely cover them decorate with sprinkles now if your using them, i dont dip in the sprinkles but just drop a few onto the cake pop, i then stand them to dry in the side holes of my metal collander and when completely dry after about 20 minutes i bag them and store them in the fridge.

There shelf life is 10 days stored in the fridge, or a week if stored at ambient temperatures but they seldom last 7 days in this house

Sara's Chocolate brownies

This is the easiest and cheapest Brownie recipe I have ever come accross! 

Melt together:

3 1/2 oz butter

4 heaped desert spoons cocoa


Remove from heat and stir in:

8 oz granulated sugar

2 eggs

then add:

3 oz self raising flour


Line tin approx 8" square with greaseproof.

Pour in & bake @ 180 c for 25 minutes

(usually doesn't need 2 cook quite as long and usually better to use a slightly smaller tin because then it's not so thin!)

Buttermilk Pancakes

Buttermilk Pancakes served with Crispy Bacon & Maple Syrup




Ingredients

  • 3 large eggs
  • 150ml/1/4pt buttermilk
  • 175g/6oz self raising flour
  • 1 tsp caster sugar
  • pinch of salt
  • 15ml/1tbsp vegetable oil for frying
  • crispy bacon and maple syrup to serve
  • Method
  1. Beat the eggs and buttermilk together in a large bowl. Sift over the flour, sugar and salt then quickly mix to form a smooth thick batter.
  2. Heat a little oil in a non-stick frying pan. Gently drop large spoonfuls of the batter into the hot pan and cook for 2 mins until the base is crisp and golden. Flip over and cook for a further 1-2 mins. Keep warm in a clean teatowel and repeat until all the batter is cooked. It makes about 12.
  3. To serve, stack 3-4 pancakes per person on plates, stacking them up with crispy bacon. Serve with maple syrup.

Carrot Cake





INGREDIENTS


For the cake:
  • 175g (6oz) wholemeal self-raising flour
  • 1 level tsp baking powder
  • 1 level tsp ground mixed spice
  • Pinch of salt
  • 150ml (1/4 pint) sunflower oil
  • 175g (6oz) soft light brown sugar
  • 3 medium eggs
  • 100g (3 1/2oz) raisins
  • 250g (8oz) carrots, peeled and grated
For the topping:
  • 200g (7oz) cream cheese
  • Few drops vanilla extract
  • 3-4 level tbsp icing sugar

Method

  1. To make the cake, tip the flour into a bowl and stir in the baking powder, spice and salt. Then stir in all the remaining ingredients until well mixed. Pour the mixture into a 1kg (2lb) loaf tin, buttered and lined with a strip of baking parchment.
  2. Bake in centre of oven at 180°C/350°F/gas 4 for about 1 hour, until just firm to the touch in the centre. A skewer should come out clean after being inserted into the middle.
  3. Remove from the oven. Allow to cool in the tin for 10 mins, then turn out on to a wire rack and leave to cool completely.
  4. To make the topping, beat together the cream cheese and vanilla extract. Add icing sugar to taste.
Recipe from Good to know recipes 

The most moist Carrot cake I have ever made

A Friendship Cake called Herman


Herman is getting everywhere. Has the friendship cake revival come knocking on your kitchen door?

Herman the friendship cake

For anyone not yet initiated into the ritual of Herman cake creation, it is the culinary equivalent of a chain letter. Someone presents you with a jar of yeasty mix and a set of instructions on when to add sugar, flour and sift or stir it. Ten days on, you divide the mixture into five, pass four jars onto friends and, with the rest, bake yourself a very yeasty and sugary but surprisingly tasty cake.

My introduction was through a conversation with a friend, until that time I was unaware of the friendship cake I now know as Herman. With a little help from google I managed to find some instructions.

The instructions that came with "him" tell me this is because "he" needs more space. Already Herman is no longer just a pot of yeast. He's a living, breathing part of the family, when you receive your very first Herman he must be moved to a more spacious home – that's a bowl to you and me. And, he must be stirred and engaged in rather one-sided conversation over the next few days until he's ready for his first meal (milk, flour and sugar) on Day Four.

He's quite an undemanding, if slightly yeasty smelling, charge. Four days of stirring and chatting later, he wants the same meal again, before being divided and potted, ready to spread a little happiness to several other families. Finally, you add more flour and sugar, eggs, cinnamon and apples and stick him in the oven. But I'm not sentimental and Herman lives on, through his four babies, 

The name Herman is taken from the Amish sweet, cinnamon-flavoured bread and the cakes have their origins in the sourdough products made by the early American pioneers. Airborne yeast was used to ferment a mixture of flour sugar and water, and then used to make pancakes, bread and cakes. What was left of original starter leavening mixture was then passed around the community for others to cook with.

These days Herman cakes are a luxury gimmick rather than a necessity and in this form they have been around for several decades. My mother remembers making and passing on Hermans before the war. I missed out on them when I was at school, though I was busy giving making ginger beer plants which are essentially the same process and sharing them around the neighbourhood.


The current Herman revival is gathering momentum with the help of internet chat forums and comes at a time when we are being encouraged to waste less and share more.

In essence, Herman cakes are a quirky fun way of doing something we're out of the habit of doing - sharing surpass food within the community rather than putting stuff in giant freezers or throwing it away. 

"There is no sell by date," which is part of the appeal. In these times of almost impenetrable packaging and obsessive food hygiene there's added pleasure to be had from eating something that has been through many hands and possibly several generations, and survived to continue the tale.

Herman friendship cake
Herman (or Hermann) is a friendship cake.  You can’t buy him, but you can be given a gift of him…then you can give him away. He’s chock full of yeast so over 10 days he’ll grow slowly but surely…and then you can eat him!

He doesn’t need any swanky fridge style accommodation…the kitchen work surface will do.  He doesn’t even need a lid…just a tea towel.  Your granny’s tea towel will do – it doesn’t even have to be new.  Just cover him and he’ll merrily grow at room temperature.

To spread a little friendship far and wide, just follow the instructions below and in 10 days you will have a Herman cake to eat and four mini Hermans to give to friends and bring a little Herman shaped smile to their faces.


That said, if you want to have your cake and eat it right now, go straight to day ten and don't tell your friends!  But we know you'll share.

If you wish to start a friendship chain from scratch follow the instructions below counting the day you begin as day zero.

Herman cake sour dough starter

2 cups flour
2 cups milk
1 cup sugar
1/3 cup warm water
2 tbsp or 2 packets active dry yeast
Today is day 0. Record the date/day on calendar.

Sprinkle 1 tbsp of the sugar over the warm water. Sprinkle yeast over this and leave in a warm place for around 10 minutes so it doubles in size.

Mix the milk, remaining sugar, flour and yeast mixture in a large plastic or glass container and stir using only a wooden spoon.

Cover loosely or place plate over top of container so Herman can breathe and leave in a warm place.

The next day is Day 1 and you now proceed with the following instructions as if you’d been given a friendship cake mixture to grow. Try to stir at least once each day.

Instructions for the Herman cake

If you would like to spread a little friendship follow the instructions below and at end of 10 days you will have a cake to eat and four starter kits to pass on.

If you cannot wait to have your cake and eat it, go straight to day 10 but you will forego the opportunity to pass on the cake to friends.


Day 1: Today Herman is given to you. Put him in a big bowl (at least 4pt capacity). Cover Herman loosely so he can breathe - a tea towel or loose lid is ideal.

Days 2 & 3: Stir Herman 2-3 times a day with a wooden spoon  (be lazy – stick to wooden so you can just leave it in the bowl without troublesome corrosion issues)

Day 4: Herman is hungry. Give him the following:

200mls milk
200g self-raising flour
250g sugar
Days 5, 6, 7 & 8: Stir Herman 2-3 times a day.

Day 9: Herman is hungry again. Give him the same ingredients you gave him on Day 4. Stir well then divide him into 5 equal parts. Give 4 baby Hermans away to friends or family with a copy of these instructions. Keep the 5th portion to bake, it's yours for the eating.

Day 10: Herman is absolutely starving. He needs a holiday. He likes to go to a hot resort. The oven is his favourite. Pre-heat oven to 170ºC (150ºC fan-assisted oven) and grease a cake tin generously. Prepare him for his holiday using one of the following:

150g self-raising flour
100g finely chopped nuts/raisins/mixed fruit
100 mls oil
Half a teaspoon of baking powder to help him rise.
2 teaspoons cinnamon for extra spice.
3 eggs
2 grated apples to keep things moist
Mix everything together and pour into a very well greased loaf tin or 9” x 9“ cake tin. Bake for 1-1 ½ hours, depending on your tin. Cool in tin for 10 mins then turn out.

Right i'm Now off to the kitchen to give life to my first Herman offspring


Herman Variations

Ginger Herman:

Here is recipe for ginger Herman. It was a rather sloppy mix but have to say its the lightest cake yet.

Ginger Cake : 150g self-raising flour, 1½ tsp ground ginger, ½ tsp cinnamon, ½ tsp bicarbonate soda, pinch of salt, 125g golden syrup, 60g finely chopped stem ginger, 1 tbsp ginger syrup from stem ginger jar, 2 heaped tbsp sultanas, 75g dark muscavado suger, 2 eggs, 150 ml milk, 75 ml butter at room temp/softened in microwave.


Apple & Choc Chip:

I thought I would give you some feedback on my version of the Hermann with the apple and choc chips. The taste is actually very good and the blend of cinnamon, apple and chocolate works well. I do however intend to make it again with a slightly amended mix. The centre and base of the cake ended up to ‘wet’ and the whole thing was a little too sweet. I will probably reduce the amount of apple and choc chips to stop the mix dropping to the base and also maybe reduce the olive oil. Regarding the sweetness I think I will reduce the sugar in the last part of the mix – that should help. 

Chocolate & Honeycomb:

Mine was divine. I didn’t use any of the ingredients on the list, just the basic ones like sugar, oil, etc. Then, instead of apples and cinnamon I added chocolate and honeycomb… Wow, it was lush!!!!  

A nice idea at Christmas:

Baking mine tomorrow, going to make the starter mix 10 days before Xmas and hand them out for Xmas pressies, as well as bake mine on Boxing Day. 


Christmas Herman – A festive variation of this popular cake:

Try glace cherries, stem ginger in syrup, a small amount of mixed peel, sultana’s and some mixed spice. Sprinkle the top with sugar and bake. When cooked spike with some brandy then decorate with marzipan and dust with icing sugar. 

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