Valentine’s Day #Recipe Hidden Heart Cupcakes

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Hidden Heart Cupcakes

Vanilla sponge with a secret heart centre, topped with Champagne-infused
frosting and freeze-dried strawberries: a delicious way to say ‘I love you’ this Valentine’s Day.

Ingredients
For the ‘heart’ sponge
100g self-raising flour
100g golden caster sugar
100g unsalted butter, softened
2 medium eggs
1tsp good-quality vanilla extract
3 tbsp semi-skimmed milk
1 tbsp LorAnn Oils Red Velvet Bakery Emulsion (available from Amazon)

For the vanilla cupcake batter
240g plain flour
280g caster sugar
1 tbsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
80g unsalted butter, softened
2 large eggs
240ml semi-skimmed milk
2 tsp vanilla extract

For the frosting
500g icing sugar
160g unsalted butter, softened.
2 tbsp Champagne, or sparkling wine

To decorate
Freeze-dried strawberries

Hidden Heart 2

Method
To make the ‘heart’ sponge:

  • Preheat oven to 180°C/ 350°F/ Gas Mark 4.
  • Mix all ingredients, except colouring, in a food mixer on a medium speed until a smooth batter is formed. Then add the red velvet emulsion, and mix on a slow speed until combined and a uniform colour is achieved.
  • Pour into a flat, greased and lined baking tray or brownie tin (a depth of mixture between 10-15mm) and bake for 10-15 mins, or until a skewer comes out clean when pushed into the centre of the sponge.
  • Allow to cool in tray for 5 mins, then remove from tray and allow to cool completely on a wire rack. (Leave oven on at same temperature for next stage.)
  • Once cool, use a small, heart-shaped cookie cutter to cut shapes (for a perfect fit, the cutter should stand inside the cupcake cases).

To make the cupcakes:

  • Line a 12-hole muffin tray with cupcake cases. *See my ‘Top Tip’ below.
  • In a food mixer, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and butter. Use the paddle attachment and mix until the mixture resembles dry sand in texture.
  • In a separate jug/bowl combine the eggs, milk and vanilla extract
    and lightly whisk to combine. With the mixer on a low speed, pour the liquid ingredients in a steady stream until about 100ml remains in the jug.
  • Increase the mixer speed to medium and continue until all the ingredients are well combined.
  • Scrape down the bowl sides and add remaining egg mixture, then continue to mix on a medium speed until the mixture is smooth.
  • Pour finished batter into cupcake cases to quarter the full level, stand heart shapes in batter and, while holding them upright, steadily pour additional batter around until cases are two-thirds full. The batter should now be surrounding the hearts and keeping them upright.
  • Bake on the middle shelf for about 20 mins, or until a skewer comes out clean when pushed into the centre of the cakes.
  • Allow to cool in the tin for 5 mins, then remove and transfer to a wire rack.

To make the frosting:

  • In a food mixer bowl, add the icing sugar and butter and, with the paddle
    attachment, mix on a slow speed until combined. At this point, you may add some colouring to the frosting- gel coloring works best.
  • Increase speed to medium, and drizzle in Champagne until fully incorporated. Once fully incorporated incread the speed to high for 2 minutes for a fluffy frosting. (If the frosting becomes too runny, add a little more icing sugar to stiffen it).
  • Frost the cooled cupcakes and sprinkle with freeze-dried strawberries to complete.
  • Pour the remaining champagne into chilled glasses, serve with fresh strawberries and snuggle up with a loved one!

*Top tip:
Before they go into the oven, mark/snip the cases to show which way the hearts are
facing so you know the direction in which to cut the finished cakes to show off their full glory.

Happy Valentine’s Day

from Mr. Mom

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#Recipe Ricotta Pancakes- 3 ways

Pancake Tuesday to me is synonymous with one flavour conbination- Jif Lemon and sugar. Not caster sugar but granulated, and heaven forbid the juice be fresh. Nay! It had to come from a plastic lemon of the sqeezable variety.  This cheek-puckering combination of crunchy sugar and citrus instantly bringing back childhood memories of playground squabbles about the quantities of pancakes consumed before school. Who cared of it was only 11am!?! Somehow you had persuaded your parents to let you scoff gargantuan amounts of fried batter for breakfast. Times have changed and I now realise there is more to life than lemon juice and sugar- just about! So here’s my recipe for ricotta pancakes with a variety of serving suggestions. Try one…or try them all! Either way I hope you enjoy.

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Ricotta Pancakes

200g plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 large egg, beaten
200ml whole milk
250g tub ricotta cheese
1 tbsp rapeseed oil

  • Put the flour, baking powder and a pinch of salt in a large bowl.
  • Make a well in the middle, then pour in the egg and a splash of milk.
  • Gradually mix the flour into the liquid until starting to combine.
  • Mix in the rest of the milk in three stages until you have a smooth batter, then beat in the ricotta with a whisk.
  • Heat the rapeseed oil in a large non-stick frying pan until hot.
  • Spoon in a small laddle full of batter, spaced well apart, to make pancakes about 10cm across.
  • Cook on medium heat for 2-3 mins until bubbles appear on the surface. Flip over with a palette knife and cook for 2-3 more mins until golden. Set aside and keep warm; cook the rest of the batter.
  • Stack the pancakes, with baking parchment between, and keep warm in a low oven until ready to serve.

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1 ways- Spiced Orange

150ml orange juice

1 tablespoon caster sugar

1/2 teaspoon fenugreek

1/2 teaspoon caraway seed

4 cardamom pods, crushed

1 large orange, sliced

Caster sugar

  • Gently warm the spices in a pan until the frangrance is released.
  • Add in the orange juice and caster sugar.
  • Continue to gently heat until the sugar is disolved. Set aside to cool and infuse before use.
  • While the sauce is cooling, sprinkle the orange slices with caster sugar. Using a cook’s torch, carmalise the sugar on the slices until the sugar is bubbling, burnished and a deep amber in color. Alternatley you can heat under a high grill until the sugar reaches the same stage as with the torch.
  • Arrange a copule of slices of orange on top of your pancakes and drizzle with the spiced orange sauce. (I’ve drizzle some around the palte and used a pipette to allow the sauce to be “injected” into the stack)

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2 ways- Mango with Rosemary, Basil & Lime

75g fresh mango, chopped roughly

4 tablespoons waster

2 tablespoons caster sugar

1 tablesppon lime juice

1 small spirg fresh rosemary

3 large basil leaves

  • In a pan combine the liquids and caster sugar.
  • Add the rosemary spirg and chop in the basil leaves.
  • Heat until the sugar has disolved and the on point of boiling.
  • Remove from the heat and allow to cool fully and infuse for at least a couple of hours.
  • When fully cooled, strain into a bowl to remove the herbs. Toss in the mango pieces.
  • Top a stack of panckes with some of the mango, and serve with a dollop of creme fraiche.

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3 ways- Smoky Chocolate sauce with bourbon & pecan

50g dark chocolate, 70% cocoa content

25g butter

120ml double cream

1 tablespoon bourbon whiskey

1/4 teaspoon liquid smoke

25g chopped pecans, lightly toasted

  • Melt the chocolate in a bowl over a pan of simmering water (or in a microwave in short bursts) until smooth and fully melted. Remove from the heat.
  • Heat the butter, double cream, bourbon whiskey and liquid smoke in a small saucepan until evenly combined.
  • Remove from the heat and stir through the melted chocolate until fully combined. When fully mixed add in the pecan nuts.
  • Pour generously over your pancakes and sprinkle with some additional chopped pecans.

2015 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2015 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 8,300 times in 2015. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 3 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

#Recipe: Chocolate, Guinness & Black Garlic Bundt cake with Smoked Chocolate glaze

So I’ve (eventually) gotten around to posting this recipe- massive apologies for the delay. This cake first started out as an experiment using black garlic and was finished with a salted caramel sauce and served with forest fruits. I wanted to create something that looked and tasted indulgent but had a slight edginess to it- nothing too frou-frou! For me it was a Gothic romance in cake form. Time moved on and so did the recipe development. I replaced the salted caramel with a chocolate glaze but wanted to still keep my (signature) twist. And so liquid smoke was added. Depending on how much you use, this wonderful ingredient adds a tasty smoky flavour and in this case married really well with the black garlic of the bundt. It’s availble online or from good food ingredient stores.

iness; Chocolate and Black Garlic Bundt

The original version of the Chocolate, Guinness & Black Garlic bundt cake

Bundt cake mixture

375g plain flour

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

70g unsweetened cocoa powder

225g butter, softened

110g unsalted butter, chopped and softened

600g caster sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

5 eggs

125ml milk

125ml Guinness stout (from a bottle as opposed to a can)

6 cloves black garlic, chopped

100g dark chocolate chips or pieces

Chocolate glaze

12 Tablespoons icing sugar

4 teaspoons whole milk

1 tablespoon liquid smoke

*this mixtures makes enough for a very ample bundt cake (using a 25cm tin) or 2 standard sized ones (I used Nordicwares Fleur De Lis and Anniversary tins)

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To make the bundt cake

  • Preheat the oven to 170 C. Grease and flour  your Bundt cake tin(s)- or if your like me spray the inside with cake release spray.
  • Sift flour, baking powder, salt and cocoa together into a bowl and place to one side.
  • In a jug combine the milk and the Guinness. Set
  • In the bowl of your stand mixer, cream butter, margarine, sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy. (A tip here is to keep beating until you can no longer feel the sugar grains between you fingers).
  • Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each. Add flour mixture alternately with the milk/Guinness mixture. Mix to combine.
  • Add in the chopped black garlic cloves and chocolate chips. Mix well.
  • Pour into your prepared Bundt tin(s). Bake in the preheated oven for 70 minutes or until a skewer inserted into cake comes out clean. Let cool for 10 minutes in the tin, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool completely before glazing.

To make the glaze

  • Combine all the ingredients in a jug and mix well to combine until smooth. The mixture should fall easily from  your whisk and leave a slowly sinking trail in the bowl. If you find the mixture too stiff add some more milk in 1/2 teaspoon increments.

To finish

  • Place the cake on a cooling rack with some foil or baking parchment underneath to catch the drips.
  • Drizzle or paint the glaze onto the fully cooled cake until coated.
  • Spinkle with finishing decoration of you choice.
  • Slice, serve and enjoy!2015-11-18 16.55.00-1

 

 

#Recipe: Alternative #BonfireNight Toffee Apples

As a child I loved Toffee Apples. That sweet, sticky “crack” sound giving way to the tart crispness of a ripe apple. They were alway saved as a treat on a seaside trip. As such it’s one of my most vivid memories of childhood- the tickle of juice running down my chin as seawater wafted on the air, and overhead gulls wheeled and cried. Upon moving here to the UK I became aware that toffee apples were a treat for an altogether different occasion. They were a long-standing part and parcel of November 5th’s Guy Fawkes Bonfire celebrations along with parkin; treacle toffee and sparklers.

Never being one to settle for the “norm” I decided to do a twist on the familiar idea of the  “Toffee Apple”. It also provided me with a rather nice opportunity to try out some of Joe & Seph’s rather wonderful new caramel sauces. And so I present my take on bonfire toffee apples.

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Alternative Toffee Apples

Makes 6

Ingredients

6 Granny Smiths apples, cored

50g jumbo oats

25g chopped dates

25g dried pear, chopped

20g ground almonds

20g hazelnuts, toasted and chopped

3 heaped tablespoons Joe & Seph’s Salted Caramel sauce

To finish

Joe & Seph’s Salted Caramel sauce

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Method

  • Preheat your oven to 180 degrees.
  • Score the apples with a knife halfway up and fully around. Be carefull not to slice them the full way through.
  • In a bowl mix the remaining ingredients until fully combined.
  • Stuff the apple cavities with the oat mixture until full. You can use a spoon but the easiest way I’ve found is just using (clean) hands. Messiest…but easiest.
  • Place the stuffed apples into an oven proof dish and place in your preheated oven, on a rack in the middle.
  • Bake for 35-40 mins depending on your apple texture preference. I prefer mine to be just the “soft-side of solid” (if that makes any sens?) so I bake for 35 mins. If you prefer them softer bake for a little longer. Be careful however as you don’t really want them to be “mushy”.
  • Once baked, remove from oven and place individually on serving plates, and pour over some more Joe & Seph’s Salted Caramel sauce. Again the amount depends on taste. You may like a little- I prefer a LOT!
  • Serve the covered “toffee apples” with vanilla ice cream or I also like to have a dollop of Greek yogurt to the side.

Enjoy!

If you’re looking for another alternative Bonfire Night treat then why not try my take on treacle toffee – Fennel Seed & Black Garlic Toffee?