Recipe- Italian Stromboli

So this week on The Great British Bake Off it was ‘Bread’ week (step forward Mr. Paul Hollywood looking rather smug). The bakers were challenged to a quick bread (typically soda bread); make some baguettes- this ended up with me screaming repeatedly at the TV and finally a 3-d bread sculpture. Yup- bread. Now while I didn’t attempt any of these in the vein of Bake Off fever, I did make something to keep up the theme itself.

I’m not sure why but over the past couple of weeks I’ve had stromboli on the brain. Please don’t be alarmed it isn’t a medical condition. Strombloi is in fact a stuffed loaf of Italian origin. Or as some people like to call it ‘Pizza Roll Bread’. Now for me that name just doesn’t do it justice. I much prefer it’s ‘Stromboli’ title (go ahead call me bourgeoise!). And so stromboli would be my #TheGreatBeardedBakeOff recipe for this week’s theme. Yes I know it’s not one of the challenges but I like to think outside the box; left of the middle etc etc – ’cause I’m crazy like that!

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Italian Strombloi

500g strong white bread flour

7g fast yeast

10g fine sea salt

40ml extra virgin olive oil

350ml warm water

1 tablespoon dried oregano

4 tablespoons finely grated parmesan cheese, plus extra for topping

125g buffalo mozzarella cheese, torn into pieces

75g sun-dried tomatoes, patted fry of any oil, roughly chopped

12g fresh basil leaves

80g prosciutto ham

Method

– In the bowl of a stand mixer place the flour; salt (to one side); yeast (to the opposite side; oregano and 1 tablespoon of parmesan cheese.

– Add the olive oil and 300ml of water.

– Using the dough hook attachment, mix the ingredients for 2-3 mins until fully combined. Add the remaining water in 2-3 pours until it’s all incorporated. Increase the speed in accordance to your machines instructions and continue to knead for 8 minutes. By the end of the kneading time the dough should be smooth and elastic.

– Once the dough has risen, tip it out onto a lightly oiled work-surface and knock the dough back until all the air has been removed. Flatten in to a rectangular shape, roughly 40cm x30cm, with the long edge facing you. It doesn’t need to be perfect.

– Over the surface of the dough scatter the remaining 3 tablespoons of parmesan cheese. Then scatter the mozzarella pieces; the sun-dried tomatoes and the basil leaves. Lay the slices of prosciutto at intervals over the dough surface to finish filling it.

– Working on the long edge, roll up the dough in to a sausage shape, trapping the filling inside. Normally with stromboli it s left as a long loaf  but I prefer to roll itself into a spiral shape and tuck the end underneath. This is entirely up to you.

– Place the rolled up dough onto a baking sheet line with baking parchment. Leave to prove in a warm room until roughly doubled in size.

– Preheat you oven to 220 degrees C.

– When proved, lightly spray the surface of the dough with water, and sprinkle with semolina and some finely grated parmesan.

– Place a baking tray filled with water into the bottom fo the oven, and place the baking tray with the dough on the middle shelf. Bake the dough for 20 mins, after which reduce the oven temperature to 190 degrees C and bake for another 10 mins or until it golden and sounds hollow when tapped underneath.

– Once the loaf is baked remove from the oven place on a wire rack to cool. This tastes great as a picnic loaf or served with some fresh salad as a delicious alternative to pizza!

– Enjoy!

Recipe- Chocolate Popcorn Cake

I recently had the opportunity to work on a photoshoot with the rather fabulous Majella of Pavlova & Cream. This was  my first time working with a professional photographer and I would be willing to say Majella is second to none! I can’t wait for you to see the finished results but more about that to come. As only befitting of the occasion I brought along some cake. I wasn’t quite expecting the reaction it received on social media- it seemed to prove rather popular! A rich devil’s food chocolate cake with chocolate filling and icing, spiked with pistachios and cocoa nibs, and finished with Joe & Seph’s Caramel Popcorn and drizzled with caramel sauce it certainly seemed to tickle the public’s taste buds.

After numerous requests I posted the recipe here. It works really well with a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream to cut through the sweetness. Or just as good on it’s own!

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Chocolate Popcorn Cake

Cake sponge
100g dark muscovado sugar
250ml boiling water
150ml soured cream
60g cocoa powder, sifted
125g unsalted butter, softened
150g caster sugar
225g plain flour
1 tablespoon espresso coffee
½ tsp baking powder
½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
25g cocoa nibs
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 tsp chocolate extract
2 free-range eggs

Chocolate filling and icing
350g icing sugar
100g cocoa
160g unsalted butter, softened
100g dark chocolate, 70% min cocoa
1 tablespoon chocolate essence

Caramel Sauce
210g of sugar
85g butter
120ml double cream

To finish
50g pistachio nuts, shelled
20g cocoa nibs
15g Joe & Seph’s caramel popcorn

To make the caramel sauce:
– In a large saucepan, heat the sugar over a moderate heat. Continue to heat until the sugar turns a deep amber color. DO NOT STIR! If needed you can swirl the pan.
– When the deep amber color has been reached add in the butter and stir until melted.
– Once the butter has melted, remove the pan from the heat and stir in the cream. Take extra care here as adding the cream will cause the mixture to foam up and steam. Continue to whisk until the foaming subsides and the sauce is smooth.
– Leave to cool fully before proceeding.

To make the cake:
– Preheat the oven to 180C. Line the bottoms of two 20cm/8in sandwich tins with baking parchment and spray the sides with cake release spray, or grease with butter.
– Put the cocoa and the dark muscovado sugar into a large bowl and pour in the boiling water. Whisk to mix, add the soured cream, mix again, then set aside to cool.
– Cream the butter and caster sugar together in a stand mixer bowl, beating well until pale and fluffy.
– Stir the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and espresso coffee together in another bowl, and the cocoa nibs, and mix to combine.
– With the whisk running add the vanilla and chocolate extracts into the creamed butter and sugar – mixing all the while.
– Add the eggs, one at a time alternating with a heaped tablespoon of the dry flour mixture. Keep mixing after each addition.
– Incorporate the rest of the dry flour mixture little by little, then finally mix and fold in the cocoa mixture, ensuring it’s well combined.
– Divide the cake batter between the two prepared tins and put in the oven for about 30 minutes, or until a cake tester comes out clean.
– Remove the cake tins from the oven and leave the cakes to cool in their tins on a wire rack for 5-10 minutes, after which turn the cakes out and set aside to cool.

To make the filling/ icing:
– In a bowl set over a pan of hot water, melt the chocolate and 60g of the butter together. Stir to combine. When fully melted remove from the heat, add in chocolate essence and set aside to cool.
– In the bowl of a stand mixer, add the icing sugar, the remainder of the butter, and cocoa. Mix well to combine until it starts to clump together.
– Dribble in the melted chocolate mixture and mix well until fully combined. If the icing appears too slack (runny) add in a tablespoon if icing sugar until desired consistency is reached.

To finish/ assemble:
– Blitz the shelled pistachios in a food processor, or chop finely. Add in the cocoa nibs and stir to combine.
– Spread/ pipe some of the icing on a sponge layer.
– Sprinkle over the pistachio mixture.
– Place second sponge layer on top and pipe a border of icing to the edge. Spread the middle of the cake top with remaining icing.
– Arrange the popcorn pieces so they sit inside the piped border.
– Drizzle over some of the caramel sauce.*
– Serve and enjoy!

*Any remaining caramel sauce can be kept in the fridge for a couple of weeks.

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Recipe- Apricot, Date & Tonka bean Biscotti

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Yet another British Bake Off inspired recipe here as part of my #TheGreatBeardedBakeOff .  It was Biscuit week and I decided to tackle the signature bake task of “Biscotti”. In fact as I sit here typing this I’m dunking one into my customary strong morning coffee. A classic biscotti has a combination of fruit and nuts so I opted for apricots, dates and macadamia. Whilslt not a big fan of dried fruit I love aprocts in baked goods, and the dates were lying spare from a previous kitchen experiment. I included macadamia nuts as I think their smooth creaminess  is massively under-rated. As for the Tonka bean? Well I had to put my. Mr. Mom’s stamp on them some how!?! What better way than with this little known exotic bean. I absolutely love it’s vanilla-like, heady fragrance and love to use it where I can. In fact so much do I adore the smell it’s even an ingredient in a couple of my colognes!

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Apricot, Date & Tonka bean Biscotti

Makes 20-24

2 eggs

180g of caster sugar

300g of plain flour

1 tsp baking powder

100g of macadamia nuts, roughly chopped

85g dried apricots, chopped

85g dries dates, chopped

2 tonka beans, grated using a micro-plane

plain flour for dusting

 

Method

  • Heat your oven to 150°C/Gas mark 2.
  • Line a baking tray with baking parchment.
  • Beat the eggs with the sugar until pale and doubled in size.
  • Add in the nuts, fruits, flour, baking powder and tonka bean until the mixture forms a dough.
  • Tip out onto a lightly floured work surface and roll out into a log shape. Divide the log into two, halfway along it’s length. With your hands lightly flatten logs 40mm wide x 20mm high.
  • Place the logs on the lined baking sheet, bake for 12-15 minutes or until pale golden and firm.
  • Remove the baking sheet from the oven and leave to cool for 10minutes. After this time cut the logs into slices (10-15mm thick) and  lay  them flat on a baking sheet and bake again for 10-15 minutes or until crisp.
  • Remove from the oven and allow to cool on a wire rack.
  • Serve and enjoy with strong coffee or a glass of dessert wine.
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    Heady and fragrant- Tonka beans

 

 

Recipe Alert…I am The Muffin Man

Whilst you may think that there is always cake available in my house (and to be quite honest you wouldn’t be wrong) there is also always a hearty supply  of fruit- perhaps to ease my conscience for numerous bakes? An influx of bananas of late has lead to a near constant presence of the over-ripening fruit. So much so that my husband commented the other evening, “Why is this place turning into the house of black bananas?!?!” Fair enough- he has a point. I however think it’s not necessarily a bad thing to have some fragrant, burnished fruit lying about. They make for much more interesting and tasty bakes once the process of almost “self-caramelisation” is under way. An earlier post of mine gave the recipe for Banana Bread– a firm memory of mine from the kitchen of my childhood. Having only just finished off out latest batch of this I needed something different to make use of the over-ripe bananas now taking up residence on my butchers trolley. So what better way than muffins- that versatile, anytime treat (but not a treat) bake.

Going slightly off track, I recently made some cookies, Maple Butter Cookies with prosciutto dust, using Moose Maple Butter. I am in fact chomping on some as I type- their gloriously maple sweet crumbs littering the keyboard here- oh dear! However- I digress. As a result of this still have some of the said maple butter left and wanted to try other bakes to use it in. So my muffins to be were to provide the perfect excuse for this as well. Kill two birds with one stone – or bake two pans in one oven (to sound a little less brutal about it all).

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Banana Bran Muffins (feat. Moose Maple Butter)

Makes 9

Ingredients

250g self-raising flour

1 tsp baking powder

1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda

1/4 tsp pinch of salt

1/2 tsp mixed spice

115g caster sugar

100g oatbran

75g melted Moose Maple butter (if can also use regular unsalted butter)

125ml milk

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 medium, over-ripe bananas

2 medium eggs

 

Method

  • Heat the oven to 190C electric/ 170C fan.
  • Melt the (maple) butter and allow to cool.
  • Mash the bananas well.
  • Sift the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda, salt, and mixed spice together in a large bowl, add caster sugar and oatbran, stir through to combine.
  • In a separate bowl, beat together the eggs, vanilla extract, melted (maple) butter and milk. Add the mashed banana and mix well.
  • Make a well in the centre of the dry ingredients and add the egg mixture, stirring roughly with a fork. Be careful NOT to overmix at this point. You just want it mixed enough so that no pockets of dry ingredients remain. It should look lumpy and pastey – like how a cake batter ISN’T supposed to look!
  • Line a 12 (or 2 x6 ) muffin tray with 9 muffin cases. Fill the cases to the top .
  • Bake for between 2o- 25 minutes, until muffins are springy to touch. Rest the muffin tray on a wire rack for five minutes then remove the muffins and leave to cool.

Hope you enjoy!

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In the meantime,

“Remember Mom’s the word- that’s Mr. Mom’s!”