February 19, 2022

PINK GRAPEFRUIT DRIZZLE BUNDT CAKE


A few weeks before my nephew’s wedding, his fiancé sent me a message asking if I would make a cake for the evening buffet at the reception.  I misread the message and went into panic mode, thinking she meant The Cake but thankfully no, just something to serve as dessert.  Her step mum was making That Cake (and it was truly fabulous).

I decided that a chocolate Guinness cake would probably go down well, it always does at parties.  I must have made dozens of them over the years and it always gets eaten up, loads of compliments and requests for the recipe.  I just say "Nigella Lawson" and send people to Google it!  Although these days I reduce the icing ingredients by one third.

It is however, not that much of a looker so I made a second cake that was a bit more glamorous.  For a special occasion like this a Bundt cake fits the bill.  They are usually easy to make, serve loads of people and, because the tin does all the heavy lifting in the glamour department, don't need much in the way of fancy icing.  

There followed a few happy hours of browsing my cook books.  Several candidates for the job stood out but in the end I settled for one from the most recent cook book from the Bake Off series called A Bake for All Seasons.  Everyone loves a drizzle cake but this one's a bit different, using ruby grapefruit instead of lemons.

It was easy to make but I’ve given it two stars in the faff factor rating because preparing the crystallised peel for the decoration is a bit more time consuming and fiddly than I normally attempt.  Preparing a Bundt tin is also time consuming but essential if the cake is going to turn out in one piece. 

It looked the bees knees and got lots of compliments.  It had a lovely texture and the grapefruit flavour was delightful.  I managed to snaffle the last two slices to present to our neighbours who kindly let the dog out while we were out gallivanting.

Definitely a great cake for a party! 

Ingredients

For the candied peel and the drizzle

1 ruby grapefruit (reserve the juice)

6 tblsp white caster sugar

For the cake

175g unsalted butter, softened (I used Sainsbury's Buttersoft spread)

250g golden caster sugar

3 large eggs, beaten

1 tsp vanilla extract

2 ruby grapefruits, zest and juice

200g plain flour

150g ground almonds

2 tsp baking powder

pinch of salt

3 tblsp full fat Greek youghurt

For the icing

150g icing sugar

1-2 tblsp grapefruit juice reserved from the first grapefuit 

pink food colouring gel

Method

The first step is to make the crystallised peel for the decoration as it takes a long time to dry.  I made mine the night before I made the cake.

Using a vegetable peeler, remove the peel from the grapefruit in wide strips.  Slice each strip into thin slivers.  (This is the time consuming part.)  Put the shreds of grapefruit peel into a small bowl with 2-3 tablespoons of the caster sugar and mix together so that the peel is well coated.  Tip onto a baking sheet lined with baking paper and leave to dry for at least four hours until crisp.  I left mine overnight.

To make the sponge, prepare a suitable Bundt tin using the non-stick cake release paste which you can see here.  Preheat the oven to 170°C / 150° fan / gas mk 3.

Using a stand mixer if possible, beat the butter or spread with the golden caster sugar until paler and creamy.  Add the eggs in thirds, beating well between each addition, then beat in the vanilla extract.

Measure out 6 tblsp of the grapefruit juice and reserve the rest.  Beat it into the mixture along with the zest.  Don't worry if the mixture curdles.

Add the flour, ground almonds, baking powder and salt and mix on low speed to combine.  Then add the yoghurt and mix briefly or until thoroughly mixed.

Spoon the mixture into the prepared tin.  Level the top and tap the tin on the worktop or table to release any air bubbles.  (I find putting a folded tea towel on the worktop or table makes me less nervous that the hard ridges in some of my Bundt tins might cause some damage if I tap too hard!)

Bake for about 45 minutes until done and the cake passes the skewer test.

While the cake is cooking make the drizzle by mixing the juice from the peeled grapefruit and mix with the remaining 3-4 tblsp of white caster sugar.

This is where I deviate from the recipe in the book which suggests you should turn out the cake after 2 minutes and leave to cool for another 15 minutes.  Turning out a Bundt cake so soon is a recipe for disaster as it could break up.  

Instead, leave in the tin for 10 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack.  Leave to cool on the rack for another 5 minutes and, while the cake is still warm, poke holes in the top with a skewer or cake tester and pour the drizzle over.

Leave to cool completely before icing.

To make the icing, sift the icing sugar into a medium bowl and beat with enough of the reserved grapefruit juice to make a consistency of single cream, just runny enough to run down the grooves in the cake according to what design of Bundt tin you have used.  You can leave the icing as it is because it will have a faint pinkish hue, or you can add pink food colouring gel to get a colour you like.  I used just two drops to achieve a very soft pink.

Place the rack over a dinner plate so that icing that runs off can be collected and reused to build up the icing as you like.  Spoon the icing over the top of the cake and let it run down and pool in the grooves of the pattern.

Scatter the crystallised grapefruit peel over the top of the cake.

Cuts into 18-20 slices.

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The wedding cake.  I would never attempt anything like this.  The bottom tier was the most delicious fruit cake.  The top two tiers were sponge cake and they were hoovered up by hungry guests on the night.  Much of the fruit layer was cut up for guests to take away but there was about two thirds of it left.  We have a good supply of it in our freezer!  

How on earth do you cook that size of fruit cake and end up with it all cooked through perfectly?  Respect to the bride's step mum who achieved the magnificent feat!

February 3, 2022

MINI APPLE PIES AND EXCUSES


Did I ever write about these little apple pies?  I believe not.


I found the recipe in this book by Pippa Middleton, our future king's sister in law.

(I found the book in a charity shop for £1.)



It's a nice book, with lots of lovely ideas for entertaining.  I thought these little apple pies (called "mini apple pies in pots") would be perfect for an "informal event".  The recipe appears in a couple of places online if you're intrigued.


I used ready made, ready rolled, sweet pastry and filled them with this apple compote, the kind that has lumps of apple in it.  I added some cinnamon and lemon zest and baked them in a tart tin rather than little pots or ramekins.


My lattice work was not too bad, could have been tidier!


They looked ok and smelled wonderful.



However, they were not fit for purpose!

I made them the day before my "informal event" and we had a couple, just to taste and check they were as yummy as they looked.  They were!

Unfortunately, within hours of being baked the pastry was completely soft and soggy so there was no way they could be handed around the bonfire as per the suggestion in the recipe!  We still enjoyed them, even though they fell apart, with custard!  It's not a recipe idea I would use again.

Anyway, things are a little busy just now.  We are fully occupied with organising Dad's care and dealing with his various problems so baking is at a minimum.  

The other thing is that I have been busy helping with a wedding this weekend.  For that I will be baking two cakes tomorrow so there will hopefully be something to blog about!

January 5, 2022

ROASTED COD WITH POTATOES AND TOMATOES


The first time we had this dish it was served to us by friends at least twenty years ago.  The lady of the house (who does all their cooking)  (he does all the ironing)  gave me the recipe.  She actually photocopied the page from the recipe book that it came from, which included notes in pencil on how she had tweaked it.

For quite a few years I cooked it regularly.  It's a great dish to serve to friends and family and also easy to scale down for dinner for two.  Then, I totally forgot about it and I didn't make it all for years.  In fact if I had remembered it I would have had no idea what became of the recipe.
Until last month when we were ferreting about in the loft for the Christmas decorations.  Not that we have an actual loft, living in a dormer bungalow, it's just a triangular shaped space under the roof running the length of the house.  We've still managed to cram it with plenty of STUFF.

Crouching awkwardly in the tiny space Nick passed me a box of stuff that wasn't Christmas decorations but long lost paperwork.  Including my ring binder full of much loved saved recipes from magazines, friends and internet.  I spent a happy half hour browsing through the folder and my eyes fell upon this long forgotten recipe.  I couldn't wait to make it again.


The recipe originates from an old Ainsley Harriot cook book but I don't remember which one.  It's called "French style roasted cod" and is basically cod fillets baked on top of a layer of roasted potatoes.


I remembered that it was a good idea to make sure the potatoes were completely cooked before adding the cod as it would be easy to overcook the fish, which takes hardly any time at all.  You end up with succulent fish, lovely garlicky potatoes and tangy, herby tomatoes.  

It was totally delicious, just as I remembered it.  The instructions written in pencil by my friend on the recipe said "serve with green beans" - very French and oh-la-la!  We had ours with broccoli and carrots!


Looking back through some of my photos pre-edited in the folder marked "blog" I found this one.  A bit of detective work showed that I made this dish in December 2014 using hake fillets instead of cod.  That would have been in my French kitchen, suggesting that the elusive ring binder of recipes must have gone with us to France and since been repatriated, only to end up forgotten in the loft!  Zut alors!


Ingredients

450g floury potatoes* or enough to cover your dish in a single layer when peeled and cut into medium sized chunks.   (I used Maris Piper) 

1 bulb garlic

a handful of large cherry tomatoes, halved

4 sprigs rosemary

3 tblsp olive oil

4 thick boneless cod fillets (or suitable white fish)

4 tblsp dry white wine

Method

Preheat the oven to 220C / 200 fan / gas mk 7.

Cook the chunks of potato in a pan of boiling salted water until just tender.  Drain and tip into an ovenproof baking dish.

Tuck the cloves from the bulb of garlic in between the potatoes (I peeled mine as I wasn't sure our guests would like them unpeeled).  Scatter the tomatoes over the top and add the rosemary.  Season with salt and pepper and drizzle over 2 tablespoons of the olive oil.

Roast in the oven for 25 minutes until the potatoes are turning golden brown.

Remove from the oven and place the cod fillets on top of the potatoes.  Drizzle with the remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil and roast for another 5 minutes.

Remove from the oven and splash over the wine.  Roast for a further 7 minutes until the fish is just cooked and tender.  Check after 5 minutes to avoid over cooking the fish.

Serve immediately with green veg of your choice.

* the hake version shown in the last picture was made in France where I have yet to find floury potatoes.  They mostly seem to be waxy ones with a deeper, creamy colour.  It looks like that time I made it with the small, salad potatoes that we often buy in France, halved.

Serves 4.
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For dessert we had this.  Apricot brioche pudding, another dish I hadn't done for years.  You can read about it here.  This time I tucked some small nuggets of marzipan in with the apricots.  Yum!

January 2, 2022

BEEF AND MUSHROOM SOUP (soup maker recipe)

I am still enjoying last January's new gadget, my soup maker, and the soup season is most definitely upon us - the combination of miserable wet weather and plenty of leftovers from the festivities. 

All the turkey and stuffing had gone and with visitors coming I decided to make a nice, warming beef stew, with cubed braising steak and a miscellany of root veg - onion, carrot, swede, leek, parsnip, celery, mushrooms and half a green pepper - all leftover from the Christmas shop.

I made the stew in my Instant Pot using it as a slow cooker and when it was done there was a huge amount of liquid.  I removed and reserved the excess and thickened the stew with flour.  It was very tasty and went down well with some mash and greens.  

There was just a little stew left over, not enough for a whole meal, so I made it into soup, adding the reserved broth.  Waste not want not.  I simply put the stew in with a few more veg and a whole punnet of mushrooms.  Delicious!

Ingredients

about a pint of leftover beef stew

a whole punnet of chestnut mushrooms

2 carrots

1 leek

1 large potato

1 vegetable stock pot

about a pint of beef broth (the reserved liquid from the stew before thickening) - or use extra water and a beef stock pot or cube.

Method

Put the leftover stew into the soup maker.  Wash or peel and roughly chop enough of the veg to fill to the bottom line. 

Add the stock pot, broth and enough water to fill to the top line and cook on the smooth setting.

January 1, 2022

HAPPY NEW YEAR !!


Just out of interest I decided to look up what I had actually posted about in 2021.

The results are as follows:

CAKES AND BAKES:  16

SOUPS:  7

SAVOURY DISHES:  5

DESSERTS:  4

MISCELLANEOUS:  1

Well, I suppose that must say something about me!

    THE VERY BEST OF NEW YEARS TO YOU ALL!

Look after yourself, take care not risks and stay out of hospital!

Here's to a bright and better 2022 and lots more cakes!

December 29, 2021

BANANA AND APRICOT CAKE

I have been meaning to have a second go at this cake for some time.

You can see the first time I made it and where it was not a success if you read here.  The recipe comes from the Trex website (see here) and I had made the cake as per instructions using Trex.  There were lots of good things about it but I felt it would probably be much better if made with butter.  


It was when I saw a bunch of bananas reduced to 20p just before Christmas that I thought it was time I had another try at the recipe.  Bargain.  One week later they were just right for baking with!


I was also keen to use my new Christmas cake stand.  Also a bargain.

Now I know I have more than enough cake stands already but......this one is so pretty and when it was reduced in price on the Lakeland website I thought one more wouldn't do any harm.  (I have also created a second storage place for my large collection!)  You can see it here but it's back up to full price!

I needed a few other things from Lakeland (don't you always?) so I placed the order paying extra for next day delivery, not holding out too much hope of them actually arriving in time for Christmas.  

My luck was in!  The parcel arrived the following evening but........I was hugely disappointed to find that the cake stand was faulty.

"How can that be?" I hear you say.  Well it was wonky.  Wonkiness is a common fault with cake stands.  It only takes the pedestal to be glued slightly off centre on the base of the plate and you end up with a bit of a slope.  

I'm not too fussy about a slight slope.  After all, very few of my cakes are actually perfectly level and nobody ever seems to notice a slight wonkiness but this one was miles out.  Well over half an inch across the plate.  (I know this because my other half insisted on getting out his spirit level and measuring it!)

I phoned Lakeland first thing the next morning and spoke to a very nice lady.  I have to say that Lakeland's greeting message is probably the most polite and friendly one I have ever heard.  The lady was very understanding and quick to offer a refund.  When I said what I really wanted was another cake stand she said she would despatch another and to keep the faulty one.  On Christmas Eve my replacement arrived so I hot footed it to the Hospice shop where the wonky original was received gladly.  It was priced and on sale by the time I left the shop.  Hopefully someone who doesn’t mind a cake stand a bit of a slope would have got an even greater bargain for displaying their Christmas cake.


In the end I used Stork block baking margarine not butter.  I also made the whole thing in the food processor.  It had one of those smiley face cracks when it was done.



I decorated it with the cream cheese frosting, banana chips snapped in half and chopped apricots as suggested in the recipe.




I don't think it rose as much as the last time I made it but it was yummy!



Definitely a cake recipe worth the tweaking!

Ingredients
For the cake

225g self raising flour

a pinch of salt

100g block margarine, chilled and cubed

100g soft light brown sugar

2 large eggs

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 medium very ripe bananas, peeled and mashed

50g chopped dried apricots

1 tblsp milk

For the topping

50g softened butter

50g icing sugar, sifted

zest of ½ a lemon

100g cream cheese

a few dried banana chips and chopped apricots to decorate

Method

Grease and line the base of a 20cm round springform cake tin.  Preheat the oven to 180C / 160 fan / gas mk 4.

Sift the flour and salt into a food processor.  Add the margarine and pulse until fine breadcrumbs appear.  Add the sugar and pulse briefly to combine.

Beat the eggs and vanilla together.  Add to the food processor and process to mix in.  Add the mashed bananas, apricots and milk and process again until mixed together.  Add more milk if the mixture seems a bit stiff.

Transfer to the prepared tin and bake for 50 - 60 minutes until done.  Cool in the tin.

To make the frosting, beat the butter, icing sugar and lemon zest together.  Beat in the cream cheese.

Spread over the top of the cake and decorate with the banana chips and choppe apricots.

Cuts into 8-10 slices.

December 16, 2021

CRANBERRY AND ORANGE BUNDT CAKE and a Happy Birthday to me!

 

I recently had a Big Birthday!
Unfortunately I couldn't get all seventy candles on the cake so settled for one!

For my birthday cake I fancied making a recipe I had had my eye on for a while, a cranberry and orange cake by Lynn Hill.  I decided to make it in a Bundt tin for the extra glamour.




It was done in much less time than that specified in the recipe, 55 minutes.  In fact by then it was probably slightly over baked and would have been fine after 50 minutes.  It had a very dark and crispy crust with brown speckling, as warned by Lynn in the write up, due to the very high sugar content.  I decorated it with a drizzle of icing made from 3 tablespoons of sifted icing sugar and enough orange juice to make it the right consistency to run over the sides of the cake.  That disguised the not so attractive appearance of the naked cake!

Once through the crispy crust it was superb!

The mixture was quite stiff so the cranberries didn't sink at all and were beautifully evenly distributed.  I used fewer cranberries than stated in the recipe as my punnet only contained about 220g.  It was plenty I think.

It tasted delicious, cranberry and orange being one of my favourite combinations.

It also kept well in a sealed box and the last few slices made an excellent dessert served warm with custard.  You can see the recipe here.  Apart from the tin, the cooking time, the quantity of cranberries and the addition of the icing I followed it to the letter! 

Cuts into 18-20 portions.