The mixture was piled into a well greased muffin tin and baked in the oven at 180° fan for about twenty minutes then sprinkled with grated cheese before returning to the oven to finish cooking. After another ten minutes the cheese was melted. We had ours with baked beans. Yum!
A SLICE OF CAKE
cakes and more from both sides of the English Channel
February 7, 2026
BUBBLE AND SQUEAK TWO WAYS
The mixture was piled into a well greased muffin tin and baked in the oven at 180° fan for about twenty minutes then sprinkled with grated cheese before returning to the oven to finish cooking. After another ten minutes the cheese was melted. We had ours with baked beans. Yum!
February 5, 2026
BRIOCHE PLUM PUDDING and is the British pudding becoming extinct?
This "tear and share" style brioche was surplus to requirements but luckily we had friends coming round for dinner so I turned it into a version of bread and butter pudding.
It looks like a batch of cinnamon rolls but is actually fluffy and light brioche dough filled with a vanilla custard. I was slightly stumped as to what to do with it so as a guide used Mary Berry's recipe which you can see here. Using a filled kind of brioche bread I decided against buttering the rolls but added some fruit by tucking some of my cinnamon baked plums in between the pieces. You can see that recipe here.
Another challenge was timing its cooking so as to have it ready to serve warm at the right stage in the meal. Bread and butter pudding can become a bit stodgy when it's gone cold. To achieve this I sliced and arranged the brioche in the dish, and whisked up the custard, well in advance, keeping the liquid in the fridge until it was needed. I did the soaking stage just before serving the starter and had the kettle full and ready for the bain marie, and put it in the oven to bake just as the main course was served.
In France it is traditional to have the cheese course before dessert so it came out of the oven at that point and was still warm and fluffy when it was served. Result!
It did look alarmingly like toad in the hole when it arrived at the table but in fact was delicious and everyone loved it. Brioche certainly makes a light pudding and it was so good that I would definitely do it again!
I'm not sure I have seen the exact same brioche product in the UK but if you refer to Mary's recipe you will see that you can simply use buttered slices of a normal brioche loaf.
As it happens, there was a little of the custard mixture left over after filling the dish so I kept it in the fridge for a couple of days and then baked it by itself in a small buttered dish for about 30 minutes at 150° fan. An added bonus of a baked egg custard!
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As an aside, in the news a while ago there was a report of research by English Heritage which showed that only 2% of British households regularly eat a home made pudding as a dessert. Blogger Karen at Lavender and Lovage also posted about this here.
This got me thinking. Often we have a yoghurt at lunchtime and no dessert in the evening but at least once a week we will have some kind of baked pudding, often just a humble crumble. We're most likely to have a pudding if we have friends round for lunch or dinner, in which case I nearly always make two different ones so that people have a choice and we have leftovers to enjoy later!
The writer of the article baked and reviewed ten of the puddings allegedly under threat of becoming extinct and which were:
Jam roly poly, Sussex pond pudding, bread and butter pudding, queen of puddings, treacle sponge pudding, Malvern pudding, flummery, spotted dick, cabinet pudding and rice pudding.
He reckoned the only one worth saving was the Malvern pudding. Queen of puddings is something I make occasionally, bread and butter pudding regularly in some form or other and rice pudding is a very special treat.
I have never made or knowingly eaten a flummery, Sussex pond, cabinet or Malvern pudding and it’s a long time since I made a steamed or suet pudding of any kind. These were served frequently when I was at school and when the school had a real kitchen. Spotted dick always had the boys sniggering and had a bad press but I loved it and seconds were in high demand at school dinner. My mum used to make steamed sponge puddings regularly, steaming it for hours on a Sunday morning. I still remember the sense of anticipation and excitement as the kitchen filled up with steam! A treacle sponge with Birds custard for "afters" was such a joy! I think I would be more likely to make a microwave version these days.
What the article doesn’t make clear is whether most households are skipping dessert altogether or serving shop bought ones. "Ready meal" versions of numerous old fashioned puddings seem to be in plentiful supply in UK supermarkets; clearly still very much in demand even if people can’t find the time to make them for themselves. They are also frequently on the menu in our favourite UK restaurants, so they’re not really becoming extinct, just not made at home as often.
Of course, in France the situation is very different. The average boulangerie will have a range of delicious tarts and pastries available every day. Very tempting and if you turn up in the late afternoon the choice will be limited so that’s clearly the dessert solution in French households!
Personally I feel there is no risk of baked puddings becoming extinct in this house, nor in most where we are lucky enough to be invited elsewhere! The English, or at least certainly the British ex-pat, love a nice pudding! The French are fascinated by them too and are always keen to try one!
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Ingredients
1 brioche "tear and share" loaf
150g cooked plums
3 tblsp demerara sugar
3 eggs
75g caster sugar
150ml double cream
600ml full fat milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
zest of 1 small lemon
Method
Butter a large baking dish. Cut each roll from the loaf in half horizontally and arrange them in a spiral in the dish. Tuck the plums between the slices.
For the custard, put the eggs, cream, milk, vanilla and lemon zest into a bowl and whisk together. Pour this mixture over the brioche and press down with the back of a spoon. Sprinkle the demerara sugar over and leave to stand for 30 minutes.
Heat the oven to 180°C / 160° fan / gas mk 4. Stand the dish in a large roasting tin and pour in boiling water to about half full. This is called a bain marie.
Bake for 40 minutes until the brioche is golden brown and puffed up. It will shrink back down a little.
Serve warm with cream.
Serves 6 generous portions.
February 3, 2026
TOMATO MINI TARTS FOR APÉRITIFS
February 2, 2026
FOCHABERS GINGERBREAD
The cake had a firm texture and would be excellent for a picnic or to be handed round at a gathering as it didn’t fall into a mass of crumbs in the hand. It was somehow not too sweet, not too gingery but satisfying. We had the last two slices toasted and buttered. It was not the sort of cake you might serve at a fancy tea party but definitely worth remembering. It would be perfect for St Andrew's Day which is on 30th November.
January 20, 2026
CLEMEMTINE AND ALMOND CAKE
Dom mentioned that it's originally a Nigella Lawson recipe so I googled it and it's from her book "How to Eat". The only tricky bit is that the clementines should be boiled for one and a half hours. Ah, I thought, I don’t have time for that…..I wonder if there’s another way.
Sure enough, on Nigella's website (see here) it says that you can microwave them instead, so that’s what I did. Nigella recommends cooking them in a covered dish with a vent in the lid so I used my lovely old Pearsons of Chesterfield stewpot.
This is a fabulous cake. Beautifully moist with flecks of the clementine zest running through it and of course it’s gluten free. It's very easy to make, keeps well, freezes well and makes a delicious dessert.
Ingredients
375g clementines
250g ground almonds
225g caster sugar
6 large eggs, lightly beaten
1tsp baking powder
Method
Preheat the oven to 19°C / 170° fan / gas mk 5. Butter and line the base of a 20cm springform tin.
Put the clementines into a dish with a lid that has a steam vent. Add a little water and microwave on high , 800-900W, for 8-10 minutes, turning half way through until soft. Drain and allow to cool while preparing the other ingredients.
Cut each clementine in half and remove the stalk ends and any pips. The easiest way to do this is to flatten out the halves of fruit and dig out the pips.
Put them all into a food processor and blitz briefly to a rough pulp. Add all the other ingredients and process until smooth.
Transfer the mixture to the tin, level the top and tap on the worktop to dispel any trapped air.
Bake for 40 minutes until the cake passes the skewer test, covering loosely with foil after 20 minutes to prevent the top from scorching.
Remove from the oven and sit the tin on a rack until the cake is cool.
Dust with icing sugar before serving.
Cuts into 10-12 slices.
January 14, 2026
BEAN SOUP (soup maker recipe)
What I hadn't bargained for was that the dried beans had to be soaked overnight before they could be cooked. I should have realised this as it's exactly what we now do with our mushy peas so I wrote it on the pack of beans to remind me! (I have never seen mushy peas for sale in France and instead of bringing tins of them from the UK I bring packs of dried marrowfat peas which I then cook and freeze in portions.)
A rummage at the back of the pantry shelves turned up a tin of pre cooked beans so we could still have the soup.
Another thing I found in the cupboard was a pack of half baked demi baguettes that were just at their sell by date. These are very handy to have in stock for when you want nice crusty bread and the boulangerie is shut or the baguette machine in the village has sold out. I always make sure we have some in stock. They’re not quite as delicious as a fresh baguette but better than none at all!
The soup was cooked in the soup maker on the "chunky" function which means it's all boiled up but not blended. Consequently I chopped the veg smaller than usual as that's the size the chunks were going to be in the finished soup. As the blender function is not used you could simply cook the soup in a saucepan!
January 12, 2026
MICROWAVED POACHED EGGS
I first wrote about how to poach an egg here. It's the method I use when I have more than one egg to cook and it works well every time as long as the eggs are quite fresh. If they are not so fresh the whites tend to spread a bit but they still taste good!
A perfectly cooked microwaved poached egg.
Then I spotted on the internet a way to do them in the microwave, which is very handy and quick if I just want to poach one egg for myself. There were various methods involving mugs, cups, ramekins and other dishes, water on top, water underneath, and I had mixed results including exploded egg all over the inside of the machine!In the end I arrived at this method and came to the conclusion that the shape of the dish has a lot to do with the success.
My best results came from using a rather conical shaped dish.