Little Miss Baker
Saturday, 21 June 2014
Tuesday, 9 October 2012
Apple and plum shortcake
I’ve fallen back in love with my very first recipe book I bought
Cakes and Slices and found this simple shortcake recipe. Something a little
different to a cake but still just as tasty. Next time I make it I will work
the dough a little more as it turned out quite rough, probably because it was a
bit dry! So here goes!
250 g plain flour, sieved
1 tsp baking powder
125 g unsalted butter, cubed
55 g caster sugar, plus extra
1 egg, lightly beaten
1 tbsp milk, plus extra
4 eating apples, peeled, quartered and sliced
Ground cinnamon
3 tbsp plum or damson jam
Heat oven to 180oC.
Rub the chilled butter into the flour and baking powder
until it resembles bread crumbs (I used a mini chopper – it takes literally
seconds!). Make a well in the middle of the mixture and pour in the beaten egg
and milk. Mix together with a table knife until it starts to stick together. If
you need too, add a little more milk. Flour a board and gather the dough
together. Mould into a ball, cover in cling film and chill for about half an
hour. I used this time to prepare the apples. Half the dough and roll one part
out into either a rectangle or cirle whichever you prefer until it’s about 20
cm long or in diameter. Place on a baking tray and spread over the jam. Lay the
apples on top and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon (to your taste). Roll out
the second half of the dough in the same way and lay carefully over the top of
the apples. Brush with milk and sprinkle with more sugar. Bake for 40-45
minutes or until golden brown. Leave to cool and cut into eating sized pieces.
Delicious served still warm!
Lizzi :)
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Gingercake
Aaaaa I can smell this cooking while I write this post. I
find ginger such a comforting smell; so warm and spicy. I wanted to use fresh
ginger in a cake so I bought some and experimented with a recipe from my cake sand slices recipe book. It’s adapted from a gingerbread apricot upside-down
cake which I have to say sounds wonderful so I will probably be trying this out
soon!
Here is the recipe I used to make an 8 inch round cake:
175 g unsalted butter
125 ml water
90 g golden syrup
165 g soft brown sugar
185 g self raising flour, sieved
About a thumb sized piece of fresh ginger (not very accurate
I know but it really is down to personal choice about how gingery you want your
cake to be!)
½ tsp nutmeg
Heat the oven to 180oC (or 355oF -
I’ve moved again so I’m back to an electric oven but fortunately this one works
better than the last one I had!)
Brush an 8 inch (20 cm) round cake tin (I used silicone)
with a little oil and dust with flour, shaking out the excess.
Heat the butter, water and syrup in a small saucepan until
the butter has melted. Mix the dry ingredients together in a large bowl. Grate
in all the ginger (it’s quite hard but stick with it – it’s worth it!). Pour
the wet mixture into the flour and sugar mixture and stir well until combined.
Spoon the mix into the cake tin and bake in the oven for about 40 minutes until
a cocktail stick comes out cleanly from the highest part of the cake. Leave to
cool in the tin for about 15 minutes, turn out onto a plate or cake stand and
simply dust with icing sugar.
And here are the scrumptious results!
Sorry it's been so long since I last posted...again! Life just seems to get in the way sometimes! Hopefully I'll be a bit more on top of everything from now on :)
Lizzi :)
Monday, 16 July 2012
Paluszki
So far I’ve only baked sweet things but I fancied making
something polish and came across a recipe for paluszki which are similar to
bread sticks but are made with potato. They turned out wonderfully light and
buttery and went down a treat with my boyfriend and my family. Such a simple recipe and they can be decorated
with pretty much anything you fancy. I used poppy seeds on one batch and
sunflower seeds on the other. The only thing I would change next time would be
to add some salt to the dough as I make it. So here they are from one of my
Baked and Delicious magazines.
For approximately 50 small paluszki:
175 g cold mashed potato
175 g butter, softened
175 g plain flour
A selection of seeds
1 egg, beaten
Heat oven to 180oC (gas 4 or 360oF).
Rub the butter into the flour (or cheat like me and use a
mixer!) until it resembles breadcrumbs. Add the mashed potato and mix together until it forms a sticky dough.
Wrap it in cling film and leave to chill in the fridge for at least an hour.
Turn out onto a well floured board and kneed for a couple minutes. I found my
dough was still quite sticky so I used quite a lot of extra flour. Roll the
dough out to about ½ cm thick and cut it into strips 1 cm wide and about 8 cm
in length. Lay the strips onto a baking sheet lined with greaseproof paper and
brush with the beaten egg. Sprinkle with your chosen seeds and bake for about
15 minutes until golden brown. Leave to cool and then eat!
Lizzi :)
Friday, 13 July 2012
60th Birthday Cake
Now, birthday cakes
are always about how they look more than how they taste so I went with simple
sponge cake for my mum’s. I made a bigger vanilla sponge for the bottom layer
and a smaller chocolate sponge for the top layer. I followed the tip for one of
my earlier posts: weigh the eggs without the shells and use equal amounts of
butter, sugar and flour. I used 4 eggs for the vanilla sponge and 2 eggs for
the chocolate sponge. I iced it with vanilla cream cheese buttercream coloured
with food colouring paste rather than liquid. It makes a more intense colour. I
made little white roses with Mexican paste from a local baking shop – they are
quite easy if a little fiddly. I found loads of tutorials on youtube so I won’t
post how I made them (unless someone wants me too!). So here is the recipe and
the pictures are below and I have to say I am particularly proud of it!
For the vanilla
sponge:
4 eggs totalling 205
g, lightly beaten
205 g caster sugar
205 g butter,
softened
205 g self raising flour,
sieved
1 ½ tsp vanilla
extract
2-3 tbsp milk
Heat the oven to 170oC
(gas 3 or 340oC)
Beat the butter until
it’s very soft. This took me maybe a minute or so. Gradually beat in the sugar
and keep going once it’s all added until the mix is very pale and light. This
took about 5 minutes. Then add the eggs very, very slowly and beat well in
between additions. The mix curdled again but not quite as badly as usual. Fold
in the flour in about 4 batches. Finally fold in the extract and milk. Pour
into an 8 inch deep cake tin (or silicone mould like me) and bake for about 45
minutes or until cooked. Check with a cocktail stick. Leave to cool in the
mould for 15 minutes then turn out onto a cooling rack.
For the chocolate
sponge:
2 eggs totally 97 g,
lightly beaten
97 g caster sugar
97 g butter, softened
97 g self raising
flour, sieved, with 3 tbsp removed and replaced with 3 tbsp cocoa powder
½ tsp vanilla extract
1 tbsp milk
Follow the same
method as before. Pour the mix into a slightly smaller 7 inch deep cake tin (or
silicone mould like me) and bake for about 25 minutes or until cooked. Check
with a cocktail stick. Leave to cool in the mould for 15 minutes then turn out
onto a cooling rack.
For the cream cheese buttercream:
200 g butter,
softened
100 g full fat cream
cheese
1 kg icing sugar,
sieved
1 tbsp vanilla
extract
2-3 tbsp milk
Food colouring paste
(your choice of colour)
Beat the butter and
cream cheese together. Add icing sugar in about 8 batches and beat. Half way
through add the extract and the colouring. Use the milk to help add the
remaining icing sugar. If the colour isn’t right keep adding it and beating the
icing well until you get the right shade. Use the icing straight away.
To assemble the cake
I used wooden kebab sticks as doweling rods to hold the cakes together. I
literally just cut them to size, pushed them into the bottom cake and placed
the chocolate cake on top of them. I used a lazy Susan (an icing turntable) to
help spread the buttercream all over the cake. It made it so much easier! I used
a slim metal spatula to spread and smooth it and the effect is quite nice. Once it was all
covered I pushed in the roses all over the cake. I finished it with a diamante
six and zero and some feathers from a baking shop.
Here are the results!
Lizzi :)
Left over sponge
It was my mum’s
birthday yesterday so I made her a special cake but before I did I wanted to
make sure that I would be able to make a good cake. Originally I was going to
make Madeira cake but then settled on a normal sponge recipe. I found a great
tip for sponges: weigh the eggs (however many you are going to use) WITHOUT the
shells and use equal amounts of butter, sugar and flour. It will work
perfectly. I made a sponge but didn’t have anything to do with it so I
experimented and made some simple cream and strawberry cakes and some chewy chocolate
truffles. I will link the sponge recipe after I write it!
For the strawberry
cakes I used a circular cutter to cut the sponge, whipped up some double cream
with a bit of sherry (I’m not 70 but it tastes good!), spread it on the cakes
and topped with a whole strawberry. Simple but scrumptious.
For the chewy chocolate
truffles:
About an ⅛ of a plain
vanilla sponge which I guess is approximately 200 g!
100 g fruit and nut
chocolate, melted
50 ml cherry brandy
(alcoholic theme here!)
100 ml double cream
Put the oven on a low
temperature, not more than 100oC, crumble the sponge, put it on a
baking tray and dry it out in the oven for about 15 minutes. Be careful not to
burn it. Put the crumbs in a bowl, add the chocolate, cream and brandy and mix well.
Divide them between mini muffin cases and chill in the fridge. These were
completely made from whatever I had in the cupboard but I will definitely be
making them again – when I got up in the morning my boyfriend had eaten all of
them!!
And here they all
are!
Strawberry cakes
Chewy chocolate truffles
Chewy chocolate truffles
Strawberry cakes
I hope you like them!
Lizzi :)
Chocolate orange cupcakes
My sister has just
finished her degree and graduated with a first (congratulations!) so I decided
to make her some cupcakes. I found a posh orange extract in Sainsbury’s so
thought it would make a nice change to make some fruity cupcakes. I cheated and
used chocolate fudge icing I bought from the shop but I have to say it’s YUMMY!
I took the recipe from my Bake Me I’m Yours……Cupcake book (I have used this
recipe in a previous post).
So to make 24
cupcakes:
225 g caster sugar
225 g butter,
softened
4 eggs
225 g self raising
flour
1 tsp orange extract
1 tub of Betty
Crocker chocolate fudge icing
Edible letters (I
used Silverspoon white chocolate ones)
Heat oven to 175oC
(gas 3 or 350oF)
Beat sugar, butter
and flour together. Slowly add eggs and extract (….mine curdled!) and keep
beating. Mix until well combined and quite light. The mix is described to be a
‘soft dropping consistency’ when it is ready. It doesn’t take me long to get to
this stage. Divide the mix into the cupcake cases and bake for 10-15 minutes
depending on your oven. I like using pretty cases and these ones were pink with
butterflies on them. Use a cocktail stick to check they are cooked. I always
check the biggest cake and the stick should come out clean. Turn out onto a
cooling rack and leave for a good hour before icing. I just spread the icing on
and then spelt out ‘congratulations’ with the white chocolate letters. For the
left over cakes I sprinkled them with sugar stars. And here they are!
I'm sorry that the pictures are on the side but I'm not technical enough to work out how to change it! :(
Lizzi :)
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