Urban foodie

Posts Tagged ‘baking disaster’

Baking for Beginners

Sunday, January 31st, 2010 by urban foodie

As regular readers will know, I am no baker. I think it is something to do with my style of cooking which is of the handfuls and glugs school, rather than the more precise gs and mls - it seems I can’t try a recipe without tinkering, and that so often spells disaster in (beginner’s) baking.

For evidence please see earlier posts on the cupcake - my nemesis.

However, there is nothing quite like home baked bread on a weekend morning. Biscuits, tarts and cookies make the very warmest of presents that everyone likes to receive, simple gestures of affection that don’t carry any financial baggage.

So, for the last few months, I have been trying my hand at baking, with the help of a bread machine for Christmas and a new sieve.

I had not a few early disasters, but I ploughed on with help from various cookbooks, forums and, most of all, from better bakers on Twitter (special thanks go to @scandilicious, @goodshoeday and @foodnetworking for genuinely helpful tips and tricks).

Now I have nailed the breadmaker thang, the last two loaves (a spiced fruit loaf and granary bread,  pictured) were fab and my ginger biscuits are truly scrumptious!

I’m not claiming to be a pro, but having now got a slightly firmer hold on this baking lark I thought I’d share the knowledge I have picked up so far, in case you have use for it.

Oh, and I’ve included the recipe for ginger biscuits at the end as these are really, really great.

Tips & Tricks

  1. If a recipe calls for cold butter, make sure it is really, really cold butter – freeze for a few minutes before using then grate into your flour. Also, pop the formed biscuits into the freezer for a few minutes just before they go in the oven.
    (this helps the outside of the cookie to remain butter free)    

  2. Creaming (room temp) butter and sugar with an electric hand-whisk - cream the butter first with the whisk then add the sugar bit by bit.
    (this avoids getting sugar all over the kitchen – see this vid)    

  3. Use only quick yeast in the breadmaker – and make sure it is high quality and FRESH
    (I use Doves Farm, the Tesco quick yeast didn’t work very well)    

  4. If you use olive oil instead of butter your bread will be more like a light ciabatta, very tasty!
    (I’ve only tried this with white – note when I say tried I mean experimented as had no butter and it was midnight…)    

  5. Atmospheric pressures can have an effect on bread if it is raining and your loaf top is soft/bread a little doughy use 10-20ml less water.
  6. Use the measuring spoon that came with the breadmaker.

BEST ginger biscuits

Ingredients

Makes about 20

100g butter (unsalted, at room temp)
175g golden caster sugar
250g plain flour
150-200g crystalised ginger
1.5 tbsp golden syrup
2.5tsp ground ginger
0.5 tsp bicarb of soda
pinch salt

  1. Preheat oven to 180 C (Fan), lightly grease 2 baking trays with butter
  2. Chop crystalised ginger quite finely
  3. Whizz butter in a deep bowl with an electric hand-whisk, gradually adding sugar, cream well (3-4 mins – you can also do this by hand with a spatula, just takes longer)
  4. Sieve flour into the bowl, mix well and then add other ingredients and mix again (to make a sticky dough)
  5. Shape dough into 20 walnut size balls, lay on tray giving them enough space to spread.
  6. Bake for 12-15 mins, they will look a little pale and will be very soft but they firm up out of the oven
  7. Once firmed up (3-4 mins) transfer to wire rack to cool – can be stored in an airtight box for up to a week

Halloween Cupcake #Fail

Saturday, October 31st, 2009 by urban foodie

Ghoulish Halloween Cupcakes - meat look!Most cooks, no matter how competent, have a culinary area of darkness. It might be cooking fish (a common one) or making pastry. Mine is cupcakes.

It isn’t just that my cupcakes aren’t great, which I could accept - not happily, but I could accept. It is rather that they are truly, truly terrible. I use recipes and yet the batter is always the wrong consistency, they have a nasty aftertaste or the icing is literally inedible.

I’m not the best baker in the world but I can turn out a decent tart, banana bread or muffin but the cupcake, it seems, is beyond me.

It had been a while since I’d approached my nemesis, long enough for the memory of the last cupcake #fail to subside - it involved too much lavender and lumpy curdled butter - don’t ask! Halloween and a horror film night at some friends’ seemed like the perfect opportunity to make some ghoulish cakes.

I settled on a recipe for red velvet cupcakes, a slightly frightening vivid red cake from the American deep south, these I’d decorate with creamy icing, laced with trickles of blood (food colouring) to make vampire cupcakes.

They should have been dramatically red but also light and fluffy, mine were meaty pink (honestly, look at the photo) and rock dense, the batter really more of a dough…

They did rise but in a horribly deformed fashion, looking to all the world like I had made them from finely minced and kneaded meat. They tasted really floury and the icing was too liquid and poured into all the crags and over the sides!

Checking recipes online I now realise that while the recipe I had advocated 2.5 cups flour to 1 cup buttermilk and I had converted that to 550g flour to 100ml buttermilk, that is about twice as much flour as I should have used, oops! Still don’t know what went wrong with the icing, tasted lovely, just poured like double cream…

There was also to be some bloody popcorn (popcorn covered in dyed red melted butter), now I think it’s going to be some Halloween chocs and regular chips and dips - not even home made as I spent all yesterday evening on baking the meat cupcakes…

I thought I would share, as a word of warning about careful US to conversions (cupcakes should be about 2 parts flour to 1 part liquid) and also because it is always good to know that we all suffer bad cooking days.

Plus, they are so awful I thought you might enjoy a giggle!

Happy Halloween.


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