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Posts Tagged ‘easy baking’
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
- 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)
- 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)
- 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)
- 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…)
- 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.
- 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
- Preheat oven to 180 C (Fan), lightly grease 2 baking trays with butter
- Chop crystalised ginger quite finely
- 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)
- Sieve flour into the bowl, mix well and then add other ingredients and mix again (to make a sticky dough)
- Shape dough into 20 walnut size balls, lay on tray giving them enough space to spread.
- Bake for 12-15 mins, they will look a little pale and will be very soft but they firm up out of the oven
- Once firmed up (3-4 mins) transfer to wire rack to cool – can be stored in an airtight box for up to a week
Tags: baking, baking disaster, easy baking, ginger biscuits Posted in Food Facts, Recipes | No Comments »
Sunday, October 18th, 2009 by urban foodie
On this grey Sunday morning, ever so slightly the worse for wear after a fun Sat night out on the town I want something filling but healthy - and sweet, definitely sweet.
Bran muffins it is then, NY style bran muffins have been a favourite since I first tasted them (what feels like) a hundred years ago in the old Big Apple and there is nothing quite like the smell of baking to warm a house right through.
These muffins are by Allegra McEvedy, Leon founder, they have them in the restaurant and in the excellent recipe book. These bran type muffins are a real delight, a great balance of goodness (bran, apple, banana) and naughtiness (syrup and sugar).
Baking, I’m told, is an exact science - however, muffins, I have found, are not. You can really mix and match as you need to with muffin recipes - as you’ll see that I have below, so long as you get the proportions right you’re good to go.
Ingredients
2 eggs
90ml sunflower oil (I used groundnut)
3 heaped teaspoons apple sauce or stewed apple (I chopped up an apple finely)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 ripe banana, mashed with a fork
4 tablespoons maple syrup (I used golden syrup)
200g wholewheat flour
6 tablespoons soft brown sugar
1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
4 tablespoons bran
A big handful of chopped pecans
Scattering of oats, pumpkin or sunflower seeds for the tops
Makes 8 big muffins (I made 12 smaller ones and reduced cooking time by 10 mins)
1 Heat the oven to 180 C.
2 Whisk eggs in a bowl, beat in oil, apple, vanilla, banana and syrup
3 In a separate bowl combine dry ingredients: flour, sugar, bicarbonate of soda, baking powder, cinnamon and bran.
4 Mix dry bowl into the wet one, stir in pecans
5 Spoon into muffin cases (I only had fairy cake ones, hence making 12 instead of 8), sprinkle with oats, pumpkin or sunflower seeds
6 Bake for 30 mins (20 mins if making small ones - you can test if they are ready by inserting a skewer/fork, it should come out clean)
Allegra says that they should create proper muffin tops, mine just made tidy domes but were none the worse for it. She also says you can pour extra maple syrup on them for a teatime treat. I say bake them with the kids, they’ll love it!
Tags: bran muffins, easy baking Posted in Kid Friendly, Recipes | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008 by urban foodie
I’m no baker, but when a glut of pears were threatening to turn bad and be wasted there was nothing for it but to buy a pie dish and some baking beans and have a go. My mum makes this effortless and classic french tarte aux pommes which I used as my inspiration, offering delightful simple flavours that can be enjoyed for days, the ever so slight staleness makes it all the more delicious!
I took the pastry from Annie Bell’s excellent, if a little complex for everyday, Evergreen (I still haven’t got a copy of her legendary but elusive Vegetables currently £50 on Amazon Marketplace!) and then just made up the rest. Although this recipe isn’t the quickest it really is simple requiring only small amounts of input.
Ingredients
Pastry:
170g plain flour
55g caster sugar
85g unsalted butter
1 egg yolk (medium)
Filling
4-6 small pears
1 tablespoon apricot jam
2 tablespoons hot water
6 portions
1 Butter and flour 22cm tart tin (or if it really non-stick don’t bother)
2 Place flour sugar and butter and crumb in a bowl, add egg yolk and a few tablespoons water (as needed) to make a dough
3 Roll out pastry, put in tin and chill for an hour
4 Heat oven to 180 C, line pastry with baking beans and bake for 15-20 mins
5 Core and slice the pears, line nicely in tin, mix water and apricot jam and use to glaze, pop back in the oven for 20-25 minutes until peras are caramel brown on the edges.
6 Serve with a dollop of creme fraiche, and cover with a cloth for tomorrow (no need to refrigerate).
Tags: easy baking, pear, pie, tart Posted in Kid Friendly, Recipes | No Comments »
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