Monday, March 30, 2015

Almond cream - a simple taste of heaven

Almond cream, a very simple accompaniment for almost any dessert, but especially nice with Easter Cake or with any cake really.

Ingredients
  • 300 ml of double cream, whipped just before stiff
  • 60 grams of ground almonds
  • a teaspoon of black current liquor
  • three dessert spoons of icing sugar

Mix all the above together thoroughly.  Different liquors for different occasions and indeed, different ground nuts are just as good.  Avoid ground walnuts however, as this can make the cream very bitter and no amount of sugar will mask it.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Easter Cake




Easter is a wonderful time, not just for the obvious reasons, the reassertions of rebirth and forgiveness, but its Spring after all, and the evenings are lighter and blossom has come out to give us all hope that fresh life brings.

My Easter is probably the same as everyone else's, chocolate, Roast Chicken on Sunday and cake, in all its different forms.

The Easter cake I normally bake is based on a Victorian cherry and almond cake, just topped off with a soft marzipan cover.  It's not a traditional Simnel cake, simply because it doesn't have orange zest or the eleven marzipan balls on top.  Also, because I still have lingering nightmares of marzipan from the 1970s and 1980s, the hard, firm and dry, bright yellow marzipan of my youth, the marzipan I top this cake with is just firm enough to roll out.

This is a relatively low temperature baked cake which probably needs a little greaseproof "hat" for the first half an hour of cooking.  Before taking off the hat, turn the heat up by 10 degrees for a few minute before, and then after a few more minutes once the oven has been closed again. 

Cake Ingredients:
  • 4 ozs (100 grams) of salted butter
  • 4 ozs (100 grams) of caster sugar
  • 2 medium eggs (thoroughly beaten)
  • a teaspoon of orange water
  • 4 ozs (100 grams) of glacier cherries
  • 4 ozs (100 grams) pre-soaked in natural yogurt
  • 4 ozs (100 grams) ground almonds
  • 2 ozs (50 grams) self raising flour
  • half a teaspoon of baking powder
3 dessert spoons of marmalade (to set aside)

A 7 inch (17.5 cms) baking tin, approximately one and half inches (4cm) deep

Pre-heat your oven to 160 degrees centigrade (320 F), Gas mark 2

Cream together the butter and caster sugar until light.  Add the beaten eggs gradually.  If doing this by hand add a dessert spoon of the ground almonds at this point and this will help bind the eggs and butter mixture more evenly and easily.

Add the orange water and fruit next until the mixture is well combined and only then add the remaining dry ingredients through a sieve.

Fill your tin and place in the oven on the middle shelf.

Remove the hat after 30 minutes and then continue baking for another 30 to 40 minutes.  Use a metal skewer to test if done.  The skewer in the cake at the 30 minute mark and if it comes out clean your cake is done.

Let your cake cool in it's tin for the first 30 minutes or so before turning it out to a cooling tray.

Soft marzipan ingredients
(makes about 8 ozs or 400 grams)
  • 3 quarter cups of caster sugar
  • 5 quarter cups of icing sugar
  • 8 quarter cups of ground almonds
  • 1 desert spoon orange water
  • 1 large egg (beaten well)
  • additional icing sugar for rolling out
Sift the dry ingredients together and add the orange water and egg to make a soft dough/paste.

Work the dough until it is smooth and then place in a bowl and over and put in the fridge for at least an hour.

When rolling out this marzipan, be generous with your icing sugar, ensuring there is plenty on the work surface as the softness of this paste makes it stick readily.  Use a tea plate to make a round to place on the top of your cooled cake.  The disk of marzipan should be slightly larger than the width of the cake.

Heat the marmalade so that it can be brushed onto the now cooled cake.  Place the disk of marzipan on top of this.  Then, using the end of the handle of a teaspoon, flatten the overlap of the marzipan against the edge of the cake to give a scalloped edge.

Serve with Almond cream

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Thank you Susan and Australia

 
First my apologies, for the length of time between my last posts and now.
 
I have my partner's best girlfriend to thank for reigniting my outlook on food and also to Australia for giving me a fresh outlook on my passions. 
 
Both Susan and her husband Michael made us feel so much at home.

 
We only had time to go part-way on the Great Ocean Road, but we found a lovely country brewer on the way back to Geelong, to refresh us.

 
The Melbourne food market was vast, but still made me think of London's borough market.  At least there was room to walk about, just like everywhere we went in our visit, there was so much space.

 
Melbourne was definitely an inspiration in so many ways, the fusion of old and new and amazing blue skies!

 
And finally, just a final mention of a great Australian tradition (apparently!), the chicken parnie... this one was a Mexican ...