Saturday 27 December 2008

THAT Chocolate Cake

This is the absolute best chocolate cake recipe I have tested.  It's from "The Essence of Chocolate" by Steinberg & Scharffenberger. I made it for the hubby's birthday.  My decorating skills are pathetic, so it doesn't look so good. But ignore how it looks. 




It's a lovely and moist cake, with a deep rich chocolate taste.  And it tastes better the day after! I could swoon about it all day, but I'll spare you, so I'll just leave you with these pictures (ok, my photo taking skills leave much to be desired...).





Thursday 20 November 2008

Flourless Chocolate Brownies with Hot Chocolate Sauce

As you would probably have guessed, I'm a chocolate lover. And all chocolate lovers love a good brownie. This brownie from Nigella is very good, and very easy to make.
In place of flour, the recipe uses ground almonds. It also uses a lot of butter. The batter is a very oily proposition.

You basically melt the chocolate and butter, mix in the rest of the ingredients and then bake it. While hot, it never looks quite done, as it is still very gooey inside. But it will cool and set!

It's very very rich and damp and fudgy. Great with hot chocolate sauce. Nigella's recipe for hot chocolate sauce which contains some coffee powder, adding a nice kick. Great with ice-cream.

Thursday 13 November 2008

Totally Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies

Who doesn't like a chocolate chip cookie? And, unless you don't like chocolate, why wouldn't you like this chocolate chip cookie from Nigella Express? It's more than a chocolate chip cookie, it's even more than a double chocolate chip cookie. It's a Totally Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookie.

As it's name suggests, it involves 350g of chocolate chips in addition to the chocolate & cocoa powder already in the dough. The dough was thick and smelt good enough to eat.

To bake, you spoon an ice-cream scoop full of dough onto the baking tray. The result is one huge and very very chocolatey chocolate chip cookie. Very nice with milk.

As usual it was easy to put together. The only problem I faced was that it was hard to tell when the cookie was done just right, as you don't have the usual "or when the cookies are golden brown" to guide you. My first attempt was a little burnt. But my next few attempts were fine.

It is rather rich and very huge, so you might find it better to share one cookie. I didn't think I would be able to finish a dozen cookies, so I froze half of the dough for a quick treat another day.

Friday 3 October 2008

Butterfly Cakes

We planned a picnic to the Botanic Gardens with some friends. Since I had leftover ganache from the chocolate cupcakes (see previous post), I decided to bake some butterfly cakes and fill them with the chocolate ganache rather than the buttercream icing in the recipe.

Butterfly cakes are really just regular cupcakes with a twist. A little more baking powder is added so that the cupcakes rise a little more.
This, so that you can cut out a disc-shaped piece from the top of the cupcake, fill the cut-out section of the cupcake with icing, and fashion the cut-out piece of cupcake into butterfly wings and stick it onto the icing. Sounds complicated, but is really easy (for someone who always messed up in art class, take it from me).

The cupcakes were sweet. The ganache was bitter (I used unsweetened chocolate). The combination worked great together. Not as swoonable over as the damp chocolate cupcakes, but very easy to put together, and provides an nice variation to the regular cupcake. A very enjoyable treat. For a children's party, you could use a milk chocolate ganache, or a plain buttercream icing.

Thursday 2 October 2008

Dense Chocolate Cupcake

For my church's fund-raising bake sale, I decided to offer up Nigella's Dense Chocolate Loaf Cake, modified into cupcakes. On paper, the recipe looked really good, and I had been dying to try it out for the longest time.

As this was my first time baking chocolate cupcakes, I had no idea how chocolate cupcakes should look when ready. The cupcakes had to spend 30 mins in the oven, which is much longer than the 15 - 20 mins for regular cupcakes, and I was concerned about over-cooking them. Because of the chocolate content, the cupcakes came out of the oven looking rather scarily black. It was hard to tell if they were over-cooked. Or under-cooked!

But I needn't have worried. Miss Nigella is right. The cupcakes turned out beautifully. They were wonderfully moist and chocolatey, and had the most amazing aroma. The critical ingredient for this recipe, I believe, must be the dark muscovado sugar, which I had much difficulty sourcing, so much so that when I stumbled upon it, I bought a stash for my cupboard. (If any of you need any in Singapore, they can be found at Tanglin Marketplace.) The sugar imparts a beautiful depth to the flavour of the cupcake. And unlike Nigella's other recipes, I was able to use the recommended amount of sugar, without having the end-product tasting too cloyingly sweet (a consistent weakness I find in Nigella's recipes). I will try the cupcakes with other types of brown sugar next time to see how it affects the flavour. I would definitely not use white sugar.

But this is not all. I decided that since these cupcakes are for sale, they deserved some prettifying. So, icing was needed. And Nigella provided a wonderful chocolate ganache icing accompaniment. I am pleased to report that this time round, I melted my chocolate perfectly. (Read my previous post describing my disastrous chocolate melting experience.) I took up Katong Gal's suggestion, and melted the chocolate and cream in a bowl above simmering water. Once about a third of the chocolate started to melt, I turned off the heat, not allowing the chocolate to overheat at all.

I had a treat icing the cupcakes, and topped them off with sugar rosebud I bought from a specialty baking shop (Bake it Yourself). Apart from tasting damn good, the cupcakes looked real good too. My husband, who doesn't usually bother with cupcakes, enjoyed them thoroughly.

The decorating must have been a good idea, as the cupcakes sold out at the bake sale. :-)

Monday 8 September 2008

Childhood Candy Culture

This may seem strange to say in a blog that is largely dedicated to my baking pursuits, but my 3 year old son doesn't eat candy.

We decided when he was young, that he doesn't need candy, or chocolates, or cake or other sugar-laden treats. It's not necessary for his physical development at this age. And if he's hungry or peckish, we'd much rather he ate some nutrient-rich fruit or yoghurt or other healthful snack. He has his entire life to indulge, if he so wishes, in sweet-treats. We don't need to encourage him at this age. Especially since there is a history of diabetes on my side of the family.

Of course, we can't control what he eats in school. He has eaten birthday cakes. But I'm glad to report, he exercises self-control in school, and would sometimes choose to skip the cake and he never touches the candy. He's just not too interested. (In fact, he tried some ice-cream, and told the teacher he didn't like it much.)

And at some point, we will allow him the odd cake, or chocolate as special treats and not as a matter of routine.

The fact that we don't allow candy comes as a surprise to many people. An acquaintance who heard about our practice told us straight-faced that our son doesn't have a childhood.

Apart from the fact that I don't think this person, who doesn't know us very well, has any right to pass judgement on our parenting skills, I am taken aback that she thinks that having candy is a good measure of the quality of a person's childhood.

And she is not alone.

My mother-in-law thought we were being cruel to our son when he couldn't have any of her birthday cake (look, he wasn't even interested. He was more interested in blowing out the candles.) She's gotten used to our rules now, but she's passed the word around, such that our relatives would comment on it when they see us!

We take it in our stride, as we've come to realise that the candy culture in childhood in Singapore is so pervasive. At childrens' parties, even at school, the kids would be served candy, and then given goody bags filled with candy. At sunday school snack-time, even for the little-uns, candy would be served. Well-meaning "aunties" would proffer candy to the kids to keep them quiet (even though, in about 15 mins, after the sugar high kicked in, this tactic would totally backfire).

We don't think our children need to be a part of this. And we will stand our ground. Our son my not be as chubby as the other kid who is given a slice of cheesecake every day (Yes! This is a true story!). But he doesn't have to be. He is well-nourished and healthy.

And he has enough playtime, and love to ensure that he has a rolling good childhood.

Wednesday 27 August 2008

Coca-Cola Cake

It was my mum-in-law's birthday. Rather than get her the run of the mill beauty product/spa voucher as a present, I thought it would be nice to bake her a cake, especially since I know she rather likes my baking (or at least I'd like to think that).

Since I am down with the flu, I had to choose a recipe that wouldn't involve too much shopping, and that would be quick and easy. Nigella's Coca-cola Cake recipe was just the one. I had everything in my pantry, apart from the yoghurt (in place of buttermilk, which I happen to have, but I'm saving it for pancake...) and coke. I didn't have golden caster sugar either, and I haven't seen it at all here, so I just used regular caster sugar.

It was pretty straightforward to make. The only fiddly bit was having to line the springform tin with foil as the batter was very thin and would otherwise leak. I also had to leave it in the oven for about 50 mins instead of the recommended 40, and even then, I don't think it was fully
cooked through (saw damp bits after the cake was cut). But by then the top of the cake had cracked rather badly, so I thought it was time. (There must be something wrong with my oven. Will need to get an oven thermometer sometime.) Anyway, I just trimmed off the peaked sections (chef's treat!), and covered the cake up with the cola icing, which by the way was way too much and way too sweet, even though I had reduced the amount of sugar by about 20%.

The cake had a really lovely texture. Nice and moist. And you don't taste the cola at all. Though I must say, it could've done with less sugar (and I had already put in less sugar into the batter and the icing). The other disappointment I had was that it wasn't as chocolatey as it looked. But I suppose, it is afterall a Coca-Cola cake and not a Cocolate cake. I would do this again as a birthday cake or maybe as cupcakes. But not for dear hubby, as he still prefers Nigella's cheesecakes.

PS: I discovered not long after that this is actually a Southern recipe. I used to see it on the specials menu at the Cracker Barrel restaurant in Montgomery, and I had never ordered it as I thought it was a weird combination. Now I wish I had tried some during my year there.

Thursday 7 August 2008

World Breastfeeding Week 2008

It's World Breastfeeding Week (WBW) this week ( 1-7 Aug 08). This year's theme, "Mother Support: Going for Gold", is something I believe very strongly in.  

It is not enough to say that breastmilk is the perfect source of nourishment for infants and young children ("the gold standard" so to speak), mothers must be given support so that they are in the best position to make breastfeeding a reality for their children.  

Support should not be confined to the first days in hospital with the hospital lactation consultant.  Many mothers give up breastfeeding shortly after returning home, due to a lack of awareness and information on optimal breastfeeding practices.  More needs to be done to help mothers sustain exclusive breastfeeding for at least 6 months post-partum, and to continue breastfeeding for two years and beyond (WHO guidelines). 

Through my breastfeeding experience, I have come to realise that support must come from a variety of sources.  Mothers must start to learn about breastfeeding before the baby is born.  It is a suprise to many that breastfeeding, though a very natural act, needs to be learnt.  As mothers, we should do as much as possible to learn about it so that we can give our children the best start in life.  In a similar vein, hospitals need to provide "practical instruction" on breastfeeding in the first few hours and days after the birth of the child.  Someone needs to physically show the mother what needs to be done.  Counselling needs to be available even after the mother returns home, as many problems arise in the weeks after delivery. 

Home support is also critical.  My husband and mother, who took care of me during my confinement month, were extremely supportive of my desire to breastfeed exclusively.  Never once did they suggest that we feed our baby formula.  In my exhausted and hormonally-driven emotional state, I think I might have given in had the idea been brought up.  Even then, I faced difficulties.  

Beyond this, we need to see more support at the workplace, and within the community. Working mothers must be able to regularly express milk in a conducive environment during the workday so that her baby can be fed.  She must certainly not have to use the toilet to express her milk.  We do not prepare our meals in the toilet, so why should it be OK to prepare her baby's meals there?  She must also be able to nurse her infant in public without being asked to cover-up.  How would you like to be told to eat under a blanket? Breastfeeding is not obscene.  In anycase, usually very little of the breast is exposed and you won't notice it unless you are trying hard to look, you leering pervert. 

The Singapore Chapter of the Breastfeeding Mothers' Support Group is celebrating WBW. More information is available at their website.  If you are a breastfeeding mother, please support their activities. If you are not, do take some time to learn about breastfeeding, and what you can do to help our mothers help our children get the best start in life. 

Thursday 31 July 2008

How NOT to melt chocolate

Determined to satisfy my chocolate craving, I decided to make Nigella's Instant Chocolate Mousse, which is found in Nigella Express. I was inspired by one episode on her show, which showed just how easy it is to make this stuff. You basically melt dark chocolate together with marshmallows, butter and a bit of water, then mix it together with some cream.  You can view it here on youtube.

It looked so easy! And I suppose it should be, but, this is where it becomes evident that I am only a novice cook. 

There is a technique to melting chocolate, which Nigella doesn't go into in her recipe. TWO key points: 
FIRST: the operative words are GENTLY and SLOWLY.  And you only need the chocolate there for a short while. My flame, which I thought was low, was probably too high, and I left the chocolate there for too long. So instead of melting, it started to get lumpy and grainy. I later read that what was happening was that the chocolate was beginning to "scorch".  What I should have done was to add some vegetable oil or shortening. Instead, I decided to pour in a little bit more water.  Which leads me to the second point,
TWO: Chocolate HATES water and if you want to melt your chocolate with other ingredients, including water, you have to add the water at the start of the process and in the correct proportions. NEVER EVER add it while you are melting it. The chocolate will "seize" - separate and clump. Which was a process I observed first hand...

Still blissfully unaware of the disaster at hand, I thought, perhaps the chocolate just needed to be folded into the cream.

Here is where I committed error number three.  The cream was to be whipped till thick. But I think I overwhipped it. Well, it didn't look overwhipped, in fact, it looked perfect. But once I poured it into the chocolate and started mixing it in, the mixing process tipped the cream over the "overwhipped" edge and it started separating! 

This was when I realised that my chocolate mousse didn't look anything like mousse. It looked just like oily chocolate clumps. I miserably ladled the chocolate mixture into glasses, hoping for the best, but realising that it was definitely not going to look like Nigella's beautiful mousse.

In the end, the chocolate mixture didn't look or taste anything like mousse. But, surprisingly, it wasn't all ruined. It was still edible, and because of the marshmallow, didn't harden into a rock of chocolate.  And since I used good chocolate, I could still nibble on it to fulfill my chocolate craving.

I have since learnt how to melt chocolate (see this very useful video, and article) and I can't wait to try out the recipe again.

Tuesday 8 July 2008

Blueberry Muffins - Take 2

Blueberries are in season now! I wasted no time in making up a batch of blueberry muffins. I usually use dried blueberries for this, and they taste quite wonderful. With the fresh blueberries, they were exquisite. The blueberries burst in the muffins and bled their wonderful juice into the muffin. Really very very good. Too bad my boy doesn't fancy blueberries.


I'm totally inspired to find more blueberry recipes otherwise I'll just be making blueberry muffins and blueberry pancakes this entire blueberry season...

Saturday 21 June 2008

Milk & Cookies, Yummy in my Tummy

The school holidays have come round again, and there are only so many outdoor activities you can do with a 3 year old. It was time to bake some cookies and I picked Nigella's recipe for Butter Cut-Out Biscuits (i.e. cookie biscuits, not American biscuits).
These biscuits were dead-easy to make. But make sure you have some time on your hands as you will need to chill the dough in the refrigerator for at least an hour. First, you cream together the butter and sugar, then beat in the eggs before mixing with the dry ingredients. (As usual, I used a bit less sugar than in the recipe.) You form two fat discs with the dough, and clingfilm them for chilling in the refrigerator.

After an hour, we retrieved one disc, rolled it out and started stamping. My boy had great fun with this part. We used number-shaped cookie cutters (just as Nigella had done) and also some other small shapes. We were able to cut out so many cookies (running out of space on the baking sheet), that we decided not to use the other disc of dough, but to freeze it for use some other time.

They took hardly any time to cook and tasted really buttery and had a nice meltingly smooth texture to them. Beautiful with milk! It felt so old-fashioned and comforting.

We iced some of the cookies for effect (since the recipe calls for it and it looked so pretty in the picture). But I left a good number plain as I did not want Junior to get a sugar-high and start with the tantrums (which he did anyway coz he stole a few iced biscuits).

I will definitely be doing this again, seeing that I have the other disc of dough in the freezer, but this time, no icing necessary...

Thursday 19 June 2008

Lily's Scones

I bought a new baking board, and with friends coming over for bible study, I thought that it was finally time to make some proper scones. Nigella has just this one scone recipe in the Domestic Goddess, which she describes as "the best scones I've ever eaten". But she would say that wouldn't she? Anyway, my previous attempts at scones weren't too successful, so I was hopeful this time round.

Apart from the usual suspects of flour, butter and milk, the ingredients also included shortening, cream of tartar (which, according to Nigella, gives the appearance of cellulite, but which also gives them a "dreamy lightness") and salt.

First you rub in the fats with the dry ingredients. Then you pour in the milk, mix briefly before turning it out to knead. The hard part I found was kneading the dough, especially since the mixture is very sticky. Your hands will get really icky but bear with it and you will soon be able to roll out the dough and stamp out the scones with a cutter. I managed to form 15 pieces (the recipe says it makes 12), but I think it was because I rolled the dough out a bit thinner than the recipe called for. Then you egg-wash it before you put it into the oven.

These take 10 mins to cook. And are lovely. They are firm on the outside, and really soft and light on the inside. Wonderful on its own or with some jam and cream. They are the best scones I've made. Though I think, because of the salt and shortening and the lack of sugar, they taste more like Biscuits (a la the American South), than scones. Frankly, these remind me more of my Alabama days than my England days. In particular, the Blue Plate Cafe (Memphis, TN) and the Loveless Cafe (Nashville, TN), where I had some of the best biscuits ever. Until I tasted their biscuits, I was not a fan of biscuits. Then, I was made a convert. I prefer my scones sweet, so I will continue to look out for a good scone recipe. But I will definitely do Lily's scones again, coz they're the closest thing to Blue Plate and Loveless I've got in Singapore!

Monday 26 May 2008

Carrot Cupcakes with Cream-Cheese Icing

I had arranged a playdate with my friend V one Saturday, and it afforded me the opportunity to bake again (yay!).

I am not a carrot cake fan (I am a chinese carrot cake fan though...), and this recipe, with its cream-cheese icing appeared rather odd indeed. To me, dessert should involve chocolate, possibly vanilla, and maybe fruit, but certainly never vegetables. But my friend V likes carrot cakes, and I wanted something my boy could eat (he hates blueberries and raisins, chocolates are currently banned, and so are conventional cakes). So this looked like the perfect recipe. It just sounded so healthy (ignoring of course the amount of icing sugar that goes into the topping) - my boy was getting his veggies, and instead of butter it calls for sunflower oil! It was also an opportunity to use the (a) light mucovado sugar that has been sitting in my cupboard since the initial wave of shopping for nigella-esque ingredients; (b) half a tub of cream cheese in the fridge left-over from baking cheesecake.

It was a bit fiddly and wasn't as domestic goddess-ly relaxing as some of the other recipes. This one involved grating carrots, zesting lemons AND oranges, chopping walnuts. Even after the cupcakes were in the oven, you couldn't relax with a nice cuppa while waiting for them to be done, you had to make the icing, which also involved the hard work of beating the cream-cheese, sieving the icing sugar (which I halved), and squeezing some lime juice.

I must say, the cupcakes sans icing were surprisingly light (and maybe a bit boring). I had used less than the 100g light muscovado sugar in the recipe, and I think this is one recipe which you can actually use the full amount of sugar Nigella indicates. When paired with the cream-cheese icing, which on its own was sickeningly sweet, the cupcake become irresistible! One was certainly not enough. We had seconds. And more.



Tuesday 20 May 2008

CA*California at Dempsey Hill

This is a little different from my usual posts.  But I had something to say and I'm going to say it here.  My husband and I decided to have a nice lunch at Dempsey Hill on Tuesday after our rather long visit to the paediatrician for our baby's 6 month check-up.  As I was dying for some ice-cream (it has been a really hot few days), we decided to eat at CA*California, which is co-located with Ben & Jerry's.

The menu looked interesting - it's a California F&B concept - and decided on some Caesar salad, Nachos & a Burger.   The food was OK.  Not fantastic, but not bad either.  The burger was juicy and I was going to say a little above average, when the slice of tomato in the burger slipped out, and we saw the hair.  A short, wiry strand, stuck to the half-eaten slice of tomato.  It was disgusting. It was wiry. 

We had half a burger left, but we ate no more.  No more salad. No more nachos. We couldn't even bring ourselves to order any ice-cream.  

We raised the issue. The waitress did not appear very taken aback when we showed her the hair. But fortunately for her, she remembered her service recovery lessons, and asked if she could get us anything else instead. Anything else? Goodness know what other horrors lay undiscovered. We politely declined and requested that we not be billed for the burger.  For a moment, the waitress thought we were joking but, once again fortunately for her, she recovered in time and said she would check. 

They did the decent thing, and agreed not to charge for the offending burger. The manager apologised and said that he checked by couldn't identify the culprit as all the kitchen staff were capped (er, so? the hair we found was short and wiry...), and once again asked if he could get us anything.  Once again, we politely declined. And did not tell him that we would not be eating anything ever again from his establishment.   

We finally got our ice-cream from Dome across the street.

For all those who are considering a meal at CA*California or Ben & Jerry's at Dempsey Hill. Be warned. 

Friday 16 May 2008

Meringue

Far too often, I've found myself with leftover egg whites from recipes that call for the yolks only. And the most recent one being the apple pie. Usually, I just dump the whites into some soup the next day or steam it up for lunch. I knew that I could probably find many recipes calling only for whites but I really keen to launch 2 back to back baking sessions just so I could use up the whites. That is, until I read Jamie Oliver's "Cook with Jamie" and read how easy it would be to whip up some meringues.
Basically, you need to make sure that all your equipment is dry and has absolutely no trace of oil. And you do need an electric mixer for this. I imagine it would be a pain doing this by hand.

Then you whip up your egg whites still they form stiff peaks. The test, Mr. Oliver says, is to turn the bowl of whipped whites over your head. They shouldn't budge. Then you whip in your caster sugar for many minutes, until the mixture is all smooth and shiny. Don't overwhip or the mixture could collapse. You could fold in various ingredients to get flavoured meringues, but I just left it plain. It goes into the oven, and you vary the cooking time depending on whether you want it all crisp, or crisp on the outside and chewy on the inside.

I managed to get 8 huge blobs from 3 egg whites. They looked really pretty and dreamy! Once done, they were beautifully crisp on the outside and chewy on the inside. They were really easy to whip up. My mum was impressed, as she has heard and seen enough about collapsed meringues.


I'm not sure what I can use them for though. I mixed them with some ice-cream, and it was good. The crispiness of the meringues with the creaminess of the ice-cream. You can't really eat too many of them neat, as they are rather sweet. Perhaps I'll test out an eton mess recipe, but the berries will be a bother to get as they are quite pricey. Anyway, the meringues are now sitting in the refrigerator looking rather forlorn.


Thursday 8 May 2008

Apple Pie

After a wonderful tete-a-tete with my weighing machine, I had resolved to take a break from the wonderful world of baking. But my resolve didn't last long. I was reading Jamie Oliver's Family Dinners, and was drawn to the apple pie recipe like bees to honey. I tried to resist. But the picture of the half-eaten golden yellow apple pie in the book dominated my thoughts. All I could think of was apple pie. Even cinnamon would invade my thoughts (even though the recipe doesn't call for any cinnamon).

Finally, I caved in. Afterall, I rationalised, apple pie contains apples, and we are supposed to get our daily apple right? =)

So off I went baking again.

Apple pie is a whole new territory. I have never baked a pie, though I have often thought of it. I think I might have made some shortcrust pastry in Home Economics classes a long time ago, but I forget. The pastry appeared easy enough to make. All I needed to do was to dump the ingredients in the food processor and blitz.
However, the rolling it out and laying it in the tin showed up my inexperience. My dough was rather crumbly and kept tearing when I tried peeling it off the board, which I had liberally dusted with flour. Perhaps the humidity in Singapore (and the really hot few weeks we've been having) doesn't help. Of course, the fact that my pie dish was 9 inches rather than 8 inches, as required by the recipe, made it worse, as I had to roll the pastry out even thinner. But Mr. Oliver says it's OK if "it tears or breaks - just patch it up - as it will look nice and rustic". So I patched up as best I could, as my confidence was rapidly melting.
The second part of the recipe involved peeling and chopping the apples and cooking them into a saucepan with the rest of the filling ingredients (sugar, ground ginger, zest of lemon, sultanas). The recipe called for Bramley and Cox apples, but they aren't readily available here (if at all), so I substituted Granny Smiths for the Bramleys and Red Delicious and Gala for the Coxes. I also used regular brown sugar instead of the fancy muscovado/ demerara sugar.

As expected, I had a tough time getting the dough to fit the top of the pie. Witness the number of tears in the pastry. Also the pastry rim was very very thin.
The result was a not very nice looking pie. The pastry was a bit overdone and burnt at the edges because the pastry was thin, and I had failed to adjust the cooking time accordingly. But I was hopeful, because, the smells emanating from my oven were just heavenly!



I spooned out some pie, dolloped some custard on it and dug in. Oh my, it was good pie. It wasn't at all heavy. Not too sweet, either. It was almost perfect. For the next slice, I took out a tub of Ben and Jerry's Vanilla ice-cream and attacked. Ah, now, perfect...

Sunday 27 April 2008

Chocolate Cheesecake - take 2

I decided to make this cheesecake again, as a birthday gift to a dear, dear friend. This is how it turned out this time round.
Looks really different from the previous attempt! This time I managed to get the marble effect, by allowing the melted chocolate to cool a lot more than before. I didn't like the look though. Next time, I'll mix it all in.

Didn't get a chance to taste the cake, but I am told it was great, though a bit too rich, which I suppose it normal. Though, I'm wondering if it was because I used brown sugar this time instead of white sugar. Or perhaps by marbling the chocolate, the taste gets more intense. Anyway, it was fun to make! Happy birthday Val!

Wednesday 23 April 2008

Chocolate Cheesecake

The sour-cream in my refrigerator was expiring soon, so I had to find some way of using it, and what better way than to use it for some cheesecake?
Amazingly, I had most of the ingredients in my pantry already, which just gives an indication of how much baking I've been doing!
As with the London cheesecake, there were quite a number of steps to making this cake. First, we had to make the base from pulverised digestive biscuits (Thank God for food processors). I went a bit creative here and added some cocoa powder into the mix, since I was in a rather chocolatey mood. Second, we had to mix up the filling. There was actually a small problem here - Nigella's recipe calls for the melted chocolate to be swirled, and not fully mixed, into the cream cheese mix to create a marbled effect. However, my chocolate refused to swirl. It preferred to flake. Which I thought was a rather ugly look, so I stirred everything in for a uniformly chocolate look. Third, we had to give it a steam bath in the oven, as we did for the London Cheesecake. Finally, I added some decorative touches via chocolate ganache swirls on top of the cake, as I had some leftover ganache from before.

The result? A lusciously smooth cake. It was beautiful. A lot lighter than the London Cheesecake, and not overpoweringly chocolately (cocoa powder in base notwithstanding...). Quite perfect. I will be making this again really soon as a birthday present for my pal Val. I'm quite sure she'll enjoy it!

Chocolate Torte - Jamie Oliver Style!


This is my first non-Nigella recipe on this blog. It's from Jaime Oliver, whom I adore as well. I caught him making it on TV once (can't remember which series), and I scribbled it down because it was chocolate! It's basically like a flourless chocolate brownie/mousse thingy on a graham cracker crust. You mix cocoa powder, chocolate, eggs, sugar, golden syrup, sour cream, pour it into the crust and leave it in the oven. Easy-peasy!

It was gorgeous - it's mostly chocolate afterall. But it was hard to eat too much of it because it was really really rich. We found that it went very well with a scoop of haagen-daaz macadamia nut ice-cream, which toned down the richness of the chocolate. Best served after it's cooled and set on the outside and a little warm and slightly runny on the inside (it's too runny in my picture). Yummy!


Friday 11 April 2008

Muffin Mayhem!

I realised that I had been getting rather more adventurous in choosing recipes and thought it would be nice to go back to basics and bake something rather more wholesome. So out came Nigella's muffin recipes. As my son doesn't take raisins or blueberries, I settled on her Banana Muffins, which looked like a safe bet, especially since she describes it as "easy and quick for a child to make". And it wasn't my first time making muffins.

But as I was making it, I began to fear that things weren't going well. First, the recipe calls for 2 "oozingly, bulgingly heaped 15 ml tablespoons of clear honey". I tried my best, by the honey wouldn't bulge in this hot weather. So I wasn't quite sure if I got the required amount of honey in. Then, Nigella commands that the mixture should not be over-mixed, "just stir a couple of times". I did as instructed, but the resulting mixture didn't look quite right. It looked really under-mixed, with bits of flour still floating around. She reassured though, that "you will have a not terribly attractive lumpy sludge, but don't worry about it".

So I decided not to worry about it. It went horribly wrong and the muffins turned out like this:

The white stuff isn't icing sugar, it's flour! The muffins didn't rise at all. They were hard as rocks, and bitter, and full of flour! On hindsight, I think I could have taken her "just stir a couple of times" with a big pinch of salt, and stirred the mixture a few more times. I suspect too that I didn't get enough honey into the mix, as the mixture was way too dry to look anything like sludge, even if I proceeded to mix it a few more times.

I was devastated, even if my son thought the muffins were edible, and proceeded to eat them anyway...

The failure rankled so much, that that evening, after the kids went to bed, I proceeded to whip up another batch of muffins. This time, blueberry muffins, which didn't have the silly honey requirement. It called for buttermilk, or yoghurt+semi-skimmed milk. I used the latter, as I had a tub of half eaten yoghurt in the fridge. I didn't have fresh/frozen blueberries but I used dried blueberries. This time round, they turned out beautifully!
They looked good and tasted great as well, and was a lot easier to whip up than the banana muffins. Unfortunately, my son wouldn't eat them.

My confidence restored, I decided to give the banana muffins another go. This time round I put in more honey (about 2.5 tbsp of honey) and mixed it a little bit more. I was most relieved when I opened the oven door and found this:
Not quite as beautiful as the blueberry muffins, and somewhat harder (the blueberry muffins were really rather soft), but much much better than the sad rocks I found in my oven earlier...I will attempt this recipe again, just because I want to get it just right. Does anyone have any tips on this?