Saturday, 31 May 2014

Brownies

I'm having a love affair with these gorgeous, chocolatey little squares of delight. I try to hide them to eat myself but the delightful brownie aroma in the house always gives them away.

They are never exactly the same because I tend to put random leftover in bottom of packets type  ingredients in them, just whatever happens to be in my cupboard.

So down to business. the main recipe is:

200g dark chocolate
100g butter
250g caster sugar (brown sugar also works well)
4 eggs
1tsp vanilla
60g plain flour
60g cocoa powder

Set up a bain marie.

Basically I set a mixing bowl on a pot of boiling water ensuring the bowl is not in contact with the water. The steam then gently melts your ingredients. I prefer this method to microwaving which can easily burn your ingredients. Burnt chocolate=nasty.

Melt together chocolate and butter and gradually add sugar.


Carefully take the bowl off the pot and ensure mixture is not too warm.

Whisk in eggs and add vanilla.

Sift in the flour and cocoa powder.

Add other ingredients. Today I have a little coconut, cherries, white and dark chocolate. Nuts also work well.


The mixture will seem very wet compared to a cake mixture. This is what gives brownies the fudgy consistency.

Line a baking tray with baking paper. I don't be as fussy about this as I would be about a cake where shape is important. I tend to put the baking paper in the tray and scrunch and mould it to the sides.
Into the oven.


So here we go. Great heat up with ice cream for a dessert or just with a cup of tea.

Be nice and share. You can always bake another batch.



 
 

Friday, 23 May 2014

Oat Cookies

My daughter made these in school and said they were nice so I decided to try for myself.

50g butter
50g plain flour
125g caster sugar
1 egg
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking powder
175g oats
125g of anything else you want.
Oven 180c

The original recipe uses cherries, I used dark chocolate. Nuts and raisins would work well too.

Cream sugar and butter
Gradually add egg
Sift in dry ingredients
Add oats
Heap spoonful's onto tray allowing for the cookies spreading
Oven 20 mins
Leave to cool



 So here's the mixture. I took the lazy route and used a mixer.  I found there was too much oats so I would put in maybe 125g next time.

 When I am putting chocolate chips into something I chop up a bar of chocolate with some chunks bigger than others. The little bags of chocolate chips you can buy are for wimps and such uniformity has no place in home baking. There's nothing better then finding a big nugget of chocolate when you bite into a cookie.



 Disaster I ran out of baking paper tut tut. I just sprinkled a layer of flour and hoped for the best.
Into the oven they go.


Yikes, giant cookies..... All different sizes..... Sizing and proportion is something I can never get right. I really need to work on this ha ha. Also they stuck.  Baking paper is essential for baking cookies.....and well everything really.  Ok next batch.


Ok I still have portioning and sticking issues but better. As long as they taste ok right?.....RIGHT?

These should come with a warning.  I found them quite addictive but yum. I think I ate about four of them in one day. Now there's none left.

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

Wheaten Bread

The world calls it Irish soda bread, the Irish call it...well.... soda bread. People from my little corner of Ireland call it wheaten.  Our soda bread is something entirely different. Wheaten is beautiful spread with loads of butter(if you want healthy a baking blog is not for you), and served with cheese or soup.
 
I am going to try to bake some wheaten today.
It is not my first try so this version has been modified to prevent the horror of exploding wheaten that crumbles everywhere on contact with a knife and butter.

Wheaten Bread
Oven 200C

250g wholemeal Flour
150g plain flour
60g butter
1tsp salt (a tsp is not the wee silver teaspoon widely used to stir tea it is an actual measurement of 50g)
1tsp bicarbonate of soda
2 tbsp caster sugar (or less if you are sweet enough)
Around 300 mls buttermilk
A little honey and oats for top(optional)

I rubbed together the butter and dry ingredients until they where the texture of breadcrumbs then started adding the butter milk(I didn't bother measuring the butter milk and poured straight from the carton.) until it formed a dough.


                                                                                                                         
 
 
 I then kneaded the dough for a minute or two.



Until it became a smooth ball which I topped with honey and oats and placed on a well floured tray.


 
 
I then baked it. I never time my baking. I probably baked for at least 30 minutes before performing a probe with a cake tester.

The end product.



Success.

Lovely with cheese or soup.
 

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Focaccia Bread

Today I'm going to try to bake Italian focaccia bread. There's something I find oddly satisfying about using yeast and proving dough. Other people love the kneading - I'm not fussed. I don't like sticky hands so I cheat and use a mixer with dough hook. The pleasure for me comes in leaving the dough for a few hours then coming back to find it has expanded with a yeasty aroma. Whatever floats your boat.

I am trying out Paul Hollywood's recipe using half the ingredients and I am flavouring mine with garlic and olive oil.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/focaccia_08389

Here is the dough, I  halved the recipe to make less bread.




THE BREAD HAS ARISEN MUAHAHHAHAHAHA
Just a little longer.




The dough is totally full of air I think I may have proved it for too long it has an amazing yeasty smell though. A little kneading and onto a baking tray.



I made a little infusion with olive oil and garlic and brushed it over my bread before baking. Here's the finished product. Not quite as pretty as Mr Hollywoods but the proof is in the tasting.



Tastes ok, wouldn't win any competitions but will go fine with my spaghetti bolognese later.  It would be more helpful if I knew how focaccia is supposed to taste.



All in all not a bad effort.



You Have To Start Somewhere

The first cake I ever baked and decorated was 3 years ago for my daughters birthday.  As you can see its a bit clumsy but I thought it wasn't too bad for my first go. 
 
 
 
 
The biggest problem was the actual cake inside.  It tasted ok but it had the texture of a brick and could have choked a donkey. I was not to be put off, after all, children don't care about consistency as long as there is sugar present. It took nearly two years to get my cake consistency right so I didn't have to fear my cakes being cut and eaten.
 
So here are some of my cakes up to now (not in order). I got some of my cake ideas from the internet and some came straight out of my head. Sometimes I don't know what the end product will be - these are usually the better ones.