Archive for the 'cake' Category


Buttermilk-Honey Banana Bread

Monday, June 12th, 2006

bread

Way back mid-last year, a Paper Chef entry caught my eye and this recipe has been sitting in my ‘to try’ folder for some time. I love banana bread and would normally use mum’s recipe but buttermilk just conjured up such cosy feelings and images for me that I had to try this recipe out…with a few modifications of course!

I used one mashed banana and about 4 dried ones, all chopped up into little pieces, and also added not just dried dates but apricots and sultanas as well. With the additiional dried fruit, I really should have cut out the sugar entirely as it turned out to be just a tad too sweet for my tastes. What a great loaf otherwise though – moist with a good crumb.

bread2

Btw, A. loved the sound of buttermilk so much that he considered having it on his cereal but upon tasting a little, found that it not to be rich and creamy as he had imagined, but thin and sour instead!

Buttermilk-Honey Banana Bread

2 eggs, ¾ cup sugar, 1 mashed banana, 1/3 cup buttermilk, 1 tablespoon olive oil, 1 tablespoon vanilla extract, 1 ¾ cups flour, 2 tsp baking powder, ½ tsp baking soda, ½ tsp salt, 30 g butter, 1/4 cup honey, 1/4 cup chopped dates, 1/3 cup chopped dried bananas, 1/4 cup dried apricots and sultanas, 1/4 cup walnuts

  1. Beat the eggs with the sugar for about 5 min until thick and light.
  2. Add mashed bananas, buttermilk, walnuts, honey, dried fruit, oil, butter and vanilla.
  3. Add sifted flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt mixture to the wet ingredients and mix until just combined.
  4. Pour batter into loaf tin and bake at 170C for 60 min until top is golden brown.

Yoghurt and Pistachio BabyCakes

Saturday, March 25th, 2006

pist

pist3

I’ve just discovered these at Victoria Market this season and love peeling off the soft pink-green outer shell to reveal the harder shell of the nut that we normally associate with pistachios. The same colours are reflected on the inside, with the paper-thin pink skin covering up a bright green kernel.

I had some fresh pistachios in the fridge and knew that I wanted use them in this recipe as soon as I came across it. Although Gini used labne (Middle Eastern strained yoghurt), I just went with a natural fat-free yoghurt.
:-o I just realised, as I’m typing this recipe out, that I completely left out the 1/2 cup of EVOO that shold have been mixed in together with the yoghurt! Trust me to get a recipe wrong, but hey maybe it was actually right this time because the cake turned out to be light, fluffy and moist. It reminds mw of a chiffon cake. I think I may just leave out the olive oil again next time :-p I didn’t grind the pistachios so finely that it was like using pistachio meal, so it was lovely to get the crunch of some pistachio pieces as you eat the cakes.

pist2

Yoghurt & Pistachio BabyCakes
1 cup raw unsalted pistachios, 1 cup flour, 1 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp salt, 6 eggs (separated), 1 1/4 cups sugar, 3/4 cup yoghurt
  1. Roast pistachios at 150C for 10-15 min then rub in the folds of a clean tea towel to remove the outer skins (like Gina, I didn’t go out of my way to get all the skin off and it didn’t seem to pose any problems). Increase oven to 175C.
  2. Grind finely in a food processor then add flour, salt and baking powder and process briefly to mix.
  3. Beat egg whites with 3/4 cup sugar to form stiff peaks. Remove to another bowl.
  4. Beat egg whites with rest of the sugar until pale yellow. Add yoghurt then mix in pistachio-flour mix with a spatula.
  5. Gently fold egg whites into batter and pour into lined cake tin. I used most of the batter in a 20″ round tin and the rest into my new silicone mini muffin tray.
  6. Bake for 40 – 50 min until skewer comes out clean. With the babycakes, I baked for around 15 min.

Mum’s Banana Cake

Saturday, March 4th, 2006

cake

Mum is a wonderful cook, excelling in both savoury and sweet dishes. However, in the days before I had developed any interest in food, I did not have a real appreciation of this. I ate her food everyday so it just seemed normal to me and, in fact, my brother and I use to beg for the meat-and-3-veg dishes that all our friends had for dinner or, horror of horrors, even McDonalds! (I can’t even remember the last time I had burgers from there)

As good as she is now, I still remember the story from mum’s teenage years of when she attempted a banana cake for a friend’s birthday (or something). She had baked this before, to acclaim, however she left out the eggs by mistake this time. The banana cake rose beautifully and smelled delicious however, to her utter embarassment, it promptly crumbled and fell apart when they tried to slice it. If only her friends could see her now!

She has, of course, mastered the art of baking this cake now and I can certainly remember this being baked on a regular basis when I was younger. I think it must be particularly popular in Malaysia as I’ve seen it in a few cookbooks. I love the moist ‘banana-iness’ of this cake and it has remained one of my all-time favourites.

Mum’s Banana Cake
125g butter, 3/4 cup sugar, 2 large eggs, 1.5 cups SR flour, 1/4 cup milk with 1/4 tsp bicarb soda and 1/2 tsp vanilla essence added, 2 ripe bananas
  1. Cream butter and sugar until pale.
  2. Add eggs one at a time
  3. Add flour and milk alternately
  4. Mix in bananas and pour into 20cm lined tin
  5. Bake at 180C for 45 min (bake for 20-25min for cupcakes or for 1 hour for double batch)

Snowing in Prague

Wednesday, January 11th, 2006

I had my first white Christmas experience this year! Although there was some snowfall when we were visiting New York last year, that was nothing compared to the beautiful snowfall we had in Europe this year! The showflakes were just drifting down gently to greet us. I couldn’t help but stick my tongue out to catch the flakes as we were walking around. Hmmm, do you think people would have been looking at me funny?

Anyway, one of the loveliest sweets we had was in Prague – a honey cake. It was moist, with spongy layers of cake layered with coffee-flavoured cream. It’s pictured here with almond toast.

prague

Madeira Cake

Friday, November 18th, 2005
A. loves having a slice of Madeira cake with a cup of tea but we have not had much luck lately with the supermarket variety. He put a request in for this cake some time ago so last night I baked one based on Nigella’s mother-in-law’s recipe as found in HTBDG. Madeira cake is supposed to improve with time, so I made it last night for a dinner that mum&dad are hosting tonight.
Madeira Cake
240g softened butter, 200g caster sugar, grated zest and juice of 1 lemon, 3 large eggs, 210 SR flour, 90g plain flour
  1. Cream butter and sugar then add lemon zest
  2. Add eggs, one at a time, with a tablespoon of flour between each addition
  3. Gently mix in rest of the flour followed by the lemon juice
  4. Pour into lined loaf tin and sprinkle with caster sugar before popping into oven at 170C for 1 hour

WCB 23: Look but don’t touch!

Saturday, November 12th, 2005

So, the idea was to make something to welcome Clare Eats of Eat Stuff back from the hospital after she suffered a nasty infection from some bites that she received from Kiri following a scare from their friendly neighborhood dog. The question was what to bake? I made sardine puffs for Kiri’s birthday a couple of weeks back so I was intent on baking something sweet this time.

I remembered a recipe for Maxence’s grandmother’s Gateau au Yaort that recently appeared on Chocolate and Zucchini. The recipe seemed to be pretty strightforward but it looked like one of those cakes that you crave when you want something delicious and not overly creamy to have with a cup of tea (like a madeira cake). I looked back on Clotilde’s posts until I found the ingredient list and easy instructions for this cake. I had some plain yoghurt on hand that I wanted to use up and I also had some eggs in the fridge that were crying out to be drowned in cake batter. But I didn’t want it to just be a plain yoghurt cake. I wanted something a little more comforting…say something like an apple teacake. After all, didn’t Ruth Reichl name her book ‘Comfort Me with Apples’ for a reason? Yes, I really liked this idea of filling the kitchen with the aroma of sugar and cinnamon – mmmm. So, I decided that I would just place some slices of Granny Smith on top of the yoghurt cake batter and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon.

I placed all the ingredients I needed for this recipe on the countertop and proceeded to measure out the ingredients using the yoghurt tub. The idea with this recipe is that you can use the yoghurt tub to measure out all your ingredients. The problem was that my yoghurt was sitting in a 500ml tub – way too large for this recipe. So, I used a 200ml tub that held just a tablespoon of leftover sourcream. Seeing as there was only a smidgeon of sourcream left, I decided to include it in the batter. After pouring the yoghurt-sourcream mix into a large bowl, I started adding the sugar and flour. Halfway through this, I realised that somehow I had gotten confused and started measuring out double the amount of all the ingredients after the yoghurt step! What was I going to do seeing as I had no yoghurt left? Well, there was an unopened tub of sourcream in the fridge and that was going to have to do. I continued with the recipe by adding oil, baking powder and vanilla extract. I skipped the rum because I didn’t have any. Fortunately, everything seemed to go smoothly after that. I poured the batter into the cake tin and placed it in the oven to bake at 180C for 45 min. Of course, I ended up having to bake it for about 90 min instead because I had doubled the recipe. Well, it just meant we would have more cake to go around anyway and that can’t be bad, right?

The cake came out of the oven looking pretty good, so I left it on the counter to cool. Being a thoroughly impatient type of gal, I didn’t leave it to cool for much before cutting a slice to look at the inside. I could tell something was wrong immediately. Initially, the cake did not appear to be fully baked on the inside but upon closer inspection, I realised that it was cooked through but it had a definite sheen from the oil. I wondered where I had gone wrong with such a simple recipe – sigh. How disappointed I was! I had wasted all these ingredients for naught, and I didn’t even get to use up my eggs in this recipe…hang on, didn’t I read something about eggs before? I quickly looked at the recipe again. Horror! I was meant to have added two eggs at the start. Actually, seeing as I had doubled the recipe by mistake, that should have been four eggs! ARGGHHHH. (Of course, the sharp-eyed reader will notice that the eggs are missing in the above photo, which is supposed to show all the ingredients). Well, you gotta laugh, right? :-) I tried and it’s the thought that counts (sheepish grin), and the cake doesn’t look so bad, does it? Cheers, Clare, and we hope that you are recovering well.

Here is Tasha, who knows that she looks great against A’s new red toy car pajama pants from Peter Alexander!

This week, WCB is being hosted by Boo-licious at Masak-masak again this week:

Check out Amy’s lovely flowers and get well message at Beauty Joy Food;
Check out the cute Babaganoosh with his good wishes at passionatenonchalance;
Check out Kalyn’s beautiful snapdragons which are beckoning Clare and Kiri to get well soon at Kalyn’s Kitchen;
Check out Squirt’s life story and well wishes at …slowly she turned… ;
Check out Tasha, cake (yum!), flowers and get well wishes at A Few of my Favourite Things;
Check out Flotsa in a Berkeley window at Middle-Fork;
Check out the kitties, Fridolin and Maruschka at Rosa’s Yummy Yums;
Check out the Cat who is sad but has lovely flowers for Clare and Kiri at Belly-Timber;
Check out Flotsa who is sending Clare and Kiri some virtual ice-cream at Far Cartouche;
Check out Earl and Toejam looking so cute they will definitely cheer up Clare and Kiri at So Cal Foodie;
Check out the sweetie, Tigger who looks like he can give lots of loving to Clare and Kiri at Shelli’s Sentiments;
Check out Phoebe and Trina giving cute winks to Clare and Kiri asking them to get well quickly at Indy Foodie;
Check out the adorable kitty antics which will bring a smile to Clare and Kiri’s faces at Tigers & Strawberries;
Check out Macroom who is sleeping away on a very cute chair (my Mum’s favourite cartoon character!) at Dispensing Happiness;
Check out Gigolo Kitty who is trying to negotiate better terms with Santa this year over at Gigolokitty!;
Check out River who is making sure there are no stray doggies around for Clare and Kiri at kitchenmage;
Check out Lixue who offers furry cuddles to cheer up Clare and Kiri (extra ones for Kiri as she loves him – I am so jealous but I understand as Kiri is such a hunky cat) at Look Hunny, I Cooked;
Check out Aggie who sent a hug, chocolate cake and flowers to Clare and Kiri at kayaksoup;
Check out the most adorable kitten fight ever plus candy for Clare and Kiri at Anne’s Food;
Check out Leo who sends his best wishes at my little kitchen;
Check out darling Molly Doodlebug with beautiful heart cookies and a lovely message for Clare and Kiri at Farmgirl Fare;
Check out Tanuki who wanted to post himself to Sydney to see Clare and Kiri at A Cat in the Kitchen;
Check out Marlin sprucing himself up as he brings S’more Treats to Clare and Kiri to cheer them up at Heather’s Space;
Check out Maggie sitting in a sink and offering lots of wishes to Clare and Kiri to get well soon at Love and Cooking;
Check out Miss Kitty with a lovely get well message and flowers for Clare and Kiri at Culinary in the Desert;
Check out Maggie and Wellington offering to go Down Under to see Clare and Kiri at Modern Girls Kitchen;
Check out at the kitties from France who bring flowers for Clare and Kiri at Lali et Cie
Check out Princess LouLou who sends her royal wishes to Clare and Kiri at Stalking the Waiter;
Check out Alicat’s former kitties and Spanks with lots of good wishes to Clare and Kiri to get well at Something So Clever;
Check out Billy Lee, the cyber kitty who is up to tricks at The food pornographer;
Check out Jack and Charlotte who both sent lots and lots of hugs to Clare and Kiri (I want one too!) at My Adventures in the Breadbox;
Check out Tyson who will beat up that doggie which tried to hurt Kiri at Food Chronicles (I’m sad about Meggiecat’s loss too!);
Check out Dale who sends his love and hugs to Clare and Kiri plus apologies for his species at One Hot Stove;
Check out Miss Domino who is looking for Clare and Kiri at Farmgirl Fare;
Check out Dusty who is concentrating very hard to be worried at bakingsheet;
Check out speedy Trixie who offers good wishes to Clare and Kiri at greengirlart;
Check out Snoopy who is joining us for the first time at everybody likes sandwiches;
Check out Red-Boy who wishes Clare and Kiri well at bunnyfoot;
Check out Lyle who offers Kiri a safe place to play at Basic Juice;
Alisha and Mattie sends Clare and Kiri well wishes at Playin’ Whaley;
Check out Shishi, Mel and Spot who all offer well wishes plus good advice to Clare and Kiri at s’kat and the food;

Just Clowning Around with Burnt Butter Cupcakes

Sunday, October 30th, 2005

We had friends over last night to help us celebrate A’s birthday. We served dips with rosemary foccacias to start with then later had roast lamb, chicken, green salad with dates & feat and thai red rice with raisins. I was too busy with friends to take any pictures though!

For dessert, I wanted to bake a great birthday cake for A, not just a normal run-of-the-mill chocolate birthday. No, an ordinary cake would not do for my baby! So I turned to my library of cookbooks & food magazines. I came across some beautifully decorated cupcakes in the Donna Hay’s second annual kids issue and decided that these would be most appropriate for our party. Instead of following the vanilla cupcake recipe suggested in the magazine, I turned once again to Nigella for help. I was intrigued by the Butter Brown Sugar Cupcakes and made some small adjustments based on the ingredients I had on hand. I don’t know if the cupcakes tasted any different from a normal cupcake, but it was so great to hear the ooohs and aaaahs when these were served.

The fun part was in the decorating of these little cupcakes! Look at the burnt butter cupcakes prior to construction:

And here is a single clown cupcake looking right at you!

Burnt Butter Brown Sugar Cupcakes
150g unsalted butter, 125g SR flour, 60g caster sugar, 65g dark muscovado sugar, 2 large eggs, 1 tsp vanilla bean paste, 1 tsp baking powder, 2-3 tbs milk

  1. Melt butter in saucepan on medium heat, stirring constantly until it turns a dark golden colour. Take pan off heat and strain clarified butter into a bowl. Wait until the butter has solidified but is still soft.
  2. Put all ingredients except milk into a food processor and blitz into a smooth paste. Add milk gradually until a soft, dropping consistency is reached.
  3. Scoop into cupcake cases and bake at 200C for 15-20 minutes.
  4. Coat with a thin layer of buttercream icing and use your imagination to decorate!

Chocolate Sponge Cake – hmmm

Thursday, October 20th, 2005


Have you ever had one of those baking days when things just do not go according to plan? Sigh, what can you do?

Last night, I set out to bake a light airy chocolate sponge cake for my hubby whose birthday is coming up this weekend – talk about being deflated (the cake, that is!). I was looking forward to slicing the airy chocolate sponge in half and brushing the middle with jam before filling it with strawberries and cream and perhaps dusting the top with icing sugar…well, that was the PLAN, right?

I found a recipe for a basic chocolate sponge and I followed its instructions to the letter and everything was looking quite good until it came to the actual baking of the cake. The instructions were to bake the cake at 175C for 15 minutes, which I thought was quite a short amount of time but being the kind of person that I am, I followed the instructions. Hah! I won’t be doing that in a hurry again! I pierced a skewer through at 15 min at found (surprise, surprise) that it wasn’t ready. I left it for another 15 before checking, then another 15, then another. I think I must have opened the overn door about 3-4 times before the cake was finally done, but the result was a very sad-looking collapsed chocolate sponge cake. The cake didn’t even have the decency just to be collapsed in the middle but it had to be lopsided as well.

This morning, I came to decorate the cake and discovered that it’s mighty difficult to slice a lopsided, collapsed cake evenly much less top it with whipped cream evenly. But I made a valiant attempt to make it look half decent and to distract people from the leaning-tower look by topping it with blueberries and stranberries.



I did have another look at the instructions and noticed that they used a jelly roll tin, which I’m now guessing means a really shallow tin that is used to make roulades…so maybe I didn’t follow the instructions to the letter then – oops! :-P

Pepperminty Chocolate Cupcakes

Tuesday, October 18th, 2005
Some time ago, my husband asked me to bake some chocolate cupcakes to his specifications. He wanted to have peppermint-flavoured chocolate cupcakes – more specifically, chocolate cupcakes topped with a white peppermint frosting. I finally got around to baking these yesterday, basing it on Nigella’s recipe for Aromatic Chocolate Cupcakes from her ‘How to be a Domestic Goddess‘ book. As my decision to bake these cupcakes was pretty impulsive, I didn’t get a chance to stock up on everything the recipe called for and I had to swap plain old brown sugar for the muscovado sugar. I also added some extra egg white that was leftover from another recipe. After mixing the batter, I filled the muffin cases half way and sprinkled some crumbled Peppermint Crisp chocolate in the middle before filling the rest of the case up with batter. Peppermint Crisps are bars of crispy mint shards covered in chocolate and I believe that they are uniquely Australian as I haven’t seen them anywhere else. 

After baking, I wanted to frost them with a peppermint icing, but alas, found that I was not in possession of any peppermint essence. I was SURE that I had bought some a couple of months ago in preparation for these cupcakes, but no…my memory deceived me. Instead, I iced them and sprinkeld more Peppermint Crisp over the top (not shown in picture).

I was hoping (fingers crossed) that the peppermint crisp in the middle of the batter would have stayed there to form a nice pepperminty centre to the cupcake, but when I cut one of them open to get a photo, I found that the chocolate had sunk to the bottom and did not make for a pretty picture :-( Nevertheless, these cupcakes were moreishly yummilicious. They had a crispy top (my favourite part) but the peppermint at the bottom also made this section interesting to eat. The icing was a little sweet for my liking so I’d like to try a different type of (peppermint) frosting next time. Any ideas on this would be much appreciated!

Aromatic Chocolate Cupcakes

110g unsalted butter, 200g dark muscovado or brown sugar, 1 large egg, beaten, 1/2 tsp vanilla extract, 50g dark chocolate, melted and cooled slightly, 100g pl flour, 1/2 tsp bicarb soda, 125ml boiling water

  1. Cream butter & sugar, then beat in egg and vanilla extract
  2. Fold melted chocolate and blend well but do not overbeat
  3. Add alternating spoonfuls of flour/bicarb soda and boiling water until you obtain a smooth & fairly liquid batter
  4. Fill muffin cases halfway and sprinkle chunks of Peppermint Crisp in centre. Spoon more batter over the chocolate to fill case & bake at 180C for 30min
  5. Ice and sprinkle more Peppermint Crisp over top