Friday, 11 August 2017


Crusty cornmeal bread (aka polenta bread)

Not the cake-like stuff you often see recipes for, this is pretty much a normal loaf with added flavour and a wonderful thin crispy crust.  And it's yellow.

Make a sponge of 90g water, 90g strong white flour, and 1/4 tsp dried yeast. Mix, cover, and leave at room temp overnight.

In the morning, mix together 300g cornmeal*, 150g strong white flour*, 1/2 tsp yeast, 12g salt, and stir together. Add
280g water and the sponge mixture, mix, then knead for 5 - 10 min. Place back in the bowl until about doubled in size (this will probably take 3 hrs+). Turn out, gently flatten and, using a dough scraper, fold in half, then half again, then form into a ball (as best you can!). Leave on work surface for 15 min, covered by the upturned bowl. Repeat the folding and place in a greased 1 lb loaf tin, levelling and tucking the edges of the top down the sides using the dough scraper to increase the tension over the top surface.  Rest for an hour or so.

Preheat oven to max and put the bread in the oven for 20 min, after which turn oven down to 210 deg C. Bake for a further 20 min. Turn loaf out of tin and bake for a further 10 min. Cool the loaf.  Makes brilliant toast.

*for a less dense loaf, decrease the cornmeal and increase the strong white by the same amount. 

This is quite a wet dough (hence the use of the loaf tin), but less sticky than pure wheat.
Misc links to recipes - to be transcribed later

Russian Black Bread
Russian Black Bread 2
Black Bread
Basic white tang-zhong bread


Russian Slice

V.1 

Freeze all the left over cake pieces from making cakes and use them to make a lovely recipe – Russian Slice.

Line a deep
sided flan dish with short crust pastry, bake blind and cool.  Warm some jam and add a flavouring (I used a small bottle of almond essence, the flavour needs to be quite strong) mix well.
Cut the cake pieces into chunks and pour over the jam, coating the cake and gently stir to coat all the pieces.
Spread the mixture into the pastry cake. Cover with a thin layer of sponge (swiss roll type).  Cover with cling film, place a plate or something the same diameter as the flan and weigh down the filling for a few hours.
Remove cling film and cover with glace icing and decorate. I used with cherries and feathered the icing.  (NB - doesn't have to have the icing)

V.2

Ingredients

8 oz dry chocolate cake (any type)
12 oz dry white cake (any type) or madeira
2 oz butter
1 tbsp lemon juice
6-7 heaped tsp seedless raspberry jam
3 tbsp dark rum

Break the white and chocolate cake in chunks in a mixing bowl.  Rub the two cakes together with your fingers to produce a dry crumb mixture (?).  Gently melt the butter.

Place the seedless raspberry jam into the bowl with the Tbsp lemon juice.  Pour in the melted butter.  Add the rum and mix together well.  Taste the mixture to see if you need more rum.  Your Russian Slice recipe mixture will be a dark brown/red and thick textured.

Line a small loaf tin with plastic wrap.  Add the Russian Slice filling.  Make the top even with the back of a spoon.  Cover the Russian Slice with the plastic wrap and place into a fridge for a few hours.

Take the Russian slice out of the loaf tin.  Slice and serve as desired.  You can place a slice on top of some shortcrust pastry or eat it as it is.

Enjoy your Russian Slice Recipe just like from a bakery.


(?) or keep pieces quite large, perhaps.

Schneewittchenkuchen

Sponge cake mixture – divide into 3 in proportion 3:1:1.  Add cocoa powder to one of the smaller portions.

Pour the large portion into the baking vessel, smooth over.  Carefully pour over the cocoa mix, smooth over.  Finish with the small white portion, smooth over. 

Drain the cherries, retaining the liquid.  Push the cherries into the batter until almost submerged. Bake & cool.

Cover with Birds Dream Topping or white chocolate Angel Delight, made thick; finish as level as possible.  Make a jelly using Vege-Gel and the retained cherry liquid, and when cool but not set pour/spread over the Dream Topping/Angel Delight, leave a few minutes, and subtly marble. 

Leave to set.



Method 2.

Sponge cake mixture – divide into 2 in proportion 1:1.  Add cocoa powder to one of the portions.

Pour the dark portion into the baking vessel, smooth over.  Carefully pour over the light mix, smooth over.

Drain the cherries, retaining the liquid.  Push the cherries into the batter until almost submerged. Bake & cool.

Cover with basic buttercream.  Make a jelly using Vege-Gel and the retained cherry liquid, and when cool but not set pour/spread over the buttercream, leave a few minutes, and subtly marble. 

Leave to set.



Armenian Nutmeg Cake v.4
Adapted from a recipe on the Billington's Sugar Website

110g self raising flour
110g plain flour
1 1/2 teaspoons freshly grated nutmeg
110g butter
110g Light brown sugar
1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
175 ml milk
1 egg, beaten
100g walnuts, chopped
ground cinnamon

Preheat the oven to Gas 5/190°C/375°F.  Sift the flours and ½ teaspoon of the ground nutmeg into a mixing bowl and rub in the butter until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Stir in the sugar. Press half the mixture into a greased 20cm cake tin.  Combine the bicarbonate of soda with the milk and stir into the remaining dry ingredients with the egg, another 1/2 teaspoon of nutmeg and 3/4 of the walnuts, mixing well.  Pour into the tin and sprinkle over the rest of the nutmeg and walnuts, and some ground cinnamon.  Cook for about 35 minutes until golden.  Cool in the tin for 5 minutes then turn out onto a wire rack to become cold.

Armenian Nutmeg Cake V.3 
Ingredients

240 ml milk
1 tsp bicarb of soda
280 gm plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
300 gm brown sugar
170 gm butter, cubed, chilled
1.5 tsp freshly ground nutmeg
1 tsp vanilla
1 egg, at room temperature
100g walnuts, chopped
Edible dried rose petals
60ml runny honey

Directions:
Preheat oven to 170C. Line a 21cm springform tin with baking paper on the base and sides and wrap some foil around the outside of the tin as the butter tends to leak from the springform tin when baking. In a large food processor add the flour, baking powder, brown sugar and butter and process until it resembles fine breadcrumbs (you can also do this with a pastry cutter or by rubbing the butter between your fingers). Place half of the above mixture in the base of the springform patting it down with fingers to make a base and set aside.
In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat the egg and nutmeg for 2 minutes until fluffy and pale (you can do this by hand, just whisk for a few minutes longer until you get it to the right consistency). In a cup mix the baking soda and milk and add to the egg with the vanilla and whisk until combined. Then add the remaining half of the flour and butter mixture and mix until smooth (you can still use the whisk for this as it is still quite liquid). Add 75g of the walnuts, stir to distibute, pour on top of the base crumbs and then sprinkle the rest of the walnuts on top. Bake for 50-60 minutes until a skewer inserted comes out clean - many have found that while the top looks cooked, the batter is runny underneath so try the skewer in several places.  
When cake is ready, remove from oven and allow to cool. While doing this, heat honey gently and then using pastry brush, spread honey over the top of the cake. Sprinkle edible rose petals which will stick to the honey. Serve warm.



Armenian Nutmeg Cake V.2  Prep Time: 15 minutes. Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes.
Ingredients


250ml milk
1 tsp baking soda
200gm all-purpose flour
100gm  walnuts, divided
2 tsp baking powder
320gm brown sugar
150 gm unsalted butter, chilled, cubed
1 egg (optional)
1.5 tsp grated nutmeg

Method

Preheat the oven to 180C. Lightly grease (or line) an 8″ springform tin.

Place the flour and baking powder in the bowl of your processor; add the brown sugar and pulse a couple of times to mix.  Add the chilled butter and process until you get a breadcrumb like mix. (You can do this by hand too, but a processor is far quicker and easier)

Divide this mixture into half. Press half (435gm approx) into an 8″ springform tin, pushing up some into the sides if you like. Pat firmly to create a base.

In the bowl of the processor, add the milk and baking soda to the remaining biscuit mix with the egg and freshly grated nutmeg, and process for 2-3 minutes till you have a smooth batter, then mix in 75g of the walnuts.  Pour this batter over the pressed crust.  Toss the remaining walnuts in a tsp of flour, and sprinkle on top gently.

Bake the cake at 180C for about 35 to 45 minutes till the top is a golden brown or till a skewer pushed through the centre of the cake comes out clean.  Mine took about an hour.  Cool the cake in the tin before demolding. It is best eaten while still warm, though it’s good cold too.

Armenian Nutmeg Cake V.1 - 12 Servings

Ingredients

400 g brown sugar
250 g plain flour, sifted
1 tsp baking powder
pinch salt
115g cold butter, roughly chopped
1 tsp baking soda
240 ml milk (or you can substitute sour cream)
1 egg, lightly beaten
1 tsp ground nutmeg
60 g walnuts, chopped
ground cinnamon (optional)

Method

Preheat oven to 180 degrees C.  Grease a 9 inch square pan, and line with baking paper if desired.
Combine flour, baking powder and salt, then rub in the butter until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.  You can do this with the tips of your fingers or in your food processor. Then add sugar, and combine.
Press 1/3 - ½ of this mixture evenly over the base of the prepared cake pan, and reserve the rest.
Dissolve baking soda in milk (or sour cream), add beaten egg and nutmeg, then add to reserved mixture.  Combine well.  Pour into pan and sprinkle nuts, and some cinnamon if desired, over top. 
Bake in oven for 45 minutes to 60 minutes (start testing for doneness with a skewer after about 45 minutes).  Allow to stand for 10 minutes before turning onto a wire rack to cool. 

Porridge Oat Bread


Enjoy warm.  Also good cold – goes with honey as well as it does with cheese!
Thanks to Astrid Malachewitz for the recipe and humour.
Ingredients

300 g porridge oats
500 g natural yoghurt
2 tsp bread soda
1 egg
2 tbsp flavour ingredients if you feel like it - nuts, seeds, raisins, cheese, herbs, whatever... or 1.5 mashed bananas.  What you do with the remaining half-banana is up to you.

Preheat oven to 180
.

Thoroughly mix oats and soda.
Add yoghurt, egg, and flavour ingredients.
Mix with a spoon until it begins to resemble a dough if you squint a bit.

Pour into a small bread tin.
Bake at 180
for half an hour.
Reduce heat to 150
and bake another half an hour.

When done remove from tin, cool on a wire rack for ten to 15 minutes, slice and enjoy warm.

Castleton Vicarage Cake (very crumbly!)

Ingredients

1 lb/450g self-raising flour (or the same of plain flour plus 1 tsp of baking soda) – but see note
12 oz/340g of demerara sugar
1 lb/450g sultanas or mixed dried fruit
4 oz/115g of candied peel (or the same of more sultanas)
12 oz/340g of butter
1/2 pint/280cc milk - will need to be hot but not boiling
1 tsp mixed spice
2 tbs brown sugar mixed with ½ tsp cinnamon

Method
Preheat oven to 170C/350F. Grease two loaf tins and line with parchment/greaseproof paper.
Mix all the dry ingredients together in a large bowl. Add butter that has been cut into walnut size lumps and stir these through. Then, pour HOT milk over the whole. Stir thoroughly with a wooden spoon, and then scoop the thick batter into your tins. Top with the cinnamon/ sugar mixture & lightly pat it in with the back of a spoon.

Baking time is approximate. I baked two loaf tins of this cake; they took roughly 60 minutes, but if you use one large cake tin it will take longer. Start checking on it after an hour, doing the usual “clean skewer” test. 
Note:  I recently read that substituting strong flour for the plain flour results in a less crumbly cake, but it may need slightly more liquid in the mix.  So ...
I tried substituting 50g s/r flour with 50g strong flour, & adding half a tsp baking powder.  No discernable difference.

Strawberry Coconut Squares

Ingredients

1¼ cups sifted all purpose flour
1½ cups sifted cake flour
½ teaspoon baking soda
1½ tsp baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1½ cups sugar
⅔ cup vegetable oil
⅓ cup vegetable shortening at room temperature
3 tablespoons good quality vanilla extract
3 large eggs
1½ cups buttermilk
Approximately 4 cups dried shredded coconut

FOR THE STRAWBERRY SYRUP
2 small packages strawberry jelly
1½ cups water (3/4 cup boiling plus ¾ cup cold)
1 cup strawberry jam

Instructions
Grease a 9x13 inch baking pan and line with parchment paper.

Sift together both flours, baking soda. baking powder, salt and sugar, Set aside.  In the bowl of an electric mixer beat together the vegetable oil, shortening and vanilla. Beat well at high speed with whisk attachment until light and fluffy

Beat the eggs in one at a time.  Fold in the dry ingredients alternately with the buttermilk.  I always add dry ingredients in three divisions and liquid ingredients in 2 divisions. It is very important to begin and end the additions with the dry ingredients. Do not over mix the batter. As soon as it has no lumps in the batter, pour into the prepared 9x13 inch pan.  Bake at 325 degrees F for 30-35 minutes or until a wooden toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Allow the cake to cool completely in the pan.

Wrap the pan in plastic wrap and place in the freezer until the cake is completely frozen.  When frozen, lift the cake out of the pan using the parchment paper as an aid and cut it into 24 squares. Return to the freezer until ready to dip in the strawberry syrup and coconut.

TO PREPARE THE STRAWBERRY SYRUP - dissolve the 2 packages of jelly in the boiling water.  Whisk in the jam and cold water. Chill this to the point that it thickens slightly but not beginning to set.  Working quickly, dip the frozen cake cubes into the syrup one at a time. Let them soak for a few seconds.  Quickly roll the soaked cake into the coconut and place on a parchment lined baking sheet to dry.

Store in airtight plastic containers in the fridge.  If you are freezing the dessert squares put them back into the freezer right away.

 Use the above jelly idea for English Madeleines - http://thecakedcrusader.blogspot.co.uk/2008/08/english-madeleines.html