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Monday, 14 April 2014

Spring Clearning and Coffee Walnut Loaf Cake


I've been doing a bit of a spring clean this weekend. I was clearing out my kitchen cupboards and was shocked at how many things had passed their use by dates and had to be thrown away. I hate throwing things away, so now i'm on a mission to make sure I use everything else. One of the things hiding at the back of my cupboard was some Camp coffee essence which I bought last year for a Cappuccino Cake and haven't used since.



I also bought myself the latest Sainsburys magazine over the weekend which came with a cute little recipe book and as luck would have it, there's a Coffee Walnut cake recipe which has coffee essence in the recipe.



The recipe was for a traybake but I decided to make it into a loaf cake instead and didn't add the icing in an attempt to be ever so slightly healthier (I know, who am I kidding?). The cake turned out really well, definitely one I'll make again.

Ingredients

225g Stork
225g light muscovado sugar
275g self-raising flour
2 tsp baking powder
4 eggs
2 tbsp milk
2 tbsp Camp chicory and coffee essence
75g chopped walnuts

Method
  1. Preheat the oven to 180C / 160C (fan) / Gas 4. Grease and line a 2lb loaf tin.
  2. Put all of the ingredients, minus the nuts, and beat together in a large bowl until well blended. Fold in the chopped walnuts. Pour into the tin.
  3. Bake for 45-50 minutes or until you can insert a skewer into the centre and it comes out clean. Leave to cool for 5 minutes before turning it out onto a wire rack and leaving to cool completely.
  4. Slice and serve. 



Sunday, 13 April 2014

Easter Baking

Easter is a great time for baking. I've not decided what I'm going to bake for the weekend yet but here's some of my favourite Easter themed bakes from the last few weeks:


Chocolate bundt cake / egg nest
I made this bundt using my favourite Chocolate Guinness Cake recipe. I think it looks a bit like a nest so filled it with my favourites Cadbury's creme eggs.


Hidden inside Easter egg cake
I baked a plain sponge, coloured it and cut out egg shaped using a cookie cutter, I then baked the cake shapes inside another plain sponge to create a hidden inside cake. 


Apple, cinnamon and sultana hot cross buns
These don't look that pretty but they tasted really really good, I loved the addition of apple and cinnamon. 




And from a couple of years ago, some Easter cupcakes.


Friday, 14 February 2014

Valentines Cupcakes



Happy Valentines Day!

I'm not usually one to make a big deal of Valentines Day, I'm in the camp that thinks it's all a bit too commercial. However I was unable to resist making some valentine themed cupcakes after seeing some of the other amazing treats people have been making and since I don't have anyone to buy me flowers this year it's up to me to treat myself.

These Nutella and Cinnamon Cupcakes are pretty indulgent but they are one of my favourite cupcake recipes so they're perfect for a valentines treat.

I had great fun making the decorations, using red fondant and heart shaped cookie cutters to create some romantic cakes.

I suppose I should really share some of these with my loved ones but I could quite happily eat them all myself.

Have you baked anything for your valentine (or yourself) this week?




Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Winter Wonderland Cake

For me, Christmas starts as soon as we hit December. Suddenly it becomes acceptable to wear Christmas jumpers, listen to Christmas songs, watch Christmas films and of course bake and eat all sorts of Christmas goodies.

I actually first tried this cake back in the Summer when Stork were testing their Christmas recipes (yes, they have to test them that far in advance). I'm not usually a fan of fruit cake but this is a modern take on the traditional Christmas cake and it's really delicious. It's not only got a great combination of flavours but a mixture of textures, juicy fruits mixed with the real crunch of the praline topping. I also love the video Edd Kimber has done to showcase the recipe and so was dying to try making it for myself.



The most recent get together of the Wandsworth Clandestine Cake Club was the perfect opportunity, the theme for December was of course 'Merry Christmas Wandsworth'.

There are four main elements to the cake; the fruit cake, buttercream icing, praline and gingerbread houses. It looks impressive and went down a treat at cake club, its pretty big so was hoping to have plenty to bring home but alas just one small slice was left by the end of the evening.

You can find the recipes for the cake and the gingerbread on the Stork website www.bakewithstork.com.





Sunday, 8 September 2013

Sorted Food and Chocolate Magic Custard Cake



I first came across Sorted Food on YouTube about a year ago, if you haven’t heard of them or seen any of their brilliant videos you should check them out at SortedFood.com.

Sorted is made up of four childhood friends who are on a mission to get people cooking simple, tasty food. The guys are clearly good mates and have great banter and their videos are hilarious as well as being great tutorials.

A few weeks ago I was lucky enough to meet one half of Sorted (Ben and Jamie) at a Google event and I plucked up the courage to go and introduce myself. They were absolutely lovely and I got to ask Ben who is a trained chef lots of foodie questions. He told me about a new craze for Magic Custard Cake which they will be making in one of their future videos.

After a quick Google I found out a bit more about Magic Custard Cake. It’s one mix which separates out when baked creating a three layered ‘cake’. From what I read online it sounds pretty tricky to make and a temperamental - it won’t work if it’s not the right temperature and will crack easily – basically it’s a diva of a bake. But it sounded soooo good I decided to take the risk, even if it could end up a big squidgy mess on a plate.

I followed a recipe from whiteonricecouple.com and am really pleased with how it turned out.



Can you see the layers?


Perfect served with a sprinkling of icing sugar and some fresh berries.


I wanted to take a dessert to a dinner party so I made them in little ramekins making them much easier to transport, however don’t do what I did and remove them from the oven 5 minutes before you're due to leave the house and transport them warm – give them plenty of time to cool down and "set".


I filled 5 ramekins and then had enough batter left to fill a 15cm / 6inch losse bottomed round cake tin.

The cake came out of the tin much easier than expected and cuts really easily. It tastes as good as it looks and makes a great dinner party dessert. Success!

Monday, 2 September 2013

New York Cupcake Tour

I just had the most amazing holiday in Costa Rica and on my way home I stopped off in New York (amazing, I know!).

I'd been to NYC two times before so I'd already ticked all the usual tourist things off my list so wanted to do something a bit different on my third visit. I decided that the ideal thing to do in NYC would be my very own tour of all of their amazing bakeries, tasting lots of cupcakes along the way. My very own NYC Cupcake Crawl.

My first bakery was Crumbs Bakery, Bryant Park. This is actually a chain which is all over the US and has a number of stores in NYC. I went to the one right by the New York Public Library (where Carrie is due to marry Big in the first SATC film).



They have an amazing selection, I spent ages choosing and finally opted for a Peanut Butter Cup Cupcake (I definitely share the Americans love of peanut butter and chocolate).


The shop is opposite Bryant Park which was the perfect place to sit and enjoy it. It was a moist chocolate sponge filled and topped with buttercream and decorated with chocolate chips and peanut butter cups. Pretty darn good!

Next was Levain Bakery, Upper Westside. This place specialises in cookies and is rated 3rd best eatery (out of an impressive 12,711) in New York. I went for their most popular bake, a 6-ounce chocolate chip walnut cookie (ok not technically a cupcake for this 'cupcake crawl' but it was necessary).


The bakery is down a quiet residential street not far from Central Park so I took my cookie (which was still warm from the oven) and ate it in the park. It's not the most beautiful cookie (in fact it's a bit ugly) but trust me, it's DELICIOUS. It's really really thick so whilst the outside is crunchy the centre is gooey. If I'm honest it tasted a bit uncooked in the middle but if you've ever eaten raw cookie batter you'll know this isn't a bad thing!




Day 2 of my New York bakery adventure and I started the day with a trip to Empire Cake. They have some amazing cakes in the window, they do special occasion cakes for weddings and birthdays as well as cupcakes, traybakes, brownies etc.





I opted for the Salted Caramel Cupcake, a chocolate sponge filled with salted caramel, topped with dark chocolate buttercream and salt flakes. The cupcake was pretty small, I'm not usually a fan of small but you couldn't eat much of this rich cake.

Finally I headed over to the world famous Magnolia Bakery. I have actually been here before on previous visits to NYC but last time I had given up chocolate for lent (don't ask, never again!) so this time I HAD to chose something chocolatey.

This bakery is adorable, its tiny but always packed with cake lovers. They're best known for their cupcakes but they also have large cakes, traybakes, brownies, mini pies and individual (but massive) cheesecakes on offer.




I chose the Blonde Marble Cake but still full from my earlier visit to Empire Cake I took it to take away. What a perfect way to say goodbye to the city, a cupcake at the airport.



Until next time NYC! xxx



Friday, 2 August 2013

Fifty Shades Of Grey - The Depressed Cake Shop


Who doesn’t love cake? Cake brings people together, who ever ate a whole cake to themselves? No celebration would be complete without a cake. So why would anyone be interested in The Depressed Cake Shop, the pop up bakeries opening across the UK this weekend?

I, for one, think it’s a brilliant idea and am not only going along to eat some tasty treats but have volunteered to make something too. The Depressed Cake Shop is a charity project aimed at raising awareness of mental health issues and getting people talking. If this project can do anything to help quash the social stigma around mental illness, whilst eating cake, then I see that only as a good thing.


I’ve debated whether to do this, but since I think it is really important that we all start talking, I wanted to tell you a little bit about my personal story and why this is something close to my heart.

When I was just nineteen years old, my world fell apart. I became miserable, I stopped eating, lost my ability to enjoy anything, I couldn’t concentrate at all which caused me to fail my second year of university. It was like I had so many negative thoughts in my head there was no room for anything else. I started to sleep for as long as possible as being awake was so unbearable. I had no idea why I felt like this but I truly believed that I was over and would be better off dead. This was my first depressive episode.

Over the last ten years I have had depression on and off and have developed a much greater understanding of the illness. I have learnt coping strategies, one of the most effective ones being distraction. When depressed your mind is full of negative thoughts but if you can distract it with something else, a simple activity like baking then you can give your brain a rest. What could be simpler than weighing flour, whisking eggs?


A serious bought of depression two years ago really fuelled my love of baking. I realised that not only was the act of baking a great distraction but the sense of pride at having made something delicious helped lift my spirits a little. Then of course I wouldn’t eat it all to myself so I would share my cake and get another boost from seeing everyone else enjoy it too.

And I am not the only one who has had this experience, the author Marian Keyes wrote her own recipe book Saved by Cake after a bout of depression, John Whaite from the Great British Bake Off talks about it in his book Recipes for Every Day and Every Mood and even Mary Berry has said she thinks baking can help mend a broken heart.

Please don’t get me wrong, baking is not an alternative therapy and can’t “fix” depression but it has been a great help for me during difficult times.



Now, back to the Depressed Cake Shop. The idea is for anyone who wants to get involved can either set up a shop in their local area or they can bake for the shop and all of the cakes, biscuits, macarons etc will all be grey. I have been following the discussions about the shop on facebook and it's great to see is how it has brought people together.


For me by taking part I feel like I am doing something proactive and knowing there is a whole community of people who have also suffered with this horrible illness taking part too makes it feel like a positive social movement. I said at the beginning that cake is all about bringing people together and no celebration would be complete without it and this is no different, I think we can start to celebrate the fact that the social stigma around mental illness is on its way out.

You can find out more here or on Twitter #DepressedCakes.