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Afghan biscuits: Sure to Rise

Afghan biscuits: Sure to Rise

I have been toying with the idea of cooking my way through the entire Edmond’s Cookery Book for some time now. The seed of this idea began to germinate a while back, after I watched Julie and Julia and my mind leapt to some more 

Socca

Socca

My adventures with chickpea flour began in Binn Inn, one of my favourite retail locations.  It’s the perfect combination of thrifty spending and food shopping that leave me positively glowing with pleasure and virtue. On this particular occasion, my sister and I had made a 

Putting on the ritz

Putting on the ritz

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I am probably not the only person inspired by the recent New Zealand’s Hottest Home Baker episode featuring caramel garnish.  With my sister and sweet-toothed brother in law due for dinner later in the week, what better and tastier way to impress than a simple bowl of ice cream crowned with some caramel finery?

I have had a life-long fear of creating anything involving molten sugar, following my mother’s dire warnings of children disfigured permanently following coconut ice and the like gone wrong.  This may have been a ploy on her part to discourage rampant sweet-making and resulting hyperactivity.  But now dear reader, as a fully grown human being, I am pleased to report that I am ready to tackle this one head on.

Caramel garnish is not a field I feel I have the expertise in to start making up my recipes willy-nilly.  Not to worry, the internet is most obliging on the matter of caramel garnish.  I used this lovely blog’s Decorative Caramel recipe.

So, one needs to begin with melting some sugar.  Taking a deep breath and banishing fears of third degree burns, I put my pot of sugar on the heat.

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The idea is you melt it until it starts to go amber.  I found this took what felt like an age, to the point where I was contemplating googling ‘caramel not going amber’, except for abundant warnings about turning your back on the caramel for a mere second and finding the whole lot reduced to a smouldering mess.  That would not be an auspicious introduction to decorative caramel.

Lo and behold, after looking like a strange alien-like bubbly mass for at least fifteen minutes, it developed a most attractive warm amber hue.

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And now for the tricky bit.  The internet, with a cavalier attitude, tells you to simply dip your spoon into the caramel and drizzle it onto your baking paper in attractive shapes.  And for the real over-achievers, you can make baskets, spirals and I don’t know, probably name cards for your dinner guests.

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Frankly, getting any kind of shape out it took a few goes.  We had some wonky hearts and some spiral whirly things.  The Mr also made some rather rude shapes but I will not include photographs of such base humour.

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You will notice some of the shapes are a bit bubbly…perhaps I needed to leave the caramel to settle down a little, or boil it more softly?

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Once the shapes are all laid out on the baking paper and your caramel is all gone (or starting to harden, as in my case), you can leave them to set and peel them off the baking paper when they are ready.  As it’s winter here and our heating is on a lot, I found mine were going a little sticky, but I popped them in the freezer and this restored them to their crunchy glory.

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To serve, I impaled the garnishes atop a mound of vanilla ice cream and we smothered the ice cream with Martha Stewart’s easy caramel sauce.  Successful dessert and not a third-degree burn in sight.

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What to do with parsley?

What to do with parsley?

I have recently taken up gardening.  That is a sentence I never thought I would write.  Yet, here we are, and so far I am enjoying it immensely. My Italian flat-leaf parsley in particular is going great guns.  The picture above may not look as 

Asian noodle soup

Asian noodle soup

Gingery, salty, savoury and good; this Asian noodle soup recipe is something I muddled around with when I lived in London and frequently found myself in need of something comforting to protect against the long dark wintery nights.  This warm, spicy noodle soup is the 

Pink and white cupcake glory

Pink and white cupcake glory

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As I’m sure you’ve all noticed, the cupcake craze is well and truly in full swing. Although I haven’t jumped on the bandwagon hook line and sinker, every now and then I get the urge to bake and decorate some little morsels of cupcake prettiness. When this urge takes me, I never go past Nigella Lawson’s cupcake recipe from her fabulous book How to be a Domestic Goddess.

The thing I love about this recipe is that it’s so simple – you pretty much throw the whole thing in your food processor, whizz it up, put it in the tins and off you go. It’s funny how something so dinky starts off looking gloopy like this.

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But what do you know, a few short minutes later and you have little mounds of golden-brown cakey goodness. Does anyone else find their cupcakes form little peaks like these ones?

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Not that I’m complaining, because then you can cut those bits off and dip them into the icing without having to wait until all of the cakes are ready (which is one of the best things about baking cupcakes).

Now, the fiddly piping bit is not really a strength of mine, but I like to think I’m getting there. I set to with my piping set and my icing, or as the Americans like to call it’ ‘Buttercream frosting.’ I did some googling for suggested recipes for the icing and put together my own version, consisting of:
1 cup of icing sugar
1 cup of softened butter
A squeeze of lemon juice – personally, I find this helps cut through the sweetness a little.

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And, Bob’s your uncle…there you have it, a plate of iced pink-and-white goodness to make one feel proud and enjoy with a cup of tea. Or, as my darling sister once proclaimed, ‘those cakes look like a fairy threw up on them.’ Charming.

Enjoy!

Fresh fish and frugal tortillas

Fresh fish and frugal tortillas

In the hilly little town where I live, we are very lucky to have a fresh food market by the waterfront every Sunday morning.  And one of the highlights of this market is the fresh fish boat.  It parks up on a jetty near the