Sunday 1 December 2013

Apple pie.

Apple pie.
Ingredients:
Flour - 180 g
Sugar (approximately) - 250 g
Butter (at room temperature) - 120 g
Egg - 2 pcs
Apple - 600-800 g
Rum (or cognac, brandy, whiskey, vodka) - 5 tbsp. liter.
Vanilla sugar - 1 package.
Raisins - 2 tbsp. liter.
Baking powder - 1 tsp.

First of all you need to cook the stuffing.
Apple peel, cut into thin slices and add together in a saucepan. Add 2 tablespoons raisins, 4 tablespoons 5 tablespoons of sugar and rum (or brandy, vodka, whiskey, in general, any strong drink, who are found in the house). I loved soaking in the Belarusian balm, Riga balsam.
You can add a good pinch of cinnamon.
Pan cover with a lid and leave for a few hours, or better the next day.
Periodically apples should be mixed to better soaked.
(If you do not have time to wait, cake here and want immediately, you can warm up the pan with apples almost to a boil and let cool, soaked faster.)

The basis of the cake:
Sift flour and mix with baking powder. Add 90g. butter, 60g. sugar sachet of vanilla sugar and mix gently until the crumbs hands.

Pour the resulting crumbs into a greased form (I additional bed on the bottom of baking paper and sprinkle with breadcrumbs wall).

Put the stuffing on top, sprinkle with sugar and put in a preheated 200 degree oven for about half an hour.

Meanwhile, prepare the fill.
To do this, beat 2 eggs and 40g. sugar, then add 30g. butter and whisk well again.
Fill the pie with the mixture and send it in the oven for another ten minutes.
Ready cake still hot pour alcohol. I used for this purpose, the remainder of the apple syrup, adding a little brandy.

Remove from the mold, cut and try to better cooled down.
Here is the option we poured pouring cake, where the oil is replaced cream. Also good, but not browning, and reminds type cake Tsvetaeva. Sometimes forget about raisins, again, with raisins I like more.

Frampton.

A quirky village with many attractive cottages located on one side of the street and yet nothing on the other, making it appear quite lop sided! Another odd feature of the village is the church of St. Mary with its tower corners consisting of two huge columns, one on top of the other with pinnacles above. Inside the church are rich monuments and memorials. Historically, Frampton was an ancient British settlement and some Roman tessellated pavements incorporating one of the oldest Christian symbols to be found in the country were discovered 150 yrs ago.
The Frampton Trail, in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, is a 1 kilometer long circular walk which gives you the chance to discover Frampton's past and to explore how it has changed through the years.

Thursday 18 July 2013

Blackcurrant Jam.


Recipe------

500g blackcurrants500g granulated sugar ( warmed )grated rind & juice of 1 orange ( medium )150ml water1 tbsp cassis ( optional )

Method-----

Remove stalks from blackcurrants, put the fruit, orange rind, juice and water in a large pan. Bring to the boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 30 minutes.
Add the warmed sugar and stir over a low heat until the sugar has dissolved.
Bring the mixture to a rolling boil to cook for about 8 mins or until setting point ( 105deg C/ 220deg F ).
Remove the pan from the heat and skim off any scum, leave to stand for 5 mins (then stir in Cassis if using ).
Carefully pour the jam into warmed sterilized pots and seal. Leave to cool then label and store in a cool dark place.

Sunday 7 April 2013

Friday 15 February 2013

Cheese Puffs

       

Recipe:
1 Cup (8fl oz/225ml) Water.
90g butter.
1 cup(115g) flour.
Pinch salt.
3 Large eggs.
3tbsp parmesan cheese (grated).
Salt & Pepper.
Mustard Powder.

Method:
Preheat the oven to 220degC (fan oven 200C)
Sift the flour and salt onto a square of greaseproof paper.
Place the water and butter in a pan over a medium heat.bring to the boil
remove immediately from the heat and quickly stir in the flour and salt all at once,
using a wooden spoon.
Beat the mixture until it forms a smooth paste that leaves the sides of the pan clean,
leave to cool for a while.
Beat the eggs well,then beat the into the mixture in Six stages until no trace of egg remains,
Beat in the parmesan cheese and season to taste with salt,pepper and mustard powder.
Place dessert spoons of mixture onto a baking sheet, reduce the oven temperature to 200C (Fan 180C)
Bake until golden .

Tuesday 12 February 2013

Snowdrops

 

Cranberry, Sultana Bun.


Recipe:

250g Flour
7g Dried Yeast
50g Butter
30g Sugar
175ml Warm Water
1/4 Tsp Salt

1. Sift the flour into a large bowl. Melt the butter and allow to cool down.
2. Make a well in the flour.
3. In a small bowl put the yeast a teaspoon of the sugar and all of the water and mix together.
4. Into the flour well pour the yeast mixture,stir in some of the flour from the center of the well until a paste is obtained.
Cover with cling film and leave in a warm place for 15 minutes.
5. Add the melted butter the remainder of the sugar and the salt to the dough and mix with a fork or by hand.Stir in a circular motion in the same direction
all the time dragging the flour from the sides of the crater.
6. Knead the dough until smooth then place in the refrigerator for 6-8 hours.
7. Remove the dough from the fridge and allow to rise at room temperature about an hour.
8. Roll out the dough to about 2-3mm thick brush with vegetable oil, sprinkle with brown sugar and sultanas (or any dried fruit of your choice)
roll into a roll and stretch slightly, cut into 3cm thick slices and place cut side down in a greased 20cm tart tin.
put in a warm place for 45-50 mins to rise.
Meanwhile preheat the oven to 190C. When ready to bake Brush with beaten egg mixed with 1 tablespoon of milk.
Bake for about 30mins at 190

Friday 1 February 2013

Dan Lepard's ginger beer scones recipe.

If you like ginger, you'll love these little beauties. They're just the thing for a cold winter's day

Dan Lepard's ginger beer scone: A ginger lover's delight, as there's not just ginger beer in it. There's glacé and ground ginger, too Photograph: Colin Campbell
I first tried these scones, made with plain lemonade, at ­Marilyn and Gary Barker's Patchwork Teahouse, set deep in Melbourne's Dandenong Ranges, and thought they were the softest and lightest I'd ever eaten. They don't have the crisp top ­regular ones do, but they stay moist for days and that's something. Use non-alcoholic ginger beer, and one ­without artificial sweeteners.
425g plain flour
50g icing sugar
1 tsp ground ginger
2½ tsp baking powder
200g crème fraîche
1 large egg
100g chopped glacé or stem ginger
150ml ginger beer
Milk, for brushing the top
Spoon the flour, icing sugar, ground ginger and baking powder into a large mixing bowl and stir well. In another bowl, beat the crème fraîche, egg and glacé ­or stem ­ginger, then add the ginger beer and stir to ­amalgamate. Pour into the ­mixing bowl and ­gently mix ­until you have a very soft and sticky dough.
Flour your work surface very well, then scrape the dough on to it. Don't try to knead it – it's way too sticky for that; just flour the top and pat it out to 2-3cm thick. Cut the flattened dough into discs or squares and place on a flour-dusted tray.
Heat the oven to 220C (200C fan-assisted)/425F/gas mark 7, brush scone tops with milk and bake for 10-15 minutes, until brown on top.