Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baking. Show all posts

Apple Pie Oats with Maple Peanut Sauce

3 heaped tbsp oats
1 cup liquid (half water, half milk)
1/2 an apple, diced
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp mixed spice/nutmeg
splash of vanilla extract
1/2 tbsp maple syrup
1 tbsp peanut butter
for topping: walnuts and a pinch of coarse sea salt


Soak the oats overnight in the spices to achieve maximum creaminess and flavour, but if you don't have time it doesn't make too much difference. Start the pan on the lowest heat, and when it starts to get hot, add the diced apple and vanilla extract along with any other add-ins you may have e.g flaxseed, raisins etc. Let the porridge bubble away slowly for around 15 minutes, stirring to ensure it doesn't stick to the pan. At the last moment, heat the grill to a medium temperature and mix the peanut butter and maple syrup in a mug. If the peanut butter is quite stiff the sauce can be made runnier by a quick 10 seconds in the microwave. Grill the pan of porridge or empty into an oven-safe bowl to make the top crispy and stodgy, drizzling with the peanut sauce for the final 2 minutes. Remove, sprinkle with walnuts and salt and eat when cool enough to enjoy.



Alternatively, add all ingredients bar sauce to an oven-safe dish and bake for about 20 minutes on 200° for a more authentic apple pie texture.

This loaf is bananas.


Having recently seen a lot of recipes using yoghurt in place of fat in cake mixtures, I wanted to create my own version of banana bread which combines healthier cooking substitutes with the original ingredients. By subtly changing half of the ingredients, the difference in taste is unnoticeable unlike those fat free/low calorie recipes where your 'cake' tastes like a piece of dry sponge. As a general rule in attempting to make recipes healthier, think about the nutritional value of ingredients rather than the calorie content. Here's the recipe for my first attempt, next time I'm trying it with 100% wholemeal flour and oats so will keep you updated!


 Ingredients:

60g wholemeal flour
60 plain flour
40g oats
pinch salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp cinnamon
50g twice-as-sweet sugar
50g melted butter
80g yogurt
capful vanilla extract
shot of freshly brewed coffee, cooled
3 ripe bananas, mashed
2 eggs, beaten
Optional: pumpkin seeds, for topping

Method:

Preheat the oven to 200°C.

If your bananas are not already ripe, put them into the oven now while you prepare your other ingredients. After around 20 mins, the skins will go black and they will be perfectly ripe. Unless your bananas are at the peak of ripeness I recommend doing this anyway for maximum flavour. When they are cooled, the flesh should scoop out effortlessly.






















Combine all of the dry ingredients apart from the oats in a large mixing bowl.


In a blender/liquidizer/food processer, whiz the oats with the eggs until fine. Alternatively, use oat flour in place to save this step. Add the rest of the liquids to the mix and combine thoroughly. 


Fold in the mashed banana and scrape mixture into a greased and lined loaf tin. Sprinkle with pumpkin seeds if using and bake for around an hour and a half. This loaf takes a while. Test if it's ready by ensuring that the top is nicely browned and a knife comes out clean when plunged into the middle.


This bread is delicious warm or cooled then toasted and spread with nutella or any nut butter. Serve for breakfast with coffee or as a not-so-naughty dessert.

 

What Challah Make For Breakfast?

Ha ha.

To continue with my breadventures I decided to make a plaited Challah loaf. I was really excited about the plaiting part cos so far I've only really made flatbreads, which don't come in overly exciting shapes (although that might be an idea). I'm not honestly sure how tasty this bread is on its own, but it really shines when used in dessert, as I will get to later. The lack of a distinct flavour is probably because I used wholewheat flour, so it just tastes like quite simple brown bread. Although the crustiness of the plait does make it infinitely more exciting.

Let's weave
I'm giving the recipe I used here but recommending that for a tastier bread, go with white/any other interesting flour. 

Simple Wholewheat Challah Bread.

2 teaspoons active dry or instant yeast
1 cup/230ml lukewarm water
400g wholewheat bread flour
200gish white flour
40g white sugar
2 teaspoons salt
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk (reserve the white for the egg wash)
60ml vegetable oil

On writing up this recipe I now realise that I think I forgot to add the sugar, which is probably why the bread tasted just like wholemeal. Lol. Excuse to retry I suppose.
How to: I got this recipe directly from the kitchn and the directions are really well laid out, so there is no point in me trying to do it justice.
Minor changes: I used a mixture of white and wholewheat flour, and proved the dough overnight in the fridge.
Doughn't forget the sugar
You knead to make this bread




I can prove it
I mean, it's the yeast you could do


I'm on a roll with these puns
Don't be abraid to get it wrong
It takes some willflour
But rise to the challenge

Go on, you'll loaf it
Get a slice of the action


This bread is perfect for use in desserts as-is (the wholewheat recipe). I used it for peanut butter and banana French toast, which was delicious. The simple flavour and robust crust makes it the perfect topping carrier.

For PB French toast for two:

Toast 4 slices bread, soak one side of each in 2 whisked eggs with a splash of vanilla. Spread un-soaked sides with peanut butter then fry egg side in butter, place slices of banana on the peanut butter, stick together, butter with a thin layer of golden syrup or honey and sprinkle with cinnamon.

It's also perfect to use the last few stale-ish slices in cinnamon bread and butter pudding.

Hola Granola

Wouldn't that be a great name for a Spanish granola company?! You saw it here first. 


All of the best breakfast flavours
As you may have guessed from previous posts (PB Pad Thai, the many ways with porridge), I'm a big fan of all things peanut butter. Combine it with banana, cinnamon and some other healthy stuff and that has to be a winner. 

Ingredients:

   200g mixed unsalted nuts (I get the resealable bags from Lidl, I think £1.89)
   Large handful rolled oats
   Large handful seeds (sunflower, pumpkin, mixed, etc)
   Handful raisins/ chopped dried fruit
   Anything else granola-ey (I had toasted flaked almonds from a previous truffle-making session)
   1 heaped tsp cinnamon
   1/2 tsp ground ginger
   A ripe banana, mashed with a fork
   2 tbsp peanut butter
   3 tbsp honey - if you like sweet granola, use more (mine had more of a nutty roasted flavour than standard sugary taste, but less is obviously healthier)



Method:

Preheat oven to 180°C. Chop nuts on a board until broken but still nicely chunky. Mix all dry ingredients in large bowl.




Separately, mix mashed banana & PB, spoon the honey into a mug and warm on high in microwave for 10 secs, then add to banana mix.

Pour banana-ey goodness over nuts and combine until well coated. 


Spread evenly onto a lightly greased tray and bake for around 20 minutes, till smelling nutty and delicious. Halfway through roasting give the mix a scrape to ensure big clusters don't form. If you like big clusters in your granola, leave this part til the end of cooking. 




Remove from oven, restrain from eating entire tray of granola. Cool and store in a sealed container. Serve on top of yoghurt, porridge, smoothies etc.



I think this would make a lovely homemade gift if packaged in an old jam jar and sealed with a pretty piece of fabric, some string and a handwritten label. 


Photo: veggiegrettie
The best gifts are those that you'd be happy to receive!

Warm Cinnamon Monkey Bread with Rum Spiked Frosting

I don't really like tradition.

'We have to have sprouts', 'We can't have Yorkshires', 'We have to have Christmas pudding'.

Why? Christmas is supposed to be one of the most enjoyable days of the year, why set any restrictions? With regards to Christmas food, my view is that if you want it, have it. 

I'm not saying I'm a tradition anarchist who eats spaghetti and garlic bread on December 25th, but there's nothing wrong with those who do. If I fancied it, I would. That's why this year I decided to replace the tradition of eating aged, brandy-soaked dried fruit (otherwise known as Christmas pud) with a similarly-spiced hot and sugary baked dough.

Behold the Monkey Bread:


It's like one giant sweet cream-cheese covered cinnamon roll doughnut. 

Christmas has passed, but in lieu of following tradition, why not make this dessert all year round?

The dough:                                                                                        

4 tsps yeast (from a packet)                                                                
1/2 cup warm water                                                                           
2 tbsps sugar (any)                                                                              
2 tbsps salted butter                                                                            
1 large egg                                                                                          
1 tsp salt
2½ - 3 cups plain flour

Sugar topping:

2½ tbsps white sugar
1 level tbsp ground cinnamon
6 tbsps salted butter, melted
2½ tbsps brown sugar
½ tsp vanilla extract


Combine the first 3 ingredients and whisk til combined. Leave to sit for 5 minutes until yeast has activated and the top is slightly frothy. Add the butter, egg, salt and gradually begin adding the flour, until the dough comes together and is manageable by hand. Work onto a floured surface and knead for around 5 minutes. Roll into a ball and place into a large bowl (the one you used for mixing is fine) and cover loosely with a tea towel. Leave in a warm-room temperature place for around 2 hours, or until doubled in size. When the dough is ready, turn out onto surface and cut into around 34 pieces. Mix the dry ingredients of the sugar topping in a bowl. Roll the individual dough pieces into the sugar mixture and arrange into a greased round cake tin. If you have a ring mould, excellent! Use it. I sadly did not but managed to DIY one by use of a small ceramic jug.





Any thin, round oven-safe object should work for this, just place it in the middle of your greased cake tin (and grease the object too). Once this is set up you can arrange the dough balls around the shape. Leave to rise in this position for another hour, half an hour through the waiting time is a good time to preheat the oven to 200ÂșC. Just before baking, mix the remaining ingredients from the sugar topping and pour over the balls.


Bake the dough for around half an hour, or until risen and nicely browned. Leave to cool for 10 minutes then turn onto a plate, then back on to another plate so the bottom is the side that was touching the cake tin.

Frosting:
3½ tbsps butter
4 tbsps cream cheese
3 tbsps icing sugar
1 tbsp alcohol of choice (I used Captain Morgan's Spiced)
1 tsp syrup (maple or golden)

Melt the butter and cream cheese in a small bowl in the microwave, Stir and add the remaining ingredients until smooth. Transfer to a small jug and drizzle over the bread. Use the leftovers for extra moisture when serving. 






















Best enjoyed warm with a mug of coffee.

Hard work? There's just no knead.

Another post, another bread recipe. Inspired by a blog favourite of mine Budget Bytes, I prepared this unbelievably easy focaccia in time for a dinner party turned booze-up at fellow food enthusiast Hester's apartment. The guests were impressed.

I felt almost embarrassed to take compliments for something that was so simple to make, but not so embarrassed that I didn't glowingly reply 'it was nothing'. (It really was.)



Not out of place at a gourmet meal

Ingredients:

120g wholewheat bread flour
360g white bread flour
1/2 teaspoon instant yeast
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
480ml water
3 tablespoons olive oil (the better the quality, the better the bread)
Sprinkling of herbs - salt & rosemary is a classic combination, or basil and garlic

Method:

Add all of the dry ingredients to a large bowl and stir. Add the water and stir gently with a spoon until the mixture is combined and in a sticky ball. Cover loosely with a tea towel and let sit overnight/about 14 hours.

When you're around 2 hours before needing the dough to be ready, prepare a tin with oiled greaseproof paper or foil and and pour the dough onto the sheet. Stretch to the edges of the tin and let sit for another hour. Poke dimples in the dough and drizzle with extra olive oil, don't worry about adding too much. Sprinkle with extra herbs and salt. 

With the oven preheated to 200°C, place a sheet of foil over the mixture and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for a further 20 minutes, or until brown.
 Wait until cooled to slice or enjoy hot.

If you're worried about cooking times or leaving the dough for too long, you could always mix the dry ingredients before you go to bed and add the water when you get up in the morning. Minimum time and effort involved, and lovely risen dough for when you get home.




Prep time: Around 16 hours (the majority of which you will be sleeping for)
Hands-on time: 20 minutes
Oven time: 40 minutes


Extra step-by-step photos:












The perfect rocky road bars

Firstly, welcome to post number 1 of EllieFood! I tried to design a pretty header and customize everything but my technological expertise failed me. If anyone is good with this kind of stuff I'd really appreciate any help, but for now we have to make to with this simple design - if I faffed around for any longer trying to make it look all fancy I don't think there'd be a new post til I've finished uni.

Here's the pic I tried to use just to prove my efforts:


Anyway - the bars.

As probably one of the easiest sweet treats to make, rocky road bars are my fail-safe party showstopper. The basic recipe is to grab everything unhealthy, smash it all to bits, cover it with gooey melted chocolate and refrigerate.

However, if you're going to make something so easy that it doesn't even really count as baking, you might as well make it perfect.



I made this batch to serve at a 40th wedding anniversary, and I think it's my best one yet.

This time I used:
200g Galaxy
100g Bourneville
100g Dairy Milk whole nut
70g butter
2 Ts golden syrup
150g chopped marshmallows (I used scissors but small ones work too)
Pack of hobnobs
Almost a box of maltesers
100g chopped wonka's millionaire shortbread (had it in, use choc chips/other chopped choc or omit)
75g mixed dried fruit

Construction:

Melt chocolate, butter and syrup in a saucepan on low til runny and smooth. Separately, crush the biscuits - I do this by whacking the full packet on the sides of a large bowl til it bursts, then jabbing at the crumbs with a rolling pin - add all the other  dry ingredients, mix, cover with the cooled chocolate. Press into a greased and lined rectangular tin. I think this made about 24 large ones, which Mum then halved again because my portion sizes are greedy.If you want to make it look a bit more special you can dust with icing sugar, but I don't bother, I think there's already enough sugar in these mini heart attacks.

This recipe is just a combination of everything I had in, so be creative - add different nuts, fruit, cereal maybe? Granola would probably work. Most of all, ENJOY RESPONSIBLY.

Let me know if you have a recipe that rivals this one.