Wednesday, 31 December 2008

spiced fruit cake


This cake happened slightly by accident but turned out to be a really light and fresh take on an old favourite. Last night, D and I were craving something sweet after dinner, and our pantry is literally bursting at the hinges at the moment, filled with Christmas dinner ingredient leftovers. So rather than buying yet another box of Lindt Balls I set to making a Sticky Date Pudding, from one of my favourite Gabriel Gateaux recipes. It's quick and easy and really delicious. However, once I'd started, I realised we didn't have dates, or oranges and I messed up the first stage (not so easy after all, ha!). My courage refused to be dimmed and, improvisation being the name of the game, I pushed on. The result was actually really, really nice. I still served it with hot toffee sauce, as I would a sticky date pudd. And it was good. good. good.

You'll need:

300g self raising flour
1 tablespoon bicarb soda
250g - 300g dried fruits (I used loads of apricots, then sultannas, cherries and prunes)
4 organic, free range eggs (very important. no one wants angry chickens. peck. peck.)
2 tablespoons vanilla essence
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon cinnamon
3 cups of water
4 tablespoons orange juice, or apple juice, I actually used mandarin juice!
120 grams butter

What to do:

Boil the water, 1 tablespoon of vanilla essence and fruit together. Once they come to the boil, add the bicarb of soda and stir quickly. It will start to bubble and froth. Remove from heat and cover.

Meanwhile, mix sugar, flour, butter, fruit juice and eggs with electric beaters until combined. Add 1 tablespoon of vanilla essence and the spices, mix well. Add the fruit and mix until just combined.
Pour into a ready greased cake tin and bake at 180'c for approximately 35 minutes (in a fan forced oven). It should be golden brown and a metal blade, once inserted, should come away clean.

Remove from oven once finished and leave to rest for a few minutes. Run a blade around the perimetre of the cake and flip onto a plate. Serve (as pictured) with rasberry coulis and cream, or for something really decadent, hot toffee sauce. (Mix 1/3 each of cream, butter and brown sugar over low heat until pale and the consistency of thick pouring cream.)

This cake comes out with quite a puddingish consistency, which I personally really like. It's perfect for winter nights and rainy days.

Friday, 26 December 2008

a culinary journey

I am passionate about food. It is one of the things that most enriches my life. I start each day wondering what I'll cook, and my happiest hours are spent flicking through recipe books, food markets, and kitchen appliance shops. I feel cheated if I have to grab "a sandwich on the run", as if one of the meal quotas for the day has been robbed from me and replaced with a hasty and inferior substitute. I believe in cooking with love and cherish days and nights when I am able to cook and bake for my family and friends. Christmas is a giddy day for me! I believe that if you can glean one really great recipe, one that you will recreate regularly, from any cook book then it is worth the purchase. The best present I can ever receive is a beautiful meal with friends.

So then, the purpose of adding to the already cluttered blogsphere is really to give me somewhere to store up all my recipes. I'm kicking off 2009 with a culinary self challenge. To master 52 new recipes in the year - one a week. Or, if I'm busy, two the following week. It's easy to get stuck in a cooking rut but I'm going to travel the world with my taste buds this year - from Asia to India to France, to Rustic Italy and all over Europe, to deep America, South America, and everywhere in between. Along with me for the ride will be my other half, who never complains at a cooking challenge, and is most accomplished at complimenting even my worst kitchen misadventures. And you, I hope!

Thanks for stopping by and happy cooking. dd.x