Showing posts with label dried fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dried fruit. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2013

Easy Fruit Cake


This is a very easy fruit cake. Just remember to soak the dried fruit with liquid overnight. I used lemon juice and water, but apple juice is a very nice alternative. The cake is very moist as you would expect.
I made fruit cake in a hurry without soaking the other day and the cake turned out really dry.
So, using "juicy" dried fruit is definitely the key.


Ingredients
  • 6 oz low-fat spread (or butter)
  • 6 oz caster sugar
  • 6 oz self-raising flour (or plain flour + 2tsp baking powder)
  • 6 oz dried mixed fruit  
  • 2 eggs
  • zest of 1 lemon 
  • juice of 1 lemon
  • 30ml water or apple/orange juice
Method
  1. Soak the dried fruit and lemon zest with lemon juice and water overnight.
  2. Pre-heat the oven to 170 °c  (160 °c fan) 
  3. Put low-fat spread (or butter), sugar, flour and eggs in a food processer and mix well.  I often use an electric hand mixer.
  4. Gently fold the soaked dried fruit and the juice into the mixture. 
  5. Pour the mixture into the prepared loaf tin.
  6. Bake it in the oven for about 50 minutes until a skewer comes out clean from the cake. 
  7. When the cake is baked, let it stand for 5 minutes, then turn it out onto a plate. 

Thursday, 6 December 2012

Spiced Fruit Muffins. Christmassy!

Feeling a bit Christmassy? These muffins have a hint of winter festive taste. Ginger, cinnamon and dried fruit are the main ingredients for Christmas cake. But these muffins are much quicker to make. When the dried fruit are soaked overnight and are plump and juicy, it's ready to bake. If you soak the dried fruit in brandy or sherry, the muffins would be even more Christmasy. I decorated the muffins with cinnamon icing sugar to spice them up.


Ingredients 

  • 200g plain flour
  • 100g sugar
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • 100ml milk
  • 50ml vegetable oil  
  • 1 egg
  • 1 dash of lemon juice
  • 1 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 100g dried Fruit (20g mix peal + 80g mix dried fruit) soaked in 50ml of warm water (preferably overnight)
  • zest of 1 orange   
  • cinnamon icing (cinnamon, icing sugar and water mixture to decorate the muffins) 


Method


  1. Preheat oven to 200 C / Gas 6 and add paper cases to a muffin tray.
  2. Measure out dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl.
  3. Measure milk and oil in a large measuring jug. Add egg and whisk well.
  4. Add the wet mixture (3) into the dry mixture (2).  Stir until just combined. The mixture will be lumpy. Do NOT over mix!
  5. Gently fold in soaked mixed fruit.
  6. Bake for 20 minutes or until golden brown on top.



Monday, 29 October 2012

Chelsea Buns

I have done it. Proper Chelsea buns... no cheating... I followed a recipe of the famous Paul Hollywood. It was my first time making "rich sweet dough" and it was a bit of nightmare to begin with, as the dough was really wet and sticky. Perseverance. I kept kneading though the dough seemed to be stuck to my hand forever. However, my hard work paid off as the dough gradually became pleasant to work with. Paul's recipe on BBC Food site said the the butter should be melted in a saucepan with milk. I was a bit confused because he put all the independents (flower, sugar, yeast, salt, egg) together in the bowl, then poured in the warm milk on the BBC show "The master class of GBBO." So I followed his GBBO method and put all the ingredients in the bowl then, poured in the warm milk. I used mixed dried fruit, glace cherries which really needed to be used up, and orange and lemon peel.

Proved and ready to put in the oven

Hurray... just came out of oven.

Ahhhhh. It was worth it. Very soft and beautifully bouncy dough.
Rich and sweet. I'm so happy about the result. :)


Oh, by the way,............Look, NO soggy bottom.

Tuesday, 24 July 2012

Oat and Fruit Cookies


Fancy a cuppa? My Oat and Fruit cookies may be lovely company with a cup of tea. 
Crunchy outside and slightly soft inside .... that's how I like them, but you can make them really crunchy by baking them a bit longer if you like. A lovely cinnamon aroma spreads in the kitchen when they are being baked. The dough is very sticky, so using your hands to shape them is a messy job. I used 2 spoons to make a round-ish shape and dropped it on the baking tray. I quite like this rustic look. :) 


Ingredients   


  • 3 oz Brown Sugar 
    One of the cookies turned out a heart shape... awwww.
  • 4 oz Caster Sugar
  • 4 oz  Unsalted Butter (or Low-Fat Margarine if you prefer) 
  • 6 oz Plain Flour
  • 5 oz Rolled Oats
  • 5 oz Dried Fruit (and/or some nuts)
  • 1 Egg
  • 1/2 tsp Cinnamon 
  • 1/2 tsp  Baking Powder 
  • 1/2 tsp  Salt    

Method

  1. Heat the oven to 170°c.
  2. Put the brown sugar, caster sugar and butter into a mixing bowl and whisk them together until it has become smooth.
  3. Add all the rest of the ingredients into the bowl with the butter and sugar mixture.
  4. Mix everything together so that it is all evenly distributed. Then shape it into a ball with your hands.
  5. Lightly flour your work surface and then roll out the ball of cookie dough to a thickness of about 4mm. 
  6. Using a cookie cutter, cut out the cookies and put them onto a non-stick baking tray (or one lined with greaseproof paper)
  7. Put the cookies into the 170°c oven and bake them for 15 minutes.
  8. When they are cooked, remove them from the oven and leave them to cool on the baking tray for 3 minutes or so before putting them on a wire rack and allow them to cool to room temperature.

   

Thursday, 14 June 2012

double yolk egg muffins ... lovely!


Hey, I found a double yolked egg. :) I cracked the egg and there were two yolks in one egg.
So I baked fruit muffins with my easy muffin recipe adding 100g of dried fruit.
I baked them as usual, but somehow, they rose more than usual. Is this an effect of 2 yolks?
I don't really know.....
Anyway, it was a lovely surprise and I'm very pleased about how the muffins turned out. :)


Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Fruit Loaf

After baking so many muffins, I'm back to bread. It's a sweet bread.
I love cooked dried fruit because of the burst of flavour you get. For this loaf I used 100g of dried fruit.
The dough looked almost overwelmed by the quantity of fruit, but when the loaf came out of the oven and I sliced it, I thought to myself.... hmmm I could have put more fruit in it. What do you think? It's really up to personal taste, isn't it? I just love fruit, so I'll try to add more fruit next time. However, I have to be careful to make a balance between the dough and fruit as the bread needs to rise properly, otherwise the bread will end up being a heavy dumpling.
How about adding some walnuts as well? I think dried fruit and walnuts are a great combo. :)

Ingredients 
  • 250g Strong Bread flower ( I used white flour)
  • 1 tsp Fast-action dried yeast
  • ¼ tsp Salt
  • 1 tsp Sugar 
  • ¼ tsp Cinnamon powder
  • 175ml lukewarm water
  • 100g Mixed dried fruit 
Method
  1. Make the dough by tipping the flour, yeast and salt into a large bowl and making a well in the middle. Pour in most of the water and use your fingers or a wooden spoon to mix the flour and water together until combined to a slightly wet, pillowy, workable dough - add a splash more water if necessary. Tip the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead for at least 10 mins until smooth and elastic. This can also be done in a tabletop mixer with a dough hook. Place the dough in a clean oiled bowl, cover with cling film and leave to rise until doubled in size.
  2. Knock back the dough by tipping it back onto a floured surface and pushing the air out. Knead in the dried fruit to the dough.  Mould the dough into a rugby ball shape and place it on a baking tray. Cover with a clean tea towel and leave to prove for 30 mins. Dust the top of the loaf with a little more flour and slash the top with a sharp knife if you want.
  3. Heat oven to 220°C / fan 200°C / gas 7.
  4. Pour hot water onto the bottom of the oven or into a dish at the bottom of the oven to create steam. 
  5. Bake the bread for 15 mins, then reduce the heat to 190°C / fan 170°C / gas 5 and continue to bake for 30 mins until the loaf sounds hollow when removed from the oven and tapped on the base. Leave the bread on a wire rack to cool completely. 

Thursday, 10 May 2012

Really Fruity Tea Cake

 I was looking forward to baking this cake last night when I was soaking the dried fruit in my favourite Earl Grey tea.... 
When I came across the fruity tea cake recipe in BBC Good Food, I couldn't resist trying this out immediately. Sadly, I didn't have "dried berries and cherries" that the original recipe suggested and I didn't particularly want to rush to the shop to buy them at 10pm. So, I emptied all my dried fruit jars and got 250g of mixed dried fruit, apricots and prunes. Well, That's all I had. So, I adjusted the original recipe for tea soaked dried fruit. I used Earl Grey tea instead of normal tea because I love the flavour. 
Next morning, I found all the dried fruit looked plump and juicy and ready for me to bake a cake with them. 
The cake was really rich in flavour and moist.... and really really low-fat.  Look at the independents. :) 
Ah, and it would be even nicer if I added some kind of  liqueur, like brandy, cointreau or cherry liqueur to be a bit naughty. :)  Perhaps I could add some spice such as cinnamon and cloves to make a version of Christmas cake.  
Ingredients

250g mixed dried fruit, apricots, and prunes
200ml hot Earl Grey tea
Juice of 1 orange (about 75ml/2½fl oz) plus zest
50g butter (or Low-Fat spread)
100g light brown sugar
egg
225g self-raising flour
4 tbsp demerara sugar


Method

1.     Place the dried fruit in a bowl and pour over the hot tea, orange juice and zest. Cover with cling film, then leave for at least 4 hrs or better still overnight.

2.     Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Grease and line the base of a 2lb loaf tin. Beat together the butter (or low-fat spread) and sugar until creamy, then beat in the egg followed by the flour. Carefully stir through the fruit mixture including the tea and the orange juice. Spoon the mixture into the tin, then smooth over the surface with the back of a spoon. Sprinkle all over with a thick layer of demerara sugar.

3.     Bake for 1 hr or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tin, then turn out.



Thursday, 12 April 2012

My take on Pain aux Raisins

After making little Chelsea buns, I was wondering if I could make these a bit classier.... like Pain aux Raisins which I can't resist buying in the patisserie. I love the buttery flaky pastry with custard and raisins.  However, sometimes I fancy a lighter version, something like bread based Pain aux Raisins. So, here is my little bread version of  Pain aux Raisins. I used dried mixed fruit instead of only raisins to give more interesting flavour and texture. Well, I didn't make the custard though I could have done. I cheated by making custard from instant custard powder. I thought I had got rid of it, but the last packet was still there in my cupboard, and I had to use it up. I made the custard very thick in consistency and let it cool. I also soaked the dried fruits with some hot water to plump them up. You could soak the fruit with apple juice instead of water.
I made a half quantity of bread dough, but added 2 tsp of sugar before adding water. After the first raising, I flattened the dough and spread the custard all over. Then I sprinkled the mixed dried fruit. I carefully rolled up the dough as if I was making a Swiss roll, and cut this Swiss roll look dough into pieces about 2cm in width and flattened them. I placed them on a baking plate, then baked  in a 200c fan oven for 15 minutes.