Saturday, 29 February 2020

Now for the sweet treat!


Are you a fan of Daim bars? If you are you'll probably already know if you are a visitor to IKEA that they sell various Daim bar products. There's Daim vanilla ice cream and a Daim Swedish almond cake – gluten free and frozen. There's a limited edition Strawberry Mousse cake too! Daim bars originated in Sweden and Norway in 1953 – the brand is now owned by Kraft Foods.

The last time I visited IKEA I came away with two large bags of the mini Daims. I'm always messing around with variations on a theme of Rocky Road – it seemed appropriate to produce a Daim version – here's the recipe :

Daim Rocky Road

450g of Daim minis
175g of unsalted butter - cubed
4x15ml tablespoons of golden syrup
150g of almonds – blitzed finely
150g of glacé cherries
300g of shortbread fingers
125g mini marshmallows - optional

Place the Daim bars, butter and golden syrup into a large saucepan. Melt on a low heat. Place the shortbread in a strong food bag, seal and crush to a rough crumb. When the Daim bars, butter and syrup have melted add the biscuits, almonds and cherries and fold through until they are all coated in the melted ingredients. Finally, add the marshmallows and tip into a foil tray-bake. Fridge it for at least four hours – it won't hurt if it's left longer.

When you're ready cut the slab in half and set aside one of the halves. Lay the half sideways and cut into strips then turn and cut again into cubes – the cubes can be as small or large as you like. Repeat with the remaining half. As a guide you can expect to get 120 cubes approximately depending of course on the size of the cube – in this case 2cms/¾”.

Fridge in bags or boxes to suit and freeze some too!

Coming up … a photo guide and a serving idea

A hug but the dumpling doesn't fit in a mug …


We had the soup and a dumpling each with the fresh bread and butter for supper. I packed up boxes of the soup and took a risk – I divided the remaining dumplings into quarters and packed into a microwave box – it matters not that they have been lifted from the soup and have soggy bottoms!

My friend called in to collect … I explained that the dumplings were a risk but hey, it was worth a shot.

What did my friend and her husband think?

They loved their lunch – the bread in particular and made it last two days. An unexpected bonus – the tiny leftover dumplings were microwaved on high for 10/15 seconds – light as a feather – note to self – in future make enough dumplings for second helpings to microwave.

It's hard for me to critique my own food but I loved all of it, the bread in particular – it does exactly what it says in the recipe albeit tweaked sensibly and it looks amazing – the Food Stylist did a good job!

Now for the sweet treat …

The soda bread verdict continued …


Where did I send the bread for taste testing? Remember my friend whose husband has been very ill and the get well gift? A perfect mid week treat me thinks. Hmm, I can't just send bread - I decided to make some soup – what better vehicle for a freshly baked loaf.

I chose my favourite veggie soup – carrot, coriander and chick pea except that I decided to ring the changes and added cannellini beans instead of the chick peas. If you're interested in the recipe then check out the soup label.

Then I thought how wonderful would a dumpling be too. Veggie suet is a truly wonderful product.

100g/4oz of self-raising flour
50g/2oz of vegetable suet
large pinch of salt
80ml cold water

Mix the flour, suet and salt with the water

I divided into four and shaped into balls

Drop into simmering soup and cook for 20 minutes

Here's the thing … traditionally dumplings are placed on top of a casserole with a tightly fitting lid. Casseroles have a thicker consistency than soup and obviously, usually, slow cooked in the oven. Soup simmers on top of the hob and saucepan lids “sit” on top of the pan and are not what I'd describe as “tightly fitting”. Here's my tip - tear off a sheet of foil large enough to overlap the pan, push down slightly and then secure with the lid. Make sure your soup is simmering gently before you add the dumplings and seal with foil. 20 minutes later you'll have dumplings the size of which you wouldn't believe!

Soup, dumplings with freshly baked bread and butter for supper.

Sounds like a plan … what happened next

The Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread … the verdict


Before I begin I should say that recipes are meant to be a guide, though it does say “it's wonderfully simple”.

Here's the verdict.

Omit the greasing and lining of the baking tray – as I said I've never done either when baking bread.

The instructions given in the final paragraph of 1 - “... In a jug or second mixing bowl … this will take a little while, but stir patiently ...” are, I think, poor. Taken in the recipe order – Guinness, yogurt and treacle – the Guinness and the yogurt are easy enough, now try measuring the treacle and adding it to the other two ingredients - black treacle is dense, sticky stuff and quite difficult to weigh - you can't retrieve it if you've added too much if it's already submerged in Guinness and yogurt!

By the time you've managed to combine the three “wet” ingredients – always providing you've not jettisoned the mixing bowl and its contents all over the kitchen floor and you've lost the will - any anticipation of a glorious loaf of soda bread has evaporated.

In certain cooking circumstances you can wing it or fly by the seat of your pants. With baking this is not the case – it's important to be accurate and weigh ingredients - your end product will sink – sorry about the pun - if you don't.

I'm not sure whether it's an incomplete recipe or badly written. Is it deliberately vague - surely you want your readers to succeed in their efforts? It's such a pity - with a little more care in the explanation of the method for the “wet stuff” it would make life so much clearer for devoted readers and bakers!

If you glance at my photo guide – separate jugs makes life easy – weighing the black treacle directly into a mixing bowl means you're ready to go - it might not be hands free but you have control of the mixing bowl. By trickling the Guinness into the treacle it loosens quickly. The rest, as they say, is history – or easy peasy!

Next … the taste testing

Saturday, 22 February 2020

The Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread photo guide

Here goes :

the dry ingredients

the jugs – Guinness and yogurt

the bowl of black treacle
slowly add the Guinness to the treacle
to loosen

add the yogurt to the Guinness and treacle
and whisk together
the dry combined with the wet
ingredients
the bread on the baking tray – see the
dusting of flour underneath

the loaf, marked into quarters -
the long handle of a wooden spoon works
beautifully!

Ta dah – fresh from the oven

sliced in half – looks good enough to eat

a quarter, ready with a pot of butter
it would be rude not to!


Coming up … the verdict and the sweet treat


Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread … hints and tips

continued

I mentioned making sure your mixing bowl was set on a non slip mat, alternatively you could use a dampened j cloth.

Here's my non slip mat – a Le Creuset Cool Tool. This mat protects your surfaces from heat and scratches but I've used mine – which I've had for ages – as a non-slip mat and if, like me, you struggle opening stubborn lids on jars the mat does that too!

These mats are brilliant pieces of kit – I would never recommend any kitchen kit that wasn't worth the dosh and I don't believe in filling my kitchen with large pieces of equipment I'll use once and then commit to the discarded equipment heap in the sky or garage, whichever is most convenient!

The Cool Tool is available in cool colours – black, blue, cerise, teal, ultra violet and volcanic. I use mine underneath my mixing bowls but they are also perfect to place on a tray ready for a hot plate of food or bowl of soup. They take multitasking to a whole new level.

Here's a photo :






Time for the photo guide :

Guinness and Treacle Soda Bread …

the method and hints and tips.

Pre-heat your oven 180fan/200c/Gas 6. Grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment. Put the flours, oats, salt and bicarbonate of soda in a mixing bowl and toss together. Add the butter and, using your fingertips, rub it into the dry ingredients until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. In a jug or second mixing bowl, stir together the Guinness, yogurt and treacle, until the treacle more or less dissolves – this will take a little while, but stir patiently and it will come together.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and, with a spatula, wooden spoon or firm hand, bring everything together into a rough dough. Knead for a moment on a worktop, just until the dough has come together, then shape into a rough ball and put on the prepared baking tray. Dust the ball of dough liberally with flour, then use the handle of a wooden spoon to press a deep cross into the dough, ensuring you don't go all the way through the dough, so all 4 quarters are still connected. Bake for 50 minutes until golden, crispy and steaming.

This is the recipe taken directly from the magazine. I've a few suggestions that will make life easier.

It mentions “grease a large baking tray or line with baking parchment”. In all my bread making I've never greased or lined a baking tray. I sprinkle a non-stick baking tray with flour and “swirl” so it covers the tray. The bread doesn't stick – ever.

If you take your butter straight from the fridge as you begin, weigh and cut it into small cubes and place on a piece of cling film by the time you've weighed the remainder of your ingredients your butter will be soft enough to rub into the dry ingredients.

With regard to the “wet” ingredients you'll find life much easier if you begin by weighing the black treacle directly into a small mixing bowl. Weigh your Guinness and yogurt in separate jugs. Make sure your mixing bowl is set on a non slip mat – if you don't have one then use a dampened j cloth.

Gradually drizzle the Guinness into the treacle, stirring all the time and it will loosen, continue until combined. Use a small whisk when adding the yogurt to prevent it splitting. The process takes no time at all.

There's more …