Sunday, 27 September 2020
Baked apples and sultanas – ready to eat and serving suggestions
Baked apples and sultanas – the sweet surprise, assembly and photos
Saturday, 19 September 2020
A savoury weekend treat and a sweet surprise
On my shopping list this weekend was a Pink Lady apple, which I hoped I'd be able to buy loose – wrong – I needed a large one for my treat to myself - beetroot relish and finished up buying four.
I'd also bought Pink Lady fruit juice for a change – not realising how handy it would be.
Here's what happened to the three I had left :
Baked Apples with sultanas and
optional sticky toffee sauce
ahead of the game take two handfuls of
sultanas – place in a box with a tight fitting
lid. Add 150ml of Pink Lady fruit juice,
fridge and steep overnight
Grease a dish that measures 25x17x5cms (10x7x2”)
with 1 tsp of unsalted butter
2 tbsp of soft dark brown sugar
½ tsp of vanilla bean paste
1 tsp of cinnamon – mix all three
ingredients in a medium size mixing bowl
3 Pink Lady apples – peeled, cored and
sliced and add to the sugar, paste and cinnamon
in the bowl together, add 1 tbsp of Pink Lady apple
juice from the steeping - mix well to combine then tip into your
greased dish
Bake for 30 minutes in a pre-heated oven 150fan/170c/Gas 3
turn after 15 minutes and set aside to cool, then cover.
Note : you want the apples to keep their shape, not turn
into mush
Next up – assembly and photo guide
Pasty gate – the verdicts
Margaret reported in as promised – short and to the point … “delicious – again please!” I'll take that, thank you!
Then I had a light bulb moment! In these troubled times I've heard, already, that Christmas celebrations are hanging in the balance. There's also the question of gifts. Off the cuff I asked Margaret what she thought about making a list of her favourite food treats I could give her for Christmas – that went down very well.
I suspect the list already includes, apart from a pasty or two (note to self, halved and easy therefore to freeze and take a portion when the mood takes) lemon drizzle syrup, cheese scones – I could go on, the final choices coming soon!
News just in and a direct quote from my other tester friends - “we saved the precious cargo until today ...”.
“... really loved it, especially the pastry – recipes by email please! I'll try it and let you know how I go.”
I should explain that my friend lives in the USA and is a student too – a very good one – the recipes will be winging their way across the sea to North Carolina. I've taken the liberty of saving him time and sourced a supplier for lard and a veggie shortening alternative in the US – his favourite place to shop – Walmart. I should have known!
If you have spare apples in your fruit bowl …
Pasty gate – vindication!
I appreciate it means work at home in your own kitchen and you might think it defeats the object of a “takeaway” but it's worth it. I'll gladly pay for quality but I hate the anticipation of a treat and being disappointed. More irritatingly these pasties do not contain expensive ingredients.
Despite the fact that I'm recommending making your own pasties you can make it work for you – you can make the pastry on a day when you've time and ditto with the filling, then fridge and use or freeze.
I'm not comfortable criticising M&S but it was such poor quality it had to be done. It shouldn't matter whether it's a humble pasty or a fillet de boeuf en croute – each should be given the same care and attention.
I can only assume that either the test kitchens and/or the quality control departments weren't up to scratch on that day.
Rocket science it ain't!
Then there's the verdict … my elderly friend Margaret visits for coffee once a week – distanced I might add and I gave her a lunch treat taken from my freezer – half a pasty, which, once defrosted in the fridge would be ready to warm so a takeaway treat for her. I unwrapped the pasty parcel to show her and explain warming. I have to say this bodes well – on unwrapping and therefore cold the savoury waft of the pasty made our mouths water. Hold that thought.
It's important to get a tester's opinion. I loved these pasties but that doesn't mean a whole lot – I need to know I'm not on my own.
I then gave a whole pasty to two friends for their lunch treat. This will definitely be the ultimate test – one of my friends is a Northern boy and takes his cheese and onion pasties very seriously so his opinion counts all the more.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed – that's two thoughts to “hold”!
Pasty gate – photo guide
To sum up, this is a Greggs style filling encased in a Cornish pasty pastry but with a thinner crimped crust.
Have a look at the results :
These are large pasties – they measure 22cms/8½” x 12cms/4½” over the middle. Cut in half or leave whole if you're feeding hungry hoards or have a very large appetite!
The bonus – you can make a batch of the pastry, divide, weigh and wrap and treat the filling in the same way. I took my own advice and made two pasties and popped the remaining portioned pastry and filling into the freezer, ready for when I needed a comfort food fix.
I should also say that authentic Cornish pasties are cooked with raw ingredients – I've “borrowed” the pastry, used my own filling and am very pleased that I did!
A small tip - pasties will keep warm for a long time - wrap them straight from the oven in either greaseproof or baking paper and then a clean tea towel. It does work and the pasty will stay warm – it definitely saves burning your mouth when you're itching to devour.
Next – vindication!