Take it from someone who doesn't “do cake” - this is the exception.
Now for the extra bits that takes it to the next level …
Take it from someone who doesn't “do cake” - this is the exception.
Now for the extra bits that takes it to the next level …
Here are a few recipes with, not surprisingly, oranges and lemons!
First up, my favourite cake, tried and tested and a flourless recipe – it stands wonderfully on it's own and is equally a perfect celebration cake with extra bits.
You wouldn't normally serve a cake as a dinner party dessert I hear you say, the following may change your mind.
Gateau a l'Orange
(Orange Cake)
Serves 12
2 oranges
6 large eggs
250g sugar
2 tbsp orange blossom water
1 tsp baking powder
250g ground almonds
Wash the oranges and boil them whole for 1 – 1½ hours or until they are very soft.
Beat the eggs with the sugar. Add the orange blossom water, baking powder and almonds and mix well. *Cut open the oranges, remove the pips and purée in a food processor. Mix thoroughly with the egg and almond mixture and pour into a 23cm cake tin – lined with baking parchment, preferably non-stick and with a removable base. Bake in a pre-heated oven 170fan/190c/Gas 5 for an hour. Let it cool before turning out.
Believe me when I say that I stared at this recipe for years. What put me off baking this cake was the boiling of the oranges for the time allotted, an hour and a half is too long for me watching oranges and it's so easy to become distracted - before you know it you have a burnt saucepan and the rest, as they say, is history.
To bring it up to date - instead of boiling the oranges, microwave them for 8 minutes on high.
Pierce the oranges with a paring knife – carefully and microwave for 4 minutes then turn and repeat. Make sure your fruits are in a covered vented microwave container. Leave to cool. Continue with the recipe marked *.
A useful tip. Microwave the oranges ahead of making the cake so that they can cool, it will be much easier and safer to prep them, ready to pulverise.
You could enjoy this cake on its own but … hold that thought …
... that I don't try to think of everyone and cover every base.
One of my favourite additions to the standard vanilla ice cream is to add salted caramel sauce. Some may say it might be a step too far and they may be right, however I think it's personal choice and after all, it is meant to be a summer treat!
The fast option - use a jar of salted caramel sauce (260g) – easily available at most large supermarkets – fold into the mixture to give a marbled effect.
The “fastish” option. If you'd like to make your own salted caramel sauce here's my recipe :
Salted Caramel Sauce
110g/4oz unsalted butter
225g/8oz soft dark brown sugar
275ml/10 fl oz double cream (or whipping cream)
1½ tsp salt
Heat together the butter and sugar. When dissolved add the salt and whisk in the cream.
Simmer for 15 minutes, stirring.
One batch of the recipe produces approximately 539g of the sauce and you can portion and freeze for convenience. Yippee – more for another time!
Then there's the sprinkles.
My favourite home-made sprinkle is praline – used largely for adding to and flavouring cream, ice cream, butter cream or whatever takes your fancy. You can use it in large pieces or shards or blitzed into a coarse powder. It keeps well so long as you transfer it into an air-tight jar. Should the mood take you it can even be blitzed into a paste.
Praline
75g/3oz almonds, unblanched
75g/3oz caster sugar
Place the sugar into a frying pan (I used a pan measuring 28cms/11” in diameter) and then the almonds on top. Heat the sugar and almonds on as low a heat as possible. Resist the urge to prod/stir/mess with! Patience is eventually rewarded the sugar begins to melt and when the almonds begin to “pop”, and your sugar is a good colour - turn it out onto a non-stick sheet (or oiled slab if you want to be posh). The melting of the sugar takes approximately 20 minutes.
Leave the praline sheet where it is until it is well and truly set. You can then break it up and blitz into a coarse powder or as you wish. It's stating the obvious I know – you'll get 150g/6oz of praline.
Please note that when blitzing you will need ear plugs and warn anyone nearby that isn't totally deaf they soon will be – it's worth the noise – the result - tiny bits of twinkling toffee – the ultimate sprinkle.
Have fun!
For ease of reference, here's the basic recipe again :
Vanilla ice cream
1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk
1 x 600ml double cream
2tsp vanilla bean paste
Put the condensed milk, cream and vanilla into a large mixing bowl and beat with an electric hand whisk until the mixture is quite thick and stiff, like pipeable whipped cream.
You will need 260g of fudge cut into tiny irregular pieces
including the cocoa dust too
Fold the tiny pieces of fudge and the cocoa dust gently through the ice cream so that you achieve a ripple effect with a hidden surprise of fudge!
Spoon the mixture into a lidded freezer-proof containers and freeze for at least 6-8 hours or until firm. You might also want to consider freezing individual portions as well as larger pots, just in case you need an ice cream fix for yourself – as the cook you need to taste!
Bear in mind that you need to take the ice cream out of the freezer at least 15 minutes before serving to allow it to soften.
Here are the photos :
Chocolate Fudge Ice Cream fotos
the tiny pieces of fudge and cocoa
dust, ready to incorporate
the ice cream base and folding in
the fudge and cocoa dust
tiny pots of ice cream – ready for the
freezer
Ta dah!
Never let it be said ...
Here's the result of messing about and creating a new, no churn ice cream.
It's in two parts, here's the first, the recipe for the fudge – I'd make it ahead :
Chocolate Fudge Squares
Takes 1½ hours/ make 50 pieces
400g dark or milk chocolate, broken into small
even sized pieces
25g butter
397 can condensed milk
100g icing sugar
30g cocoa powder, sifted
Line a 20cm square shallow tin with baking parchment.
Melt the chocolate in a bain-marie. In a non-stick saucepan melt the butter and gently warm the condensed milk, then add the melted chocolate and mix until smooth. Beat in the icing sugar until blended and smooth.
Put the mixture into the prepared tin, spread evenly into the corners, smooth over the top and place in the fridge to set for at least 1 hour. Remove and cut into small squares and dust with cocoa.
Coming next - a photo or two and a few hints and tips …
Tray of block of choc
choc cubes in cocoa
The ice cream on its own is very easy, the only extra prep is to cut your fudge into tiny pieces. Your fudge is already in 2x2cm pieces, cut each piece into four again, preferably on kitchen roll so that you preserve any cocoa dust and you're ready to roll!
Next, the basic ice cream recipe ...
Now for the second recipe – Miso Caramel Sauce!
You might think that there's too much miso going on here but I can assure you it works. Just think salted caramel. This recipe isn't mine but it rang a bell because of the miso ice cream I'd made back in 2019. I like recipes that fit together but that play well with other ingredients too!
Here it is :
Miso Caramel Sauce
260g dark brown sugar
250ml double cream
100g unsalted butter
2 tsp sweet white miso – saikyo
Heat the sugar, cream and butter in a small pan over a medium heat, stirring regularly. Bring the mixture to a boil and cook for 2/3 minutes until slightly thickened. Take off the heat then stir in the miso.
Make the miso caramel up to a week in advance, chill until needed, then gently warm to a pouring consistency.
I've frozen this sauce too so another candidate for your emergency dessert stash, what's not to love.
Served with fresh seasonal fruit it's a win win!
Anyone for chocolate?
If you've never used sweet white miso before and want to have a go the following two recipes are a great place to start – they are both easy.
To begin, a no-churn ice cream – using sweet white miso paste – to explain, it's a Japanese seasoning – fermented soybeans with salt and koji, the resulting paste is used in savoury and sweet dishes. There are different types of miso the sweeter white version includes rice, barley and a smaller quantity of soybeans.
Here goes :
Sweet white miso ice cream
Makes 1 litre of ice cream
100g sweet white miso paste
397g tin condensed milk
300ml double cream
Combine the miso paste and condensed milk in a bowl, mix well so that it loosens. A tip – put the paste in the bowl first and then add the condensed milk gradually. If it doesn't comply then use your hand whisk until smooth. Add the cream and whisk until it begins to thicken.
Decant into suitable containers – I'd suggest you decide on portion control that suits you, so a mixture of small and medium pots. Remember you can always take out more if you need it! Freeze overnight.
Allow the ice cream to soften for 10 minutes before serving.
If you're a fan of the salted caramel flavour you'll like that sweet and salty “hit” the miso gives.
Moving on to the second recipe ...
... & hints and tips!
If you're using Sundae pots you want a size of 150ml approximately.
You might think it'll be fiddly filling them – I have a plan!
The neatest and least messy way of decanting the ice cream is to use a disposable piping bag – don't snip the end until it's full. Fold the edge of the bag back over your hand and spoon in the ice cream, when it's full then you can snip the end – it needs to be wide enough to allow the mixture to pass through the opening and then pipe into the Sundae pots!
Alternatively spoon into suitably sized containers with lids of say 4-6 scoops.
Here's a few photos that will help :
I love it when a plan comes together!
P.s. If you're interested, the origin of Rocky Road ice cream is said to have been created in March 1929 by William Dreyer … and his partner Joseph Edy with many variations along the way. After the Wall Street Crash of 1929 Dreyer and Edy gave the flavour its current name “to give folks something to smile about in the midst of the Great Depression”. Alternatively Fentons Creamery claims that William Dreyer based his recipe on a Rocky Road-style ice cream flavour invented by his friend, Fentons' George Farren.
Food for thought – there's a certain symmetry me thinks
Next up … something different?
… let's have some fun and do some more “no churn” ice creams!
First up, the ultimate in ice cream – it needs no introduction :
Rocky Road ice cream
100g salted, toasted pecans, finely chopped
50g cocoa powder, sieved
50g mini marshmallows
1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk
1 x 600ml double cream
2tsp vanilla bean paste
8 x Sundae pots with lids
or suitably sized containers to split
the ice cream into say 4 – 6 scoops
It's a good idea to salt and toast the pecans the day before – they need to cool!
Heat a small knob of butter, gently, in a pan and when foaming tip in the pecans with a good pinch of sea salt flakes. Stir over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes or until toasted – the delicious aroma will tell you when they are ready – don't leave them! Tip the nuts into a bowl and leave to cool.
On the day – empty the condensed milk into a large mixing bowl and gradually sieve in the cocoa – I use a tiny sieve, tapping the side with a spoon – you have more control (the size of a tea strainer) - use a manual whisk to combine.
Then add the cream and vanilla bean paste and use an electric hand whisk until you get stiff peaks – i.e. stand on their own when lifting the mixing blades from the mixture.
Combine the pecans thoroughly.
Fold in the mini marshmallows gently so that they are covered in the ice cream.
Bits and pieces & hints and tips coming up!
There's only one thing wrong with home-made ice cream you need an ice cream maker – or so they say – there are delicious no-churn versions out there and the following recipe is an example – and easy!
No-churn strawberry ice cream
The recipe will give you 960g
750g/1½lb strawberries
juice of two lemons
1 x 397g condensed milk
300g light brown muscovado sugar
Top the strawberries, cut in half or quarters if large then blitz to a purée, add the lemon juice. Tip the blitzed berries into a large sieve and allow the purée to pass through. As you're passing the strawberries there's no need to hull the berries.
Place the condensed milk and brown sugar into a large mixing bowl and whisk on high for 10 minutes. I used a hand whisk. Eventually the sugar is beaten into the condensed milk and will give you a ribbon effect. Set your timer and have patience – it's worth it. You can help your strawberry pulp through the sieve with the back of a metal spoon. Fold into your sugar and condensed milk and mix until combined. I split the mixture into two boxes. Freeze for at least 6 hours. Remove from the freezer 10 minutes before serving – no longer – it softens very quickly.
If you want a perfect scoop dip the scoop into boiling water and pat dry.
As the cook I think you're entitled to taste the ice cream ahead of serving. I confess I'm not a huge fan as a rule but I was intrigued so I took a teaspoonful as I boxed it – one word - “wow” - I ditched the spoon and took another, just to be sure.
Yum!
If you want to make your own pastry - here's the recipe I used :
Rich shortcrust pastry
The recipe makes enough to line a shallow
23cm/9 inch flan tin
Serves 8
115g/4oz plain flour
55g/2oz cold unsalted butter, diced
25g (a scant 1oz) icing sugar, sifted
1 egg yolk plus 1 tbsp cold water
Sift the flour into a mixing bowl. Add the butter and rub in until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add the sugar.
Lightly beat the egg yolk with 1 tbsp of cold water. Add to the flour mixture and mix with a round-bladed knife. Gather together to make a soft dough.
Wrap in cling film and chill for at least 30 minutes before rolling out.
Add 1 tsp pure vanilla extract to the beaten egg yolk and reduce the amount of water slightly – optional.
Bake at 160fan/180c/Gas 4 for 15 minutes or until they are golden in colour – leave to cool.
If you prefer individual tart cases then you'll get 12 based on using a cutter 7cms/2¾” in diameter from the recipe given. Prick the cases with a fork before baking.
After I'd rolled out the pastry I used my trusted tamper to ease the cases into the tin for an even shape.
If you don't want to make your own pastry cases you don't have to - you can buy ready-made either individual or a 23cm/9 inch tart case.
It's quick and easy and well worth the effort!
A hint and a tip
If you don't like the idea of making pastry then a shortbread stack would work well.
The mascarpone cream is also good enough to stand alone – by that I mean it's delicious enough with a bowl of fresh fruit.
Then there's the ice cream …
This recipe is so old I can't remember when – probably as far back as 1986 ish. There's a reason I've kept it – it's easy but best of all – it's delicious!
Strawberry Tarts
Rich shortcrust pastry
as per the recipe given
Filling
250g mascarpone cheese
165g caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla essence
1 tsp lemon juice
Strawberries, hulled and sliced finely
Glaze
2 tbsp apricot jam, sieved
1 tbsp water
On a lightly floured board, roll out pastry thinly and cut into circles with a fluted 7cm cutter. Line two 12 tartlet trays – or place sweet shortcrust tart cases on a baking tray and prick bases. Bake at 160fan/180c/Gas 4 for 15-20 minutes, or until golden brown. Cool on a wire rack.
Beat together the mascarpone cheese, sugar, vanilla and lemon juice. Place a tablespoon of cheese mixture in each tart.
Arrange the strawberries decoratively over the top.
Heat the jam and water in a small saucepan over moderate heat until smooth. Brush over tarts and allow to set before serving.
The recipe for the filling will give you sufficient for 24 tarts – perfect for a summer party dessert. Halve the filling recipe for the 12 tart cases or double the pastry recipe if you're going for 24!
These tarts are small, which is great, the size of a jam tart, so perfectly poppable into the mouth.
Use whatever fruit takes your fancy or mix it up – my fancy was strawberries, it's worth the effort of hulling – the finished article looks like this:
Now for the pastry!
I appreciate this recipe comes after Easter, I include it because it's an “any time” treat that's quick, easy and hits the spot!
This recipe uses that old favourite the puff pastry sheet – perfect for freezing for that rainy day or a good idea.
With this in mind, here are :
Mini Belgian Buns
1 sheet of frozen puff pastry, thawed in fridge (375g)
15g butter, melted
50g dark chocolate drops (or finely chopped)
25g ground almonds
50g sultanas
1 egg, lightly beaten with 1 tbsp milk
Fondant Glaze
75g icing sugar
1-2 tsps boiling water
50g flaked almonds and 6 glacé cherries cut in half
to decorate
Preheat your oven 180c fan/200c/Gas 6. Line a baking tray with greaseproof paper or similar. Unroll the pastry sheet and lay with the short sides either side - you are going to roll to form a log.
Brush the surface of the pastry and melted butter then scatter the chocolate and ground almonds leaving a border at the top end of the pastry to enable you to “glue” the log when rolled. Then scatter the sultanas over the chocolate and almonds. Carefully roll up from one of the shortest sides as tightly as you can forming a log.
Using a sharp knife, cut the log into 12 even slices. Place on the baking tray and brush with the remaining butter, then the beaten egg mixture. Bake for 15-20 minutes until puffed and golden.
Here's the photo story so far folks!
For the fondant glaze - pour the boiling water slowly over the icing sugar in a small bowl while stirring the mixture with a wooden spoon. Pour in only enough water to make a creamy mixture that has the consistency of pancake batter. Cool. You need to make sure the mixture isn't too stiff, you need to be able to drizzle the glaze over your pastries.
Drizzle over the buns then sprinkle with flaked almonds and the final flourish – half a cherry on the top!
Hope you had the best time!
… you can choose whatever you fancy for a change to the original Rocky Road recipe. It's whatever floats your boat. An idea for a treat at any time and for any celebration!
Design your own Rocky Road
Traditionally Rocky Road is made using Brazil nuts,
glacé cherries and marshmallow.
Rules are meant to be broken - take a look at the
list below and if you'd like to design your own
Rocky Road swap any or all of the three
ingredients in the original recipe for the
same weight
(or may be four if you want to stay true
to Rocky Road and include the mini marshmallows)
Cashew
Peanut
Pistachio
Pecan
Hazelnut
Glacé cherry
Dried sour cherries
Cranberry
Apricot
Banana chips
Pineapple
Sultanas
Nougat
Turkish Delight
Fudge
Toblerone
Praline
Salted Caramel
Mini Marshmallow
Popping Candy
My latest suggestions are :
Pecans with dark cherries and vanilla fudge
Pistachios, apricots and Turkish Delight
Spoilt for choice!
I realise that this is not a traditional Easter Egg but hey does it really matter so long as it's chocolate?! What I love about this treat is it's easy and makes heaps so whilst it sounds like it could be expensive if you've lots of treats to give then you'll find it's great value too.
Rocky Road
250g dark chocolate
150g milk chocolate
175g soft butter, unsalted
4 x 15ml tbsp golden syrup
200g hobnobs
*150g shelled Brazil nuts
*150g red glace cherries
*125g mini marshmallows
Put the biscuits into a freezer bag and roll with a rolling pin until you get a mixture of rubble.
Chop the Brazil nuts into different sizes.
Chop both sorts of chocolate into small pieces, or use chocolate buttons made for melting and then put them into a heavy-based saucepan to melt with the butter and syrup over a gentle heat.
Take the pan off the heat and add the biscuit and nuts, cherries and mini marshmallows. Turn carefully so that all the ingredients are coated with the syrupy chocolate.
Tip into a foil try (I use a tray bake size), smoothing the top as best you can, although it is meant to be uneven.
Refrigerate until firm enough to cut, which will take about 1½-2 hours. Take the set block out of the tray. With the long side in front of you cut 6 slices down and 4 across so that you have 24 squares.
This is the basic Rocky Road recipe. The three ingredients marked “*” can be swapped to suit your own personal taste. You can choose any of the ingredients given on your “Design your own Rocky Road” sheet attached.
Make ahead tip:
Make the Rocky Road and refrigerate to set, cut into bars or bite size pieces and then store in an airtight container in a cool place for up to 1 week.
Freeze for up to 1 month.
a Chocolate Chip Scone
warmed and split with a side of cherry
jam and clotted cream
a loaded treat!
A final tip – don't be tempted to add the cocoa to your ingredients without sifting.
Perfect for the chocoholics!
This is a bit different - of course you don't have to wait until Easter!
Chocolate Chip Scones
500g plain flour (1lb 2oz)
1 tsp salt
2 tsps bicarb
4½ tsps cream of tartar
25g cocoa
125g (5oz) unsalted butter
100g of plain chocolate drops – minimum
50% cocoa solids
300ml milk
1 large egg, beaten
5cms/2” fluted cutter
cocoa in a small ramekin to dip the cutter
to prevent sticking plus extra to dust your
working surface
2 baking sheets, lined with baking parchment
Pre-heat oven 200fan/220c/Gas 7
Sift the flour, salt, bicarb, cream of tartar and cocoa into a large mixing bowl. Rub in the butter until you've got breadcrumbs, add the chocolate chips then add the milk – all of it – mix with a round bladed knife, roughly and then tip onto a working surface, dusted with cocoa and knead lightly so that you have a dough. Divide the dough in half, leaving half in the bowl. You can use a rolling pin or your hands to round and flatten until 4cms/1½” deep. Remember to dip your cutter into the ramekin of cocoa before cutting, repeat with the remaining dough.
If you use the size of cutter in the recipe you'll get 24 scones.
Place the scones on the baking parchment, then brush with beaten egg. Bake for 10 minutes until risen and chocolatey brown.
A tip - there's no doubt that what matters are good quality ingredients, plain chocolate and organic cocoa in particular. I always use Green and Black's Organic Cocoa, it never fails. If you're not a fan of plain chocolate you could use 50/50 plain and milk.
It's important that these scones are served warm. They will freeze which might be a good idea of you want “chocolate control” – defrost – which will take a couple of hours at room temperature and then warm in a pre-heated oven (150fan/170c/Gas 3) for 5 minutes, split and serve.
Have a look ...
Here's my antedote to trifle! For me it's up there with sago and semolina – horrid! I appreciate that trifle has “grown up” since the 1950s – back then it was tinned fruit immersed in jelly from a box, the inevitable Birds Custard topped off with synthetic cream – and decorated with hundreds and thousands – sprinkles I think they are called these days.
If you're of a like mind then this could be the answer :
Sticky Toffee Orange Trifle
Make a cake – a cake that will freeze well – a sticky toffee loaf cake
Use as a cake or slice (1.5cm) and cut into small cubes –
place in a sundae dish – warm the cake if you wish
Make a toffee sauce – one that will freeze
Use the sauce warmed to drizzle over the cake or over ice cream
Chop walnuts, add a knob of butter to a frying
pan, sprinkle with sea salt flakes
Use to sprinkle over the cake and toffee sauce or
add to the sauce poured over ice cream
Segment a large navel orange and reserve the juice too
Stand by for the recipes and the photos!
I always seem to plan my menus with ideas for desserts first!
There's nothing that will serve you better than a home-made ice cream and all my recipes are of the “no-churn” variety. I use the standard vanilla ice-cream base recipe to begin :
Vanilla ice cream
Prep – 5 minutes
Total time – 5 minutes
plus freezing at least 6-8 hours
or until firm
Gives you 1.6 litres of ice cream is equal
to 18 scoops
1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk
1 x 600ml double cream
2tsp vanilla bean paste
Put the condensed milk, cream and vanilla into a large mixing bowl and beat with an electric hand whisk until the mixture is quite thick and stiff, then decant into smallish containers.
To serve – remove from the freezer and allow to soften.
Serve with the cake, drizzle and a scoop of ice cream – a great idea for Mother's Day!
What about an orange ripple ice cream, adding the vanilla ice cream recipe as the base?
I made a double batch of orange syrup that we used for the drizzle – why double? I divided it into half – popped half into the freezer for another day and fridged the other half, ready to turn my basic vanilla ice cream into an orange ripple.
Orange Syrup
400g icing sugar
500ml orange juice (no bits)
Put the sugar and orange juice in a small saucepan and heat gently so that the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and simmer on a low heat for 20 minutes.
You'll achieve approximately 600ml of syrup – divide into two boxes and freeze one of them. Fridge the other, ready to complete your ice cream.
Here's a few photos …
Whisk your ice cream to a stiffer consistency
– thicker ribbons - you're adding syrup which will loosen
the batch
here's the syrup, ready to go
tip the syrup into the ice cream and fold through
gently
here's the orange drizzle ice cream, ready for
the freezer – you can see the vanilla flecks and the
trail of orange syrup running through
What's not to love – a treat in the freezer, ready when you are!