In short, it was good. Not world beating, but good. I had been a little careless in making the pastry and used a little too much water; I realised it at the time, but it really hurt this pie. The filling was really nice, well balanced for sweetness, and the apples went soft, but not too soft. But it could have done with a bit of apple that just dissolved into a paste as well. If the pastry had been a bit shorter and I'd thrown in some bramley apples as well as the braeburns, and maybe even served it with some vanilla ice cream or custard, this would be really great; as it is, it's just good. Room for improvement then, but in a really tasty way!
Tuesday, 28 February 2012
As English as apple pie...
The American's might use the phrase "as American as apple pie" a lot, but the apple pie predates the USA by quite a few centuries. Apparently, there's a printed apple pie recipe that dates back to 1381 (a quick Google turns it up easily, but the recipe itself isn't exactly very informative...). In any case, I'm a little ill, which means that I've not left the flat all day and so I've decided to bake! I got a gorgeous new pie dish for my birthday that I've yet to use, so this seemed like a perfect opportunity!
Apple Pie
Ingredients
Ready for the oven. I would have crimped the edge, but I didn't leave myself enough overhang.
Straight out of the oven. Looking good...
And ready for eating!
Apple Pie
Ingredients
- 180g Plain flour
- 85g Butter
- ~2tbsp Cold water
- 600g Braeburn apples
- 80g Caster sugar
- 1 1/2 tsp Ground cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp Ground nutmeg
- Rub the flour and butter together until it resembles coarse breadcrumbs.
- Add just enough cold water to form a dough.
- Place the dough in a freezer bag and refrigerate for ~30 mins.
- Roll out 2/3rds of the dough and line a pie dish.
- Peel, core and chop the apples and mix with the sugar and spices.
- Pour the apple mixture into the pastry-lined dish.
- Moisten the crust of the pastry.
- Roll out the remaining dough and place over the pie, pressing around the crust to seal.
- Poke a hole in the top to let the steam escape and bake at 180C for ~45 mins.
Ready for the oven. I would have crimped the edge, but I didn't leave myself enough overhang.
Straight out of the oven. Looking good...
And ready for eating!
Saturday, 18 February 2012
Verdict 2: Wasabi and apple ganache
Okay, maybe it wasn't entirely my fault - I tried again (with half
quantities), taking extra care not to overheat the chocolate. It was
fine when I poured it out and definitely hadn't seized, but when I took
it out of the fridge, it had separated out again. It's a shame really - I
think the flavours are really nicely balanced, but I have no idea why
it went grainy. Maybe I'll try adding some cream to act as an
emulsifier sometime, but I think I'll leave this one alone for now.
Friday, 17 February 2012
Back to basics
I've been neglecting Aage. Like all pets, you really ought to play with them once in a while, so it's time for another loaf of bread! It's been a while since I've just done a plain wholemeal sourdough, so I'm just doing a normal, run of the mill (albeit half-size) wholemeal sourdough loaf. I am running a mini experiment though - I've made this a much drier dough than usual, and I'm interested to see how much less moist the end result is. It's not the most exciting experiment in the world, but it should be a useful one!
Verdict: Wasabi and apple ganache
It was absolutely horrible! But I should also rather hastily add that
I don't think this is a flaw of the recipe, but letting the chocolate
seize absolutely ruined any chance of it being nice. The texture was a
really nasty grainy, vile mess. So this was entirely my fault for being
careless - I've not done any chocolate work in quite a while and
completely forgot how fickle it can be. The flavour was actually really
interesting though - it seemed to be nicely balanced and really quite
complex - so I think this recipe has some great potential, if you're not
a muppet. I'll try it again soon (hopefully) and try to be a bit less
stupid... so we'll reserve judgement until then!
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Wasabi and apple ganache
A while ago, I was given a copy of Adventures With Chocolate by Paul Young. I hadn't got around to trying any of its recipes until now, but they all look absolutely amazing! One in particular caught my eye though, and today seemed like a good opportunity to try it!
Wasabi and Green Apple Ganache
Ingredients
Wasabi and Green Apple Ganache
Ingredients
- 15g Wasabi paste
- 200g Caster sugar
- 250ml Apple juice
- 200g Dark chocolate
- Put the wasabi, sugar and apple juice in a pan and bring to a simmer.
- Simmer for 5 minutes.
- Pour over the chocolate and stir until smooth.
- Pour into ramekins and refrigerate to set.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Verdict: Spelt sourdough
Well, it's good, but not altogether very different from a normal white loaf baked with regular wheat flour. In fact, there's very little difference that I could discern - it's maybe very slightly chewier, but that's it really. Nice, but nothing special.
Verdict: Lemon meringue cupcakes
Oooh, these are really nice. The batter was indeed a little too thick, so the cupcakes themselves could have been a little softer. But the taste was just wonderfully delicate and perfectly balanced. The lemon curd was tart, but not too sour; the cake was sweet but not overpoweringly so and the meringue was just a wonderful counterpoint to everything else. This is a really nice recipe - though I'm not certain it's entirely worth the faff, it's definitely a good cupcake!
It's a baking day!
I had been intending to go into the lab today and get a load of work done, but seeing as it's horribly snowy and icy outside, I decided that it'd be better spent as a baking day instead. So while the spelt bread's rising, I thought I'd make cupcakes. Usually, when I see a recipe I tweak it slightly to my liking - this time around though, the only thing I've changed is that I substituted 1tsp of vanilla extract for the vanilla pod, because I'm too cheap to use real vanilla pods! The recipe I used is this one, from a Channel 4 programme.
Lemon Meringue Cupcakes
Ingredients
For the lemon curd
Lemon Meringue Cupcakes
Ingredients
For the lemon curd
- 90g Caster sugar
- Juice of 1 lemon
- 55g Butter
- 1 Egg
- 100g Butter
- 100g Caster sugar
- 1tsp Vanilla extract
- 2 Eggs
- 100g Plain flour
- 1/2tsp Baking powder
- Zest of 1 lemon
- 50ml Water
- 100ml Caster sugar
- 2 Egg whites
- Whisk all of the ingredients for the lemon curd together over a double boiler and cook over steadily simmering water for ~10mins, whisking continuously, until the mixture thickens to a custard-like consistency.
- Remove from heat and set aside to cool.
- Cream the butter, sugar and vanilla for the cake together until light and fluffy.
- Beat in eggs one at a time.
- Fold in the flour and lemon zest.
- Spoon a few teaspoons of the cake batter into cupcake cases. Add one teaspoon of lemon curd, then cover with more cake batter.
- Bake at 180C for 15-20 mins until golden brown and the cupcake centre springs back after being lightly pressed.
- Remove to a wire rack to cool.
- Dissolve the caster sugar in the water over a gentle heat to form a syrup.
- Whisk the egg whites to soft peaks.
- Gradually pour the sugar syrup into the egg whites while whisking continuously, and whisk until thick and glossy.
- Pipe the meringue over the top of the cupcakes and gently toast with a blow torch.
Here's the lemon curd at the end of step 1.Ready for the oven. The batter feels a little thick.Straight out of the oven - they're looking pretty good!Check out my meringue! How amazing does that look?!I can't pipe very well :o(.But they still look pretty gorgeous when toasted, no?
An ancient loaf
I've been curious about using different types of flour for quite a while now. Recently, I finally went and got myself some spelt flour, so I thought I'd see what baking with spelt was like. Spelt is a particular sort of wheat that was around back in Roman times and still survives to this day. It's the same recipe as my usual sourdough (500g flour, 200ml water, 13g salt, half of Aage), but made with (white) spelt flour. I didn't use the sponge method, so it's all just thrown together in one go.
The spelt flour is really fine - about halfway between regular wheat flour and cornflour. It has a slight tendancy to clump, but it forms such a silky dough! It's been the most satisfying dough to knead that I've found so far (although that might partly be because I used warm water and it's a ridiculously cold day!), and the gluten seems to develop incredibly easily compared with normal bread flour. Here's the dough at the end of the knead, about to start the first rise. It's rather a wet, soft dough as you can see, but remarkably, it's not actually all that sticky either.
The spelt flour is really fine - about halfway between regular wheat flour and cornflour. It has a slight tendancy to clump, but it forms such a silky dough! It's been the most satisfying dough to knead that I've found so far (although that might partly be because I used warm water and it's a ridiculously cold day!), and the gluten seems to develop incredibly easily compared with normal bread flour. Here's the dough at the end of the knead, about to start the first rise. It's rather a wet, soft dough as you can see, but remarkably, it's not actually all that sticky either.
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