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Cakes & Bakes/ Featured

Sunshiny Day Rainbow Cakes

Sunshiny day rainbow cakes are perfect for a day like today.

It’s raining inside and out, the wind is blowing a gale, the weather front across the world is as depressing as it gets, yet still, here in a small corner of the UK, a young girl close to my heart has the power to brighten up the world. Her insistence to make a rainbow cake, with a two eyed sunshine spurred me along. Amongst the bright pans of beautifully coloured buttercream, multiple piping bags and a carefully shaped arch, there it was, a rainbow in our kitchen and a little ray of sunshine called Keira working her sparkle! #Happydays

Sunshiny Day Rainbow Cakes
 
Prep time
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Sunshiny day rainbow cakes, ideal for all those bad weather moments in life. Cake to stop the rain inside and out and to fill your world with sparkles. #happydays
Author:
Recipe type: Cake
Cuisine: British Bakes
Ingredients
  • For the Sponge
  • 350g unsalted butter
  • 350g caster sugar
  • 300g plain flour
  • 50g cornflour
  • 5 tablespoons of milk
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract
  • 6 eggs
  • 50g good quality coco powder
  • a few drops of red food colouring
  • For the Buttercream
  • 400g unsalted butter
  • 800g icing sugar
  • 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract
  • 4 tablespoons of milk
  • A variety of food colourings
  • For the decoration
  • 200g raspberry jam
  • Chocolate or coloured sprinkles
  • 2 x 30cm cake tins
  • lots of piping bags!
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 180oc/160oc fan/gas mark 4 & grease the two cake tins
  2. Cream the butter, sugar, and vanilla extract until pale.
  3. Gradually beat in the eggs one at a time
  4. Sift the cornflour, baking powder and salt into the bowl and mix until you have a silky batter
  5. Divide the cake mix, add the coco powder to one half and the red food colouring to the other. Mix.
  6. Place separately into the pre greased tins or cupcake case and bake for 35 mins (15 for cupcakes)
  7. Leave to cool and tip the cake out of tins
  8. Jam on side and place the two cakes on top of each other. cut a circle out of the middle.
  9. Cut the cake in half, speed with jam and stack the other two layers on top, forming the arch.
  10. To make the buttercream, mix ingredients together and separate equal amounts into 7 bowls
  11. Add a few drops of each food colouring to each bowl. Red, orange,yellow, green, blue and violet.
  12. Leave one bowl without colour to use on the edges of the cake.
  13. Add the sprinkles to the outer edges.
  14. Fill 6 piping bags, with star nozzles one for each colour and pipe the rainbow design on top.
  15. If you have made the cupcakes, use the piping bags to make your own colourful rainbow designs!

Carnivore/ Featured

Moussaka Moussaka

moussaka-moussaka

Moussaka reminds me of one of the most romantic times in my life, and yet it’s not something I make – at all, in fact this is the first time for me.
Let me set the Moussaka context;
Many moons ago, pre marriage, children and mortgage, my lovely boyfriend (now husband) decided to set off on a last minute holiday.
Times had been tough. I’d been working for nearly a year as chief pie production manager (I kid you not) in a pie factory nestled in the Northamptonshire town of Wellingborough.
Meat pies, pork pies, any kind of pie you can imagine. I would arrive to work at ungodly hours to prepare the nations pie orders for the day. Mostly, I smelt of pie, was pie eyed from scale, volume and pace and disillusioned with my career choices.
I guess you’d expect this post to contain a pie recipe, but no. I’m focusing on and thinking about the things that helped me survive that period.
Whilst the job was awful, as always in these kind of places, the characters that coexisted and worked alongside me where like shiny hidden gems. Hidden from daylight hours, shining from inside the factory walls, lives full of stories and side splitting humour. True and genuine working class characters. I made a friend for life in that factory. Regina Djamasi. A Ghanaian warrior with a heart the size of Northamptonshire, a faith bigger than anything I’ve ever experienced and a laugh that could bring the walls down.
Gina, as she like to be called, had a habit of giving me that wide eyed side look if I was off track. When I told her I was leaving, I received that look. I don’t think she ever forgave me for bailing out of the steak and ale top crust pie promotion we were frantically trying and failing to keep up with, but she did stand by me. Gina deserves a post all of her own, and I will write one, but this one is for my husband.

He was the one who convinced me to sack it all off with no planning, no job, no carefully crafted plans for the future and helped me break free. He had faith that it would all come good, but first he said, you have to change your environment in order to see clearly.
With his wise words we booked a last minute and ran away to Kefalonia, one of the many beautiful sun brushed islands of Greece.
With no plans for the future, I truly let life’s baggage go. I cleared my brain of schedules, deadlines and existed for one perfect week in the moment with the man of my dreams.
That feeling of liberation I now associate with sitting at a table on the breath-taking Trapazaki beach. The sun setting across the ink-stained Ionian Sea, the breeze still warm, small lights twinkling in the surrounding hills, laughing, in love whilst eating a mouth-watering Moussaka. Happiness personified.
It’s Saturday evening here in Rye, East Sussex with a marriage, a mortgage, two children and 16 years down the line, eating Moussaka Moussaka – I have to name it twice as the memories are as good as it tastes x 2!

Moussaka Moussaka
 
Author:
Cuisine: Greek
Ingredients
  • For the meat base:
  • Olive oil
  • 1 large onion, finely chopped
  • 3 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • 1 tbsp tomato purée
  • 500g lean lamb mince
  • 200ml good red wine
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 400g can chopped tomatoes
  • Pinch of caster sugar
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 2-3 large aubergines, thickly sliced
  • For the Béchamel sauce:
  • 75g butter
  • 75g plain flour
  • 500ml milk
  • 1 large organic egg yolk
  • 100g Parmesan, grated
  • 75g grated cheddar cheese
  • Grated nutmeg
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/fan180°C/gas 6.
  2. Heat a splash of oil in a large pan, add the onion and fry on a low heat for 5 minutes, stirring, until soft.
  3. Add the garlic and cumin and fry for 1 minute. Add the purée and fry for 1 more minute.
  4. Add the lamb, turning up the heat and fry for around 5- 8 minutes until browned all over. Pour away any excess oil.
  5. Add the wine and cinnamon, slowly simmer for a few minutes
  6. Add the tomatoes, 100ml water, the sugar and oregano. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 45 minutes, stirring occasionally, until thick.
  7. Check the flavour and season.
  8. Meanwhile, brush the aubergine with olive oil and season. Heat a griddle pan until very hot, griddle aubergine on both sides until golden brown. Set aside on kitchen paper.
  9. To make the béchamel sauce. Melt the butter in a small pan, add the flour and stir to make a roux (paste).
  10. Remove from the heat whilst gradually stirring in the milk.
  11. Place the pan over a gentle heat and simmer, stirring, until thickened. Remove from the heat, let the mix cool slightly, stir in the egg yolk and half the parmesan cheese. Season to taste.
  12. Take your 2litre oven proof dish and layer the aubergine and mince. Repeat, then spread the white sauce on top.
  13. Scatter with the remaining parmesan cheese and sprinkle the grated cheddar cheese on top
  14. Finish with grating nutmeg across the cheese scattered surface.
  15. Bake for 25-30 minutes in the pre heated oven until golden.
  16. Serve with a Greek salad or wedges

He was the one who convinced me to sack it all off with no planning, no job, no carefully crafted plans for the future and helped me break free. He had faith that it would all come good, but first he said, you have to change your environment in order to see clearly.
With his wise words we booked a last minute and ran away to Kefalonia, one of the many beautiful sun brushed islands of Greece.
With no plans for the future, I truly let life’s baggage go. I cleared my brain of schedules, deadlines and existed for one perfect week in the moment with the man of my dreams.
That feeling of liberation I now associate with sitting at a table on the breath-taking Trapazaki beach. The sun setting across the ink-stained Ionian Sea, the breeze still warm, small lights twinkling in the surrounding hills, laughing, in love whilst eating a mouth-watering Moussaka. Happiness personified.
It’s Saturday evening here in Rye, East Sussex with a marriage, a mortgage, two children and 16 years down the line, eating Moussaka Moussaka – I have to name it twice as the memories are as good as it tastes x 2!

Featured/ Pastry, Pies & Tarts

Diana, Egg Custard and the Crown

Diana. The people’s princess. 20 years ago, where have the last 20 years gone? If I was to describe her life in terms of weather, in one word, turbulent would sum it up.

The Diana tragedy and her story has touched my life at different ages. The events, so impactful that it’s hard not to make associations and draw from your own memories. Her journey, besides the pomp, the princess and the palace was a real one, played out for all to see. She was ultimately a loving mother, a woman struggling with peer pressure and body image issues, a cheated wife and partner, dealing with issues we will all face at some point in life.

Although not publicly played out, I can relate to all of the above. I guess most people can and because we saw here vulnerability, the untouchable life we viewed from a distance felt real to us and so we can relate.

My first real memory of her was the wedding, July 1981, I was 9 years old. I watched from the stuffy Liverpool living room of my Grandparents. My Granddad was beside himself with excitement and so his feverish enthusiasm rubbed off on me. My uncle John played Soft Cell, Tainted Love and danced around the living room in his too tight jeans. In hindsight Marc Almond must have had a tip off as the title and content of the chart topping single seem now, so painfully appropriate.

In full wedding broadcast preparation, we went to Sayers.  Sayers was a north-west institution, a bakery that originated in Liverpool back in 1912. You could pick up sandwiches, savouries, pies and pasties along with a huge selection of cakes and bakes. Heaven! Back then it felt like the Harrods food hall of its day, at least it did to me. I distinctly remember the firm grip of my Grandad’s hand as he’d gently lead me to the white tiled floor of the 70’s round edged, orange shop outfit and the all-consuming indecision that would follow; what cake would I choose, whilst pressing my face a little too close through the chilled glass display units?

That particular day, they were running a Diana’s Dress art competition. Win a year’s supply of cake if your child (below the age of 12) could replicate the beautiful princess bride and gown. After stocking up on a selection of naughty but nice, chocolate éclair’s, Bavarian slice, Cream fingers and Egg custards, I entered the competition and was given an A3 sheet to take home and return within 7 days.

We watched the box, munching on our cream cakes, the royal spectacle unfolding whilst my Grandad had taken to drawing and painting. He’d roughly sketched Diane, the dress and the tumbling rose and Ivy bouquet and whilst taking extremely concentrated nibbles from his egg custard, he began to paint the oyster coloured silk and lace, creating a mini masterpiece (not entirely satisfying the Sayers age defined guidelines) I remember watching him more than I did the TV that afternoon. The skill of balancing trembling custard in one hand whilst concentrating on painting Diana’s dress and doing it justice, paintbrush softly moving across paper was captivating.

Fast forward to August 31st 1997, 25 years old, on a bank holiday weekend. I’d been out clubbing all night in Liverpool (they were the days!) returning back to a flat on Sandringham Drive in the small hours, oblivious until I turned the TV on. The news had started to break, along with the inflatable sofa I’d recently bought. Both I and the sofa slowly lost air, as we watched and listened. For what seemed like a lifetime, and then just before 5am she was gone. And so, began that British Bank holiday Monday. A day of mourning.

I sat as deflated as my support, remembering her wedding day, my Grandad and the trembling egg custard. The hope and the tainted love. She had not survived.

Whilst checking my dates for this post I came across a Diana quote.

Carry out a random act of kindness, with no expectation of reward, safe in the knowledge that one day someone might do the same for you.

We should do more of this.

On my dark days, I eat egg custards on the quiet. Whilst they now remind me of my Grandad and his loss, they also remind me of sayers, innocence and a trembling custardy celebration of life. They may not be the most fancy cream cake at the counter, but they are delicate, real and delicious. Falling from fame this nutmeg sprinkled, custard filled delight are nearing extinction and are increasingly more difficult to find in the bakeries of the UK, so I gave this recipe a go to keep the egg custard and the memories in me alive!

Best eaten during times of turbulent weather, served with a steaming hot cup of builders tea.

Diana, Egg Custard and the Crown
 
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A nutmeg sprinkled, creamy egg custard filled short crust pastry
Author:
Recipe type: Bakes
Cuisine: British
Serves: 12
Ingredients
  • The Pastry
  • 180g plain flour
  • 120g chilled unsalted butter, cubed
  • 55g caster sugar
  • 1 organic egg
  • The Egg Custard
  • 700ml pint full-fat milk
  • 7 organic egg yolks
  • 90g caster sugar
  • freshly ground nutmeg
Instructions
  1. To make the pastry, add the flour, the butter and rub in with your fingertips until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
  2. Stir in the sugar.
  3. Break in the egg and work into the mixture with your fingers, it should form a soft dough.
  4. Tip the dough onto a lightly floured work surface and shape it into a ball and wrap in cling film. Leave to chill in the fridge for 30 minutes.
  5. Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6.
  6. Roll out the sweet pastry on a lightly floured work surface.
  7. Using an 11cm fluted cutter, cut out twelve discs and line the muffin tray moulds with the pastry circle.
  8. For the custard filling, warm the milk in a saucepan,
  9. Beat the egg yolks and sugar together in a separate bowl until pale and creamy.
  10. Pour the milk onto the egg yolk mixture and stir well
  11. Transfer the custard mixture into a pouring jug and fill each of the tart cases.
  12. Sprinkle with ground nutmeg over each tart.
  13. Bake the tarts in the oven for about 25 minutes, checking the temp and reducing for the final 10 mins
  14. To check they are baked correctly you are looking for a very slight dome on the custard, not too much!
  15. Cool, then remove from the moulds and enjoy one with a warm cuppa

 

 

 

 

Cakes & Bakes/ Featured/ Puddings/ Recipes

Summer Survival Scones

Scone

Summer Survival Scones

If I was to describe my summer in terms of weather, it would be: Mostly grey, with patchy cloud and the occasional sunny spell.

The reason being? I’ve had a catalogue of ailments. Why is it, that we work, work, work the entire year-round and the moment we stop to take a break, BANG – the sick hammer hits, or is that just me? Then it’s back to work and I’m fighting fit for the next 46 work weeks???

This year, I was granted a generous 4 weeks off. 4 whole weeks! These have been squandered on a litany of ailments. Please, let me share.

There have been thorn like sore throats, fevers, a heavy cold, a wasp sting (that was actually my daughter, but we all suffered), vampire red eye (left eye) which casually spread to both eyes, PMS, a period (and yes for me that feels like an ailment these days) and finally (or so I thought) to top it all off, an egg fuelled dose of Salmonella…and then, in the final days of the holiday, just as the finish line was in sight, I managed to finely and efficiently slice the top of my thumb off with the new vegetable slicing mandolin I’d bought. Seriously. Happy Holidays to me.

I’m actually very good at feeling sorry for myself. Years of practice! So, I’ve spent most of my 4 weeks of intermittent bedridden days, watching (mostly #netflix #suits) thinking and generally being dissatisfied with life.

Why? Because I endlessly scrolled Facebook and Instagram, viewing the roll call of picture perfect, stress-free, sun-kissed, healthy-looking holiday goers, having fun and enjoying life to the max.

Meanwhile, me; a whiter shade of pale, red-eyed, thumb hacked individual, was trying to make the most of our staycation situation (yes, that’s right – no holiday).

I resigned myself to the fact, that whilst it wasn’t all sunshine, there were a few rainbow like moments, mostly spent with my two children and that FB & Instagram don’t always paint a true picture (lots of overlays, perfect skin distorting alterations, auto correction and all that life-altering jazz…) Let’s face it, you NEVER see a camera roll of tough times.

So, how did I survive the summer? I thought (a lot, like hours of just exhaustive, much needed thinking time) I listened, not only to my children bickering but also to myself and I made a very detailed plan of things I wanted to do, wanted to change and wanted to achieve (oh I do love a good planning session – it’s like a to-do list on steroids) I listened to Goddess, a Banks album because it speaks to me on many levels and I made and ate one too many clotted cream scones, but mostly I reminisced.

As a full time working gal, with kids in tow it’s a constant juggling act but we women are resourceful and resilient, we soldier on through the summer, balancing a million one activities, to-do lists, mother, lover, friends demands and whilst we make it work, we also find it difficult to take time out for ourselves (at least I do). This recipe is for all the ladies (I hear Beyonce playing in my mind), It demands a ‘me moment’. Make it, take it, eat it alone and reflect and enjoy! #wemadeitthroughthesummer

The moral of my summer: I may look like sh!t, I don’t feel refreshed, or entirely re-fuelled, but on the inside I’m ready. Ready for something although typically I’m not sure for quite what…..

Summer Survival Scones
 
Prep time
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Summer Survival Scones made with rich buttermilk and served with clotted cream and strawberry jam
Author:
Recipe type: Sweets & Treats
Cuisine: British Bakes
Serves: 12
Ingredients
  • 450g Organic self-raising flour
  • 2 heaped teaspoons baking powder
  • 75g Organic butter, cubed
  • 75g caster sugar
  • 2 large organic eggs, beaten
  • 1 × 284ml carton buttermilk
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 220C/200C fan/gas 7.
  2. Line a baking sheet with baking parchment.
  3. Measure the flour, baking powder and butter
  4. Using a large bowl. Rub with your fingertips until the mixture looks like breadcrumbs.
  5. Stir in the sugar
  6. Mix the eggs and buttermilk together in a jug and pour all but 1 tablespoon into the flour bowl and lightly mix together until combined – the dough should be fairly moist.
  7. Sprinkle the worktop with flour and gently knead the dough until smooth and soft.
  8. Roll to about 2.5cm thick.
  9. Using a 6cm round fluted scone cutter, stamp out 12 scones.
  10. Place the scones on the baking sheet and brush the tops with the reserved egg and milk mixture.
  11. Bake in the preheated oven for about 12-15 minutes until risen and lightly golden.
  12. Serve with clotted cream and homemade strawberry jam