Sunday, February 26, 2012

RASPBERRY COCONUT SLICE

When I was a child this recipe was converted to Blackberry Coconut Slice.  Blackberries grew everywhere when I was little and we would go out to the bush and collect them in buckets.  I'd get scratched to pieces doing this and get red stain on me because I ate more than I collected. 

But it was fun.  These days the blackberry briar's in the wild are poisoned by councils so its not a great idea to try to consume them any more.  Raspberry Jam is still one of the cheapest to purchase and it doesn't have to be the top label jam when using it in combination like in the recipe below.



Blackberry and raspberry tart, September 2006.


Ingredients:

BASE
1 Cup Self Raising Flour
1/3 Cup Castor Sugar
1/4 Cup Coconut
125 grams butter (melted)
TOPPING
1 Cup of Coconut
1/4 Cup Castor Sugar
1 Tablespoon Corn Flour
1 Egg lightly beaten
1/4  Cup of Raspberry Jam

Method:

 MAKING THE BASE

1.  Sift Flour into a bowl
2.  Add Sugar and coconut
3. Mix in butter
4.  Press into a tin and bake in a moderate oven for 15 minutes
5.  Cool and spread Raspberry Jam all over

MAKING THE TOPPING

1.  In a bowl mix together Coconut Sugar and Cornflour
2.  Beat and Egg and mix into this mixture
3   Spread on top of  jam covered base
4.  Bake in a moderate oven for  20 minutes
5.  When slightly cool cut into slices


Coconut WaterCoconut Water (Photo credit: TaranRampersad)
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Friday, February 17, 2012

HOMEMADE BAILEYS IRISH CREAM

 Homemade Bailey's Irish Creme Recipe

There is no reason to pay high prices for Baileys and if you have a blender its even easier.  Halve the ingredients though and blend two smaller batches and bottle.

  Ingredients:
2 (400grm.) cans evaporated milk
1 can condensed milk
50mls. whiskey
3 tbsp.  Ganache is chocolate syrup before it hardens / Hershey's chocolate syrup

Method:
Combine all ingredients in large pitcher or jar with tight fitting lid (2 quart container). Shake before using; refrigerate. Use by itself with ice or in coffee. Enjoy!

I like the mixture of using Bailey's and Butterscotch Shnapps in the little shot glasses with the dividers.  And Down the hatch.
They are affectionately called "Cowboys".


 


Chocolate Sauce:

12 ounces (340 grams) semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, cut into small pieces
1 cup (240 ml) heavy whipping cream
1/3 cup (66 grams) granulated white sugar
1/3 cup (80 ml) light corn syrup
1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 tablespoon strong liquor, such as rum, or liqueurs such as Grand Marnier or brandy (optional)

Chocolate Sauce: Place the chopped chocolate in a medium sized stainless steel bowl and set aside.
Combine the cream, sugar, and corn syrup in a saucepan and place over low heat. Bring to a boil, stirring often. 
Remove from heat and pour immediately over the chocolate.  Let stand until the chocolate has melted, then stir until smooth.
Stir in the vanilla extract and alcohol, if using.
Store the sauce in the refrigerator in a tightly covered container for up to two weeks. Reheat over simmering water before serving.
Makes about 2 cups. Preparation time 15 minutes


Read more: http://www.joyofbaking.com/ChocolateSauce.html#ixzz26F0MKflb
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Thursday, February 16, 2012

MAKING A SIMPLE APRON

English: Vintage half apron.Image via Wikipedia


An apron can be made for many reasons, for yourself or for a gift or to make several little ones for a childs party details of this clever idea are in a tutorial on this page link below.

 http://morganmoore.typepad.com/one_more_moore/2007/02/valentine_tree__1.html
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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

COCONUT ICE

2019 Sydney: Coconut Ice

Ingredients:

      
1 kg of Sifted Icing Sugar
500 grams desiccated coconut
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 x 400 gram tin of condensed milk
2 x egg whites
60 grams Copha shortening
cochineal pink colouring

Method:

  1.   Combine Icing Sugar and coconut in a bowl.
  2.    Melt copha.... and line a lamington tin with aluminium foil
  3.   Add Vanilla, condensed milk, egg whites and melted copha.
  4.   Combine this mixture well and separate into two separate lots.
  5.   In one lot, add a few drops of cochineal and colour pink.
  6.   Press Pink lot into the bottom of a foil lined  18 x 28 cm Lamington Tin.
  7.   Place in the fridge for a few minutes to start the chill process.
  8.   Take out and press on top the white section and return to the refrigerator to set harder.
  9.  When sufficiently set turn out and cut into convenient squares for consumption.

YUMMY!  plus.. I made this when I was very young.

Whisking egg whites                                                        
Image via Wikipedia


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

ANZAC BISCUITS

This is a massive old favourite this one and so healthy!

Anzac's

Pre- Heat the oven to 160 degrees Centigrade of 300 degrees Fahrenheit

Ingredients:
1 Cup Rolled Oats
3/4 Cup coconut < ------ the dry ingredients
1 Cup Plain Flour
1 Cup Sugar

125 grms Butter
1 Tablespoon Golden Syrup

1 and a 1/2 teaspoons Bi- Carbonate of Soda
2 Tablespoons Boiling water


Method:

1. Combine all dry ingredients in a bowl
2. Melt Butter and Golden Syrup in a saucepan
3. Mix Soda with Boiling water and add to syrup mixture
4. Mixture froths up to the top and as it is almost to the top take off the heat.
5. Pour this syrup mixture into the the dry ingredients in the bowl and mix well
6 . Form small well formed balls and cook on a greased or papered biscuit slide
7. Bake at 160 degrees for 20 minutes

This recipe makes approximately 36 biscuits.
Freshly baked ANZAC biscuits. Note that these ...Image via Wikipedia


I have regularly made a double batch of these over the years when the kids were growing up as they are a hearty nutricious yummy sweet biscuit.

If you attempt a double batch be aware of the frothing of twice as much butter / syrup mix and choose a bigger saucepan for the job.


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Sunday, February 12, 2012

AMY JOHNSON CAKE

The famous Amy Johnson Cake.  found in the CWA cookbook 1957
History of Amy Johnson the person.  http://youtu.be/QZRg6bPJ8jE

Amy Johnson was born July 1, 1903, in Hull Yorkshire and lived there until she went to Sheffield University in 1923 to read for a BA. After graduating, she moved on to work as a secretary to a London solicitor where she also became interested in flying. Amy began to learn to fly at the London Aeroplane Club in the winter of 1928-29 and her hobby soon became an all-consuming determination, not simply to make a career in aviation, but to succeed in some project which would demonstrate to the world that women could be as competent as men in a hitherto male dominated field.
It was on one of the routine flights on January 5, 1941, that Amy crashed into the Thames estuary and was drowned, a tragic and early end to the life of Britain's most famous woman pilot.
Jason was the name she called her first plane which was a Gypsy Moth aircraft.


Preheat the oven to a180 degrees Celsius / 350 degrees
Ingredients:  for Base

2 ozs Butter
I cup SR Flour
Pinch of salt and a little milk Raspberry jam 
Currents
Method
Rub 2ozs butter into 1 large cup S.R flour, sifted with a pinch of salt, mix to firm dough with a little milk. Roll
 out 1/4" thick and line a greased cake tin.  Spread with raspberry jam and sprinkle with 1/2 cup currents. 

Ingredients:  for the sponge mixture
2 Eggs
3/4  cup of Sugar
1 cup sifted Flour
2 tablespoons Melted Butter
3 tablespoons Milk
Method:
Then make a sponge mixture: beat 2 eggs and 3/4 cup of sugar until light and fluffy.  Fold in 1 cup sifted S.R flour and finally 2 tablespoons butter melted in 3 tablespoons of milk.  Pour on top of pastry.  Bake about 40 minutes in moderate oven. 

When cold, ice with thin lemon icing and sprinkle with coconut.


(Plain) Flour and (lite) milk.Image via Wikipedia

 Lemon Icing
Ingredients:

100g butter
1 tsp grated lemon rind
2 cups icing sugar, sifted
1 - 2 tbsp lemon juice

Method:
  1. Cream together the butter until it turns light and fluffy
  2. Add the lemon Rind and mix through
  3. Beat in the icing sugar gradually,  keep beating until the resulting mixture goes smooth.
  4. Add the lemon juice. Add only in small increments until the icing becomes of a spreadable consistency. It is always better to a little than too much! 
On Sunday I went to visit my dear friend Iris Goldstein.  We rented a house from Mark and Iris for some ten years and Iris is a cook of legendary status.  I tasted this cake and I had to come home and make it and blog it for my children.  There is a lot of history in this cake given it is named after the famous female aviation legend.  Iris does not fly planes but she knows how to fly around her kitchen.  She has a new kitchen now.

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