Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Scones. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Scones. Sort by date Show all posts
If I had to sit and think about the one flavour I adore more than any other in the world, I would have to say that I yearn for the flavour of lemon the most of all. I am a true foodie and always have been. I have the utmost fondness for all sorts of foods, yes . . . but lemons are at the uppermost top of my list of edible passions!
I have been cooking, collecting, writing about food for a very long time now, even in the days before online journals and blogs. When I first started writing an online journal it was not very long before I discovered that the posts that most excited people were the ones in which I wrote about food and shared recipes. A lot of those recipes have never been posted anywhere else or even in this kitchen blog and so I thought today I would gather together the best of my lemon posts from those early blogs to share with you. The photography is not the best admittedly. Those were very early days and I have learnt a lot since then, or at least I like to think that I have. The recipes are very sound, despite how they may look and so I give to you . . . a Very Lemony Post.
First up a really great Lemon Curd.
Lemon Curd
Yield: 3 cups
Author: Marie Rayner
This freshly made lemon curd is delicious and I use it a lot! It’s wonderfully delicious spread on bread, scones or muffins. Use it to fill lovely little tart shells, or sandwich it between the layers of a wonderful Victorian sponge. It’s so versatile I don’t think you’ll have any problems at all using it all up! (I could eat it by the spoonful)
ingredients:
- 1 TBS finely grated lemon zest plus
- 2 tsp finely grated lemon zest
- 1 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (240ml)
- 1 1/3 cups sugar (55g)
- 4 large gree range eggs
- ¾ cup (180g) unsalted sweet butter, plus
- 2 TBS unsalted butter, cut into pieces
instructions:
How to cook Lemon Curd
- Whisk the zest, lemon juice, sugar, eggs and a pinch of salt together in a medium sized, heavy bottomed saucepan.
- Add the butter all at once and cook over moderately low heat, whisking constantly. Cook only until the curd is thick enough to hold the marks of the whisk when you pass it through and the first bubbles appear on it’s surface. This will take from ten to fifteen minutes.
- Immediately pour the curd through a fine meshed sieve into a bowl. Cover the surface with plastic wrap, pressing the plastic wrap directly onto it so that a skin doesn’t form. Chill, covered in the fridge until you are ready to use it. This keeps, covered and refrigerated for at least one week.
Created using The Recipes Generator
This is a delicious way to use up some of that lemon curd. Little Ginger Lemon Cakes.
*Little Ginger Lemon Cakes*
Serves 4
I love these little
cakes. Crisp and spicy ginger cookies sandwiched together with the tart
and mellow flavour of a lemon curd flavoured whipped cream, these little
babies are a delight both to make and to eat! I have put quantities
here for four, but it is easily multiplied and divided. It's a quick way
to put a lovely dessert on the table for a whole crowd of people!
ingredients:
- 1 cup of double cream (240ml)
- ¼ cup of lemon curd (2 heaped dessertspoons)
- 1 package of thin crisp ginger biscuits, such as Anna’s (my personal favourite)
- Powdered sugar for garnish
instructions:
How to cook Little Ginger Lemon Cakes
- Whisk the double cream until it holds soft peaks and then gently fold in the lemon curd.
- Place one ginger biscuit on each of four plates. Spread with some of the whipped cream and lemon mixture. Top with another ginger biscuit and repeat at least 2 more times. Dust the tops with powdered sugar and serve.
Who doesn't love cake? Not me! This is a fabulously tasty gingerbread filled with blueberries. I like to split the cake and then fill the centre with lemon curd for a spectacular treat!
*Blueberry Gingerbread*
Serves 12
Serves 12
This is an unusual version of gingerbread in that it is studded with lovely pockets of blueberry. Who knew the two things would go together so well! This is really moist and delicious and only gets better every day!
½ cup sunflower or canola oil (120ml)
1 cup sugar (caster* or granulated) 190g)
½ tsp salt
3 TBS mild molasses (or equal parts of golden syrup and dark treacle)
1 large free range egg
2 cups plain flour (280g)
½ tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp freshly ground nutmeg
1 tsp baking soda
1 cup fresh or frozen blueberries (120g)
1 cup buttermilk (240ml)
2 TBS Demerara sugar for sprinkling on top
Pre-heat the oven to 180*C/350*C. Lightly grease and flour a deep 9 inch cake tin and set aside.
Beat together the oil, 1 cup of sugar, salt and molasses with an electric mixer. Beat in the egg, mixing it in well.
Sift together the flour, spices, and baking soda. Remove 2 TBS of the mixture and dredge the berries in this.
Add the remaining flour to the beaten mixture, alternately with the buttermilk, beating well after each addition. Fold in the blueberries and remaining flour.
Spread in the prepared pan. Smooth the top and sprinkle the Demerara sugar evenly over top.
Bake for approximately 50 to 60 minutes, or until well risen and the top springs back when gently touched with your fingertips. a toothpick inserted in the centre should come out fairly clean.
Set on a rack to cool. Cut into wedges to serve, either warm with butter of with some whipped cream on top. OR…you can do like I do, and split the slices in half and dollop some lovely lemon curd in the middle and then put them back together.
Did someone ask for a Lemon Tart? I served this one with a blackberry coulis, some fresh berries and softly whipped cream.
*Caster sugar is a finer type of granulated sugar.
I have not made it in ages. I remember at the time it was most delicious! But don't take my word for it. You really need to make this!
*Lemon Tart*
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
1 1/2 lemons scrubbed and dried (I used un-waxed)
1 1/2 cups sugar (285g)
1 large free range egg, at room temperature
2 large free range egg yolks, at room temperature
1 1/2 TBS cornstarch
1/2 cup heavy cream (120ml)
4 TBS melted unsalted butter, cooled
1 (9-inch) tart shell, partially baked and cooled
Whipped cream, creme fraiche for topping (optional)
icing sugar for dusting (optional)
Centre a rack in the oven and pre-heat the oven to 160*C/325*F. Place the partially baked tart shell onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Set aside.
Grate the zest from your lemons. Slice the whole lemon in half. Remove the seeds from all the lemon halves. Taking a sharp knife peel away all the white pith. (this is the bitter part) Cut the lemon halves into small bits. Put it all, the zest, the lemon flesh, and any juice into your blender along with the sugar. Pulse and blend until you have a smooth mixture. Add the remaining filling ingredients and pulse and blend until you have a smooth homogenous mixture. Remove the blender jug and rap it down on the counter a few times to work out any air bubbles and then pour it into the partially baked crust.
Transfer the baking sheet to the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Increase the oven temperature to 180*C/350*F and bake for an additional 25 to 30 minutes. (Dorie says not to worry if the filling begins to bubble up or bubble over the edge of the crust.) It is done when it is set, but a bit shaky in the centre. There should be a slight sugar crust over top.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool to room temperature. Serve with some cream, creme fraiche and a dusting of icing sugar. (Or with berries as I have done!)
Enjoy!
1 1/2 lemons scrubbed and dried (I used un-waxed)
1 1/2 cups sugar (285g)
1 large free range egg, at room temperature
2 large free range egg yolks, at room temperature
1 1/2 TBS cornstarch
1/2 cup heavy cream (120ml)
4 TBS melted unsalted butter, cooled
1 (9-inch) tart shell, partially baked and cooled
Whipped cream, creme fraiche for topping (optional)
icing sugar for dusting (optional)
Centre a rack in the oven and pre-heat the oven to 160*C/325*F. Place the partially baked tart shell onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Set aside.
Grate the zest from your lemons. Slice the whole lemon in half. Remove the seeds from all the lemon halves. Taking a sharp knife peel away all the white pith. (this is the bitter part) Cut the lemon halves into small bits. Put it all, the zest, the lemon flesh, and any juice into your blender along with the sugar. Pulse and blend until you have a smooth mixture. Add the remaining filling ingredients and pulse and blend until you have a smooth homogenous mixture. Remove the blender jug and rap it down on the counter a few times to work out any air bubbles and then pour it into the partially baked crust.
Transfer the baking sheet to the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Increase the oven temperature to 180*C/350*F and bake for an additional 25 to 30 minutes. (Dorie says not to worry if the filling begins to bubble up or bubble over the edge of the crust.) It is done when it is set, but a bit shaky in the centre. There should be a slight sugar crust over top.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool to room temperature. Serve with some cream, creme fraiche and a dusting of icing sugar. (Or with berries as I have done!)
Enjoy!
You are going to positively love these Raspberry Lemon Bars. They are fabulously tasty!
Makes 15 squares
Printable Recipe
These delicious squares combine a buttery shortbread crust and a tangy lemon curd topping, all sandwiched together with sweet and fruity strawberry jam. A batch of these baked in mid-winter is a sweet and satisfying reminder of warm summer days.
2 cups plus 3 TBS plain flour
1/3 cup icing sugar, plus extra for dusting
¼ tsp salt
8 ounces chilled butter, cut into small pieces
1 ¼ cups caster sugar
½ tsp baking powder
3 large eggs
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
2 tsp grated lemon zest (I use un-waxed lemons,
if you aren’t using these wash your lemons
well in warm soapy water)
¾ cup good quality strawberry preserves (you can also use raspberry)
Pre-heat the oven to 180*C/350*F. Grease and flour an 11 X 7 inch baking pan. I then line it with greaseproof paper lengthwise, leaving a one inch overhang either end so that I can lift the squares out after baking for ease in cutting into squares.
Stir together 2 cups of the flour, 1/3 cups of the icing sugar and salt. Rub in the cold butter until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Press into the prepared baking pan evenly and bake for about 16 minutes until just firm.
Stir together the sugar, 3 TBS flour, and baking powder in a bowl. Stir in the eggs, lemon zest and lemon juice, mixing well.
Remove the pan from the oven and spread with the strawberry jam evenly. Pour the lemon mixture over top and return the pan to the oven. Bake for another 25 to 30 minutes until set. Remove from the oven. Let cool in the pan before removing and cutting into squares. Lightly dust with more icing sugar before serving.
Cupcake anyone? These are a really nice cupcake. Moist and lemony.
The batter has cream cheese in it for richness, and they are also filled with lemon curd and topped with a lush frosting.
*Lemon Cupcakes*
makes 12
I love cupcakes. They
are like eensy teensy little baby cakes just big enough for one, and
who doesn't like a cake that screams "Just for You!" These ones are
exceptional. Moist and lemony, with a tiny secret tucked inside.
ingredients:
- 1/2 cup butter at room temperature (120g)
- 3 ounces of cream cheese
- 1 TBS grated fresh lemon zest
- 2/3 cup sugar (127g)
- 2 large free range eggs
- 7/8 cup flour (123g)
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp lemon extract
- 1/2 cup lemon curd to fill
For the frosting:
- 2 TBS butter
- 3 ounces cream cheese
- 1 1/2 cups sifted icing sugar (195g)
- 1 tsp grated lemon zest
- 1/4 tsp lemon extract
instructions:
How to cook LemonCupcakes
- Pre-heat the oven to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3. Line a 12 cup muffin tin with paper cupcake liners. Set aside.
- Cream together the butter and cream cheese. Beat in the sugar and lemon zest until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, incorporating each one fully before adding the next.
- Sift together the flour, baking soda and salt. Add gradually to the creamed mixture, beating on low speed until just combined. Divide the resulting batter equally amongst the muffin cups.
- Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until they are lightly browned and firm to the touch. Remove from the oven and let cool completely, removing them from the pan, and placing them on a wire rack.
- When they are completely cooled, make a little hole in the top of each and down into the centre. Fill each hole with about a tsp of lemon curd.
- Beat all the frosting ingredients together until light and fluffy and smooth. Spread frosting evenly over each cupcake to cover the hole you made. Decorate as you wish and serve.
Č
Who wants a piece of cake! I do! I do! Especially when its a delicious Lemon & Poppyseed Bundt Cake!
*Lemon & Poppyseed Bundt Cake*
makes 16 servings
A deliciously moist cake with a double blast of lemon flavour!
ingredients:
- 1 pkg (2-layer size) lemon cake mix
- 1 pkg(3 oz.)Lemon flavor powdered Gelatin dessert (4 serving size)
- 1 1/4 cups water (300ml)
- 1/2 cup oil (120ml)
- 4 large free range eggs
- 4 TBS poppy seed
- 1/2 cup Cream Cheese (120g)
- 2 TBS butter, softened
- 1 cup icing sugar, sifted (130g)
- 2 TBS shredded zest and 1 TBS juice from 1 lemon, divided
instructions:
How to cook Lemon & Poppyseed Bundt Cake
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/gas mark 4. Butter a 12 cup fluted tube pan of 10 inch tube pan very well. Dust lightly with flour. Set aside.
- Place the cake mix, gelatin, oil, water and eggs into a large bowl. Beat with an electric mixer until well blended. Stir in poppy seed. Pour the mixture into the prepared pan.
- Bake for 50 minutes to 1 hour or until a toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Allow to cool in the pan for 30 minutes. Loosen the cake from the sides of the pan with knife. Invert cake onto wire rack and gently remove the pan. Cool cake completely before proceeding.
- Beat the cream cheese spread and butter with a mixer, using clean beaters, on low speed until well blended. Gradually beat in the sugar and lemon juice. Spread this mixture over top of the cake. Garnish withthe lemon peel. Cut into slices to serve.
Lemon and berries are a beautiful marriage made in heaven . . .
Especially when you bake them into a delicious scone! Put the kettle on, you'll want to enjoy a nice hot cuppa with these light and fluffy babies!
Makes 12 to 14
Printable Recipe
Deliciously moist, flavored with lemon and stogged full of lucious blueberries!
2 cups flour
1/3 cup sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp grated lemon zest
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup (8 ounces) lemon yoghurt
1 large egg
1/4 cup butter melted
1 cup of fresh or frozen blueberries
Glaze:
1/2 cup icing sugar, sifted
1 TBS fresh lemon juice
1/2 tsp grated lemon zest
Preheat the oven to 400*C/200*F/ Gas mark 7. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Set aside.
Whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder, lemon zest, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. Beat together the yoghurt, egg and butter. Add all at once to the dry ingredients. Stir to moisten evenly without over mixing. Fold in the berries.
Drop by heaped tablespoonfuls onto the prepared baking sheet, leaving 2 inches of space in between each. Bake in the preheated oven for 15 to 18 minutes, until lightly browned and well risen. Remove from the oven.
Whisk together the glaze ingredients until smooth. Drizzle over top of the warm scones. Serve warm.
Lemon is not just for baked goods (although it is fabulous when baked) its also for wonderful savoury main dishes as well, such as these tasty Lemon & Oregano Pork Chops!
With their crisp and flavourful crumb coating and the lush lemon mayonnaise for serving, these always go down a real treat!
*Lemon & Oregano Pork Chops*
Serves 4
These tasty chops are
quick, easy and flavourful. I have included a simple recipe to make
some lemon mayonnaise, just using ingredients to hand, which is the
perfect accompaniment. Sometimes the simplest meals are the tastiest!
ingredients:
For the chops
- Finely grated zest and juice of one large lemon
- 1 cup dry bread crumbs (120g)
- 2 tsp dried oregano
- salt and black pepper to taste
- 4 boneless pork loin chops
- 2 TBS sunflower oil
For the Lemon Mayonnaise:
- 4 TBS good quality mayonnaise (I use Hellman's)
- the juice of half a lemon
- the zest of half a lemon
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard
- freshly ground black pepper
instructions:
How to cook Lemon & Oregano Pork Chops
- To make the lemon mayonnaise, mix together all the ingredients with a fork or small whisk until well incorporated and seasoning to taste with a good grinding of black pepper. Set aside and keep cool.
- Take a shallow plate and on it mix together the bread crumbs, lemon zest and oregano. Set it aside.
- Squeeze the lemon juice iinto another shallow plate and set it aside.
- Place the pork chops into a plastic bag, one at a time, and beat it with the length of your rolling pin on each side until they are half as thick as they started out. Season each one generously with some salt and pepper on each side. Working with one at a time, dip them first in the lemon juice and then into the bread crumb mixture until they are well coated.
- Heat the oil in a large frying pan over high heat and cook the pork for about 3 minutes on each side, until the crumbs are crisp and nicely browned and the pork is just cooked through.
- Serve each on a heated plate with some lemon mayonnaise. Boiled new potatoes and a simple steamed vegetable such as green beans or carrots go very well with these
One of my favourite Chinese dishes is Lemon Chicken!
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
This has always been my favourite kind of chicken. I just love the tanginess of the lemon sauce.
2 pounds skinless chicken breasts, sliced
1 cup cornstarch (150g)
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
3 cups peanut or vegetable oil
Lemon slices (optional)
White sesame seeds (optional)
Marinade:
3 tablespoons dark soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon sesame oil
Sauce:
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 1/2-inch piece of ginger, minced
3 tablespoons lemon juice
2 teaspoons lemon zest
1/4 cup chicken stock (60ml)
1/4 cup sugar (45g)
1 teaspoon cornstarch dissolved in 1/4 cup (60ml) water
Whisk together the soy sauce and sesame oil for the marinade. Coat the chicken with the marinade, cover and then place in the refrigerator to marinate for at least half an hour.
Combine the cornstarch and white pepper in a shallow bowl. Remove the chicken from the marinade, allowing any excess to drip off. Roll the chicken pieces in the cornstatch mixture, shaking off any excess before frying.
Heat the three cups of oil in a large pan, until just smoking, then add the first batch of chicken pieces and deep-fry until cooked through. This will take about 4 to 5 minutes. Remove chicken with a slotted spoon to drain on paper towels. Repeat with the rest of the chicken.
Turn off the pan with the oil in it, removing 1 tablespoon of the oil into a medium-sized pot and heat over medium-high. (You can save the used oil for later use by allowing it to cool, then straining into an aluminum can or other container.)
Add the garlic and ginger to the 1 tablespoon of the oil, and cook briefly until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the lemon juice, lemon zest, chicken stock, and sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved and simmer until the liquid is reduced by half. Stir in the cornstarch mixture and cook to thicken.
Remove the sauce from the heat. Add the fried chicken pieces and toss them in the sauce. Garnish with lemon slices and white sesame seeds, if desired. Serve with white rice and maybe some steamed broccoli or snow peas on the side.
So there you have it, enough Lemon recipes to keep you busy for a while I reckon! High in vitamin C and fibre, its been said that eating lemons can reduce the risk of stroke in some people. They fight free radicals, help to lower blood pressure, and they also say that drinking a cup of hot water and lemon in the water is a great aid to reducing weight. Somehow I don't think these benefits transfer very well when consuming them as cake, but oh well . . . why quibble about something so very tasty! Now where's my fork!
This recipe I am sharing with you today is one which I adapted from the old Purity Flour Cookbook. That was one of the very first cookbooks I purchased not too long after I got married all those years ago.
I had bought myself the Fanny Farmer Cookbook when I was in High School. (I've actually worn out three copies of that one.) I was at my sister-in-law's and she had the Purity book. Back in those days the book included forms in the back that you could send away and request your own copy.
I sent away for it and have been using it ever since. It is filled with old standby recipes that do not change with the passing of time. I call them the classics.
This delicious tea bread/loaf is one of the classics. The type of thing you always used to see served at Tea Parties, Bridal and Baby Showers. Before everyone got fancy smancy.
For me, it is an autumn classic, because of the cranberries. I grew up and live now, not very far from a cranberry bog. Cranberries are a very commonly used ingredient in my area.
This tasty bread falls within the Quick Bread category. Quick breads are types of bread products that do not use yeast for leavening, instead relying on baking powder and baking soda to help them rise.
They include loaves such as one I am sharing today (banana bread being a very popular one,)
muffins, biscuits, soda breads, pancakes, crackers, corn breads and scones.
One of their positives is that you don't have to wait for any yeast to rise. There is normally no kneading involved. They go together very quickly and, for the most part, stay fresh for days. In fact, some even improve upon time passing!
Most quick loaf breads cut much nicer the second day, so I almost always bake them the day before I need to use them.
They also freeze very well, tightly covered/wrapped.
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE CRANBERRY, NUT & ORANGE BREAD
Very simple ingredients. Do note that the walnuts are totally optional. Not everyone likes to add them. I do. Because I am nuts about nuts!
- 2 cup (280g) plain all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 cup (200g) granulated sugar
- the finely grated zest of 1 large orange (Wash it well first)
- 1 cup (100g) fresh cranberries, chopped (rinse and pat dry before chopping)
- 1/2 cup (60g) chopped toasted walnuts (optional)
- 1 large free-range egg, lightly beaten
- 1/4 cup (60g) butter, melted
- 3/4 cup (180ml) fresh orange juice (add water to make up the full measure)
If you are using walnuts, do note that I like to toast my walnuts first. This is very easily done. Simply spread your nuts out on a rimmed baking sheet and toast in a preheated 375*F/190*C/ gas mark 5 oven for 8 to 10 minutes. Leave them to cool before using.
You can use frozen cranberries if you wish. Chop frozen in a food processor (if you have one) and use as is. No need to thaw.
You can also leave your cranberries whole if you prefer them that way. Today I left mine whole.
HOW TO MAKE CRANBERRY, NUT & ORANGE BREAD
Quick breads such as this one are always very easy to make. They usually involve not much more than whisking together the dry and wet ingredients together separately and then briefly combining them to make a batter.
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and flour a 9 by 5 by 3-inch loaf tin, shaking out any excess flour. Alternately line with baking paper, buttering both the tin and the paper.
Whisk together the flour, baking powder, soda, salt and sugar in a large bowl. Stir in the cranberries, walnuts (if using), and orange zest.
Whisk the egg, butter and orange/water together. Add all at once to the dry ingredients and stir everything together just to combine. Scrape into your prepared loaf tin.
Bake for 50 to 60 minutes until well risen, golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Let stand in the pan for about 10 minutes before tipping out. Cool completely, then wrap and store for one full day before cutting.
Just be sure not to overmix the batter. A few lumps are actually preferable and will give you a lighter moister loaf. Over mixing toughens the batter when it comes to loaves like these.
I like to enjoy it as it is, thickly sliced with a nice hot drink. Sometimes I will spread it with softened butter for an extra special treat.
You can make an optional sweet glaze by whisking together 1 cup (130g) icing sugar, 1 1/2 TBS of orange juice, or just enough to give you a thin glaze. A bit of orange zest can also be added.
I like it just plain. But that's me. You may prefer something to sweeten it up or dress it up just a bit!
Some other quick bread recipes which I enjoy and have posted on here that I think you might also enjoy are:
APPLESAUCE NUT BREAD - Moist and delicious. Nicely spiced and studded with toasted nuts. Not overly sweet either. A real winner.
CORNBREAD WITH FENNEL, CRANBERRIES & SULTANAS -This is one of my favourite of all the quick breads that I make. It is no secret that I am a huge fan of cornbread. I also happen to love quick breads with dried fruit in them, especially raisins and cranberries. Add fennel seed to anything and I am so on it! I just adore that slight anise like flavor of fennel seed! This lovely bread incorporates those three loves of mine in a most delicious way!
Yield: 8 (one loaf)
Author: Marie Rayner
Cranberry, Nut & Orange Loaf
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 1 HourInactive time: 24 HourTotal time: 25 H & 15 M
I have been making this for years. It's an old standby that has never let me down. The nuts are optional. I don't always add them.
Ingredients
- 2 cup (280g) plain all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 cup (200g) granulated sugar
- the finely grated zest of 1 large orange (Wash it well first)
- 1 cup (100g) fresh cranberries, chopped
- 1/2 cup (60g) chopped toasted walnuts (optional)
- 1 large free-range egg, lightly beaten
- 1/4 cup (60g) butter, melted
- 3/4 cup (180ml) fresh orange juice (add water to make up the full measure)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and flour a 9 by 5 by 3-inch loaf tin, shaking out any excess flour. Alternately line with baking paper, buttering both the tin and the paper.
- Whisk together the flour, baking powder, soda, salt and sugar in a large bowl. Stir in the cranberries, walnuts (if using), and orange zest.
- Whisk the egg, butter and orange/water together. Add all at once to the dry ingredients and stir everything together just to combine. Scrape into your prepared loaf tin.
- Bake for 50 to 60 minutes until well risen, golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
- Let stand in the pan for about 10 minutes before tipping out. Cool completely, then wrap and store for one full day before cutting.
Did you make this recipe?
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Hooray for Strawberry Season!! My favourite time of year! I know we can get strawberries pretty much all year round here, with berries being flown in from Africa and Spain, but . . .
Let's be honest here though. They are not a touch on the flavour of a freshly picked home-grown English Strawberry.
The warmth of the sun still resting on it's sweet red flesh and pieces of straw still clinging to it's bright green leaves . . . ok, so you will only get that if you pick your own, but still . . .
A berry that has only just been picked and transported a few miles tastes infinitely better than one that's been flown thousands of miles and held in a cold warehouse for days before it reaches the store shelves!
I just can't get enough of them!! I love them fresh and eaten out of hand . . .
sliced and sprinkled with a bit of sugar and then doused in cream, dipped in chocolate, baked into pies and cakes, made into jam, crushed and dolloped on top of fresh scones . . .
oh the possibilities are endless!!!
One of my favourite ways is to bake them into this delicious, moist tea bread.
There is no tea in it, that is just what we call a quick bread over in North America. I reckon that's because they go so well with a cup of tea . . . in my case herbal tea . . . Mint tea is lovely with it!
It smells heavenly when it is baking . . . the cardamom is so sweetly fragrant . . . the lemon drizzle adds just an extra touch of sweetness.
All in all it is a real winner. I guarantee!
*Strawberry Cardamom Bread*
Makes one 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf
Printable Recipe
A deliciously moist bread stogged full of fresh strawberries and glazed with a tangy lemon glaze.
4 ounces unsalted butter ( 1/2 cup)
150g granulated sugar (3/4 cup)
3 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
280g plain flour, sifted (2 cups)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground cardamom
(remove the seeds from green cardamom pods and grind them
with a pestle and mortar or a coffee grinder if you cannot find it already ground)
175g sour cream (1/2 cup) or plain yoghurt
55g toasted walnuts (1/2 cup), coarsley chopped
300g of fresh strawberries, chopped (1 1/2 cups)
For the glaze:
the juice of 1/2 lemon
enough icing sugar to make a drizzable glaze
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and lightly flour a 9 by 5 by 3 inch loaf. Set aside.
Beat the butter until softened. Add the sugar and continue to beat until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Stir in the vanilla.
Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cardamom together. Add to the creamed mixture alternately with the sour cream, beginning and ending with the flour. Mix only to combine. Gently fold in the chopped strawberries and the nuts.
Spoon into the prepared and bake for about 1 hour, or until the bread is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. Let stand in the pan for 10 minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack to cool.
Whisk together the lemon juice and enough icing sugar to make a drizzle glaze. Drizzle over the cake. Let set.
Serve warm or at room temperature. This bread also freezes very well.
I am a lover of quick breads . . . scones, tea loaves, baking powder biscuits, muffins, corn bread, etc. I just love them. One of the reasons I love them is because they are quick to put together and they freeze really well. If you are making a pot of soup, it really isn't much extra work to put together a savoury muffin or quick bread to go along with it, and they realy turn a simple meal into something very special.
One cake which I fell totally in love with when I moved to the UK was the Traditional Battenburg Cake. This was not a cake which I had ever heard of prior to moving there.
There really is no end to the varieties of traditional and regional cakes and goodies amongst those fertile green and septred isles! With it's church window appearance, delicious texture and flavours, the Battenburg was one of my favourites.
After the holidays we are firmly entrenched in Winter, and with Covid, this year can be feeling especially depressing to you. We are all stuck in our homes, and our natural freedoms have been somewhat curtailed, and for good reason.
We may find ourselves in need of a "Pick Me Up" maybe more than ever. One thing I really like to do in the Winter months is to plan and prepare a small Tea Party, even if it is just for one or two people.
A Tea Party is one way to perk up your days and bring a bit of sunshine into your life! Are we not all in need of a bit of a lift?
You don't need anything special, or a load of people to attend. Some of the best tea parties of
all happen when there's just two of you, and I have been known to really enjoy an intimate tea party for just one. And why not?
All you need is a table spread with a fine cloth and some tea . . . in a
pot of course, (today we had blackberry and mint and it was
delicious!) and cups and saucers. You also need some delicious foods, although they need not be overly complicated.
The perfect afternoon tea (or High Tea as it is also called) should begin with some delicious savouries . .
. finger sandwiches, sausage rolls, little toasts, savoury pastries . .
. followed with scones (if you wish) and a selection of small fancies and
cakes.
You don't need a lot of sandwiches, only a few different types will do. I think we all have things in our cupboards and larders to make up a few sandwiches. Egg Salad. Ham. Cheese and pickle. Tomato. Cucumber (very traditional). There is no end to the types we can make.
Sausage rolls and tiny turnovers are also very popular. We had some in the freezer leftover from Christmas. Even Deviled Eggs can be quite welcome! I adore Deviled Eggs. You can find my recipe for those here.
For dainties all you need is a selection of a few bits and bobs. I am sure we all still have things leftover from Christmas. Shortbread cookies, squares and the like.
You don't really need a lot of them, one or two per person is quite sufficient. Even fancy chocolates are a treat. Just choose a few bits that really strike your fancy and give you a small bit of pleasure.
Of course the star of any good Tea Table will be a fresh baked cake. You won't get much nicer than a beautiful Battenburg Cake. If you love almond, then this is the cake for you.
A firm favourite on
the traditional English tea table, this is a very pretty two coloured
sponge cake, put together like a pink and white checker board pattern. I think you may actually be quite surprised as how very easy it is to make one of these delicious cakes!
You only need to create a simple sponge cake batter. The sponge batter is divided in half with one half being coloured pink with a bit of pink food colouring.
These get baked in the same tin. If you like you can separate the two batters with a strip of aluminium foil, or bake them separately in small loaf tins. .
Personally, I never have a problem baking them both in the same cake tin however.
They stay largely separate and you will be trimming the edges once the
cake has cooled, so it is very easy to separate the two colours.
Once cooled each colour is separated, trimmed and cut into two long strips. These strips are then sandwiched together in a checkerboard pattern, using seedless raspbery jelly and vanilla buttercream as a glue.
Its quite simply really. If your cake is completely cold you only need a good and sharp serrated knife to do the job. Just cut and trim as needed.
You don't have to put jam and butter cream between each layer if you don't want to, although that is traditional. On this day I did jam one way and buttercream the other way. Feel free to use a good quality store brand if that is what you have.
Raspberry jam and butter cream are traditional, but do feel free to use something else if you are not fond. This is all about creating a pretty cake that everyone will enjoy.
Once you have your checkerboard created you will need to brush the whole cake in more jam and then wrap it in a thin layer of marzipan. The marzipan gets rolled out very thinly on a layer of granulated sugar, which helps to prevent it from sticking to the cutting board/counter and adds a delightful crunch.
If you are really feeling keen and industrious you can stretch this a bit and make a Hazelnut Battenburg Cake. This is a wonderful riff on the traditional, composed of a chocolate hazelnut batter layered with the white cake.
As you can see this is also very pretty. The layers are sandwiched together with chocolate hazelnut spread. I use nutella.
It is incredibly moreish. Especially if you enjoy chocolate!
When cut into slices this is a beautiful cake. I think it is really quite amazing looking. It is very impressive and not all that difficult.
It does require a little bit of
patience, but it's well worth any effort taken. It may take a bit of
practice to get the marzipan as tight as you would like it, but do
persevere as it is most beautiful when done
If you are looking for a mighty fine cake to serve at your teatime table, then this is the one to choose. Pretty and delicious. What more could you want??? Nom! Nom!
Yield: 6
Author: Marie Rayner

Battenburg Cake
prep time: 10 Mincook time: 45 Mintotal time: 55 Min
This is a traditional cake that has appearing in British cookery books for over two centuries. The finished cake resembles somewhat a church stained glass window. This is a real treat for almond lovers and not as hard to make as it would seem!
Ingredients
For the cake:
- 3/4 cup (175g) butter, softened
- 1 cup minus 2 TBS (175g) caster sugar
- 3 large free range eggs, beaten
- 1 1/4 cups (175g) self raising flour
- a little red food colouring
You will also need:
- 2/3 pound (275g) of natural almond paste (marzipan)
- warmed seedless raspberry jam (about 3 TBS)
- vanilla buttercream icing (about 3 TBS)
- granulated sugar to dust
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3. Butter a 7-inch square cake tin and line with parchment paper.
- Cream the butter together with the sugar until very light and fluffy.
- Add the lightly beaten eggs and the flour, a little at a time, beating until smooth.
- Divide the cake batter in half, placing each half in a different bowl.
- Tint one half with a bit of red food colouring to give you a pink batter.
- Spoon the pink batter into the left hand side of the tin, and the normal colour into the other side. Smooth the top gently.
- Bake in the oven for about 30 to 35 minutes or until firm when lightly pressed in the centre.
- Carefully turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely before proceeding.
- When the cake is completely cool, trim the edges of the cake and then divide it equally into 4 long sections, with two being pink and two being white.
- Using a little of the butter cream and some of the warmed raspberry jam, place one of each colour on the bottom and the remaining two on top. alternating the colours to give you a chequer board pattern and having some butter cream and jam between each. You will not need much, only just enough to make them adhere to the other.
- Dust the counter top with some granulated sugar and then roll out the marzipan on top. You need to roll it thinly into an oblong roughly the length of the cake and large enough to roll around the cake.
- Spread with a thin layer of jam and then place the sponge checkerboard on top. Roll the marzipan around the cake and seal with a bit more jam.
- Trim the edges neatly at each end. Place onto a plate with the "seam" underneath and lightly mark the top in the traditional criss cross pattern.
notes:
Make Your Own Self Raising Flour:
You can make your own self raising flour by adding 1 1/2 tsp of baking powder and 1/4 tsp of salt to every cup of plain flour.
Did you make this recipe?
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