Happy New Year! I wish for all of us a very prosperous and happy 2023. May it be filled with lots of the people and things that we love, and here in the English Kitchen that means delicious recipes and good food to eat! (Focus being on DELICIOUS!)
I hope the coming months will be filled with lots of tasty traditional recipes intermingled with some new, some old, some healthy, and everything in between.
More and more I want my focus to be on smaller sized recipes, geared towards the smaller family, singletons, and empty nesters. But you larger families never fear, there will be plenty stirred into the mix for you as well, and as always, I am happy to give you the measurements for a larger sized recipe if you ask!
Everybody is doing this so I thought I would just jump on the bandwagon and share what were the most popular recipes on the blog over these past twelve months! I am sure you will be acquainted with many of them, but there may be a few that you have missed out on.
In any case, I can promise you this. All are delicious!
Coming in at #20: GINGERBREAD MUFFINS.
No surprise here. Moist and gingery with a bit of crunch from the demerara sugar sprinkle on top. A great basic gingerbread muffin that you can adapt by making a few additions if you like such as dried or candied fruit, etc.
Number 19: OLD TIME BREAD PUDDING
This is also not a surprise. This is an old traditional recipe for a solid bread pudding that cuts like a cake and is stuffed with plenty of spice and loads of fruit. Delicious warm, but equally as delicious cold. You will see this sold by a single serving slab in many of the bake shops in the UK. Perfect to enjoy with a mid morning or afternoon cuppa.
Number 18: PAN FRIED COD
I was really happy to see this one and not at all surprised. This is one of my favorite ways to prepare one of my favorite types of fish. This simple recipe boasts wonderful flavors and a really simple cooking method. Using very few ingredients, you can be enjoying perfectly cooked and delicious fish in less than fifteen minutes.
Number 17: GRATIN OF CHICKEN
Who doesn't struggle with using up all of the cooked chicken leftover from a roast chicken or a rotisserie bird. Struggle no more as I have the perfect solution and it is perfectly delicious! This creamy chicken gratin recipe is also perfect for those nights when you are starving, and you want to feed your family something warm and comforting. There is nothing like a creamy chicken gratin to tick all the boxes when it comes to creating a delicious and yet simple supper dish.
Number 16: TRADITIONAL SEED CAKE
I am really excited about this one as it is one of my absolute all-time favorite cakes to enjoy with a hot cuppa. It was also said to be the favorite cake of William Wordsworth's sister Dorothy Wordsworth! A good seed cake recipe would have been included in any Victorian era cookbook! They are very traditional.
Number 15: MARY BERRY'S MINCEMEAT BUNS
And there is no more perfect time of the year to bake them than now, with some of us having leftover mincemeat in the larder that we be wanting to use up! These may be baked in a muffin tin, but they are as far away from muffins as they can be. Instead they are dense fruited cakes, meant to be enjoyed with hot drinks. Not a dessert, but an indulgent teatime treat!
Number 14: NIGEL'S POTATOES
I absolutely adore this simple potato dish which comes from Nigel Slater. this one is such a simple dish. It's basically just layered raw potato, fried onions and chicken stock. You don't even need to peel the potatoes. And you can adapt it up or down to serve as many or as few people as you like. I can't think of anything that this tasty side dish wouldn't sit well next to!
Number 13: BLUEBERRY BUTTER SWIM BISCUITS
If you are a fan of North American style Biscuits you are going to just love this version of Butter Swim Biscuits. Butter swim biscuits are soft and fluffy biscuits that bake in a pan loaded with butter. There is no butter in the biscuits themselves, but with plenty of butter in the baking tin, you don't need it. These bake up light and fluffy with a lovely buttery crust, and crispy outside edge. This version is particularly nice as it is stuffed with sweet blueberries and glazed with a sweet glaze.
Number 12: BANBURY CAKES
A close cousin to Eccles cakes these delicious pastries are not cakes at all but a round shaped flaky and buttery puff pastry turnover filled with a filling of dried fruits, butter, spices and brown sugar. They are melt in the mouth delicious. Another very traditional recipe from the UK.
Number 11: MARY'S PERFECT SHORTBREAD
Another recipe adapted from Mary Berry. You just know it is the perfect shortbread biscuit/cookie. Crisp and buttery. Not too sweet. Perfect with a hot cup of tea or a bowl of ice cream. If you are looking for a great shortbread cookie, look no further. You just struck gold!
Number 10: CARAMEL POPCORN TWISTS
If you love caramel corn but are not fond of the husks on the popcorn getting stuck in your teeth, this delicious and easy recipe is the perfect solution. It uses a bag of hull-less popcorn, or popcorn twists as they are also called here in Canada, the popular brand being put out by Old Dutch. I know there is also a brand of these in America, but am not sure what it is called. In any case I call this easy to make snack DELICIOUS with a capital 'D!"
Number 9: GREEN BEAN & POTATO CASSEROLE
Cooked cubed potatoes and green beans in a delicious cheese sauce, topped with a buttery crumb and baked until golden brown and bubbling. This is an excellent side dish for any occasion or weeknight supper! Quite simply delicious!
Number 8: HOW TO COOK CHICKEN IN THE MICROWAVE
This is my tried-and-true way of preparing perfectly cooked chicken breasts in the microwave oven. I often buy whole packs of chicken breasts when they are on offer at the shops and poach or cook them, packing the meat into two cup containers, and freezing them. That way I always have a quantity of cooked chicken ready to use in a tasty dish at any given time. One of the easiest ways to cook this chicken is in the microwave. If you know how to cook chicken in the microwave you will never be short of cooked shredded chicken. It is very simple to do and very quick. The chicken always comes out moist and delicious. Perfect for shredding or dicing.
- 1/3 cup (80g) butter at room temperature
- 1/3 cup (75g) soft light brown sugar
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 cups (360g) Bisquick baking mix (see note)
- 1/2 cup (120ml) milk
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 1/3 cup (80ml) warm milk
- 1 cup (130g) icing sugar
- 2 TBS milk
Bisquick Cinnamon Rolls
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup (80g) butter at room temperature
- 1/3 cup (75g) soft light brown sugar
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 cups (360g) Bisquick baking mix (see note)
- 1/2 cup (120ml) milk
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 1/3 cup (80ml) warm milk
- 1 cup (130g) icing sugar
- 2 TBS milk
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 375*F/190*C/ gas mark 5. Butter an 8-inch square baking tin very well. Set aside.
- Beat all of the ingredients for the cinnamon filling together until light and well combined. Set aside.
- Measure the baking mix into the bowl. Whisk in the sugar. Add the milk and mix together to a soft dough.
- Roll the dough out to an 8" by 18" rectangle on a lightly floured surface using a lightly floured rolling pin. Spread the Cinnamon Filling evenly over top. Roll up tightly from short end to short end. Cut into 9 (2-inch) slices.
- Place the slices into the prepared baking tin, leaving space in between each roll.
- Warm the milk in the microwave for 15 seconds and then pout over top of the cinnamon rolls in the pan.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 25 minutes until the rolls are golden brown and each roll is cooked through, including the center roll.
- While the rolls are baking whisk together the sugar and milk to make the glaze.
- Remove the cooked rolls from the oven and leave to rest for 5 minutes. Spread the glaze over the hot rolls to cover. Serve warm.
Notes
You can easily make your own baking mix. Find my Homemade Baking Mix Recipe here.
Did you make this recipe?
As I have said many times in the past, I love lemons. They have to be one of my favourite of all fruits. If I had to choose between chocolate cake and lemon cake, I'd be hard pressed to choose, but I think in the end . . . lemon would overcome.
I just love their fresh clean flavour and that lovely tang. I found myself this weekend having bought far too many lemons. (I have a tendancy to pick up a mesh bag of them almost every time I go to the shops. They come in ever so handy.)
Not a problem though as I also fancied some delicious homemade lemon curd. There is nothing as tasty as homemade lemon curd and it's not as hard to make as some would suppose.
Some handy hints for lemons. Keep them at room temperature and you will get far more juice from them than if you keep them in the fridge. Also give them a good roll between the palm of your hand and the counter top before juicing, and you'll get absolutely the most juice that you possibly can from them! I Love my wooden lemon juicer. It works like a charm and I would not be without one now!
Back to Lemon Curd. This recipe makes rather a lot, but it is such a wonderful thing to have in the fridge. I use it all the time. It is just wonderful spread on warm scones and bread, in between cake layers, on top of ginger biscuits, in crisp pastry tart shells . . . or just spooned out of the jar. Yummo! I am a glutton through and through I do believe!
Of course you can also pack it into jars and gift a few of your friends with some of it. They'll love you for it forever, I guarantee!
*Lemon Curd*
Makes about 3 cups
Printable Recipe
Once you have had proper homemade lemon curd, you will never want to buy ready made again. The fresh made stuff is delicious, and very easy to make. It's a good way of getting rid of that glut of lemons you may have! It's delicious spread on bread, scones or muffins. I love it spread between thin ginger thins and topped with whipped cream, or as a tasty filling in a nice sponge cake.
1 TBS finely grated lemon zest plus 2 tsp of the same
8 fluid ounces (1 cup) fresh lemon juice
265g caster sugar (approx 1 1/3 cups)
4 large free range eggs
6 ounces unsalted butter (3/4 cup)
plus 2 TBS, all cut into TBS sized pieces
Whisk the zest, lemon juice, sugar, eggs and a pinch of salt together in a heavy 2 litre saucepan. Add the butter all at once and then cook over moderately low heat, whisking constantly until the curd is thick enough to hold the marks of the whisk and the first bubbles appear and break the surface. This should take about 10 minutes. Immediately pour through a fine sieve into a bowl. Cover and chill before use. This should keep, covered and in the fridge for about 1 week.
Here's another delicious use for some of that Lemon curd. A tasty Lemon Drizzle Cake. mmm . . .
*Lemon Drizzle Cake*
Makes one loaf sized cake
Printable Recipe
This has to be one of the easiest cakes ever. You just bung everything into a food processor and blitz. Quick, easy and oh so very delicious!!
140g self raising flour (1 cup)
4 ounces butter (1/2 cup)
115g caster sugar (2/3 cup)
2 large free range eggs
2 dessertspoons of lemon curd
the grated zest of one lemon
For the topping:
the juice of 1/2 lemon
2 TBS caster sugar
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F. Butter a loaf tin and line with greaseproof paper. Set aside.
Put all the cake ingredients into a food processor. Blend together for 2 minutes. Scrape mixture into the prepared tin and bake for 30 to 35 minutes or until the top springs back when lightly touched and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.
While the cake is still warm, and before turning it out of the tin, mix the lemon juice and sugar together until the sugar dissolves somewhat, and pour this mixture over top evenly. Let sit for about 10 minutes before removing from the tin to cool completely on a wire rack.
And of course, there is nothing tastier than a fresh piece of Lemon Drizzle Cake with a huge dollop of lemon curd spread over the top of it. Oh, my . . . I must have surely died and gone to heaven . . . .



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