Showing posts sorted by date for query Scones. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Scones. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Generally speaking at the weekend I like to bake the Toddster a delicious teatime treat. Something that I know he will enjoy and that I wouldn't normally bake for him. He's very fond of scones . . . the problem is so am I. What to do about that?? I don't know. I bake em anyways, even if they do get in my mouth.
This is a simple recipe, using ordinary things and my most favourite ingredient of all fresh blueberries. So good for you with their vitamins and anti-oxidents! Once the dough is made for these you just pat it into a round, place it on the baking sheet and then cut it into wedges, pushing them apart gently for baking. So good.
They bake like a dream and there is no faffing about with cutting them into rounds etc, all the dough gets used up, so there's no waste. No tough scones from having to re-roll and cut, etc.
These puff up really nicely, and are stogged full of lovely coconut and lime flavours which go really well with the blueberries.
These are beautiful served with a nice cuppa and some blueberry jam . . . but lemon curd is my chosen poison, and I eat it whenever I can. I know . . . I'm repeating myself here, but blueberries and lemon are such perfect partners!
Just look at that crisp coconut and sugar gilding the top of these delicious bakes! So good!
And all those blueberries. So tasty! Nice. Nice.
The delicate crunch of coconut and sugar, the sweetness of blueberries, the tang of lime. What's not to like about these??
*Coconut, Lime and Blueberry Scones*
These were the perfect excuse to crack open this new tea from Tetley . . . Biscuit flavoured Tea. I don't drink tea myself, but I did have a good whiff of this and it definitely smelled a lot like a biscuit. Very sweet and vanilla-ee biscuit-ee . . . I have a friend who does drink tea and she had a cup and declared it gorgeous. Who am I to quibble.
Want to enjoy one of life’s simple pleasures of biscuit-tea dunking but without the calorie concerns or biscuit crumbs left floating in your cup? Well look no further. One of the UK’s most famous tea brands is launching the first-ever biscuit flavoured tea. Those clever Tea Folk at Tetley have devised a new brew that not only tastes like your favourite biscuit but it’s also been created to save you having to do any dunking at all.
Makes 8
These
are delightfully full of the lovely flavours of lime and coconut, not
to mention sweet blueberries. I call dips on the big one!
225g self raising flour (1 1/2 cups plus 2 TBS)
1 tsp cream of tartar
1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 TBS caster sugar
50g of chilled butter (3 1/2 TBS, scant 1/4 cup)
the finely grated zest and juice of one lime
75g fresh blueberries (about 1/2 cup)
25g dessicated coconut (scant cup)
3 TBS tinned milk or cream
4 TBS milk
plain flour for dusting
to finish:
1 medium egg yolk beaten with a drop of water
1 TBS dessicated coconut
1 TBS granulated sugar
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. LIne a baking tray with baking paper. Set aside.
Sift
the flour into a bowl along with the cream of tartar, soda and a pinch
of salt. Cut the butter into small cubes and drop it into the flour
mixture. Rub it into the dry ingredients, using your fingertips until
it resembles fine bread crumbs. Stir in the coconut, lime zest and
blueberries.
Whisk together the milks and
juice of the lime. Pour this into the flour mixture and stir with a
round bladed knife just to combine. Tip out onto a lightly floured
surface and knead lightly, just to bring the dough together. Shape
into an 8 inch round about 1 1/2 inch thick. Place onto the baking
tray. Brush the top with the egg yolk. Mix the coconut and sugar for
the finishing together and sprinkle over the top. Using a very sharp
knife, cut into 8 wedges. Gently push apart on the baking sheet,
leaving space between each.
Bake for 14 to 16
minutes until risen and golden brown. Serve warm and split along with
some blueberry jam or lemon curd and cream (If desired) Delicious!
These were the perfect excuse to crack open this new tea from Tetley . . . Biscuit flavoured Tea. I don't drink tea myself, but I did have a good whiff of this and it definitely smelled a lot like a biscuit. Very sweet and vanilla-ee biscuit-ee . . . I have a friend who does drink tea and she had a cup and declared it gorgeous. Who am I to quibble.
Want to enjoy one of life’s simple pleasures of biscuit-tea dunking but without the calorie concerns or biscuit crumbs left floating in your cup? Well look no further. One of the UK’s most famous tea brands is launching the first-ever biscuit flavoured tea. Those clever Tea Folk at Tetley have devised a new brew that not only tastes like your favourite biscuit but it’s also been created to save you having to do any dunking at all.
Well let’s look at the stats!
- The team at Tetley believes that as many as three quarters of their tea drinkers enjoy a biscuit with their brew
- There are 36 million cups of Tetley drunk every day
- So that’s 27 million biscuits dunked per day
- There are 54 calories in the average biscuit
- So without the need for that cheeky biscuit, the new Tetley Biscuit Flavoured Tea provides a saving of 1.4 billion calories
- That’s enough calories to run 561,000 London marathons!
And what if we focus just on the crumbs?
- Based on 36 million cups of Tetley drunk a day and 27 million biscuits a day dunked
- And if the average biscuit is dunked three times and drops 8 crumbs per dunk
- That’s 216 million crumbs saved a day through no dunking
- And if the average crumb is 2 mm big, that’s enough crumbs, if put on top of each other, to reach the height of 50 Mount Everests
- Now that’s lot of crumbs saved from being lost at the bottom of a cup of tea
Surely those stats alone are worth giving up the dunks for?
Tetley Marketing Director, Amy Holdsworth said: "We know that the average Tetley drinker loves dunkin' a nice biscuit in their cuppa. That's why we came up with the idea of combining the two. Who doesn't like their life to be that little bit easier?
Who indeed?
It is no secret . . . my mother makes the best baking powder biscuits in the world! There is no denying it.
Light, flakey and oh so scrummy . . . with soups, with stews, and on their own . . .
Served up warm with butter and honey . . . or some preserves . . . my . . . my . . . my. You just can't beat them!
There's no surprises here. They're really quite simple, nothing too out of the ordinary, but there are a few tricks to the success of them.
First, light handling. Don't be rough with them. A light touch is the secret behind the flakiness . . . too much handiwork and you get a tough biscuit.
If you want straight sided, tall biscuits . . . pat them out fairly thick, 1/2 inch will do and then cut them with a sharp tap down with the biscuit cutter . . . carefully lift the cutter straight up again. Don't twist, or you'll get lopsided.
Oh they'll still taste delicious, but aesthetically speaking . . . straight sided look oh so much better.
Yep . . . my mom does make the best baking powder biscuits in the world . . . and now you can too!
*Mom's Baking Powder Biscuits*
Makes about 36
Printable Recipe
My mom makes the best baking powder biscuits in the world. Now you can too.
17 ounces plain flour (4 cups)
8 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
2 TBS granulated sugar
8 ounces white shortening (1 cup)
2 large free range eggs
12 fluid ounces milk (1 1/2 cups)
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. You will need several large baking sheets. No need to grease them.
Whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt and sugar in a bowl. Drop in the shortening and cut it in with two round bladed knives or a pastry blender until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Beat together the milk and eggs until well combined. Add to the dry mixture and stir with a fork until you have a soft dough. You may not need all the liquid. Turn out onto a lightly floured board and knead a few times. Pat out to 1/2 inch thickness. Cut out with a sharp 2 inch round cutter, giving the cutter a sharp tap straight down and up without twisting. (Twisting will give you lop sided biscuits.) Place onto the baking sheets, leaving some space in between the biscuits for crispy all around biscuits, or close together for soft sided biscuits.
Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until well risen and browned. Serve warm. Any leftovers can be stored in an airtight container and reheated in the microwave for a few seconds. These also freeze really well.
I confess to being rather lazy at times. That's why I just love strips cookies. You know the kind I mean? You shape them into two flat logs on a baking sheet, create a dip in the middle and then fill that dip with something scrummy and bake.
The magic happens when you take them out of the oven and slice them into diagonals . . . what once was two becomes two dozen. Bingo! No fuss. No muss. It's as simple as cutting them with a knife. Quick as a wink.
I just adore this chocolate and cherry version . . . with it's rich chocolate dough and it's sweet Morello Cherry Jam filling. So delicious! I just adore jam . . . especially if it is in, on or around biscuits and cakes. tarts . . . toast, scones . . . I just adore jam full stop.
These have the added scrumminess of a white chocolate drizzle over top. Soooo good. Love, Love, LOVE white chocolate too!
Altogether, these were quite scrumptious. I hope you will give them a try. Resistance is futile. You will fall in love. I promise.
*Chocolate and Cherry Diagonals*
Makes 4 dozen
Printable Recipe
Scrummy chocolate cookies, stogged full of chocolate chips, cherry preserves and a drizzle of white chocolate. Very quick and easy to make!
280g plain flour (2 cups)
2 ounces unsweetened cocoa powder (not drink mix) (1/2 cup), sifted
1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1/4 tsp salt
150g of caster sugar (3/4 cup)
85g of soft light brown sugar (1/2 cup packed)
6 ounces butter, softened (3/4 cup)
2 large free range eggs
12 ounces semi sweet chocolate chips (2 cups)
about 6 TBS Morello cherry preserves
To drizzle:
4 ounces white chocolate, cut into bits
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Line two large baking sheets with baking parchent. Butter the parchment lightly. Set aside.
Cream together the butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time. Sift together the flour, salt, cocoa powder, and soda. Stir this into the creamed mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips.
Shape the dough into 4 (12 inch) long logs on the baking sheets, leaving lots of space in between them for spreading. Using your thumb, make a shallow trough down the middle of each. Spoon the cherry preserves into the troughs.
Bake for 14 to 18 minutes in the heated oven, until a toothpick inserted in the centre of one of the logs comes out clean.
Remove the baking sheets to a wire rack to cool completely.
Carefully melt the white chocolate in a bowl over simmering water. (Don't allow the water to touch the bottom of the bowl, not to get into the chocolate or it will seize.) Drizzle this over the cooked cookie logs. Allow to set completely before proceeding.
Once completely cooled and the white chocolate has set, cut the logs diagonally into 1 inch wide strips. Store in an airtight container.
I like to really pull out the stops at the weekend when it comes to Saturday morning breakfast and I could hardly wait to show you what I did last Saturday.

And not just any bacon either . . . some lovely dry cured organic smoked and meaty back bacon. Of course you can use regular streaky bacon as well.

I had picked up some really nice looking Italian cherry tomatoes on the vine at the store and so I took the opportunity to roast a few strings of them in the oven with a bit of olive oil, salt and black pepper.
If you are looking for some other Irish Bakes on here might I suggest:
IRISH SODA BREAD MUFFINS - Small individual soda breads baked in a muffin tin. Loaded with plenty of dried currants and caraway seed. These are fabulously easy to make a incredibly tasty! Again, quick and easy to make, bake and eat!
Like everything else though, it had to wait it's turn in the queue.
I had baked a pan of really tasty looking soda farls and when I saw how brilliantly they turned out I just had to have one for breakfast. If you are talking a Saturday breakfast, you are talking something special!!
I turned one into a couple of tasty breakfast sandwiches for myself, with the leftovers to freeze and have at a later time with some soup or stew or some such . . . or maybe even more tasty Breakfast Sandwiches!!
A Soda Farl is a type of Irish quick bread, or soda bread, made with soda and buttermilk, and no yeast. They are typically most often baked on a griddle or a stone, but these were baked in the oven.
These ones are stogged full of lots of strong cheddar and black pepper, for some nice sharp flavors, that go really well with things like eggs . . . and bacon . . .
And not just any bacon either . . . some lovely dry cured organic smoked and meaty back bacon. Of course you can use regular streaky bacon as well.
Just make sure it's a good quality one and meaty. I like dry cured because 'tis not pumped full of water and nasties.
Cheese and Bacon are a marriage made in the heavens don't you think?? I know! Soooo scrummy! They say everything tastes better with bacon, and I do believe that to be true.
I have never had a combination of bacon and anything else yet that I did not fall in love with. ☺
I had picked up some really nice looking Italian cherry tomatoes on the vine at the store and so I took the opportunity to roast a few strings of them in the oven with a bit of olive oil, salt and black pepper.
Soooo good with the eggs, bacon and those tasty farls. You need to run out before this weekend and get yourself the ingredients to make some of these for your family. Seriously!
If you are looking for some other Irish Bakes on here might I suggest:
IRISH COFFEE CAKE SCONES - Tasty fruited buttermilk scones, topped with a brown sugar, spicy, streusel crumble. What's not to love about these!
IRISH SODA BREAD MUFFINS - Small individual soda breads baked in a muffin tin. Loaded with plenty of dried currants and caraway seed. These are fabulously easy to make a incredibly tasty! Again, quick and easy to make, bake and eat!
Yield: 8
Author: Marie Rayner
Cheddar and Pepper Breakfast Farls
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 25 MinTotal time: 35 Min
Delicious soda farls stogged with cheese and black pepper. Split, spread with butter and filled with crispy bacon and fried eggs, with some grilled tomatoes on the side.
Ingredients
For the Farls:
- 450g self rising flour, plus extra to dust the surface (3 1/4 cups)
- 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1 tsp English Mustard powder, sieved
- 2 tsp yellow mustard seeds, lightly crushed
- 150g of strong cheddar cheese, finely grated (1 1/4 cups)
- 280ml of butter milk (1 cup plus 3 TBS) mixed with 90ml whole milk (generous 6 TBS)
- fine seal salt to taste
- 1 tsp coarsely cracked black pepper
Ingredients to make 4 sandwiches:
- 4 strings of cherry tomatoes on the vine
- a bit of olive oil
- 12 rashers of dry cured, smoked streaky bacon, or 8 slices of
- dry cured smoked back bacon
- 4 large free range eggs
- sunflower oil for shallow frying
- softened butter for spreading
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Lightly flour a nonstick baking sheet. Set aside.
- Sift the flour, soda, 1 tsp of salt and the mustard powder into a bowl. Stir in the mustard seeds, cracked pepper and cheese. Make a well in the center. Add the milk and buttermilk all at once. Mix together into a soft and slightly sticky dough.
- Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and quickly shape into an 8 1/2 inch circle. Carefully place on the prepared baking sheet. Using a sharp knife cut into 8 wedges, and then separate them slightly on the baking tray to give them enough room to rise and spread. Sprinkle with a bit more flour and then bake for 20 minutes until well risen and golden brown.
- While the farls are cooking, place the cherry tomatoes into a small roasting tin. Drizzle with some olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt and black pepper. After the farls have cooked for 10 minutes add the tomatoes and roast them alongside for the remaining 10 minutes.
- Grill the bacon until it is crisp and golden and fry your eggs in a bit of sunflower oil until done to your liking. Remove the farls from the oven. Split one per person in half and butter. Place them onto warmed plates and fill with the bacon and eggs, placing a spring of tomatoes along side. Serve immediately and pass the remaining farls at the table. (They're awfully good with some butter and strawberry jam, I do admit!)
Did you make this recipe?
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Happy Valentines Day to all you lovers out there. I thought it would be fun to show you what my Valentines menu will be for today. Yes, I do like to spoil my honey on this special day of the year. There are those who would rather be taken out for a meal, but I am not one of them. Nothing beats anything I can cook for myself, seriously. I am not being bold in saying that. I am not able to afford to go to a really good restaurant, so I make do at home and in all truth we have a much nicer meal than we could buy out. We would rather spend any extra cash on going to a film or something like that.
So here you go . . . my Valentines Menu for February 14th, 2014.
Breakfast will be Sweetheart's French Vanilla Eggy Bread. Heart shaped French Toast, served with crisp bacon and real Maple syrup. I don't think he will complain!
*Sweetheart's French Vanilla Eggy Bread*
Serves 4
This
is a real favourite for kids and lovers and friends . . . You can leave
the slices of bread whole if you wish, but I like to cut out heart
shapes for special loved ones. Served in bed on a tray it's a really
wonderful way to show someone that you truly care.
3 large eggs, beaten
1/2 cup cream
1/4 cup caster sugar
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla paste
8 slices of good quality firm white bread
a couple of knobs of unsalted butter as needed
Icing sugar to dust
Syrup to serve
Beat
the eggs, milk, sugar, cinnamon and vanilla paste together in a large
shallow bowl. If you are cutting the bread into shapes do it now.
Heat
a large skillet with a heavy bottom over medium high heat. Add a knob
of butter and let it melt until it begins to foam. Then reduce the heat
to medium. You do not want the butter to burn.
Dip
the slices or pieces of bread into the egg mixture coating both sides,
and allowing it to soak in a bit. (Not too much or it will be hard to
lift without tearing) Place the soaked bread into the heated skillet.
Cook until golden brown on each side, only turning once. Remove and keep
warm on a plate in a slow oven until you are finished browning each
piece.
Serve
hot on heated plates with a light dusting of icing sugar and some syrup
on the side for pouring. A few rashers of streaky bacon are also good
"go withs".
It will probably be near noon by the time he finishes this so I doubt I will make him any lunch, but I will have something on hand that he can use to hold away the hunger pangs until dinner is served. I think some of these tasty Ginger Scones will go down a real treat. I know that they are a particular favourite with him, and with me as they are quick and easy to make, and we both love ginger.
*Gingerbread Scones with a Lemon Glaze*
Makes about 16
Printable RecipeDelicious scones, with a tender crumb, and a bit of a snap! The raisins are optional. So is the chopped candied ginger on top. Fabulous!
1 ounce butter, softened
55g of soft light brown sugar (1/4 cup, firmly packed)
1 large free range egg yolk
375g self raising flour (2 1/2 cups)
3 tsp ground ginger
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground cloves
250ml of buttermilk (1 cup)
2 TBS treacle or golden syrup (can use molasses)
a handful of raisins (optional)
Additional buttermilk for tops
For the Lemon Glaze:
160g icing sugar, sifted (1 cup)
1/2 ounce of butter, melted
1 TBS fresh lemon juice (more if needed)
To decorate some chopped candied ginger or lemon zest(optional)
Preheat the oven to 220*C.425*F/ gas mark 7. Butter a 9 inch square cake tin. Set aside.
Cream together the butter, brown sugar and egg yolk until light and fluffy, in a large bowl. Sift the dry ingredients together. Mix together the buttermilk and the syrup. Add the dry ingredients to the creamed ,mixture along with the buttermilk mixture. Use a knife to cut the buttermilk mixture through the flour to make a soft and sticky dough. (If using raisins add them now.) Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead lightly until smooth. Pat out into a 3/4 inch thick round. Cut with a sharp round 2 inch cutter, tapping straight down and up. Place the rounds into the baking pan, just barely touching. Gently knead the scraps and repeat until all are used. Brush the scones with some additonal buttermilk.
Bake for about 20 minutes, until risen and golden brown. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 10 minutes before proceeding.
Whisk together the ingredients for the lemon glaze until you have a smooth drizzable icing. You may need more lemon juice to give you the right consistency. Spoon this glaze over the warm scones and decorate the tops with some candied ginger or lemon zest.
These scones are best made on the day of serving, although they can be frozen for up to 3 months, unglazed. Thaw in an oven, wrapped in foil, before glazing.
A romantic Dinner for Two in the early evening prior to show time. These are my picks for the main and for dessert. Since the main is a couple of nice steaks, I will be serving some salad and a baked potato on the side. But first up a delicious soup . . .
This cauliflower soup is a real favourite of the Toddsters. The simple garnish of sauteed mushrooms and chopped chives makes it look really elegant.
*Creamy Cauliflower Soup with Sauteed Mushrooms*
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
A deliciously rich and creamy soup topped with a beautiful garnish of sliced mushrooms sauteed until golden brown.
1 large cauliflower, about 3 pounds, trimmed and chopped
1 large potato, peeled and chopped
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
fine seasalt and ground white pepper
2 TBS butter
4 TBS olive oil
1 1/4 litre of chicken stock (5 cups)
600ml of full fat milk (2 1/2 cups)
142ml carton of double cream (a very generous 1/2 cup)
250g chestnut mushrooms, cleaned and sliced (about 1 pound)
freshly ground black pepper
1 to 2 TBS chopped fresh chives
Heat the butter and half of the oil in a large saucepan. Add the cauliflower, potato and onions. Stir to coat then reduce the heat to low and cover. Allow to sweat for about 10 minutes, stirring every couple of minutes or so to prevent them from catching and colouring. Pour in the stock and bring it up to the boil. Add the milk and gently return to the boil, then immediately reduce the heat to low and simmer, uncovered for a firtjer 10 to 15 minutes, until the vegetables are very soft. Add the cream. Blitz with a stick blender until smooth. Season to taste with salt and ground white pepper. Keep warm.
Heat the remaining oil in a large skillet, until very hot. Add the mushrooms and flash fry until golden brown. Season with some salt and black pepper to taste.
Ladle the hot soup into heated soup bowls. Top each with some of the fried mushrooms and a sprinkle of chives. Delicious!
I will cook my steaks according to my most excellent instructions which you can find here. This is what works for me. We like our steaks medium rare. I think it is a sin to cook any steak worth grilling to well done. In my honest opinion . . . you are ruining it,but to each their own.
I love this stilton butter on steaks. It's simple to make and yet it melts over the steaks in a delicious sauce that everyone loves. Steak and stilton are a marriage made in heaven to be sure . . .
*Stilton Butter*
Makes 8 servings
Printable Recipe
This is excellent shaped into logs, chilled and then sliced and serve atop hot grilled steaks!
3 1/2 ounces butter (scant 1/2 cup) at room temp
6 ounces Stilton cheese (11 1/2 TBS), at room temp
4 TBS finely chopped flat leaf parsley
3 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed (can use less if you prefer not so strong a flavour)
coarse sea salt to taste
freshly ground black pepper to taste
Place all of the ingredients with the exception of the seasoning into a bowl and mash together until well combined. I like to use a fork for this. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Shape into a log and wrap in wax paper or plastic cling film, twisting the ends to secure. Chill for at least an hour before use. Can also be frozen. Because of the fresh parsley and garlic you cannot keep this much longer than a few days. Alternately you can use freeze dried parsley and leave out the garlic.
The Toddster is a great lover of old fashioned puddings. He's not one to drool over a stylish pannacotta or chocolate mousse! He hates chocolate desserts. I always cave quite happily to his desires though, as I love a good old fashioned pudding as well. In this case a delicious Gingered Raspberry and Pear Cobbler. Served up with lashings of custard . . . it's Valentines, why not splurge! (Note, you can easily cut the recipe in half)
*Gingered Raspberry & Pear Cobbler*
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
A delicious combination that will have them coming back for seconds!
1 TBS butter to butter the pan
For the filling:
95g granulated sugar (1/2 cup)
2 TBS plus 1 tsp cornflour
pinch of fine seasalt
4 large pears, peeled, cored and sliced
1 TBS fresh lemon juice
1/2 pound fresh or frozen raspberries (2 cups)
1 TBS cold butter, cut into small bits
For the topping:
245g of plain flour (1 3/4 cup)
4 TBS granulated sugar, divided
3/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp fine seasalt
10 TBS cold butter, cut into small bits (5 ounces)
2 ounces candied ginger, chopped (1/3 cup)
165ml plus 1 TBS cold buttermilk, divided (5.5 fluid ounces plus 1 TBS)
To serve:
Pouring Cream, Custard or Vanilla Bean Ice cream
First make the topping. Whisk the flour, 3 TBS of the sugar, the baking powder and salt together in a bowl. Add the butter, and toss to eavenly coat. Use your fingertips to rub the butter into the flour until you get crumbs the size of peas. Stir in the candied ginger, then pour in the 5.5 fluid ounces of buttermilk, stirring just until the dry ingredients are moistened. The dough should be crumbly with visible pieces of butter. Set aside.
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Butter a 9 inch deep dish pie pan. Set aside.
Rub the sugar, cornflour and salt (for the filling) together in a large bowl. Add the pears and lemon juice. Toss until evenly coated. Gently fold in the raspberries. Transfer to the prepared pan. Dot with the 1 TBS of butter.
Turn the dough for the topping out onto a lightly floured surface. Gently press together into a 9 inch circle. Place carefully on top of the fruit. Brush with the 1 TBS of buttermilk and sprinkle with the remaining 1 TBS of sugar.
Bake in the bottom third of the oven for 30 minutes. Turn the oven down to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. and bake for an additional 20 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown and the juices are bubbly and thick. Allow to cool for half an hour before serving. Serve with pouring cream, custard or ice cream. Delicious!
I think that after all that spoiling, the Toddster will be a very happy man and in all truth, when he's happy I am happy too!
Happy Valentines Day to you all!
I am feeling a tiny bit under the weather today so I hope that you don't mind a repost from about 2 1/2 years ago now. Nobody minds an impromptu tea party do they?
I thought not . . . so here we go. And then we had tea . . .
These cold dismal and dreary January days can get one a bit down after a while. Day after day of drizzle or snow . . . very little sun . . . blah, blah, blah.
Here's one way to perk them up and bring a bit of sunshine into your life! Have a tea party! You don't need anything special . . . or even to invite a whole bunch of people over. Some of the best tea parties of all happen when there's just two of you and a dog!
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.
The perfect afternoon tea should begin with some delicious savouries . . . finger sandwiches, sausage rolls, little toasts, savoury pastries . . . followed with scones (if you wish) and a selection of fancies and cakes.
I decided early on during this particularly dreary day that I was going to treat Todd and I to a traditional English Afternoon tea party. He had no idea what I was up to, as he sat upstairs engrossed in his war games on the computer.
Things don't always go to plan though . . . do they. The dog mischeviously ate half of my first Victoria Sponge when my back was turned. Bad doggie. I seized the engine on my new baby sized food processor, chopping the glace fruit for the florentines. Bad idea. Chop it by hand.
Never mind we got there in the end and Todd was so surprised when I called him down to lunch and he saw what I had been up to.
We sat there smiling and sipping and nibbling . . . all was right with the world, drizzle or not, dog eaten cakes . . . it was fun, plain and simple.
Don't forget to use your pinkies!
*Finger Sandwiches*
makes 18 to 24
Printable Recipe
What would afternoon tea be without a plate of tasty sandwiches? (Choose 3 of the below fillings)
12 thin slices of white or wholemeal bread, crusts removed
(I just buy the bread that already has the crusts removed,
easy peasy, lemon squeasy)
room temperature butter, for spreading
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper as desired
For the egg and cress filling:
2 TBS good quality mayonnaise
1/2 tsp finely grated lemon zest from an unwaxed lemon
2 hard boiled eggs, peeled and chopped
a handful of mustard cress
For the Gentleman's Morsels:
1/4 pound shaved roasted ham
apricot jam, seived
Dijon mustard
For the Roast Beef:
1/4 pound thinly sliced rare roast beef
horseradish mayonnaise
a handful of rocket leaves
For the Parma Ham and Fig filling:
1/4 pound of parma ham
1 ripe fig
1/2 tsp balsamic vinegar
1/2 tsp olive oil
handful of rocket leaves
For the Stilton and Pear filling:
50g of Stilton cheese, thinly sliced (1/4 pound)
1 ripe firm pear
To cut sandwiches, lay your hand on top of the sandwich and lightly press down. Using a serrated knife and a gentle sawing motion, cut diagonally into quarters or lengthways into 3 fingers.
For the egg and cress sandwiches, thinly butter 4 slices of the bread. Combine the mayonnaise, lemon zest, egg and season with some black pepper, folding together well. Spread evenly on half the slices of bread. Sprinkle with the cress and top with the remaining 2 slices of bread. Cut as above.
To make the Gentlemen's Morsels., thinly butter 4 slices of the bread. Spread 2 slices with seived apricot jam. Spread the other 2 with Dijon mustard. Lay the ham evenly over top of 2 slices and top with the other 2. Cut as above.
For the Roast Beef, thinly butter 4 slices of the bread. Spread 2 slices with the horseradish mayonnaise. Top with the roast beef and season to taste. Sprinkle with the rocket and top with the other 2 slices of bread. Cut as above.
For the Parma Ham and Fig sandwiches, thinly butter 4 slices of bread and fold ham on top of two of them. Cut the fig into thin wedges, remove and discard the skin and then arrange the wedges on top of the ham. Whisk the vinegar and oil together. Season with a bit of salt and pepper. Drizzle over the figs. Top with rocket and the remaining slices of buttered bread and cut as above.
To make the Stilton and Pear sandwiches, thinly butter 4 slices of bread. Arrange the stilton over 2 slices of the bread. Slice the pear into thin wedges, removing and discarding the core, then arrange on top of the cheese. Season with black pepper, then top with the remaining slices of bread and cut as above.
*Dark and White Chocolate Florentines*
Makes about 24
Printable Recipe
Sticky, crisp, chewy, gooey. Moreishly addictive.
50g of butter (3 1/2 TBS)
50g of caster sugar (2 TBS)
3 TBS double cream
25g of flaked almonds (1/4 cup)
75g of mixed nuts, chopped (Pistachios, walnuts, hazelnuts, etc.) 3/4 cup
4 glace cherries, chopped
50g of mixed glace fruits (apricots, pineapple, peel, angelica) chopped (1/3 cup)
25g of plain flour (1 heaped TBS)
50g of white chocolate
(2 ounces)
50g of dark chocolate
(2 ounces)
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ Gas mark 4. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Set aside.
Gently heat the butter, sugar and cream together until the butter melts. Bring to the boil and then remove from the heat. Stir in the nuts, cherries, fruit and flour. Mix thoroughly. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing them well apart.
Bake for 10 minutes, until golden. Remove from the oven and gently press back the edges with a rounded knife to keep a round shape. Allow to cool on the baking sheets for 10 minutes before carefully peeling off the paper and setting on a wire rack to cool completely.
Break the white and dark chocolates into individual bowls. Melt carefully in the microwave without over-heating. (Be careful as white chocolate burns easily.) Alternatively melt in bowls over simmering water. Spread over the bottoms of the florentines, coating half with white and half with dark. Let set before serving.
Ohhh . . . doesn't she have a longing and innocent look on her face? I think half a cake is more than enough don't you?
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