Showing posts sorted by relevance for query sandwich. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query sandwich. Sort by date Show all posts
Today is the day I turn 63. However did that happen? Wasn't I just 16 a few days ago? I don't know how it happened, but it has and there is no lamenting it.
I am 63. This is the cake I make myself every year for my Birthday. Raspberry Celebration cake. It makes the aging go down a tiny bit easier.

Every year I say I'm not going to bake myself a cake . . . but then, I beak down and baked one anyway. I have lots of things to celebrate after all.

My Birthday (of course!) for one. I reckon every year after fifty five is a milestone. (Even if the Queen doesn't send me a card.)

A clean bill of health from my Doctor! (Blood Glucose levels 4.1, blood pressure 120/78, Iron Levels normal.) It's all good. Yes, I do need to lose weight, but . . . one thing at a time!

And the anniversary of the arrival of a furry little bundle of joy named Mitzie. (Eight years today!)
Life is good and so is this cake. A deliciously buttery sponge, filled with fresh raspberries and baked into two moist layers.
Sandwiched together with a lovely vanilla butter cream icing and some seedless raspberry jam, and then drizzled with more sweetness. This is one very moreishly scrummy cake.

It won't help my sugar levels, but I reckon one thin slice won't hurt and we will be having a houseful of missionaries over later today to polish off the rest!

shhh . . . don't burst my bubble!
*Raspberry Celebration Cake*
Cuts into 12 scrummy slices
Printable Recipe
This is the cake I always bake for summer birthdays. A light moist sponge, filled with lovely raspberries, butter cream icing and seedless raspberry preserves. Top with a sweet glaze and serve with more raspberries.
For the Cake:
175g of caster sugar (3/4 plus 1/8 cup)
175g of butter, softened (13 TBS)
4 large free range eggs, separated
100g self raising flour (a scant 3/4 cup)
1 tsp baking powder
100g ground almonds (1 scan't cup)
a few drops of almond extract
125g of fresh raspberries (a heaped cup)
For the buttercream:
75g of butter, softened (1/4 cup approx.)
125g icing sugar, sifted (about 3/4 cup)
few drops vanilla
For the glaze:
100ml icing sugar sifted (1/3 cup approx.)
water to thin
Also about 4 heaped dessertspoons of seedless raspberry jam
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/Gas mark 4. Butter two 8 inch sandwich cake tins. Line the bottoms with parchment paper. Set aside.
Cream together the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Beat in the egg yolks. Sift the flour and baking powder over the creamed mixture and then fold in using a metal spoon. Fold in the ground almonds and exract. Fold only until all traces of the flour have disappeared.
Beat the egg whites until they just hold their shape. Fold them in gently, by thirds, being careful not to overmix and lose the lightness of the whites. Lightly fold in the berries. Divide between the two prepared cake tins and level off carefully.
Bake in the heated oven for 30 to 35 minutes, just until they test done. A toothpick inserted in the centre should come out clean and they should spring back when lightly touched on top.
Remove from the oven. Let cool in the tins for five minutes, then tip out onto wire racks, peel off the baking paper and allow to cool completely.
Make the buttercream by beating together all the ingredients until smooth and creamy.
Place one cake, bottom side up on a cake plate. Spread completely with all the buttercream. Spread the raspberry jam over top of the buttercream and then top with the other cake layer, placing it right side up. Whisk together the icing sugar for the glaze and enough water to make a smooth drizzable mixture. Drizzle decoratively over the top of the cake. Allow to set, then dust with more icng sugar if desired.
Bon Appetit!
I think the British love sandwiches more than anyone else in the world. Walk into any shop, and I do mean any . . . and you are sure to find a variety of them, ready made, wrapped and for sale to anyone who feels in the need for some potable and portable sustenance of the this kind. AND, they come in varities which are suitable for any meal of the day . . . breakfast, lunch, dinner or snack!
I recently treated myself to Nigel Slater's latest cookbook, eat. You all know how I love Nigel and his way of cooking and eating. That man could make anything look and sound tasty and he is the master as creating delicious and fast food out of just about anything you can get your hands on. He has one whole chapter in this book devoted to sandwiches and the like. My kind of guy. My kind of cooking.
One in particular intrigued me and set my tastebuds to tingling. This was a sandwich he created using crusty bread, beef drippings and leftover roast from the sunday dinner. Reading about it . . . made me want one, and reading about it . . . inspired me to create my own version. I got to thinking hash . . . roast beef hash . . . in a bun.
And so that is what I did. I made some hash using chopped potatoes, chopped onions, chopped cabbage and some of the leftover roast from yesterday's pot roast. I seasoned it lightly with some salt and cracked black pepper . . .
Added a touch of herb . . . in the way of summer savoury, and a hint of snap by using some Worcestershire Sauce and a dash of brown sauce. (steak sauce to you North Americans) I cooked that all together until the potatoes and onions and cabbage were gilded with little caramelized edges, all golden brown and sweet . . . and the meat was falling apart once more . . .
And then I stogged it between two halves of a crisp warm ciabatta roll . . . the bottom spread with just a touch of creamed horseradish sauce . . . a slice of Leerdammer Toastie cheese layed on top of the hot hash, so it melted down into all those gilded crevices, and topped by that crisp roll-top . . . all that goodness tucked into a tasty and lightly crisped ciabatta suitcase and just waiting for me to tuck in . . .
Good things happen when Nigel inspires me. Tasty things. Things I want to indluge in again, and again . . . and again. I am never disappointed.
*Roast Beef Hash Buns*
Serves 4a handful of chopped cabbage
1 small clove of garlic, peeled and minced
2 TBS hot beef stock or water
an amount of leftover cooked roast, cubes (an equal to the amount of potatoes)
1 TBS vegetable oilTo serve, slice each ciabatta roll in half. Spread the bottoms with some horseradish sauce (if desired) and then pile an equal amount of the hot hash on top. Top each with a slice of toastie cheese and then the top of the rolls. Serve immediately. Pass the brown sauce or ketchup if desired.
(A Simple Butter Cake)
From time to time readers ask me why their cake sank in the middle when baking. They always say something along the lines of: "I followed the recipe perfectly, but it still sank. What did I do?!" While it's impossible for me to know exactly what happened in any specific occasion without my actually being there, and I can't pretend to be an expert baker myself, these are the top 5 things you should look out for which may help to keep your cake from sinking the next time you bake:
1. Old Baking Powder: Baking powder may only account for a tiny percentage of your entire cake ingredients, but it can ruin the whole thing if you're not careful! Remember that baking powder only stays fresh for about 6 months to a year, so date them when you buy them, and toss and replace any containers that have been hanging around too long.
Not sure if yours is still good? Take 5 seconds to test it before you start baking by placing a teaspoon of baking powder in about a 1/2 cup of hot water. If still good, it should start to bubble rapidly. If nothing (or barely nothing) happens, it's time to head to the store.
2. Too Much Leavening: As counter-intuitive as it might sound, adding too much baking powder, baking soda, or yeast to a cake will cause it to sink as the amount of air that is created within the cake will be more than the structure can support and the whole thing will come crashing down.
Never add additional baking powder or other leaveners to self-raising flour or cake mixes (they already have it mixed in), and always be sure to read a recipe clearly and measure carefully.
When in doubt, remember that the average ratio for baking powder to flour is 1 to 1.5 teaspoons per cup of AP flour; so if you read a recipe that calls for something way above that, it's probably an error.
3. Overbeating: this is probably one of the most common reasons why cakes sink. I'm not sure what it is, but we all seem to have a natural tendency towards overbeating cake batter until it is smooth and creamy. This is even easier to do when we rely on the trusty old Kitchen Aid or food processor to do our mixing for us. But beating in too much air into the batter once the dry and wet ingredients are combined will only cause the batter sink.
Go ahead and work the air in when creaming the butter, sugar, and eggs, but as soon as you add the flour mixture, remember that it's ALL about the light hand. Fold the dry ingredients through the wet only until they are just combined, then delicately divide and pour into your cake pans. If adding anything at the end (food coloring, chocolate chips, nuts, etc.), continue to work the addition through the batter as gently as possible in a flowing folding motion.
4. Oven Temperature: an oven that isn't properly calibrated and runs either too hot or too cold, could easily make for a falling cake. If possible, spring for an external oven thermometer (you can find them in the $15-$30 range at stores like Bed, Bath, and Beyond) to make sure that when it says 350 on the dial, it's really 350 inside the oven.
Also, don't be tempted to peek inside that oven for at least the first 80% of the suggested baking time. Remember that each time you open the oven door, the temperature inside can drop as many as 10 degrees. These tiny fluctuations in temperature can affect the even rising of the cake.
5. Timing: Unless a recipe specifically calls for it, don't let a finished batter sit for very long before baking. 20-25 minutes while the first batch bakes is fine; a few hours while you run out to pick up the kids and finish some errands is not. I always strive to have my cakes in the oven as soon as I have finished mixing them, unless of course I have been otherwise instructed in a recipe.
Remember that the minute the wet and dry ingredients meet, a chemical reaction starts to take place (like those baking soda volcanoes we all made in 7th grade science class). To get a light, fluffy, and beautifully raised cake, you want that chemical reaction to take place inside the oven as the cake bakes so that the air that is created gets sealed into the baking cake. If your batter is sitting on the counter or on the fridge, the air created inside will just escape into the room, and come time for baking, there will be less to lift the cake up.
(Irish Apple Cake)
And... a few bonus tips!
Preheating IS important. Depending on your oven, it can take as long as 30 minutes for it to reach the optimal baking temperature. Always be sure to do that first before getting on with your recipe or you'll end up with an uneven, lumpy cake.
Baking Powder and Baking Soda are NOT interchangeable. Though baking powder contains baking soda, it also has other components that act as a catalyst for all that good air-creating cake-rising action, and is used in recipes that don't have acidic elements. Baking soda usually works along with an acid (lemon juice, buttermilk, yogurt, chocolate, etc.). Some recipes call for both, but that doesn't mean that you can skip one or the other; if it calls for both, be sure to use both.
(A Lemon and Pistachio Cake)
Center your oven rack. Unless otherwise told, position your oven rack in the center and place the cake pans right in the middle of the rack. If baking two cake layers at once, place them on the same rack side-by-side; don't put one on top of the other; they won't bake evenly that way.
As much as possible have all your ingredients at room temperature. I know it is very tempting to want to be in a rush and to think that it can't possibly hurt if all of your ingredients are at different temps. When it comes to the science of baking however, this variance in temperature between ingredients can make a really big difference when it comes to the end result. Bake a cake with frigid butter and eggs and you may end up with something resembling a pancake. That’s why some recipes call for “room temperature” ingredients, a frustratingly general concept, especially from a scientific point of view. Baking with room temperature butter helps to create "fluffiness." Too warm or too cold butter can result in either too few air bubbles, or air bubbles with don't hold their shape and flatten quickly.
Eggs are also crucial in giving loft to baked goods. The white of the egg is 90 percent water and 10 percent protein; when you beat an egg, it’s the protein that traps the air bubbles, and when incorporated into baked goods, these bubbles expand in the heat of the oven. Egg whites can be whipped up to eight times their volume, but this maximum air-trapping happens only when the eggs are warm; in warm eggs, the whites and yolks are looser, so it’s easier to incorporate air into them (which is the whole point).
Warmer eggs are also better when you’re mixing batter for cakes and cookies, because if you introduce cold eggs to a warmer butter-sugar mixture, the fat in the butter could harden. That would impede integration of the butter and eggs, which is why you’re creaming them to begin with.
But you do want your eggs to be cold if you need to separate the whites and yolks. Cold eggs are easier to separate, so if your recipe calls for the yolks and whites to be separated, do it before warming the eggs.
So now that I have told you all that I can about the science of baking and shared all of my wisdom in great cake bakery, I think it's only fair that I share my absolute favourite cake recipe with you.
It's a deliciously buttery sponge, filled with fresh raspberries and baked into two moist layers. Sandwiched together with a lovely vanilla butter cream icing and some seedless raspberry jam, and then drizzled with more sweetness. This is one very moreishly scrummy cake.
*Raspberry Celebration Cake*
Cuts into 12 scrummy slices
Printable Recipe
This is the cake I always bake for summer birthdays. A light moist sponge, filled with lovely raspberries, butter cream icing and seedless raspberry preserves. Top with a sweet glaze and serve with more raspberries.
For the Cake:
175g of caster sugar (3/4 plus 1/8 cup)
175g of butter, softened (13 TBS)
4 large free range eggs, separated
100g self raising flour (a scant 3/4 cup)
1 tsp baking powder
100g ground almonds (1 scan't cup)
a few drops of almond extract
125g of fresh raspberries (a heaped cup)
For the buttercream:
75g of butter, softened (1/4 cup approx.)
125g icing sugar, sifted (about 3/4 cup)
few drops vanilla
For the glaze:
100ml icing sugar sifted (1/3 cup approx.)
water to thin
Also about 4 heaped dessertspoons of seedless raspberry jam
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/Gas mark 4. Butter two 8 inch sandwich cake tins. Line the bottoms with parchment paper. Set aside.
Cream together the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Beat in the egg yolks. Sift the flour and baking powder over the creamed mixture and then fold in using a metal spoon. Fold in the ground almonds and exract. Fold only until all traces of the flour have disappeared.
Beat the egg whites until they just hold their shape. Fold them in gently, by thirds, being careful not to overmix and lose the lightness of the whites. Lightly fold in the berries. Divide between the two prepared cake tins and level off carefully.
Bake in the heated oven for 30 to 35 minutes, just until they test done. A toothpick inserted in the centre should come out clean and they should spring back when lightly touched on top.
Remove from the oven. Let cool in the tins for five minutes, then tip out onto wire racks, peel off the baking paper and allow to cool completely.
Make the buttercream by beating together all the ingredients until smooth and creamy.
Place one cake, bottom side up on a cake plate. Spread completely with all the buttercream. Spread the raspberry jam over top of the buttercream and then top with the other cake layer, placing it right side up. Whisk together the icing sugar for the glaze and enough water to make a smooth drizzable mixture. Drizzle decoratively over the top of the cake. Allow to set, then dust with more icing sugar if desired.
Have a great weekend!
Every year I say I am going to be better prepared when the Holiday season rolls around, but every year it seems to creep up on me! I don't know how that happens, but it does and I am sure I am not alone.
But, oh, it is my very favorite time of the year. I love all of the decorations and music, movies, cards, etc. I especially love the food. The holidays give us the perfect excuse to pull out all the stops and celebrated with special tastes and flavors!
Quite often it is a great opportunity for us also to try something new. I saw this recipe for Cranberry Jalapeno Salsa first on the Gooseberry Patch page several weeks ago. I knew as soon as I saw it that it was something I wanted to try.
Not only was it bright and colorful, but the flavors seemed to be very seasonal and celebratory. It was also quick and easy to make. I don't know about you, but this time of year quick and easy is something I often look for, especially when it comes to appetizers or nibbles!
I also want them to be fun and delicious, and this recipe is all of that in spades. Quick, easy, delicious and fun, Fun, FUN!
It is attributed to Bonnie Waters from Bloomington, IN
When I cooked at the Manor and they were entertaining, I was always looking for new nibbles to serve with drinks prior to the dinner parties. Something fresh and exciting, and hopefully not too much work.
Something I could make up ahead of time. This would have been perfect, and there are so many different ways that you can dress it up!
WHAT DO YOU NEED TO MAKE CRANBERRY JALAPENO SALSA
Trust me when I say these are very simple ingredients that are available to most of us! Another thing I love about this is that it doesn't take a ton of ingredients.
- 1 (14 oz/400g) tin of whole-berry cranberry sauce
- 1 fresh jalapeno pepper
- 1/4 cup (large handful) of fresh coriander/cilantro
- 2 spring onions
- 1 tsp lime juice
- 1/4 tsp ground cumin, toasted
- crisp Tortilla chips to serve
Cranberry sauce is something I always have in my larder. It comes in so handy and is not just great with turkey. It also goes great with chicken, pork, etc. And it is fabulous in this dip!
I used Sprague Wild Cranberry Sauce. I normally always buy Ocean Spray, but this variety was on special a few weeks back for 99c a tin. I picked up a couple of tins on a whim. It has a beautiful flavor for a tinned cranberry sauce. I think it quite delicious, and the berries are quite small in it.
The only extra things I had to pick up fresh for this salsa/dip was the jalapeno pepper and the spring onions. I had everything else in the house, even the lime.
I even had the chips. I will often make myself nachos for supper, so chips are always in my larder.
HOW TO MAKE CRANBERRY JALAPENO SALSA
When I say nothing could be easier, I really mean it!
Trim your jalapeno pepper, discarding any ribs or seeds. (Unless you want it to be quite hot and spicy.) Chop finely. Trim your spring onions and chop finely. Wash and dry your coriander leaf. Chop finely.
Toast the cumin in a small skillet until you can smell it. It doesn't take long, but really enhances the flavor.
Empty the cranberry sauce into a large bowl. Add the spring onions, jalapeno pepper, coriander leaf and ground cumin. Stir in the lime juice. Mix everything well together.
Cover and chill for a few hours so that all of the flavors meld together. Serve at room temperature with crisp tortilla chips for dipping. This will keep several days, covered tightly, in the refrigerator.
Ever since I made this, I have been thinking of different ways I could use it. Trust me when I tell you I will have no problem using it all up!
It would make a fabulous appetizer spooned over a block of cream cheese. Served with crackers for spreading, I think it would go down a real treat!!
It would also be wonderful in my Cranberry Baked Chicken recipe. My tastebuds are tingling just at the thought of that.
I think it would be good with roast turkey and chicken or pork as well, and I can just imagine how well it would spark up the traditional turkey or chicken after the holiday dinner sandwich!
I think it would make an excellent quesadilla filling, along with some sharp cheddar cheese. It would go fabulous on a toasty grilled chicken, turkey or pork panini as well!
Oh, when I think of all the wonderful ways you could enjoy this tasty salsa, I get very excited. What does that say about my life? It says I love LOVE good food and extraordinary flavors!
JALAPENO PEPPER JAM BAKED BRIE-Gloriously rich and creamy gooey brie mixed with hot pepper jam . . . perfect for spreading onto soft slices of a fresh French loaf . . . and topped with a few leaves of rocket.This puff pastry encased appetizer is actually very simple to make and is also incredibly delicious! It can be as plain or as ornate as you wish to make it!
SMOKED SALMON SPREAD -This is actually an appetizer I used to make fairly often when I cooked at the Manor. You don't need to use your best smoked salmon to make it, you can often buy packages of smoked salmon ends and bits which are perfect for this purpose. It was one of the most popular appetizers with the dinner party guests and no small wonder there. It is delicious!
Yield: 3 cups
Author: Marie Rayner
Cranberry Jalapeno Salsa
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 2 HourTotal time: 2 H & 10 M
A quick, easy and berry delicious appetizer. Fun to make and to eat!
Ingredients
- 1 (14 oz/400g) tin of whole-berry cranberry sauce
- 1 fresh jalapeno pepper
- 1/4 cup (large handful) of fresh coriander/cilantro
- 2 spring onions
- 1 tsp lime juice
- 1/4 tsp ground cumin, toasted
- crisp Tortilla chips to serve
Instructions
- Trim your jalapeno pepper, discarding any ribs or seeds. (Unless you want it to be quite hot and spicy.) Chop finely.
- Trim your spring onions and chop finely.
- Wash and dry your coriander leaf. Chop finely.
- Toast the cumin in a small skillet until you can smell it. It doesn't take long, but really enhances the flavor.
- Empty the cranberry sauce into a large bowl. Add the spring onions, jalapeno pepper, coriander leaf and ground cumin. Stir in the lime juice. Mix everything well together.
- Cover and chill for a few hours so that all of the flavors meld together.
- Serve at room temperature with crisp tortilla chips for dipping.
- This will keep several days, covered tightly, in the refrigerator.
Did you make this recipe?
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Thanks so much for visiting! Do come again!
Cuting out sugary foods and high fat snacks is an important way to improve your diet and help maintain good blood glucose levels. It helps to have alternatives available when you are feeling that urge to snack on something or when your levels dip and you just don't have time to make a meal. Having alternatives at the ready and achieving a balance are really important for long term success! It's okay to have an occasional sweet treat, but in all reality, those need to be kept at a minimum, and it's best to develop a taste for nutritionally sound snacks.
I had bought a lovely bone in pork loin roast prior to Christmas, which had been in the freezer since then as I just didn't get the chance to cook it. I remembered it at the weekend and decided to take it out. It was a lovely piece of meat. Perfectly sized for four people, or just us two with some nice leftovers.
It was a free-range bone-in loin of pork half roasting joint, skin on, with four rib bones. The chin bone had been removed, which makes for very easy carving. I didn't especially want the crackling this time so I trimmed it all off with a sharp knife and discarded it, leaving a nice layer of fat on the outside.
To be honest, I am never really quite sure what to do with the layer of skin. Over here they roast it until it is crisp and serve it as "Cracklin" . . . crisp and salty. I am not a huge fan of this. Probably because it isn't something I grew up with. It's also really difficult to get it as crisp as you want for eating purposes simply by roasting it. I think a lot of places actually deep fry it. We are staying away from that kind of thing in this house.
How I have always done my pork loin roasts is to make deep cuts into the roast, all over it at regular intervals, right down almost to the bottom, using a really sharp knife. My boning knife does a super job.
Then I take peeled cloves of garlic and stuff them into the meat. For a roast this size, I used four cloves. You cut them into slivers and then you start stuffing them down into the roast into the holes/slits you cut with your knife.
I use a chopstick for this. First I push in the chopstick, which makes the slit wider, and then I stuff in the garlic, pressing it down in with the end of the chop stick. I try to make it so the slivers end up a different spots inside the meat. Some I will push down all the way and others I will leave nearer the surface. Don't worry the holes close over when the meat cooks. You don't end up with a hole-pocked piece of meat, trust me.
After that I sprinkle it all over liberally with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper. And that's it. Just put it into the roasting dish/tin and roast it. Easy peasy.
I like to serve it with some mashed potatoes, cabbage, carrots, swede and gravy. With a bit of applesauce on the side, it makes for a beautiful meal. Sometimes I will make a fruity bread stuffing to serve along side as well. Its so tasty!
*A Simple Roast Loin of Pork*
Serves 4
Remove the meat from the refrigerator and allow it to come to room temperature. Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6.
If your roast has the skin on it, using a really sharp boning knife, trim off the skin and discard, leaving a nice layer of fat. Using the tip of your boning knife, make deep cuts down into the meat, through the fat. Push a sliver of garlic down into each cut. Sprinkle all over liberally with salt and black pepper. Place into a small roasting tin/dish.
Roast in the preheated oven for 30 minutes per 500g/1 pound plus an additional 20 minutes. My roast took approximately 1 1/2 hours. The juices should run clear.
Serve hot cut into thick slices. (I like to cut in between the ribs. This is very easy to do, if the chin bone has been removed.)
Serve with applesauce and your favourite vegetables.
You can make a delicious
gravy with the pan drippings if you wish. Remove and discard all of the
fat, but 2 TBS of the fat. Put the the 2 TBS pork fat into a saucepan.
Add 2 cups hot stock (chicken) to the pan and scrape up all the brown
bits and meat juices. Heat the fat over medium heat and whisk in 2 TBS
of flour. Cook for about a minute. Slowly whisk in the pan
juices/stock. Cook, whisking constantly, until it bubbles and
thickens. Season to taste with salt, pepper and a bit of thyme if you
desire.
We had some of the leftovers today in Cuban Sandwiches. I have never been to Cuba, but this sandwich has always intrigued me. It has always looked incredibly delicious.
I did a search on Pinterest for a recipe. There was no end of recipes to choose from. I finally decided on one that I found on Saving Room for Dessert. Most of the other recipes I had looked at called for a layer of Salami, which I didn't have. This was simply layers of honey ham, roast pork, swiss cheese (I used a Dutch Maasdam), mustard and sour gerkins/pickles. I used ciabatta rolls. Buttered and pressed/weighted down and grilled in my iron skillet. YUM!
The leftover roast pork was perfect in this, with a nice hit of garlic, thinly sliced. My new favourite sandwich! Bon Appetit!
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