You are gonna either love me to pieces or hate me for this . . . let's face it . . . after today your life will never be the same again.
From this moment on you will never be more than two minutes away from a scrummy, delicous, buttery cake, chock full of lucious chocolate chips.
That's right. Two minutes, or one and a half depending on the strength of your microwave oven.
I know . . . it's a sin isn't it??? (You will need a big mug for this. )
Oh to think that something so beautifully scrummy can be yours as quick as a wink!! It's downright dangerous. But what a way to go!
Put on your fluffy slippers, slip into your robe and get ready for the scrummiest two minute wait of the day! Your world has now changed. You can thank me tomorrow.
*Two Minute Chocolate Chip Cake*
Makes one serving
Chocolate Chip Cake. Two minutes. 'Nuff said!
1 large free range egg
3 packed TBS of soft light brown sugar
5 1/2 TBS plain flour
1/4 tsp baking powder
1 TBS softened butter
3 to 4 TBS good quality chocolate, chopped coarsely
(I like to use Green and Black's Organic milk)
1/4 tsp vanilla
Mix all ingredients together in a large mug. Place in the microwave. Cook on high for 1 1/2 to 2 minutes, or just until the top centre of the cake is set. Allow to cool slightly. Serve warm with clotted cream, Creme Fraiche or ice cream. Enjoy!
Note: You can make as many servings of this as you want, but cook each one individually.
I could not resist. I ate the whole thing. Myself . . . the eating did take a bit longer than two minutes as I wanted to savour every . . . single . . . bite. Sigh . . . What can I say. I am a bad puddy tat! =^..^=
I'm cooking Perfect Corn with a Basil Lime Butter over in The Cottage today.
Do you all remember this picture??? Yep, that's four of my five kiddos enjoying the scrapings of the rice crispie square pan after our Friday night ritual of making Rice Crispie Squares. We did this regularly for years, and the kids always enjoyed cleaning out the pan afterwards. Just look at all that joy! It's hard to believe, but they are all grown up now. Where oh where did the years disappear to! Mom and dad never stood a chance at licking that pot out for sure!
You might think that these little babies here today look quite unremarkable . . . and you would be forgiven for doing so, for after all a rice crispie cake is a rice crispie cake . . . or it is???
You would have to look a little closer at these and even then you might notice anything different. It would not be until you sunk your teeth into one of these tasty little treats that you would notice that these little delights got a whole lotta adult flavours going on!
Cardamom, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, allspice, white pepper, nutmeg and vanilla . . . oh baby, these are some scrummy! So scrummy I had to fight Todd for the scrapings in the pot afterwards!! (not really, but it sounded good didn't it?)
Anyways, these are destined to become the new favourite kid on the block. I guarantee!!
*Chai Spiced Crispie Cakes*
makes 16
Printable Recipe
The Crispie Cake for adults. 'Nuff said.
2 ounces of butter, plus 1 TBS for buttering the pan (1/4 cup plus 1 TBS)
40 large marshmallows (about 250g)
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp ground cardamom
1/3 tsp of ground ginger
1/3 tsp of ground cinnamon
healthy pinch of ground nutmeg
healthy pinch of ground allspice
small pinch of ground cloves
small pinch of ground white pepper
6 ounces crisp rice cereal (5 1/2 cups)
Butter a 9 inch square pan. Set aside.
Place the butter and marshmallows in a large microwavable bowl. Place in the microwave and cook on high for several minutes, stirring every 30 seconds until the marshmallows are completely melted and the mixture is smooth. Mix all the spices together and then stir them into the marshmallow mixture along with the vanilla, making sure it is totally amalgamated. Stir in the rice cereal, stirring until it is completely coated with the marshmallow mixture. Press this mixture into the prepared pan using buttered hands, and pressing it in firmly. Allow to cool and set completely before cutting into squares. Store in an airtight container.
In The Cottage today, Braised Cavalo Nero with Tomatoes. Deliciously autumnal.
Sometimes you have a craving for a cake and nothing else will do . . . it has to be a cake, and that's . . . that!
I baked us a tasty Walnut Cake the other day because I wanted cake, cake . . . cake. I love walnuts. I'm like my dad in that way. He loves walnuts too.
His favourite ice cream has always been Maple Walnut . . . so is mine, but alas . . . the only way we be getting that over here is iffin we makes it ourselves! Not a problem!
We'll make some of that another day . . . today we wants cake, and what we wants, we gets!
Oh my but this is tasty . . . chock full of lovely walnuts and iced with a creamy buttercream icing. DO toast the walnuts first for even more flavour.
The Canuck in me was just itching to add some maple flavour . . . but the purist in me held her back.
Enjoy! I did.
*Iced Walnut Cake*
Makes one 8 inch cake
Printable Recipe
The perfect teatime cake.
225g of butter, softened (1 cup)
225g of self raising flour (2 cups), sifted
1 tsp baking powder
225g soft light brown sugar (1 cup packed
75g of finely chopped toasted walnuts (3/4 cup)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 TBS treacle (molasses)
4 large free range eggs
For the buttercream:
75g softened butter (6 TBS)
1 tsp vanilla
175g sifted icing sugar (1 1/2 cups)
Toasted walnut pieces to decorate
Preheat the oven to 1600*C/325*F/ gas mark 3. Butter and line two 9 inch round shallow cake tins with baking paper. Set aside.
Place all of the cake ingredients into a large bowl. Beat vigorously for 2 minutes with an electric whisk until smooth. Divide the batter equally amongst the prepared tins, smoothing out the top.
Bake for 25 minutes until golden brown and the top springs back when lightly touched.
Allow to cool in the pans for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.
To make the buttercream, beat all the ingredients together with an electric whisk until smooth and fluffy. Place one cake layer on a plate. Spread with half of the buttercream. Top with the other cake layer and spread the remainder of the butter cream over top. Sprinkle with toasted walnut pieces.
There's a delicious Pizza baking in The Cottage today, where I'm sharing my special recipes for a lovely crust and my own special secret pizza sauce! (A secret no more!)
If you're having a bit of a celebration in this country, this fella is sure to show up. Suave, sophisticated, a bit fuzzy, delicious and totally non-alcoholic. Being Mormons, he shows up at all our parties and is always warmly welcomed . . . as well as being the first drink to disappear!!!
The people from Schloer recently sent me a sample to try out, of their new Limited Edition Winter Flavour . . . just in time for the holidays . . . Berry Punch!! Ruby coloured it gives a beautiful nod to traditional English flavours being packed with the flavour of blackberries with a warming hint of spice.
They recommended that it be served over ice and quintessentially English fruits so I thought why not go whole hog and serve it over frozen English autumn berries, which I also happen to keep a load of in the freezer . . . the berries acting as both ice and fruit!
Wow, was it ever wonderful! We both really enjoyed and are sure to pick up a few more bottles to have in the house during the up and coming holidays! Many thanks to the people at Shloer for sending me this tasty treat!
Shloer Limited Edition Berry Punch costs £2.29 per bottle. (Schloer is also available in White Grape, Red Grape, Rose, apple & White Grape, White Grape, Raspberry & Cranberry and White Grape & Elderflower flavours)
Schloer is also on Facebook where you'll find little extra inspiration and a Sunday Cookbook. (I'm thinking that it would make an amazing fruit jelly for the holidays as well!)
This put me in a very fruity moos, and of course . . . knowing me, whilst I had the frozen berries out I had to do something else with them as well . . . and why not!!!
I baked up some lovely fruity muffins. We all love blueberry muffins, but a muffin stogged with a variety of berries just can't be beat!
Oh so buttery, and fruity and moreishly scrummy with the tang of fresh berries in every bite . . . black and red currants, blueberries, raspberries, blackberries . . . these are soooo delicious!!
You could glaze them if you wished, but I just dust with a bit of icing sugar. These scrummy muffins speak for themselves, they really don't need much in the way of dressing up . . .really!!
*Berry Fruities*
Makes 12 muffins
Printable Recipe
Moist, buttery and chock full of tangy summer fruits!
175g of mixed summer berries (1 2/3 cups)
(fresh or frozen, cutting the larger ones in bits the size of
blueberries)
300g self raising flour (2 cups)
1 tsp baking powder
150g of caster sugar (2/3 cup)
100ml of plain yoghurt (1/2 cup)
125ml of milk (1/2 cup)
1 large free range egg, beaten
1 tsp vanilla
125g butter, melted (a slightly generous half cup)
Icing sugar to dust (optional)
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Line a 12 cup medium muffin tin with paper liners.
Whisk the flour, baking powder and sugar together in a large bowl. Beat together the egg, yoghurt, milk, melted butter and vanilla. Add all at once to the dry mixture and mix the two together, combing only to moisten the dry ingredients. It is perfectly ok for the mixture to be lumpy. Fold in the berries. (I like to save out a few to press into the tops.) Spoon into the paper lined muffin cups. Scatter any saved berries over top, pressing down lightly.
Bake for about 20 minutes, until risen and golden brown. Leave to cool in the pan for a few minutes before transferring to a wire rack to finish cooling. Dust with icing sugar and serve.
Cooking in The Cottage today, a Sticky Date Bread Pudding!

When I was a girl one of my favourite treats would be when my mother gave us celery sticks filled with cheese whiz! (Cheese whiz is a processed cheese spread that they have in North America.) Sophisticated no, tasty to a child, yes! Not exactly haute cuisine though . . .

I'm happy to say that my tastes have grown somewhat since then and whilst I still enjoy cheese with celery, I am more likely to enjoy it with a good cheddar or a blue cheese, perhaps even a boursin or goats cheese nowadays!

Celery is quite often paired with blue cheese actually . . . Stilton, Cashel Blue, Shropshire Blue, Danish Blue . . . they're all very, very good with it. (I also happen to like it with raisins and peanut butter, a childhood taste for ants on a log that I have never quite outgrown!)

Any hoo . . . the cold wind and rain today begged for a hot soup to take the chill off. You can't get any finer than a Celery and Stilton Soup . . . fresh, rich and oh-so-good! We enjoyed a nice loaf of Sunflower Seed and Honey bread with ours.

*Celery and Stilton Soup*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A delicious soup which takes advantage of the perfect pairing of celery and stilton, which are often eaten together. It has a fresh clean taste with a rich texture.
40g butter (3 TBS)
1 large onion, peeled and finely chopped
1 medium potato, peeled and cubed
1 whole head of celery, cleaned, trimmed and thinly sliced
1 1/2 pints vegetable stock (3 3/4 cups)
100g of Stilton cheese, crumbled (3 3/4 oz)
1/4 pint of single (light) cream (2/3 cup)
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
Melt the butter in a large saucepan. Add the chopped onion. Cook over medium heat for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, without colouring, until the onions are softened. Stir in the potato and celery and cook for a further 5 minutes. Add the stock and bring to the boil. Cover and reduce the heat to a simmer. Cook gently for about 30 utes, until the vegetables are very tender.
Remove and blitz about 3/4 of the soup until smooth, then return it to the pan with the remainder of the soup. Bring back to the boil and then season to taste with some salt and pepper. Remove from the heat and stir in the cream. Reheat gently. Stir in the cheese, reserving a bit for the garnish. Serve hot, ladled into heated bowls with a crumble of cheese on top.

There's a delicious Cardamom Scented Plum Cake baking over in The Cottage today.
Everyone needs a simple recipe for a dessert that can be whipped up at a moment's notice when unexpected company drops by, or even just when you want a dessert, but don't want to have to go to the shops.
This fits the bill on all counts. It's quick and easy to do. It can be whipped up at a moment's notice because it uses ingredients most people keep in their store cupboards all the time, and you won't need to go to the shops!
It's a deliciously rich date and nut cake which creates it's own lucious toffee sauce while it bakes. Each warm mouthful brings you all the flavours of a sticky toffee pudding without any of the angst and work that making a real sticky toffee pudding involves!
Actually I'd call this a scrumdiddlyumptious doddle! (Don't worry if you are not fond of dates, you can use 3 to 4 apples, cored and chopped (leave the peels on) instead! Of course then it's actually an Apple Walnut Pudding.) It's also very low in fat, having only 1 TBS of butter which when divided amongst 6 people amounts to about 3/4 tsp a piece! (We won't talk about the cream which you are going to pour on top when you eat it. If you don't talk about it . . . well, it doesn't really count does it??? shhh . . . )
*Date and Walnut Pudding*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
This is an old fashioned, economical pudding, very similar to a sticky toffee pudding with a cake on the top and a lucious toffee sauce on the bottom, which forms while the whole thing is baking.
It's very easy and quick to make.
4.25ounces of plain flour (1 cup)
7 ounces granulated sugar (1 cup)
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
125ml of milk (1/2 cup)
5.25 ounces chopped pitted dates (1 cup packed)
4 ounces chopped walnuts (1 cup)
Topping:
7.5 ounces soft light brown sugar (1 cup packed)
500ml of boiling water (2 cups)
1 TBS butter
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a 10 by 10 inch square baking pan, or a deep round dish, 9 inches in diameter. Set aside.
Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt together in a bowl. Stir in the milk and briskly mix together until smooth. Stir in the dates and nuts. Spread the batter into the prepared baking dish. Heat the brown sugar, water and butter together in a saucepan until it comes to the boil again. Pour this carefully over top of the batter. Immediately place into the heated oven and bake, uncovered, for 1 hour, or until the top is golden and the sauce is bubbling up from underneath. Serve warm with or without pouring cream, custard or ice cream.
There are some delicious Grilled Lamb Chops with a Mint and Coriander Sauce cooking over in The Cottage today.
I like to think that I can be pretty thrifty. I hate waste and I try to use up every scrap of what I produce or buy foodwise. Did you know that in a recent study it was found that half of the food produced worldwide is wasted????
I know! Amazing to think of, in light of the fact that upwards of 30,000 people in the world die of starvation each day. It's mind boggling, and so very very sad.
I can remember as a child being forced to eat everything on my plate and told that there were children starving in Africa that would love to have what I had to eat. I often felt like telling my mother that if they wanted it, she was quite welcome to package whatever it was up and send it to them.
In any case, I always ate it, whether I liked it or not. I'd still be sitting at my mother's dining table had I not!
Food is wasted in incredible amounts each day, and whilst there is nothing we can do about a lot of it, we can control how much we waste ourselves in our own homes and families. I just love re-purposing food.
Things like creating tasty casseroles and dishes from leftover meats, cheeses, cakes, cookies, etc.! There is no end to what you can do with them if you just stretch beyond your comfort zone just a teensie bit.
Delicious things like this fabulous breakfast casserole which I cooked today that used up the leftover Black Pepper Biscuits that we had yesterday. You needn't use black pepper biscuits though . . . or scones . . . you can use any you wish, plain, savoury or even sweet.
(Although in the sweeter ones I might leave out the mustard and add some chopped fruit and or nuts. In the case of apple or stone fruits, some cheeses actually go very well, especially cheddar.)
It's also a good way of using up those dry ends of cheese in the fridge that would not get used otherwise. Just sayin' is all.
Yes . . . that is Maple Syrup on mine. Don't judge me. A bit of bacon would have also gone down really well . . . floppy crispy please! (NO, that is not a contradiction in terms, it's how I like my bacon . . . floppy in some parts and crisp in others.
serves 6 - 8, depending on appetites
This
is one of those delightful breakfast casseroles you put together the
night before and bake in the morning. It also works if you make it in
the morning and bake it at night for supper. Heck, I've even baked it
right away and it's always delicious! Makes great use of those leftover
biscuit (scones) you want to get used up!
6 TBS unsalted butter, melted
300g of torn biscuit (scone) pieces (about 3 heaped cups)
9 large free range eggs, beaten
16 ounces grated cheese (strong cheddar, Emmenthal, Gruyere, Blue, or
whatever cheese or combination you like)
1 1/2 to 2 TBS Dijon mustard
(The milder in flavour the cheese you have used, the more mustard you will want)
Dash of cayenne pepper (optional)
750ml of milk (3 cups)
fine seasalt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Place
the biscuit bits in a large bowl. Pour the melted butter over and toss
together. Let sit for a few minutes, so that the biscuits absorb the
butter. Toss in the cheese. Beat the eggs, milk, mustard and any
seasoning you are using together in a large measure. Pour this over top
of the biscuit bits and cheese. Give it a good stir and then cover and
let sit in the refrigerator overnight (all day or not as required)
When
ready to bake, preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a
13 by 9 by 2 inch baking dish. Pour the mixture into the baking dish.
Cover
and bake for 30 minutes. Uncover and bake for 30 minutes longer, until
the eggs are set and a knife inserted in the centre comes out clean.
Serve warm.
Note: you may scale this up or down. For each
additional biscuit, add another egg 2 tsp of butter, 1 ounce of cheese,
1/2 tsp of mustard and approximately 80ml (1/3 cup) of milk. You may
also add some chopped fresh herbs, up to 2 TBS if you so desire.
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