We were in town the other day and I popped into the Little Waitrose they have there. I sure miss Waitrose. I used to do most of my shopping there when we lived down South. Their meat and produce was always excellent. I found some excellent looking organic free range pork chops that were on their sell by date and so I got a good bargain. I froze them when I got home and then, yesterday, I thawed them out and we had them for supper.
We don't eat pork very often . . . actually we don't eat any red meat very often . . . usually it is fish or chicken or no meat at all . . . but the Toddster, he does enjoy a good chop once in a while.
My mother always way over-cooked her pork when I was growing up. Seriously. You could have used her chops to shingle a roof. I think there was a lot of fear as well as danger in those days of people getting trichinosis from under-cooked pork.
You can cook pork well enough without drying it out and over-cooking it though. There is a fine line between cooked through and cremated! I don't care who you are . . . an over cooked pork chop is just not very tasty or appealing. I find if you cook it so long as the meat which is closest to the bone runs with clear juices when pricked . . . then it's done! And indeed you can cook the tenderloin only until it is a little pink and you will be safe. Any longer and it's blah . . . YUCKO!
Today I pan fried my chops, finishing them off in a hot oven for a few minutes while I created a delicious sauce to serve over top . . . of red apples and onions, sage, walnuts and cider vinegar. Beautiful. It's not a sauce in the sense of a gravy . . . but more like a relish.
Pork and apples are perfect partners . . . add some sage, onion and walnuts, and you have something very special indeed. Tasty and colorful with just a bit of crunch from the walnuts. The men in your life will thank you for these!
I paired this up with Tatties and Neeps . . . Basically that is just mashed potatoes and Swede . . . but doesn't the other name sound more delicious and intriguing?? I know, how could you not love something called Tatties and Neeps??? It's quite impossible. And it just goes so well with pork. It really does.
Enjoy.
*Pork Chops with an Apple, Red Onion & Walnut Sauce*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Tender pork chops served with a chunky apple, red onion and walnut sauce. Delicious. I like to serve this with mashed potatoes and Swede, or Tatties and Neeps as it is known over here!
4 bone in, thick pork chops
1 TBS butter
freeze dried sage, sea salt and cracked black pepper to taste
For the Sauce:
1 TBS olive oil
2 TBS butter
2 large red-skinned dessert apples, cored and cut into wedges
2 medium red onions, peeled and cut into wedges
50g of walnut pieces, toasted (about 1/2 cup)
1 tsp freeze dried sage leaves
2 TBS organic Cider vinegar
salt and pepper to taste
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Have ready a shallow baking dish.
Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat until it begins to foam. Sprinkle the chops to taste on both sides with salt, pepper and sage. Brown them generously, for about 3 to 4 minutes per side. Remove them from the skillet to the baking dish and bang them into the oven while you make the sauce.
To make the sauce. Add the olive oil and butter to the pan drippings. Add the apples and onions. Cook, stirring occasionally for about 5 minutes, or just until they are beginning to soften. Add the sage leaves, walnuts and cider vinegar and cook for about 2 minutes more. Remove from the heat. Season to taste.
Make sure the juices of the chops are running clear. Once they are done, plate them up onto heated serving plates, spoon an equal portion of the sauce over each and serve immediately.
This past weekend I picked up a beautiful roasting chicken at the Chester City Indoor Market. We are so lucky to have an indoor market here in our lovely city.
I decided to roast it using my favourite recipe for roasting chicken, which is one that I have adapted from a recipe I found in Rachel Allen's book, Rachel's Food for Living.


*Lemon and Herb Stuffed Roast Chicken*
Serves 4 to 6
Printable Recipe
A moist and delicious perfectly roasted chicken, stuffed with a fabulous lemony herb bread stuffing. Fabulous.
1 large free range roasting chicken (between 3 1/2 and 5 pounds in weight)
a knob of softened butter
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
a few thyme leaves
the juice of half a lemon
375ml of chicken stock (1 1/2 cups)
For the Stuffing:
2 TBS butter
1 small onion, peeled and finely chopped
2 TBS chopped fresh parsley
1 tsp chopped fresh thyme leaves
1 tsp chopped fresh sage leaves
the finely grated zest of one unwaxed lemon
the juice of 1/2 lemon
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
100g of fresh soft white bread crumbs (about 1 3/4 cup)
1 large sweet potato, peeled and cut into large chunks
6 medium potatoes peeled and cut into large chunks
2 TBS flour
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Have ready a nice deep roasting pan.
Melt the butter for the stuffing in a skillet. Add the onion. Cook, stirring over low heat, without browning, until it is meltingly soft, about 10 minutes. Tip in the herbs, lemon zest, lemon juice and bread crumbs. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Allow to cool completely. (Safe the squeezed lemon carcass)
Place your chicken into the roasting pan. Stuff the cavity lightly with the bread stuffing. Slather the chicken breast all over with a knob of softened butter. Sprinkle with some sea salt and black pepper and a few thyme leaves. Squeeze the juice of half a lemon over top. Place the lemon carcass into the roasting pan around the chicken along with the one you used for the stuffing. Scatter the peeled vegetables around the base of the chicken. Sprinkle lightly with some salt and herbs. Pour about half the chicken stock around the chicken and vegetables.
Roast for 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 hours, basting with the pan juices and turning the vegetables over halfway through the baking time. When done the juices should run clear from the chicken when pierces between the thigh and the breast and the legs should feel quite loose when gently twisted. Remove from the oven. Remove the chicken and vegetables from the pan to a serving platter. Loosely tent with foil to keep warm. You will want it to rest for about 20 minutes now, while you make the gravy and cook any additional vegetables.

To make the gravy, pour the pan juices out into a measuring jug. Pour a bit of boiling water in the pan and scrape up any juicy browned bits. Pour this into the measuring jug. Spoon about 2 TBS of the fat from the jug into a saucepan. Discard the remainder of the fat. Heat over medium heat until bubbling. Whisk in the flour and cook for about a minute. Slowly whisk in the pan juices, whisking until the mixture begins to bubble and thicken slightly. Season to taste. Allow to simmer over low heat for a few minutes to get rid of any flour taste.
Serve the chicken sliced, along with some of the gravy, stuffing and roasted vegetables, and of course any other vegetables you have prepared.
We love to have carrots and peas with this! Boring I know, but very tasty.
Other than a few odds and sods, there is not much you can't get there . . . cheeses, eggs, fresh produce, baked goods, fish, meats and poultry. There is literally everything there and all reasonably priced and all out of the elements, dry and warm.
I decided to roast it using my favourite recipe for roasting chicken, which is one that I have adapted from a recipe I found in Rachel Allen's book, Rachel's Food for Living.
I just love Rachel Allen's recipes. They are not too fiddly and well written, and I have always been able to adapt them to my own methods and tastes.
It helps when you are going to roast a chicken to have a really good chicken to begin with. I love buying my roasting chickens from a butcher.
They are normally air dried which means that the skin gets really crisp and flavourful . . . not like a grocery store chicken which has spent days sweating under plastic cling film.
They may not be as pretty to look at as the grocery shop chicken . . . but there is no real comparison when it comes to taste . . . a free range Butcher's chicken just plain tastes better. It tastes like chicken is supposed to taste.
I don't change a thing when it comes to Rachel's lemon and herb stuffing.
It is her mother's recipe and pretty hard to beat . . . soft bread crumbs, gently softened onion, butter, herbs . . .
lemon, both the zest and the juice . . . and of course salt and pepper. It doesn't get much better than that.
I love to rub my roasting chickens with lots and lots of butter. It just gives it a nice colour and flavour and I sprinkle it with plenty of sea salt, black pepper and some more of the thyme which was used in the stuffing.
Now here's where I vary from her method. I like to cut up potatoes and sweet potatoes (if I have them) and lay them around the chicken in the roasting dish.
I dot them with some of the fat which I have pulled out from the inside of the chicken . . . and of course season once again with more salt and pepper and a few sprigs of herbs.
A few hours later we are rewarded with a beautifully roasted chicken, with lovely crisp skin and meltingly tender roasted potatoes . . . not to mention that delicious lemon and herb stuffing.
You can't get much better than that!
You can't get much better than that!
*Lemon and Herb Stuffed Roast Chicken*
Serves 4 to 6
Printable Recipe
A moist and delicious perfectly roasted chicken, stuffed with a fabulous lemony herb bread stuffing. Fabulous.
1 large free range roasting chicken (between 3 1/2 and 5 pounds in weight)
a knob of softened butter
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
a few thyme leaves
the juice of half a lemon
375ml of chicken stock (1 1/2 cups)
For the Stuffing:
2 TBS butter
1 small onion, peeled and finely chopped
2 TBS chopped fresh parsley
1 tsp chopped fresh thyme leaves
1 tsp chopped fresh sage leaves
the finely grated zest of one unwaxed lemon
the juice of 1/2 lemon
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
100g of fresh soft white bread crumbs (about 1 3/4 cup)
1 large sweet potato, peeled and cut into large chunks
6 medium potatoes peeled and cut into large chunks
2 TBS flour
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Have ready a nice deep roasting pan.
Melt the butter for the stuffing in a skillet. Add the onion. Cook, stirring over low heat, without browning, until it is meltingly soft, about 10 minutes. Tip in the herbs, lemon zest, lemon juice and bread crumbs. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Allow to cool completely. (Safe the squeezed lemon carcass)
Place your chicken into the roasting pan. Stuff the cavity lightly with the bread stuffing. Slather the chicken breast all over with a knob of softened butter. Sprinkle with some sea salt and black pepper and a few thyme leaves. Squeeze the juice of half a lemon over top. Place the lemon carcass into the roasting pan around the chicken along with the one you used for the stuffing. Scatter the peeled vegetables around the base of the chicken. Sprinkle lightly with some salt and herbs. Pour about half the chicken stock around the chicken and vegetables.
Roast for 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 hours, basting with the pan juices and turning the vegetables over halfway through the baking time. When done the juices should run clear from the chicken when pierces between the thigh and the breast and the legs should feel quite loose when gently twisted. Remove from the oven. Remove the chicken and vegetables from the pan to a serving platter. Loosely tent with foil to keep warm. You will want it to rest for about 20 minutes now, while you make the gravy and cook any additional vegetables.
To make the gravy, pour the pan juices out into a measuring jug. Pour a bit of boiling water in the pan and scrape up any juicy browned bits. Pour this into the measuring jug. Spoon about 2 TBS of the fat from the jug into a saucepan. Discard the remainder of the fat. Heat over medium heat until bubbling. Whisk in the flour and cook for about a minute. Slowly whisk in the pan juices, whisking until the mixture begins to bubble and thicken slightly. Season to taste. Allow to simmer over low heat for a few minutes to get rid of any flour taste.
Serve the chicken sliced, along with some of the gravy, stuffing and roasted vegetables, and of course any other vegetables you have prepared.
We love to have carrots and peas with this! Boring I know, but very tasty.
I am a real cereal lover! It has ever been so. I grew up on sugary cereals when I was a child. My mother could never get us to eat oatmeal , or any other kind of cooked cereals for that matter. We would only eat cold cereals like Cheerios (which I still love) puffed wheat, corn flakes and the like . . . not exactly the healthiest things around, but looking at them now, not exactly the worst things either! There was no such thing as granola back then, at least not that you could buy in the shops. I am sure there were a few tree hugging hippies (which my mother was not) that did make their own, but having said that . . . we probably would have turned out noses up at it back then anyways . . .
As an adult I have come to embrace and LOVE cooked cereals, but more than that . . . I adore Granola, often making my own. The thing I have always loved about home created Granola is that I can put lots of fruit into it . . . and I do like lots of fruit in my granola.
Just prior to Christmas the people at Jordan's sent me some of their new Super Fruity Granola. Super Fruity granola is bursting with raspberries, redcurrants, and pomegranate . . . lots and lots of lovely red berries. There is also oat and almonds, baked with honey.
Jordon's Super Granola's are all created with a base of toasted oatmeal and combined with plenty of special 'super berry' or nuts ingredients added for extra nutrition, flavour and texture.
And as you can see, the fruit was really bright and colourful, and I have to say it tasted just like real fruit! Well, it was real fruit, but you know what I mean. It didn't taste stale and dry like some of those dried fruits in cereals can taste. I quite enjoyed it. The oats were crunchy and slightly sweet from the honey it is baked with. I quite, quite enjoyed. I love a nice bowl of granola in the morning topped with tart plain yogurt. I think it is the breakfast of champions!
From their page:
- No artificial flavourings, colourings, preservatives
- Non GM
- No added salt
- High in fibre
I often eat granola just out of hand as a quick snack, and I have been known to use it to top pancakes and muffins as well as my baked honey glazed granola donuts.
Very scrummy indeed and I am thinking that this fruity granola would go down very well in those! This beautiful granola is available in Four delicious flavours.
Sometimes though, you are on the run and you don't have time to sit down and eat a bowl of cereal, or bake donuts or the like. You want something quick that you can grab as you are going out the door and eat on the run. They also sent me a box of their ABSOLUTE Nut Luxury Bars. Oh my . . . just look at all the nuts in that bar! I love nuts.
These were beautifully chewy and just stogged full of lovely crunchy whole and chopped almonds, roast hazelnuts and pecans . . . combined with oats in a fabulous hand held bar which I truly enjoyed. I love that it was healthy and very, very nutty. Have I told you I love nuts? Yes . . . well, I'm telling you again, I LOVE NUTS and I just LOVED these granola bars!
From their page:
- No artificial flavourings, colourings, preservatives
- Suitable for vegetarians
- Non GM
- No added salt
- High in fibre
These Luxury bars also come in an ABSOLUTE Berry Bar, filled with strawberries, cranberries and blackcurrants and once again with wholegrain oats.
Many thanks to Orly and Jordan's Cereal for sending me these goodies. These products are available at all major grocery shops throughout the country.
Award winning, using British grown ingredients, responsibly produced, wholegrain, wholesome, family run and supporters of the Prince's Countryside Trust.
Will this replace my homemade granola . . . in all honesty, probably not, but it is nice to know that when I don't have the time to make my own, there is a delicious and healthy alternative that I can pick up at the shops!
It's still snowing although it's not quite as cold as it was. If this stuff freezes those roads are going to be treacherous! It's definitely the type of day you want to spend indoors next to the fire!
I know all you North Americans think we Brits are cold weather wimps . . . and maybe we are. But in all fairness . . . we just don't have the insulation and heating systems that y'all are used to in North America, and it is a lot damper here!
I took a gathering from the leftovers on my Vegetable Bin today and created a lovely soup from them. Rib sticking and heart warming . . . with lovely carrots, parsnips and swede (rutabaga) . . . fantastic root vegetables that have beautiful sweet properties, especially when you sweat them down with butter.
Added to the mix are wonderful aromatics . . . onions, leeks . . . celery, with a touch of fresh sage leaves. It's sounding pretty good so far isn't it? But just wait . . . it gets even better . . .
I've added the luxury of stodgy bacon, sage and suet dumplings . . . oh so wonderfully filling and fabulously delish. Seriously. The soup on it's own is rich and brothy . . . filled with lots of cubed vegetables . . . and these spectacularly scrummy dumplings. Oh my . . . it goes down a real treat.
Soup. Vegetables. Dumplings . . . BACON dumplings no less. What more could a body want on a cold winter's day? Not much . . . not much . . . so, what are you waiting for??? Get cooking!
*Vegetable Soup with Bacon Dumplings*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A delicious filling soup. Perfect for a cold winter's day.
2 TBS butter
1 medium onion, peeled and finely chopped
1 leek, diced, white and green parts kept separately
3/4 pound of swede, peeled and diced
3/4 pound of parsnips, peeled and diced
3/4 pound of carrots, peeled and diced
2 celery sticks, diced
3 to 4 sage stems
2 1/2 litres of chicken stock (10 1/2 cups)
salt and black pepper
Dumplings:
100g of self raising flour (1 cup)
1/2 tsp English mustard powder
2 tsp finely chopped sage
50g of vegetable suet (1/4 cup)
2 rashers of smoked streaky bacon, finely chopped
salt and pepper to taste
4 TBS cold water
Melt the butter over medium low heat in a large saucepan. Add the onion and white part of the diced leeks. Saute about 5 minutes, until beginning to soften, without colouring. Add the remainder of the vegetables and sage. Toss in the butter, then cover and sweat for about 10 minutes over low heat, stirring occasionally. Pour on the stock, season to taste with salt and black pepper and bring to the boil. Cover and simmer for about 45 minutes until the vegetables are tender. Adjust seasoning as needed.
To make the dumplings whisk together the flour and mustard powder. Stir in the sage, suet and bacon with a bit of salt and pepper to taste. Gradually stir in the water with a spoon, then using your hands to squeeze it together to make a smooth dough. Using your hands shape into 18 balls by gently rolling between your hands.
Stir in the remaining green diced leeks. Add the dumplings. Recover the pan and simmer for 10 minutes until the dumplings are light and fluffy. Ladle into bowls and serve immediately.
Note: If you wanted to make this vegetarian, you could use vegetable stock and add gnocchi dumplings instead of the bacon suet ones. Or you could leave the bacon out of the dumplings and replace it with something nutty like chopped walnuts, and a bit of crumbled cheese, such as a creamy Stilton. Sounds gorgeous already!
Ottolenghi is probably one of the best and dynamic places to eat in this country. When I worked down South the daughter often came down from London for the weekend with friends
They would always stop at Ottolenghi before they came and stock up on beautiful meringues and breads for the weekend. Of course as the cook, I got to try them out too. Beautiful stuff.

I bought the Ottolenghi cookbook when it first came out in 2008. Having been able to try a few of their goodies via the daughter of my employer . . . I just knew that it would be a winner and it is.
I bought the Ottolenghi cookbook when it first came out in 2008. Having been able to try a few of their goodies via the daughter of my employer . . . I just knew that it would be a winner and it is.
It's filled with all sorts of fabulous recipes for vegetables, salads, soups, grains, meats, breads, cakes, tarts, biscuits and no end of other wonderful things. It's a take it to bed book for sure.

I have since gotten his second and third books, entitled . . . Plenty and Jerusalem . . . but the original book remains my favourite of the three.
I have since gotten his second and third books, entitled . . . Plenty and Jerusalem . . . but the original book remains my favourite of the three.
Every recipe I have ever made from it has turned out beautifully. That's the mark of a very good cookbook don't you think?

Today I made the Sour Cherry Amaretti from the first book and they turned out beautifully. Now, I have to say I have never been to Italy . . . and I would not know how an Italian Amaretti biscuit should or does taste.
Today I made the Sour Cherry Amaretti from the first book and they turned out beautifully. Now, I have to say I have never been to Italy . . . and I would not know how an Italian Amaretti biscuit should or does taste.
I have no idea if these are authentic or not . . . I only know that they are an incredibly, moreishly, addictively wonderful sweet bite!

Easy to make and oh so tasty. I think I scarfed three down before I even realized it . . . and then I went in for another one.
Easy to make and oh so tasty. I think I scarfed three down before I even realized it . . . and then I went in for another one.
Right now they are locked up in a Kilner jar, and placed up high so that I can't reach them without help for fear that I might finish the whole lot tonight. They are THAT good! Yes.

Lightly crisp on the outsides . . . chewy on the insides . . . and stogged full of lovely dried sour cherries.
Lightly crisp on the outsides . . . chewy on the insides . . . and stogged full of lovely dried sour cherries.
I just adore dried sour cherries . . . I could eat them by the handful . . . but I don't because they are rather on the pricey side. They remain a once in a blue moon treat.

They are beautifully showcased in these delightful little biscuits. Simply scrummy. One day I hope to go to Italy myself and taste these things first hand . . .
They are beautifully showcased in these delightful little biscuits. Simply scrummy. One day I hope to go to Italy myself and taste these things first hand . . .
Or maybe even one day I will make it to Ottolenghi . . . but in the meantime it's nice to know I can have a little taste of what the experience might be like.

If I am not mistaken these are also Gluten Free, so long as you use gluten free icing sugar. These went down a real treat for my mid afternoon break with a nice big cup of hot chocolate. Have you ever sprinkled cinnamon sugar on your hot chocolate?
If I am not mistaken these are also Gluten Free, so long as you use gluten free icing sugar. These went down a real treat for my mid afternoon break with a nice big cup of hot chocolate. Have you ever sprinkled cinnamon sugar on your hot chocolate?
At this hot chocolate place in Chester you can get your chocolate sprinkled with orange cinnamon sugar. I keep saying I am going to make some for myself, and one of these days . . . I will.

*Sour Cherry Amaretti*
Makes about 2 dozen
Printable Recipe
Delicious little almond flavoured biscuits, sweet and chewy and flecked with bits of dried sour cherries. Do be careful with the almond flavouring. Too much will be too much. You only want a couple drops.
120g golden caster sugar (10 TBS)
180g ground almonds (2 cups +2 TBS)
the finely grated zest of one unwaxed lemon
2 to 3 drops of pure almond extract
pinch of fine sea salt
60g dried sour cherries, roughly chopped (6 1/2 TBS)
2 large free range egg whites, at room temperature
2 tsp liquid honey
a bowl of sifted icing sugar to roll them in
Preheat the oven to 170*C/ 325*F/ gas mark 3. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Set aside.
Measure the ground almonds, sugar, lemon zest and almond extract into a bowl. Rub together to help to distribute the ingredients evenly and release the oils and flavour from the lemon zest. Stir in the cherries.
Whip the egg white along with the honey until soft peaks form. Fold them into the almond mixture with a fork. You should have a soft malleable mixture.
Pinch off heaped tablespoon sized lumps of the dough. Roll into an egg shape between your hands then drop into the bowl of icing sugar. Toss gently to generously coat. Place onto the prepared baking sheet, gently pressing down on each side to make sort of a deconstructed triangular shape.
Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, turning the pan around halfway through the baking time. When done they should have taken on some colour, but still remain relatively pale and chewy in the centre. Allow to cool completely before eating. Store in an airtight container.
If you can't get the sour cherries you can use chopped dried cranberries, dried apricots or even dried blueberries. All are very good!
*Sour Cherry Amaretti*
Makes about 2 dozen
Printable Recipe
Delicious little almond flavoured biscuits, sweet and chewy and flecked with bits of dried sour cherries. Do be careful with the almond flavouring. Too much will be too much. You only want a couple drops.
120g golden caster sugar (10 TBS)
180g ground almonds (2 cups +2 TBS)
the finely grated zest of one unwaxed lemon
2 to 3 drops of pure almond extract
pinch of fine sea salt
60g dried sour cherries, roughly chopped (6 1/2 TBS)
2 large free range egg whites, at room temperature
2 tsp liquid honey
a bowl of sifted icing sugar to roll them in
Preheat the oven to 170*C/ 325*F/ gas mark 3. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Set aside.
Measure the ground almonds, sugar, lemon zest and almond extract into a bowl. Rub together to help to distribute the ingredients evenly and release the oils and flavour from the lemon zest. Stir in the cherries.
Whip the egg white along with the honey until soft peaks form. Fold them into the almond mixture with a fork. You should have a soft malleable mixture.
Pinch off heaped tablespoon sized lumps of the dough. Roll into an egg shape between your hands then drop into the bowl of icing sugar. Toss gently to generously coat. Place onto the prepared baking sheet, gently pressing down on each side to make sort of a deconstructed triangular shape.
Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, turning the pan around halfway through the baking time. When done they should have taken on some colour, but still remain relatively pale and chewy in the centre. Allow to cool completely before eating. Store in an airtight container.
If you can't get the sour cherries you can use chopped dried cranberries, dried apricots or even dried blueberries. All are very good!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
The citrus fruit is so lovely this time of year! Our grocery shelves are stocked with lovely oranges and lemons from Spain. It is the perfect time to make marmalade too . . . I have never made my own marmalade. I really should give it a go. I fear I would never be happy with store bought stuff again. I do love a nice piece of toast in the morning . . . spread with lots of butter and orange marmalade.
Any other time of the year I would not think of using precious oranges in cakes and the like, but at this time of year . . . when they are so abundant reasonably priced, I do love to indulge myself in this way.
This week I decided to bake us a lovely spiced orange cake, which was filled with lots of beautiful orange flavour . . . both from the juice and the finely grated zest . . . mixed with lots of cinnamon, cloves and ground cardamom. Just delightful!
I created a lovely icing sugar and cinnamon/orange glaze to spoon over top of the warm cake as it cooled. I like to do this on a rack placed over a large piece of foil. I keep scraping the glaze which over-runs the up with a spoon and spooning it over again . . . I don't want to waste even a fraction of all those lovely flavours.
And I think it makes the glaze look even more interesting in the process . . . but that may just be me. Do try not to over bake the cake . . you want it to keep all of that buttery moistness . . . You could add a bit of texture by stirring some juice plumped raisins into the batter. I'd just pour some warm orange juice, with maybe a touch of Cointreau over top of the raisins and let them stand for about 15 minutes to make them all plump and juicy . . .
Do feel free to frost with a spiced vanilla butter cream instead of the glaze if you wish . . . instead of . . . or even on top of the glaze. This also tastes lovely when sliced warm and served with a nice scoop of vanilla ice cream, or even some softly whipped double cream.
It's just a simple cake . . .
I like simple things, don't you?? Quite often it is the simple things in life which bring us the most joy.
*Spiced Orange Cake*
Makes one 9 inch square cake
Printable Recipe
A good way to use up some of the oranges left from Christmas. Smells fabulous when it is baking.
170g of butter, softened (3/4 cup)
190g of golden caster sugar (1 cup)
2 large free range eggs
60ml vegetable oil (1/4 cup)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp orange extract
the finely grated zest of two well washed large oranges
60ml of orange juice
175g of plain flour (1 3/4 cup)
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1/2 tsp ground cardamom
To glaze:
60ml orange juice (1/4 cup)
130g of sifted icing sugar (1 cup)
1/4 tsp cinnamon extract (optional)
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Butter a 9 inch square pan. Line with baking paper. Butter the paper. Set aside.
Cream the butter, orange zest and sugar together until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Beat in the orange juice, oil and extracts. Sift together the flour, baking powder, soda, salt, cinnamon, cloves and cardamom. Beat this into the creamed mixture in thirds, making sure it is smooth after each addition. Spread the batter in the prepared pan, smoothing the top. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes until risen, golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.
Remove from the oven. Let stand for five minutes before lifting out of the pan and onto a wire rack. Place the rack over a large piece of foil wrap. Whisk together the glaze ingredients until smooth. Pour the glaze over top of the warm cake. In order not to waste too much of the glaze, I scraped it off the tin foil and kept spooning it over top of the cake. It made for a nice rustic look. Cut into squares to serve. Store in an airtight container.
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