I am a lover of quick breads . . . scones, tea loaves, baking powder biscuits, muffins, corn bread, etc. I just love them. One of the reasons I love them is because they are quick to put together and they freeze really well. If you are making a pot of soup, it really isn't much extra work to put together a savoury muffin or quick bread to go along with it, and they realy turn a simple meal into something very special.
It's hard to believe that Easter is just two weeks away. This year just seems to be evaporating.
Not only is it delicious and pretty to look at, but it's very easy to do. And . . . you only need a microwave in order to make it.
You could use jelly beans if you wished, but I like to use those little candy covered milk chocolate Easter eggs . . you know the ones I mean.
I love the delicious mix of salty and sweet . . . creamy and crunchy . . .
I like to add more eggs to the top after I spread it out . . . just to add some additional scrum, and of course a few more broken pretzels.
I'm a big fan of the salty/sweet thing. I know . . . and as Dorcas Lane would say . . .
*Easter Bark*
Makes about 1 pound
Printable Recipe
Sweetly scrummy. Easy and quick to make too! I like to add broken pretzels to mine. It's that sweet/salty thing!
12 ounces (weight) of white chocolate chips or candy melts (2 cups)
2 tsp white vegetable shortening
2 (100g) bags of small candy covered chocolate easter eggs such as the Cadbury's ones (about 1 heaped cupful)
a good handful of small pretzel hoops, broken (optional)
Have a baking sheet lined with parchment paper ready. Spray the paper lightly with non cooking spray. Set aside.
Place the white chocolate and vegetable shortening into a medium sized microwaveable bowl. Blitz on the 80% setting (medium high) for about 1 minute. Stir. If the chocolate still doesn't melt, blitz at 30 second intervals, stirring after each, until the chocolate is melted and smooth. Give one packet of the candy eggs a good bash with the bottom of a jar or a rolling pin. You want them broken up coarsely.
Stir the broken candy and pretzels (if using) into the melted chocolate. Pour onto the prepared baking sheet, spreading it out thinly. Sprinkle with the remaining pack of chocolate eggs. Allow to set until firm. Once firm, break into pieces. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.
Note: You don't have to use the chocolate eggs. You can also use jelly beans, or coloured smarties if you would rather.
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 Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!
I had not baked a pie in a very long time. It was different when I had a large family to feed . . .
I quite simply adore Lemon Pie . . . and so having one of these in the house is even more tempting than having any other kind.
Silky . . . creamy . . . rich. With lots of lemon flavour and then just a hint of vanilla.
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5.
This recipe has been floating around for years. Chocolate Sheet Cake. Texas Sheet Cake, etc.
This particular recipe was adapted from a book I have entitled "The Best of Cooking Light."
This recipe differed a bit from the usual choclate sheet cake I make . . . first it has buttermilk in the batter, which usually makes for a really moist cake . . . second it is put together rather differently.
The icing is also a tiny bit different.
It's also very dense . . . I don't remember my regular recipe ending up quite as dense as this one is . . . but it was quite pleasant to eat nonetheless.
30g of cocoa powder, sifted (1/4 cup)
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.
I was recently sent this cutting edge cookery book on grains to review. Entitled Grains as Mains and written by Laura Agar Wilson, it features a comprehensive collection of modern recipes using ancient grains.
Ancient grains first cooked thousands of years ago are now back in vogue, as more and more people become more health conscious and actively seek out food that is nourishing as well as being delicious.
I was really wanting something light today. We eat chicken a lot in our house. We only ever very rarely have another form of protein. Pork or beef are a rare treat. Eating chicken as often as we do, it can be somewhat of a challenge to keep it interesting. Chicken breasts are so very adaptable and mild in flavour. They make a pretty decent canvas for other flavours.
I like to think that one of the most wonderful things about blogging is the fabulous people you meet via this medium. Like minded people . . . good people . . . invisible friends.
As soon as I saw this cake on Monique's page the other day I knew I HAD to make it. Not only was it a really simple cake to make, but it was filled with Quebecoise sucre à la crème.
My father . . . mon pere, is from the Saguenay region of Quebec and I have very fond memories of visits to his home and sitting around my grandmaman's kitchen table eating flaky pastries dolloped with sucre à la crème and a thick thick spooning cream.
As soon as I saw Moniques Cake (and her's is much, MUCH prettier than mine) . . . I knew I had to have it and so within just a couple of days I had one made. In my eagerness I did managed to crack the cake a bit, but it still tasted heavenly.
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.
Rice wasn't something we ate a lot of when I was growing up. My brother wouldn't eat it at all, my mother didn't like it either and when she did cook it, it was always minute rice, which is a sort of instant rice product they have in North America. Not exactly nutritionally sound . . . but we did not know that then. She always made it taste good when she did make it. She would chop up celery and onion and add some herbs . . . usually oregano. That was her favourite add in . . .
I was recently sent a lovely Hamper from the people at Baking Mad and challenged to bake myself a loaf of bread! I have a real fear of baking with yeast. Most of the time (even when I use the bread machine) my bread turns out lousy! I kid you not! My ex husband was a beautiful bread baker. He baked all of our bread when he was home. It was lovely. Me . . . I have always only ever made great door stops.
I've been very lucky in my life to have been inspired and taught by remarkable women and cooks. One of them was my good friend Leona.
I was in my mid twenties when we met and Leona was probably a good 16 years or so older than myself. She was and is a remarkably great home cook and this is one of her recipes which she shared with me all those years ago.
It's not much to look at, but it's really a very simple dish and uses things we all probably have in our kitchens all the time, with the exception of maybe the onion soup mix.
I do always have a packet or two of that on hand . . . for dishes just such as this, but I know not everyone will.
It does not photograph very well . . . but don't judge this book by it's cover . . . it's really far, far more delicious than it looks!
Trust me on this. Would I lie to you? I think not!
You can use any combination of chicken pieces that you wish to use . . . legs, thighs, breasts, etc. Today I used boneless chicken breasts.
You will obviously not need to cook them as long as you would the bone in pieces.
You simply whisk together simple ingredients . . . tomato ketchup, vinegar, brown sugar, water, lemon juice . . . and pour them over the chicken in a baking dish.
The dry onion soup mix is sprinkled evenly over top afterwards and then the whole thing is popped into the oven to bake.
I like to baste it every 15 minutes or so. The end result is tender chicken with a delicious sauce. Your family will think you have slaved all day, but that's okay . . . you don't need to tell anyone that you haven't!
I have always said that it is the simple things in life that are the most delious of all.
I am somewhat ashamed to say that there were not a lot of homemade . . . made from scratch . . . cakes that didn't come from a mix in my life prior to coming over here to the UK. I did some psuedo homemade cakes . . . you know the kind I mean. You use a cake mix and a few other ingredients to make a type of cake . . . but there's not really any science or skill involved in that is there. I did make my mom's hot milk cake from time to time and the odd gumdrop cake, and maybe a fruit cake now and again, but mostly . . . my cakes came from a mix. They were quick, easy, convenient and didn't taste all that bad.
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This Sunday is
Today I tortured my pasta hating husband with some comfort food from my childhood, which rang all my bells, but left him feeling rather off key! haha He says he hates pasta, but he always eats it when I make it. I think it's because he knows it's cheap . . . and that part of him that grew up during the War and during rationing, likes a good bargain!
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