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Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 One of the things I am always grateful for living here in the UK, is that I have spent the last twenty years living in a very close proximity to the European Continent, or "The Continent" as it is referred to here.  When we lived down in Kent, we could be sitting at an ouside cafe in France enjoying a hot drink by mid morning, depending on how early we got up. 

This was always really nice.  We often went over to Calais and Bologne sur Mer for a day's shopping. There was a huge Carrefour in Calais, so we would go sight-seeing in Bologne, have lunch and then double back to Calais and load up on French goodies before catching the train through the Euro-tunnel back to England.

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 One time we went over with our friends Jo and Colin and spent a day traversing all down the coast line from Calais South-bound, stopping to have a picnic along the way.  It was a lot of fun. Did you know the French are obsessed with any thing Egyptian?  I discovered that on that particular trip. It was astonishing.

One thing the French do really well is breads, cheeses and wines/spirits. I believe their bread is some of the best in the world. Once you have enjoyed a fresh French Croissant, you are spoiled for any other kinds. 

That is one thing I really love about travelling to other countries. Being able to try their foods. I am a culinary tourist more than anything else!

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 One year we were blessed to be able to spend a few weeks down in the Bordeaux/Dordogne region of France with our friends Audrey and Peter Lee. What a wonderful time we had.  Peter had rented a stone cottage out in country side.  

We spent our days hiking and exploring and then would come back to the cottage in the evenings where I would whip up a dinner for us from what we had managed to gather in the daytime during our travels. On that visit I got to try beautiful Caneles from the medieval town of Saint Emilion. 

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 I fell in love with those beautiful French pastries.  A beautifully rich caramel interior sealed into a crispy caramelised shell.  So delicious! 

Another time we stayed in the Alsace region of France/Germany.  This region is an area in the North East of France that has alternately been either French or German throughout the centures, reflecting a mix of the two cultures. At the moment it belongs to France.

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 We spent a full day in Strasbourg which is the capital of the Alsace region. There is a street there that is lined with tall poles on both sides.  There are stork nests situated on the top of each pole. I had never seen anything like it. Not before, not since.  Storks (Cigognes Blanche are the symbol of Alsace, as is this fabulous Bacon and Onion Tart. 

Tarte Flambee/Flammekeuche is its official name. It is sort of like the French/German equivalent of Pizza, but don't say that too loud or they might throw you in jail! haha

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

 Essentially it is a round flat, open-faced tart with a beautiful incredibly crisp pastry bottom. This is topped with sour cream/creme fraiche, caramelised onions, two cheeses and beautiful Alsatian bacon/lardons. 

Simple, and yet incredibly delicious in its simplicity.  Along with the Choucroute Garnie (essentially sauerkraut and smoked meats/sausages) it was one of my favourite foods from the region. We enjoyed the Choucroute one day at an open table in a market square. It was served with the most delicious boiled baby potatoes.

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

The Bacon and Onion Tarts are baked quickly in very hot ovens which gives them a very crisp crust.  This is almost impossible to replicate perfectly at home, but I do try my best. 

The thinner you can roll the dough out the crisper it will be. Or you can cheat a tiny bit and use puff pastry, which comes out crisp every time. This is my cheat/go-to option and something which we I can live with very happily.

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart  

Whilst it is not totally authentic, it is quite delicious and the perfect nod to this traditional tart of Alsace. With is crisp bottom and edges, not to mention rich toppings, it always goes down really well. 

Having said that, however, it is a rare, once in a blue moon treat as it is also very indulgent, to say the least.  Let's face it.  Puff pastry, bacon, sour cream, two cheeses caramelised onions.  How much more indulgent could you get?

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart  

I have never been able to resist anything in pastry.  When I was about 13 years old my mother had to go away one weekend. She had left a family sized homemade pot pie for me to heat up for our Saturday night supper. My whole family accused me of having taken the largest piece for myself. 

I denied it of course, it just so happened that after I had dished out everyone else's, there just happened to be a nice sized piece left in the dish for me. Was it done on purpose?  I cannot say for sure, but I do know I have never been able to live it down!

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart

To this day I am known for having taken the largest piece of pie for myself. On purpose or not.  I don't think I really intended to take the largest piece myself. I prefer to think of it as a happy accident. 

Nobody wants to be known as selfish or a glutton. In all truth however, when it comes to pastry, I am completely untrustworthy. Anything in pastry sings the song of my food-loving heart!

Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart
 
Well, almost anything at any rate.  I don't think I would be lining up for "Stargazy pie." (A british pie stuffed with whole fishes, heads intact. The bake the pie so that the heads poke out of the steam vents in the top of the pie, as if to be gazing at the heavens.) 

I think I would gladly give the whole of that pie to anyone who wanted it.  This Alsation Bacon and Onion Tart however . . .  that I might be tempted to fight for! 
 
Food travel is often the best kind of travel, and in these modern times you never really have to leave the comforts of your own home to experience it.

Yield: makes 6 - 8 slices
Author: Marie Rayner
Print
Alsatian Bacon & Onion Tart

Alsatian Bacon & Onion Tart

This is a simple tart that is delicious with caramelized onions, bacon and cheese. Perfect for a lunch or light supper when served with a salad, or cut into smaller bites and served as a party bite over the holidays.
prep time: 20 Mincook time: 25 Mintotal time: 45 Min

Ingredients

  • 2 TBS olive oil
  • 1 large onion, thinly sliced
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 TBS white wine or Calvados (French apple brandy)
  • 1 sheet frozen puff pastry, thawed
  • 1/2 cup (125g)of creme fraiche (about 1/2 cup)
  • 8 rashers of bacon, par-cooked (see notes) and chopped
  • 1/4 cup (20g) of grated gruyere cheese
  • 1/4 cup (20g) of grated cheddar cheese
  • egg wash made with 1 egg yolk beaten with 1 tsp of milk or water

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Line a baking tray with baking parchment.
  2. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onions, salt and black pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until they are soft and golden brown. This will take about 15 minutes.
  3. Add the wine or Calvados, if using, and stir gently to release any flavourful browned bits from the bottom of the pan. Simmer until the wine is evaporated, about 2 minutes.
  4. Remove the pan from the heat and allow to cool.
  5. Roll the pastry out on a lightly floured surface to a circle, about 13 inches in diameter.
  6. Transfer the rolled out dough to the prepared baking sheet. Spread with the creme fraiche evenly over the pastry, leaving a one inch border free all the way around the edge. Sprinkle evenly with the chopped bacon and the onions. Top with the grated cheeses.
  7. Fold over the exposed edges of the dough, fluting decoratively as you go, forming a 1 inch border. Brush this border with the prepared egg wash.
  8. Bake until the tart is golden brown and the bacon is crisp, about 20 to 25 minutes. Cut into 6 to 8 slices and serve hot.

notes:

To par-cook the bacon, place two layers of paper kitchen toweling on a microwave safe plate. Lay the desired amount of bacon in a single layer on top of the paper towel. Cover with two additional sheets of paper. Microwave for 2 to 2 1/2 minutes, or 30 seconds per rasher. (I do two rashers at a time.)
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Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #EnglishKitchen
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Alsation Bacon & Onion Tart  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  
 
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Ultimate Pizza Bagels

Monday, 28 September 2020

 

Ultimate Pizza Bagels  






One of my favourite things of all of the food groups is Pizza. I adore Pizza in any way shape or form. You may not think of it as a food group, but I do.  We have our fruits and vegetables, our meat fish and poultry, our dairy, our grains and breads and then there is Pizza, which from where I am sitting deserves a group all of its own. 




It combines the best of all the food groups, and it does it in a most delicious way. I will forever be grateful to the Italians for this delicious contribution to the world. It was always my dream to be able to eat pizza in Italy, but I don't think that is ever going to happen now for one reason or another!




Ultimate Pizza Bagels 
 





It was not always so, this love I have for pizza. I was well into my teens before I ever tasted a pizza. Our high school did a Winter Carnival every Winter. It lasted several days and it was a happy mix of games and activities.  




That was back when we used to get quite a bit of snow in Nova Scotia in the Winter months. You could make snow sculptures and go ice skating out of doors, tobboganing, etc. I believe in Global Warming because it has certainly changed a lot in recent years. 





Ultimate Pizza Bagels  




The year I was in Grade nine, they held a "Coffee House" on one of the nights of our High School Winter Carnival. The gym was set up with a stage for the performers and there were tables scattered throughout for our "customers" to sit at and enjoy the music and pizza which was available to buy by the slice. 



Our Home Ec Department was kept very busy making the pizzas for sale and I, as one of the "waitresses," was kept very busy taking and delivering orders. 



This was the very first time I ever tasted Pizza. I fell in love. (Who wouldn't!) Next time I tasted it, it was by way of a boxed Pizza Mix, enjoyed in the comfort of our home, introduced to us as a family by my then boyfriend, who would one day become my husband.  Apparently, it was something his sister's made quite often at home. 



Ultimate Pizza Bagels 







So what does any of this have to do with Pizza Bagels?  Why nothing really!  It was just an attempt on my part to explain how Pizza, which is something which we all take very much for granted these days, became one of my great loves.




Pizza can come in many ways, shape or forms, aside from the traditional.  There are French Bread Pizzas, Naan Pizzas, Spaghetti Pizzas, Cracker Pizzas, etc. Pizza Bagels and Pizza Bagel Bites. This, I am sharing today, is my attempt to share with you what I feel is the Ultimate Bagel Pizza!





Ultimate Pizza Bagels






It combines all of the things I love about Pizza, but in the form of a very delicious, hand held, Pizza Bagel.  I used Sour Dough Bagels for my Pizza Bagels.  It provided the perfect case for all the cheesy ooey gooey goodness! 




I started by brushing the cuts sides of a bagel with some softened butter and sprinkling them with some garlic Italian seasoning. Onto this I sprinkled some coarsely grated Parmesan Cheese. I then popped them into the oven to crisp up the edges and melt the cheese.



 
Ultimate Pizza Bagels






Onto that went some pizza sauce. I have always made my own pizza sauce.  It is delicious. I downsized it to a smaller amount for these. (Quantities are given for enough to make one are are easily multiplied to make more!) 


 
This went onto both the top and bottom of the bagels.  On top of that almost garlic bread topping. It is all about layering flavours here. 



 
Ultimate Pizza Bagels

 






Next I applied a sort of an uncooked sofrito/mirepoix of very finely chopped vegetables. I used two kinds of sweet bell peppers (yellow and red), onions and green and black olives. You could use whatever combination you wanted to use. 



It is meant to be another layer of flavour in what is already shaping up to be something quite delicious to say the least. And I am all for the flavours!



Ultimate Pizza Bagels

 




Onto that, and again on both sides, goes a layer of grated Mozzarella cheese.  Ooey, gooey, milky Mozzarella Cheese.  This helps to "glue in" those vegetables and keep them in place.




I added a layer of very thinly sliced Pepperoni.  Italian Pepperoni. You will never catch me snacking on a Pepperami stick, but on a pizza, I love the flavour of Pepperoni. It just fits.




Ultimate Pizza Bagels






Of course if you don't like Pepperoni, you can add whatever kind of protein you like, or even no protein at all.  Just make sure it is thinly sliced. You could try ham, or proscuitto, even mortadella or sliced hotdogs. Cooked ground beef, Italian sausage.  Crisp diced bacon. Whatever floats your boat!! This is placed only on the bottom half of the bagel.




Its then time to close it all in by flipping the top half of the bagel over top to cover everything up. You might think that I would be finished here, but nope, there is more!



Ultimate Pizza Bagels

 





Finally on the top I gild the lily with some melted butter.  A thin layer brushed over top of everything.  More flavour it added by lightly sprinkling on some dried basil and oregano leaves, and then a final dusting of very finely grated Parmesan Cheese. 




Now it is time to pop your Pizza Bagel into the oven. Make sure you line your baking sheet and lightly spray it with low fat cooking spray. That cheese will melt and the sauce may ooze a bit. You don't want your pizza bagel to end up stuck to the baking tray.



Ultimate Pizza Bagels






 You are almost at the finish line now. Into the oven for a quick bake.  Just until the bagel is warmed through and gilded on the edges, the cheese has melted and that buttery parmesan topping is golden crispy! 



Prepare to fall in love!  Grab the napkins and get ready to drool! Get ready to open wide and enjoy a spectacularly delicious hot sandwich!



 
Ultimate Pizza Bagels

 




These delicious hot delights are the ultimate in Pizza Bagels.  Not just a half a bagel like most Pizza Bagels you will see, these are the whole shebang! 



With double the sauce, double the toppings and double the cheese.  A true delight you can wrap your mouth around.



Ultimate Pizza Bagels

 



Hot, delicious and oh so moreish. I guarantee these Pizza Bagels are sure to become firm family favourites.  



I cannot claim fully the inspiration for this delicious treat. I was largely inspired by a photo of some Pizza Bagels I saw on Pinterest from Don't go Bacon My Heart. Lush and lucious. I have adapted the recipe in a way I feel puts them together better and so that if you only want one or two you can easily manage that. Plus I like to make my own sauces, etc. If you would like a full size recipe for my pizza sauce, you can find it here.



I don't know how you feel about Pizza, but as far as I am concerned, there can never be too much of it in my little world. My husband does not share my passion, but that's okay. It just means that there is more for me to enjoy!




Ultimate Pizza Bagels

Print
Ultimate Pizza Bagels
Yield: One
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 15 Mincook time: 15 Mintotal time: 30 Min
Quantities are given for one Pizza Bagel. You can multiply as per your requirements. These are fabulously tasty. Best Pizza Bagel ever, which says a lot!

Ingredients

For the Sauce:
  • 1/4 cup (60g) tomato sauce (Passata)
  • 1/2 TBS tomato puree (tomato paste)
  • pinch fennel seeds
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp onion powder
  • 1/4 tsp each dried basil and oregano
  • salt and black pepper to taste
  • 1/2 tsp sugar (optional)
For the filling:
  • 1 TBS softened butter
  • 1/2 tsp garlic Italian seasoning
  • 1 TBS coarsely grated Parmesan cheese
  • 1/2 cup (50g) grated Mozarella cheese
  • 1 TBS each minced onion, peppers, olives
  • 4 thin slices pepperoni
You will also need:
  • 1 sour dough bagel split
  • 1/2 TBS melted butter
  • 1/2 TBS finely grated Parmesan Cheese
  • pinch each dried oregano and basil

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas  mark 4. Line a small baking tray with aluminium foil and spray it lightly with canola spray.
  2. Place the split bagel onto the baking tray.  Spread both halves with the softened butter and sprinkle with Italian garlic seasoning. Sprinkle over top the coarsely grated Parmesan cheese.
  3. Pop into the oven for 8 to 10 minutes to gild the lily and melt the cheese.
  4. Whisk all of the sauce ingredients together to combine well.
  5. Remove from the oven and spread each half of the bagel with half of the pizza sauce. Top with the chopped onions, peppers and olives, dividing the chopped vegetables between each half. Top each half with half of the Mozzarella cheese, pressing it down lightly to adhere.
  6. Place the pepperoni onto the cheese on the bottom half. Carefully place the top half of the bagel over the pepperoni, cheese side down.
  7. Brush the bagel all over with the melted butter.  Sprinkle with some oregano and basil. Sprinkle the finely grated parmesan cheese over top.
  8. Bake in the preheated oven for a further 15 minutes until the bagel is crispy, the cheese inside has melted and the topping has gone golden crispy.
  9. Cut in half to serve. Deliciously scrummy!
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #EnglishKitchen
Created using The Recipes Generator 


Ultimate Pizza Bagels 





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!  

 
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Tomato Soup Cake

Sunday, 27 September 2020

Tomato Soup Cake 

You know it is autumn when the temperatures start to dip and the kitchen starts to smell like sugar and spice and all things nice.  Cinnamon. Cloves. Nutmeg.  Yep, a Tomato Soup cake is in the oven! 

Tomato Soup Cake?  What the heck? Say what?  Today I am tipping my hat to this fabulously retro recipe which dates back to days of old. I got the recipe from my Canadian MIL.  I am sure she got it from a tin of tomato soup!

Tomato Soup Cake 

People are always really surprised when you give them a slice of this delicious cake and are told what kind of cake it is!  You can almost guarantee their eye brows will rise in question.  Almost like they have heard you wrong.

Nope, you tell them. It is Tomato Soup Cake.  And then you can see them kind of nervously dipping their forks into it.  Not quite sure of what to expect.
 

Tomato Soup Cake 

They raise their fork to their mouth and you can almost see them cringing.  They are not sure what to expect but it can't be good right? 

WRONG!  They are almost always pleasantly surprised and have no problem digging their forks into the cake for a second bite. This is love at first bite, every time.

Tomato Soup Cake 

Tomato Soup Cake is a spicy sweet classic that has been gracing tables across North America for a great many years, back to the 1930's and the great depression.  This simple spice cake is also known as Mystery Cake. 

The secret ingredient, a tin of condensed tomato soup, has kept people guessing to no avail as to just what it is. You cannot taste any tomato soup in it. It just tastes nice and spicy.

Tomato Soup Cake

 I can only guess some really brave housewife happened upon the idea of using tomato soup to help cut back on butter and eggs which were really scarce at the time, along with wages.  There is some, but not a lot.

What a wonderful way to think outside of the box! How very innovative.  Whoever it was, I thank them very much!

Tomato Soup Cake 

In all truth it was probably a dietitian working for one of the soup companies who came up with it as a way to sell more tinnd soup. It doesn't really matter. The end result is one very delicious cake! 

I had never heard of it before my MIL gave me the recipe. It was not something my mother had ever made.  The first year I was married my MIL gave me a little handwritten notebook filled with all of her tried and true recipes. This was one of them.

Tomato Soup Cake 

I confess, I, too, was quite sceptical when I first saw it.  It was my ex husbands favourite cake however and so what was a good wife to do. Eager to please, I baked it for him. 

It smells heavenly when it is baking.  All spicy and warm, like autumn.  Your house will smell amazing.

Tomato Soup Cake 
 
To me, this is the smell of Home Sweet Home. Homecoming. Changing leaves. A briskness in the wind. Crisp and cooler mornings.  The smell of spice and woodsmoke.  

This tender and moist, spicy cake is to be honest, simply wonderful. It is very similar to my Applesauce Spice Cake both in looks and in flavour.  They both smell fabulous when baking.

Tomato Soup Cake 

The applesauce cake is not quite as dark in colour.  Both recipes are a nod to the ingenuity of the cooks and bakers of days gone by, when nothing was ever laid to waste and every scrap was used. 

I have added a cream cheese icing to my MIL's recipe. Hers was always plain.  Where she used to bake hers in a square pan, I like to bake it in a loaf tin. I think it turns out much moister baked in a loaf tin.

Tomato Soup Cake 
 
The cream cheese icing really adds a special touch I think.  A certain richness. I have had to fiddle a lot with my cream cheese icing since moving here to the UK.  Cream cheese here is wetter I think. It took me a very long time to get it to work out properly.

It is a fine balance between butter and cream cheese, and I do find it takes me a lot more icing sugar to get it to the right consistency here, which does result in more icing, but you can freeze the extra. Or keep it in the refrigerator for a short time if you know you are going to be using it up soonish.


Tomato Soup Cake

You can leave it plain if you wish, or just make a vanilla butter cream.  Plain it is lovely toasted lightly and spread with butter. 

Yes, I do know how to add extra calories to just about everything.  What can I say?  Guilty as charged.I guess I just know how to put the good in taste.  And my hips don't lie. They are the proof of the pudding.

Tomato Soup Cake


This spicy moist cake is studded with sweet sticky raisins. You can leave them out if you want, but if you are a raisin lover, I highly recommend you leave them in. You could use chopped dates in their place if you wanted to, or even both.

Same with the walnuts.  Leave them in and do toast them first if you can. It does make a difference. You could probably use pecans in their place, but I have just always used walnuts. Where I come from if a recipe calls for nuts, its usually walnuts.

 
Tomato Soup Cake

I really hope you will bake this.  Don't tell your family what it is until after they have fallen in love with it and then watch for the surprised look on their faces.

This has been a family pleaser for about 90 years now I reckon. There is something to be said about the staying power of a recipe such as this. Like the music of the Beatles and Spaghetti Bolognaise, may it never go out of style.

Tomato Soup Cake

Print
Tomato Soup Cake
Yield: 1 (8 by 4-inch) loaf
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 10 Mincook time: 45 Mintotal time: 55 Min
This sweet and spicy classic loaf cake is studded with sticky raisins and crunchy toasted nuts. A cream cheese frosting is its crowning glory. You know its autumn when one of these is in the oven!

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup (60g) butter
  • 1 cup (195g) sugar
  • 1 large free range egg
  • 1 (10 3/4 oz)(295g) tin of condensed tomato soup, undiluted
  • 1 tsp  bicarbonate of soda
  • 1 1/2 cups (210 g) sifted all purpose (plain)flour
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1/3 cup (50g) raisins
  • 1/3 cup (40g) toasted walnuts (coarsely broken)
For the cream cheese frosting:
  • 2 1/2 TBS butter, at room temperature
  • 4 TBS cream cheese, at room temperature
  • few drops of vanilla extract
  • 1 cup (130g) icing sugar sifted (or enough to give you the consistency needed) (In the UK it may take considerably more)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.  Butter an 8 by 4 inch loaf tin and line with baking paper. Set aside.
  2. Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg.  Beat in the tomato soup.
  3. Sift together the flour, soda, baking powder and spices.  Add to the creamed mixture and mix together just to combine.  Fold in the raisins and nuts.
  4. Spread in the loaf tin and bake for 40 to 45 minutes until well risen and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean. (Here in the UK, mine took an additional 10 minutes.)
  5. Let cool in the tin for 10 minutes, then tip out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
  6. When the cake has cooled make the frosting. Beat everything together until smooth, adding enough icing sugar to give you a smooth, thickish yet spreadable frosting. Spread over the top of the cake. 
  7. Cut into thick  slices to serve.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #EnglishKitchen
Created using The Recipes Generator 


Tomato Soup Cake  How are you coping with all of the changes in Blogger? I am having a heck of a time myself. I have never been one much for writing code etc. Like a car, I just want to get behind the wheel and turn the key.  This sure is different!  I suppose in time it will become old hat! Things are not quite looking the same on my home page, but I am hopeful that they will sort themselves out in due time.

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  

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Flash in a Pan Chocolate Squares

Saturday, 26 September 2020

Flash in a Pan 

I have been a cookbook collector since I was in high school, and a recipe collector since before even then. When I was a small girl, my mother would give me her old magazines to look through and I would clip out the recipes to keep. 

I can remember perusing her high school economics text book. Ever page was noted and studied by my yes and my heart. The cleaning, the sewing and, yes . . . the cooking pages.  She also had an old red covered cookbook put out by the Co-op from her hometown of Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia. 


Flash in a Pan 
 
That was likewise devoured and studied, along with a small meat paperback cookbook, and a volume from her housekeeping enclopedia entitled, The Money Saving Cookbook by Ida Bailey Allen. You can see clearly I was a foodie from a very young age. 
 
Once I got older and started earning my own money I started collecting cookbooks.  This recipe I am sharing with you today comes from The New Brunswick Women's Institute Cookbook. 
 
Flash in a Pan
 
This was published in 1987. In my experience community cookbooks like this are the best kinds of cookery books to have. They don't have many if any photos in them, but they are loaded with gems! 
 
When a woman feels proud enough of a recipe to want to share it in a community cookbook, you can be pretty sure that it is a good and sturdy recipe. Usually a recipe which has withstood the test of time and family.  Indeed most of them will be family favourites, and you can't beat that!
 

Flash in a Pan

 What intrigued me about this recipe was that it was mixed and baked in the tin. I have made a cake like that since I was a teen, called Wacky Cake. It was a recipe given to me by my best friend Linda's mother.  I have been baking that one for nigh on 50 years now. 

This, too was a chocolate cake, very similar to Wacky Cake, but at the same time quite different. This one was in the cookies and bars section of the book, amongst the brownies and other squares.

Flash in a Pan

 It also used an egg, which the Wacky Cake did not.  In the Wacky cake recipe you made three hollows in the dry ingredients mixed in the pan. Into one went oil. Into the other went vinegar, into the last went water.  This recipe has no vinegar either. 

It also used melted chocolate instead of cocoa powder. I was intrigued.  You lay a layer of walnut halves and chocolate chips on top of it prior to baking.  Again, intrigued.

Flash in a Pan

 Not intrigued enough however to actually mix the cake in the pan. I wanted to be able to cut it into squares and so I mixed it in a bowl and the poured it into a baking tin I had buttered and lined with baking paper so I could lift it out. 

I didn't want to take any chances on it sticking to the pan. I also wanted to be able to cut it into perfect squares. Yes,  I can be a bit pedantic when it comes to things like that.

Flash in a Pan

 The end result is a lovely and moist chocolate bar/cake.  Not too sweet, but with just the right amount of chocolate flavour. 

It is more like a cake than a bar. I don't think you could call it a brownie, unless you are wanting a very cake-like brownie.

Flash in a Pan

 This is the kind of cake/bar my grandmother would have baked. I would love to know the history of it and how it came to have the name of Flash in a Pan.

I suspect it has something to do with it being mixed all together in the pan. Not to mention the ease at which it goes together and the short time it takes to bake. Indeed it is baked in a flash!

Flash in a Pan

 There are a few things in life which make me incredibly happy. One of those things is trying out a new recipe. Another is chocolate cake. I also love walnuts and chocolate chips.

Combine all of those things and I am very happy. In fact I am truly ecstatic if you want to get right down to it!

Flash in a Pan

So are any of you from New Brunswick?  In Canada.  Might you know the history, if any, behind this recipe? I would be very interested to know.
 
Inside the book on page three is written these words: 
"The past presidents of the New Brunswick Women's Institute gratefully acknowledge and thank all who have contributed to the publication of this cookbook. 
 
As always, our lives are centred around our homes, and our kitchens are the centre of activity. We feel you will enjoy these selected recipes, some are new and others old, but all reflect the love of good cooking."  
 
Flash in a Pan

 I don't know about you, but just reading that made my heart happy. Those are my values. Home.  Family. Traditions and good food.

The message is repeated again in French just beneath.  Did you know that New Brunswick is the ONLY truly officially bilingual province in Canada?  Its true. Both Engish and French are its official languages.  As are all of the street/traffic/highway signs, etc.

Flash in a Pan

 You can correct me if I'm wrong, but I do believe it is the law. I also think most children are able to be educated in both languages. My grandsons are being educated in both French and English. Its a good thing. 

Half of this cookbook is in English and half of it is in French.  Different recipes in each half. A great impetus to learn the language.  Thankfully my highschool French is good enough that I can easily sort it out.

Flash in a Pan

 I was really pleased with how this "Flash in a Pan" turned out! It is nice and moist and quite chocolaty considering it only has two ounces of melted chocolate in it. Make sure you use a good dark chocolate. 

I love the walnuts on the top. I did not bother to toast them this time as I knew they would be baking in the oven on top of the batter and would get nice and toasty anyways. I didn't want to risk them burning.


Flash in a Pan 
 
What you have here is a moist and delicious chocolate cake bar. With toasty walnut halves studding the top and little pocket of semi-sweet chocolate from the chocolate chips.

It needs nothing else. I would not even attempt to frost it. Not too sweet,  just right. If you are looking for a great, quick and easy bake for the weekend, I highly recommend!

Flash in a Pan

Print
Flash in a Pan
Yield: Makes 12 squares
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 5 Mincook time: 30 Mintotal time: 35 Min
A delicious moist chocolate cake that is mixed and baked all in one pan. Topped with walnut halves and chocolate chips this goes really well with a glass of cold milk or a hot drink!

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup (120ml) canola oil
  • 2 ounces melted unsweetened chocolate
  • 1 large free range egg
  • 1 1/4 cups (175g) plain flour
  • 1 cup (190g) granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup (180ml) water
  • 12 to 16 walnuts halved
  • 1/2 package of chocolate chips (I used 1 cup/180g)

Instructions:

  1. Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas  mark 4.  You will need a 9-inch square cake tin.
  2. Mix the first 9 ingredients in the cake tin. Beat with a fork until light and creamy, for about 2 minutes. Scrape the bottom and sides of the tin with a spatula and then spread the batter out evenly in the tin.
  3. Arrange walnut halves evenly over top and scatter with the chocolate chips. Do not mix them in.
  4. Bake for about 30 minutes until the cake springs back when lightly touched and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.
  5. Cut into squares to serve.

notes:

Alternately you can grease the pan and line with baking paper. Stir the flour, sugar, baking soda and salt together in a bowl. Add all the wet ingredients and beat until smooth. Pour into the prepared pan. Top and bake as above.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #EnglishKitchen
Created using The Recipes Generator 


Flash in a PanClearly I do not have a heck of a lot of willpower when it comes to either chocolate or cake, or walnuts for that matter. Life is far too short not to be happy. A little treat now and then does a body and a mind 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 

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This is a book I wrote several years ago, published by Passageway Press. I am incredibly proud of this accomplishment. It is now out of print, but you can still find used copies for sale here and there. If you have a copy of it, hang onto it because they are very rare.

Welcome, I'm Marie

Welcome, I'm Marie
Canadian lover of all things British. I cook every day and like to share it with you!
A third of my life was spent living in the UK. I learned to love the people, the country and the cuisine. I have always been an Anglophile. You will find plenty of traditional British recipes here in my English Kitchen. There are lots of North American recipes also, but then again, I am a Canadian by birth. I like to think of my page as a happy mix of both. If you are looking for something and cannot find it, don't be afraid to ask! I am always happy to help and point you in the right direction, even if it exists on another page, or in one of my many cookbooks.

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