Sunday, November 8, 2009

Chocolate Cake

Finally an update on my cake making adventure is here.So, it was a day before my birthday and the previous day P and I decided that we will follow a cake recipe of David Lebovitz.But as Sunday rolled on,laziness took over us,we just lounged around the house,made some pasta for lunch,made onion bhajiyas in the evening.By the time I realized that I had not even started the cake it was 7pm.Both of us were pretty tired and did not want to spend 2 more hours in the kitchen,so we opted for this easy Nigella Lawson's cake recipe.It came out pretty good and we finished it before my birthday:)



Ingredients for the Cake:
  • 200g plain flour
  • 200g caster sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
  • 40g best-quality cocoa
  • 175g soft unsalted butter
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 teaspoons real vanilla extract
  • 150ml cream
Frosting
  • 75g unsalted butter
  • 175g best quality dark chocolate, broken into small pieces
  • 300g icing sugar
  • 1 tablespoon golden syrup (or light corn syrup)
  • 125ml cream
  • 1 teaspoon real vanilla extract

Cake
  • Take everything out of the fridge so that all the ingredients can come to room temperature.
  • Preheat the oven to gas mark 4/180°C and line and butter two 20cm sandwich tins with removable bases.(you can just use baking trays)
  • Now all you have to do is put all the cake ingredients – flour, sugar, baking powder and bicarb, cocoa, butter, eggs, vanilla and cream – into a food processor and process until you have a smooth, thick batter. If you want to go the long way around, just mix the flour, sugar and leavening agents in a large bowl and beat in the soft butter until you have a combined and creamy mixture. Now whisk together the cocoa, cream, vanilla and eggs and beat this into your bowl of mixture.
  • Divide this batter, using a rubber spatula to help you scrape and spread, into the prepared tins and bake until a cake tester, or a thin skewer, comes out clean, which should be about 35 minutes, but it is wise to start checking at 25. Also, it might make sense to switch the two cakes around in the oven halfway through cooking time.
  • Remove the cakes, in their tins, to a wire rack and let cool for 10 minutes before turning out of their tins. Don’t worry about any cracks as they will easily be covered by the icing later.
Frosting
  • To make this icing, melt the butter and chocolate in a good-sized bowl either in the microwave or suspended over a pan of simmering water. Go slowly either way: you don’t want any burning or seizing.
  • While the chocolate and butter are cooling a little, sieve the icing sugar into another bowl. Or, easier still, put the icing sugar into the food processor and blitz. This is by far and away the least tedious way of removing lumps.
  • Add the golden syrup to the cooled chocolate mixture, followed by the cream and vanilla and then when all this is combined whisk in the sieved icing sugar. Or just pour this mixture down the funnel of the food processor on to the icing sugar, with the motor running.
  • When you’ve done, you may need to add a little boiling water – say a teaspoon or so – or indeed some more icing sugar: it depends on whether you need the icing to be runnier or thicker; or indeed it may be right as it is. It should be liquid enough to coat easily, but thick enough not to drip off.
  • Choose your cake stand or plate and cut out four strips of baking parchment to form a square outline on it (this stops the icing running on to the plate). Then sit one of the cakes, uppermost (ie slightly domed) side down.
  • Spoon about a third of the icing on to the centre of the cake half and spread with a knife or spatula until you cover the top of it evenly. Sit the other cake on top, normal way up, pressing gently to sandwich the two together.
  • Spoon another third of the icing on to the top of the cake and spread it in a swirly, textured way (though you can go for a smooth finish if you prefer, and have the patience). Spread the sides of the cake with the remaining icing and leave a few minutes till set, then carefully pull away the paper strips.
* This is Nigella Lawson's recipe for Old-fashioned chocolate cake.





Saturday, October 31, 2009

Bruschetta

After making the pedhas, I was on a roll:). P called up from work and said he wanted to have bruschetta: he was craving it ever since we saw Julie and Julia,where in a scene Julie is making yummy bruschetta.
So we decided to make a dinner out of it.


Ingredients: 1 baguette
7 to 8 firm ripe tomatoes

2 cloves of garlic

2
tbsps EVOO (extra virgin olive oil)
1 tsp sugar

1 tsp salt

1/2 cup chopped fresh buffalo
mozzarella
freshly
ground black pepper according to desired taste
couple of sprigs of basil.(you can use dried basil too,but use sparingly because
dried basil generally tends to be a little strong in taste)
Method:
De-seed the tomatoes


















Cut the baguette up into
diagonal slices













Heat
EVOO on a skillet and toast these slices to golden brown on both the sides.You can use the oven too,Just coat the slices with EVOO and put it on the grill setting for 5 minutes for 180 deg C.

Chop the de-seeded tomatoes into cubes.Add the sugar,salt,EVOO,basil and finely chopped garilc and freshly ground pepper and the cheese.








Mix this up nicely and keep it in the fridge for an hour.
Later when you are ready to eat,spoon out the tomato mixture on to the toasted bread and enjoy!

Milk Pedhas

Yesterday, I had a litre of whole milk lying in the fridge.Usually I make yogurt out of it,but for some reason we did not get to finishing the yogurt and I had a lot of left over milk. So I set out on a hunt for the perfect pedha recipe and liked Sree's recipe.
But I tweaked it and eliminated the milk powder and added very little paneer.


Ingredients:
1 litre whole milk
2 1/2 tbsps paneer

3 tbsps sugar

10 roughly chopped almonds to garnish

1 pinch of saffron strands


Method:
Heat the milk in a heavy bottom wide pan. (I took our regular cooking kadai). Keep the heat on medium low and boil approximately for 2.5 hours stirring every 5 to 7 minutes. Be careful and stir at regular intervals otherwise the milk will stick to the bottom of the pan. After around 2 hours the milk will become thick and start forming a mass.At this point add the paneer,sugar and saffron. Keep stirring continuously.When the mixture starts leaving the kadai, cook for 5 more minutes and turn off the heat. It is important to stop cooking when the mixture is still a little moist, because if you overcook it the pedhas will have a burnt taste and will become hard. Once the mixture cools down, roll them into balls of desired size and top each one of it with a piece of the almond.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

I am going to be a year older..Do I like it?..Does anybody??

Okay so here I am sitting in front of the computer trying to write my first ever blog..yeah I know all you seasoned bloggers will think..honey well that's how we started!..Anyway ..to cut a long story short..I am here to ramble..like many of my fellow bloggers..but still an amateur..
Well the reason for starting a blog is one being...that I follow some of the food blogs..and I love to cook..and am a decent cook..:)
So here I am..I want to bake a cake on my birthday..which is very soon..and I am looking for a good chocolate cake recipe..For some reason this birthday feels very different..the enthusiasm is lacking..not the usual euphoria that I usually myself create a week before my birthday..For some reason I have not even gotten myself to go to the salon and do the usual beautification that I go through before my birthday..oh well..enough...
So to start with I am looking for a recipe for a chocolate cake with good icing..usually the icing that I have tried either melts too fast or becomes too creamy..I could might as well buy a Betty Crocker cake mix..but now that I have sometime I would like to indulge in some cake making..at least it will get me excited:)...