Another GBBO inspired toon...
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
Monday, 9 September 2013
Chocolate, Honey and Almond Biscotti - for Organic September

When the good people at Sainsbury’s asked if I would like to
be sent some of their So Organic range to come up with a few new recipes, I knew
I would love the challenge. This is to promote Organic Food Month this September.
I didn’t know what ingredients I’d be sent or what I would
make, so when I said yes and the So Organic goodies arrived my brain got ticking. I will have a few
recipes using the produce through September, but the first batch I used
included honey, blanched almonds and Fairtrade dark chocolate.
I took a look at these ingredients and they screamed the
word biscotti at me. I have made biscotti before, namely chocolate and hazelnut biscotti. But this recipe was to be a plain biscuit with chocolate chunks
studded throughout, toasted almonds and the sweet addition of the runny
honey. Here's how I made it...
Ingredients:
2 eggs
115 grams granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 tablespoons Sainsbury’s So Organic Clear Honey
235 grams plain flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
100 grams Sainsbury’s So Organic blanched almonds
100 grams Santo Domingo Fairtrade Organic Dark Chocolate, chopped
adapted from Joy of Baking
Method:
Preheat the oven to 180oC. Lay the almonds out on
a baking sheet and toast in the oven for about 8 minutes, or until they have
turned slightly brown and you can begin to smell them. Remove from the oven
(keeping it at 180oC) and give them a rough chop. Set aside.
In a mixing bowl, sift the flour, baking powder and salt,
set this aside. In the bowl of a mixer, beat the sugar and eggs on high for 3-5
minutes, until the mixture is very pale and creamy looking. Add the vanilla and
honey and beat for a further minute.
Add this wet mixture to the flour mix and combine. Add the
almonds and chocolate and mix through evenly. Line a baking sheet with
greaseproof paper and spoon the mixture into the middle. With a couple of
knives, form the dough into an oblong about 4” by 10”. This is pretty sticky
stuff, but using the knives avoids any mess.
Place into the oven and bake for 25 minutes. The oblong will
turn dark brown and rise slightly. Remove from the oven (drop the temperature to 165oC) and carefully remove
the greaseproof paper. Let it cool on a cooling rack for 15 minutes. Then with
a bread knife, cut into 1” thick slices. Place each slice back onto the baking sheet
(lined with new greaseproof paper) on their side and bake for 10 minutes. Flip
each biscuit over and bake for a further 8 minutes.
Again, remove from the oven and greaseproof paper and allow
to cool on a rack completely.
The biscotti is very crisp. It has delicious floral
sweetness from the honey and the dark chocolate and creamy almond compliment
each other well. These go great with a hot coffee and are just waiting to be
dunked! Enjoy…
Disclosure Statement: I was sent So Organic items free to bake with. Any opinions expressed are my own.
Saturday, 7 September 2013
Twinings Tea Review and GBBO Week 3
I have to admit, even though I go to Starbucks A LOT, when
at home and at work actually, I drink mostly tea. So when I was recently asked
to review some Twinings teas, I jumped at the chance.
Twinings, as you may know, are an English purveyor of tea.
They carry an amazing amount of the stuff, loose leaf, bagged, fruit, herbal, green, black,
etc. the range is actually very surprising.
I was sent a selection to try including some of their fruit
and herbal tea range, namely settling ginger and camomile and maple sensation. I
was also sent pineapple and grapefruit green tea and some loose leaf low grown Sri
Lankan strong black tea.
I actually took these into work to give my colleagues a bit
of a tasting session. I tried the maple and camomile, as I love maple flavour
and I was not disappointed. The maple was not overpowering and
complimented the earthy camomile tea well. A few folk said this was too sweet for
them, but I don’t like sweet tea myself and didn’t find it so.
One of my colleagues tried the pineapple and grapefruit
green tea as she drinks quite a lot of regular green tea. She was sceptical,
thinking that the fruit flavours might be too acidic with the green tea, but
she was surprised by how pleasant it was and not cloying at all.
A couple of others tried the settling ginger. This went down
well, with them saying that the ginger was warming and left a tingle at the
back of their throats. One friend even took a couple of bags home for their
daughter as she had a sore throat and thought it would soothe her.
And lastly to the loose-leaf black tea, which I tried today
at home (as there were no strainers in the office!). This was a good strong
black tea, perfect for a morning cuppa with a splash of milk, as I like it.
Overall the Twining teas impressed. As I said they have many
many teas and their earl grey would be good to try with my London Fog recipe I
made a while back.
Disclosure Statement: I was sent the teas free to review. Any opinions expressed are my own.
And my GBBO Week 3 thought of the week – Poor Ali and his
Petit Four! They barely got a fleeting glance, only Dame Mary Berry
pointing out that one effort was just a shortbread biscuit with icing on! Oh
well, he got through to next week anyway!
Thursday, 5 September 2013
Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cupcakes with Cookie Dough Frosting

You know those days when you just fancy chocolate? Well, I
was having one of those. And I was in the mood for cupcakes, so I knocked up a
batch of chocolate flavoured batter, and added chocolate chips (hence the
chocolate chocolate chip part).
I baked these off. But they looked sort of naked without any
frosting. And by this point I was in the mood for something else as well –
cookie dough.
Remember way way back at the start of Cakeyboi I made cookie dough pops? Well, I decide to use this recipe for my frosting, making it a
little looser, so it could be piped easily on top of the cupcakes.
To garnish, I popped weenie choc chip cookies in the top and
voila – my craving was set to be satisfied…
Yield: 24 cupcakes (my craving was well satisfied!)
Cupcake Ingredients:
260 grams plain flour
75 grams unsweetened cocoa powder
170 grams granulated sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
320 ml milk
2 eggs
80 ml vegetable oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
100 grams plain chocolate chips
adapted from culinaryarts.about.com
Method:
Preheat your oven to 180oC. Place cupcake liners
in two 12 cup, cupcake trays.
In a bowl whisk together the flour, sugar, cocoa, salt,
baking powder. In a separate bowl mix the milk, eggs, oil and vanilla.
Add the wet mix to the dry and mix just until the dry
ingredients have been fully incorporated. Add the chocolate chips and mix
through.
With a scoop, fill the cupcake liners ¾ full. Place the two
trays in the oven for 18 to 20 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean
from the centre. Allow the cupcakes to cool fully.
Cookie Dough Frosting Ingredients:
110grams of unsalted butter, softened
250grams plain flour
200grams of light brown sugar
1 tsp Vanilla extract
1 can (397g) condensed milk
200grams of light brown sugar
1 tsp Vanilla extract
1 can (397g) condensed milk
1 tablespoon milk
50 grams mini chocolate chips
50 grams mini chocolate chips
Method:
In a mixing bowl, cream the sugar and the butter together
until light and fluffy. Add in the vanilla and mix through. Once combined add
your flour and condensed milk and tablespoon of milk. Mix until totally
combined and no flour is visible. Add in the chocolate chips, mix through well.
Place the cookie dough in a piping bag an pipe onto the top of the cupcakes.
Finish by placing a mini chocolate chip cookie in the frosting.
Keep the cupcakes cool in the fridge, which helps keep the
frosting firm, until you are ready to eat them.
Labels:
chocolate,
Chocolate Chip,
cookie dough,
cupcakes,
frosting
Wednesday, 4 September 2013
Monday, 2 September 2013
Treat Petite – a new baking, blogging challenge!
Welcome and a big thank you for stopping by to check out
‘Treat Petite’. It’s a new baking, blogging challenge hosted on alternate
months by myself - Stuart from Cakeyboi and Kat over at The Baking Explorer.
The idea behind Treat Petite is quite simple – it’s any
sweet treat you can think of that’s not a big cake! From cookies to macarons,
krispie treats to truffles; we want to see any delicious concoction you
conjure up in the kitchen that is individually portioned!! And don’t worry;
cupcakes are permitted.
Each month will have a theme for you, to get those ideas
flowing.
Each challenge will begin on the 1st of every
month and will close on 25th. We aim to have a round up online at
the end of the month.
Here are those all important rules;
- Email that month's host by the 25th of the month, midnight at the latest – include in the e-mail your name, if you have a blog the URL of your post and name of your blog, recipe and a photo (640x480pixels max) of your bake.
- If
applicable post your bake onto your blog and link back to Cakeyboi and The Baking Explorer, stating who is hosting that particular month.
- Follow
Cakeyboi and The Baking Explorer blogs via the Google Join this Site
button, if you haven’t already.
- If
you tweet use #treatpetite and
mention @MrCakeyboi and @BakingExplorer – we will retweet
- Add
the challenge logo to the post and ‘Treat Petite’ as a label to the post
- Use
any recipe as long as the source is noted
- Add
your photo to the ‘Treat Petite’ Pinterest board (request access from me –
Cakeyboi)
- Feel
free to enter old posts as long as you update the post and meet all the
requirements above!
And the theme for Treat Petite No.1 is ‘No Theme’.
That’s right – to get us all into the swing of things, anything goes! Kat is hosting and she would
love to see your petite makes, no matter what they are….
If you have any questions at all, please email Cakeyboi or
The Baking Explorer.
Ready, steady bake!
Saturday, 31 August 2013
Cartoon Saturday, Capt. Cakeman on Evap and Condensed, plus GBBO Week 2
Firstly a cartoon which I've shown before, but is kinda apt for those of you in the UK, this weekend...
Captain Cakeman is here...
Captain Cakeman is here...
Hi Katie,
Evaporated milk and condensed milk are very different
products. Let’s start with Evaporated.
Evaporated milk is ordinary milk which has had around 60% of
it’s water content removed. It is then canned and the cans are heated to
prevent bacteria growing, giving it a long-shelf life. This heating process
gives the sweet taste evaporated milk has. I have read that if you add enough
water to evaporated, you end up with regular milk again! Not sure if that is
true, as the sweet flavour might make it taste a tad different.
Now, condensed milk is milk which has sugar added to it, and
had some of it’s water content removed. Due to the amount of sugar added
(about 45%) it is a much thicker product, used in many recipes. Condensed milk
without the added sugar used to be quite common but is now nearly unheard of.
Like evaporated milk, canned sweetened condensed milk has a very long shelf
life.
The two are not interchangeable in recipes! I hope this
answers your questions Katie.
And lastly GBBO week 2, thought of the week - Poor Lucy, I'm not saying I could do any better, but I thought the bread was supposed to be a showstopper - not a doorstopper!!
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