Saturday, 6 August 2011

Cerebellum Crustulum


Ok, I know, it seems like I am stuck on this cupcake thing for evah!!!  Friday afternoon's are cupcake days around here. And after much deep and profound brain things inside my head,  I bring you Cerebellum Crustulum, cupcakes with brains.  I have to admit, I would never have made the cut as a surgeon,  as I did not have a steady hand while icing, but you get the picture.

I made just enough frosting, and ran out on the sixth guy, and of course, we had to give him a name......but lets move on to the more important part, the recipe.

This recipe is exactly the same one as for the vanilla cupcakes, you just add the cocoa, I also added the last of the choc chips in order to produce that extra punch in the mouth chocolate explosion.  After all chocolate is my kryptonite.





Ingredients:
150 g Butter - softened
150 g Castor sugar
175 g Self-raising flour
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 tbs cocoa








Method:
1. Pre-heat the oven to 180 degrees celcius.
2. Line a 12 cup cake tin, with cup cake papers.
3. Crack the eggs into a cup and beat lightly with a wisk.
4. Place all the ingredients in a large bowl.
5. Beat with an electric mixer for 2 minutes, until light and creamy.
6. Divide the mixture evenly between the cake cases.
7. Bake for 18-20 minutes until risen and firm to touch.
8. Allow to cool fully before icing.


Disclaimer: No brains were harmed during this photo shoot, although I am not sure how Julius sneaked  in



Friday, 5 August 2011

Are you Spooking to Me?


Spookelina on the red carpet

Here I was thinking, tonight I am taking a break from the kitchen.  But noooo, it seems I have created a monster.  My two apprentice sous chefs had a little assignment for me.

"What do you mean you are not creating something interesting tonight?"

They wanted some show and tell which they could take to school in the morning.

So I whipped out my Queen Latiffa jiggle, and did the "Are you spooking to me?"  attitude. We were in stitches, again, rolling on floor laughing this time.

Now these little blokes did not come out that perfect, I don't think they should be cracking like this (note bubbles on Spook with runny tummy). But I will tell you what was cracking us up, it was the photo shoot. We had so much fun snapping these spook puffs, we felt like the Spook Paparazzi.

It is important to let your egg whites come to room temperature, this will help you get the most volume. Also, make sure all your bowls, whisk, etc are spotlessly clean and free of any grease.

Spook with runny tummy
Ingredients:

2 egg whites, room temperature
tiny pinch of salt
tiny pinch of cream of tartar
3/4 cup castor sugar, sifted
tiny silver candy sprinkles (chocolate or little seeds) for eyes, or food coloring

Special equipment:
ziplock bag with one of the corners snipped off







Method:

Spook Mobile
  1. Place the egg whites, salt and cream of tartar in a large, clean mixing bowl. 
  2. Start whisking the egg whites at medium speed with an electric mixer.
  3. When the whites are frothy and have a bit of volume to them, start sprinkling in the sugar a bit at a time over a minute or two - leaving the mixer on the entire time.
  4. The meringues mixture should start to have stiff structured peaks, lots of structure, otherwise the will collapse into a puddle.
  5. Fill the pastry bay -or alternately, zip lock bag with the corner snipped off - using the spatula. 
  6. Now pipe about 12 ghost shapes onto the prepared baking sheet which is covered with wax paper.
  7. I found that making tiny circles all the way up is the easiest way to make the ghost shape.
  8. At this point you can either press candy silver balls one at a time into your pointer finger and place them on the ghost - again, quickly but carefully.
  9. Or you can also paint little eyes with food coloring onto the meringues after they have baked.
  10. Place the meringue in the oven for an hour. After an hour, open the oven door an inch or two and cook for another 30 minutes. 
  11. Touch one of them at this point, they shouldn't be gummy or wobbly. If they are still too moist, leave them in the oven until they aren't. 
  12. Turn off the oven, and leave the meringues in there until it comes down to room temperature.

Thursday, 4 August 2011

Poopdeck Pappy Pancakes

Starting this blog has really been an exciting event in our kitchen, especially for the kids.  They love being in the kitchen with me chatting, doing their homework, helping out and testing the food.  I couldn't help but laugh at Imke (my youngest) and her appetite for adventure.  She offered to chop some spinach, I gave her one of the smaller knifes and noticed that she was having a difficult time with it and also complaining about it.  So I handed her the big chef's knife, she instantly commented "Now that's what I am talking about!"

As I started the spinach dish, the kids impersonated Popeye the Sailor man, so we all tried to copy cat his silly old laugh.  I then quizzed the kids on their knowledge of the cartoon and asked if they knew what the name of Popeye's dad was. I had them in stitches, of course it was Poopdeck Pappy.So they instantly decided that the original name of these pancakes should be changed to Poopdeck Pappy Pancakes.  I have to be honest this dish took me longer than the 40 minutes proposed for the preparing and cooking time, as I was busy 90% of the time wiping tears of laughter from my eyes.

Spinach Cheddar Pancakes aka Poopdeck Pappy Pancakes

Camoflage Spinach
Ingredients
10 ounces frozen chopped spinach, defrosted (about 300 ml)
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 cup grated sharp cheddar
l large egg, beaten
2 egg whites
2/3 cup low-fat milk
1 cup all purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Olive oil for frying
Sundried Tomato Cream Sauce (see below)




Method
  1. Squeeze all water from the defrosted spinach. Melt the butter in the microwave, about 30seconds.In a large mixing bowl, combine the spinach, melted butter, grated cheese, the beaten egg, milk, flour,baking powder, and salt. Mix well, forming a thick batter.
  2. Using an electric mixer, beat the egg whites in a separate bowl until they form soft peaks. Fold it into the batter.
  3. Place a frying pan over medium high heat and add enough oil to coat the surface.
  4. Ladle the batter into the hot pan, spreading the batter out. Give yourself enough room in the pan to flip the pancakes.
  5. Cook for about 3 minutes, or until the pancakes are golden on the bottom. They will puff up and small air bubbles will form on the surface when they are ready to be flipped. Flip the pancakes over and cook for about another 2 minutes until the other side is golden.
  6. Transfer to a foil-lined baking sheet and place in the oven to keep warm while you finish the remaining batches. 
  7. Serve with the Tomato Cream Sauce spooned on top.

Sundried Tomato Cream Sauce

Sundried Tomatoes, fresh Tomatoes, Cream
Ingredients
5 sundried tomatoes packed in oil
2 whole peeled tomatoes
3/4 cup heavy cream


Method
  1. Blend together all the ingredients using food processor or blender. (The cream may look a little chunky, it's ok).
  2. Transfer to a saucepan and warm through over low-to-moderate heat. If you had chunky-ish cream before, it should melt smoothly, leaving you with a creamy smooth sauce.


This recipe was published on http://lickmyspoon.com

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

Wai Yu Mun Ching 你大嚼

Imke and Thelani (my kidlings) wanted dessert again, so I made them Chinese pancakes with chicken and Hoi Sin Sauce.  Imke was not impressed, but I quickly did  a "Noot vir Noot" version of  Hanna Montanna's "The best of both worlds". Convincing her that dessert and dinner rolled into one is always a good thing, how cool is that!  The horror!

Now these are not real chinese pancakes, as this is an interesting process, and on a week night we have to do things quick around here.  So this pancake is a good old South African bazaar pancake.  And the two critics surprisingly loved these pancakes, I guess my singing did the trick :)


Ingredients for pancakes (crepe's):
250 ml cake flour
5 ml baking powder
2 ml salt
2 eggs
200 ml milk
175 ml water
5 ml lemon juice
125 ml sunflower oil
 


Method:
  1. Sift the cake flour, baking powder and salt together.
  2. Mix the eggs, milk, water and lemon juice together.
  3. Add the cake flour to this mixture and mix well.
  4. Add the oil and mix well until mixture takes on a creamy consistancy.
  5. Let the mixture rest for about 20 minutes.
  6. Coat a frying pan with sunflower oil and heat until nice and warm.
  7. Pour or scoop the batter onto the frying pan, using approximately 1/4 cup for each crepe.
  8. Tilt the pan with a circular motion so that the batter coats the surface evenly.
  9. Cook the crepe for about 2 minutes, until the bottom is light brown.
  10. Loosen with a spatula, turn and cook the other side.

Ingredients for stir fry chicken:

250g stir fry chicken
20 ml Vital Soy Sauce (the garlic, ginger and sesame flavored one.  Very yummy and good for you)
fresh grated ginger, thumb size
Hoi Sin Sauce
1/2 cucumber diced
2 spring onions chopped

Method:
  1. Mix chicken, soy sauce and grated ginger.
  2. Fry this in a warm frying pan until chicken is cooked through.
  3. Brush the pancake with some Hoi Sin Sauce.
  4. Place some chicken, spring onion, cucumber down the centre of the pancake. 
  5. Fold up the end to enclose filling and roll into a cigar shape. Serve immediately.
Makes about 12 pancakes.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Juliaaas is a Waffle Guy

I was scanning news headlines this morning. As we currently stand on international affairs, the US managed to negotiate its debt limit in the nick of time, and the world economy is safe for the time being.  It also looks like Julius Malema want's to grace us with his presence in the form of his huge stature and war like appetite here in Botswana.

In order to prepare for his visit, I was pondering what this youngster (pronounced jungsta) would like to eat, if he is allowed across the border that is.  Unlike the vegetable truck that got stopped and we are now stuck with local green tomatoes,  his paw-paw truck might just get a chance of slipping by,  as we currently do not have a ban on paw-paw's unfortunately.

But he seems like a waffle guy and I am not just being facetious now.  Whenever he waffles about something, it's priceless and it provides so much entertainment, you just have to love him as a stand up comedian.  I hope he will be impressed with my choc chip waffles, I promise it is lip smacking good chief, om nom nom.


Ingredients:
375 ml cake flour
15 ml baking powder
2,5 ml salt
10 ml sugar
about 250 ml milk
2 eggs, separated
45 ml melted butter or margarine
125 ml choc chips (more or less, I like more)








Method:
  1. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt, add the sugar.
  2. Gradually add the milk, mixing well after each addition.
  3. Add the beaten egg yolks as well as the melted butter.
  4. Beat the egg whites until stiff and old in.
  5. Add the Choc Chips, mix well.
  6. Cook the waffles in an electric wattle toaster.

Monday, 1 August 2011

What to do with a killer tomato


We have to convince the little housewife out there that the tomato that ate the family pet is not dangerous! - Attack of the Killer Tomato.

Now I thought of this quote when I saw the pathetic tomatoes at the supermarket today, they all looked like they had eaten someone's pet indeed.  They had these sad green grins on their chubby little faces, ready to cough up some dust and then really wilt away .  It's then that I realized that the border must have been closed for any healthy looking tomato trying to get in, and we were stuck with these little green blokes.

I had to dig deep to find the good ripe ones so that I can at least try my hand at a tomato chilli jam for this posting today. This hot jammy would be very good on a bruschetta with some goat's cheese.


Ingredients:
1 kg ripe tomatoes
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
1 onion, finely chopped
3 fresh red chillies, finely chopped, or 1 dried and two fresh chillies or to suit your taste
3 – 4 cloves, or medium pinch powdered cloves
1/3 cup (60g – 65g) brown sugar
1/4 cup white-wine vinegar
1 tspn sea salt
black pepper, to taste





Method:

  1. Combine all ingredients in a large pan, including the salt and pepper.
  2. Stir over low heat without boiling until the sugar dissolves.
  3. Then bring to the boil and simmer uncovered over a medium-low heat, stirring occasionally for about 45 minutes until the mixture thickens slightly.
  4. If you prefer a smoother sauce, you can blend the mixture using a blender, food processor or immersion blender.
  5. Spoon into sterilized jars. Seal while the mixture is still hot, and store in a cool dark place or the refrigerator.
  6. After opening, keep in the fridge.

Sunday, 31 July 2011

Life goes faster on protein

What a gorgeous day it turned out to be.  The weather played its part, and we managed to have clear skies here in Gaborone.  The annual Pot and Biltong Festival held by the Dutch Reformed Church was in full swing by the time we got there.  I have to say this is a very successful organized event and we had a good time eating sosaties, biltong, desserts, curry and rice and pancakes.  The make shift butchery provided the opportunity to buy rump steak, boerewors, mince and chicken at very decent prices.  We are now stocked well for the next 5 braais.

Today's recipe is a copy that I picked up from a hand written note in my green monster recipe book.  This is where I keep all the secret stuff, like my mother's peri-peri sauce of which I only have three ingredients listed, because my brother is guarding it with his life, but I am determined to strangle it out of him soon (grin).

Ingredients that you will need for 8–10 people
2 tablespoons oil
2 onions, chopped
3 garlic cloves, bruised
1 red chilli, seeded and chopped
2 tablespoons mild curry powder
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
½ teaspoon ground coriander
3 bay leaves (for the marinade)
1 piece of fresh root ginger (as big as your thumb), grated
¼ cup apricot jam
1½ cup wine vinegar
2 cups buttermilk
1½kg lamb, mutton or pork, cut into 2,5cm cubes
soft dried apricots
bay or lemon leaves (for the skewers)

The day before method:

Heat the oil in a pot and sauté the onions and garlic until tender.
Add the curry powder and fry for another 2 minutes.
Add the chilli, spices, bay leaves, ginger, jam and vinegar, and simmer for 10 minutes.
Remove from the heat, allow to cool, then stir in the buttermilk.
Put the meat in a non-metallic bowl (a Tupperware container with a sealed lid works best). Pour the marinade over the meat and leave it in the fridge for 24 hours.

The next day braai:
Thread the meat cubes, dried apricots and bay or lemon leaves onto the skewers.
Braai the sosaties over mediumhot coals until cooked. Baste the meat regularly.

Saturday, 30 July 2011

Rocket, Pear and Brie pizza, what an affair!

"I love my pizza so much, in fact, that I have come to believe in my delirium that my pizza might actually love me, in return. I am having a relationship with this pizza, almost an affair." - Elizabeth Gilbert's Eat Pray Love.

 

Ingredients:

1 x 10 g sachet of instant yeast
240g/500 ml cake flour
10 ml sugar
7 ml salt
300 ml luke warm water
30 ml sunflower or olive oil 
±120 g/250 ml extra cake flour






Method:
  1. Mix yeast and first measure of cake flour in a mixing bowl or into the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the dough hook and mix to combine.  Add all the remaining ingredients except the extra flour and mix well.
  2. Add enough of the extra flour to forma soft dough and knead for 4 - 5 minutes in the mixer or turn out onto a floured surface and knead for 5 - 6 minutes by hand until smooth and elastic.  Add a little more flour and shape the dough into a ball.  Return the dough to the bowl, cover and let rise for about 30 minutes until double.
  3. Punch down the risen dough and roll out the dough to a thickness of 1 cm.  Cover with a cloth and allow to rest for about 10 minutes.
  4. To make mini pizzas, I divide the dough into 4 balls, then follow step 3 for each of the balls.
  5. Brush pizza with olive oil, spread a thin layer of tomato topping onto each.  You can choose to bake as is at 180°for 8-10 minutes at this step, or continue to step 6 for toppings.
  6. Cover with selected additional ingredients, such as cheese, mushrooms, bacon, avo ect, bake at 180° for 8-10 minutes.
Rocket, Pear and Brie Affair

I bake make crust first, when it comes out of the oven, I add rocket, fresh pears, and brie cheese for.  It is an absolute must, and a fresh departure from your ordinary pizza toppings.

Friday, 29 July 2011

In the past chickpeas were used to cure warts

At some stage it was believed that you could cure warts by touching it to a chickpea plant at new moon.  So unless you are related to Harry Potter or Liewe Heksie, I suggest you stay away from these babies.  But I did find some interesting health facts and thought it would be good information while preparing this salad.

Chickpeas are a helpful source of zinc, folate and protein.  They are also very high in dietary fibre and hence a healthy source of carbohydrates for persons with insulin sensitivity or diabetes. 

In short chickpeas prevents diabetes, reduce heart disease, it is low in GI (not GI-Jane) and reduces cholesterol, but if you have kidney stones you should limit your intake of chickpeas (bummer).


Chickpea, feta and coriander salad
(From Falling Cloudberries by Tessa Kiros)

400g tinned chickpeas
250ml olive oil
1 large red onion, chopped
5 garlic cloves, very finely chopped
1 or 2 red chillies, seeded and finely chopped
250g crumbled feta cheese
4 spring onions, green part only, chopped
25g chopped coriander
30g chopped parsley
Juice of 1 lemon

1. Rinse chickpeas and place them in a bowl.
2. Heat 3 tbsp olive oil and fry the red onion gently until it is cooked through and lightly golden. Add the garlic and chilli and cook for a few more seconds, until you can smell the garlic. Take care not to brown the garlic. Leave to cool completely.
3. Add the feta, spring onion, coriander, parsley and lemon juice to the chickpeas and season. Add the onion mixture and the remaining oil and mix through.

Thursday, 28 July 2011

Apple Tart Jeans, Boots with the Furrrr, everyone in the kitchen is looking at herrrr

In order to stay in tune with one's teenager, you need to roll like they do.  This is why I like to be in the know with all the latest crib music.  Its called being "In Tha Muthahood".

Nowadays having them plastered on a Facebook wall, takes even more courage to keep up to date.  But at the end of a hectic school day, they still come home and ask "What's for dinner?", "What's for dessert?".

So I keep them entertained while baking my favorite Apple Tart Jeans Number.  We whip out Flo-rida, dress up in furrr and we bake them apple tarts!



Ingredients:
Batter:
60 ml butter (1/4 cup)
2 eggs
190 ml castor sugar (3/4 cup)
250 ml Self Raising Flour
60 ml milk (1/4 cup)
385 g Tin Sliced Pie Apples

Syrup:
190 ml castor sugar (3/4 cup)
5 ml caramel essence
190 ml cream or evaporated milk

Method for Batter:
Mix eggs and castor sugar together until creamy
Add the milk and melted butter
Add self raising flour mix well
Pour batter into an oven proof dish
Arrange apples on top of batter
Bake at 200°C for 30 minutes

Method for Syrup:
Boil castor sugar and evaporated milk or cream for about 5 minutes
Add caramel essence
Remove from stove





Remove apple tart from oven when done, pour hot syrup over the apple tart.  I like to run a knife around the edges, and pull the pudding away from the corners, so that the gorgeous caramel sauce can slide in around the dish and soak into the sides.  

Serve with cream or with a spoon of really good vanilla ice-cream.

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Chicken Makhani aka Indian Butter Chicken

This tastes better than the Indian Butter Chicken at that well known, you know who, expensive Indian Restaurant in Pretoria.  You can make this as mild or spicy as you wish by adjusting the cayenne pepper.  Now a word of caution, don't try and pull "this is vitamins" on the kids, they will not buy it this time. 

 Ingredients:

Indian Butter Chicken
For the sauce:
1 tablespoon peanut oil
1 shallot, finely chopped (optional)
1 white onion, chopped
2 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 tablespoon ginger-garlic paste
1 teaspoon garam masala
1 teaspoon chilli powder
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 bay leaf
¼ cup plain yogurt
½ cup milk
½ cup cream
1 cup tomato puree
¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, to taste
Salt and black pepper, to taste

For the chicken:


1 tablespoon peanut oil
500 – 700 g skinless chicken thighs, cut into bite size pieces
1 teaspoon garam masala
1 pinch cayenne pepper (if you must)

At the end:

1 tablespoon cornstarch
¼ cup water

Method for the sauce:
  1. Heat  1 tablespoon peanut oil in a large pot over medium high heat.
  2. Saute shallot and onion until soft and translucent.
  3. Stir in butter, lemon juice, ginger garlic paste, 1 teaspoon garam masala, chilli powder, cumin and bay leaf.
  4. Cook, stirring, for 1 minute.
  5. Add tomato puree and cook for 2 minutes, stirring frequently.
  6. Stir in milk, cream and yogurt.
  7. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 10 minutes, stirring frequently.
  8. Season with salt, pepper and cayenne pepper.
  9. Remove from heat and set aside.
Method for the chicken:
  1. Heat 1 tablespoon oil in large heavy skillet over medium heat.
  2. Cook chicken until lightly browned, about 10 minutes.
  3. Reduce heat and season with 1 teaspoon garam masala and cayenne pepper.

Method for the END:
  1. Pour the rest of the sauce onto the chicken
  2. Mix together cornstarch and water, then stir into the sauce
  3. Cook for 5 to 10 minutes, or until thickened.
Serve with Jasmine rice.

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

30 minute Bolognaise, during the week that works for me!

I am sure many of you have had a blue, pink or green Tuesday before, I had a very blue one today.  So dinner had to be quick and funky.  Please excuse the repeat of chillies, but i had some leftover from the peanut chicken curry, and I just had to dress up this Tuesday dinner plate for its photo shoot.


Ingredients:
2 tbs olive oil
1 medium onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 medium-large carrot, finely diced
1 large stick celery, sliced
500 g lean minced beef
1/2 tsp dried basic
1/2 tsp dried marjoram
400 g can whole tomatoes in juice
300 g can tomato puree
1/2 - 1 tsp salt
black pepper to taste
500 g long pasta (spagetti, fettuccine, etc)
1/4 cup of white wine (always cook with wine :)
Method:

Heat the oil in a very large pan.  Add the onion and garlic and saute for 2-3 minutes, stirring frequently, until the onion is soft.

 Add the carrot and celery, stir then cook for 1 minute longer.  Stir in the beef mince and cook until this loses its pink colour.  Turn and stir frequently to break up any lumps.  Add the dried herbs, tomatoes in juice and tomato puree. Mix together and allow the mixture to come to the boil.

Reduce the heat to a gentle simmer and cover with a lid.  Allow the sauce to simmer gently, for 10 - 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, while you cook the pasta.  If you think the sauce is getting too dry, add 1/4 cup of white wine to thin it down.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Drain the cooked pasta.  Toss it in a little olive oil or butter and arrange on individual plates.  Pour or spoon over the sauce and serve topped with chopped fresh parsley, coriander or chillies and grated parmesan or cheddar cheese.

Monday, 25 July 2011

Butternut Bake With Vitamins

My trusted Butternut Bake, we usually have this with a braai or even a roast chicken, always a charm, and everyone always asks for the recipe, so here we go.


Ingredients:

1 or 2 butternuts cubed. ( I also use the already cubed butternut packets that you buy either from Woolies, Spar or Pick n Pay.)  In our case today, these packets didn't make it across the border, so we had to cube some ourselves, its hard work.

1 packet of White onion soup
250 ml cream
175 g plain yogurt (Lana uses Bulgarian yogurt, but even that didn't make it across the border)
1 tsp crushed garlic

Method:

Mix together white onion soup, cream, yogurt and crushed garlic.  Pour over butternut cubes add some black pepper if the kids will allow it, otherwise just sneak it in there and tell them its vitamins.  

Place in ovenproof dish, cover with foil.  Bake at 180°C for 35 minutes.


See now this is full of vitamins

Sunday, 24 July 2011

Expensive Sunday Chocolate Guinness Cake

The reason this one turned out to be an expensive round was because on a sunday the bottle store is closed here in Gaborone.  So of course the only alternative is to send my husband to the local Keg to buy one Guinness Beer for 35 Pula.  I think he stopped trying to explain that he needed it for a chocolate cake recipe when the waiter just continued to have this blank look on his face, took the money, handed him the beer, turned around and walked away.

The recipe asks for 400 ml Guinness Beer, a can of Guinness measures 440 ml.  At this point you can masterfully crack the can open, slurp the 40 ml that bubbles up and keep the rest for the cake.

Ingredients:

225 g butter, softened
350 g brown sugar
4 large eggs, lightly beaten
225 g plain flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
400 ml Guinness beer
100 g Cocoa Powder

Pre-heat your oven to 180°C
Butter and line a 20-25cm cake tin with greaseproof paper




Method:
Cream the butter and sugar until pale and creamy.  Slowly add the beaten eggs, mixing well to incorporate.  Sift together the flour, baking powder and bicarb.

Stir the cocoa powder into the Guinness.

Bit by bit, alternating between the two, add the flour and the Guinness mixture to the egg mixture, mixing well until completely combined.

Spoon into the tin and bake for 1 - 1/2 hours or until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out fairly clean.  The top will begin to crack but the cake should still be moist inside.

Remove from the oven and leave to rest for 10 minutes before turning out on a wire rack to cool.

Once completely cooled, drizzle the top with ganache.

Ganache ingredients:

200 g dark or white chocolate
200 ml fresh cream
15 g butter chilled

Place cream in glass jug and microwave until boiling point, pour over chocolate and stir until chocolate is completely melted.
Add the chilled butter and continue to stir until you have a smooth chocolaty consistency.

Let the ganache sit at room temperature until it cools before you ice the cake. (I don't have time for the sitting around part, so I just pop it in the freezer for a bit to cool down)


Spotty ribbon (Ribnz), courtesy of Elmarie Mentz

Saturday, 23 July 2011

Peanut Chicken Curry

So the only Thai Restaurant in Gaborone was closed, due to an armed robbery a while back.  No one was hurt, but it did turn out to be a scary ordeal, as one of my colleagues had been a victim that unfortunate evening.  Apart from the "Son in laws eggs" on the menu, we really felt like Peanut Chicken Curry, and I stumbled upon this recipe in the food section on News24.com.

 

I figured this would be easy enough as you don't have to speak Thai, and all the ingredients are readily available even in Gaborone Botswana. 

 

Peanut Chicken Curry

Have some white wine while cooking

Ingredients

800 g skinless chicken breasts, de-boned
3 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
1.5 tsp crushed ginger
2 heaped tbsp smooth peanut butter
3 Tbs soy sauce
2 Tbs fish sauce
1 tsp brown sugar
1 tsp Thai red curry paste
1 tin coconut milk
1 tin chicken stock/water (using the same tin as the coconut milk)



 

Method

Cut the chicken into chunks and fry in a large, hot wok until browned. Remove from the wok and set aside.  Briefly fry the garlic and ginger before adding back the chicken. Stir fry for a minute before adding the peanut butter, soy sauce, fish sauce,brown sugar and curry paste. Stir fry and allow the peanut butter to melt. Add the coconut milk and chicken stock /water and stir carefully to combine all the ingredients.  Lower the heat and allow to simmer for 10-15 minutes until the sauce has thickened slightly.  If the sauce needs salt/sugar, add more brown sugar or soy sauce.  Serve with jasmine rice and sugar snap peas.

Dress it up with chillies and coriander








Reprinted with permission of Simply Delicious.
To visit Simply Delicious’ blog, click here.

Life is uncertain. Eat dessert first!


Life is definitely uncertain.  We never know what waits around the next corner, or even what the next day would deliver to our doorstep.  It's with this uncertainty that I decided what the heck, let me start this blog and see what the future holds.

I felt like cupcakes and photography today so I whipped out my trusted vanilla cupcake recipe and started shooting.  After dressing up these babies, I lined them up for their photo shoot, which was actually quite easy as it doesn't take much for a cupcake to sit still.

Basic Vanilla Cup Cake Recipe

Ingredients:

150 g Butter - softened
150 g Castor sugar
175 g Self-raising flour
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract








Method:

1. Pre-heat the oven to 180 degrees celcius.
2. Line a 12 cup cake tin, with cup cake papers.
3. Crack the eggs into a cup and beat lightly with a wisk.
4. Place all the ingredients in a large bowl.
5. Beat with an electric mixer for 2 minutes, until light and creamy.
6. Divide the mixture evenly between the cake cases.
7. Bake for 18-20 minutes until risen and firm to touch.
8. Allow to cool fully before icing.

Butter Cream Frosting

Ingredients:

150 g Butter - softened
250 g icing sugar
1tsp vanilla
2 tsp hot water

Method:
1. Beat together the butter and sugar with an electric beater.
2. Once well combined, add the vanilla and water.
3. Beat until smooth and creamy.