Showing posts with label Desserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Desserts. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 June 2013

BANANA RAISIN OAT BREAD




This banana raisin oat bread tastes really good, but is it a cake or is it bread?  It tastes more like cake, but it's called bread. What's the deal here?  Well, actually, it's a quick bread. It is so named because it doesn't use yeast as a leavening agent.


Yeast requires hours and optimal temperatures to cause bread to rise. Baking powder, which contains baking soda (base pH) and cream of tartar (acid pH), acts quickly. The acid/base combination reacts when introduced to liquid, causing carbon dioxide to form. Consequently, the batter expands and increases in volume. When baked goods rise quickly, they are called quick breads. Cakes, muffins, and scones, are types of quick bread. 

Banana bread is a cake, and officially a quick bread, but it's referred to as banana bread because, I suppose, it's faster to say banana bread than banana quick bread. Fine. That solves the mystery for me. I thought I would share the information with you. I am not a know it all, but I like to do my research. I just hope I can remember all this a year from now.  But then I will always have this post to remind me. One thing I won't forget is how delicious this cake (quick bread) is. I've already had requests for the recipe. Here we go ladies, my post is finally ready. Get out those bundt pans!






Ingredients:
1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons all purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup of golden raisins
½ cup regular oats
½ cup unsalted butter, melted

½ cup sugar
2 large eggs
4 medium very ripe bananas, mashed

½ cup chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
½ teaspoon cinnamon
powdered sugar and cinnamon for dusting on top

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 325ยบ F.  Grease a bundt pan and set it aside.
Into a bowl combine the flour, baking soda, baking powder cinnamon and salt.  Stir well to combine. 
In the bowl of your mixer add the sugar and melted butter.  Beat until smooth.
Add the eggs one at a time, mixing after each addition. 
Add the bananas and vanilla extract and mix.
With a wooden spoon gently fold in the raisins, oats, and walnuts.
Add the flour mixture in three batches folding gently after each addition. 
Pour the batter into the prepared bundt pan and bake for about 1 hour and 15 minutes.
When ready, a knife inserted into the centre of the quick bread should come out clean.

Remove the pan from the oven and place it on a rack to cool.  After about 20 minutes invert the pan onto a plate.  The banana bread should slide on the plate. 
Let cool another half hour.  Mix some powdered sugar with a little cinnamon and sift it on top of the banana bread to decorate.  Slice and enjoy a nice treat! 


  

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

PAVLOVA WITH CHANTILLY CREAM AND BUTTER TOASTED ALMONDS



                I will go on record and say that this is a great recipe for pavlova. The best.  It has a meringue with a delicate, crunchy crust and a soft marshmallow-like centre. The cream topping is a flavourful Chantilly cream that goes great with the fruit, especially the strawberries. The almonds? Well, they are buttered and then toasted. That gives them an incredible flavour. The dessert melted in our mouths. Literally. It was sweet, creamy, fruity, smooth, soft, heavenly. And it's a great dessert for holiday time! 


Ingredients:


4 large egg whites at room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons lemon juice at room temperature
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 teaspoons cornstarch
sliced fresh fruit of your choice for topping
some butter cut up in small pieces
whole blanched almonds for topping, notes on preparation bellow
Chantilly cream for topping, recipe below

Directions:

It's important to cook the pavlova at a low temperature for a long time. This and beating the egg whites extraordinarily well insures success.


  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Using a pencil, draw an 8-inch diameter circle on the paper. Turn the paper over so that the pencil marking rests on the baking sheet side. The circle will still be visible.
  • Add the granulated sugar into the bowl of a food processor.  Beat it until the granules become superfine and somewhat powder-like: this is superfine or caster sugar. If you can buy it ready-made, go ahead and get it, but this is an easy, convenient way to make your own. Caster sugar is best for meringues because its fine granules dissolve quickly.
  • Preheat the oven to 225° F.
  • Make sure that the bowl of your mixer is dry and very clean. Place the egg whites into it. They should be free of any presence of yolk.
  • Begin beating on medium.  When the egg whites start to get frothy and form soft peaks, turn the speed up to high and add the sugar, one tablespoon at a time, beating well after each addition. After all the sugar has been added, continue to beat until the egg whites are very stiff and shiny. If you think the meringue is done, beat it some more. I took a short, refreshing nap while the mixer was beating my egg whites. Recommended!  
  • The meringue should be smooth, and the sugar should be fully dissolved so that the meringue doesn't feel gritty to the touch but is instead smooth and stiff; it should look shiny.
  • At this point add the vanilla and beat to mix. 
  • Remove the bowl from the mixer, add the lemon juice and fold well.  
  • Sift the cornstarch over the meringue and fold that in as well. 
  • Place the meringue on the prepared tray and smooth it into a round shape using the pencilled circle as a guide. An offset spatula will help with this job. 
  • Form a small indentation in the middle for placing the cream into once the meringue finishes baking. 
  • Place the meringue in the oven and bake it for one and a half to two hours, until the top of the meringue feels dry and somewhat hard.  
  • Turn off the oven and let the pavlova shell stay in there until it has cooled. 
  • Take out the shell. It will probably have one or two cracks, and that's fine.  The outside will feel firm, but looking through the cracks you will be able to see the marshmallow-like interior. 
  • The shell can be stored on its parchment in a cool dry place until ready to use.  You can make the shell one day ahead of time.

To decorate:

Gently remove the parchment paper while sliding the shell onto a serving platter.  Place the Chantilly cream on top and gently spread it all over.  Top with the almonds and fruit, creating a decorative pattern.

TO PREPARE THE ALMONDS:

Spread whole blanched almonds on a baking sheet and top them with pieces of butter.  Stir them around with your hands so that the butter covers most of the surface of the almonds. Toast them in the oven until they begin to get golden.  Keep a close watch because once they start to get golden they are on their way to getting burned, so it's important that they are removed from the oven before that happens. Butter gives the almonds a wonderful and totally different flavour than plain toasted almonds. It also makes them appear shiny.

CHANTILLY CREAM:

Ingredients:


1 cup heavy whipping cream, really cold
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon Grand Marnier
2 tablespoons sugar

Directions:

  • The best-whipped cream is made with very cold ingredients.
  • Refrigerate the bowl and the whisk attachment of your mixer until they are cold. Bring them out and reassemble the mixer.
  • Add the cream and Grand Mariner. 
  • Add the vanilla. Vanilla is the bacon of the baking world. It makes just about any baked good taste that much better. This is an analogy, no substituting bacon for vanilla ... unless ... If you've tried it, let me know of your experience, okay?  
  • Beat on medium until frothy.
  • Add the sugar one tablespoon at a time and beat on medium-high until soft peaks form, about 3 to 4 minutes.  
  • Do not overbeat; you will know when it is done because it will look nice and thick. If you continue beating, the mixture will start to get grainy, and you will start to develop butter. Or so I have been told, and I should really try it one of these days just in case it's true. 
  • This cream is absolutely delicious and it will remain thick; chantilly cream doesn't tend to get watery like regular whipped cream because it contains sugar.


The recipe for the meringue is adapted from "The Joy of Baking.com" 

Saturday, 9 March 2013

CROISSANT, RASPBERRY and NUTELLA TEA SANDWICH BITES


Behold the croissant. One of humankind's greatest inventions. Flaky, buttery, irresistible. Kind of like me. Oops, I said it, and I am not taking it back. The picture above shows an almond croissant. Purchased from Whole Foods. It holds a surprise inside.  It has an almond paste filling.


A while ago I hosted an "after church" tea. I made some really nice tea sandwiches: chicken, cucumber, AND my special minis with ham, cheese and turkey on whole wheat. I had a fruit salad and some phyllo and feta wraps too. I had cheese and bagels, and a store bought dessert. Why am I telling you all this? I'm just thinking back, reminiscing. That day I wanted to offer croissant, raspberry and Nutella bites, for dessert but I ran out of time. I ran out of time, plus after making all the other sandwiches I was too exhausted to speed up and make anything else. I think everyone who came to the tea had a good time. There were no leftovers to speak of. Just a few pieces of cheese. The Nutella I had bought for the croissants sat on a shelf in the pantry until I remembered it last week and used some of it to make these really tasty and moist Reeses, Nutella and banana bars.


Then I remembered all about the croissant sandwiches I hadn't made. So I bought a single croissant and some raspberries and I invited myself to tea. A nice cuppa and a bite of a croissant, raspberry and Nutella sandwich. The raspberries I bought were grown in Mexico: they were shipped from Mexico all the way here to the cold Northeast, and they were magical! They brought sunshine into the house. Best raspberries ever!
Here is how to make Croissant, Raspberry and Nutella Tea Sandwich Bites:

Get yourself some croissants. Butter or almond or chocolate. Say no to the broccoli ones. Get some raspberries or strawberries. Cut the croissants in half lengthwise.

Arrange raspberries on one half of the croissant.  
Spread some Nutella on the other half of the croissant.
Here is my kitchen rooster posing with the croissandwich. Bring the two croissant halves together by folding the Nutella half over the raspberry half. It feels like rocket science, doesn't it? Keep at it, if I managed it so can you!



Cut each croissant into quarters. If you're serving these to company, stick a sandwich pick or some such implement into each piece to keep it from falling apart and to make it look prettier than it already is. Place the bites on a nice serving platter, and dust the tops of the croissants with a little powdered sugar.  

If the bites are just for you and yours, just enjoy them. They are sweet and flaky. As am I. Seriously though, these darlings make fantastic little treats for a tea, and they are so very easy to make!

Thursday, 7 March 2013

BANANA, NUTELLA and REESE'S DESSERT BARS



It’s 10:00 pm on Sunday night. Tomorrow is a workday. All your co-workers are chocoholics. You promised you’ll help them start the work week by bringing in a chocolate cake. Not store bought, but homemade. Don’t you think it’s time to go to the kitchen? Yes, go there, that’s the place in the house where cakes get made.  Gather up all your ingredients and get started.  

That’s the conversation I had with myself before making this dessert. Which was supposed to be a chocolate cake ... Until I discovered that I had no cocoa powder in the house! Catastrophe? You bet. Major. I ruled out a quick trip to the grocery store.  Why? Because I roll with the punches. I move on to Plan B. I have a drawerful of Plan B. I collect Plan B: Plan B says to substitute Nutella for the cocoa powder. And to get on with it, because it’s getting late.  Clean up the kitchen, too. What are those brown bananas doing there, still sitting on the counter?


I couldn't make chocolate cake, so I improvised and came up with banana-peanut butter-chocolate bars! They were incredibly moist, filled with the delicious flavour of ripe bananas and they had peanut butter and Nutella mixed into the batter. Oh, they even had Reeses peanut butter chocolate cups decorating the top (why did I buy those? I can't remember). I say Plan B worked out well. The bars stayed moist for the next few days, and they were enjoyed by one and all! 
  

Ingredients:

1/2 cup butter, softened
2 tablespoons peanut butter
2 tablespoons Nutella chocolate spread
3/4 cup sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 ripe bananas, mashed
1-1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
10 ounces miniature peanut butter cups, crumbled


Directions:
  • Grease a 9x13 inch baking pan.  Preheat the oven to 350ยบ F.
  • Into a bowl combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
  • In the bowl of a mixer cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. 
  • Add the peanut butter, cinnamon and Nutella.  Mix well. 
  • Beat in the egg and vanilla.
  • Stir in the bananas.
  • Slowly add the flour mixture and combine.
  • Spoon the batter into the prepared baking pan and smooth the top with an offset spatula.  
  • Spread the peanut butter cups over the top.  
  • Bake for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the centre of the batter comes out clean. 
  • Remove from the oven and cool. 
  • When the dessert has cooled cut it into bars, small ones or larger ones, depending on preference.
  • What we couldn't eat we just froze. We took pieces out of the freezer as needed. The bars thawed in no time and were just as moist as when they were first baked.

Monday, 28 January 2013

APPLE and GOAT CHEESE TART with a HONEY TOPPING



For the crust:
You will need a nine-inch tart pan.  Make your favourite crust, place it in the pan and blind bake it until it's halfway done.
For the apples:
4 apples, peeled and sliced thinly. Melt two tablespoons of unsalted butter in a large skillet and add the apples. Cook them, stirring occasionally, until the apples have softened (about ten minutes). Transfer apples to a bowl and let them cool.



For the goat cheese filling:
8 ounces goat cheese, softened
1 egg
zest from 1/2 lemon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons powdered sugar
2 teaspoons corn starch


Directions:
Place all the ingredients in the food processor and pulse until they are mixed. The mixture should come out thick, not runny.  If it's runny, add a little more corn starch.
Pour the cheese mixture onto the dough in the tart pan and then arrange the apples over the cheese.  Working in a circular pattern and starting from the edge, arrange the apples in rows. At the centre of the tart add some apple slices in a decorative pattern. Pack in the apples generously. It may seem like a lot of apples are being used, but as you know, apples shrink when they bake. If by chance there are any apple slices leftover, you guessed it, that's the cook's treat!


For the topping:

2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons honey

Directions:
Cut the butter into small chunks. Mix it with the cinnamon. Sprinkle it over the apples and bake at  350ยบ F for about 15 to 20 minutes. The tart will be done when its centre isn't runny but jiggles just slightly. When the tart comes out of the oven, heat the honey until melted, and carefully brush over the top of the tart, covering all the apple slices.  


Tuesday, 15 January 2013

SPICED PUMPKIN CHEESECAKE with ORANGE-GINGERSNAP CRUST



Mr Cardinal, what do you think of my pumpkin cheesecake?  Is it rich, sweet and moist, with a velvety cream cheese softness and with pumpkin and cinnamon-spice overtones?  Is it all that and more, is it exactly what a pumpkin cheesecake should look and taste like?  I think Mr Cardinal is saying yes. 
  
Last year this recipe came out kind of mushy. Good taste but mushy texture. Lovely topping, lovely crust, but the pumpkin and cheese part secretly wanted to be soup and were only pretending at being a cheesecake. I learned a valuable lesson: don't rush when baking! Give the cheesecake enough time to cool down. And if you make pumpkin cheesecake only once a year, like I do, rely on your notes for the recipe and don't try to wing it. Because if a year has gone by since you last made this, chances are you won't remember what you're supposed to be winging.
  

Ah, the joy a two-year-old brings to one's life...  Gracie and dad Joe opening up Christmas presents!





Our Layla celebrates her birthday on December 26th.  That's one of the several cakes she got for her 17th birthday.  And my nephew, Alex, would not let go of the Bauer hockey stick I gave him for Christmas. He taped it right away and wanted to use it right away. His dad (my brother) had to hide it so that we could all sit down to dinner.

Starting as early as late August, a large variety of pumpkin flavoured foods begin to make their appearance. There's pumpkin coffee, pumpkin bread, pumpkin cookies, pumpkin ice cream, and I've even run into pumpkin-and-spice flavoured almonds. But in my estimation, when it comes to pumpkin, nothing beats the comforting taste of pumpkin cheesecake. I make one either at Thanksgiving or Christmas, both being perfect holidays to enjoy the taste of pumpkin. The recipe I use is one I've stayed with for a long time because it makes a sumptuous, rich, and magnificent cheesecake! It has a smooth and velvety texture into which is incorporated the subtle flavour of pumpkin. Complementary spices and an orange flavoured gingersnap crust harmonise together to enhance the taste of this cheesecake. The topping is made with vanilla-scented sour cream. What could be better? Here's the recipe:


Spiced Pumpkin Cheesecake with Orange-Gingersnap Crust


    For the crust:
1 cup graham cracker crumbs
1 cup crushed good quality gingersnap cookies
1/2 cup finely chopped pecans
1/2 teaspoon orange zest
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

    For the pumpkin cheesecake filling:
2 cups canned solid-pack pumpkin (plain pumpkin, not seasoned pie filling)
2 tablespoons unflavoured gelatine
3 tablespoons water
1/2 cup heavy whipping cream
3 (8-ounce) packets of cream cheese
1 cup light brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon ground ginger
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
6 large eggs
2  1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

    For the sour cream topping:  
1 cup sour cream
1/4 cup light brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Directions:

    To make the crust:
  • Have all the ingredients ready and at room temperature. Place the rack in the centre of the oven and preheat the oven to 350°F/180°C.  Keep the oven on while making the cake. 
  • Grease a 9-inch springform pan and wrap the outside well, using 2 layers of heavy-duty aluminium foil.  
  • In a medium-sized bowl combine the graham cracker crumbs, crushed ginger cookies, and melted butter.  (If you like, save about 2 tablespoons of the mixture to use as decoration for the top of the cheesecake). 
  • Press the crumb mixture evenly on the bottom and sides of the pan.  Bake for 10 minutes, until the crust is almost firm when pressed. Transfer to a wire rack to let cool while the filling is being prepared.
To make the filling:
  • Wrap the springform pan base with aluminium foil; the cheesecake will be baked in a water bath, therefore the foil will keep water from entering the pan. 
  • Remove the excess moisture from the pumpkin: line a large colander with several layers of paper towels. Spoon the pumpkin onto the towels. Top with more layers of paper towels and press down to squeeze as much liquid as possible from the pumpkin. Repeat until the pumpkin resembles a paste. 
  • In a microwave-safe bowl add the water and over it sprinkle the gelatine. Stir and let stand for 5 minutes. Stir in the cream and microwave for 1 minute. Make sure the gelatine is completely dissolved. Stir again and set aside.
  • In the bowl of a mixer combine the cream cheese, the sugars, the ginger, the cinnamon and the allspice. Beat on low, gradually increasing the speed to medium. Beat for 5 minutes, scraping down the sides and bottom of the bowl as needed.
  • Beat in the eggs one at a time, until the mixture is smooth.   
  • Add the pumpkin, beating until incorporated. 
  • Beat in the vanilla and the cream-gelatine mixture.  Keep beating until everything is mixed well.   
  • Pour the filling into the crust, spreading it evenly. Tap the pan on the counter a few times to release any air bubbles. Place in a roasting pan and transfer into the preheated oven. Add hot water to the roasting pan, enough so that it comes about 1 inch up the sides of the (foil covered) springform pan.  
  • Bake for half an hour. Reduce the oven temperature to 325°F and continue baking about 60 minutes longer or until the filling barely jiggles in the centre and springs back when the surface is tapped. 
  • Turn off the oven and transfer the cake to a wire rack.  For safety, don't remove the pan from the hot water until the water has cooled down. 
  • Once removed from the water, let the cheesecake stand for 15 minutes and then run a paring knife around its circumference to loosen it from the sides of the pan.  This will help prevent the cheesecake from cracking.  Cover it and let it cool overnight.  
It's Christmas morning, and it's time to put some makeup on this cheesecake!
  • Remove from the springform pan and spread the sour cream topping over the cheesecake. (Recipe for the topping is below). Additional decorations can be used, such as pecans or cookie crumbs. 
    To make the sour cream topping:
In a small bowl add the sour cream, the brown sugar and the vanilla.  Mix thoroughly, until the sugar has dissolved and the topping is well blended.

This recipe is based on one from "The All American Dessert Book," by Nancy Baggett © 2005 (pp. 80-82).

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

VASILOPITA: For Saint Basil and for the New Year!


If it’s the first day of January and you are Greek, it’s time for a most important ritual: the cutting of the vasilopita.  Grab your plate and your fork and get in line.  Perhaps this is the year you will be lucky.  Perhaps this year you’ll get the coin!  Because, as all Greeks know, inside every vasilopita there’s a coin that's hidden. Come on, dad, slice that vasilopita and pass around those pieces. First, you’ll pretend that you are interested in eating your piece. Then you’ll do what everyone else does and dig around your slice for the coin.  Crumbs on the tablecloth, on your lovely new outfit, on the floor. Who cares? Where is that coin? 

“Ohhh, it’s me! I have it!!!” shouts Veronica, who just happens to be your least favourite cousin. She's the lucky one this year. So there is nothing left for you to do but to gather up your crumbs one by one, and if they are still eatable, to eat them. Meanwhile, that cousin of yours (Veronica ...) who just happens to have really hairy forearms and a big nose and how come you never noticed it before, well, Veronica is smiling from ear to ear while recounting the play-by-play of how she found the coin: 

“I cut into my piece, and felt something that I thought was the coin, but it turned out to be a raisin. I put a bite of vasilopita in my mouth and started chewing it. But it wasn't as moist as in other years. How come? Anyway, I forged ahead in looking for that coin. I knew in my heart that this was going to be my year! I cut into my piece again, and yes, I could see something shining.” 

“What was it, another raisin?” you have the temerity to ask.
  
Impervious to my sarcasm, Veronica clarified that it was definitely not another raisin. 

“It was definitely not another raisin!" 

You continue, trying to sound perplexed: "Oh, a piece of walnut, then!" 

"It was the coin!" she gasps. “It was mine!  My goodness, this will be such a great year for me!”  

Your little brother, whom you love dearly (most of the time), eyes the lucky coin sitting on the side of Veronica's plate and, in one slick move, removes it and deposits it into his pocket. Then he leaves the table and heads for his room. 

A few minutes later, as you’re washing dishes, you know why your cousin with the hairy arms and big crooked nose who snores as indelicately as a hibernating bear and could use a CPAP, has started to scream: “Where is my coin???”  Yup, clever girl, she figured out it's missing. 

"Wasn't the Vasilopita moist enough this year?" asks my mother as a way of a reply.

"Auntie, what's important is that my coin is missing!"

"It's got to be around here somewhere." My mother gets up from her chair and devotes all of thirty seconds to her search." She sits back down. "Maybe we'll call Sherlock Holmes ..."

And so rolls another New Year’s Day at chez Grecque Maison. 
 
For Greeks, the first of January is a day when secular and religious traditions are combined to celebrate the coming of the New Year. Along with New Year’s Day, there is celebrated the feast day of Saint Basil the Great, one of the most important saints in the Greek ecclesiastical calendar.

Saint Basil was born into a wealthy family but gave away his money to the poor.  Because he was a pious individual and champion of the underprivileged, myths and traditions slowly developed to commemorate his memory.  It’s interesting to note that another saint of the same period, Saint Nicholas, was also known for his generosity.  Over the centuries, the legends of Saint Nicholas and Saint Basil blended together to form one “big” legend associated with none other than Santa Claus. However, Saint Nicholas is associated with the Santa of the Western churches, and the Eastern Santa is Saint Basil.

Yes, Saint Basil is the Greek Santa Claus. On January 1, his feast day, children receive gifts brought by the saint, New Year’s carols are sung, and families gather around the vasilopita, which is a cake made in Saint Basil’s honour. Recipes for vasilopita vary with regions and family traditions.  In some places it takes the form of a fillo pie, in others it is a cake, and yet in others, it is a yeasted sweetened bread. That which makes vasilopita a vasilopita is that it's round in shape and has a coin hidden inside. The head of every Greek family makes the sign of the cross over the vasilopita and then slices it. The slices are distributed to family members and guests, starting with the eldest and ending with the youngest. Whoever gets the slice with the coin is blessed by Saint Basil, and has good fortune for the year to come. The round shape of the vasilopita symbolizes the unity of the church and the concept that God is without beginning or end. 

Many cultures have the custom of hiding trinkets into celebratory cakes. This custom most certainly predates Christianity and was probably associated with the pagan festival of Saturnalia, which celebrated the renewal of light and the coming of the New Year. As the Roman Empire came under Christian rule, some of its customs were incorporated into the seasonal celebrations of the church. 

For Greeks, the celebratory cake became the vasilopita, so named after Saint Basil. Inclusion of an actual coin is unique to Greece, and that's because Saint Basil is associated with the giving away of money for the protection of the poor.

Beyond the myth, who was Saint Basil?  He was born around 330 CE in Asia Minor, which at the time was under the control of the Roman Empire. He studied philosophy and rhetoric in Constantinople and Athens and then settled in Caesarea of Cappadocia, Asia Minor. He was baptized as a Christian in 358 and joined the priesthood, eventually being appointed bishop. He wrote important ecclesiastical works, some of which concern monastic life. These were pivotal to the development of the monastic tradition. 

Saint Basil gained prominence for successfully defending the Nicene Creed against the Arian theology supported by the Roman emperor Valens, who denied the relationship of the Holy Trinity. St. Basil was also a humanitarian and a philanthropist. He built a sprawling complex, unique for its time, which included a hospice, a poorhouse and a hospital, and which was open free of charge to all. This became a model for other institutions of similar nature. He was a famous preacher, noted for his sermons on ethics and morality. Saint Basil died on January 1, 379. It is for that reason that January 1 is celebrated as his feast day. All I can say is, we need a few individuals like him today. 

I love Saint Basil, not only because I admire him for his intellect, piety, and goodness, but also because I have wonderful associations with his name itself. My most beloved uncle was named Basil, and I remember how we visited him on New Year's day, his name day. We would arrive at his home and find it filled with flowers, gifts, and boxes upon boxes of confections, all of them brought by well-wishers. I would sit and listen to the grown-ups talk: family stories, political discussions, gossip, jokes ... There were many conversations I remember to this day, and there are memories which envelop me in joy and warmth!




VASILOPITA  for NEW YEAR’S DAY (makes 16 servings)

Ingredients:

2 cups powdered sugar (480 grams)
3 cups almond flour (320 grams)
1 ½  cups flour (200 grams)
4 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons cinnamon
16 egg whites  (just protein here, it's the yolks that contain the cholesterol.  I threw my egg yolks away. Some markets sell containers that contain egg whites only. In that case, you will need to weigh 560 grams of egg whites)
18 tablespoons melted butter  (520 grams)
Rind from 2 medium oranges

Directions:
  • In a large bowl add all the dry ingredients and mix them well.  
  • Add the egg whites and mix gently. 
  • Add the butter and mix gently.  
  • Place into a greased 10-inch springform pan that's resting on a baking sheet.
  • Take a clean coin such as a quarter and wrap it in aluminium foil.  Drop the coin into the batter.
  • Bake at preheated 350ยบ F for ½ hour, lower to 325ยบ F and bake for another ½ hour to 45 minutes depending on the oven.  Don’t open the oven door for at least the first half-hour.  
  • Let cool and remove from the pan.  Decorate the top with powdered sugar, and tie a pretty ribbon around it until it's time to cut it.  I added some melted white chocolate and chocolate chips on top just to make it fancier.  
  • This vasilopita is very easy and quick to make, and it tastes really good too. The recipe is from chef Parliaros, who is a Greek master pastry chef. I don't understand how he can work with all that sugar and butter and stay so thin.  But, he says that if you have small portions of everything the calories are less significant. Below I include the YouTube video in which he and his sous chef make this recipe. The video is in Greek, but even if you don't understand Greek you can get a general idea of how he makes the vasilopita. The amounts for the ingredients are given in the metric system, and chef weighs everything. I weighed everything also, and then I converted the amounts to cups.  Do you see that tiny crack on the chef's vasilopita? Mine had a crack also, only it was much larger and deeper. Truth to tell, that's why I covered the top with both powdered sugar and melted white chocolate. The melted chocolate covered the crack beautifully and made the vasilopita look pretty fantastic too. What can I say?  My vasilopita may get a crack, but my cheesecakes never do!  How about that???
  • Signing off now, and once again I wish you a happy and healthy 2013!

Tuesday, 25 December 2012

MELOMAKARONA with a RICH ORANGE FLAVOUR!!!


Merry Christmas one and all! Here is a very appropriate post for Christmas Day: a brand new recipe for melomakarona. I made them on Christmas Eve, and as I was waiting for them to come out of the oven, it started to snow. Beautiful Snow! I considered it to be a surprising, blissful miracle. We were having an uncommonly warm winter; however, nature changed her mind about our toasty temperatures and gave us a perfect Christmas present by dusting our lawns with a light coating of snow. For just one brief moment, baking as I was, I imagined that each lawn, all over the neighbourhood, had been sprinkled with powdered sugar! 

The snow continued its soft descent ... Standing at the counter, in front of my kitchen window, I sprinkled crushed walnuts on the cookies as I watched the snowflakes fall, ephemeral Christmas Eve snowflakes.

Merry Christmas to all, and may you have a safe, loving and peaceful Christmas Day. Keep the feeling of love and the hope of peace in your hearts all year long. Come on, if I can do it, so can you! After all, it's not so hard; there aren't too many days left in the year. Right? Oh dear, was this joke necessary?


Melomakarona are the quintessential Greek Christmas cookie. I have some information on their history in the other melomakarona recipe posted on this blog.  The recipe on this page is one I tried for the first time, and as it turned out, it was a great recipe. It even got the approval of my mother, who is on the stingy side with her compliments. It's a recipe based on one by Greek master pastry chef Stelios Parliaros. It was well worth making. The cookies turned out crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside, they had the fragrant aroma and taste of oranges, and the syrup in which they were dipped made them really delicious. This is a sophisticated version of melomakarona, with prominent orange and honey-flavoured notes. I loved it, loved it, loved it, but I also love my other melomakarona recipe posted here, which contains a heavier dose of spices. I suppose that from one Christmas to the other, I will have to alternate between these two recipes. 


Chef Parliaros lives in Athens, where he occasionally makes TV appearances and where he markets his concoctions in the several patisserie shops he owns. He is a 
highly praised French-trained pastry chef. He is also very good at teaching his craft. I watch his demonstrations on YouTube, and he inspires me. 

I gathered the information for this recipe, translated it, got the ingredients, and made the melomakarona. Near the end of my post I will have a link for the YouTube demonstration of chef's melomakarona. It's in Greek, so you may not understand what he is saying, but you will see how the chef moulds the cookies, which I think is an important demonstration, especially for me, because I have trouble making decently shaped melomakarona.  

The most important piece of advice the chef gives is to mix the dough by hand and to work in gentle, light strokes. In this way, the dough will stay fluffy, and the oil contained in the melomakarona will not leak out during baking. If the oil leaks out, the cookies will turn out dry. You want a cookie that is crunchy on the outside and soft on the inside. Working quickly and softly should provide that result. Another piece of advice given is to have the syrup cold and the melomakarona hot when we dip them in the syrup. Chef is very insistent about that.  So here we go:  


First, make the syrup.  This can be made the day before, as it needs to be cold when used. This recipe makes an excellent syrup!

Ingredients:
2 cups water
3 cups sugar
3 sticks of cinnamon 
1 cup honey (use thyme honey if available, because it has a strong flavour. Orange blossom honey can also be used, but in my opinion, it's one of the sweetest types of honey available - overly sweet - therefore, I don't use it).
the peel from 2 medium oranges
1/2 cup of orange juice


Directions:

  • Into a pot, add the water, the sugar, the orange peel, the orange juice and the cinnamon sticks. Mix the ingredients with a spoon and stop mixing once the syrup goes over the heat. The reason for not mixing the syrup as it cooks is that the sugar it contains might crystallise.
  • Place the pot on the stove over medium-high heat, let the syrup come to a boil, and then turn down the heat. Cook for 2 minutes and remove from the heat.  
  • Add the honey and mix.
  • Let the syrup cool down and then transfer it to a wide container with a lid.  Cover it, and let it get cold. 
The melomakarona are made next.  No need to use a mixer; this should all be done by hand. Chef weighed everything, and so did I. Where possible, I converted the quantities into cup measurements. 


Ingredients:
2 cups freshly squeezed orange juice (or use the best quality store-bought juice), weight is 400 grams
3 cups sunflower oil or mild olive oil, weight is 530 grams
5 tablespoons butter, melted in the microwave
1/4 cup powdered sugar (powdered sugar mixes well and helps to add colour while baking)
1 teaspoon baking soda
2  teaspoons cinnamon
1/2  teaspoon ground cloves
zest from one orange
about 10 cups (to weigh 1,200 grams) of all-purpose flour.  There is no need to sift the flour.
walnuts, chopped
honey to use while layering 

Directions:
  • In a deep container, add all the wet ingredients, including the melted butter.
  • To that, add the powdered sugar and the spices.
  • Mix the wet ingredients.
  • Add all of the flour along with the baking soda. Mix with your hands gently, starting from the middle of the bowl and progressing toward the outside.  Don't use a mixer, it will destroy this dough. Stop mixing as soon as the liquid is incorporated with the flour and the dough begins to form. The dough will have a wonderful aroma.
  • Shape the cookies into ovals and then score lines on their surface with a fork.
  • Alternately, you can place them on a rack and roll them to make decorative grooves.
  • The lines and grooves give character to the cookie and also help to hold in the syrup. There is a demonstration of how to shape them on the YouTube video below.
  • Place the cookies on parchment-lined baking sheets and bake them at 350°F for 25 to 30 minutes, depending on the oven. When done, they should have a dark golden colour.
  • As soon as they come out of the oven, drop them in the cold syrup. Work in small batches of three or four cookies. Turn them over with a large spoon and leave them in the syrup for about one minute. If you leave them in for too long, they will become saturated with syrup (that's not necessarily bad, they do get soggy and become really sweet, but they still taste okay).
  • Remove the melomakarona from the syrup, place them on a rack and let them drain off any excess syrup.
  • Prepare a serving platter by spreading a little honey and some walnuts on its surface. 
  • Add a layer of melomakarona and then repeat the same procedure, layering honey, walnuts and cookies, ending with a light layer of honey and walnuts.
  • This recipe makes about 70 really delicious, honey-orange-cinnamon flavoured and fragrant cookies.

Some notes:
*If you cannot find oranges that are flavourful and juicy, buy a good quality prepared orange juice.  

*If you watch the full video, you will see the chef stuff some of the cookies with walnuts. This is a well-known variation. I made half of my melomakarona without stuffing, while I stuffed the other half with walnut pieces.
 
*Melomakarona can be kept fresh for 10 to 15 days.