Category Archives: Dessert

Green tea creme brulee.

I consider it a  success, Florian however, grrrrrr, says if it was a classic one, vanilla flavoured, not the green tea, it would be great. :- /

I used 150 ml of double cream, 50 g of sugar and 3 egg yolks. I also infused about 30ml of milk with 3 tsp of macha powder and added it to the cream. I creamed the egg yolks with sugar until lovely, thick and pale and kept on whipping while slowly adding the infused cream. I then baked the brulees in bain marie for 40 minutes in 150 degrees, gas 2.  Yes, I admit, the sugar work is not astounding, but I’m pleased, with the taste and overall. 8.5 out of 10. Yeah. 🙂

A mousse technically brilliant.

This post is just to prove to myself that I am capable of making a brilliant mousse that holds its shape perfectly. This evening I made a simple lemon mousse with a touch of yuzu juice wasting away in the fridge. I added lemon and yuzu juice suryp with 1 gelatine leaf to a freshly whipped cream, saved some of it on the side to make a jelly and here we go- looked like that.

If I could improve something, I’d have made it sweeter, Florek said it was great, for me a touch too zingy. The nutty muesli on the side added to the texture very nicely. Pleased.

 

Raspberry Frustration.

And I was so proud when I completed the white dots around the plates! So pretty, I thought! And if I had only paid as much attention to the mousse as I did to those dots, the result would have been awesome.

The inspiration came from the lobster dish I saw from L’Atelier de Joel Robuchon, but I made mine as a dessert, so an ordinary fruit jelly, the ring in the middle, before the jelly sets and the mousse in. I won’t bother with the mousse recipe from today, as it was totally and entirely shit, I will do it again though, with more attention to detail.

4 out of 10. Not happy.

Lemon drizzle cake.

From the recent “Good Food”.

175 g of self raising flour, 1,1/2 tbsp of baking powder, 50 g of polenta( I didn’t have any, I used corn flower), finely grated zest of 2 lemons, 50 g of ground almonds and 140 g of caster sugar all mixed in a bowl, 2 whole eggs cracked in with 75 ml of rapeseed oil and 25 ml of natural yoghurt. All this roughly mixed, but not overmixed went to the tin with baking parchment and nicely baked for around 40 mins in 180 degrees ( 4). In the meantime, juice from those 2 lemons alongside 85 g of sugar and 75 ml of water was all boiled and reduced down to a nice syrup.

When the cake baked and cooled slightly, I made lots of little holes and spooned over all the syrup into them and all over the cake. It is moist, springy, lemony and enjoyable.

Blueberry and roasted pecan fool.

Very simple and tasty dessert. First I toasted the chopped pecans, it’s quite extraordinary how much flavour it brings out of the nuts. Then I whipped the cream with some vanilla paste and lemon juice, tossed in a crushed meringue nest, a good handful of blueberries,some chopped dark chocolate and stuck it all into the rings. Once again blow torch was at hand to help me get them out, but I didn’t overdo it like last time. I topped the thing with some blueberries and nuts and served. While eating it I was already thinking, something sharp like strawberry would be even better, more contrast. the texture is there, brilliant, but it needs more contrast and maybe a coulis or something. To be continued- on Saturday.

Pear & white chocolate mousse.

Nice one. A Valentine dessert I found in Good Food online. I even asked The Chief how to top a cold mousse with hot chocolate and end up with lovely topping, that lets out this crunchy sound when hit with a spoon.

I used 125 g of peeled and chopped ripe pears, which I cooked off with some lemon juice and a splash of Cointreau- the recipe called for Poire William liquor, I had none, and sugar. I threw a leaf of softened gelatine and cooled it outside. In the meantime I whipped up 150 ml of double cream,not too much, still quite runny, them folded in the chilled and pureed pears. Last thing to do was melting some white chocolate and topping the mousse up, once safely in the rings.  They stayed in the fridge for nearly 3 hours, I used the blow torch to loosen them out of the rings, a bit too much, as they melted a bit. Very tasty though, I’m pleased.

Green tea baking commences…

A green tea sponge cake has been on my mind for a while, today, on my day off I got cracking. The idea came from The Chief, who made a GT tiramisu a few months ago, I thought I’d see if my mom’s sponge recipe with the addition of GT would work or not. The Chief suggested infusing the GT powder with a bit of hot milk, so it doesn’t lose the flavour. For the sponge I whipped 4 egg whites with a glass of sugar- my mom’s measurements :-), kept on adding the egg yolks, then the GT infusion, which took about 1,5 tea spoons of the GT powder and about 30ml of hot milk. Then I folded in 4 tbsp of plain flour, 2 tbsp of potato flour and 1 tsp of baking powder. All this baked in 180 degrees for about 30 mins, until the cake came off the sides of the tin. Then left to cool and sliced in half.

The cream was a bit of a challenge. I cooked budyń plus a spoonful of plain flour, cooled it and whizzed with 1/3 of a margarine. The taste was not amazing, so I threw a banana in and some vanilla paste and was then quite satisfied, so in it went, I saved some for the top, although I think white chocolate would do nicely too. I finished it off with toasted hazelnuts and flaked almonds. Next time a touch more GT powder, the colour is ok, but it could do with more flavour. Texture- spot on.  🙂

 

Banana soufflet with raspberry sauce.

Sitting and grinning. It’s such an awesome feeling when something works out so nicely, having heard that being able to make a nice soufflet is a skill every chef should be able to do with her eyes closed. My recipe comes from ” Masterchef @ Home” book I bought myself from Amazon- was on sale. For 2 soufflets I whipped 1 egg white with roughly 1 tbsp os caster sugar. Into well whipped mixture I added a ripe banana blitzed with a spoonful of honey. Gently folded and transferred into the prepared ramekins, buttered and covered nicely with sugar. Hint from Gordon Fucking Ramsay, when spreading butter on ramekins, use the brush in upward movements, so that it’s easier for the babies to rise. I baked them in 200 degrees for 12 minutes. I discovered today that if I put the ramekins on a preheated baking tray, the soufflets bake beautifully from the bottom, so when eating the very last of them from the ramekins, it doesn’t even stick to the bottom. Perfect.

I served them with a very simple raspberry sauce- raspberries blitzed with sugar.

Proud!!!!:-)

 

Plum tartlet.

Last Monday I was told I sucked at work recently, it was all as pleasant as a constipation. I have some making up to do, so I baked a tart for the Chief this evening, plus 2 small tartlets for us, to round up a nice meal.

It’s the same recipe as the one with apples from Hugh a few posts ago, but I threw some lovely plums in instead of apples, I love the textures. I gave it to Florek, started typing and was just about to ask him what he thought about it, I looked at his plate and it was empty. Guess he liked it then. 🙂

For a tart and 2 tartlets I used 150 g of soft butter, 125 g caster sugar, creamed it together, added 2 eggs, some vanilla extract, 75 g of self raising flour and as much ground almonds. Threw the sliced plums on top, some flaked almonds and baked off for 45 minutes in 180 degrees. Finished off with icing sugar. Let’s hope it will meet Chief’s approval tomorrow.

Ps. Those 2 last dishes and positive feedback on FB give new meaning to the words “comfort food”. Feeling a wee bit better now.

Spiced toffee apple cake.

From the recent edition of Good Food Mag.

I tried it, I like it, will make it again tomorrow and take it to work, but with more ginger and more spices and maybe with some pecan nuts too, I think it would make it even more awesome.

200 g of dates were roughly chopped for this recipe and simmered with 200ml of milk, then pureed nicely and added to the  mixture of 250 g of soft butter, 4 eggs, 280 g of self raising flour, 200 g of brown sugar, 2 tsp pf vanilla paste, and a touch of baking powder to lift it up. All this was beaten up and poured out onto a baking tray lined with baking parchment. In the meantime I cored 3 apples, red apples, all for the looks, did not peel them, but sliced thinly and arranged in the cake mixture into rows.

Baked in 180 degrees for about 45 minutes, then finished off with maple syrup and icing sugar.  Pat on the back. 🙂