Sunday 4 January 2009

A Biscuit for all seasons (well the colder ones mainly)

Oaty fruity cinnamony honeyed biscuits
Makes about 15 biscuits
Preparation time: about 35 mins (excluding the washing up!)

I was sorting out some stuff while watching a "Man for all Seasons" and was inspired to bake something to go with some tea and also to spice up the lunch box this week.
These ingredients were sort of what I had left after making Christmas cakes. I added the honey as my supply of sugar was low and well it tastes nice. The oats, honey and spice add a medieval touch something that might have cheered Thomas Moore as he rotted in the tower. In fact the biscuits are so good they could have Sir Thomas recant his conscience!


Pre-heat your oven to 180°C
What you'll need:
50g butter
100g caster sugar
2 tablespoons of runny honey
1 egg, beaten
50g plain flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
175g porridge oats
125g mixed dried fruit


What to do:
1. Cream the butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl until light and fluffy. (You could use a mixer but is it worth the faff for a few biscuits?)
2. Add the beaten egg and mix until combined.
3. Add the flour, salt and baking powder into the batter and stir to mix it in.
4. Add all the remaining ingredients and mix to combine thoroughly (the mixture will be thick).
5. Grease two baking trays and place large tablespoons of the mixture some 2 inches apart on them.
6. Place the trays in the pre-heated oven and bake for about 15 minutes, or until nicely browned all over.
7. Remove from the oven and allow cooling slightly on the baking trays before putting them on a cooling rack.
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To serve: some proper tea and a Oscar winning period piece concerning the balance between our moral duties to a higher being and our allegiance to the state in the form of the monarch that or you could watch a western.

Saturday 3 January 2009

Simple is best


Classic baked Cheesecake

Serves 10-15

Cooking time 30-40 preparation plus 1-15Hr cooking and best with overnight chilling.

Like most people who grew up in UK from the 70's onwards cheese cake means only one thing a pudding you got on special occasions that was made out of a box that had 3 packets in it. These cakes were great they tasted good, me and my brothers could make them ourselves, and they seemed dead sophisticated especially the black cherry one and they made a change from those flans with jelly and mandarins on them.

I know they may have been "filled with chemicals" but we only had them every so often and hey most things came in packets soup (just add water), mash (just add robots) and for brief period pizza (just add well cheese)!

I think once when I was staying with another family we had another form of cheese cake from the "deli" counter at COOP but if memory serves this was just a lump of very ripe Cheshire cheese on some biscuits with pineapple on the top, it strangely horrid.

It took all the way until 21st century for me to try "real" cheese cake, and of course being dead flash I tried it just of Bleeker st in the Village, I think the place was called Dantes and claimed to specialise in the stuff. Well on a grey NY day with some coffee it wasn't too bad and after having some more from Gaby's back here in London I decided to give it a go. I've made one 5 or 6 times and I think keeping it simple is the key. Many of the recipes involve adding chocolate to the base or having varied sauces or topping but I think like tomato soup or vanilla ice cream, somethings are better kept one flavour. Sadly this week I lost my nerve and included a summer fruit compote/sauce as in picture but eating it again for New Year's day breakfast it was better without the berries.

What follows is adaption of a Nigella recipe including my variations as I always like to see how recipes evolve.

What you'll need

Spring bottom baking tin mine is 8inch
Cling film and tin foil
Deep sided Roasting pan big enough for your baking tin.
125g each of Hobnobs and gingernuts (added the later to add a bit of spice)
75g of unsalted butter
100g of caster sugar
Nigella suggested 4 eggs and I yolk I just added 5 eggs
700g cream cheese (mine was Turkish I think and came in brine so I soaked it in milk for an hour to rinse of the salt to save time just buy Philadelphia!)
125 ml of double cream
Again the saintly N suggested 2 tablespoons of cornflour which I forgot to buy so I replaced with custard powder!!
1 teaspoon of vanilla extract.
The finely chopped zest of 1 lemon
The juice of half the lemon this (replaces apple schnapps in NL list!)

Sauce (just so you know but I'd not bother next time)
500g of frozen mixed summer fruit
splash of sloe gin
Sugar to taste.

What you need to do:

  1. Blitz the biscuits into sandy dust in the blender.
  2. I deviated from NL here and melted the butter in pan and added it t the biscuits she just mixes it with the biscuits.
  3. Pressed the crumbs and butter into the bottom of the baking tin in an even layer.
  4. Put the tin in the oven to firm up.
  5. Preheat the oven 170 C.
  6. Clean out the mixer bowl.
  7. Add to the clean bowl the eggs, cheese, cream, cornflour (custard powder) vanilla and lemon zest and mix up into smooth liquid.
  8. Add the lemon juice at the end and stir in.
  9. Now wrap the base of the baking tin with Clingfilm to ensure the liquid doesn't leak out. I used to 2 layers then wrap the film in tin foil to protect it from the heat.
  10. Pour the cheese mixture onto the crumb base and place the tin in to the baking tray. Put the whole lot onto the oven shelf and then top up the roasting tray with hot water up half the height of the cake tin.
  11. Close the oven door and bake for 1 hour, then check to see if it is a little wobbly in middle and has set if not give it another 15 mins.
  12. By which time it should have as my friend S said a "proper patisserie" browned top.
  13. Take it out of the oven and let it stand and cool for while.
  14. Remove the film and foil and refrigerate overnight before eating.

    For the sauce:

Put the fruit and sloe gin in pan and simmer down until it's a sauce but not too cooked down then mix in the sugar to the sweetness you prefer. But like I say the Cheese cake probably doesn't need it so pass it separate and then put it on to some yoghurt the next day it keeps in the fridge for a while.