Archive for May, 2009

26
May
09

apple and date cake

There is a strange joy in buying out of season ingredients and baking with them. Dont ask why, its there and there is no explaining it. Here’s an example of the very same- apple and date cake prepared with ridiculously expensive pureed ( not even whole pieces!!) apples.

003

Ingredients:

  • 2 large apples- cored, peeled and chopped
  • 1/3C or 85 gms softened butter
  • 1C powdered sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tsp b.p.
  • 1 ¾ C all purpose flour
  • ½ C chopped walnuts
  • 1C stoned and chopped walnuts

001

Methods:

  • Blend apples to a puree with 4 tbsp water
  • Sift flour and b.p. and keep aside.
  • Beat butter and sugar till light and fluffy.
  • Alternately add eggs and sieved flour to the butter.
  • Add the apple puree and mix.
  • Keeping aside 1 tbsp of walnuts and dates for the top, add the rest to the cake mixture.
  • Grease a 11” X9” cake tin and pour the batter in it.
  • Bake at 180 degree C for 45 min to 1 hour.
  • Cool, cut and serve.

Source: Nita Mehta’s Bakes and Cakes

Notes: The cakes texture is obviously heavier than the basic cake that we make.  Its  got too many things inside to not be!! But that doesnt mean its dry or that there is something wrong with the texture. Apple and date make a wonderful and combination. I have never made cake with apple puree but have read a few recipes.I was quite happy with the overall effect it had on the cake- I believe it made it softer. While the cake is soft, the chopped walnuts add just the right amount of crunch to it.  This is a recipe that you should try…..sometime in December!!

21
May
09

Apple clafouti

I learnt this from Arundathi ’s food blog and tried it out some weekends ago. I loved the results so I am sharing it with you here.

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup chopped apple
  • 3 tbsp maida
  • 1/4 cup Caster Sugar + more for dusting
  • 3 tbsp Whole Milk + 3 tbsp Fresh Cream
  • 1 tsp Vanilla Essence
  • 1 Egg

021

Method:

  • Butter for greasing the  baking dish
  • Butter the baking dish and sprinkle a little  sugar. Place the cut apple over the sugar. Keep aside.
  • Beat the egg till light and fluffy. Add the cream, milk, sugar and vanilla to  it. Add the flour and mix well.
  • Pour the mixture over the fruit.
  • Bake in a pre heated over at 200 deg.C for 20 mins. Serve plain or with ice cream.

022

Notes:While Arundathi used pear, I used an apple.Dint have any pears at home you see. I think you can use any hard food , the kind that wont turn into a puree when subjected to heat waves in the oven. What I loved about this recipe is that its so quick to put together!!This is probably the fastest baked dish I ever made!! The top of my clafouti got a tad overdone (try refraining from saying “AGAIN!!??”)  thats why it doesnt look as nice as it should. See Arundathi’s post to get an idea of how the clafouti should really look like. I admit the Thar desert like look  does act as a deterrent  but all you have to do it take a bite and they you dont care about how it looks. We ate it without ice cream but you could serve it with any flavour you like.

Thanks for the recipe Arundathi!:D

PS: you can look at another version of the clafouti here at Bakingobsession. Quite an expert at work there!! 

18
May
09

Orange apricot muffins

I am really happy to put this recipe up… coz I “invented” it..all by myself!:D

010

Ingredients:

  • 2 eggs
  • 80 gms maida/APF
  • 80 gms powdered sugar
  • 80 gms softened butter
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 50 ml orange juice
  • 2 tbsp chopped dry apricots
  • 1 tbsp orange zest

Method:

  • Sift maida and b.p. and keep aside.
  • Beat butter and sugar together till light and fluffy.
  • Add the eggs and beat till well incorporated.
  • Add the maida along with the chopped apricots, juice and zest.
  • Pour in a well greased muffin tray and bake at 180 deg.C for about 20 mins.

012

Notes: I had some apricots lying around  that I dint know what to do with. I though up this recipe on the bus to work- the traffic is dreadfully boring to watch and thinking up recipes is definately more fun that inhaling vehicular exhaust and counting cars!  The orange juice makes the muffins moist and soft and add a distinct flavour. I dont normally add juice to cake/muffin batter because I fear it would spoil the batter consistency. But done in the right amount, it yields encouraging results. :D

I tried making a glaze for the muffins and thats the only thing about them that flopped!! You see there is only so much “invention” you should indulge in in any given day. I had met my quota with the muffins, the glaze was therefore destined to fail. I didnt have the vagues idea about how an orange  glaze is made and so something went terribly wrong with the consistency.It was waaay too thin. And I kinda boiled the apricot piece along with the glaze and that made them too soft and caused discolouration. I am sticking to non-glazed cakes and muffins from now on.. unless you have a basic glaze recipe that works..

015

14
May
09

Potato nests

Yup, we are over doing potatoes on this blog. And we have no real reason for it. Promise to keep the potatoes away for at least 3  months right after you tell us how absolutely wonderful this potato side dish looks!

potatonest

Ingredients :

  • ½ C bonesl ess chicken/ crumbled paneer
  • 4 large potatoes- boiled and grated
  • ½ C sliced mushrooms
  • 4 tbsp softened butter
  • 2 tbsp milk
  • A few sprigs of coriander
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Method:

  • Mash  the boiled potatoes till smooth.
  • Add in 2 tbsp butter and 2 tbsp milk and the seasoning.
  • With your hands or with the help of a katori/vati shape into small nests.
  • Cover the baking tray with greased aluminium foil. Place the nests on it. Bake at 200 deg.C for 15- 20 mins, till the nests are set.
  • Melt 1 tbsp butter and sauté the chicken/paneer till golden.  Add some water and cook till done (in the case of paneer the cover and cook step can be skipped).
  • Sauté mushrooms and add to the chicken/paneer.
  • Fill the mushroom-chicken/paneer filling in the nests, garnish with coriander and serve.

027

Source:Nita Mehta’s Bakes and Cakes

026

Notes: The humble potato is probably the most versitile sabzi I have  ever met. Falling short of cauliflower in  for dinner? Throw in some potatoes to increase teh quantity of the sabzi.  Dint get time to go vegetable shopping this week? Look around, there are sure to be some potatoes and onions around- throw them together to make a simple vegetable and tide over the vegetable drought. There are  millions of ways to cook and serve potatoes- this recipe is just one of the many that you will find on the blogosphere. What do I like about it?  Its not too complicated to do and its looks very good. The original recipe asks for chicken. I subsituted it with paneer with sauted grated carrots and spring onions. You could use any kind of filling- mushrooms, sauted bell peppers and onions, baby corn,shredded spinach and olives. Basically anything you fancy.

11
May
09

Rice aubergine casserole

 A slighty time consuming recipe.. but one  that yields yummy results.

dscf0553

Ingredients:

  • 1 C rice
  • 2 bay leave
  • 1 tsp shahi jeera
  • 1 large brinjal/aubergine cut into 1” piece
  • 1 large capsicum cut into ½ “ pieces
  • Oil for frying

Red sauce

  • 2 tbsp oil
  • 11/2 oinion chopped finely
  • 4 large tomatoes pureed
  • ½ tsp red chilli pwd
  • ½ tsp suage
  • 11/2 tsp salt

Cheese sauce

  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 tbsp maide
  • 2 C milk
  • 2 cheese cubes grated
  • ¾  tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp pepper

Method:

  • Sprinkle 4.4 tsp salt on the brinjal pieces and leave for ½ hour ro sweat. Pat dry with a kitchen towel. Heat oil and deep fry till golden brown.
  • Boil rice in 5 C water with salt, bay leaves and shahi jeera. Cook till tender. Drain excess water and keep aside to cool.
  • To prepare the red sauce, heat oil, sauté chopped onions toll light brown. Add tomato puree, salt, red chilli, sugar and oregano. Cook for about 5 mins till slightly thick. Remove from heat and keep aside.
  • For the cheese sauce, heat butter in a pan, add the maida and stir on low heat for  about a minute. Add milk stirring continuously till it comes to a boil. Cook for 2 minutes. Remove from heat, add seasoning and grated cheese. The sauce should be thin in consistency.
  • To assemble, spread half the rice in an oven proof dish. Spread half the aubergine and capsicum on it.  Top with ½ the  red sauce and ½ the cheese sauce.
  • Spread the next layer of rice. Add brinjals, capsicum, top with the two sauces.
  • Cover dish with aluminium foil and bake in a preheated oven for 10 mins at 200 deg.C.
  • Serve hot.(Serves 4)

dscf0550

Notes:   To avoid deep frying the aubergine pieces, I shallow fried them on a non stick pan.  It doesnt turn out as crisp as it would have had it been deep fried but it gets cooked just fine. The original recipe doesnt ask you to cook the capsicum pieces butI have a mortal fear of serving kachha khana,  so  I sauted the capsicum in 1/2 a tsp of oil before adding it to the dish.  This recipe made me realise one thing- white sauce and rice make a great combo! The white sauce makes the rice creamy and rich.  The texture you get is somewhat like risotto.. at least to me it tasted like risotto and because I love risotto I gave this recipe a doubel thumbs up!:D

08
May
09

Orange cookies

A variation to the basic shortbread- zesty and orangey!

Ingredients:

  • Maida 60 gms
  • Butter 30 gms
  • Orange essence a few drops
  • Fresh orange zest 1½-2 tbsp
  • Baking powder   ½ tsp
  • Milk to bind

Method:

  • Mix together the maida and the baking powder.
  • Rub in the butter till the flour begins resembling bread crumbs.
  • Add the orange zest and essence and mix well.
  • Use milk to bind together.
  • Use the dought to form any shape you like and place the cookies on a well greased over tray and bake for 10-15 min.s at 180 deg.C.
  • Makes 10 small cookies.

Mandira’s notes: I relaly dont have anything much to write about this cookie, just that the short bread lends itself to millions of varaitions!All you need is a fertile imagination! 

dscf0363

06
May
09

Cheese sticks

This is what I call “cheesy and easy”!! It takes just about 5 minutes to put it all together!

Ingredient:

  • Maida-60 gms
  • Baking powder-1/3 tsp (optional)
  • Salt -to taste
  • Pepper -to taste
  • Butter- 30 gms
  • Grated processed cheese-30 gms
  • Egg yolk-1/2 + a little for basting
  • Water-just enough to bind.

Method:

  • Pre heat over.
  • Sift flour, salt, pepper and baking powder together.
  • Add the butter and gently rub it in till it begins to look like fine bread crumbs.
  • Stir in the cheese and bind together with egg yolk and water to form a thick dough.
  • Roll out the dough and cut into strips.
  • Bake the strips on a well greased tray at 160 deg.C for 7-10 mins.

Source: Basic Food Preparation

Mandira’s notes: The egg yolk in this recipe is totally avoidable. In fact the yolk lends an eggey smell to the cheese sticks. Though the baking powder is mentioned as optional, I think it should be added because it makes the biscuits light. Towards the end of the baking time, it makes sense to repeatedly check on the biscuits ,else you run the risk of making them too brown. Please refer to picture below to know what over done biscuits look like! If you like, you could reduce the cheese quantity a bit- I love cheese, so I would never do that, but if you like it less cheesy, knock of 5-10 gms of cheese.

30112008

05
May
09

Foodilicious Sri Lanka

This is probably one of those posts that shouldn’t make it to this blog. I mean it has nothing to do with baking and yet its here. It has to do with food thought, and my experiences with it in my recent trip to  Sri Lanka. So lets categorise this as “random by mandira” We already have that category on this blog so it makes sense to periodically add posts to it. ;)

In the week that we spent in Sri Lanka, we got to eat a whole range of food- some local and indigenous to Sri Lanka, some with Indian roots and some entirely continental. India is probably the closest neighbour SL has and so there are bound to be some influences in culture and food. Possessing no knowledge of Singhalese and Tamil, the only langue for communication available to me during the trip was English. And though you can generally get around SL comfortably with English you cant always interact with the locals and get information about their food from them. So I had to rely primarily on hotel menus with descriptions , interaction with waiters(and waitresses) who spoke some amount of English and general observation.

Being an island country, sea food is obviously popular. You find all sorts of sea food everywhere- from the smallest hotel to the largest, fanciest one. Meats of all kinds are also easily available-chicken, mutton, pork,beef. The staple diet is rice and curry- the curry can have vegetables in it or any kind of meat. I found most of the curries were coconut based and rather spicy, quite like the Indian curries. They also had some special non vegetarian dishes but I dint venture and try out any of those for obvious reasons. Besides rice, Lankans also eat rotti, which is somewhat similar to the roti/chapati we have in India but it’s much thicker and smaller in size. Rotti is mostly served with a vegetable curry or sambol. Sambol is what I would call a hot Sri Lankan chutney. The ones I got to eat were onion based with lots of red chillies and a dash of coconut. Spicy enough to make your eyes tear!

If you are traveling in a foreign country and dont speak the native language, there are bound to be some funny annecdotes around food, mostly a fall out of the communication gap. The first time a waiter told me they served “roti” in the hotel I jumped for joy and ordered it. I am not much of a rice eater and prefer roti to rice anyday. I was served a 4” diameter thick circular disc made of flour in the name of roti. I was obviously disappointed.  I was looking forward to ghee lathered thin, soft ones that I eat at most meals back home. Not to say that the rotti wasnt nice, but it wasnt the roti that I wanted.  The “sambol” was another cause of  confusion. Towards the end of the journey we were quite desperate for familiar Indian food. Food that sounded and tasted like what we get at home. At the airport we found a canteen that served airport staff and was willing to extend its services to  starved Indian tourists. The small black board  proped in the corner announced “dosai” as the speciality of the day.  In my understanding dosai is the same as dosa- pancakes made with fermented mixture of ground rice and urad dal, mostly served with coconut chutney and sambar. We placed an order for three dosa and re checked if they served it with sambar. “Yes yes, madam” said the man at the counter. A few minutes later we picked up our order from the self service counter- three white plates with one dosa each, some red colour chutney and  no sambar in sight. “Where’s the sambar?” we asked. ” There madam, look. Sambol” “Oh but we thought you were giving us sambar.” “Yes  thats what it is.Sambol, madam.” We gave up. We were gonna have to eat dosa with sambol, at least this one time. The dosa had a layer of egg in it. Certainly not the kind of dosa we  are used to getting in India. My dad wasn’t amused. He could manage a few bites only.  I dint care, I was too hungry and  happily gobbled up his share too.

When the Sri Lankans aren’t eating rice and curries they are eating hoppers, mostly for breakfast. Hoppers are basically pancakes made from a  fermented rice based dough. They are made in a special pan that looks like a katori/vati  with a handle. The hoppers have a soft, fluffy centre and thin, crisp sides. They reminded me of the appams Malyalis make. Hoppers are either plain or with egg. An egg is broken in the centre of the hopper  and its  cooked along with it, somewhat like an egg with the sunny side up. String hoppers are hoppers  but in a different shape. They are noodle like and are steamed  instead of cooked. They are mostly  eaten with sambol or curry.

Kiribath is rice cooked in rice cooked in cocnut milk. A little sweet in taste, it reminded me of rice pudding. Sri Lankans also eat a lot of curd wiht their meals. Its mostly served with treacle.  You get these earthen pots with thick, creamy curd in the market. They are freely available and you can pick it up from practically 261any shop.  The curd is much thicker than the one we get int eh market here . I assume they set the curd without removing the cream.  We had the super thick curd with loads of honey and bananas for lunch one day. We needed a break from all the hotel food and wanted to eat light. All that heavy curd drizzled with honey  and bananas was very filling, not exactly a light meal. Talking of fruits, you get some absolutely delicious fruits in SL.Bananas,pineapples,papaya, melons and some local fruits that couldnt be identified but were loweely.

In Nuwara Eliya we stayed at a hotel called The Grand. Everything about the hotel was in tandem with its name, including its room tariff. We paid a bomb for living there but the hotel was beautiful and its food out of the world. Breakfast was a grand affair that served everything you could possible imagine.Since this blog is about baking, it made sense to add a little info on the baked goodies that I encountered at the Grand since they were by far the best I had on the trip. Unfortunately the lay out was so vast that I found the baked  things only after I had practically finished my meal, so I had to be content with tasting only two of the cakes available. Both were delicious.  Here is a picture of coconut cake and another of a slice of banana bread.  We’ve done banan bread earlier on this blog and it was nice, honestly it was. But it dint have the kind of texture the one I ate at The Grand did. It was also white in colour. Lakshmi and  I have also tried coconut cake and we are both happy with the way it has turned out. We will be posting it soon. What I want to figure out it while both our cakes are white in colour, the ones I ate were dark brown and  I want to know why. Is it the use of brown sugar in place of regular sugar? Or is it something else all together? What do you think?

 

308

 

310

Please note, no matter how I started this post, I ended it with baking. I think I am getting obsessive.

02
May
09

Baked vegetables in spinach sauce

A baked dish of vegetables that was modified a bit to make a one dish meal.

dscf0283

Ingredients:

  • 3C diced mixed vegetables(French beans, carrot ,peas, potatoes, cauliflower)
  • 1 onion thinly sliced
  • 1 tbsp butter softened
  • 1 tsp red chilli powder

White sauce

  • 2 tbsp maida
  • 2 tbsp butter softened
  • 1 C milk
  • 1 ¼ tsp salt
  • ½ tsp pepper

Other ingredients

  • 2C chopped spinach
  • 1C cream
  • 6 tbsp grated cheese

Method:

  • Parboil or microwave vegetables. Strain and keep aside.
  • Heat 1 tbsp butter, sauté the chopped onion.  Add the mixed vegetables and sauté foe 2 mins. Add chilli powder and salt. Keep aside.
  • For the white sauce, heat 2 tbsp butter, add the maida and still for a minute. Add milk salt and pepper. Cool till it thickens a bit.
  • Cook the spinach separately till dry. Cool and blenderize to a puree.  Beat the cream lightly, add the spinach and white sauce to it.
  • Mix the vegetables to this sauce. Mix 3 tbsp grated cheese.
  • Pour in a dish, cover with the remaining cheese and bake at 200 deg.C for 20 mins.

Source: Nita Mehta’s Bakes and Cakes.

dscf0281

Mandira’s notes: I did two things to the original recipe- i got rid of the cream that was added to the spinach and I added macarone along with the vegetables to get a one dish meal. I think the cream was totally superfulous- may be it made it creamier and richer but it wasnt an essential part of the recipe and thats exactly why it was avoided.  The macarone added volume ( and carbs)to the dish and made it a full meal by itself.




Goodies this month

May 2009
M T W T F S S
« Apr   Jun »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Top Rated

Archives

visitors since 23rd june '08

  • 13,982 hits

visitors’ map