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Entries categorized as ‘Sugar High Fridays’

Mmm … Canada

June 23, 2008 · 13 Comments

It’s that time of the month again, Sugar High Friday time and this month the challenge has been set by the event owner.

OK so what’s the challenge involve for June?  Well it has to be something sugar high inducing and has to involve a typically Canadian product or recipe. To quote the Domestic Goddess herself:

Let’s get together as many bloggers as we can to share their favourite Canadian confection, indulgence, dessert, sweet…anything really! As long as says Canada to you and you can get some sort of Sugar High from it, we want to know about it.

As a girl from the UK who has never travelled to Canada I’m not overly knowledgeable in this area of the worlds cuisine, I don’t think I even own a Canadian recipe book, which is shocking considering how many books grace my kitchen (and the rest of the house if I’m going to be honest).  So what to cook?

I love, no make that adore, maple syrup but it’s quite tricky to find the ‘pure’ variety here in my location. Luckily for me a great forum friend of mine Steph (who is Canadian) sent me a lovely large bottle of this amber nectar as part of a swap arranged last Christmas.

Maple syrup is apparently a pretty straightforward product to make yourself, oh if only I had a few maple trees in my garden, sigh, I’ll just have to stick to the health-food store and generous friends won’t I.

I use maple syrup in so many ways, in fact if I listed them all I think I’d overspill an A4 piece of paper :) So a few examples, drizzled over a chicken before roasting to give the most glorious crispy sweet skin, in spicy marinades for meat/fish/vegetables as the sweetness offsets the heat so well, in my now becoming famous side dish of carrots & peas which are simmered in butter and maple syrup with some herbs occasionally, drizzled over pancakes (so good especially when served with crisp rashers too), on french toast, oh I could go on and on and on; but maple syrup comes alive for me when it’s in cake frosting.

So for the challenge it just had to be a maple syrup based cake then didn’t it really, and the one that springs to mind has already been blogged about here, so I won’t bore you all by recounting it again. Trust me here, this cake is guaranteed to give a sugar high of the best kind, so please do give it a go.

Nestled in amongst that wonderful swap parcel from Steph was a small bottle of Inniskillin Vidal Ice Wine, a fruity, slightly floral wine with an almost vanillery edge.

The perfect thing to drink with a nice slice of this cake as a naughty night time treat :)

Categories: Cakes & Cookies · Challenges · Chat · My Recipes · Sugar High Fridays · Vegetarian

Say Cheese!

May 3, 2008 · 12 Comments

Last Tuesday was my mums birthday, and today was my day for baking her a lovely birthday cake; or so I thought.  She had originally asked for a lemon cake but changed her mind, requesting cheesecake instead and to be truthful I’m very glad she did, as it gave me chance to cook from Grand Livre De Cuisine: Desserts and Pastries (Alain Ducasse & Frederic Robert) which was a birthday present of mine earlier in the month.

I love this book, just to look at the photographs is wonderful but the recipes are to die for.  

Dessert and pastry recipes are presented on double-page spreads and illustrated with close-up photos of the finished dishes. Pastries, viennoiseries, breads and rolls, candies, chocolate creations, ice creams and sorbets, fruits and flavourings: everything is included, from traditional and basic recipes to more audacious creations such as Raviole d’Agrumes, jus de citronnelle et jus de fruits de la passion frais and Fondant de chocolat au the Earl Grey. This all-inclusive book encompasses gourmet delights from around the world, such as Tiramisu a notre facon, Coupe Cheesecake and Pavlova, each adapted to reflect the authors’ distinctive flair.

Organised by main ingredient, the structure of the book reflects the philosophy of Alain Ducasse, who says that culinary techniques should enhance and bring out an ingredient’s true nature, not mask it.

Many of the recipes look incredibly complicated due to the presentation of the food but although I’d say they’re for the confident cook they’re not unachievable in your home kitchen.  Most do not require fancy equipment or very hard to find ingredients and given a little time and patience can be recreated with relative ease.

So I went for the basic cheesecake recipe, which can be found below, and then adapted it very basically by adding a few drops of lemon oil and some lemon zest to the cheesecake filling.  

I made one large traditional round cheesecake and for presentation purposes after dinner I made some small individual cheesecakes in brioche moulds.  Which cooked very quickly and looked great – possibly a quick way of making cheesecake, if another method was used; I will certainly be testing it out.

The main difference with Alain’s cheesecake and the more typical American style ones is the crust.  Here Alain uses a sweet pastry instead of the biscuit crumb base, encasing the cheese in an even better protective layer and adding a buttery depth to the proceedings.

The cheesecake was baked very slowly in a bain marie and kept a wonderfully soft, luscious textured, almost mousse like  belly, which remained to have a slight wobble as it was forked up.

Above that we have a lovely vanilla set cream, almost panna cotta like, which despite being incredibly rich, seemed to cut through the slight sharpness of the cheese and buttery pastry so well.

So cheesecake has reached its higher purpose, no longer a quick and easy pudding, but a classy and elegant dessert.  

This is also my first entry to Sugar High Fridays (for more details please see the Blog Events page), which is being hosted by the marvelous Tartelette. If you haven’t already visited these fabulous blogs do – you’re bound to thoroughly enjoy them.

The Recipe:

Sweet Pie Pastry Crust:

  • 500g flour
  • 300g butter
  • 200g granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 vanilla bean
  • 500g butter

Cream Cheese Batter:

  • 1.133kg cream cheese
  • 335g caster sugar
  • 3 tablespoons flour
  • 5 whole eggs + 2 yolks
  • 80g double cream
  • Lemon oil & zest (optional & to taste)

Frosting:

  • 160g double cream
  • 20g baum syrup (I used agave syrup)
  • Seeds from a vanilla pod
  • 2 gelatin sheets
  1. Make the cheesecake batter. 
  2. Use a paddle in an electric mixer to blend the cream cheese together with the sugar and flour.
  3. Add the eggs, egg yolks and then the double cream.
  4. Refrigerate until needed.
  5. Make the crust.
  6. Cream the 300g butter and sugar in an electric mixer (or by hand) until pale and fluffy.
  7. Add the eggs, one by one, beating well.
  8. Fold in the sifted flour.
  9. Scrape in the seeds from the vanilla pod, mix gently.
  10. Roll out the pastry and bake at 170C for 10 minutes until lightly tinged golden and crisp.
  11. Break up the pastry and mix well with the 500g softened butter.
  12. Roll to 3mm thickness, line the tin and bake at 170C for 20 minutes, allow to cool.
  13. Pour the filling into the cooked crust and bake for 3 hours in a bain marie, leave to cool and set (24 hours if possible).
  14. Make the topping.
  15. Soak the gelatin in cold water and place the other ingredients in a small pan, bring to the boil and add the gelatin.
  16. Whisk well then cool rapidly by placing the pan in a sink of ice.  
  17. Leave to cool and set slightly before topping the cheesecake.
  18. Serve.

Categories: Challenges · Desserts · Sugar High Fridays