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Monthly Archives: November 2011

Pumpkin Cupcakes

I know, I know…
I am very aware that this post is overdue since I said I’d put up a new weekly post on time for the weekend.
Well, what can I say, things just got a bit too busy last week and I’m really sorry for the delay!

This delay is even more annoying as I had timed the recipe for this post with American Thanksgiving and now it’s not even Thanksgiving weekend anymore.

In fact, yesterday was the first Advent which means that for us Germans, one of my favourite times of the year has just begun: the Advent Season! Die “Adventszeit”, or rather the first Advent Sunday, is the start of baking and eating all the lovely gingerbread spiced cookies Germany does so well, so I should probably blog about that. But I still have 3 more weeks for that and as I had planned to tell you about these little pumpkin cupcakes as an alternative to pumpkin pie, I’m going to do it anyway – even if it is 5 days late!

Traditional Pumpkin Pie is a very American thing and, I find, not necessarily to every European’s taste. I therefore wanted to make something a little different for my friends here and went on the search for a pumpkin cupcake recipe. I tried out two different ones and – along with my tasting team – decided that this one gives the better result for the cupcake. As for the icing, I stuck with what I knew works, which is the same icng as with the Chocolate Guiness Cupcakes.
See
http://thesweetestbrunch.com/2011/11/04/chocolate-guiness-cupcakes/

So if you’re not fully over all things pumpkin yet, you might try making them – or wait for the whole Thanksgiving thing to come around again next year!

Cupcake Recipe from: http://www.sweettreatsandgoodeats.com/2010/10/pumpkin-cupcakes-with-cream-cheese.html

For about 24 cupcakes you’ll need:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp ground ginger
  • 1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp ground allspice
  • 1 cup packed light-brown sugar
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
  • 4 eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1 can (15 ounces) pumpkin puree

Preheat the oven to your oven to gas mark 4 and line your muffin tins with wrappers.

Mix all dry ingredients together, so that’s the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and allspice. Set it aside.

In another bowl cream the butter and sugars together with an electric mixer until fluffy. Then add your eggs, one at a time, followed by the pumpkin puree, which is also added best slowly, in about 3 batches.

Bake them for circa 15-20 mins (do the tooth pick test to check they are ready). Then let them completely cool down before icing them with the following icing:

And for the icing you need:

  • 300g cream cheese
  • 150g icing sugar
  • 125ml double cream (or whipping cream)

Lightly whip the cream cheese with an electric whisk until smooth, then add the icing sugar and carefully whisk it in. Add the cream and beat again with the electric whisk until it makes spreadable consistency.

Enjoy!

French Toast Soufflé

It’s taken me over 8 posts to feature French Toast  – but here at post number 9 it is! Well, French Toast of sorts, as I decided to try out a French Toast Soufflé which I came across on another blog (see below).

Most of my readers will know how to make basic French Toast. It’s a great way to use up white bread that’s starting to go a bit stale. A slightly more upmarket version would be French Toast made with brioche, which I had originally planned to make the other morning when my friend Tracey stayed over.

As I couldn’t get brioche in my little local supermarket I got a baguette instead and turned it into one of these French Toast  “soufflés”. Of course, as you can see on the photo, this is not really a soufflé but more of a bread and butter pudding style oven bake. But made in small individual ramekins the ‘soufflés’ do have a raised peak and even rise a little and after all, soufflé sounds just so much more sophisticated!

The best thing about this dish is that you can make it up the night before and keep it in the fridge overnight, allowing the flavours to infuse the bread. A great trick, if you want to show off a brunch treat when guests are staying over, without having to get up early to slave away at the stove first thing in the morning.

Recipe from: http://jennysteffens.blogspot.com/2011/08/french-toast-souffle-baked-french-toast.html

For 4 individual servings, you’ll need:

  • 1 baguette, which can be a day or two old
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1/4 cup maple syrup (plus more for serving)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
  • icing sugar, for serving

Cut the baguette into small square cubes by slicing it into thick slices, then cutting each on in to about 6 pieces.

In a large bowl, whisk together eggs, milk, maple syrup, vanilla and cinnamon.  Add bread cubes and toss until all of the cubes are coated.  Scoop or pour into individual ramekins.

Cover and chill in the refrigerator overnight or for at least 1 hour.  Bake at 375 degrees for 20 minutes.

Serve warm with powdered sugar and maple syrup and some stewed fruit, such as the plum compote from my Quark Pancakes, see http://thesweetestbrunch.com/2011/10/07/oat-pancakes-with-plum-compote/

Lemon & Lime Crumble Slice

It seems the season of colds and flu has begun, boohoo. Many people around me have come down with nasty colds. To ward off all these bugs I have increased my Vitamin C intake and one of the ways of doing this is to have a glass of warm water with freshly squeezed lemon first thing in the morning (apparently, this way is detoxifying and kick starts your whole digestive system). When a cold has already got a hold on me, I have cups of hot lemon, ginger and honey, which is soothing on a sore throat and warming all over.

So with these lemon remedies coming in to season again, I am surrounding myself with citrus fruits and had a few spare ones to try out another Pioneer Woman recipe: creamy lemon crumb squares (see link below). It sounded so easy and quick to make, I had to give it a go.

However, I amended it a tiny bit, as I like limes as much as I like lemons – or maybe even a little more.

I also preferred a slightly more British name instead of ‘Creamy Lemon Crumb Squares’, so I’m calling my version ‘Lemon & Lime Crumble Slice’ in honour of all the yummy British crumbles over here.

This recipe based on Creamy Lemon Crumb Squares by Pioneer Woman: http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2010/03/creamy-lemon-crumb-squares/

For 10 -12 slices (depending on the size you cut them of course), you’ll need:

  • A deep enough baking dish, – such as one a brownie dish (I used a Perspex one I usually use for pasta bakes, measuring 23×30 cm – the original recipe suggests an 8×11 or 9×13 inch pan)
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • pinch of salt
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, slightly softened
  • 1 cup brown sugar (not too tightly packed)
  • 1 cup oats
  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • juice of 3 limes and 1 lemon (should yield about ½ cup)
  • zest of ½ lemon and ½ lime

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Mix butter and brown sugar until well combined. I used a wooden spoon for this, which works well.

Now mix the baking powder in the flour and add a pinch of salt. Then add this flour mix, as well as the oats, to the butter/sugar mixture and combine. Press down half of the oat crumb mixture into the bottom of your baking dish, using the back of a spoon.

For the filling, mix together the condensed milk, lemon & lime juice and grated lemon & lime zest with a whisk – electric or handheld – either should do the job nicely and pour it onto the bottom layer of the crumb mixture and spread evenly.

With your (clean!) hands rub the other half of crumb mixture into actual crumbs (that’s Streusel for the German Readers – and for the Brits: think crumble topping) then cover the lemon & lime layer with the crumbs but don’t press it down.

Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the crumble toping is golden brown.

Allow the dish to sit on counter until it is cooled down completely, at which point it should be refrigerated, until you are ready to slice and served. The slices should be kept in the fridge and are best served cool.

Chocolate Guiness Cupcakes



Every now and then a “trendy” cake seems to be appear at every Café, Party and Blog. The cake de jour I have come across over the last few months has to be Nigella Lawson’s Chocolate Guiness Cake. I first tried it at an office bake off and then it practically stalked me at various birthday parties, Cafes and Restaurants and I even overheard people talk about this amazing Chocolate Guiness Cake recipe once.

Now, I’m not a Guiness drinker and if you are also not keen on the Irish stout beer, don’t be put of (most people, especially guys, will probably be anything but put of about an extra dose of Guiness!). I can’t say, that I taste the Guiness as such in this recipe. It just seems to give the cake a richer and deeper taste.

However, if you really don’t want Guiness in your cake, try it with some non-alcoholic malt beer instead. I tried this in Germany (with “Malzbier”), where Guiness is not that easy to come by and it tasted almost exactly the same.

Both make the cake equally moist and dense. So much so, that it is – topped with its rich cream cheese icing – a bit much for me, unless it comes in a very thin slice and then the frosting ratio doesn’t work for me anymore…

I therefore decided that Chocolate Guiness Cupcakes would be the way forward – small but with a good spread of icing!
So here they are, based on Nigella’s recipe:

http://www.nigella.com/recipes/view/chocolate-guinness-cake-3086

I made both, mini versions – which I really, really liked – and the normal, fairy sized cupcakes and from this recipe I got tray of 20 normal sized ones, which I didn’t fill that full so that I had enough left for a tray of 12 mini ones as well.

So I’d say, the recipe is for about 24 normal cupcakes – and if you only want mini ones, you will probably get double that, if not more!

For the Cake you need:

  • 250ml Guinness
  • 250g unsalted butter, cut in slices
  • 75g cocoa
  • 400g caster sugar
  • 142ml pot sour cream (or half fat crème fraiche)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 Tbsp real vanilla extract
  • 275g plain flour
  • 2 ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

And for the icing you need:

  • 300g cream cheese
  • 150g icing sugar
  • 125ml double cream (or whipping cream)

Preheat the oven to gas mark 4/180 degrees and line your muffin tray with cupcake cases.

Pour the Guiness in a large saucepan, add the butter and heat until the butter’s melted. Then whisk in the cocoa and sugar, with a whisk or wooden spoon.

In another bowl/jug beat the sour cream/crème fraiche with the eggs and vanilla extract, then pour into the brown butter-beer fluid in the pan.

Mix the bicarbonate of soda with the flour and add this in as the last ingredient, again mixing it in with your whisk or wooden spoon.

The batter is pourable so you can use a small ladle or jug, to fill your cupcake cases. For the mini cupcakes a piping bag with a big nozzle or a squeezy bottle works best. You can fill the cases almost to the top, if you like, as the black colour of the risen cakes looks quite nice over the cases.

Bake the mini ones in the oven for circa 10-12 minutes and the bigger ones for about 24 minutes. Do the toothpick test for both sizes to make sure they are baked through: they are ready, if the toothpick comes out clean. Let the cakes cool down in the tray for about 10 minutes then transfer them onto a wire rack.

For the icing, lightly whip the cream cheese with an electric whisk until smooth, then add the icing sugar and carefully (or your kitchen will be covered in icing sugar) and slowly (or you’ll have lumps) whisk it in. Add the cream and beat again with the electric whisk until it makes spreadable consistency.

Ice the completely cooled cakes and if you don’t eat them all at ones, keep them in the fridge. They cakes still taste good up to 2 days later!

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