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Banana Muffins

 

I always thought this receipe would be one of the first ones I put up on this blog and I’m surprised it’s taken me this long.

That’s because these banana muffins are so quick to make and you can’t really go wrong with this easy receipe and even vary it slightly if you like by adding some chopped nuts or chocolate chips or  - if you can find them in the shops – peanut butter chips!

Making these muffins is also the best way of using up old bananas that may have gotten left at the bottom of the fruit bowl, you know those forgotten bananas that that no one wants to eat as they’ve gone all bruised and brown or even black.

Well, they are perfect for this receipe.
And don’t attempt to use bananas that haven’t gone dark yet – for this receipe, the browner the bananas the better! If you remember this you can’t really go wrong with these crowd pleasers…

For 12 cupcake sized muffins you’ll need:

  • 3 big, over ripe bananas
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/3 cup of sunflower oil
  • 1 egg, lightly whisked
  • 1 ½ cup plain flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • optional: 1/2  cup chocolate or peanut butter chips or walnut pieces

Preheat the oven to gas mark 5 and line a muffin tin with paper cases.

Mash the bananas with a fork.

In a large bowl mix the flour with the bicarbonate of soda and baking powder.

Now add all other ingredients and mix them together.

It really is as easy as that!
As long as you mix up the flour with the raising ingredients first the order of the rest doesn’t matter and you can even mix everything together with a wooden spoon or fork (as with all muffins this is preferable to using an electric whisk to get the right muffin texture).

Fill the muffin cases evenly and bake for about 20 – 25 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the middle of the muffins comes out clean. Leave to cool down in the tin for a few minutes then lt the muffins cool on a wire rack.

They will keep in a cake tin for a few days!

Duffins

 

What is a Duffin, I hear you ask?
The answer is: a donut-like muffin!

I hadn’t heard of them either until the other week when I was reviewing a café near Holborn , who had a tray of freshly baked ‘Duffins’ on their counter. I was instantly intrigued by the sweet smelling muffins rolled in cinnamon sugar and couldn’t resist buying and trying one. And, oh boy, was I glad I did, as the buttery muffin, full of vanilla, cinnamon and nutmeg flavours was very yummy indeed.

As soon as I was back in front of a computer I started looking for Duffins on the web and found that they originated in North America (no surprise there then) and they seem to be this year’s big new thing.
I’d even go as far as saying that they may become this year’s ‘whoopee pie’ if you know what I mean…

Anyhow, I found a good Duffin receipe which I tweaked a tiny bit to make them taste like the Duffin I had tried. So I added the nutmeg for example. The original receipe also asked for using extra light olive oil, for example, but I think baking with virgin olive oil is a bit of a waste, when sunflower or groundnut oil work just as well. My colleagues certainly didn’t seem to mind, when they were wolfing them down to appreciating sounds of “mmmm” and “ahhhmmm”.

Have a go at making the Duffins, which are best eaten with a fresh cup of hot coffee!

Receipe based on this one.

For the Duffins you will need:

  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1½ cups flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  • ¼ cup sunflower oil (or other neutral tasting oil suitable for baking, such as groundnut oil)
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp almond extract
  • ½ tsp ground nutmeg

And for the topping:

  • 1 tbsp butter, melted
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • ½ cup caster sugar

Preheat the oven to gas mark 4.

Grease a 12-muffin tin, ideally with an oil spray, if you have it (other sites suggest pouring a tiny bit of oil in the forms).

In a large jug or bowl, beat together the sugar and egg until light and fluffy. Now, pour in the oil, milk, and vanilla and almond extracts and mix to combine.

In another large bowl mix the flour with the baking powder and salt. Now pour the fluid mix into the flour mix and stir well.

Divide the batter evenly into the muffin cups, filling them about half full and bake for 15-20 minutes (toothpick test!).

While muffins are baking, melt the butter for he topping in a small bowl. I found blitzing it for 20 seconds in the microwave did the trick nicely.

For the topping, pour the caster sugar and all the cinnamon on to a soup plate and mix until all is combined.

Once the Duffins are done and only slightly cooled down for 5-10 minutes, lightly brush the top with the melted butter.  Remove each duffin from the pan and dip the top in the cinnamon sugar straight away and follow this rolling it around the whole plate, covering the whole Duffin.

Enjoy!

 

Rhubarb Marzipan Muffins

Have you noticed that it’s rhubarb time?

My sister did and requested that I upload a receipe featuring the tangy vegetable that gets used rather like a fruit in most dishes (think crumble, compote, pie…).

The obvious choice for me would have been to use rhubarb in a cake with a meringue pie topping, which is probably the most common way of using rhubarb in a cake, in Germany. But I went through my cookbooks in search for something different…

The sister who asked for a rhubarb suggestion is also a big marzipan fan so I thought it could be good to combine the two in a sweet and sour way. And as I browsed through my Ottolenghi cookbook, I found my inspiration – a recipe for marzipan and plum muffins, which after a few changes became this recipe for my marzipan rhubarb muffins.

I particularly like the look of the muffins with the fruit compote on top, as if a little muffin volcano is erupting with juicy fruits. I’d recommend getting the pink rhubarb stalks, rather than the ones that are mainly green, as the pink colour will  look much nicer on top of the muffins. I also choose thin stalks, as again they will look better, more delicate, on the muffins.

The muffins were much liked but a little dry at first, so to perfect the receipe I decided to add more rhubarb to the dough and it did the trick.

 Start with the rhubarb compote, for which you will need:

  • 800g rhubarb
  • 300ml water
  • 160g sugar

Trim the rhubarb and cut it into 1,5 cm lengths.

Mix the water and sugar and heat, stirring from time to time, until the sugar has melted. Then add the rhubarb to the sugar syrup and poach gently until just soft – the rhubarb must not collapse but keep its shape.

There will probably be a lot of juice left at this stage, if so remove the fruit but keep the juices on the boil to reduce them down to a thicker syrup.


While the rhubarb cools down get on with the muffins.

For 12 muffins you will need:

  • 480g flour
  • 1tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp bicarb of soda
  • 1 pinch of salt
  • 200g sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 110g margarine or butter, melted but slightly cooled down
  • 280ml milk
  • grated zest of 1 lemon
  • 120g marzipan
  • a muffin tin and paper cases

Preheat the oven to 170 degrees/Gas Mark 3 and line your muffin tin with paper cases.

Mix the flour, baking powder, bicarb of soda and salt in one bowl. In another, larger bowl whisk the sugar and eggs, then add the milk and butter and whisk again to combine.

Grate the marzipan on the coarse side of a grater and add it to the batter, together with the lemon zest.

Now add 2/3 of the rhubarb compote and stir together. The rest of the compote is for the topping of the muffins, so set it aside for later.

Gently fold the flour mix into the wet mix until just combined – there may still be a few lumps of flour, which is actually wanted (if muffin batter gets over mixed the muffins become hard and dense).

Spoon the mixture in the prepared muffin tin, filling each case all the way to the top to ensure you will get that muffin top platform.

Bake for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the middle of the muffin comes out clean.

Let the muffins cool down a few minutes until you can handle them at which point they need to be taken out of the tins, to fully cool down on a wire rack.

When the muffins are cold, dust the tops with icing sugar and top with the reserved compote.
Enjoy!

Passionfruit & Coconut Mini Cakes

 

I know that somewhere on this blog I said that I like to follow the seasons with my choices of food and that summery strawberries don’t work for me in winter. That is still the case but there are some exotic fruits I make an exception for, the passion fruit for example. After all, no season in England is ever warm enough for passionfruits. I’m sure there are seasons for passionfruits, depending on which country England imports them from but they do seem available all year round and at the same price, so I can’t feel too seasonal for the lovely passion fruit.

As a quick morning treat, I often have the tangy juice and crunchy passion fruit seeds simply spooned over creamy Greek yoghurt, sweetened with honey. And when I was looking for more ways to use passion fruits in other brunch treats I came across some little passionfruit and coconut cakes that I want to introduce you to.

For starters, they look rather cute. I really like this idea of turning muffins or cupcakes upside down (as I did with my almond and cranberry mini cakes) and ice the smaller end of the cakes for a different look.

The cakes themselves contain creamed coconut, which makes them really moist but with an extra depth of coconut, which of course is also quite oily so they are probably rather high in fat but the good one… I hope!

And the frosting in the original recipe is what makes them particularly tasty, assuming you like coconut, as it uses coconut cream rather than butter. This coconut cream icing is the one on the pictured cupcakes above but if you want them even more refreshing you could go for a glazed icing, made from icing sugar and passion fruit juice.

Either way, they’re a popular cupcake alternative, especially in the morning when proper cupcakes are too much to digest for most people (not me, of course).

Recipe adapted from http://www.thepinkwhisk.co.uk/2011/12/coconut-passionfruit-cakes.html.

For 12 mini cakes you need:

  • 125g butter or margarine, at room temperature
  • 180g sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 100g self-raising flour
  • 50g coarsely grated creamed coconut (creamed coconut comes in a block, so you’ll need to grate 50g of the block)
  • 80ml coconut cream (this comes in cans and each time I open a can, I find the solid coconut separated from the fluid, so make sure to stir them together again before measuring out your 80ml)
  • 3 passionfruits

For the coconut icing:

  • 250g icing sugar sifted
  • 4 tbsps coconut cream

Alternatively, for the passionfruit icing:

  • 150g icing sugar
  • 3 tbsps of passion fruit juice

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees/gas mark 4 and grease a muffin tin and dust it with a little flour.

Cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy then add the grated coconut and beat again.
Add the eggs and self-raising flour and mix well.
Lastly, stir in the coconut cream and the pulp from the passionfruits.

Fill the muffin tray – ideally the mix should go about 2/3rds up in each muffin case – and bake for about 25mins until golden brown on the top and springy to the touch.

Leave the tray to cool down for about 10mins, then remove the cakes with the help of a knife and turn them out upside down, that’s with the smaller side up, and allow them to cool completely.  

When the cakes are cold, mix the icing sugar with about 4 tbsp of the coconut cream. You may need a little less or more, depending on how thick you want the icing to be (if you want the icing to drizzle down a little like on the pictured cakes above, go for a custard consistency).

Drop around a teaspoon worth of icing on top of each cake and, if you wish, tip the cake to its sides to allow the icing to drizzle down the side.

Alternatively, for the passionfruit icing, stir half the icing sugar in the juice and once it’s incorporated, stir in the rest. Spread a teaspoon worth of the icing, with the back of a tablespoon on each cake and let it harden.

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!

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