Showing posts with label snacks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snacks. Show all posts

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Baby quiches


My contribution to a work lunch. So easy.


Baby quiches

300g diced bacon
3 sheets store-bought puff pastry
6 eggs
1 bunch chives, finely chopped
a dash of milk or light cream
ground black pepper

Fry the bacon till browned and slightly caramelised: set aside.
Whisk the eggs, cream or milk and chives in a jug. Cut circles out of the puff pastry and use them to line deep muffin tins (spray tins with non-stick cooking spray first.)
Distribute bacon evenly among the pastry cases. Pour a few teaspoons of egg mixture over the bacon in each pastry case. Don't let the egg come all the way to the top of the pastry.
Bake in a preheated hot oven (200C) for about ten minutes or until the pastry is puffed and golden (even on the bottom: take one out and check) and the egg is puffed and set.


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Lady date

French Twist at the Barracks: coffee, tea and a beautifully mini apple crumble to share. Lovely chinaware, lovely company, lovely position.



Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Tao kae noi



























My new faaaaavourite snack!

Not sure how legit this snack really is in Japan, given that it has Western writing all over the packet, but I'm sure the essence is there.

Big shards of crispily flavoured seaweed, coated in various seasonings such as seafood, tom yum, hot n' spicy, or original. AND the packet is resealable.

You can get these at Asian supermarkets for about $2.50 a packet. Just as well they're not in normal supermarkets yet, or I'd live on nothing else.

Saturday, March 05, 2011

Valentine's teddy cookies


Brownies: double chocolate and peanut butter swirl
















Nom nom nom. These were the perfect reward for some very helpful boys. I made double chocolate brownies, and peanut-butter swirl brownies. How lovely to be gently stirring melted chocolate when there's a tropical thunderstorm brewing outside.

Double chocolate brownies


115g unsalted butter
115g plain milk chocolate (broken up)
300g caster sugar
pinch salt
1 tsp proper vanilla extract
2 big eggs
140g plain flour
2 tbsp cocoa powder
100g choc chips, or crumbled dark chocolate
Preheat oven to 180C. Grease and line your brownie tin. Melt the butter and milk chocolate over simmering water; cool slightly. Stir in the sugar, salt and vanilla. Add the eggs and beat well till all blended good.

Sift in the flour and cocoa, then add the choc chips and stir them in. Pour it into the tin and bake for 35-40 minutes or until a skewer comes out almost clean.






Peanut butter and chocolate swirl brownies


150g dark chocolate
100g unsalted butter
1 cup caster sugar
Half a cup of plain flour
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
2 big eggs
200g crunchy peanut butter

Preheat oven to 160C. Grease and line your brownie tin. Melt the chocolate and butter over simmering water and leave to cool. Meanwhile, sift the flour, cocoa and sugar into a bowl. Pour the chocolate into the bowl and then add the eggs. Stir until just combined. Pour the mixture into the tin and then blob the peanut butter over the top. Swirl it in a bit with a butter knife. Bake for 35 - 40 minutes, or until a skewer comes out with crumbs on it.



Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Cream tea






















Afternoon tea. David Herbert's scone recipe, St. Dalfour jams (raspberry, black cherry and fig), only because I couldn't find Bonne Maman... thick cream and strong Madura tea. Also some sliced strawberries, macerated in icing sugar and Cointreau. Lovely.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Tea house

Beautiful. This tea house is over 400 years old. Hanging above the central fire were lots of fish, gently being smoked. We enjoyed a fantastic morning tea: whisked matcha tea with a zunda-mochi cake (a speciality of the Miyagi region), and a glass of mugicha (roasted barley tea) with cold alcohol-free sake. Delicious. I loved how the zunda-mochi came on its own little piece of slate.





















Sunday, April 18, 2010

Apple biscuits


Plain vanilla biscuits with red and green icing. So bright!




Saturday, January 23, 2010

Fran Whipps


Another item of treasure brought back from Japan. Mmm, fran whipps.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Glazed maple cookies

















From Martha Stewart. These are really, really beautiful. I love their glassy mirror finish and their rich gorgeous colour. Maplelicious.
In the recipe, Martha says to "drop the batter" onto the baking trays, but my mix turned out more like a dough, so I just rolled it into balls, flattened each ball with a flat-bottomed glass dipped in flour, and reduced cooking time to about 10 minutes instead of the 12-15 that Martha says.
The finished bikkie is firm but chewy, with a soft caramel-like glossy top. I sprinkled each one with a couple of grains of Maldon salt.
They remind me of imaginary honey biscuits that Winnie the Pooh might have had in the treehouse with Christopher Robin, or maybe something that The Famous Five would have packed in the hamper for adventurous afternoon teas.












Thursday, December 24, 2009

Spiced Christmas nuts




100g each of cashews, raw almonds, pecans and toasted, skinned hazelnuts. Roast in medium oven for five minutes to release flavour, then sprinkle with three-quarters tbsp sea salt and half a tsp of cayenne. Melt 30g unsalted butter and a tablespoon of brown sugar in a big saucepan. Add the nuts and a tbsp of chopped rosemary, stir well, leave to cool.
These are GREAT.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Monday, August 31, 2009

American candy in Brisbane


Used to be that you had to order your American candy fix from specialist shops online. But now, not so. There are a plethora of places in Brisbane now that stock classic US chocolates and candies, like Junior Mints (Seinfeld!), Hershey's (although they've been here for a while), Reese's Pieces, Butterfinger, Almond Joy , Twizzlers, Red Vines and so on.
This isn't much of a list, but here are some places that I've seen American candy for sale:
  • Blockbuster video stores
  • The corner store near the Swann Road roundabout at St Lucia

  • The candy place upstairs at Westfield Carindale, near The Body Shop

  • The Nut Shack, James St Markets

  • The Fig Tree Deli at Camp Hill

  • The Quik-E-Mart at Coorparoo
  • The Spar convenience store on Oxford St, Bulimba. They have Baby Ruths, Butterfingers and also Cherry Coke, Grape Fanta and Dr Pepper

  • Many small corner stores and so on.

So at this stage, it seems to be mostly independendents deciding whether or not to stock these imports. Once the supermarkets get on to it, that will be the end of you, Cadbury.

Personally, I have a weakness for Reese's range of peanutty goodness, and I also love me a Junior Mint. They are definitely sweeter than I prefer, but there's something about that processed, artificially-flavoured, fake-butter flakiness: that melting mouthfeel, that down-home all-American combination of innocence and bravado that appeals.

And while I'm on the topic, Oreos. Lame American TV ads ("My mom says...gulp... chocolate isn't good for dogs") and dodgy Aussie ripoffs ("Bachelors!!") aside, they really are a perfect companion to a tall frosty glass of cold milk. Every time there's an Oreo packet in the office, they last for a maximum of three minutes before the sound of contented munching breaks out.

Ready to freak out? Here's the ingredients in an Oreo:

SUGAR, ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE, MONONITRATE {VITAMIN B1}, RIBOFLAVIN {VITAMIN B2}, FOLIC ACID), HIGH OLEIC CANOLA OIL AND/OR PALM OIL AND/OR CANOLA OIL, AND/OR SOYBEAN OIL, COCOA (PROCESSED WITH ALKALI), HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, CORNSTARCH, LEAVENING (BAKING SODA AND/OR CALCIUM PHOSPHATE), SALT, SOY LECITHIN (EMULSIFIER), VANILLIN - AN ARTIFICIAL FLAVOR, CHOCOLATE. CONTAINS: WHEAT, SOY.

Yeah, but whatever. I'm sure it's all that alkali-processed cocoa that makes them taste awesome, right?

Sunday, June 07, 2009

Paris street food



















Ah, Paris. I'll be there in just a few short weeks: five days of bliss, tramping around the French capital, poking into walled courtyards, ferreting out sunny gardens, smearing my grimy paws on every shiny windowpane in sight, avoiding Eiffel towers and museums, digging out the juiciest strawberries at the market, inhabiting every last dishevelled cafe in every grotty side street, nursing cafe cremes and Le Figaro for hours on end. Bliss.

Why? Because I can. And because the catacombs are open again for business, after renovations, and it's high time I was exploring skeleton-lined underground caverns and dreaming of Valjean's tunnel escape in Les Miserables.

One of the real delights of Paris is food, but not the high-end restaurant classics, or even the mid-level salades composees and bistro standards. It's the street food: the stuff prepared by dubious-looking immigrants and entrepreneurial fingersmiths on every street corner, with nothing more than a hole-in-the-wall to sell from or a portable hotplate. Street food varies according to the seasons, and in winter you'll find a roaring trade in crepes spread with Nutella and hot roasted chestnuts outside Galeries Lafayettes.

In summer, things are a little different. I have a soft spot for the ubiquitous jambon beurre, a crusty baguette section split down the middle and stuffed with fresh cold butter and fat slices of carved leg ham. Sitting on a bench in one of the gravel-lined Parisian parks, the sun on your back, unwrapping the thin paper that wraps your simple sandwich and taking your first big bite is a plain and exquisite pleasure.

Less simple but just as lovely is the merguez-frites. Better for when you crave an injection of something hot, salty, meaty and juicy: a baguette stuffed with spicy North-African sausage and hot chips, sometimes with tomato, chili or garlic sauce as well.

Footpath vendors sometimes also have little containers of tabouleh, layered with hard-boiled egg, red onion, mint, basil and lemon juice. These are incredibly light and refreshing after a morning's walking and sightseeing over hard cobblestoned streets.

Alternatively, if you are more the deep-fried snacktacular calorie-feaster, go for the brik a l'oeuf. This is a square of light puff pastry, deep-fried and with a runny fried egg inside. It's tasty but not all that filling and only really good with a vinegary salad to cut the oil content.

If you have a serious sweet tooth, then beignets are for you. I confess that I have never been able to eat an entire beignet, for the extreme sugar content is just too much for me. However I am in the minority and most people fall into ecstatic raptures over a fresh beignet. Think of a doughnut with no hole, crispily fried, dredged in grainy sugar and oozing a thick filling of chocolate or fruit. With a coffee, on a cool morning, I concede that this must be a good thing.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Butter



Buttery French TV Snacks (Croq-Télé)

Published: December 17, 2008
Adapted from “Field Guide to Cookies” by Anita Chu (Quirk Books, 2008)

Time: 45 minutes
3/4 cup blanched almonds or hazelnuts, lightly toasted and cooled to room temperature
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon kosher or flaky sea salt (if using fine or table salt, use 3/8
teaspoon)
1 cup all-purpose flour
7 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch pieces.


1. Position 2 oven racks in top third and bottom third of oven. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
2. In a food processor, grind nuts, sugar and salt to a fine meal. In a mixer, beat flour and butter together on low speed until texture is sandy. Add nut mixture and mix on low until dough starts to form small lumps; keep mixing until dough just holds together when pinched between fingers. Do not use wet fingers: the cookies will collapse.
3. Pinch off about a teaspoon of dough and place in palm of your hand. With tips of fingers, pinch and press dough together until cookie has a flat bottom and pointed top, like a rough pyramid. Cookies need not be perfectly smooth or equal size. Place on parchment about 1 inch apart.
4. Bake about 15 minutes, rotating cookie sheets halfway through. Cookies should be turning golden brown on edges. Cool on sheets 5 minutes, then transfer to wire racks and cool completely before storing in airtight containers up to 1 week.
Yield: About 2 dozen cookies.


Butter Holds the Secret to Cookies that Sing

Julia Moskin


WHEN home bakers get out the mixer and the decorating sugar at this time of year, visions of perfect-edged cookies and shapely cakes dance in their heads. But too often, the reality — both for the cookie and the baker — is ragged, fallen, and fraying around the edges.

“I’ve cried many times at 2 a.m., when the cookies fall apart after all that work,” said Susan Abbott, a lawyer in Dallas who tries every Christmas to reproduce her mother’s flower-shaped lemon cookies, though she rarely bakes during the rest of the year.
“It seems that home bakers don’t always follow instructions precisely,” said Amy Scherber, the owner of Amy’s Bread stores in Manhattan (where she also makes cakes and cookies, including orange butter cookies). “And then it’s so disappointing when things don’t turn out.”
The most common mistakes made by home bakers, professionals say, have to do with the care and handling of one ingredient: butter. Creaming butter correctly, keeping butter doughs cold, and starting with fresh, good-tasting butter are vital details that professionals take for granted, and home bakers often miss.
Butter is basically an emulsion of water in fat, with some dairy solids that help hold them together. But food scientists, chefs and dairy professionals stress butter’s unique and sensitive nature the way helicopter parents dote on a gifted child.
“Butter has that razor melting point,” said Shirley O. Corriher, a food scientist and author of the recently published “BakeWise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Baking” (Scribner).
For mixing and creaming, butter should be about 65 degrees: cold to the touch but warm enough to spread. Just three degrees warmer, at 68 degrees, it begins to melt.
“Once butter is melted, it’s gone,” said Jennifer McLagan, author of the new book “Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes” (Ten Speed Press).
Warm butter can be rechilled and refrozen, but once the butterfat gets warm, the emulsion breaks, never to return.
For clean edges on cookies and for even baking, doughs and batters should stay cold — place them in the freezer when the mixing bowl seems to be warming up. And just before baking, cookies should be very well chilled, or even frozen hard.
Cold butter’s ability to hold air is vital to creating what pastry chefs call structure — the framework of flour, butter, sugar, eggs and leavening that makes up most baked goods.
Before Anita Chu began work on her just-published “Field Guide to Cookies” (Quirk Books), she was a Berkeley-trained structural engineer with a baking habit she couldn’t shake. One of her favorite cookies is the croq-télé, or TV snack, a chunky cookie she adapted from the Paris pastry chef Arnaud Larher. “There is no leavening to lift it, no eggs to hold it together,” she said. “It’s all about the butter.” Ms. Chu’s experience in design helped her with the demanding precision of pastry.
“Butter is like the concrete you use to pour the foundation of a building,” she said. “So it’s very important to get it right: the temperature, the texture, the aeration.”
Ms. Chu says that butter should be creamed — beaten to soften it and to incorporate air — for at least three minutes. “When you cream butter, you’re not just waiting for it to get soft, you’re beating air bubbles into it,” Ms. Chu said. When sugar is added, it makes more air pockets, she said.
And those air bubbles are all that cookies or cakes will get, Ms. Corriher said. “Baking soda and baking powder can’t make air bubbles,” she said. “They only expand the ones that are already there.”
The best way to get frozen or refrigerated butter ready for creaming is to cut it into chunks. (Never use a microwave: it will melt it, even though it will look solid.) When the butter is still cold, but takes the imprint of a finger when gently pressed, it is ready to be creamed.
When using a stand mixer, attach the paddle blade, and never go above medium speed, or the butter will heat up.



Butter’s structural abilities are most crucial in layered or “laminated” pastries like puff pastry, strudel, croissants and pie dough, where flour-coated globules of butter expand during baking, creating flat layers of pastry bathed in melted butter.

The result is almost succulent, splintering into flakes and shards with each bite. Alvin Lee, the owner of Lee Lee’s Baked Goods in Harlem, may be one of the last commercial bakers in New York producing traditional butter-dough rugelach, the Austrian-German-Jewish cookies that are like tiny strudels. Most rugelach are made with vegetable shortening, which is much cheaper and longer-lasting. Shortening behaves well at most temperatures and makes crumbly, tender doughs, but has no flavor of its own. Mr. Lee’s rugelach are buttery, magnificent, and fleeting. He says he came out of retirement, after a 30-year professional baking stint, determined to master the rugelach genre. “I couldn’t find one that I wanted to eat, with all the old Jewish and German bakeries closing,” he said. “So I had to make them myself.”
As commercial baking moves away from butter, home cooks have more choices. There are regional French butters with impeccable government credentials, English butter from Jersey cows, yellow butter from Alpine peaks and white butter from Emilia-Romagna. (European Union export subsidies are one reason for the cornucopia.)
Standard American butter, usually made from fresh cream, is about 80 percent fat. European butters are about 82 percent, and made from slightly fermented cream. (American butters in that style, fashionable among food lovers, are often called “cultured.”)
Salted butter was long disparaged by American epicures, but the French, the global butter authorities, welcome salt. “Salt makes food taste better,” said Robert Bradley, emeritus professor of dairy science at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. “Why not butter?”
Blind tastings by Dining section staff members and others found the differences among butters, European and American, to be pronounced. Some were waxy, some nutty, some grassy. Some seemed less greasy than others. Professionals like Mr. Bradley can taste many other flavor undertones in butter, some lovely and some not, including grass, flowers, whey, old cream, malt, must and weed. Some flavor differences come from cows’ feed. Others are acquired during processing.
Overall, the European-style butters have more of a golden, warm, toasty flavor. (This is from a compound called diacetyl that develops during fermentation.) Standard American butter has a fresher flavor of milk and cream.
But quality was unpredictable. The butter with the best credentials (high in fat, from the cows used to make Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese), and the one with the most alluring packaging, were the most flavorless.
Our favorite butters were salted Kerrygold from Ireland, unsalted Kate’s Homemade Butter from Old Orchard Beach, Me., and a “limited edition” cultured butter from Organic Valley, made from May to September, when cows are outside at least part of the time, eating grass rather than feed. Butter from grass-fed cows, rich in beta carotene, is more yellow (not higher in butterfat, as many believe).
In baking, the flavor differences mostly disappear. High-fat butters can be used in traditional recipes. “You shouldn’t see much difference,” said Kim Anderson, director of the Pillsbury test kitchen, “maybe a slightly richer flavor and more tender crumb.”
Most important is that butter be well preserved. Mr. Bradley recommends wrapping butter that’s not going to be used immediately in foil, then sealing the edges with tape. Or using it quickly.
“I just went out and bought eight pounds of butter,” said Robin Olson, “and it will all be gone by next weekend.” Ms. Olson, of Gaithersburg, Md., is making six dozen cookies this week and reigns as queen of the Christmas cookie party at her Web site, cookie-exchange.com. Her instructions for cookie swaps are widely adopted. She always calls for butter.
“I can tell a margarine cookie as soon as I bite into it,” she said. “And then I put it right down.”

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Christmas cookies


The Christmas cookies baking marathon went well. I made a double batch of dough from Nigella's Feast cookbook, and added a shake or two of allspice to the vanilla flavouring. I probably got about 60 cookies out of it.


The piping was... not very good. I agree that my skills with a piping bag need some improvement. Need more practice. It was still fun though.
These cutters all came from Taste at Bowen Hills. I'm going to pipe on some royal icing, in white, to outline the shapes and add some cute detail. The four silver cutters were $4.95 for the set and the red reindeer was $2.50. Cheap and festive!

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Crumbed green olives stuffed with pork

  • half cup basil
  • sea salt and fresh-cracked black pepper
  • half cup mayonnaise
  • 120g pork mince
  • 1 clove garlic, finely diced
  • 25g parmesan, grated
  • 1 tsp ground allspice
  • 4 sprigs oregano, leaves chopped
  • 24 large green olives, pitted
  • half cup plain flour
  • 2 beaten egg yolks
  • 1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
  • vegetable oil for deep-frying
  • lemon wedges to serve (optional)

Pound basil and a pinch of salt to a smooth paste in mortar and pestle. Stir through mayo and keep in fridge till required.

Combine pork, oregano, garlic, parmesan and spices. Season lightly. Stuff olives with mixture (stuffing should be almost popping out). Roll olives in flour, then egg, then breadcrumbs. Shake off excess. Heat oil in saucepan to 190C. Fry olives in batches for about 3 mins or until golden. Remove with slotted spoon and drain on absorbent paper. Serve with basil mayo and lemon on the side.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Hot chips

I followed David Herbert's recipe to the letter. I even got a digital thermometer to get the oil temperature spot-on. The basket did a great job, too.




Here are my hot chips, after the first fry.






Here's the basket, working hard.




And here's the finished product. I still say they are too dark. Maybe I should ask David about that: must try again and get it right.

I served the chips with a vinaigrette salad, homemade aioli and some snapper that I skinned, crumbed and baked in the oven. Good.