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Showing posts with label Recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recipe. Show all posts

RECIPE : Fig, ricotta and honey toasts

Tuesday, October 27, 2015


It's only until I moved to France that I've started liking figs. Here, you're so aware of what comes in and out of season, that it's hard not to pass up the opportunity to enjoy a fruit or vegetable at its very best. Making a simple and delicious brunch at home at the weekends using in-season treasures found at the the organic market down the road is a luxury I try to indulge in each week. This recipe has to be one of my absolute favourites and I love when fig season rolls around each year.


For recipe...

Mardi Gras :: Swedish pancakes

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Happy Mardi Gras! Or, as I like to call it 'Fat Tuesday'!
The one day I like to celebrate eating like a little piggy, whilst still managing to splutter between spoonfuls of awesome food "The diet (aka Lent) starts tomorrow!".
Traditionally in France, as at home, pancakes are eaten today each year (those lucky French, they get two Pancake days within the month!), as the day's common name in English describes. As I have been making Swedish pancakes of late due to my place of work, here is the recipe I've been handed down by my Swedish boss, despite the fact that in Sweden semlor are eaten today instead - my friend Anna has posted an awesome recipe for these over here.

Diet starts tomorrow...

xx

Lovely lavender icing (Le Week-End 23::02)

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

This weekend I got sick. AND, due to it being school holidays at the moment, I was bestowed a long weekend this week. But I got sick and spent half of it on the couch. No fun, no fun at all.
Right before I came down sick, however, I made this lavender Earl Grey tea cake for a knitting afternoon tea I organised at my dear friend Katie's apartment - honestly, the two are definitely NOT related! While I didn't love the cake recipe - it needs a little tweaking - the frosting was a hit! And I can never, ever get frosting right! So here it is...

Coloured cake frosting (adapted from the Twinings site here)
Ingredients
+ 180 gms of icing sugar, sifted
+ 55 gms of soft, soft, soft butter
+ 1 tbsp vanilla essence
+ 1 tbsp milk
+ approx 10 drops of food colouring

Method
Using a spatula/ wooden spoon mix the icing sugar and the butter together until the icing sugar and butter are well combined - this I do every time the recipe calls for butter to be beaten with any kind of sugar, if I don't the sugar usually flies out of the bowl and I get bits of butter all over the walls, which I can't stand because it makes me feel like a muppet in the kitchen.
Add the tablespoons of milk and vanilla essence and mix with an electric beater until it goes nice and fluffy and creamy.
Add the food colouring a couple of drops at a time and mix lightly with the spatula/ wooden spoon, until you reach the desired colour.
Spread over cake and make pretty swirly patterns with the spatula or with a palate knife.  

xx

Champagne Tiramisu with rose biscuits

Wednesday, May 22, 2013


Not quite as well known as the champagne the region produces are the pink-hued biscuits from bake house Maison Fossier. Initially developed out of a desire to utilise the warm ovens in between batches of baking bread, the biscuits were given their namesake colour from added Carmine to disguise the vanilla added for flavour. As the oldest biscuit production house in France, Maison Fossier, or Maison Mère des Biscuits de Reims it was known prior 1845, was the official biscuit supplier to French royalty. Not only do Fossier suggest their biscuits be served alongside coffee, they also recommended the biscuits be dipped in champagne!

Champagne Tiramisu with rose biscuits.

Makes one large baking tray, two small dishes, or six ramekins.
Please note; this recipe requires one hour refrigeration time.

Ingredients
(French terms of ingredients are provided in brackets for those on this side of the world to more easily locate them in the supermarket).
+ 500g Mascarpone
+ 5 eggs (ouefs)
+ 1/3 cup icing suger (sucre glacé)
+ 1 tbsp espresso coffee
+ Approx 20 rose biscuits Maison Fossier - more or less depending on the size of the vessel you're making it in.
+ 1 cup of champagne, plus extra for serving
+ Dark chocolate for garnish (chocolat noir patissier)

Recipe continues after the jump... xx

Mr M's French Toast

Friday, April 5, 2013

Before we had even started dating, Mr M came over to my, which is now our, apartment to cook me breakfast. He made me his self-proclaimed 'famous' French Toast and as I ate slice after scrumptious slice I realised that while the "coming over and cooking breakfast" stunt hadn't wooed me as it should have - I was wise enough to know it was just a dating ploy - the French Toast he prepared most definitely helped win me over.

Like French Fries, French Toast is not referred to as French Toast in France. It's called Pain Perdu - perdu being the French term for 'lost', therefore called 'lost bread', as you'd normally use day-old stale bread that would be 'lost' otherwise. Normally pain perdu is eaten as dessert and is made with lots of milk (instead of the orange juice in Mr M's) so it's quite soggy once cooked, slightly resembling bread and butter pudding more so than toast. It's served in a pool of sweet syrup with generous amounts of icing sugar and is, of course, absolutely delicious all the same!

The other week we celebrated Mr M's birthday. As I 'd seen him cook his delightful French Toast a hundred times since his first trip to The Beehive (what our apartment's called) I now know how to make it off by heart and surprised him with a huge home-prepared brunch, featuring his yummy Toast, for when he woke up.

Mr M's French Toast
Makes about 10 thick slices, or enough for one large loaf of brioche (the loaf pictured I'd consider to be on the small side).

Ingredients
+ A loaf of brioche
+ 1 orange, juiced
+ 4 eggs
+ 1 tbsp of cinnamon
+ A small heap of icing sugar and some strawberries to serve
+ A little bit of butter (not pictured) to grease the pan

Press the orange and leave the juice to the side. In a small bowl lightly beat the eggs and then mix in the cinnamon. Pour the egg mixture into a flat-bottomed dish and then add the orange juice. Mix the cinnamon and juice through the eggs thoroughly. Slice the loaf into thick slices.
Heat up a fry pan to a mid-to-high setting and melt the butter. Take a slice of brioche and lay flat in the mixture for about 20 seconds and then, using a fork, turn over for another 20 seconds.
Then gingerly fry each side of the toast until the egg is properly cooked, adding a little more butter after each lot if need be.
Serve with icing sugar and strawberries, or some maple syrup.

Miam!
Have a lovely weekend!

xx

Canelés de Bordeaux

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

While the macaroon may reign supreme as the treat of choice by many a Parisian, head to the south-west and the colourful, candy biscuits are shadowed by their frilled, fluted counter-parts - the canelé. Encasing a vanilla and rum flavoured soft, doughy centre in a caramelised, distinctive shell, the canelé (also spelt cannelé) was created to feed the downtrodden of the city by an order of nuns in the sixteenth century from left over flour stored in trading ships docked the port of Bordeaux.  Its popularity has stood the test of time and now the little, lumpy treats can be seen on patisserie counters all over France.

A visit to Bordeaux wouldn't be complete without trying a vrai canelé so within hours of arriving I was searching where to go for the best canelés in Bordeaux; over and over again Baillardran would crop up in the search results and as luck would have it, once I'd navigated where we were within the labyrinth of little streets, I located a store just around the corner on the Cours de l'Intendance. Mr M and I bought two each and in 60 seconds flat all four were gone. Not possessing a sweet tooth as I do, the canelé is Mr M's favourite treat but for me is was my first, delicious introduction to what I've now declared the perfect snack; sweet without being sickly, filling without being heavy and its flavour combination of vanilla and rum is sophisticated without being moreish. Its shell gives a satisfying crunch while the centre melts like butter on the tongue. Not surprisingly we would visit three more Baillardran stores for more canelés in our short time in Bordeaux, including their bake-shop inside the Galerie des Grands Hommes, where you can watch the canelés being made and their little cart at the Gare Saint-Jean, perfect for picking some up before a train ride.

Two days after arriving home from our trip I checked the mail. I had received a postcard from Mr M that he'd sent me while away. I wasn't surprised, he does this quite often; escorts me into some high-street - crafting - souvenir store, leaves me there like a child at a crèche and sneaks off to mail me a postcard in secret. It's quite sweet. My postcard had the words "Dearest M, make some of these for me + the BLOG! x M" wedged between two recipes for canelés, one in French, the other in English.

So I did...


Canelés de Bordeaux
Adapted from a very awesomely 80s-styled postcard from 'Cart'image'.

Makes 10 medium canelés
**Please note, this recipe requires overnight refrigeration and baking time of one hour or more depending on the level of "burntness". It also requires the use of a special canelé mould found in most baking stores in France (specialty stores or online elsewhere). The individual copper and aluminum ones, available for purchase via the Baillardran site, are best however for this recipe I did use a silicon 8-mould sheet.

Ingredients
(French terms of ingredients are provided in brackets for those on this side of the world to more easily locate them in the supermarket).
+ 500ml full cream milk (lait entier)
+ 230g sugar (sucre)
+ 150g flour (farine)
+ 50g butter (beurre doux) + a little more for greasing
+ 1 vanilla pod (gousse de vanille)
+ 2 tbsp brown rum (rhum brun)
+ 2 egg yolks (jaunes d'ouefs)

Method
Prepare the mix
On low heat melt the butter. Once the butter is liquid pour in the milk and bring to the boil. At the moment of boiling take it of the heat and pour into a very large bowl. In a small, separate bowl beat together the egg yolks. Drizzle the egg  yolks into the hot milk while whisking continuously to combine. Leave aside to cool.
Once the milk mix is close to room temperature, in another bowl combine the flour, sugar and rum well so there are little to no lumps. Slowly dust this mixture into the milk, stirring all the time to prevent lumps forming. To smooth out any that may have formed scoop them out with your whisk or a fork and squash on the side of the bowl with the back of a spoon and mix back into the liquid. Take the vanilla pod and make an incision down its length. Using the tip of your knife carefully remove the vanilla seeds and put in the mix, rubbing lumps of seeds with your fingers in the mixture to properly separate them. Once the majority of the seeds are out, pop in the vanilla pod, cling wrap the bowl and place in the fridge overnight.


Bake the canelés
Preheat the oven to 180°C. Take the mixture out of the fridge, remove the vanilla pod using a fork and leave out to bring to room temperature. Butter each mould. Whisk the mixture to stir up any sedimentary clumps and pour into each mould, leaving a little space at the top.
Should you wish your canelés "well done" - burnt outside and bread-like in the middle, bake for one hour and 20 minutes. If you'd like them a little under done - caramelised on the outside (as in the pictures) and custard-like inside, bake for one hour.
When finished baking, up turn the moulds and tip the canelés onto a tray to cool to room temperature - this is important, canelés are not traditionally eaten warm and the cooling process helps harden the crust.

Enjoy for breakfast with some strong black coffee, or for afternoon tea with a bit of thickened cream. Or, as the postcard recommends, as dessert with a sweet white wine such as Sauternes, Jurançon or Montbazillac.

 xx

Dîner en amoureux entre amis

Friday, February 15, 2013

The French have no real translatable word for a 'date'. They use the same word date for a 'calendar date', as in February 15. The oh so well known rendez-vous refers to a meeting/ 'hook-up'/ an appointment. But the term for a 'date' as in dinner shared between two people, gazing at each other over their magret du canard and playing footsies under a candle-lit table, is referred to as dîner en amoureux - 'dinner in love'. Sweet, hunh?

Three of my closest friends in Paris work nights in bars, and sometimes I strike it lucky and two are off on the same night and we can go out as a clan. This year I struck it super lucky as not one, but two of my friends were given Valentine's Day night off. And so, as Mr M had to work himself and we had no romantic dinner planned, the girls came to my place for our own romantic and silly dîner en amoureux before heading out for cocktails.


Menu for a dîner en amoureux entre amis (between friends)
Apéro
+ Organic hand-pressed cider from Haute-Normandie
+ Black olives à la herbes de Provence

Main
+ 'Heart Tart' with beetroot and chèvre (goat's cheese).
To make;
- Prepare the pastry (I used store-bought roll-out puff pastry - pâte feuilletée).
- Cut out a 'dip point' in the top and taper lower sides down to a point.
- Place thinly-sliced pre-boiled potatoes all over the base and very lightly brush with olive oil. Sprinkle gently-crushed rosemary all over. Top with sliced zucchini. Scatter small cubes of already cooked beetroot around the edge to form a heart. Place cherry tomatoes and thin slices of chèvre.
- Place in the centre of a 180°C pre-heated oven for 20 minutes. If the middle where there is no beetroot puffs up just gently pierce with a knife to deflate.
+ Salad drizzled with Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale di Modena.

Dessert
+ Côtes de Provence AOC rosé with added fresh raspberries.
+ Single-Serve Chocolate Cheesecake (recipe and step-by-step can be found here).

xx