Tuesday 31 December 2013

Cake seventeen - Xmas Fruit cake - 2013

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This cake’s undoubtedly another Xmas must have! It’s quite easy to make, but pay attention to the right baking time, Anyway it’s better to bake a little bit longer so that flavours can blend together well. Then the longer you store it the nicer it smells and tastes - one month is a good period of time, in my opinion Storing time does make the difference! I think you should try it yourself. I do love this cake, you can make it in any shape: my favourite moulds for Xmas are trees or stars, whether smaller or bigger, but if you use a square or round pan it looks traditional and if you put a ribbon around it and a decoration in the middle, something like a Xmas tree candle holder it looks quite elegant and original. 
But this cake hides another secret! You can change some of the ingredients and there you have another cake! The original recipe is with candied fruit, raisins and almonds, but I never put almonds - we don’t like them much - and use chocolate instead! And for chocolate lovers use white and dark chocolate without candied fruit or raisins. It taste delicious, believe me!

for recipe see cake seventeen 

As you see, this year, I decorated the big Xmas tree in green with little red Xmas balls using cream cheese frosting and tiny chocolate rounds. 

Cream cheese frosting
green food colouring 
300 g cream cheese or mascarpone
200 g icing sugar
Mix cream cheese and icing sugar together until they’re well blended together. Add as much green colouring as to reach the shade you like. Refrigerate for at least one hour.
















Red Xmas balls
100 g White chocolate
red food colouring.


Melt white chocolate over a bain maire. Cool it. Add some red colouring until you get the shade you want. Pipe small rounds on baking paper or better on a silicon baking mat. Refrigerate.




Sunday 29 December 2013

Cake nineten - Santa's House 2013 edition

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It’s been long since I first attempted to make a gingerbread house but every year I’m as thrilled as the first time I made it and I note down some little changes to make the next time. This time I used  a sugarless dough for the house external walls, the trees and sleigh and it really proved very good to look at but quite weak to bear the weight of the roof. So we had to make other walls with the old style (I mean the one we’ve always used) dough and stick two walls together - one made with the new dough and one with the old using some brownish icing as glue. Another new thing was to bake the roof in two parts and bake them twice so that they become harder. 

Sugarless gingerbread dough
200 g butter 
500 g honey
2 tsp ginger, pepper, cinnamon and muscat nut
15 g cocoa
1200 g flour
1 packet baking powder
1 pinch salt
2 eggs
same proceeding as in Cake nineteen
http://time-for-cake-making.blogspot.it/2013/03/cake-nineteen-father-xmass-house.html

for ‘old style’ gingerbread dough see link above

for assembling advice see:

http://time-for-cake-making.blogspot.it/2013/03/cake-nineteen-father-xmass-house-making.html


http://time-for-cake-making.blogspot.it/2013/03/cake-nineteen-father-xmass-house_10.html

 House details:
1. House grounds and trees






2. Front wall, window with flowers and wreath
 3. Side walls and window 







4. Inside wall with door and Santa Claus








5. Inside the house 










6. Sides and back



 7. ready!






 also visit http://time-for-a-cake.blogspot.it/2013/12/cake-nineteen-2013-edition.html


Saturday 28 December 2013

Cake thirty-one The Duchess Cake

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It sometimes happens I have an idea in mind which I think it’s perfect but then when it comes to the actual realization .. it turns out totally different... Do I get mad about it? Of course I do.... but I try to keep calm and consider it like a challenge between the cake and me: I must win anyhow! No good reason to give in.. anyway, a good chance to use my creativity and make something even better.The Duchess Cake is an example, in fact. It was my elder son’s graduation family dinner and I wanted to make a splendid cake for the occasion.

 I let him choose the cake, and I liked it too, quite a solemn cake, suitable for the event. But, while making it, I got more and more disappointed: the cake was nearly ready and looked like a white omelette tier cake! I felt desperate at first, but after a few minutes I had a new plan..  I baked some eclairs, and used all the former cake components to make a totally new cake, an elegant and quite sumptuous cake: no doubt about the name to choose - it was a duchess cake. Why duchess? No logical explanation, simply a stream of thoughts of pictures in my mind: in a moment’s time a flashback from some fairy tale books, royal receptions with ten meter long tables full of cakes and young princesses strolling along huge ball rooms. There it was my cake, the cake for a duchess, for sure!

Here’s what you need to make: (preparation’s quite long, I must say...)
Meringue Cake
Éclairs
Pastry cream
Choco Cream 
Chocolate decorations

Step 1 - Meringue Cake
6 egg whites
200 g icing sugar
1 tbs starch
80 g icing sugar
80 g grated almonds
Preheat the oven to 110° C. Pencil a 24cm circle on four baking paper sheets. 
Beat the egg white on medium speed with an electric mixer until the mixture resembles a fluffy cloud and stands up in stiff peaks when the blades are lifted. Now add icing sugar, a spoonful at a time, continue beating for 3, 4 minutes between each addition. Continue to fold in the remaining icing sugar until the mixture looks thick and glossy. Fold in starch and grated almonds. Spoon the meringue on the 4 circles and bake them for about one hour, until they’re crisp and you can lift off the paper easily. Leave the oven door slightly open with the help of a wooden spoon. Leave to cool completely.

Step 2 - Chocolate decorations
200 g dark chocolate
Place the chocolate in a heatproof bowl over a pan of simmering water. Allow the chocolate to melt so that it is smooth, shiny and glossy. Spoon some on an aluminum foil paper and make 20 small thin rectangles of different sizes.

Step 3 -Pastry cream
3 egg yolks
250 ml milk
75 g sugar
2 tbs flour
Bring milk to a boil in small saucepan. Meanwhile beat egg yolks, sugar and flour in small bowl with electric mixer until thick. Gradually beat in milk. Return mixture to saucepan and stir over heat until mixture boils and thickens. Cool to room temperature.

Step 4 - Éclairs
40 g butter
120 ml water
70 g flour
2 eggs
60 g melted dark chocolate
Combine butter with the water in small saucepan, bring to boil. Add flour, beat with a wooden spoon over heat until mixture comes away from base and side of saucepan and forms a small ball. Cool. Beat in eggs with electric mixer until mixture becomes glossy. 
Spoon mixture into piping bag. Pipe 5cm lengths of mixture 3cm apart onto prepared trays with baking paper. Bake at 220° C for 7 minutes, then reduce heat to 180° C and bake further 10 minutes or until they’re browned lightly and crisp. Carefully cut éclairs in half, removing any soft centre. Bake further 5 minutes or until they’re dried out. Cool to room temperature.
Spoon pastry cream into piping bag fitted wit 1cm plain tube. Pipe cream into éclairs halves, top with remaining halves. Spread with melted dark chocolate

Step 5 - Cream cheese frosting
300 g cream cheese
200 g icing sugar
Mix cream cheese and icing sugar in a small bowl, cover and refrigerate for at least one hour.

Step 6 - Assembling cake
Centre one meringue circle on serving plate. Spread with some cream cheese frosting. Repeat with second layer and some of the pastry cream. Place third layer on top and spread with cream cheese frosting. Top with remaining cake layer. Cover top and sides of cake with pastry cream. 
Decorate top and sides with éclairs, chocolate rectangles and small cream cheese dollops.


also visit: http://time-for-a-cake.blogspot.it/2013/11/cake-thirty-one.html