Archive for the ‘christmas’ Category
Having fun in the kitchen baking gingerbreadmen!
If your catering for children then this old favourite always goes down a treat literally. Its something everyone can have fun with, certainly with a little imagionation and some great cookie shape cutters you can use this recipe throughout the year and produce christmas, easter biscuits as well as animal farm biscuits for example to go with a animal farm theme birthday party.
So lets get cooking whether its with the children or not. For your gingerbreadmen you are going to need:50g butter, 3 tblsp golden syrup, 75g castor sugar, 250g self raising flour, pinch of salt, 3 tsp ground ginger, glasce cherries and currants for decoration and milk for glazing.
First place the butter syrup and sugar in a small saucepan and heat slowly until sugar has dissolved. sift together the dry ingredients then make a well in the middle and pour in the warm melted mixture and beat until smooth. Roll out the mixture on a lightly floured surface while still warm and cut into figures using a cutter or homemade template. Make buttons eyes and a mouth from currants and glace cherries. Other decorations can be used depending on who they are for. Then brush with a little milk and bake on a greased baking sheet for 8 to 10 minutes or until the biscuits are firm and lightly golden. Remove from the oven and cool on a wire rack.
Cooks Note - Uncooked dough can be kept in the freezer for up to 6 months and these biscuits will keep in a air tight tin if they last the day out once made!
See my previous blog Piping bags to use with your cooking as you could pipe faces, clothes etc on to each gingerbreadman too. See the cutters and christmass biscuit ideas in my previous blog christmas hanging biscuits also. Plus other great biscuit recipes in my blog taking the biscuit.
Posted on Friday, September 18th, 2009 Having fun in the kitchen baking gingerbreadmen! by jacqui
Delightful Apple dessert to eat with cream or as a cake
At this time of year we are inundated with fruits as we harvest from the fruit trees and hedgerows. I seem to have a abundance of apples, pears and plums this year (blame it on the weather). So with jams and preserves being made aswell as freezing to preserve for later use I love to cook this Swedish Apple Dessert my grandmother shown me.
In this dessert we use bread which is a important contribution to our daily intake of carbohydrates, B vitamins, iron, calcium and protein along with fibre if wholemeal variety used. This recipe gives you another way in which to use this ingredient to make a scrumptious dessert which is happily served with cream as a dessert or as a afternoon cake with tea, the choice is yours so have a go its delicious!
For my Swedish Apple Dessert you are going to need:1kg cooking apples peeled, cored and sliced, 1 lemon, 100g caster sugar, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 100g butter, 225g breadcrumbs of your choice, 1 tblsp icing sugar and toasted almonds to decorate.
Cook your apples in a covered saucepan in minimum water (around 6 tblsp), once soft add the grated rind of the lemon and 4 tblsps lemon juice, the cinnamon and sugar then beat to a pulp. Melt the butter in another saucepan and add the breadcrumbs stirring well until the butter is fully absorbed. Now grease a 15 to 18 cm cake tin of your choice remember to line with greaseproof paper if not using silicone bakeware or a loose bottom tin. Press one third of the breadcrumbs onto the bottom of your prepared tin, then add a layer of the apple and continue layering breadcrumbs and apples finishing with a layer of breadcrumbs. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes then cool before turning out. When cooled sift the icing sugar over the top and decorate with toasted almonds and slices of apple if you wish.
You can use plums for this recipe well which also tastes delicious. This dessert is also great for freezing as I like to have one for christmas ( I know that banned word) but you can freeze this for 6 months.
For great silicone bakeware which you always hear me praising as everyone who trys them never goes back to conventional tins take a look or see my previous blog silicone bakeware makes it oh so easy to clean.
Find a great preserve recipe in my previous blog apples falling early in freak british weather, another great apple recipe can be found on my blog fathers day roast, and for the apple pie recipe everyone loves see my blog meanwhile back in the kitchen to celebrate apple day. Have you got a seasonal fruit recipe to share with all of us, drop me a line.
Tip - If you have got alot of pear and apples my grandmother taught me to wrap the good fruit in paper and place in a box in a cool area off the floor for keeping and this does work. Keep you box somewhere dry away from damp.
Posted on Wednesday, September 9th, 2009 Delightful Apple dessert to eat with cream or as a cake by jacqui
Kitchen Mincer in trendy come back
One gadget which I keep hearing about more and more and seeing more of in friends kitchens is the Food Mincer. One such item sat proudly on my grandmothers kitchen table always; it was used for allsorts including grinding coffee beans for morning coffee.
It seems this gadget is enjoying a comeback and a return to our kitchens, as we cook more and more homemade. This can be for many
reasons, whether your looking to take control of your nutrition and watch what you eat avoiding additives, allergens and colourants etc, or you could be looking at ways of saving money by cooking and preparing foods yourself but using the highest quality ingredients.
By this you could use a mincer for example to, mince a cut of beef from your local butcher in order to make burgers, whether for the kids so you know what ingredients are in them or for that homemade appeal for a barbecue with friends.
Another great use for these is I make christmas cakes, mincemeat and christmas puddings, (yes I know its that dreaded word none of us wish to discuss), but I make these for relatives and the elderly do appreciate their fruit minced slightly, as do children.
This kitchen craft cast iron mincer for example looks fantastic and being cast iron will last you through all of your kitchen recipes. This Kitchen Craft cast iron mincer from John Lewis has three different sized mincing discs and even a sausage making attachment. This mincer is easy to set-up and securly clamps to the worktop which is less than 1¼” thick with a plastic guard supplied to protect the worktop surface too.
So why not join in the trend today, and try making your own burgers and sausages for example. Its easy, try different meats with added vegetables like tomato, onion and leek for example, or even apple and add you favourite spices and herbs to create your own brand of sausage. Imagion your next barbecue when you annouce the chefs special!!
See my blog its just minced beef, and man sized burger to satisfy and lots more recipes for all occassions and meals in many more of my blogs.
Posted on Monday, August 24th, 2009 Kitchen Mincer in trendy come back by jacqui


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