Wednesday 29 May 2013

Beautiful Cake


As I mentioned I was up in Aberdeen last weekend, visiting family.  On Saturday evening one of my cousins and his new wife came over for dinner and my poor sister was faced with catering for both a vegetarian and non-fish eater (me) in the same meal.

She and my brother in law produced amazing lamb kofta kebabs and homemade falafel, with wraps, a gorgeous herby salad and a delicious spicy yogurt.  

 I offered to make dessert and to keep in with the middle eastern theme decided to make Rachel Allen’s Lime, Pistachio and Rosewater yogurt cake.  I really love this cake.  It is so easy to make and tastes like Turkish delight in a light, moist, cakey form. And it’s really pretty.

Ingredients
  •  225 g self-raising flour 
  • 1 tsp baking powder 
  •   1 pinch salt 
  • 75 g ground almonds 
  • 100 g caster sugar 
  • 2 eggs 
  • 1 generous tbsp or 50g runny honey
  •  250 ml natural yogurt 
  • 150 ml sunflower oil 
  • 1 lime, finely grated zest only 

Take the flour, baking powder, salt, ground almonds and sugar and sift together in a large bowl.  Then take the eggs, honey, yogurt, oil and lime zest and mix together in another bowl/measuring jug. 

 Fold the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients until completely combined.  Tip into a lined 22cm round tin and then bake in a preheated oven at 180 for 40-50 minutes.

My big sister’s oven is quite a lot hotter than mine, so I’ve got to admit I burnt the cake a tiny little bit.  But it turned out ok in the end.

For the syrup
  • 150 ml water
  • 100 g caster sugar
  • 1 lime, juice only
  • 1-2 tbsp rose water
Make up the syrup by mixing together the water and sugar and keeping on a gentle boil until the liquid reduces by half.  Add the lime juice and boil for two minutes longer.  Take off the heat and add the rosewater.

Then, using a skewer, make holes all over the top of the cake.  Slowly pour on the syrup and leave to settle for an hour.

For decorating
  • 50 g unsalted pistachio nuts, roughly chopped
  • rose petals, (optional)
Scatter on the pistachios and rose petals and serve.  We served it with some crème fraiche, with a lime zested over.

told you it was pretty

Monday 27 May 2013

Unexpected Sunny Days

Something strange has happened this year. We've had not one but two beautiful sunny, hot bank holiday weekends in May. This is made stranger as I took the boy up to Aberdeen for the second weekend, so he could meet the remaining elements of my family.

Before we left I had been scaring him with tales of his very blood freezing in the cold North. 

But instead, this was the scene which greeted us on Saturday afternoon as we sauntered along the beach. We might even have paddled in the North Sea.


On such a gorgeous day, it seemed only right that we celebrated with some summery cocktails before dinner.  I had previously found a recipe for thyme martinis, which I had palmed off to my parents to test for me.  Their reports had been positive, and as all the ingredients were to hand it seemed like the perfect opportunity.

Thyme Martini
2 measures of gin
1 measure of limoncello
1 measure of line juice

Shake over ice, garnish with some sprigs of thyme which have been grilled on the BBQ for 30 seconds and serve

Tuesday 14 May 2013

Elegant Insults

There are two things that I really love in life.  A well placed greeting card and well constructed and heartfelt swear.  Why wouldn't I love something that combines both of these things?

I very rarely recommend products on this blog, but I can't help myself with these cards by Calligraphuck.  They're brilliant. I highly suggest that you all go and buy one for someone, anyone.

I sent this one to the boy last week.





I'm waiting for a good opportunity to send this one, next.  Maybe as a wedding card.


And unless something better comes along (which is highly unlikely) this is totally going to be next year's Valentine's card.





Not only are the cards brilliantly entertaining.  They're excellent quality and really lovely things.  Best of all they come with beautiful butterfly close envelopes. 

Anyway - go forth, buy insulting gorgeous cards and send them to random people.  It will make the world a better place.

Monday 6 May 2013

How to distract a group of mid thirties from ranting about restricted parking zones.

With surprise cake of course.

This is actually what I have spent most of the weekend ranting about.  George Ferguson's proposed residents parking scheme, because it is one of the worst thought out ideas in the world ever.  I'm not going to start talking about it here, because I won't stop and you'll never find out about surprise cake.  Which would be a shame, because the cake is good.  As is the surprise.

To make surprise cake you will need

For the cakes
  • 6 eggs
  • 12 oz flour
  • 12 oz sugar
  • 12 oz butter
  • teaspoon baking powder
  • teaspoon vanilla essence.
Line four round tins with baking paper and make up the sponge mix.  Split evenly between the tins and bake at 180 for 20 minutes, or until the sponge is light golden and set.

Turn the cakes out of the tins and cool on wire racks.

Once the cakes are cooled, take two of them and cut a four inch circle out of the middle of each of them.  I cut round a ramekin.  Remove the centre circle.

For the Butter Icing
  • 10 oz icing sugar
  • 5oz butter
  • splash of milk
Mix together until a light fluffy consistency.

Take one of the complete cakes and pop on the plate you're going to serve the cake on.  Then take one of the cakes with the middle removed and spread butter icing on the bottom, stack on top of the bottom cake.  Repeat with the next cake with the middle removed.  At this point you should have one complete cake left (the lid).

Fill the hollow in the middle of the cake with whatever you want.  I used M&Ms.  Other sweet treats are available.  Layer on the lid and then ice the whole thing with butter icing.



  Then when you cut the cake the sweets spill out of the middle.  Fun idea huh?

Thursday 2 May 2013

The perfect summer drink

I think I have found the perfect new drink for summer.  By found, I mean that Charlie sent me a link to it after she found it on Pinterest.  I'm not actually sure what we did in the days before Pinterest.  Probably drank and ate all the same things all the time.  Or actually read recipe books.  One or the other.

Anyway, this drink is awesome.  I fully intend to drink nothing else this summer.  In fact I like it so much I actually invested in an ice crusher.

Smashed Raspberry Lemonade

For this drink you will need the following
  • handful of raspberries
  • teaspoon of raw sugar
  • 2 shots of limoncello
  • 2 shots of triple sec
  • 1 shot of lemon juice
  • lots of crushed ice
  • soda water
  • assorted silly things like straws, cocktails sticks, slices of lemon and kilner jars to make it look appropriately poncey.

So, take a handful of raspberries and a teaspoon of raw sugar and throw in the bottom of a glass/kilner jar.  Muddle these together.

Add the alcohol and lemon juice, then fill the rest of the jar/glass with crushed ice.  Top off with soda water and drink.

Look how pretty it is!  And how shiny and nice my little sister's work surfaces are. 

As you probably gathered, I made these while I was up visiting my little sister recently.  So just for good measure, here are some pictures of her and her gorgeous boyfriend modelling the drinks like pros.

 
Aren't they pretty?