‘Humpless’ Madeleine

I am actually very laggy with my blog posts :/

This is gonna be the MOST up to date post on my cooking/baking escapades

Recently, I bought a Madeleine pan from Amazon using my swagbacks. I always wanted to bake Madeleine but procrastinated because I wanted to find a good opportunity to get the pan.Finally, there’s a price drop on the Madeleine pan… Mini Madeleine pan though… so I thought… HOW CUTE!!! and I bought it after the 3rd thought ( not even 2nd thought) hahaha… I actually c0-baked the original version of Lemon Madeleine at Jo’s place BUT i didn’t have the pictures :/ decided to try baking them with a variation – adding Chocolate! what can go wrong with chocolate right?? 😀

Anyhow.. the signature Madeleine have distinct HUMPS ( like camels) and HUMPS are supposed to be more distinct after refrigerating the batter over night. I followed the recipe and left my batter in the fridge overnight ( about 24 hrs) – think I could have neglected it too much… there were humps BUT not exactly very humpy

BTW, the most difficult part about baking Madeleine are not only ensuring there’s a HUMP BUT it’s kinda time consuming to put the batter into the mould :O That took up alot of my time… and the worst part was… I bought the MINI pan!!! which makes it even more tedious!!! OMG!! I will so buy the normal size Madeleine pan when there’s a sale

Overall, I was disappointed that the Madeleine didn’t look too humpy BUT it was certainly HARMLESS (pun on ‘humpless’) I took comfort that my Madeleine taste good..I will try again ~~

Chocolate & Lemon Madeleines Recipe
(Taken from ThelittleTeochew via Chocolate Desserts by Pierre Hermé, written by Dorie Greenspan)

*Makes 30 mini cookies.

– 1/2 cup + 1 tbsp (70 g) all-purpose flour
– 3 1/2 tbsp Dutch-processed cocoa powder, preferably Valrhona
– 1/2 tsp double-acting baking powder
– 1/3 cup + 2 tbsp (90 g) sugar
– pinch of salt
– grated zest of 1/4 lemon
– 2 large eggs (at room temperature)
– 6 1/2 tbsp (100 g) unsalted butter (at room temperature)

1. Sift together flour, cocoa powder and baking powder. Set aside. Put the sugar, salt and lemon zest into a bow and rub everything together with your fingertips until the sugar is moist, grainy and very aromatic.

2. Using a whisk beat the eggs into the lemon-sugar until the mixture is blended. Squish the butter through your fingers to create what is called a pomade and add it into the bowl. Still working with the whisk, beat in the butter just to get it evenly distributed. Gently whisk in the sifted flour mixture, stirring only until the flour is incorporated and the mixture is smooth. Press a piece of plastic wrap against the surface of the batter and chill it overnight before baking. The overnight rest helps the cookies develop their characteristic bump on their backs; if you don’t have time for an overnight rest, try to give the batter at least an hour in the refrigerator.

3. When you are ready to bake the cookies, center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 425F (220C). Butter a 12-mold madeleine pan, than dust the molds with flour, tapping out the excess.
Note: I buttered but did not flour … even though it is highly recommended in the book.

4. Divide the batter evenly among the madeleine molds. Place the pan in the oven, insert wooden spoon in the door to keep it slightly ajar, and immediately turn the oven temperature down to 350F (180C). Bake the cookies for 13 to 15 minutes, or until they are domed and spring back when pressed lightly. Unmold the cookies onto a work surface – you may have to rap the madeleine pan against the counter to release the cookies – then transfer them to a rack to cool to room temperature.

Easy Banana Nut Bread

It had been raining heavily for the past few days. sometimes, the rain will suddenly turn to snow~~ The weather had been quite weird.. I was supposed to go to the gym BUT since it’s raining.. I decided to blog first

A few weeks back, I made this yummy bread 🙂

Easy Banana Nut Bread Recipe
(from BudgetSavingDiva)

Ingredients

1 pack yellow cake mix
2 eggs
1 ripe banana
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup pecans (chopped)
1 Tablespoon Cinnamon
1/4 Cup of Packed Brown Sugar
1 Tablespoon Vanilla Extract

Instructions

1)Combine pack of yellow cake mix, milk, vanilla, cinnamon, brown sugar and eggs in mixing bowl.
2)Add banana to mixture make sure the banana are well mashed.
3)Mix in 3/4th of Pecans.
4)Pour into greased pans – I use loaf pans and cupcake pans.
5)Place the rest of the pecans on top as garnish
6)Bake at 350F till the toothpick, placed in the middle, comes out clean.

It’s nice to have friends here.. baked goods nv goes to waste.. hahaha… and when we see something delicious, we know we can buy it and share it with everyone

A lovely picture of the 2 ladies I’ve been hanging out with 😀

Blog more soon~~~

Chicken Katsu Don

BH and I plan to eat out on Vday.. I told BH to make reservations like 1 week before BUT the place we wanted to go had been fully booked!!! Boooo…. it’s been 2 or is it 3 years in a row that we didn’t managed to eat out on Vday because we can’t mk reservations :/

Fret not, I decided to try out another Japanese dish 🙂 and BH volunteered to get desserts! yum!

Chicken Katsu Don Recipe
(from Justonecookbook)

Ingredients:


(Ignore the kamaboko – Initially, I wanted to use it as a decoration on the dish but decided not to in the end)

200g (7oz or 4) chicken tenders [ I used 2 chicken breast – sliced into 1/2 sideways to mk it thinner for easy cooking]
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup all purpose flour
1 egg
1 cup Panko
Oil for deep frying

1/2 onion
2 eggs
2 serving rice
Mitsuba (Japanese wild parsley)[I used normal parsley]
Ichimi togarashi (Japanese chili powder) [I omit]

Seasonings
2/3 cup dashi stock
1 ½ Tbsp. sake
1 ½ Tbsp. mirin
1 ½ Tbsp. soy sauce
1 ½ tsp. sugar

Instructions:

Dust salt and pepper on chicken tenders and dredge flour, eggs and panko.

Heat ½ inch of oil in a frying pan and deep fry at 350F (180C) until golden brown. Take out the chicken and drain extra oil on paper towel.

Slice onion and make dashi stock.

In a frying pan, bring Seasonings and onion to a boil. Lower the heat to medium and cook onion until wilted.

Put chicken katsu in it and turn the heat up to medium high heat. Pour and distribute egg evenly.

When egg is half cooked, add mitsuba and turn off the heat. Serve rice in a Donburi bowl and put Chicken and egg mixture on top. Serve with Ichimi togarashi (chili pepper) on the side.

Of course, the food is as good as it looks!! hehe.. I’m so proud of myself!

——————–
BH came home earlier than usual on Vday BUT I was kinda disapted that he didn’t managed to get my fave pastry from Fuji Bakery Even before I get the opportunity to sulk, he presented a nice bouquet of flowers in front of me! 🙂

BH was really proud of the colour combination of the bouquet ” Very nice colour combination right??!! I choose one leh!”

haha… I was happy again…but wondered y aren’t the roses RED? geez.. who on earth will give their Valentine GREEN flowers??!!! erm… according to BH, GREEN roses were the only ones left.. so I was like ” what does green rose mean? is it for break ups??” we googled it “The most significant and popular meaning of the green rose is fertility. The green color symbolizes richness, abundance and bounty. Green roses are a sign of plenty and copiousness.” (quote Flowermeaning) Erm… ok… I hope this means I’ll have plenty of money and Chanel bags.. wahaha

As I admired the flowers… Bh took a look at his receipt and realised that…. the cashier didn’t even charge him for the roses which cost $19.99!! hahaha… lucky BH ( and me) , we got free roses on Vday! 😀 HAPPY Valentine’s Day indeed!

Everyday is Valentine’s Day… just that 14 Feb is MORE Valentine’s Day than others! I’m just so glad that BH and I are physically together – who know what will happen next yr? 🙁

Hope u all had a great Valentine’s Day!

Tempura Udon

BH and I had been craving for nice Japanese food for the longest time. Well, there are some nice restaurants here BUT it’s kind of costly to eat there on any normal day. So, I’ve decided to try cooking REAL Authentic Japanese food! 😀 Recently we bought some Japanese rice (which was supposed to be healthier) and I also updated my pantry with some Japanese condiments. OMG! Japanese food is expensive because of it’s ingredients! Anyhow… it’s amazing how much Dashi stock is required for each dish!!! and if u are wondering.. Dashi stock is actually MSG+seafood powder!!

I comforted myself that since I am doing the cooking… the dish is definitely gonna be healthier than the store bought ones… haha.. MSG once in a while it’s ok too… right? heh

There’s 2 parts to this dish:
1) Tempura prawns
2) Udon

Yes.. I pretty much spend the whole afternoon preparing food.. BUT I enjoyed it… The results… VERY AUTHENTIC!! I feel so silly spending $ eating at restaurants now

Shrimp Tempura Recipe
(taken from Justonecookbook, superb site for Japenese cooking!!! )

Ingredients:

10 Large or jumbo shrimp (if frozen need to thaw, the bigger the shrimp the better)
Corn starch to dust ( I used all purpose flour and it turned out fine)
Oil for deep frying

Tempura Batter [ Too much batter for me, maybe my prawns are too small.]
100 g (little bit more than ¾ cup) flour
½ tsp. baking powder
¼ tsp. salt
1 egg yolk
200 ml ice water

Tentsuyu (Tempura Dipping Sauce) [I didn’t do the sauce as I figured out that I don’t need it since we are eating with udon]
1/3 cup dashi stock (or 1/3 cup water + ½ tsp. Hondashi)
3 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. sake
2 tsp. sugar
Garnish for Dipping Sauce
1 inch daikon, grated and squeeze liquid out
shichimi (Japanese 7 flavor chili pepper)

Instructions:

Prepare shrimp. Please read step-by-step pictures and explanations of How To Prepare Shrimp for Shrimp Tempura so that shrimp will be straight instead of curly.

You can start heating the oil when you are almost done with cleaning shrimp. You want to bring the oil to 170C (338F). You can check the temperature with chopsticks or with a thermometer. When you see small bubbles around chopsticks, it’s pretty much ready for deep frying.

When oil is getting close to 170C (338F), start preparing batter. Sift flour, baking powder, and salt into a bowl.
Beat egg yolk gently and add iced water and 2 ice cubes. It’s important to keep the batter icy cold at all time. The crispiness of Tempura comes from the temperature difference between oil and batter.

Pour the egg mixture into flour mixture. Using chopsticks, mix but only circulate around the bowl 10 times. You want to leave some of the flour unmixed and clunky. The key here is not to produce gluten in order to have crispy tempura.

Sift some corn starch on top of shrimps.

When oil is 170C (338F), dip shrimp in batter several times, making sure shrimp is completely covered by the batter and start deep frying.

Deep fry for about 2-3 minutes or so (depending on how many shrimps you deep fry at the same time and oil temperature), and after it’s cooked, place the shrimp on a wire rack (paper towel is okay but try to place it vertically) to get rid of extra oil. Keep in mind the more shrimp you have in the pot the cooler the oil temperature will be.

If you want your Shrimp Tempura to look like ones from restaurant (extra batter around shrimp), then you have to follow this method. Please see video below (in the post) as I couldn’t capture myself doing it while deep frying… My trick for restaurant style skin is to pour extra batter on top of the shrimp after it’s been deep frying for about 5-7 seconds. You can use a spoon to do this but DO NOT drop the ice cube in the oil or else it’ll result in possible accidents.

For Tentsuyu (Tempura Dipping Sauce)
Heat all the ingredients in a small saucepan over medium high heat. When boiling, turn the heat off and set aside.

———————–

Kitsune Udon recipe [ I used Tempura prawns]
(from Justonecookbook)

Ingredients:

4 cups water
1 dashi packet
2 servings of udon
2 servings of inariage [I omit]

Seasonings
2 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. mirin
2 tsp. sugar
¼ tsp. salt

Toppings
Narutomaki (fish cake), thinly sliced [I used kamaboko, shown in pic below – I am thrilled that it is packed with a wood plank! This cost US$3.80 for a small piece! worth it though!]

Blanched spinach, chopped [I omit]
Green onions, chopped

Instructions:

In a medium pot, add water and a dashi packet and bring it to a boil. Reduce heat to medium and cook 7 minutes. Discard the dashi packet.

Add Seasonings and wait till simmer.

Meanwhile, open udon packages and loosen up udon by running warm water. This is an optional step. If you are lazy like me, you can just dump udon directly into the soup even if the udon is frozen. Also, I would like to mention that some brand of udon breaks up too much even if you gently touch it, like this brand. I always buy a frozen “Sanuki udon” from Asian/Japanese supermarket. The texture of Sanuki udon is much better than this udon, which I bought from an American supermarket.

Add udon and cook for 3-5 minutes (frozen one probably takes a little more time).

Serve Udon and soup in a bowl and top with inariage and additional toppings of your choice.

P/s: I also made Chawanmushi to go with the Udon – Shall blog about that another day

No Knead Bread

One random day, I was debating wth myself IF I should buy a bread maker. As I was surfing around… I found this wonderful recipe which was so simple to follow!!! I decided to give it a try!

I love the results!! OMG… the active time is at most 30mins. The idle time is about 20hrs. yes, 20 hours!!! BUT it’s IDLE TIME! To make this bread, you need a dutch oven though! Anything cooked using the dutch oven will come out extraordinary good!!!

Anyway, when I first saw the bread fresh out of the oven.. I can’t help BUT to feel really proud of myself. hahaha… I made Artisan Bread for a fraction of the cost!!!! hehehe… Bread making have NEVER been easier. You should have heard how crispy the crust was as I was slicing it ~~~

Bread in dutch oven

No Knead Bread Recipe
(from Steamykitchen)

Ingredients:
3 cups bread flour (I like Harvest King bread flour)
1/4 teaspoon instant yeast
1 teaspoon fine table salt (or 3/4 tablespoon of kosher salt)
1 1/2 cups warm water
Covered pot (five-quart or larger cast iron, Pyrex, ceramic, enamel…something that can go into a 450F oven.)

Directions:

1. Mix dough: The night before, combine all ingredients in a big bowl with a wooden spoon until the dough just comes together. It will be a shaggy, doughy mess. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit 12-20 hours on countertop.

2. Shape & preheat: The dough will now be wet, sticky and bubbly. With a wet spatula, dump the dough on a floured surface. Fold ends of dough over a few times with the spatula and nudge it into a ball shape. You can use your hands if you like, just keep your hands wet so that the dough does not stick. Generously dust a cotton towel (not terrycloth) with flour. Set dough seam side down on top of towel. Fold towel over the dough. Let it nap for 2 hours. When you’ve got about a half hour left, slip your covered pot into the oven and preheat to 450F.

3. Bake: Your dough should have doubled in size. Remove pot from oven. Holding towel, turn over and dump wobbly dough into pot, using your hands to get the dough off the towel. Doesn’t matter which way it lands. Shake to even dough out. Cover. Bake 30 minutes. Uncover, bake another 15-20 minutes or until the crust is beautifully golden and middle of loaf is 210F. Remove and let cool on wired rack. If not eating right away, you can re-crisp crust in 350F oven for 10 minutes. Best way to eat it? Smear a warm slice with some good butter (Kerrygold and Lurpac are both found in your grocery stores, usually on top shelf)

Inside~~~

Made some Kaya to go with the bread..looks so good… taste sooooo good…..

A must try recipe!! 😀 NO NEED (Knead) ‘to buy’ bread from supermarkets already!!

Ngoh Hiang

Made these for CNY … Glad that I’m able to freeze the excess 🙂 Ez meals for lazy days!

Ngoh Hiang Recipe
(from Rasamalaysia)

Ingredients:

1 pound/ 455 grams minced pork (preferably the shoulder for its higher fat content)
½ pound/ 228 grams fresh shrimp, shelled and minced
1 large egg, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons light soya sauce
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 teaspoon ground white pepper
1 teaspoon five-spice powder
10 to 12 water chestnuts (about 11 ounces/ 300 grams), washed, peeled and smashed with a pestle
3 green onions, finely chopped
½ a yellow onion, minced
3 tablespoons self-rising flour
Dried soya bean skin (available in frozen, ½ pound packs from Chinese grocery stores), cut into 4 by 6-inch rectangles
Corn oil
Sweet dark soya sauce or Kecap Manis for dipping

Method:

Mix the pork and minced shrimp in a large bowl and add the egg, stirring to mix. In a separate bowl, stir together the soya sauce, salt, white pepper and five-spice powder until smooth, then add it to the pork/shrimp mix.

Stir in the water chestnuts, green onions and yellow onion, mixing as you go to distribute the ingredients evenly. Finally, sift in the flour and mix until no traces of flour are visible.

Lay out the prepared skins on your work surface. Arrange a heaping tablespoon of the prepared pork mix along the longer edge of the skin, leaving a ½-inch gap from the surrounding edges. Shape the meat into a slim sausage, it should be about 1 inch tall and 1½ inches wide. Add more pork if needed.

After shaping the meat, roll the skin starting with the edge closest to you, tucking in the side edges as you go. Roll until the meat is fully ensconced within the skin, then place it, seamside down, on a plate. Repeat until you’ve used up all the pork.

Lightly grease a steamer tray and steam the rolls for 8 to 10 minutes, until the skins turn translucent and the rolls feel firm. Remove and set aside on wire racks to cool. At this point, you can divide the rolls into batches and freeze them in plastic wrap for up to 3 months. To cook, defrost the rolls in a 350F/ 180C oven for 10 minutes before frying.

Steaming the ngoh hiang before freezing
Steamed ngoh hiang

To finish the rolls, heat a non-stick saucepan large enough to hold 2 to 3 rolls comfortably and add enough oil to thinly cover the surface of the pan.

Add the rolls one at a time – I recommend cooking a maximum of 3 at one go, so as not to overcrowd the pan – and fry on medium high heat until the skins turn a crisp dark brown. Leave to cool on paper towels or a wire rack before slicing and serving. Wipe down the pan with paper towels after each batch before cooking the next.

Slice the rolls into 1-inch chunks and serve warm or at room temperature with the dipping sauce.

Lemongrass Chicken

It so happen that I had some lemongrass left from making ‘Lemak’ aka ‘Vege curry’ aka Sayur Lodeh (which I haven’t blogged about yet :X) After chatting with my mum, she suggested that I make Lemongrass chicken! and so… I did!

This simple dish is now OUR FAVOURITE chicken dish 🙂 Lemongrass mks the dish so aromatic… and the caramel sauce gives a sweet, yet fragrant taste to the chicken.

The only thing is that I didn’t cook the chicken on HIGH heat as suggested by the recipe – so it’s not as ‘brown’ or rather caramelized. Then again…It is absolutely yummy!!

Vietnamese Lemongrass Chicken Recipe
(from Rasamalaysia)

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons fish sauce
3 garlic cloves, crushed
1 tablespoon curry powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons plus 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
1 1/2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breast/thigh, cut into 1 1/2-inch pieces
3 tablespoons water
3 tablespoons cooking oil
2 fresh lemongrass stalks, tender inner white bulbs only, minced
1 large shallot, thinly sliced
3 chilies, seeded and minced
1 scallion for garnishing

Method:

In a bowl, combine the fish sauce, garlic, curry powder, salt, and 1 1/2 teaspoons of the sugar. Add the chicken meat to coat.

In a small skillet, mix the remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar with 1 tablespoon of the water and cook over high heat, stirring until the sugar is dissolved. Cook without stirring until a deep amber caramel forms. Remove from the heat and stir in the remaining 2 tablespoons of water. Transfer to a bowl.

Heat a wok over high heat. Add the oil and heat until shimmering. Add the lemongrass, shallot, and chilies and stir-fry until fragrant. Add the chicken and caramel and stir-fry until the chicken is cooked through and the sauce is slightly thickened. Transfer to a bowl and top with the scallion. Serve with steamed white rice.


Our dinner ~~ Lemongrass chicken, Chap Chype and rice topped with egg!

Toulouse Petit

On the 2nd day of 2012, Bing and I ventured to our old home area ( Queen Anne) to have brunch at the much rave Toulouse Petit

It’s amazing that this place is so near our old apartment BUT we have nv tried it before. We didn’t make any reservations so we needed to wait for a table.

First impression of the place – The restaurant have really nice deco. It was really unique with interesting lamps, resembling Venus Fly Trap. haha.. we took photos outside

Fortunately, it was only a 10mins wait. Anyway, just for in case you wanna try.. it’s better to go for breakfast happy hours Mon-fri 8-11am as most of the breakfast plates were $8!

We settle down on our table which isn’t that comfy because there’s no place to hang our coats ( and the server didn’t ask if they could keep coats for us) – we just have to make do. The menu is extensive! so many types of food to choose from! I was gonna order something sweet.. I LOVE sweet things.. and I ordered the Bananas Foster pancakes and BH ordered something that have fish ( can’t rem what – but it’s a small serving, expensive for its size)

The french press coffee came first.. it’s sooooo good… now i’m wondering if I shld buy a french press!! heh.. so while enjoying the coffee.. I was admiring the nice lamps again.. hahaha

Actually our food took sometime to come… either that or.. I was super hungry… Finally….

My pancakes were delicious!! OMG.. I love the candied peacans.. so nice!!! fluffy pancakes – 2 thumbs up!!! As for BH’s food… it was ok?! hehe… The pt is… I love my pancakes!! Yummy!! But lucky BH, the portion is too big for me.. he had the pancakes too!

last but not least… a pic of me with the delicious pancakes!! wahaha… more pls!!

Hor Fun with gravy and Tao Suan!

The weather is cold.. and some form of warm comfort food would be good….so that’s it..

Hor Fun and Tao Suan are the simplest kind of food that you can find in any hawker centre or food court.. not for us here.. hehe.. so I looked for recipes and decided to attempt them. It was so easy.. the cost of the ingredients are cheap!!

My Hor Fun picture may not be pretty BUT it’s absolutely delicious, like those in Zichar store! *Blush* haha.. and how do u take nice pictures of gluey food anyway??!! heh

Hor Fun with Gravy recipe

(inspired by 3 hungry tummies & seasiafood)

Ingredients

300 g of fresh wide rice noodles (hor fun)
150 – 200 g of beef fillet, thinly sliced across the grains
50 g green mustard ( like choy sum or even broccoli)
5 cm knob of ginger, thinly sliced ( Optional – BH doesn’t like the ginger)
2 garlic cloves, chopped
2 spring onions, cut into 6 cm lengths
500 ml of chicken stock (I used packaged ones)
1 tbs of light soy
1/2 tbs of dark soy
1 tbs of oyster sauce
dash of sesame oil
dash of Chinese cooking wine
white pepper to taste
tapioca flour solution* (Corn flour also can, if u have no Tapioca flour)
1 egg white, lightly beaten
* Unlike corn flour this won’t cloud the sauce.

Method

1) Marinate the beef slices with a little soy, sesame oil, chinese cooking wine, white pepper and corn flour.
2) Heat up the wok, add in 2 tbsp oil and fry crushed garlic till fragrant.
3) Add in hor fun, dark soy sauce and light soy sauce, stir fry quickly over high heat till mix well.
4) Remove heat, set aside in a serving plate.
5) Saute garlic, beef and ginger then add in the spring onion and continue to cook. Add green mustard, stock and seasonings and bring it to a boil.
6) Add in the tapioca flour solution to thicken the sauce, it should be thick enough to coat the noodles. Drizzle in the egg, turn off the heat and give it a light stir.
7) Pour the egg gravy on top of the fried hor fun. Serve with pickled green chilli (which we don’t have!!)

————–
Tao Suan Recipe
(from noobcook)

Ingredients
(Makes 4 rice bowls)

150g split green (mung) bean
2 pandan leaves, washed and tied to a knot
50g rock sugar
500ml water
1 “you tiao”, cut – I used frozen ones from Asian Supermarket, prep them according to instructions on package

Thickener:
40g sweet potato flour (or water chestnut flour), mixed with 125ml (1/2 cup) water

Directions

1. Soak the beans in water for 1 hour, drained and rinse again with water. Drain again.
2. Steam the beans for about 30 minutes, or until they are soft.
3. In a pot, add water, pandan leaves and sugar. Bring to the boil, reduce heat, and add in the steamed beans.
4. Before using the thickener, stir the solution again to make sure it is even. Stir in the thickener slowly until mixture thickens (you do not need to add all … stop adding once it becomes the thickness that you like. I used only 3/4 of the amount).
5. Ladle into serving bowls and top with you tiao. Serve hot or warm.

X’mas Bake off 2011 ( Chocolate-dipped shortbread + Steamed Chocolate fudge cake)

Outdated entry BUT still… I will blog about it .. haha

It’s kinda like our tradition that we have a bake-off on Christmas… haha.. I like it.. and we actually look forward to it every year 🙂 This year.. we made Chocolate dipped shortbread. We were at Dave and Jo’s place when they let us sample their neighbour’s cookies.. OMG.. it tasted so good!!! we decided to look for the recipe and try to bake something like that too! We were happy that it turned out very well – tasted like Danish cookies! haha.. and we gave them to our friends who loved them too!

Chocolate dipped Shortbread recipe

(From Food Network)

Ingredients
3/4 pound unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 cup sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
6 to 7 ounces very good semisweet chocolate, finely chopped ( We used Hershey’s special dark chocolate bar)

Method
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, mix together the butter and 1 cup of sugar until they are just combined. Add the vanilla. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour and salt, then add them to the butter-and-sugar mixture. Mix on low speed until the dough starts to come together. Dump onto a surface dusted with flour and shape into a flat disk. Wrap in plastic and chill for 30 minutes.

Roll the dough 1/2-inch thick and cut with a 3 by 1-inch finger-shaped cutter. Place the cookies on an ungreased baking sheet and sprinkle with sugar. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until the edges begin to brown. Allow to cool to room temperature.

When the cookies are cool, place them on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Put 3 ounces of the chocolate in a glass bowl and microwave on high power for 30 seconds. (Don’t trust your microwave timer; time it with your watch.) Stir with a wooden spoon. Continue to heat and stir in 30-second increments until the chocolate is just melted. Add the remaining chocolate and allow it to sit at room temperature, stirring often, until it’s completely smooth. Stir vigorously until the chocolate is smooth and slightly cooled; stirring makes it glossier.

Drizzle 1/2 of each cookie with just enough chocolate to coat it.

What’s Christmas w/o cake? haha.. so I attempted to try another new recipe!

For my cake, I used a 6″ round pan and used my big soup pot as the steamer. During steaming, my cake rose and the top of the cake was on the cover of the pot. I was very upset because that would mean that my cake won’t look nice/ might turn out underbaked. I allowed it to steam 10mins more that the desired time – that seem to do the trick. Cake looks very ugly though 🙁 Fortunately, I managed to slice the ugly top off.. and it looks flat and nice!!In future, I will definitely divide the batter into two 6″ pans.

For the fudge, it took forever to thicken so I added more cornflour and up the heat. Bad idea… fudge thickened too fast and became lumpy. sigh… it was not thick enough to be spread onto the cake. BH was like “let’s just pour on it?!! It will look nice la! Fudge mah!” I was just too upset that it’s not perfect – so I was “whatever lor.. anyway, it’s doomed already” and… tadah….

Topped it with walnuts and it looks so pro!!! The taste… was like heavenly!!! Chocolate overload!! 🙂 Because the fudge was lumpy, we shld have pour the fudge over a sieve before putting it on the cake. Anyway, the cake was so good that we couldn’t taste the lumps! 😀

Steamed Chocolate Cake with Fudge Recipe

(from Peng’s Kitchen)

For Cake:

Ingredient

150g unsalted butter
170g fine sugar
200ml evaporated milk
2 eggs, lightly beaten
125g plain flour
70g cocoa powder (I used Trader Joe’s, a local house brand)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp vanilla essence

Method

1) Combine sugar, evaporated milk, vanilla essence and butter in a saucepan. Stir over low heat until sugar is dissolved and butter has melted. Remove from heat.

2) Add the beaten eggs into the slightly cooled mixture and stir till well mixed. Sift the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder and baking soda into a large mixing bowl. Add the eggs mixture over the flour and stir till smooth. (Batter should be runny).

3) Heat up the steamer. Lined and grease a 7″ baking pan. ( I used 6″ round pan) Pour the batter into prepared pan and place into the steamer. Cover the top of the pan loosely with a piece of aluminum foil.

4) Steam over medium heat for 45 minutes. Check for doneness by inserting a skewer into the cake. If it comes out clean, it’s done. If not, steam for a further 5 minutes.

5) Cool the cake in pan before turning out for frosting.

For chocolate fudge

Ingredients

35g cocoa powder, sifted
50gm corn flour, sifted
1 cup evaporated milk
2 egg yolks
175ml water
120g sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
50g unsalted butter

Method

1) Mix all ingredients well (except the butter. stir over double boiler at low heat till thickened. (takes abt 10mins to thicken)
2) Add butter, turn off fire and stir till the butter melts.
3) Spread the warm fudge over the cake to coat evenly.
4) Chill the cake in the fridge before serving.