Monday 28 January 2013

Dairy free choc cake

 So this is my first dairy-free venture - a surprisingly easy recipe, but so strange having to remind yourself not to add any hint of milk, cream, butter or yoghurt! Basically the only change you must make to the recipe is to swap in dairy-free "butter" for the usual butter/marge of choice. Simple. And there's no change in taste or texture either - I was quite amazed that the chocolate cake tasted - surprise, surprise - like perfectly normal chocolate cake! Filled with raspberries and topped with dairy-free choc-chip buttercream, with a grating of dark chocolate* to top the cake off, this made a gorgeous dessert for my Auntie on her birthday.

*Only dark chocolate is fine for my Auntie to eat - I suppose it depends on the level of your own dairy intolerance. Unfortunately can't guarantee that this cake is suitable for all those dairy intolerant - you'll have to check out the ingredients yourself


 *Serves 12*

145g self-raising flour and 30g Bournville cocoa powder (175g floury ingredients total)
175g caster sugar
175g dairy-free butter
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
1.5 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp (tiny pinch) salt
1 punnet (200g) fresh raspberries

250g+ icing sugar
Dark finely grated chocolate - only 2 or 3 squares needed to make visible difference
175g dairy-free butter
1tsp vanilla extract

1. Preheat oven to 175', and grease two cake tins (or one larger tin if you're pushed, as I was - I'll elaborate on this later). Cream dairy-free butter and sugar together until smooth, before adding your vanilla and beating in each egg, one by one

2. Sift in all dry ingredients and mix well until smooth. If the cake batter isn't a dark enough colour (creamy latte-coloured batter won't taste very chocolatey when cooked), just add a cheeky extra tbsp cocoa powder - if you must add more than this though, perhaps add a tsp or two of water to loosen the mix

3. Pour the batter into your greased cake tins, place in the preheated oven, and bake for 30-35mins* before testing (if in two tins - will need nearer 45-50mins if in one larger tin) with fork prongs to see if any raw batter sticks (if it does, give it another 5-8mins)

* 4. Make your butter icing whilst the cakes are cooking. Mix together dairy-free butter and icing sugar - gently at first to avoid icing sugar dust flying everywhere - and finally add vanilla extract, and grate a few squares of dark chocolate in. I refrigerated mine as dairy-free butter seems to get a little softer than my usual butter/marge, and I wanted to pipe my icing

5. Decoration: If your cakes are perfectly cooked, great. Sandwich together with 1/3 of icing and raspberries, pipe remaining icing on top, and dot raspberries on the top.

However in my case, I had only one large tin, so my cake was miserably uncooked in the centre. Oops. Solution: scrape out uncooked cake batter, and discard. So now we've got a 6cm(ish) circular hole in the cake's middle, leaving our cake donut-shaped. Don't panic. Place cake on serving platter. Cut remaining cake horizontally into a top and bottom half, before slathering 1/3 of icing into the middle, and sandwiching back together. Now fill the hole in the cake's middle with raspberries, stacking them up until the hole is no longer visible - genius - and the finished effect is, well, quite lovely and most importantly, intentional. Once the cake is entirely cooled, use piping bag (if you have one - otherwise simply smooth icing on) to ice on all remaining frosting in pretty, circular cupcake style (working from cake's edge, inwards), before grating more chocolate over the top*

*If you want posh chocolate shavings, take dark chocolate and either use a speed-peeler across the chocolate's edge, or use the following technique. Place large bar of dark chocolate face down before you on a surface, take a sharp, flat-edged knife and hold horizontally on the chocolate's surface. Holding each end of the knife, gently scrape the knife towards you, pulling shavings of chocolate with it. Please be careful! (Jamie Oliver technique - seen on one of his 30 Minute Meals episodes)

 Here's a picture - I thought this may be the only chance I get to see my own cake presented on Pizza Express plates, drizzled with raspberry coulis...

;)

Friday 25 January 2013

Ultimate chocolate cookies

 Hi guys - sorry for the long wait, blogging's been put on hold over Christmas and the return to Canterbury last week! Not done too much baking lately as Christmas has meant eating far too much (delicious) rubbish, and snow has put my running on hold, but today I needed a pick-me-up, and after watching my sister make these ultimate chocolate cookies a fortnight ago for her boyfriend's birthday, I decided to give them a go this afternoon. I definitely wasn't disappointed.


This is, unsurprisingly, a recipe of Nigella* - one of my favourite TV chefs as her recipes are très indulgent and incredibly sweet - but I have tried to make it a little more suited to the student budget. I've replaced posh choc for Sainsburys' basics, and cut Nigella's enormous proportions of chocolate down just a teeny tiny bit (not that you'll notice). Anyway, I think these are gorgeous, they seem to work every time, and I know you'll love them if you're as big a fan of chocolate as me! Enjoy, but try not to eat all at once...


*Makes 14 Cookies*

100g dark chocolate (to melt)
175g chopped/chips white chocolate - I used a mix of a basics bar & white choc buttons
150g plain flour
50g white granulated sugar
75g brown sugar
125g butter/marge
30g dark Bournville cocoa powder
1 small tsp baking powder
1/2tsp salt
1 egg (straight from the fridge, unusually!)
1tsp vanilla extract

1. Preheat oven to 170' - or 175' if, like me, you've got a temperamental student oven - and line two baking trays with greaseproof paper

2. Break up your dark choc, place in a microwave-safe bowl, and microwave for 1min, stir, then microwave again for 1min until almost entirely melted

3. Place flour/cocoa/salt/baking powder in a bowl (or measuring jug if it's easier) and give a quick mix-up, so that it is ready to throw in after the next stage. If, like me, you are using a bar of white chocolate as chips for your cookies, place your bar onto a chopping board and cut up into tiny pieces now too

4. Cream your butter and sugar until well mixed, before pouring in your melted dark chocolate - once mixed in, the batter looks so gorgeous that I could very easily have eaten it all at this point...

5. Mix your vanilla into the batter. Removing your egg from the fridge, beat well into the mix. I will warn you that you have quite a stiff batter at this point, so this will give your arms a work-out! But persevere until your egg is entirely beaten in, before sifting in all your dry ingredients and stirring well (again, it may take a few mins to mix thoroughly). Now add your chocolate chunks, mix once more, and you're finally ready to dollop tbsp-size mounds onto the lined baking trays*


*PS: These cookies are so indulgent, I froze six cookie-batter mounds before baking (leaving Robbie and I "only" eight to eat). Pictured below. Just stick them on a baking tray, cover with clingfilm, and leave, flat, in the freezer for 1-2hrs. Then simply throw the frozen batter 'cookies' into a freezer bag. When you want more cookies, there's no need to defrost - just stick them in the oven, 175', for 18-20mins


6. Bake the cookies in preheated oven for 15-18mins (cookies baked in the bottom half of the oven may need an extra 2-3mins than the cookies baking on the highest shelf in the oven). Now, the cookies will come out fairly squidgy (because of all the chocolate in the mix) - don't worry about it. Just let them rest on their baking trays for 3-4mins - honestly, you'll be amazed how much they firm up in this time - then remove and place on a wire rack so that the cookies get nice and crisp




7. Now eat the cookies (and once more, thank you very much Nigella). Thanks for reading!