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Sticky fruit pudding with salted caramel & coconut topping

Posted by Sue Heward on

This recipe will knock you socks offer. A total delight from a Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh recipe with my little twists added to include our diced dried fruit and sticky quince syrup (because they are a flavour match made in heaven).

Sticky Fruit Pudding with Salted Caramel and Coconut Topping

Ingredients
400g Singing Magpie diced dried fruit
1 tspn bicarbonate of soda
250 mls water
2 tlbspns Sticky Quince Syrup
200g plain flour
2 tspn baking powder
1/4 tspn salt
125g unsalted butter at room temp
200g caster sugar
1 large egg (again I try to have this a room temp)
1 tspn vanilla extract

Salted caramel coconut topping
75 g unsalted butter
1 tlbspn Sticky Quince Syrup
95g soft brown sugar
60 ml thickened cream
95g shredded coconut
1/4 tspn salt

Method
Place the diced dried fruit, sticky quince syrup, bicarb soda and water in a saucepan. Bring to a boil, then simmer over a medium heat for about 5 minutes, stirring from time to time. Remove from the heat and set aside until cool.

Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C Fan. I used a muffin tray and muffin liners. You can also use lined bottomless cake rings on a baking tray. 

Sift the flour, baking powder and salt together into a bowl and set aside. Place the butter and sugar in an electric mixer and beat on a medium-high speed for about 2 minutes, until light and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until combined. Reduce the speed to low and, in alternate batches, fold in the dried fruit mix and the sifted dry ingredients.

Divide the mix between the muffin liners and bake for about 25 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.

Ideally make the topping while the cake is baking but I did forget, lucky this topping comes together very quickly. Place all the ingredients for the topping in a saucepan and stir over a low heat until the butter is melted and the ingredients are combined.

Once the cakes are cooked, remove from the oven (keep the oven on) and spoon about 1½ tablespoons of the topping mixture over the surface of each pudding. Return to the oven for another 12 minutes, or until the topping is golden brown.

Remove from the oven and leave to cool for 10 minutes, or until they come to room temperature, before transferring to a wire rack to cool before serving.

These will keep for up to 2 days at room temperature (or in the fridge, if it’s particularly warm) in an airtight container. Serve them as they are, or better still warm them through for 5 minutes in an oven or the microwave and serve with some cream or ice-cream.

Utterly delicious. A total crowd pleaser. Makes 12

UPDATED: If you are looking for more recipes to use our Spectacular diced dried fruit mix here is my list so far:

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Rhubarb, Apple and Quince cream cake

Posted by Sue Heward on

If there is one cake you bake this winter please make it this one. This is my take on a cake by Belinda Jeffery. You can find the original recipe here. I'm so enamoured with it and completely love the texture that cream brings to it rather than using butter. So, so, light but so much flavour, it serves 8 but you could definitely stretch it further.

Rhubarb, apple, quince cream cake

Rhubarb, Apple and Quince cream cake

250g Apple peeled and chopped into 1 cm chunks

200g rhubarb washed and chopped chopped into 1 cm chunks

1 1/2 cups self-raising flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon salt

Finely grated zest 2 large lemons

1 large egg

1 cup (220g) caster sugar

1 cup (250ml) pure cream

1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

4 tlbspn Quince butter (I keep a stash of this in my fridge, the recipe is here)

Crumble topping

1 cup rolled oats / oatmeal

1 cup self-raising flour

1 cup brown sugar (loosely packed)

1/2 tsp baking powder

1 tsp cinnamon powder

125g / 1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted

Pinch of salt

Vanilla bean ice cream or cream, to serve

Method

  1. Preheat your oven to 175 C. Butter a 23 cm springform tin, line the base with buttered baking paper and then dust the tin with flour.
  2. Have your chopped rhubarb and apple in one bowl.
  3. Measure the flour, baking powder and salt into another bowl. Use a whisk to mix them together for 1 minute so they’re thoroughly combined. Sprinkle in the lemon zest and whisk for another 10 seconds or so, then set the bowl aside.
  4. Whisk an egg into into your electric mixer bowl and beat it briefly (I did this by hand). Then I used the whisk attachment on my mixer. Add the caster sugar and whisk together for 1 minute so the mixture looks creamy. Pour in the cream and vanilla and whisk again until everything is thoroughly combined.
  5. Add all but 1 tablespoon of the flour mixture to the mixer bowl, and use a spatula to stir the two together. Do this by hand and don't beat just fold as this causes the cake to toughen. The batter is still lumpy when you are finished.
  6. Sprinkle the reserved tablespoon of flour mixture over the rhubarb/apple mix in the bowl, and give it a good shake so the pieces are lightly dusted in flour. Now, fold the fruit into the batter – it will be thick with fruit. Scoop the batter into the prepared tin and use a palette knife to spread it out evenly. 
  7. Spoon your quince butter over the cake mixture.
  8. Crumble preparation: Place Topping ingredients in a bowl. Mix until clumps form, like wet sand. Spread over your cake, crumbling with fingers if required to get that crumbly topping.
  9. Put the tin in the oven and bake the cake for 50 – 55 minutes until a fine skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean. Remove the cake from the oven and sit it on a wire rack. Let it cool for about 10 minutes before unclipping and remove the sides of the tin. Carefully remove the base. Leave it to cool until it’s room temperature.

Serve with ice cream or cream. Belinda does write that you can freeze the leftover cake for up to 3 weeks, but we did just eat it all. 

Rhubarb, Apple quince cream cake

 

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Our Family ANZAC biscuit recipe

Posted by Sue Heward on

ANZAC day is a day for making ANZAC biscuits and remembering our Poppas and Nannas. How great it would be if they were still here.

I could ask Jack what he thought of our Fig Leaf and Rose tea.

My Barmera Poppa Jeff was the baker, he would make the biscuits.

Barmera Nanna would make her famous scrambled eggs and Margie, Monash Nanna would let us dress up in her extraordinary hat collection. 

This is our family ANZAC biscuit recipe, created by Auntie Rene, preserved by Auntie Joy and dabbled with by me.

ANZAC biscuits

Ingredients

1 cup plain flour

1 cup rolled oat

1 cup sugar

1 cup shredded coconut

125 g butter

1 tblspn sticky quince syrup

1 tblspn golden syrup

2 tblspn water

1 tsp bicarbonate of soda

Method

Set your oven at 175 degrees Celsius.

Sift the flour into a bowl. Add the sugar, rolled oats and coconut.

In a saucepan add the butter, syrup and water and bring to boil.

Stir in the bicarb soda and then take off the heat.

Add in the dry ingredients. Mix thoroughly.

Put teaspoons of mixture onto 2 greased trays (you need to allow space for the mixture to spread) and bake at 175C for approx 10 - 12 minutes.

Biscuits will harden when cool. Watch them, I did nearly burn them.

Makes 30 biscuits.

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Autumn Salads- bitter greens, figs, and quince...my current favourites

Posted by Sue Heward on

Here is my take on using bitter greens combined with our sun dried figs & quince and sticky quince syrup (perfect addition to any salad dressing among other things).... sensational Autumn salads.
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Tis the season to bake....Quince, Pecan and Ginger frangipane tart and even some crumble

Posted by Sue Heward on

I really have only just stumbled on the flavour combinations of quince, ginger and pecan but I'm so glad I have.

Quince, Pecan and Ginger frangipane tart

Makes one 22cm tart or approx. 12 tartlets (6.5cms in diameter). 

Serves 8- 12 (if you have made the smaller tartlets)

Ingredients

Quince butter layer (note this needs to be prepped the day before making the tart):

500g quinces, cut in half but still with skin and core in. If you don’t have fresh quince you can also use approximately 200g of our sun dried Smyrna quince, the raw sugar and lemon below are then not required.

200g raw sugar

One lemon cut in half

Water to cover the quinces

Note: You can also add other spices to your taste eg start anise, cinnamon, vanilla pod. I generally don’t. This layer is an adaptation from Amy Minichiello, you can check out more from her website at www.aminikitchen.com

Pastry:

1 packet of Careme pastry vanilla sweet shortcrust pastry or if you want to make it yourself I use a Brisee pastry recipe from Phillippa’s ‘Home Baking’ cook book.

Pecan and Ginger frangipane layer:

125g unsalted butter

125g raw caster sugar

1 ½ teaspoons ground ginger

2 eggs

125g All Natural Pecans ground in the food processor

2 tablespoons cornflour

2 tablespoons candied ginger or if you can’t get this, I used ginger marmalade

This layer is an adaptation of Careme Pastry’s Poached Pear & Ginger Pie recipe

Method
Quince butter: This needs to be started the day before making the tart. In a large saucepan put the halved quinces and lemon, sugar (and spices if you are adding them) and cover with water. Bring to a boil and then lower the heat to poach the quinces. This needs at least three hours (sometimes up to five hours depending on your quinces) until the quinces go a deep red/mauve colour. Allow the quince to cool, preferably overnight and then remove the quinces from the poaching liquid. Reserve the poaching liquid, this can be reduced and used as a sauce on pancakes or roast pork.

Take care to scoop the core of each half of each quince out (this is not pleasant to eat) and discard. Put all the remaining cooked quince in the food processor and blitz until you have a mousse-like butter consistency. Set aside until the rest of the pie components are finished.

Alternatively if you don’t have fresh quince or pressed for time you can use our sun dried quince and soak for 20 minutes in warm water. Then simply blitz this in the food processor until you have a paste/butter consistency. Set aside until the rest of the pie components are finished.

Pastry: Preheat the oven to 180°C (160°C fan-forced).  Lightly grease and dust with flour the base of a round 22cm pie dish or in my case I prepped up 12 tartlets tins. I used ones with removable bases.

On a floured bench, dust both sides of the pastry sheet with a little flour.  Cut a 24cm circle from the pastry and line the pie plate with pastry so it sits over the edge of plate, place in refrigerator to chill. I kept all the leftover pastry to make some mini pecan crumbles, the recipe is at the end.

If you are using Careme Pastry blind bake the pastry case. Firstly line the pastry case with baking paper. Cover paper with baking weights, rice or dried beans for example or a dried pulse (eg. chickpeas, fill weights to top of shell to help support the sides and weigh the base down during cooking.

Place tart tin on a baking tray in preheated oven, bake for 20 minutes. Remove tart tin from oven, check pastry is just golden before removing beans and baking paper. Return tart tin to oven and cook for a further 10 minutes or until golden. Remove tart from oven, allow to cool.

If you are handmaking your pastry follow your recipe instructions to prepare and blind bake.

Frangipane:

Firstly make the pecan meal by blitzing the pecans in the food processor- really you can stop at whatever consistency you want the meal, I like a little bit of crunch so I did’t make it too fine.

In a stand mixer beat the butter, sugar and ground ginger together until pale and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, beating until each has been incorporated. Stir in the ground pecans, cornflour, ginger powder and ginger marmalade, mixing until combined.

Tart Assembly:

Once the pastry case(s) is cool start with spooning in a layer of the quince butter evenly. Then follow with the frangipane. If you are feeling fancy you can also top the tart with some latticed pastry.

Place the tart on a baking tray in put in your preheated oven Cook for 40 minutes at 180°C (160°C  fan-forced) or until pastry is golden and frangipane is cooked through (e.g. just firm to the touch when lightly pressed in the centre). If the edges of the tart look like they are browning too quickly, cover with baking paper or putting an edge of foil around the tart and continue baking until the frangipane is cooked.

Allow to cool in the tin before removing. Serve with ice cream, cream or yoghurt whatever tickles your fancy.

 

Bite sized Pecan crumbles

If you have leftover pastry, quince butter and/or frangipane I did go alittle over the top and make some bite sized quince and pecan crumbles. Complete decadence

.

Simply use a mini cupcake tray and butter/flour each cavity. Cut rounds of your leftover pastry and line the tray with pastry. Add a dollop of quince butter and frangipane. I finished off with a teaspoon of a very quick to prepare pecan crumble. Here is my recipe for this layer:

1 tbspn brown sugar

2/3 cup plain flour

100g rolled oats 

1 tspn ground cinnamon

120g unsalted butter softened

80g of All Natural Pecans cut up roughly into small pieces

Mix together the brown sugar, flour, oats, cinnamon and pecans in a mixing bowl. Break the softened butter into pieces and add to the flour mixture. Incorporate using the tips of your fingers until mixed like course breadcrumbs. Then add a small spoonful of the crumble mix onto of the frangipane layer. Bake in the oven preheated (as above) for 20-30 minutes, until the crumble is golden brown.

If you do have any leftover quince butter and/or crumble after all this it can be stored in the fridge until you make your next dessert.

Allow the crumbles to cool slightly and take a brilliant bite- these are delicious and its hard to stop at one.

Happy Baking

 

 

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