Category Archives: Food/Wine

♥ Chocolate Tart



I am of the make-your-own-pastry-tribe but if you’re not and would like to make the tart you could always seek out a good ready-made pastry.   When a recipe calls for a pastry shell to be baked blind, I adopt a twenty-four hour approach to tackling it; I make the pastry and bake the shell the evening before it’s needed and then all I have to do the following day is make the filling and cook off the tart.  This is a Simon Hopkinson recipe, I suspect everybody is probably into Simon Hopkinson’s latest book, The Good Cook, post his recent BBC series, but the chocolate tart recipe is from his older and excellent book Roast Chicken and Other Stories published by Ebury Press in 1994.

INGREDIENTS

 For the pastry

175g butter

65g icing sugar

2 egg yolks

225g plain flour

For the filling

3 egg yolks

2 whole eggs

40g caster sugar

150g butter

200g dark chocolate broken into pieces (I used one with a 70% cocoa content)

METHOD

To make the pastry, put the butter, sugar and egg yolks in a bowl (or food processor) and work together quickly.  Blend in the flour, and work to a homogenous paste.  Chill for at least one hour.

Preheat the oven to 180°C .   Roll out the pasty as thinly as you can and use it to line a 20.5cm tart tin.  Bake blind in the oven for about 25  minutes or until pale biscuit in colour, but thoroughly cooked through.  Remove. Increase the heat of the oven to 190°C.

To make the filling, put the egg yolks, whole eggs and sugar in a bowl and beat vigorously together, preferably with an electric mixer until really thick and fluffy.  Melt the butter and chocolate together in a bowl over a pan of barely simmering water, stirring until smooth.  Pour on to the egg mixture while just warm.  Briefly beat together until well amalgamated, them pour into the pastry case.  Return to the hot oven for 5 minutes, then remove and leave to cool.  Serve with thick cream.

Enjoy!

Note: To bake the pastry case blind I lined it with tin foil and weighed it down with uncooked rice.

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♥ Bake my Cake



What do you do if you qualified as an architect in Dublin, just as the world economy wobbled spectacularly, the Irish property market imploded and construction in Dublin lurched to a shuddering halt?  When Catherine De Groot completed her degree in 2008, she briefly worked in an architectural practice but when her hours were cut, she decided to supplement her income by transforming her childhood passion for baking into a business.  For a while she beavered away at the cake making plus the architecture but the fledgling baking business was so successful that she decided to leave architecture and in November 2010 she found a suitable premises and opened Bake My Cake.



The shop is on Booterstown Avenue in South Dublin, it’s long, narrow and the white-painted walls are a perfect foil to the splashes of colour supplied by: the shelves of brightly-hued products, the painted logo created by a graphic designer friend, the colour blocked take away coffee cups and the pretty polka dot cake boxes.  The gorgeous baking aroma transfixed me the moment I walked through the door, it comes from the heart of the business,an open plan kitchen, at the back of the shop, overlooking a small garden.



The business has three distinct parts.  Firstly there’s the baking side; should you be looking for a bespoke cake for a special occasion (wedding, birthday, christening…) you can sit down and talk to The Bake My Cake team and they will come up with a design that matches your requirements.  There is also a list of deserts, cupcakes and other treats available to order.  Secondly, if you are a devoted home baker the shop is a place where you can source all manner of cake-centric things such as: fondant icing, cake tins, colouring, cutters, edible food writing pens, cake decoration and cup cake cases.  The third part of the Bake my Cake business is the treats section at the front of the shop where there is a daily changing choice of goodies (cup cakes, brownies…) as well as ice cream and coffee for sale (take out only).



A special thank you to Neil, one of Catherine’s team for answering all my question.

Note; Bake My Cake, 45 Booterstown Avenue,Blackrock, Co. Dublin. Website: http://www.bakemycake.ie  Phone: 00353 1 2784478.  The shop is open, Monday – Friday: 8.00a.m. – 6.00p.m. and Saturday: 10.00a.m. – 4.00p.m.

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♥ Vegetarian Supper



My five-day detox in June (see here) left me feeling so energized that I decided to devote this week to another dose of healthy eating.  The ideal was no wheat, dairy, sugar, alcohol, caffeine or meat.  I have to confess that I racked up: one coffee, a few cups of tea with *whispers* milk, a delicious square of apricot sponge cooked by a friend and oh two glasses of wine this evening.  Oops.  I don’t feel too bad about my breakouts as in the main this week eats were über healthy.  Tonight I made a dish that I have christened, roasted vegetable, goat’s cheese and chickpea bake.  Here’s the recipe, which makes two/three portions.


INGREDIENTS

One small onion finely chopped

400g can of chopped tomatoes

Two cloves of garlic very finely chopped

Handful of basil

Two medium courgettes cut into bite sized chunks

Two red peppers cut into bite sized chunks

70g goat’s cheese diced

Handful of chopped walnuts

Half the contents of a 410g can of chick peas drained and washed

2 handfuls of breadcrumbs (I used spelt bread)

Grated zest of one lemon

Handful of parsley

Salt and pepper

Olive oil

METHOD

First pre heat the oven to 180°C.  Saute the onion in a frying pan in some olive oil until translucent, then add the garlic and cook for a further two minutes (don’t be tempted to throw the garlic in at the start, as garlic burns easily).  Add the tin of tomatoes with salt and pepper to taste and leave to simmer over a low heat for thirty minutes, towards the end of the thirty minutes throw in the handful of basil leaves.  When the thirty minutes are up, take the pan off the hob and allow to cool for a few minutes before whizzing to a smooth sauce in a food processor.  Taste and adjust the seasoning as necessary, if the sauce is too acidic you might like to add a teaspoon or so of sugar.  While the sauce is simmering on the hob toss the chopped vegetables in olive oil and put them in a roasting tin and pop in the oven until the vegetables are soft  (approx 30- 40 minutes).  When the vegetables are cooked, mix in the diced goat’s cheese, chickpeas and chopped walnuts and gently fold in the tomatoe sauce.  Make the topping by mixing the chopped parsley and lemon zest into the breadcrumbs.  Transfer the vegetable, chickpea and goat’s cheese mix into  a baking dish, top  with the breadcrumb mix and place in the oven until heated through (approx 20 – 25 minutes).



This dish was an experiment and it tasted good but next time I think I will try adding a couple of tablespoons of pesto to the tomatoe sauce.

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♥ Raspberry Road



I had a kaleidoscope of pleasing, peaceful, pastoral images floating around my mind as the car climbed the hilly, twisty road en route to the raspberry farm.  I had never been there before so I imagined, I would be wandering among the raspberry canes idly picking fruit while simultaneous gazing at the misty mountains and admiring the verdant fields in the middle distance.

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♥ Blueberry, Raspberry and Strawberry Cobbler



This recipe for blueberry, raspberry and strawberry cobbler is from Tamasin’s Kitchen Bible; one of Tamasin Day -Lewis’s excellent cookery books.  She describes cobbler as ‘a sort of pie with a scone-like crust’.  I made it tonight to celebrate the start of the Bank Holiday weekend (in Ireland). It’s easy to make and it tastes delicious, so delicious that I ate two helpings!

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♥ Cornucopia



Cornucopia is the answer; the question was where do you eat in Dublin when you are detoxing.  I only discovered it a few years ago but Cornucopia has been around for a quarter of a century, starting off as a health food shop with a few tables to the back for eating at, then morphing into a café/restaurant.  Cornucopia has expanded over the years and now occupies the ground floor space of two building on Wicklow Street and there are plans to open the first and second floors of the buildings, later this year, for dining, catering and arts events.

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♥ Detox Days



Two things have given this weeks shopping basket a green and healthy look.  Firstly when I put on a pair of my jeans, I discovered that they fitted to perfection; this was not good news.  You see in the two years since I bought them, I have bemoaned the fact that I got the wrong size and that they were too loose, that is until now.  Secondly my energy levels have been low and I suspected it was time to take a closer look at what I am eating and that the day had dawned for a change of direction on the food front.

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♥ Orange Breakfast Bars



This Sunday’s weather made it very difficult to believe that we are just ten days away from Midsummer.  The sky was dull and dark in these parts and misty, gauzy, grey rain floated incessantly to the ground.  A soft day!  To cheer myself up this evening I did a spot of comfort baking and whizzed up a batch of orange and cinnamon breakfast bars, for the freezer.  The recipe comes from Jane Clarke’s book  Body Foods for Life.

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♥ Coffee in Dublin//Three: Bibi’s Cafe



The culinary deities have been kind to the denizens of Dublin 8, as there is a delightful café called Bibi’s in the neighbourhood, which serves breakfast and lunch on weekdays and brunch at the weekend.

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♥ Chocolate Guinness Cake



I suspect the grand panjandrum, whoever he or she is, in charge at Diageo’s (owners of Guinness) marketing department, may have been mostly occupied these past ten days with ordering in cases of celebratory champagne. The reason?  On a recent state visit to Ireland the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh watched a master class in how to pull a pint of Guinness.  A short few days later Barrack Obama also on a visit to Ireland was pictured downing a pint of the black stuff. These images have appeared in media outlets worldwide; a marketer’s dream and the type of publicity that no amount of money can buy.

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