Tuesday 24 April 2012

Floral Tea Cupcakes

Like winnie the Pooh i always crave something sweet and delicious, only my craving is not honey but instead it’s cake. So in my mind i start thinking of ways i can satisfy my stomach and get creative at the same time in the kitchen…Then it comes to me a few days earlier i had seen Raspberri Cupcakes post the most cutest cupcakes ever. the colours were so well suited so i thought to myself ‘that gives mr a fantastic idea!’ So here they are my rose  tea cupcakes!








Ingredients:
Cake
6oz Butter/ Margerine
6oz Sugar
60z Self Raising Flour
1 tsp Baking powder (level)
1 tsp Vanilla Essence
3 Eggs
butter Icing
4 1/2 oz Butter
9 oz Icing sugar
1 tbsp Milk
1tsp Vanilla Essence
Food colouring ( i chose pink and blue)
1.In a bowl or mixer combine the sugar and marg together until a pale cream colour and looks fluffy

2. In a jug beat the eggs and slowly add to the sugar and marg mixture. At this point you can also add your flavouring and if you wanted to make the sponge a colour your colouring also.

3. Sift the flour and baking powder into the bowl and gentle combine with the rest of the mixture insuring you don’t beat it too much or the air that will help your cake raise will disappear!

4. spoon mixture into cases and baking for around 20-25 minute at 160 C. Take out and allow to cool before icing.




Now for the icing.
1.  Remove the butter from the fridge 30 minutes before starting.
2.Place in a large mixing bowl and beat at high speed, gradually adding icing sugar (and adding the milk and vanilla about halfway through) and beating until light and fluffy.
3.  Split your icing into different bowls to add the colouring
4. Place in a piping bag and alternate which colour you place in the piping bag. (like below)
5. Pipe icing on top of cupcakes, I used a Wilton 2D nozzle to get the rose shape look.

Hopefully you to will end up with some beautiful cupcakes as well!

Monday 23 April 2012

Tea for Two



As I have grown into adulthood I feel I have aged years! I do a textile degree course where my specialism is knitting and my all time favourite past time is having afternoon tea!


 My all time favourite place to go is Betty’s for afternoon tea and select from their mouth watering spread of enticing cakes. Betty’s always feel like stepping back into the 1920s with its art deco style and prim and proper demeanour. It’s silver gleaming tea service and delicate tea cups make it truly magical!
There are several all based in Yorkshire, England. Fortunately I have been privileged to attend several. Recently I have been up to the one in York town centre when on a special trip for my 21st birthday! Really when visiting York you should go to little Betty’s for a cosy and ambiance but unfortunately due to its size it often too busy to get a seat!  However, not getting into little Betty’s is not the end of the world as there is there other one on the main high street and we queue up eagerly awaiting to be seated at one of the marble tables. It’s ever so quaint!
Being such a special occasion we opted for the more expensive pink champagne afternoon tea, which was absolutely delightful. What came was a selection of bite size sandwiches, on our stand we had roast chicken, egg with cress and cooked ham. 
After our sandwiches we moved on to the beautiful scones with strawberry jam and Cornish clotted cream. Scones we lovely and light and tasted wonderful! Once we had started on the scones we poured the Betty’s tearoom blend tea from the shiny tea pot making sure we used the petite tea strain.  
Finally, reaching the top layer of the stand we nibbled on the divine little cakes. I was defeated after the first bite and asked if they would be kind enough to package them up to take away with me. They reappeared quickly in a lovely little box in a Betty’s paper bag.
If you are in the vicinity of a Betty's Tearoom it is well worth a trip!
For those of you wandering to the location of Betty's Tearooms they can be found here!


Sunday 22 April 2012

Fool Proof

When I was younger it’s safe to say I wasn’t the easiest person to cook for, I was very picky pushing away nutritional food my mum offered me and hope she would present me with a ‘better’ option. This was often bribery with something sweet: “Sweet heart if you eat your pea then you can have some maltesers”. I ate very little and opted always for the sweeter options whenever I could and mum would always fuss over me worried sick that I never ate anything real. However, whenever we went to my aunties it was a very different story!






My Mum’s sister (Auntie Doo Doo as we affectionately call her) has always been a fantastic cook and baker. Going to her for lunch was always an exciting, hoping she had made her famous chocolate flake cake.  We’d usually have some kind of cooked dinner around lunch time which would consist of roasted meat and fresh vegetable and if we were lucky a tradition desert or more than likely cheese and biscuits. About 4:30pm Doo Doo would start to prepare the afternoon tea to fill the gap for the journey home. On a little tea trolley she would lay out the cheese and biscuits from lunch time, a selection of sandwiches which were usually cucumber sandwiches, smoked salmon and roasted meat from lunch sandwiches. There would also be on the trolley a fresh pot of tea, which always had loose tea, leaves in and had to be strained when poured in you delicate tea cups on patterned saucers. Best of all Doo Doo would bring out her freshly baked cakes. Fruit scones with jam and cream and an enormous chocolate cake decorated with flakes on top.
The chocolate flake cake was always perfect, crumbly and oh so chocolaty. It one of those cakes that you can only ever eat one slices of but definitely makes you want to ask for more! When i was older enough to get in the kitchen on my own i ask for the recipe to this famous cake so i could also hold the secret to the famous chocolate flake cake! The secret behind this cake has to be that it’s so simple! There is nothing particularly special about the cake and its method is so simple to follow even a fool could bake it! I occasionally adapt the recipe according to how chocolaty I am feeling, so gradually my Auntie Doo Doo’s cake has evolved. Amongst my friends this cake is legendary, it’s the one all the boys constantly ask me to bake for them and when i suggest something like a Victoria sponge cake they turn their noses up and say “we prefer the chocolate one”. 
So I hear you ask “How do I make this delectable delight?” Lucky for you I am willing to let you into my families’ secret recipe! 

For the Cake:
175g unsalted butter or stalk margarine , at room temperature
175g caster sugar
175g self-raising flour , sifted
50g Coco Powder ( or if you prefer 75g of melted dark chocolate)
1 tsp baking powder 
3 eggs
  1. Heat the oven to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4. Line and butter 2 x 18cm sandwich tins. 
  2. Beat the butter and sugar in a bowl together until a pale cream colour.
  3. sift the cocoa powder and flour into you the other ingredience and with a metal spoon gently fold together.
  4.  Divide the mixture between the tins and level.    
  5. Bake side by side for 20-25 minutes until the sponges are risen, slightly shrunk away from the edge of the tin and spring back when lightly pressed. Leave to cool for 5 minutes then turn out onto a rack and peel off the paper. 
  6. Cool completely before filling.
For The Icing:
128g/4.5oz butter, softened


255g/9oz icing sugar
150g/5oz Dark Chocolate, melted (best if it’s over 60% cocoa solids)


1-2 tbsp milk

  1. To make the buttercream, beat the butter in a large bowl until soft. Add half of the icing sugar and beat until smooth.
  2. Add the remaining icing sugar, melted chocolate and one tablespoon of the milk and beat until creamy. Beat in more milk if necessary to loosen the icing.
So very easy and tastes great! Enjoy!
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