I so wanted to copy the GBBO format and give you a floral themed (sorry, botanical) bake and well, I ended up kind of giving you something botanical. This is my classic lemon tart. I love this recipe so much. It uses my never fail pastry I often bang on about. I hope you like it. READ MORE
So I’m taking on some kind of personal blogging challenge. I’ve decided to post a recipe a day every weekday until Christmas eve. I may not make it, in fact it’s highly likely something related to looking after three kids and preparing for Christmas at the same time might get in the way. But I’m going to give it a good go.
Here’s the first recipe. This tart is always loved by everyone. The pastry is easy to handle, the filling chocolately without being too sweet. This is my alternative Christmas dessert on the big day, as you can make it 2 days in advance and crack on with something else.
More recipes like this in my book, Recipes from a Normal Mum, out now… on Amazon, at Waterstones, WHSmith, The Book Depository and many smaller outlets.
I made a lovely video with the Scoff folks to show off how to make this tart. You can see the vid on my YouTube channel and also the Scoff one. You can watch it below too.
Last December: My slow cooker beef bourguignon pie and Crumble topped mince pies and a very ugly but delicious cranberry & raspberry traybake
Two years ago: Mini Yorkshire pudding canapes and Christmas pudding fizz and Brandy butter icing and Rudolf morsels
Three years ago: Lime meringue pie with chocolate pastry and Christmas scones and Ginger cake with Christmas cottage and Hot chocolate on a stick
Four years ago: Moonuts and Cheese biscuits and Parsnip soup and Inauthentic chicken tagine
Chocolate ganache tart with my most well behaved pastry
Ingredients:
Pastry:
Ganache:
Make the pastry by rubbing the butter into the flour and icing sugar (use hands/food processor or stand mixer on speed 1/2 using flat beater) until you have a breadcrumb like consistency. Then bind together with the egg using either a blunt knife or the flat beater at speed 1 on the stand mixer. Once you have clumps of pastry pulling together, use your hands to gather into a ball. Wrap in clingfilm and chill in the fridge for 30 minutes.
Roll the pastry to a thickness of about 3mm and line a 23cm loose bottomed tart tin with it. (I move the pastry by laying both hands under the pastry with palms upwards and fingers spread wide.) Make sure the pastry is pushed into the corners, then run the rolling pin over the top of the tart tin to trim the pastry edges. Line the pastry with greaseproof paper and fill with baking beans/uncooked rice or pulses. Bake in a preheated 180C/Gas 4 oven for 15 minutes then remove the beans and paper and bake until lightly golden brown and baked through. Remove from the oven and allow to cool but leave in the tin.
Make the ganache by boiling the cream in a small saucepan until just boiling. Do not allow to boil for long or the ganache will be grainy. Then add the butter and chocolate and stir until completely smooth. Pour into your blind baked pastry case and leave to set, either on the side at room temperature overnight for a soft set. Or in the fridge which is a lot faster and achieves a hard set. If you use the fridge method the tart will lose a little of its shine though taste not compromised.
P.S. To sign up for my free monthly newsletter just click here. It has a baking SOS, recommendations on bits of kit I can’t live without, my kitchen catastrophe of the month, a sneak preview of a recipe coming up on this blog and a letter from me telling you what I’ve been up to. Remember to check your inbox for a confirmation email and also to add my email recipesfromanormalmum@gmail.com to your contacts. Otherwise I could go to spam.
So youthful types get a bad press in general, no? I know I find myself crossing the road from large groups of teens, as if they’re a dangerous species, liable to snap and scratch. We’re conditioned to think of teens as feral, difficult and just plain bad. Well, I feel guilty about my presumptions after my experience with a carriage of silver drunks at the weekend.
A large group of men all over the age of 55 monopolised the carriage. (Actually, I am being kind. They were 60 if they were a day). They were very, very drunk. So far down the path to a a hangover that they couldn’t stand without help. They were shouting, swearing and I’m afraid to tell you, vomiting. One man, a delightful specimen, was telling the whole carriage what a dreadful woman his wife was. Guess who picked him up at the station?
The teenage girl next to me sat reading a classic novel, earphones in, occasionally rolling her eyes. I’m not sure whether to be impressed at their joie de vivre or appalled as she was. The only answer to the trauma of this very long journey of being terrorised by inebriated middle aged men was to make a batch of these brownies just as soon as I got home.
Lots more recipes like this in my book, Recipes from a Normal Mum, out now… on Amazon, at Waterstones, Morrisons, Waitrose, The Book Depository and many smaller outlets.
One year ago: Hazelnut cupcakes with Nutella buttercream and Red root reblochon bake and Simple banana cake
Two years ago: Cherry tomato frittata and Lemon brioche or Death by chocolate cake
Three years ago: Tiramisu profiteroles and Drunken cherry brandy mincemeat or Macarons
Four years ago: Easy cheesy pasta and Almond coated chicken and Mince pies for mince pie haters
Makes 12 brownies or one larger traybake
Gluten free black forest brownies
Ingredients:
Preheat the oven to 180C/gas mark 4. Line a 25 x 20cm tin with non-stick paper. Drain the tinned cherries and discard the syrup then heat in a small pan with 2 tbsp of the kirsch for 3 minutes, stirring continuously. Remove from the heat and set aside.
Place 325g chocolate and the butter into a medium saucepan and heat on a very low heat, stirring all the time until dissolved and molten then remove from the heat. (If you are worried about the chocolate going grainy then use the bain marie method). Put the rest of the chocolate in the fridge.
Add the vanilla extract, both sugars, almonds, the eggs and the tinned cherries to the molten chocolate and butter and stir well. Pour into the tin and bake for 25 – 30 minutes until the top of the brownie has formed a crust but there’s still a little squidge left in the middle. (The sides will be a little better cooked.) It may have puffed up a bit but will sink after removing from the oven. Cool on a wire rack still in the tin until completely cool.
Once cooled spread the top with a very thin layer of conserve, ensuring you spread all the way to the edges. Then whip the double cream with the icing sugar to medium peaks. Spread over the top of the jam covered brownie. Make some chocolate shavings with the refrigerated dark chocolate by pushing a sharp non serrated knife across the top. Decorate with fresh stalk-on cherries and chocolate shavings.
Slice with a hot knife (dipped in boiling water) for perfect little squares.
P.S. To sign up for my free monthly newsletter just click here. It has a baking SOS, recommendations on bits of kit I can’t live without, my kitchen catastrophe of the month, a sneak preview of a recipe coming up on this blog and a letter from me telling you what I’ve been up to. Remember to check your inbox for a confirmation email and also to add my email recipesfromanormalmum@gmail.com to your contacts. Otherwise I could go to spam.
We all know that swiss rolls (that’s the cakery variety of rolled desserts) can cause all manner of issues. *Thinks back to the one particular tech challenge where we all laughed as we lined up our cracked and sorry looking chocolate roulade offerings* But meringue roulades, well they’re so much easier to make. They’re softer, more forgiving. This one is nigh on perfect for a Boxing Day pudding.
One year ago: Mini Yorkshire pudding canapes and Christmas pudding fizz and Brandy butter icing and Rudolf morsels
Two years ago: Lime meringue pie with chocolate pastry and Christmas scones and Ginger cake with Christmas cottage and Hot chocolate on a stick
Three years ago: Moonuts and Cheese biscuits and Parsnip soup and Inauthentic chicken tagine
Lemon, white choc & raspberry roulade
Serves 8 – 10
Ingredients:
(3 large egg whites)
Preheat the oven to Gas 4/180C and then line a swiss roll tin (23cm x 30cm) with non stick greaseproof paper. I use Sainsbury’s white stuff and stick to the sides of the tin with a little butter to make sure it doesn’t sag into the meringue whilst it’s baking. Then whip the egg whites up with a whisk/hand held mixer/stand mixer with whisk attachment until stiff looking. Then add the sugar in 1 tbsp at a time, whisking well after each addition until the mixture looks thick, stiff and glossy. Spoon into the tin, smooth over until level and bake for 15 minutes until you get a crisp shell on the top. Then leave to cool.
Once cool take another piece of greaseproof paper the same size at the one you lined the tin with. Dust the top of your meringue with some icing sugar, place the other piece of greaseproof paper on the top, place a chopping board on top of that and holding the edges firm with both hands, flip the tin upside down and place on a worktop so that the new piece of paper is underneath the meringue that’s still in the tin. Then give the tray a little wiggle until the meringue drops out onto the new paper, complete with old baked on greaseproof paper stuck to it still.
Gingerly peel the baked on paper off the meringue. My meringue tore a little but no matter, cream hides a multitude of sins. If you are concerned the meringue is undercooked, (this could happen if you have used a smaller tin and so the meringue thickness was greater than it should be) you can place the meringue back in the oven at this point, undercooked side up, on top of the greaseproof paper. Just for 5 minutes mind. To bake the top.
Whip the double cream with a whisk/handheld mixer until thick but not completely solid, then spread over the meringue evenly, leaving a half centimetre gap at the sides. Then spread lemon curd over the roulade, add the raspberries and then sprinkle evenly with the grated white chocolate, (saving a small amount for decorating the top,) though not sprinkling at the very edges of the meringue. Then you are ready to roll.
Take one of the short sides of the meringue and roll the edge over tightly… then continue to roll firmly until you reach the end. Some people prefer to use fingers, some use the greaseproof paper. You’ll work out what kind of roller you are. Pop on a serving plate and dust with a little more icing sugar and add chocolate to decorate the top.
I’m from Leicester and it’s not somewhere people seem to be proud to be from. Possibly being a Midlands city it suffers from a lack of north/south divide identity tension. We have no-one to hate, to ridicule. So we sit merrily in the middle not being angry about location because we’re quite literally stuck in the middle of things.
Given that I don’t have that puffed up chest ‘I am northern/southern, hear me roar!’ thing going on, I have always embraced my British identity. And there is nothing more British than strawberries and cream. We simply love the stuff don’t we? Make sure you spend the extra on good strawberries for these, they’re the star of the show after all.
One year ago: Clementine cake and Macadamia and white chocolate shortbread
Two years ago: Teacher’s pet chocolate and hazelnut oaty biscuits and Spelt loaf and Vanilla cupcakes
Three years ago: Restorative chicken and leek risotto
Strawberries & cream cupcakes
Makes 12
Ingredients:
Preheat the oven to 180C/gas mark 4 and prepare a 12 hole cupcake tin with cases. Beat the flour, sugar, baking powder, butter, vanilla and eggs using the KitchenAid flatbeater or a wooden spoon until really light in colour and fluffy looking. This takes about 4 minutes in the mixer. Add the freeze dried strawberries and beat in for 30 seconds then divide the mixture into 12 cupcake cases equally. Bake in the centre of the oven for 20 minutes until well risen and a toothpick comes out of the middle of the cakes clean. Leave to cool out of the tin on a wire rack.
Once cool take an apple corer and remove the centre of the sponge from each cupcake. Push the corer in and twist but not all the way to the bottom – you want a little sponge left in the base. Remove the sponge and eat/discard then fill the hole with strawberry jam or EasiYo strawberry fruit squirt. Use a teaspoon if you don’t have a squeezy pouch to use.
Pipe whipped cream on the top and adorn with a ruby red strawberry and there you have it – Britishness in a cupcake. Serve immediately and then keep in the fridge if they’re not all gobbled up.
I am almost never late. I hate lateness for all the reasons anyone might do. It implies a certain sense of importance… that the late person somehow thinks their time is so much more important than the poor person waiting. It’s plain rude. And yet here I am with a late recipe. I could tell you I’ve been working every day until silly o’clock recently. Or I could tell you that I’m not feeling so good. Or I could just stop making excuses and get on with the recipe. The late recipe. Here she is… ta da! I hope she was worth waiting for.
Comments, as always, welcomed.
One year ago: Baileys chocolate fridge cake truffles and Experimental banana loaf
Two years ago: Cherry, white choc and apricot biscuits and Reeses’ inspired chocolate and peanut tart andSesame, quinoa and carrot salad
Pecan & banoffee mini pavlovas
Makes about 7 but depends how large you make your mini pavs.
Whisk your egg whites until beginning to hold their peaks. Then whisk in 1 teaspoon of the castor sugar at a time. I know this is laborious but if you rush it and throw the lot in you’re less likely to make sure it all dissolves into the egg and you might end up with weeping meringue. Might.
Once the sugar’s all in, the mixture should look really white and glossy, then add in the cornflour and white wine vinegar. Whisk again. The combination of these ingredients makes for a mallowy chewy middle to your meringue so whilst they’re desirable they’re not a reason to run to the local shops if you don’t have them. Then use a metal spoon to very gently fold in 50g of the crushed pecan nuts. Don’t stir or use your mixer as if you do the meringue collapses.
Pop some foil or baking parchment on a baking tray, fixing it down with a little sticky meringue. Then spoon about 2 heaped tablespoons of the meringue onto the foil/parchment to make each nest. You can leave in a big snowy heap or use your fingers and the back of a teaspoon to slightly hollow out the middle for holding double cream later. Up to you. (You can squash the meringues after baking instead to make a pocket for the cream if you prefer, but they will crack as you do this.) Then sprinkle another 20g of the crushed pecans over the top of the meringues.
Bake at the bottom and on the middle shelf of a preheated oven at 140C. (For these are the coolest areas of most ovens and we’re trying to dry these meringues out, not bake them so that they brown.) As soon as they go into the oven turn it down to about 100C, or 90C for a fan. Then after 45 minutes turn the oven off entirely but don’t open it.
About 35 minutes into baking I tend to open the oven door and have a little prod to make sure the oven has worked it’s magic and the outsides of the meringue are hard. If not they need a little longer than the aforementioned 45 minutes. Then I DO NOT OPEN the oven for the last ten minutes of baking. I turn the oven off and then leave the little snowy meringues to slowly come to room temperature for a few hours. Easier to just make these last thing at night and leave them until the morning in your oven.
Once completely cold I fill with whipped cream, sliced bananas (dipped in lemon juice if not serving immediately to stop any browning) and toffee sauce, oh and more pecans. Both crushed and whole. This is a serious dessert for people who are serious about things like cream, sugar and nuts.
Recently I made a lot of macarons. I’m talking 93 wedding favours worth, with two macarons in each. That’s four shells per favour. If my maths is right then I made 372 shells, which is a lot of piping and boiling of sugar, even for me.
My lovely friends Helena and Sam have been together for over a decade and so have the luggage set and the linen and the cutlery. They need no new toaster in their life. I didn’t want to give them a cheque and so suggested over a bottle of wine that I give them macaron wedding favours as a gift. Little did I know when I offered that I’d be sent on a training course the week before the wedding. Leaving exactly 12 hours from getting home to when I needed to deliver all the favours, wrapped and named. The only answer was to freeze them all 2 weeks in advance.
So I used my chocolate macaron recipe and then made two different flavour ganaches. I’m going to have to be honest here and admit that I am estimating how much ganache you might need to fill just 30 shells, obviously for the macaron wedding production line I made huge quantities.
So for the strawberries and cream macarons I boiled 100mls double cream until it just started to bubble, then added 200g of white chocolate that had been finely chopped, plus 1 tsp strawberry flavouring. Using a teaspoon I mixed the ganache up until all the chocolate had melted, then added a dot of the pink Sugarflair food colouring. That stuff is potent so I really did only use the tiniest dot from the end of a toothpick. You can’t take the colour away after all.
Then I mixed it all up, transferred to a bowl and let the ganache solidify until it was still malleable but not too thick to pipe – spoonable rather than pourable. The fridge can help with this solidifying process but beware leaving it for too long without a stir or you’ll have rock solid ganache at the edges of your bowl and liquid in the middle. (The mint ganache was made in exactly the same way; 100mls double cream, 200g white chocolate, 1 tsp mint flavouring and a dot of green colouring.)
When both the ganaches were pipeable I transferred into two easygrip piping bags fitted with plain nozzles and filled half the macaron shells using a circular motion. I carefully sandwiched the macarons together, popped them onto large platters and let them sit in the fridge for 2 hours until the filling was rock solid. Then I transferred to freezer bags, being careful not to overfill and squeeze too many into one bag. Straight into the freezer they went and so I continued until the lot were bagged up and ready to go.
On the eve of the wedding I removed all the macs from the freezer and Mr B and I set about bagging them all up in their frozen state. Once bagged and named the macs placed on a tray. 93 favours later Mr B drove very slowly to the venue with tray upon tray in the boot. I knew there was a reason we bought a 7 seater! The macs sat in the cellar of the venue overnight so were nice and cold but defrosted by the time the wedding party sat down to lunch.
The bride and groom seemed to like them. The groom did grab Mr B and I on the way out, saying ‘I don’t know what they’re called, I call them little burgers, anyway, I like them.’ I like a man who likes little burgers.
Things I have learnt:
– Don’t put the filled macs straight into the freezer as the filling isn’t hard enough to take being pushed about a bit in bags. The macs become misshapen which is a shame when they’re so painstaking. Refrigerate them first.
– Don’t use liquid food colourings if you want your ganache to set. They change the ratio of liquid to chocolate too much and you’ll have runny ganache.
– Don’t try and pipe the ganache before it’s really thick. It’s pretty annoying to see it spill out all over the mac shells and onto the counter.
– Pair up your mac shells into similar sizes before you start piping and you’ll make the whole process a lot quicker.
– Think about fridge space before you start (and freezer space for that matter) – we had some interesting unidentified dinners all in the aid of clearing space for the wedding macs.
– Tying ribbon around cellophane is a two man job. You need one to scrunch the cellophane up and another to tie the ribbon.
– Don’t stack macs on top of each other when they are setting in the fridge pre being frozen. They can’t stand the weight of each other and slip-slide about.
– Don’t stack frozen macs on each other once they’re all bagged up into favours. As they defrost they’ll cave under the weight.
– Find a place for the packaged up macs to defrost that’s reasonably cool. Not next to a radiator for instance. All that lovely ganache needs to defrost slowly and to a cool room temperature. If you’re lucky enough to have very hot weather for your wedding then think about defrosting the packaged up favours in the fridge over 24 hours. And your neighbour’s fridge. And your cousin’s fridge… all depends on the size of the wedding I guess.
– Expect the usual hardness of the mac shell to be compromised a little after the freezing process. I think Paul Hollywood might have been critical of my wedding mac shells, few could take the finger flick test. They tasted okay though.
– Do not be upset if you see any of your macs left behind, or worse still, half eaten and discarded. You can’t please all of the people all of the time. It’s fine. One man’s heaven is another’s hell and all that.
– If I were going to make macs for another pal I think I’d go for chocolate shells with a chocolate and caramel filling. Like a Cadbury’s Caramel.
– It took about 5 hours to make all the mac shells. In case anyone’s interested. That was with dry time of the uncooked mac shells, two ovens going and baking trays of 16 shells at a time.
I hope this post is helpful to anyone thinking of making a lot of macs for any reason, be it wedding or otherwise. HUGE thanks to Scott for letting me use this photo from the day. His work can be seen here.
I’m drawn to really posh people. Like some kind of social anthropologist, I study them and make mental notes of their nuances and foibles. I’ve even been out with some posh boys in my time. To really experience the posh thing first hand. It always ended in disaster. A Holly and a Piers does not a match in heaven maketh.
I once worked with a really posh girl. She was so posh she played tennis at The Hurlingham Club and ate cottage cheese laced with pineapple for lunch without a trace of irony. She also had the best stomach of any woman I have ever seen. I know this as she often showed people. This part isn’t fundamental to the story, I just wanted to paint as full a picture as possible.
Once she even came into work once with a story of staying up until 2am at a dinner party playing a game where the winner was the one who balanced the most CDs on their nipples. I loved this story. If I suggested something like this at a dinner party I’d be asked to leave, if my posh ex-colleague suggested it everyone would think her fun. Such it the lottery of birth.
This was the thing I most admired about Posh Girl. Her appetite for fun. One Friday she was even more exhausted than usual from her super-busy social life and told me she was about to decline an invitation to a party when her Mother (for she lived at home) instructed her she simply must go. She went on to paint a picture of the most alien variety of Mother I had ever heard of. Her Mother was of the belief that one should always say yes in life.
I am now a Mum and every day I try to channel a little of Posh Girl’s Mother. This pudding is what I think she might make at one of her supper parties.
Serves 8ish or 4 pigs
Inspired by this recipe
Ingredients:
– 120g Two Chicks egg whites
– 200g caster sugar
– 150mls double cream
– half a pack of strawberry jelly made up to packet instructions and left to set, then scrambled up with a fork
– 10 strawberries, washed and chopped into 1cm-ish pieces
– a little icing sugar
Right, this is easy. Honest it is. It just looks hard.
Preheat the oven to Gas 4/180C and then line a swiss roll tin (23cm x 30cm) with non stick greaseproof paper. I use Sainsbury’s white stuff and stick to the sides of the tin with a little butter to make sure it doesn’t sag into the meringue whilst it’s baking. Then whip the egg whites up with a whisk/hand held mixer/stand mixer with whisk attachment until stiff looking. Then add the sugar in 1 tbsp at a time, whisking well after each addition until the mixture looks thick, stiff and glossy. Spoon into the tin, smooth over until level and bake for 15 minutes until you get a crisp shell on the top. Then leave to cool.
Once cool take another piece of greaseproof paper the same size at the one you lined the tin with. Dust the top of your meringue with some icing sugar, place the other piece of greaseproof paper on the top, place a chopping board on top of that and holding the edges firm with both hands, flip the tin upside down and place on a worktop so that the new piece of paper is underneath the meringue that’s still in the tin. Then give the tray a little wiggle until the meringue drops out onto the new paper, complete with old baked on greaseproof paper stuck to it still.
Gingerly peel the baked on paper off the meringue. My meringue tore a little but no matter, cream hides a multitude of sins. If you are concerned the meringue is undercooked, (this could happen if you have used a smaller tin and so the meringue thickness was greater than it should be) you can place the meringue back in the oven at this point, undercooked side up, on top of the greaseproof paper. Just for 5 minutes mind. To bake the top.
Whip the double cream with a whisk/handheld mixer until thick but not completely solid, then spread over the meringue evenly, leaving a half centimetre gap at the sides. Then sprinkle the jelly and strawberries evenly over the roulade, though not sprinkling them at the very edges of the meringue. Then you are ready to roll.
Take one of the short sides of the meringue and roll the edge over tightly… then continue to roll firmly until you reach the end. Some people prefer to use fingers, some use the greaseproof paper. You’ll work out what kind of roller you are. Pop on a serving plate and dust with a little more icing sugar. Serve with ice-cream if you can bear it.
I love Christmas. I adore everything tinselly and trashy about it. I embrace all that the food-marketing man throws at me, as if Jesus himself had decreed that red cups, real glass Coca Cola bottles, Chocolate Oranges, large tubs of strong cheesy smelling snacks, chocolate shaped bearded old-men and Twiglets are all essential to celebrating his birthday. Add a Babysham to this smorgasbord and I’m like a pig in mud. Or rather a Holly in fizz.
There does come a point though, deep in the calorific excesses of Christmas where we all say enough is enough and pronounce that We. Can’t. Eat. Another. Thing. If you’re anything like me this basically signals a 3 hour amnesty from opening the fridge or the chocolate tin. Come 11pm, you’ll be eating the Chocolate Brazil Roses chocolates as a palate cleanser, between your turkey sandwich and the remnants of the trifle, with the best of them. You see, until it’s all gone from the house, you can’t relax. It’s just part of the Christmas rules.
Other Christmas rules include:
– Regressing to your childhood casting role. You may be altruistic to the core now, but if you were a spoilt brat in your teens, you can bet it’ll come bubbling back to your surface come the festive holiday. Go with it. It’s a once yearly treat.
– Promising yourself you’ll open your presents slowly, thus savouring and spreading the enjoyment throughout the day, then finding yourself surrounded by packaging and paper by 9am and a little disappointed at how much smaller the present pile looks, post the opening flurry.
– In spite of wanting and possibly needing to diet after Christmas, to firstly eat up every last cream related, chocolate and cheesy morsel in the house, just to relieve yourself of the temptation mind.
This cake is my helpful attempt at finding a place for all that festive chocolate and cream, whether it came as a selection box or a tin of Quality Street, or Roses or dare I say it, the non-traditional choice of a box of Celebrations. Your tinned choice of chocolate says an awful lot about you. But that’s for another day.
Ingredients for the cake:
– 225g self raising flour
– 2 level tsp baking powder
– Pinch of salt
– 175g Stork margarine
– 175g caster sugar
– 75g dark chocolate (or frankly whatever Christmas chocolate you have knocking about- just not with bits in it please)
– 1 tbsp whole milk
– 4 eggs
Ingredients for the filling:
– 200mls double cream
– Lots of Christmas chocolates chopped into 2cm pieces
Ingredients for the icing and decoration:
– 200ml double cream left over from trifle making activities
– 200g Christmas chocolate for melting – pref without any nuts or bits in it. Chocolate orange would work, or a Dairy Milk slab.
– Lots of Christmas chocolates, from coins to after eights to chocolate oranges
Preheat the oven to Gas 5/190C and check the rack is in the middle of the oven. Spray two 20ish cm tins with cake release spray or grease and line. Set aside. Melt the chocolate and milk in a bowl in the microwave and set aside to cool. Sieve the flour, salt and baking powder into a large bowl. Take another large bowl and cream together the Stork and sugar with an electric handheld mixer until lighter than when you started and creamy in appearance. Then add the cooled, melted chocolate and the eggs and mix again. Fold in the flour mixture with a metal spoon and divide between the two tins. Bake for about 20 minutes until well risen and a toothpick comes out of the centre of the cake clean. Turn the cakes out onto a wire rack and leave to cool.
Make the ganache by boiling the cream in a small pan then adding the finely chopped chocolate and stirring madly until it’s smooth and combined. Set aside to cool and thicken. If you’re impatient this can be speeded up in the fridge.
Whip the cream to medium peaks with a handheld electric mixer and add the chopped Christmas chocolate – this is the surprise element of the cake if you hadn’t already guessed. Pop one of your cake sponges onto the serving platter/plate you’re using, then fill the centre of the cake with the whipped cream surprise . Add the top sponge.
When the ganache is almost set, use it to ice the cake using a knife to encourage it over the top and sides. Add various leftover chocolate bars to the top, so that it looks like a selection pack explosion. Serve with a smile and perhaps small plates. If there’s any left over remember to keep this cake in the fridge. Food poisoning should only come from turkey at Christmas, not cream cake.
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P.S. To sign up for my free monthly newsletter just click here. It has a baking SOS, recommendations on bits of kit I can’t live without, my kitchen catastrophe of the month, a sneak preview of a recipe coming up on this blog and a letter from me telling you what I’ve been up to.
Remember to check your inbox for a confirmation email and also to add my email recipesfromanormalmum@gmail.com to your contacts. Otherwise I could go to spam.