Monday, 26 October 2020

Cinammon Cake With Peanut Butter Buttercream


I haven't updated in a while - blogger changed their interface and writing new posts with pictures has become a real drag. I will do better!

Starting with this cake of dreams. I don't know about everyone else, but sometimes I just get a massive craving for cake. It's not that often, and when it happens, I usually default to my all-time favourite - mocha walnut cake (it seriously is my favourite, first posted all the way back in 2013 and rarely do I make a better cake).

But I saw an instagram post for peanut butter buttercream and I just had to try it. I really didn't want the hassle of a three tier, frosted, epic cake situation so I made a really simple sheet cake and bunged a load of frosting on top.


And it was INSANELY delicious.

I make a really nice peanut butter cookie that is rolled in cinnamon sugar - so I thought a light yellow sponge with a hint of cinnamon running through it would be a really nice but unusual pairing. It worked beautifully - but I think the chocolate sponge from my Oreo cake would also be amazing.


makes enough for a rectangular sheet cake (my tin is approx 25x17cm) and I got 4 spare cupcakes

Ingredients for the cake

  • 325g plain flour
  • 25g cornflour
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • pinch salt
  • 230g butter, softened
  • 150g granulated sugar
  • 150g packed brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp vanilla sugar or 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 240ml buttermilk (or regular milk with 1 tbsp lemon juice)
  • 80ml sour cream
  • 3 large eggs

Ingredients for the buttercream

  • 230g butter, room temp
  • 80g peanut butter, room temp
  • 440g icing sugar
  • 25g cocoa powder
  • 3 tbsp milk or double cream
  • pinch salt
  • Sprinkles, to finish


Method

Preheat the oven to 170 degrees C.

Begin with the cake - mix the flour, cornflour, cinnamon, baking powder and salt together and set aside.

In a smaller bowl, mix the milk, sour cream and eggs.

In another, larger bowl, beat together the butter, sugars and vanilla until lighter and slightly fluffy.

Add 1/3 of the flour mixture and mix well, and then add 1/3 of the liquid mixture and mix well. Continue to alternate adding the dry and wet ingredients, mixing well after each addition.


Bake for 35 minutes until golden and cooked through (I always check mine with a knife).


While the cake is cooking or cooling, make the buttercream.

Whip the butter for a few minutes, then add the icing sugar, cocoa powder, milk and beat again. Finally, add in the peanut butter and salt and beat until combined. You can always add a little more icing sugar if its too runny, or more milk if its too stiff.


When the cake is cooled, pipe or spoon your icing on top, however you do it, and throw on some sprinkles if you're into that.


Slice and eat! Delicious!

Sunday, 27 September 2020

Tahini Chocolate Chip Cookies


Am on a cookie binge these days. These are SO GOOD. I love the rich flavour of sesame in basically anything - so why not cookies!



And the addition of tahini makes a regular chocolate chip cookie into a buttery, savoury, beautifully rich cookie.


And these cookies are really easy to make. I love cookie recipes where you chill the dough overnight, because when you're ready to bake them the next day, it's about 30 minutes from rolling the cookies to eating the (warm) cookies. DREAMY!

Sunday, 13 September 2020

Creamy Peppercorn Sauce




Sometimes you just get weird cravings for stuff. I was never really into peppercorn sauce until recently, and the other day I just HAD to have some. I didn't have steak or anything on hand, but I had all the ingredients for peppercorn sauce, so I roasted some chicken and threw it on top.

The next time, I would serve this my absolute favourite way - potato bread on the bottom, sliced steak on top, sauce all over.

There's not really many pictures of this because it's just that easy. Put everything in a pot. Cook it for a bit. Pour it over food.

Thursday, 27 August 2020

Stacked Brownies


Stacks on stacks on STACKS.

Can’t decide whether you want a cookie or a brownie? I'm here to say "why not both?" It's building up to be another wet weekend, so sweet comfort foods seem smart.



These are some multi-layered brownie ridiculousness. Make a soft but sticky cookie dough, then top it with a layer of Oreos and THEN over the top of that pour over a silky smooth brownie batter.

Bake it. Eat it. Weep.


I have heard people put all sorts in the middle of the two layers, including peanut butter cups (YUM!). I've been thinking a lot about this - a distinctly delicious UK twist would be to use custard creams in place of the Oreos. Or even better, the king of biscuits, BOURBON CREAMS.

 

Monday, 3 August 2020

Chewy Ginger Nuts




I bought a tin of dark treacle ages ago when I had a craving for Jamaican ginger cake and then it just sat sadly at the back of my cupboard, unused.

But then I was spending a Sunday trawling through my recipe books for inspiration and I found a killer recipe for chewy ginger biscuits. I made a few subs to get my treacle in there and they came out PERFECTLY. Really soft but with crisp edges. Sweet but dark. Ridiculously flavourful. Hella delicious.

I love a crackle-top cookie!

Bake and enjoy! They are perfect for a little snack, but I am also picturing a dessert featuring them slightly warmed, with vanilla ice-cream on top and then drizzled with chopped nuts/honey and thinking that would be INCREDIBLE.

Saturday, 18 July 2020

Japanese Milk Bread Loaf




Okay I hope you lovely people are finding yeast because you have to try making this bread.



This dough is obscene. It’s silky and smooth. It is a dream to work with and cooks like a dream. This reminds me of a brioche dough, but with a traditional roux starter, or tangzhong.

Peaking on my little resting dough babies

This is a little time consuming but really is my ideal way to spend a weekend. It would also make amaaaazing French toast which is a great Sunday brunch food.





Wednesday, 1 July 2020

Ras El Hanout Baked Chicken



This is a perfect midweek “throw it all in one pot and cook” dish which packs the most ridiculous flavour punch while being the most low-effort dinner I’ve made in a while. You could use skin-on chicken thighs (use 8) but I don’t really like those.



Ras-El-Hanout is a fabulous mix of spices. I got mine from a little deli, but I’m sure I’ve seen it in world food aisles of bigger grocery shops. It means “head of the shop” and is usually made up of the best of spices. The exact spices and quantities are not set in stone, but usually combine all of the delicious ones – cumin, coriander, cinnamon, ginger, turmeric, cardamom etc. Mine had rose petals in it too!



This is a full on one pot dish – everything in an oven-proof dish, bake, serve. So quick. So delicious. So what are you waiting for?