Kitchen Therapy


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Gorgonzola Apple Quiche and Hawaii

We spent two magical, glorious, incredible, fun-filled weeks in Hawaii.

We swam…

We surfed…

We went paddle boarding…

We shopped…

And we shopped some more…

We toured Kualoa ranch on the east coast where Jurassic Park, Lost and Pearl Harbour and were filmed…

My husband loved it here on the east coast of Oahu the  most…

Where the mountains met the coast…

We watched scenes being filmed for Hawaii 5-0 at our hotel… (can you tell my daughter loved this the most!)

And we ate…
Buffet breakfasts, freshly made omelettes filled with vegetables and plate after plate of the sweetest pineapple, papaya, cantaloupe and watermelon you can imagine. Duke’s on Waikiki beach was our favourite breakfast hangout! (pic is of buffet at Hilton Hawaiian Village where we stayed)

We ate Haupia pie on the North Shore at Ted’s Bakery…

Garlic Shrimp and grilled corn at Giovanni’s Shrimp Truck on the East coast…

And we discovered the Cheesecake Factory!

We looooved the Cheesecake Factory!!!!!

Between us all we snapped about 2000 pics on our iphones and ipods.
Flicking through all the photos to get to the pics of the gorgonzola apple quiche has been another bonus to this week’s French Fridays with Dorie!

Coming back was hard. We had such an amazing family holiday we didn’t want to return.
But I have to admit it was nice to get back to into the routine of normal life and I realised how much French Fridays with Dorie has become a part of my life! I hate blue cheese with a passion! But I missed the group and the baking and there was no way I was going to miss another week! I knew I could try a different filling but hey, when will I ever have the opportunity to try gorgonzola and apple quiche in my life! I knew this was the perfect time! Fresh from my adventures in Hawaii I made the quiche…

Along with a salad I found in a magazine for American Cobb Salad (I replaced the blue cheese with Haloumi though!)

My family ate the quiche and we loved the pastry and the filling (without the gorgonzola bits!) What can I say! We are not blue cheese people!

So thank you French Fridays with Dorie for again introducing me to a new taste and allowing me to reminisce over two of the best weeks in my life!!! Can’t wait to see what every one else thought of the gorgonzola apple quiche!


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Bubble Top Brioche

I’m not sure how other countries format their school year but here in Sydney, Australia we have 4 school terms that go for 10 weeks each. The kids have two weeks off school at the end of every 10 week term. Except for Christmas, when they have 6 weeks off school.

We are half way through our Christmas school holidays and next week we leave for 2 weeks in Hawaii! Yay!
I can’t wait! It’s been about 15 years since I was last there and I have such great memories from that trip and now I get to make new ones with my children!

My husband is excited for the opportunity to have a break and spend time with his family.
My 14 year old daughter (who couldn’t wait until January 1st so she could announce that next year she’ll be 16) can’t wait to go to Hawaii so she can get a tan her friends will be jealous of.
My 11 year old son has decided he wants to learn to surf (and befriend the penguins that are at the resort).
And my 4 year old son is just outraged we chose to go to Hawaii over Queensland, where all the theme parks are!

I am looking forward to going to the beach, just like we do here at home…
Without having to clean the sand out of my car or wash the endless stream of beach towels!

So I really wanted to do one last French Fridays with Dorie before we take off for a few weeks.
And as usual I picked the least practical day.
We had a great, but very late night, at an Irish/Italian wedding…


Followed by an early to start to meet friends at the water slides. They slid non stop for 8 hours…

And then, to top it off, a bunch of the boys came back to our house for a sleepover.
At 10.30 that night they settled down to watch Batman so I took this opportunity to start the dough!

I was exhausted but I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed making the dough.
It felt incredibly good and satisfying.

The next morning I finished the recipe and they returned from the park having discovered new ways to ride their scooters and skateboards…

They ran inside demanding to know what smelled like croissants!

The brioche rolls were fresh out of the oven and they really did smell like freshly baked croissants.
When I pulled one apart it was incredibly soft…

And light. And fluffy. And totally delicious!

They shoved them in their mouths.
Some with jam and cream…
Others with Nutella.

They all agreed Dorie’s Bubble-Top Brioche tasted great!
I can’t wait to see what the rest of the French Fridays with Dorie team came up with!


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Gingerbread Christmas Cookie Tree

I remember someone telling me that the purpose of meditation was to give us a break from our daily lives. While meditating we are focused on other things, our breath, our body, the present moment. Anything but what has been consuming us and occupying our thoughts. At the end of our meditation time we step back into our lives. But we do so refreshed. We’ve had a break from all our worries, duties and roles. And now we return recharged and the time away has, hopefully, given us a new perspective. A more detached and objective way to see our lives, and with fresh eyes, we can tackle our concerns with new ideas that were hidden from us while we were caught up in the story that was our life! I honestly cannot remember where I picked up this broad definition of meditation, but it’s stuck with me.

That’s what I love about cooking and in particular, baking. My way of being in the world can be very much in my mind and not much happening in the body! My mind can be a hive of activity, sometimes it feels like it’s home to a loud, chaotic, formula 1 race track. You’d never know what’s going in there by watching me, my body goes through the day doing it’s thing and not getting in the mind’s way. Actually it’s learnt to stay out of the mind’s way! And that’s where baking and cooking come into play.

Doing something that is physical and new requires me to focus fully on the activity at hand. My mind tries to gloss over instructions so it can get back to solving the latest drama, but I’ve learnt the more active my mind, the more complex the recipe I need to pick needs to be. I have to concentrate on what I am doing and force myself to take a break from the tapes playing in my head. And when the business and dramas are big, like at Christmas time, doing anything complex is the last thing I want to do! That’s how I new it was time to undertake a challenge. I have been wanting to make a Gingerbread House, but I have been sick with the latest bug the boys brought home and when I saw Gingerbread Christmas Trees I was sold! They looked amazing and somehow not as daunting as the houses, to me.

I made the dough using the recipe below from Gourmet Traveller. I also had five 11-year old boys in the house having a sleepover, friends dropping in and still feeling weak from the bug. The combination wasn’t great. After many hiccups, I took my first batch out of the oven and then dropped them!
At this point my 14-year old decided to step in. My goal was to spend some mother daughter time while the boys were destroying the house. She was reluctant to begin with, but I stepped back fully and other than making the dough and destroying the first batch of stars, she did everything. 

She is also an “in her head” sort of person. 
So it was great to sit back and watch the meditative process of baking in action.
She was in “flow”.
She had purpose and an incredible sense of achievement at the end of it all.
And while she took pics of her creation to post on facebook and tumblr, I took pics of her to post here.

Remember to take a break from the busy-ness of the season, whatever form your ‘meditation’ takes, take time to do it and you will be rewarded with a renewed sense of perspective, love and joy!

MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE!

Gingerbread Recipe (as it appears in Gourmet Traveller for their gingerbread house recipe)

700g plain flour
190g each light brown sugar and dark muscovado sugar
1 tbsp baking powder
1 tbsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cloves
220g cold butter, cubed
180g golden syrup
2 eggs

1. Process half of each of the flour, sugars, baking powder and spices in a food processor to combine well. Add half the butter, process to combine, then add half the golden syrup and 1 egg and process until mixture comes together (3-4 minutes). Turn onto a work surface, knead until mixture comes together, wrap in plastic wrap and repeat with remaining ingredients. Refrigerate to rest for at least 1 hour.

2. Preheat oven to 180 degrees celsius. Roll our each piece of gingerbread on a lightly floured surface to 3mm thick. Cut decorative shapes out and place on trays lined with baking paper and bake in batches until darkened around the edges. About 10 minutes. Cool on trays for 5 minutes then cool on wire racks.

Royal Icing Recipe (as it appears in Gourmet Traveller for their gingerbread house recipe)

2 egg whites
450g pure icing sugar

Whisk egg-whites in a bowl, gradually adding icing sugar to the mixture until it is smooth holds a stiff peak. Leave white or colour what ever shade your desire the spoon into piping bags fitted with desired piping tubes.

To assemble:
Pipe icing onto each star in whatever pattern you fancy and we dabbed icing in the middle of each star to stick the tree together.


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Chard Stuffed Pork Roast with Crispy Golden Crackling

I love bacon.
I adore bacon.
But that’s’ where my interest in pork begins and ends.

The rest of my family have another love in addition to bacon.
Pork Crackling!

Now when you’re a family of 5, negotiations are just a part of life.
I get to stuff the pork loin with Swiss chard and raisins, and they get crackling!
Everyone’s a winner!

I followed Dorie Greenspan’s recipe, from her book ‘Around My French Table’, right up to the last step.
But instead of patting crushed peppercorns and coriander over the pork roast, I substituted Donna Hay’s steps to achieving the perfect crackling! (My husband just read this and wanted me to stress how incredible the crackling was).

*As soon as you get your pork home, remove the wrapping and place the pork on a plate in the fridge until ready to prepare. This makes the skin dry out, which helps create a crunchy surface.
* To make the crackling really crispy, make sure the oven is very hot – preheat for about 20 minutes at 220 celsius.
* Rub salt and oil into the scored pork after tying. Table salt spreads further than sea salt and helps give the crackling its crunch.

I then cooked the pork for 20 minutes at 220 celsius, then reduced it to 200 degrees celsius and cooked it for another 50-55 minutes.

I peeled potatoes and pumpkin, tossed them in a little oil, salt and pepper and added to the baking tray with the pork when I reduced the temperature to 200 degrees celsius.

We all loved this dish.
It was so delicious!
The stuffing flavoured the meat and the vegetables, really lifting and enhancing the flavours.

The cracking was truly out of this world!
I usually can’t get past the fact that I am eating fat.
But oh my goodness!!!
It was divine!

I am really looking forward to the leftovers…

And I cannot wait to see what the rest of the French Fridays with Dorie group came up with!


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Dorie Greenspan’s Perfect Party Cake

This week’s French Fridays with Dorie is cook’s choice.
Yay!
I got my book out and picked out Dorie’s Perfect Party Cake!
It was exactly what I was looking for!

I had a few hours to myself! That never happens!
I had all the ingredients! That never happens either!

I danced in glee as I planned to bake a cake while watching Water for Elephants.
I felt so indulgent!
What could go wrong!!!

Well…

While searching for the recipe for this week’s cook’s choice I had a few books open at the same time and I picked a recipe from the wrong book!
Dorie’s Perfect Party Cake is actually from another Dorie Greenspan book… Baking-From My Home To Yours.
I got carried away watching Water for Elephants while texting a colleague trying to wrap my head around foot fetishes for an upcoming session (what can I say… work hazzard!).
I lost track of the time and took the cake out earlier than I should have.
I was convinced my efforts had been wasted!
But I decided to persevere with somewhat lowered expectations.
And I’m glad I did…

Dorie’s Perfect Party Cake actually turned out… well… Perfect!
It looked amazing!
It tasted amazing!

Can’t wait to see what the rest of the French Fridays with Dorie group picked for their cook’s choice recipe!


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Easy Roast Chicken for Lazy People

This week’s French Fridays with Dorie recipe was Cinnamon-Crunch Chicken.

I seemed to fixate on the word “crunch”.
It sent me down a weird and wonderful path of word association.
Crunchy, crispy, golden, succulent, seasoned, roasted chicken.
I couldn’t get this image out of mind.

I craved it.
I wanted it.
I could taste it!

Speculoos became my scape goat.
I had no idea what they were.
Or LU Cinnamon Sugar Spice Biscuits or LU Bastogne.

How was I supposed to find them when I didn’t even know what they looked like?!
My argument felt incredibly persuasive.

It was decided!
I would find another chicken recipe from Dorie that would satisfy my cravings.
I was scanning for the word roasted…
Then I saw it…
Roast Chicken for Les Paresseux.
I read the first line in Dorie’s introduction of the recipe, “les paresseux are lazy people, and this is a recipe for them”.
Alright!
I was on a winner!

Some weeks I want to get lost in the complexity of a recipe.
That’s what lead me to make Movida’s Chorizo Bomba and the Sweet and Salty Layer Cake from Baked.

But the last few week’s I’ve spent the little free time I’ve had, sewing costumes for my 11 year old’s school concert.
I need to make it clear here, I don’t usually sew and my contribution was small compared to what other’s were doing.
But I found myself spending any free time I had doing this.

The kids had a great time while we sewed..

But it was really starting to wear me out!

So all I wanted was to make something easy, familiar and comforting!
And this recipe hit the spot.

I seasoned the chicken inside and out. (Dorie suggests salt and pepper however I used Vegeta, it’s a vegetable stock powder that Yugoslav’s seem to love and use in everything! So throwing in a bit of my own tradition in this recipe, I rubbed it all over the bird!)
I then shoved a head of garlic cut in half, a sprig of rosemary, thyme and oregano inside the cavity.
Placed the chicken on top of a couple slices of bread that I placed in the middle of the oiled roasting dish.
Around the chicken I threw the other half of the garlic head, another sprig of rosemary, thyme and oregano and a few lugs of oil along with 2/3 cup of water.

In the oven it went for 45 minutes at 450 degrees F.

Dorie suggests you add potatoes, carrots and shallots at the end of this time.
I went with our favourite mix of potatoes, pumpkin, red capsicums and spanish onions.

Another 45 minutes and it was done!

And oh my goodness, it was so tasty!

It was exactly what I had envisaged and what I was craving!
It was also incredibly easy to make and I even got to start reading my latest neuropsych book with the free time I had!

The French Fridays with Dorie group made Roast Chicken for Les Paresseux before I joined the group, so I was glad to catch up on a recipe I had missed! A recipe I will definitely make again and again!

And I can’t wait to check out what the group thought of the Cinnamon-Crunch Chicken!

 


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Melbourne, Movida and Chorizo Bomba

I love Melbourne.
I’m not at all surprised that it’s been voted the world’s most liveable city.
The thought that”s been put into the design, infrastructure and architecture is obvious.
Driving around Melbourne I often hear myself commenting on the thought that has gone into the layout of the city.
Comments that seem alien to my own ears.
I mean, since when do I notice a city’s infrastructure?!
But that’s my point.
Even I notice that Melbourne has a vibe! A feel good vibe!

But for me Melbourne means more than that.
I love Melbourne because it’s where my husband and I go to catch up.

With three children, it can get hard to just finish a conversation.
So Melbourne is where we go a few times a year to catch up and fall in love again.
We only stay for the weekend and that’s enough for us, any longer and we start missing the kids.

The first thing we do when we arrive in Melbourne is head straight to our favourite restaurant.

Movida…

Lunch at Movida’s signals that we are really here!
Just us!
And it’s time to relax, talk, laugh and eat.

I was eager to recreate a bit of the Melbourne vibe back home in Sydney.
I’ve been wanting to try this recipe ever since watching Movida’s owner, Frank Camorra, cook it on television show, Masterchef.

Once I started cooking, the familiar aromas started to fill my kitchen.
Chorizo, sherry, paprika, capsicum…
Oh! It brought back so many wonderful memories!
Melbourne was alive and kicking in my kitchen.

The city….

The views from our hotel room at St Kilda…

I could see it, taste it, hear it and smell it.

All thanks to these little balls of bliss!

BOMBA

(As it appears in the MasterChef book, Volume Two)

150g (1 cup) plain flour
3 eggs, lightly beaten
100g Japanese panko breadcrumbs
Vegetable oil, to deep fry

MOJO PICON SAUCE 
2 large red capsicum
250ml (1 cup) olive oil
1 tbs cumin seeds
1 tbs fennel seeds
1 1/2 tbs sweet paprika
1/2 tsp hot paprika
100ml sherry vinegar
1/2 clove garlic, chopped

POTATO CROQUETTES
5 x 200g desiree potatoes
1 tbs olive oil

CHORIZO FILLING
2 tsp olive oil
1/4 onion, finely diced
1 chorizo sausage, 125g, peeled, crumbled
75ml Fino sherry
1 good pinch sweet paprika
1 small pinch hot paprika

BRAVA SAUCE
1 clove garlic
1 egg yolk
2 tsp Dijon mustard
80ml (1/3 cup) sunflower oil
1 tbs lemon juice
60ml (1/4 cup) tomato sauce
Tabasco sauce, to taste

1. To make mojo picon sauce, preheat oven to 170 degrees celsius. Put capsicums in a small roasting pan. Drizzle with 1 tbs of the olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt. Roast for 45 minutes or until blistered.

  • Transfer to a bowl, cover with plastic wrap and leave for 20 minutes or until cool enough to handle. Remove the skin, membrane and seeds and roughly chop flesh.
  •  Meanwhile, roast cumin in a dry frying pan over medium-high heat for 1 minute or until fragrant. Cool slightly. Using a mortar and pestle, grind cumin very finely and strain through a fine sieve. Repeat with fennel seeds.
  • Mix capsicum in a food processor with ground cumin and fennel. Add the sweet and hot paprikas, vinegar, garlic and remaining oil. Puree until smooth,

2. To make potato croquettes, put potatoes in a large saucepan and cover with cold water. Bring to the boil and cook for 25 minutes or until tender. Drain and peel off skin. Push through a potato ricer into a bowl. Add the olive oil and season to taste. Set aside.

3. To make chorizo filling, heat oil in a frying pan over medium heat and cook onion for 5 minutes or until soft and translucent. Add chorizo and cook for 5 minutes or until browned. Add sherry, bring to a simmer and cook for 1 minute. Add sweet and hot paprika and cook until sherry has evaporated.

  • Cool slightly, then chop coarsely in a food processor. Transfer to a bowl and put in fridge to cool.

4. To make brava sauce, chop garlic with a pinch of sea salt and crush to a smooth paste. Whisk the garlic paste, egg yolk and mustard until well combined. Whisking continuously, gradually add the oil, a drop at a time at first, then in a thin stream until thick and emulsified. Whisk in the lemon juice, tomato sauce and Tabasco and season with sea salt.

5. Roll 2 heaped tbs of the potato into a ball.  Using your index finger, make a small hole in the potato. Fill with 1 tsp of the cooled chorizo filling. Close the potato mixture around the filling and shape into a smooth ball. Repeat with remaining potato and filling.

6. Coat potato balls in seasoned flour and shake off excess. Dip in egg, allowing excess to drain off. Coat well in the panko. Place onto a large plate or tray and refrigerate until ready to cook.

7. To cook, fill a deep fryer or saucepan one-third full with vegetable oil and heat over medium heat to 180 degrees celsius (or until a cube of bread turns golden in 10 seconds). Cook bomba in batches for 4 minutes or until crisp and golden. Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on paper towel. Season with salt.

8. To serve, place a small amount of brava sauce onto serving plates and place bomba on top. Drizzle with more brava sauce and top with a little mojo picon. Serve any remaining sauce on the side.

* My only suggestion would be to make half the amount of Mojo Picon Sauce. The above recipe produces a huge amount of sauce!


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Sweet and Salty Layer Cake

Food makes life exciting. An adventure.
There is always something new to try. New tastes, textures, combinations.
Cakes on the other hand, well, they make life worth living.
Dramatic. I know. I don’t care! It’s true.
To me they are work of art.
The different layers, textures, colours, techniques fill me with awe and wonder.
I can look at cake books, cake pics or just hang out at store front windows of great cake shops for ages.
They fascinate me and excite me.
They fill me with are and wonder.
And my favourite of all are the white cakes. They look so incredibly light, fluffy, glossy, heavenly!
Having said that, you can see my cake here is anything but white.
Not sure how that happened?
But I have to say this was an amazing cake to make and eat.

The aromas that filled my kitchen were delicious.
That made me smile and filled me with joy.
It’s as simple as that.
And that’s what makes it all worthwhile.

Being a psychologist I tend to read a lot. Actually being a psychologist has nothing to do with that, I’ve always loved reading. But being a psychologist I tend to read a lot on the certain topics and one of these is the topic of happiness. There are different levels of happiness. There is the happiness that comes from eating a cake, this is temporary and fleeting. And then there is the happiness that comes from making a cake. That’s the happiness that I am talking about here. It’s deliciously satisfying and the sense of accomplishment stays with you forever!

This cake was neither quick nor easy. But that’s what I liked about it. It was a challenge and it kept me engaged.
And that’s where the satisfaction comes from!
The challenge! You can read more about that psych theory here!

 

The recipe follows but nothing beats having the book to lovingly hold and flick through.
Enjoy!

SWEET AND SALTY CAKE

(As it appears in Baked New Frontiers in Baking)

FOR THE CLASSIC CHOCOLATE CAKE LAYERS

3/4 cup dark unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/4 cups hot water
2/3 cup sour cream
2 2/3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
1/2 cup vegetable shortening
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
3 large eggs, at room temperature
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract

FOR THE SALTED CARAMEL 

1/2 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon fleur de sel
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1/4 cup sour cream

FOR THE WHIPPED CARAMEL GANACHE FROSTING

1 pound dark chocolate (60 to 70% cacao), chopped
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
2 cups (4 sticks) unsalted butter, soft but cool, cut into 1/2-inch pieces

TO ASSEMBLE THE CAKE

2 teaspoons fleur de sel, plus more for garnish

MAKE THE CLASSIC CHOCOLATE CAKE LAYERS

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Butter three 8-inch round cake pans, line the bottoms with parchment paper, and butter the parchment. Dust with flour, and knock out the excess flour.

In a medium bowl, combine the cocoa powder, hot water, and sour cream and set aside to cool.

Sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together into a medium bowl and set aside.

In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter and shortening on medium speed until ribbonlike, about 5 minutes. Add the sugars and beat until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition, then add the vanilla and beat until incorporated. Scrape down the bowl and mix again for 30 seconds.

Add the flour mixture, alternating with the cocoa mixture, in three additions, beginning and ending with the flour mixture.

Divide the batter among the prepared pans and smooth the tops. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, rotating the pans halfway through the baking time, until a toothpick inserted in the center of each cake comes out clean. Transfer the cakes to a wire rack and let cool for 20 minutes. Invert the cakes onto the rack, remove the pans, and let cool completely. Remove the parchment.

MAKE THE SALTED CARAMEL

In a small saucepan, combine the fleur de sel. Bring to a simmer over very low heat until the salt is dissolved.

Meanwhile, keeping a close eye on the cream mixture so it doesn’t burn, in a medium saucepan combine 1/4 cup water, the sugar, and corn syrup, stirring them together carefully so you don’t splash the sides of the pan. Cook over high heat until an instant-read thermometer reads 350 degrees F, or until the mixture is dark amber in colour, 6 to 8 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool for 1 minute.

Add the cream mixture to the sugar mixture. Whisk in the sour cream. Let the caramel cool to room temperature, then transfer to an airtight container and refrigerate until you are ready to assemble the cake.

MAKE THE WHIPPED CARAMEL GANACHE FROSTING

Put the chocolate in a large heatproof bowl and set aside.

In a small saucepan, bring the cream to a simmer over very low heat.

Meanwhile, keeping a close eye on the cream so it doesn’t burn, in a medium saucepan combine 1/4 cup water, the sugar, and corn syrup, stirring them together carefully so you don’t splash the sides of the pan. Cook over high heat until an instant-read thermometer reads 350 degrees F, 6 to 8 minutes. Remove from the heat and let the caramel cool for 1 minute.

Add the cream to the caramel and stir to combine. Stir slowly for 2 minutes, then pour the caramel over the chocolate. Let the caramel and chocolate sit for 1 minute, then, starting in the center of the bowl, and working your way out to the edges, slowly stir the chocolate and caramel mixture in a circle until the chocolate is completely melted. Let the mixture cool, then transfer it to the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment.

Mix on low speed until the bowl feels cool to the touch. Increase the speed to medium-high and gradually add the butter, beating until thoroughly incorporated. Scape down the bowl and beat on high speed until the mixture is fluffy.

ASSEMBLE THE CAKE

Place one cake layer on a serving platter. Spread 1/4 cup of the caramel over the top. Let the caramel soak into the cake, then spread 3/4 cup of the ganache frosting over the caramel. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of the fleur de sel over the frosting, then top with e second cake layer. Spread with caramel frosting and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of the fleur de sel. Then top with the third layer. Spread with caramel. Crumb coat the cake and put the cake in the refrigerator for 15 minutes to firm up the frosting. Frost the sides and top with the remaining frosting. Garnish with a sprinkle of fleur de sel.

This cake will keep beautifully in a cake saver at room temperature (cool and humidity free) for up to 3 days. If your room is not cool, place the cake in a cake saver and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Remove the cake from the refrigerator and let it sit at room temperature for at least 3 hours before serving.


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Chocolate sour cherry biscuits

 You know how sometimes we see ourselves a certain way, but when we tell others, they look at you with that “you’re kidding yourself” look? Well I usually manage this with my own “you don’t what you’re talking about” look as I turn (and in my mind) graciously walk away.

And it’s worked beautifully. Until recently.

I think it’s the kid’s fault.

I find things I say to them come back to haunt me at the most inconvenient times. Things like focus, sit still, pay attention. All things, that I now realise, I struggle with on a daily basis! For a while,  I was convinced I had some form of adult-onselt undiagnosed ADD. There was no way I could pull off what I was asking the kids to do! I get up and start walking around any chance I get. I start something and half way through it I decide to do a load of laundry. My saving grace is that I don’t stop until I’ve  finished all my half started jobs. So at the end of the day, what looks like chaos, somehow manages to come together in an efficient  climax!

I realised however that my attention span issues were across the board. 
Especially when it came to food.
I have never been able to eat too much of anything.
I get bored.
But alternate tastes between salty, sweet, sour and spicy and I can pick  for hours! Like dipping salty, sesame pretzel sticks into Nutella. Best ever!
Or black forest cake, the sour cherries cut through the chocolatey sweetness perfectly!
And while I am not much of a biscuit fan, the idea of black forest biscuit caught my attenion. 
 

The recipe came from a new book I had recently bought, ‘Bourke Street Bakery – the ultimate baking companion’. And my goodness these were good! The burst of sourness in all that sweetness kept me coming back for more. 
The recipe is exactly as it appears in the book but I doubled the amount of cherries in my version.

Chocolate and Sour Cherry Biscuits
(Bourke Street Bakery)

235g dark chocolate
150g plain flour
40g unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
100g unsalted butter
240g soft brown sugar
2 eggs
85g dried sour cherries

Preheat oven to 165 degrees celsius.
Put chocolate in a stainless steel bowl and set over a saucepan of simmering water, making sure the base of the bowl does not touch the water.
Allow the water in the saucepan to boil for 2 mins then turn off the heat and stir the chocolate while it slowly melts.
Sift the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda and salt into a bowl.
Put the butter and sugar in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a whisk attachment. Whisk on medium speed until pale and creamy.
Add the eggs, one at a time, making sure each is incorporated before adding more. Add the dry ingredients in three batches, mixing well after each addition, then add the melted chocolate and mix until well combined.
Remove the bowl from the mixer, then fold through the dried sour cherries. The mix can become quite sticky, so you may need to refrigerate it for 15 minutes before shaping the biscuits. Take 3 tablespoons of mixture at a time and roll into even-sized balls – you should make about 12 balls in total. Place the balls on baking trays lined with baking paper, allowing room for them to spread. Refrigerate for a further 30 minutes, or until firm. Bake in batches, for 15-20 minutes each, or until risen and quite cracked on top. Cool on the trays and eat, or store in an airtight container for up to 3 days.


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Roasted Rhubarb and Vanilla Rice Pudding

This week’s French Fridays with Dorie recipe was Roasted Rhubarb.

It really doesn’t get easier than this.
Chop up half a kilo of rhubarb and sprinkle half a cup of sugar and the rind of half an orange over it.
Cover with foil and bake at 200 degrees celsius for 15 minutes.
Uncover and bake for a further 5 mins until the syrup bubbles.
That’s it. Simple.
Dorie suggests trying it as soon as possible and adding honey if too sour.
I figured the sweetness of the vanilla rice pudding would work well with the sourness of the rhubarb as it was.

Vanilla Rice Pudding

1 cup Aborio Rice
1 litre milk
1/2 cup caster sugar
1 Vanilla bean, split and only use scraped out seeds

Put all the ingredients in a saucepan over high heat and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat, cover and cook for about 20-25 minutes, stirring occasionally until rice is tender.
The Vanilla Rice Pudding was absolutely delicious.
It went really well with the tartness of the roasted rhubarb.

Best of all, I was able to share the evening with my parents. The last time  my dad was over for dinner was September 2010. November 18th he had a stroke and a heart attack that he was not expected to survive. Over four months in hospital and lots and lots of rehab later, he is finally back home. It was great hearing his stories of how they make rice pudding in Serbia. He had fond memories of it topped with cream and meringue. Sounded great but figured it best to give it a skip unless I wanted him back in hospital with another stroke!

That’s what I love about food. It brings us together and creates happy times and great memories.

For more stories and roasted rhubarb recipes head over to French Fridays with Dorie.