My
first “afters” offering in “get them hooked on cooking” is
Pinwheels. Once
again minimum work in the way of prep for the supervisor, only a few
minutes and the night before works well for me! No stress and
maximum fun for the budding chefs.
Pinwheels
1
sheet of frozen puff pastry, thawed in fridge (375g)
15g
butter, melted
50g
dark chocolate drops (or finely chopped)
25g
ground almonds
25g
dried cherries, finely chopped
25g
craisins, finely chopped
1
egg, lightly beaten with 1 tbsp milk
Preheat
your oven 180c fan/200c/Gas 6. Line a baking tray with greaseproof
paper or similar. Unroll the pastry sheet and lay with the short
sides left and right, you are going to roll to form a log.
Brush
the surface of the pastry and melted butter then scatter the
chocolate and ground almonds leaving a border at the top end of the
pastry to enable you to “glue” the log when rolled. Then scatter
the cherries and craisins over the chocolate and almonds. Carefully
roll up from one of the shortest sides as tightly as you can forming
a log.
Using
a sharp knife, cut the log into 12 even slices. Place on the baking
tray and brush with the remaining butter, then the beaten egg
mixture. Bake for 15-20 minutes until puffed and golden.
Fondant
Glaze
75g icing sugar
2-3 tsps boiling water
Pour the boiling water slowly over the icing sugar in a small
bowl while stirring the mixture with a wooden spoon. Pour in only
enough water to make a creamy mixture that has the consistency of
pancake batter. Cool. You need to make sure the mixture isn't too
stiff, you need to be able to drizzle the glaze over your pastries.
Here's some helpful illustrations and the end result.
Take a tip or three :
Use the greaseproof wrapping with the pastry sheet as a base to roll
the pinwheels.
Place a damp j cloth on your worktop and then the sheet on top – it
will avoid it ending up on the floor!
When you get to the stage of slicing into 12 portions mark the roll
in the middle, and then each half again (i.e. quarters) and then
divide each quarter into 3 – there's a fighting chance of
reasonably even pinwheels.
I warn you – these will vanish at the speed of light – it's a
good idea to have two batches 1 x 2 kids.
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