Everyone has their own food favourites for the holidays. I find it's the whirlwind leading up to the festivities that can turn an organised person into a gibbering idiot!
On that sobering note my next series of stuff concentrates not on the obvious holiday food but ideas for you to make ahead, or have ingredients in your store cupboard so that you can pull together lovely grub quickly and easily – all the separate elements at your finger tips. It doesn't matter whether you're sober or not!
I always seem to begin with ideas for desserts – if you like the other end of a meal – hey, it's as good a place as any.
There's nothing that will serve you better than a home-made ice cream and all my recipes are of the “no-churn” variety. I use the standard vanilla ice-cream base recipe to begin :
Vanilla ice cream
Prep – 5 minutes
Total time – 5 minutes
plus freezing at least 6-8 hours
or until firm
Gives you 1.6 litres of ice cream is equal
to 18 scoops
1 x 397g tin sweetened condensed milk
1 x 600ml double cream
2tsp vanilla bean paste
Put the condensed milk, cream and vanilla into a large mixing bowl and beat with an electric hand whisk until the mixture is quite thick and stiff.
Next up … the syrup … to turn into an orange ripple!
I made a double batch of orange syrup – why double? I divided it into half – popped half into the freezer for another day and fridged the other half, ready to turn my basic vanilla ice cream into an orange ripple.
Orange Syrup
400g icing sugar
500ml orange juice (no bits)
Put the sugar and orange juice in a small saucepan and heat gently so that the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and simmer on a low heat for 20 minutes.
You'll achieve approximately 600ml of syrup – divide into two boxes and freeze one of them. Fridge the other, ready to complete your ice cream.
Here's a few photos …
Whisk your ice cream to a stiffer consistency
– thicker ribbons - you're adding syrup which will loosen
the batch
here's the syrup, ready to go
tip the syrup into the ice cream and fold through
gently
here's the orange drizzle ice cream, ready for
the freezer – you can see the vanilla flecks and the
trail of orange syrup running through
Anyone like chocolate sauce with ice cream?
You've made the orange ripple ice cream and it's in the freezer. The following chocolate and orange sauce can be made in minutes. The ingredients are in your fridge and your pantry and it takes only minutes to bring the cream and milk to the boil, add the sugar until dissolved and then tip over the chocolate and orange zest.
Chocolate and orange sauce
120ml double cream
80ml milk
50g caster sugar
225g dark chocolate (70%) broken into small pieces in a large bowl
zest of 1 orange
Put the cream and milk into a saucepan and bring to the boil. Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Remove pan from heat and pour over the chocolate, stir until melted. Add the orange zest, then set aside to cool in serving jug or if you'd prefer it warm, pour over a portion of ice cream.
I'd suggest serving the ice cream and sauce with fresh orange segments. You could add an extra element and crush amaretti biscuits and sprinkle over the top – another excellent store cupboard stand by.
Here it is :
Resourceful
and creative desserts
Here's my antedote to trifle! For me it's up there with sago and semolina – horrid! I appreciate that trifle has “grown up” since the 1950s – back then it was tinned fruit immersed in jelly from a box, the inevitable Birds Custard topped off with synthetic cream – and decorated with hundreds and thousands – sprinkles I think they are called these days.
If you're like me then this could be the answer :
Sticky Toffee Orange
Make a cake – a cake that will freeze well – a sticky toffee loaf cake
Use as a cake or slice (1.5cm) and cut into small cubes –
place in a sundae dish – warm the cake if you wish
Make a toffee sauce – one that will freeze
Use the sauce warmed to drizzle over the cake or over ice cream
Chop walnuts, add a knob of butter to a frying
pan, sprinkle with sea salt flakes
Use to sprinkle over the cake and toffee sauce or
add to the sauce poured over ice cream
Segment a large navel orange and reserve the juice too
Stand by for the recipes and the photos!
The cake
200g pitted dates, roughly chopped
1 tsp of bicarbonate of soda
200ml boiling water
80g unsalted butter, softened
150g soft brown sugar
2 large eggs
180g self-raising flour
Pre-heat your oven 160fan/180c/Gas 4. You'll need a loaf tin – 24x10cms/9½x5¼” approximately - you can grease the tin or use a loaf liner – much more convenient!
Place the chopped dates in a mixing bowl, sprinkle over the bicarb and then the boiling water. Leave to stand for 10 minutes then blitz in a food processor to a rough purée.
Using a hand mixer or elbow grease if you prefer, cream the butter and sugar until thick and smooth. Add the eggs one at a time and then follow gradually with the flour, finally add the date mixture. Pour into the loaf tin and bake for 45 minutes or until firm. Allow to cool.
Toffee Sauce
100g soft brown sugar
200ml double cream
½ tsp vanilla bean paste
40g unsalted butter
Mix the ingredients in a saucepan and bring to the boil, stirring over a medium heat until thickened – 2 minutes.
Both the cake and the sauce can be frozen.
The Walnuts
100g walnuts, chopped roughly
pinch of sea salt flakes
knob of unsalted butter
Melt the butter in a medium frying pan until it foams. Tip in the walnuts and add the sea salt flakes. Stir them for 3-4 minutes until toasted. Tip the nuts into a bowl and leave to cool.
How to segment an orange …
I really do need to get out more!
In my defence I love oranges – what I don't love is the pith and tough outer membrane around each segment.
There is only one way I can describe this procedure and that is by photo :
You'll need a serrated knife – I use a bread knife. Top and tail your orange and then follow the shape of the orange with the knife and peel away a section at a time. Take your time – you should finish up with this :
P.s. You'll get 10 segments from a large orange.
No comments:
Post a Comment