Busy... baking
2 Feb 2013 06:16 pmI've been quite busy so far this weekend. Some Fridays I just want to come home and flop - others I have an urge to be productive! This was one of the latter.
So - I did the trolley shopping on the way home from work, put on a load of washing and drying whilst I put it away, mixed up dark fruit loaves whilst dinner was in the oven, and put them into the warm oven after dinner. Then, whilst they were in the oven I produced the prayer leaflets for church.
All this before S2C got up at 8pm to get ready for work! When he went out I changed our bedding, emptied the washer/dryer and put a load more in on timer so that it would be ready to sort and hang things to dry at breakfast time... and finally wrote 400 words of the next chapter of The Valinor Trail.
I rather think all the previous activities were a form of procrastination - it is surprising what you can fill your time with when you should be organising the ideas into sentences and paragraphs!
Actually I really did need to bake - we are having a Mariners' Service at church next week...
The Mariners' choir was formed in 1974 by a group of serving and retired seamen and their friends, primarily to sing the old hymns they all enjoyed. Many of the members are very old now, but a few younger voices have joined them, and they rotate between the island’s Methodist churches, with occasional exceptions like our church, which they visit every 2 or 3 years.
The service begins with an hour of hymns from the choir and a sermon, before supper is served, followed by a sing-along session. And not only do the gentlemen all seem to have prodigious appetites, but they have a crowd of travelling 'groupies' - most of whom seem to be elderly ladies, and all of whom seem to consume enough food for a week over supper, whilst regularly complaining that it isn't as good as the one they got last week at a different church or chapel!
So we are feeding about 120 people, although it can feel rather as if we are feeding a flock of seagulls. (And no, not the 1980s group - they'd eat less!)
Why do we host them? Well the hymn singing is really rather fun and the collection money comes to us...
Anyway - whilst others will make sandwiches, cook chicken drumsticks, and so on, I will make fruit loaves and gingerbread, possibly a cherry & banana cake too. The best thing about the particular fruit loaves, and gingerbread, is that they will improve in the cake-tins until next weekend - so I can bake now, whilst I'm in the mood.
chaotic_binky and I were discussing cakes, and bread & butter pudding, not to mention bread pudding which is a totally different thing, in another place - and it occurred to me that it might be a good idea to post the fruitloaf and gingerbread recipes here. Both are very easy and pretty much fool proof - and very tasty.
So I have put the recipes
Fruit Loaf Recipe;
150ml cold tea (or put the water in the pan and add a tea bag as it warms!)
100g mixed dried fruit
150g soft brown sugar
100g butter or margarine
1 level teaspoon bicarb of soda
1 egg, beaten (med or large)
175g plain flour
1 level teaspoon baking powder
Put tea, fruit sugar butter and bicarb in saucepan and heat gently until butter is melted and sugar dissolved, then boil gently for 10 mins or so, stirring occasionally.
Remove from heat, leave to cool.
Stir remaining ingredients into it, mix thoroughly, turn into lined loaf tin, bake at 160C fan, 180C non-fan, or Gas 4 for about an hour, or until it is firm to touch.
Cool in the tin, storing it in your cake tin for a day or two improves it, if you can bear to wait, and then eat spread with butter.
You can vary the flavour depending on what sort of tea you use - I usually use Earl Grey, or Lady Grey, but ordinary tea would be fine. We have also made it with a variety of fruit teas over the years, too - ginger and vanilla was good, I remember!
And the recipe for Gingerbread. This is on a grand scale - it came from a cookery book called 'Wor Lass's Yem Cookin' which was bought for me in the early 1970s as the relative who gave it me knew I was planning on going to the NE of England to university - it was a handbook of Geordie cooking - and this is still the best gingerbread recipe I know.
Gingerbread
8 oz margarine
8 oz soft brown sugar
8 oz golden syrup
12 oz plain flour
2 beaten eggs
2 rounded dessertspoons ground ginger
3 rounded teaspoons cinnamon
½ pint milk
2 rounded teaspoons bicarb of soda
Melt butter, sugar and syrup together. Sift flour & spices together. Stir into the melted ingredients and add the beaten eggs. Warm the milk to lukewarm, then add the bicarb to it, stir together, then add to the main mixture and stir well.
It will be quite a runny batter – don’t panic!
Pour into a well greased roasting tin, or 2x2lb loaf tins. Bake for an hour at 140CFan, or 150C non-fan, Gas mark 3. Loaf tin ones will probably be done by then – one in a roasting tin may need to be covered with a sheet of greaseproof to stop it scorching and given another 15 -30 minutes. It should be firm and springy to touch. Cool in the tin.
It is, of course, very easy to half that second recipe and just make a normal sized cake!
Also - depending on what is in the store cupboard, it has been made with all syrup, half syrup & half treacle, all treacle instead of the syrup, and even about 2/3 syrup to 1/3 honey when I had no treacle to pad the remains of the syrup up! All taste good, just a little different each time.
You can see that the two have a common root, in the method used to make them. The other thing you will notice is that one recipe is older than the other - one is in ounces and the other in grams - I have scales that weigh in both, and can think pretty well in either, so I don't bother converting recipes, just use whatever it's in!
Anyone interested in the difference between bread and butter pudding and bread pudding - or their mysterious, richer, relative the Wet Nelly - just say - and I might post about those too.
Actually, I will probably post pictures of the baking tomorrow, too.
So - I did the trolley shopping on the way home from work, put on a load of washing and drying whilst I put it away, mixed up dark fruit loaves whilst dinner was in the oven, and put them into the warm oven after dinner. Then, whilst they were in the oven I produced the prayer leaflets for church.
All this before S2C got up at 8pm to get ready for work! When he went out I changed our bedding, emptied the washer/dryer and put a load more in on timer so that it would be ready to sort and hang things to dry at breakfast time... and finally wrote 400 words of the next chapter of The Valinor Trail.
I rather think all the previous activities were a form of procrastination - it is surprising what you can fill your time with when you should be organising the ideas into sentences and paragraphs!
Actually I really did need to bake - we are having a Mariners' Service at church next week...
The Mariners' choir was formed in 1974 by a group of serving and retired seamen and their friends, primarily to sing the old hymns they all enjoyed. Many of the members are very old now, but a few younger voices have joined them, and they rotate between the island’s Methodist churches, with occasional exceptions like our church, which they visit every 2 or 3 years.
The service begins with an hour of hymns from the choir and a sermon, before supper is served, followed by a sing-along session. And not only do the gentlemen all seem to have prodigious appetites, but they have a crowd of travelling 'groupies' - most of whom seem to be elderly ladies, and all of whom seem to consume enough food for a week over supper, whilst regularly complaining that it isn't as good as the one they got last week at a different church or chapel!
So we are feeding about 120 people, although it can feel rather as if we are feeding a flock of seagulls. (And no, not the 1980s group - they'd eat less!)
Why do we host them? Well the hymn singing is really rather fun and the collection money comes to us...
Anyway - whilst others will make sandwiches, cook chicken drumsticks, and so on, I will make fruit loaves and gingerbread, possibly a cherry & banana cake too. The best thing about the particular fruit loaves, and gingerbread, is that they will improve in the cake-tins until next weekend - so I can bake now, whilst I'm in the mood.
So I have put the recipes
Fruit Loaf Recipe;
150ml cold tea (or put the water in the pan and add a tea bag as it warms!)
100g mixed dried fruit
150g soft brown sugar
100g butter or margarine
1 level teaspoon bicarb of soda
1 egg, beaten (med or large)
175g plain flour
1 level teaspoon baking powder
Put tea, fruit sugar butter and bicarb in saucepan and heat gently until butter is melted and sugar dissolved, then boil gently for 10 mins or so, stirring occasionally.
Remove from heat, leave to cool.
Stir remaining ingredients into it, mix thoroughly, turn into lined loaf tin, bake at 160C fan, 180C non-fan, or Gas 4 for about an hour, or until it is firm to touch.
Cool in the tin, storing it in your cake tin for a day or two improves it, if you can bear to wait, and then eat spread with butter.
You can vary the flavour depending on what sort of tea you use - I usually use Earl Grey, or Lady Grey, but ordinary tea would be fine. We have also made it with a variety of fruit teas over the years, too - ginger and vanilla was good, I remember!
And the recipe for Gingerbread. This is on a grand scale - it came from a cookery book called 'Wor Lass's Yem Cookin' which was bought for me in the early 1970s as the relative who gave it me knew I was planning on going to the NE of England to university - it was a handbook of Geordie cooking - and this is still the best gingerbread recipe I know.
Gingerbread
8 oz margarine
8 oz soft brown sugar
8 oz golden syrup
12 oz plain flour
2 beaten eggs
2 rounded dessertspoons ground ginger
3 rounded teaspoons cinnamon
½ pint milk
2 rounded teaspoons bicarb of soda
Melt butter, sugar and syrup together. Sift flour & spices together. Stir into the melted ingredients and add the beaten eggs. Warm the milk to lukewarm, then add the bicarb to it, stir together, then add to the main mixture and stir well.
It will be quite a runny batter – don’t panic!
Pour into a well greased roasting tin, or 2x2lb loaf tins. Bake for an hour at 140CFan, or 150C non-fan, Gas mark 3. Loaf tin ones will probably be done by then – one in a roasting tin may need to be covered with a sheet of greaseproof to stop it scorching and given another 15 -30 minutes. It should be firm and springy to touch. Cool in the tin.
It is, of course, very easy to half that second recipe and just make a normal sized cake!
Also - depending on what is in the store cupboard, it has been made with all syrup, half syrup & half treacle, all treacle instead of the syrup, and even about 2/3 syrup to 1/3 honey when I had no treacle to pad the remains of the syrup up! All taste good, just a little different each time.
You can see that the two have a common root, in the method used to make them. The other thing you will notice is that one recipe is older than the other - one is in ounces and the other in grams - I have scales that weigh in both, and can think pretty well in either, so I don't bother converting recipes, just use whatever it's in!
Anyone interested in the difference between bread and butter pudding and bread pudding - or their mysterious, richer, relative the Wet Nelly - just say - and I might post about those too.
Actually, I will probably post pictures of the baking tomorrow, too.
no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 06:55 pm (UTC)I like the idea of making the boiled fruit cake with Earl Grey, though I will probably use black chai because I have an abundance of it. I have a jar of treacle, (which apparently is out of date!) so I can make the gingerbread with that and some ordinary syrup.
I would love to see your baking pictures.
My banana loaf turned out very well and I have eaten a third of it. I really should let it sit and eat it tomorrow but it is very hard to resist. Here is the recipe I used:
Banana bread
3 or 4 ripe bananas, mashed roughly
1/3 cup melted butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg, beaten (I didn't bother beating the egg - added it whole)
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon baking soda (I substituted with baking powder)
Pinch of salt
1 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour (I used S/R flour)
Method
No need for a mixer for this recipe. Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C). With a wooden spoon, mix butter into the mashed bananas in a large mixing bowl. Mix in the sugar, egg, and vanilla. Sprinkle the baking soda and salt over the mixture and mix in. Add the flour last, mix. Pour mixture into a buttered 4x8 inch loaf pan. Bake for 1 hour. Cool on a rack. Remove from pan and slice to serve.
I used a greased and floured silicon loaf pan, which worked really well and did not stick. I also used Lurpak Light butter and did not bother to melt it - I mashed it into the bananas with a potato masher.
It is not my recipe - you can probably tell. I was able to use my measuring cup set for the first time - so that was good.
no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 07:17 pm (UTC)I'm assuming "trolley shopping" is what we call grocery shopping in the US?
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Date: 02/02/2013 07:17 pm (UTC)one of these days I'm going to have break down and get a kitchen scale!
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Date: 02/02/2013 07:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 07:39 pm (UTC)The Mariners Service sounds a lot of fun.
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Date: 02/02/2013 07:44 pm (UTC)A woman after my own heart!
I think that is quite similar to mine - I will try in next time. I have a set of measuring cups too - I got them because there seem to be so many American recipes around.
As for chai - sounds good to me. I make the fruit loaf whenever there is the need for something fairly simple, and made from what is in - so it depends what sort of tea we have - I rather like Earl Grey - whereas, when D-d is around, there are all sorts of 'infusions' around - and the original version of the recipe actually said you could just use water!
no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 07:49 pm (UTC)The little old ladies lift up the tops of sandwiches to complain about how much filling there is, mutter about how much butter there is on the fruit loaf, and so on - but they still eat like hobbits!
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Date: 02/02/2013 07:57 pm (UTC)Definitely going to have to give your gingerbread a try... I don't think I've ever had gingerbread without molasses in it!
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Date: 02/02/2013 07:59 pm (UTC)I have to say I've never even seen molasses in our shops - but as it is a sugar-cane product like treacle or syrup I would think it would work - all it needs is to be sticky and sweetish!
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Date: 02/02/2013 08:03 pm (UTC)Again, both are 'poor man's food' - but the bread pudding was for those not rich enough to spare the eggs! It is very filling - and could be eaten in slice like a cake, rather than with a spoon in the way you'd eat bread and butter pudding. But, as a child, I loved it if granny made either.
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Date: 02/02/2013 08:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 08:12 pm (UTC)I don't think I've ever seen molasses in our shops - although it is probably there. Treacle was the basic in the era the recipe originally came from - the syrup is more recent - and either work fine.
I've also 'poshed it up' by icing it with water icing and scattering chopped crystallised ginger on top.
no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 08:13 pm (UTC)My grandparents had a dairy farm; my dad grew up with butter. It was something he had strong feeling about! And my mom was opposed to processed foods, so my sister and I grew up with butter. I had a roommate who used to sometimes buy margarine, but I never cared for it. And these days there isn't much of a cost difference!
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Date: 02/02/2013 08:14 pm (UTC)And okay, buttered, like the little loaves they sell in the supermarket bakery section. He will love this :) Might even finally forgive me for losing my mom's date loaf recipe.
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Date: 02/02/2013 08:15 pm (UTC)no subject
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Date: 02/02/2013 08:57 pm (UTC)*saves recipes*
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Date: 02/02/2013 09:29 pm (UTC)Sounds as if you plan a bake-in!
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Date: 02/02/2013 09:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 09:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 09:36 pm (UTC)This fruit loaf was originally a Mary Berry recipe - but she just used hot water, and I think it is better with tea. And this one really is better kept a couple of days too - useful as long as you are able to keep your hands off it!
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Date: 02/02/2013 09:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 02/02/2013 10:39 pm (UTC)My husband loves gingerbread anything. Is there anything I could substitute for the golden syrup as we can't get that here?
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Date: 02/02/2013 10:50 pm (UTC)Can you get treacle? That works fine - I think my original version, from all those years ago, might have said treacle anyway - it gives an even darker, slightly less sweet, gingerbread. Otherwise anything sticky and sweet, I reckon - so molasses, my North American friends think, or even runny honey, which was probably traditional before we had syrup!
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Date: 02/02/2013 11:49 pm (UTC)Lord Branwyn and I agree that we are peasants at heart because we love all those old-fashioned, cheap eats.
Regarding poor man's food, lobster used to be considered "trash" fish that just fouled the nets. *grin*
I would love to hear the mariners' choir!
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Date: 03/02/2013 12:05 am (UTC)I've also been known to spread the bread and butter with marmalade to give the fruit content.
There is a good deal to be said for 'peasant food' - if you have the best cuts and richest ingredients you don't have to be quite as imaginative. As for lobsters - oysters, too, were regarded as a poor man's protein - used to pad out the beef in pies!
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Date: 03/02/2013 10:27 am (UTC)It is really interesting that just the same way of using up stale bread developed in Mexico; LJ - bringing the world together in unexpected ways!
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Date: 03/02/2013 10:33 am (UTC)Have fun experimenting with it.
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Date: 03/02/2013 12:21 pm (UTC)And...what is a Wet Nelly?
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Date: 03/02/2013 01:19 pm (UTC)Wet Nelly was made by taking stale cake, preferably fruit cake, breaking it up and damping it down with milk, adding spice and more dried fruit if available, to make a sort of thick paste - then sandwich this between two slices of shortcrust pastry and baked. We sprinkled the top with sugar, or even a drizzle of icing - and it was a whole new cake!
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Date: 04/02/2013 06:33 am (UTC)I love this. I can so imagine it!
What is a dessertspoon? Smaller than a teaspoon?
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Date: 04/02/2013 08:33 am (UTC)A dessertspoon is a 10ml spoon - between a teaspoon (5ml), and a tablespoon (15ml).