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August 2008

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Food Rings, Etc.

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Member since 01/2005

Äppelformar

Appelformar_2

In honor of Thanksgiving, Laura's second-grade class is doing a unit on immigrant ancestors this month.  This morning they are having an "immigrant banquet" in which they share foods of their ancestors, and Laura decided to bring something Swedish.  This has been a favorite recipe of mine for some years, discovered in the old Time-Life Scandinavian Cooking book. Äppelformar -- "apple shapes" or "forms" -- are little apple-filled pastries, like a little muffin-shaped pastry.  You can also make the filling with applesauce -- during those long, dark, Swedish winters, perhaps, when there are no fresh apples to be had -- but I like the fresh ones in combination with the light tartness of the jam and the crunchy almonds.

Äppelformar

12 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature (divided use)
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 1/2 cups flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
2 tart cooking apples
3/4 cup apricot preserves
slivered almonds
confectioners' sugar

For the pastry, cream 10 tablespoons butter and the sugar together until light and fluffy.  Beat in the eggs.  Sift the flour and baking powder together and add to the butter mixture, blending well.  Shape the dough, wrap in plastic wrap or wax paper, and chill for 1 hour or more.

For the filling, melt the remaining 2 tablespoons of butter in a saucepan over moderate heat.  While the butter is melting, peel, core, and finely dice the apples.  Add the apples to the butter, and cook 1 or 2 minutes, shaking the pan to coat the apples with the butter.  Remove from the heat and set aside.

Preheat the oven to 350° F.  Lightly oil or butter 12 muffin tins.  Cut off 1/3 of the dough, roll it out about 1/4 inch thick, and using a 2- or 2-1/2 inch cookie cutter, cut out 12 circles.  Work the dough scraps back into the remaining dough, divide into 12 pieces, and press each piece into the bottom and sides of the muffing cups, extending the dough slightly above the rim of the cup.  Divide the filling between the lined muffin cups.  Top each with about 1 tablespoon of the apricot preserves and a sprinkling of almonds.  Cover the apple filling with the dough rounds, folding the edges down over the tops to seal.

Appelformar1

Bake for 40 minutes or until lightly golden.  Loosen gently with a knife, and let cool in the tin.  Lift out with a narrow spatula or knife.  Sprinkle with confectioners' sugar just before serving.

Makes 12 äppelformar.  Active work time, about 30 minutes; total preparation time, about 2 hours and 40 minutes.

Rocky Road

Rockyroad

We volunteered to bring something for the bake sale at school this year, and so -- since the more we bring, the more tickets we get for the game booths! -- I made two things, Peanut Butter Squares and this Rocky Road, both from Nigella Lawson's scrumptious How to Be a Domestic Goddess.  They are both very simple and quick, very easy for the girls to help with, and went over very well with everyone who snitched -- I mean tested -- them.

I've adapted this recipe somewhat, feeling that real rocky road uses almonds, or in a pinch cashews (which is what I had in the cupboard this afternoon), and doubling it so that I could fill our quota of a dozen with two in a bag.

Rocky Road

14 oz. milk chocolate
2 oz. bittersweet chocolate
6 oz. cashews or whole almonds
2/3 cup miniature marshmallows

Line a baking sheet or tray with wax paper.

Melt the chocolate in the microwave until smooth.  Roughly chop the nuts, and mix them into the chocolate with the marshmallows.

Drop by heaping teaspoons onto the lined baking sheet, and leave to cool, preferably not in the refrigerator.  (The cold of the refrigerator will take away some of the gleam of the chocolate.)

Makes 24 sweets.  Active work time, about 10 minutes.

Coconut Sherbet Sundae

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I first tasted this little treat at Trader Joe's, where they were giving them away -- just giving them away! -- in little paper cups from the samples bar at the end of one aisle.  I don't usually care for coconut, myself, but this one had me at hello, to coin a phrase.  Mmm!

A pint of sherbet makes just enough to serve four people, as a summery after-dinner treat.  I loved it with roasted and salted slivered almonds -- the salty nuts contrast wonderfully with the sweet coconut and chocolate -- but of course you can use unsalted if you like.

And it's so easy, the kids can put it together themselves!

Coconut Sherbet Sundae

1 pint coconut sherbet
chocolate syrup, such as Trader Joe's "Midnight Moo"
slivered or sliced almonds

Divide the sherbet between 4 serving bowls or cups.  Drizzle chocolate syrup over the sherbet, and top with the almonds.

Makes 4 servings.  Active work time, about 2 minutes.

Jumbals

Fq_2

I am delighted to be taking part in "Fish & Quips", a blog-event hosted by Sam of Becks & Posh, and dedicated to the proposition that English food is not a joke.

Fish26quipsbysambreach

I have since spent a few afternoons lost in happy memories of English cheeses and sausages, Yorkshire pudding, clotted cream, Cornish pasties -- marvelling that most of the English sausages I've had were in Hong Kong, and the Cornish pasties in Australia -- and poring over such books on English food as Sybil Kapoor's Williams-Sonoma London and Marguerite Patten's We'll Eat Again -- two more disparate books you may never find, but both encompassing the range of English food -- and my old favorite, an old edition of Great British Cooking by Jane Garmey, as well as those cookbooks who celebrate English food simply by virtue of their authors being English -- Nigella Lawson, for one.

So I thought for a while about what I might share -- perhaps the bridies that I've tasted but not yet made myself (Scottish, to be sure, but are we splitting hairs?), or something new to me altogether?  I was leaning towards scones -- leaning so far, in fact, that I made some and ate them while pondering -- but in light of the fact that others taking part in this event might justly be already celebrating this delightful sine qua non of afternoon tea, I thought I would perhaps do something different.

A librarian friend of mine was once asked what might have been Shakespeare's favorite cookie.  She decided to write to the Folger Library, that bastion here in America of all things Shakespearean, and she received in return a copy of a page from The English Hous-wife, containing the inward and outward Vertues which ought to be in a compleat Woman, &c., &c., &c., dating from 1653, with this recipe:

"To make Jumbals more fine and curious than the former [i.e. the previous entry], and nearer to the taft of the Macaroon : take a pound of fugar, beat it fine : then take as much fine wheat flower, and mix them together : then take two white and one yolk of an Egg, half a quarter of a pound of blanched Almonds : then beat them very fine altogether, with half a dish of sweet butter, and a fpoonful of Rofe-water, and fo work it with a little cream till it come to a very ftiff paft, then roule them forth as you pleafe : and hereto you fhall alfo, if you pleafe add a few dryed Annifeeds finely rubbed, and strewed into the paft, and alfo Coriander feeds."

The Oxford English Dictionary, which dates the word to 1615, defines jumbal as a "thin, sweet cake or biscuit," what we in America would of course call a cookie.  The name was derived from gimbal, that double-ringed suspension device used on boats, or gimmal, a finger-ring made from two rings that fit together, and it referred to the traditional joined-rings or figure-8 shape the jumbals made after the dough was rolled into ropes and twisted.  Apparently sometime between Bosworth Jumbles around 1485 (admittedly apocryphal) and The English Hous-wife, it became popular to roll out the dough and cut it into various shapes instead.

The instructions for these jumbals are different from the way that we usually make cookies nowadays, starting with mixing together the flour and sugar, instead of creaming the sugar and eggs first.  It doesn't really make a lot of difference to the end result, and I rather like the historical throwback of using the original methods at times, but I find it a bit simpler the modern way, so that's how I've written it up.  I've also adjusted the balance of flavorings and the eggs, as not only do I dislike bothering with half of an egg (wh. usually ends up forgotten in a dish in the back of the fridge), but makes this recipe easier to halve.

I shape these sometimes by rolling a generous spoonful or so of dough into a ball before baking, a simpler alternative to using the rolling pin, especially if the kids are helping.  In that case I often leave the anise seeds until after making the balls, and then merely press a few seeds into the center of each jumbal for decoration.

Sugar, by the way, used to come in solid cones, and the cook would break off what was needed and "beat it fine" into its usable, granulated form.

This version of jumbals makes a sturdy yet delicately-flavored cookie, not too sweet, and rather chewy in the middle with a pleasantly lingering hint of anise.  Perfect, need I say, with a cup of tea!

Details on how to take part in Fish & Quips can be found here.  Sam requests that entries be posted by April 20, to be in the round-up on April 23 -- Shakespeare's birthday!

Fq_1

Jumbals

1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
2 cups sugar
2 eggs, at room temperature
1 tablespoon rosewater
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 tablespon anise seeds
4 cups flour
a small measure of cream or milk

Preheat the oven to 350° F.

Cream the butter and sugar in a large bowl, then add the eggs and rosewater, mix well, and then add the coriander and anise seeds.  Add in the flour, a little at a time, beating gently after each addition.  Add just enough cream to make a stiff dough, but not sticky.

On a floured surface, roll out the dough to about 1/4-inch thickness, and cut into 1 1/2- to 3-inch rounds.  Gather the scraps together and repeat until all of the dough is shaped.

Place the jumbals about 1 inch apart on a cookie sheet, and bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden-brown around the edges.

Makes 3 to 5 dozen jumbals, depending on size.  Active work time, about 20 minutes.

Pineapple Muffins Kittycafe

Pineapplemuffins

A dreary afternoon, grey and blustery with showers that almost rain but don't -- what better time than this for Pineapple Muffins from Elizabeth at the kittycafe?  This is not only a good recipe, but it's perfect for kids to help with or even make on their own, as it takes very little finesse or method -- just bung everything into a bowl and mix it together.

Pineapple-upside-down cake being one of my favorite things in the world, I couldn't help making these muffins with brown sugar instead of white.  Delicious!

Croissant Pudding

Croissant_pud_1

Laura was feeling a bit out of sorts this afternoon, what with all of the windy weather we've had at the beginning of this week, and her resulting allergies, poor thing.  This croissant pudding perked her up wonderfully.  It's a delicious recipe, adapted only slightly from one in "Everyday Food", not as rich or large as some versions I've seen, but still dreamily good with its buttery croissant pieces and dashes of eggy custard.  It's also a good thing to do with those last croissants from the packages of a dozen that I can rarely resist at Costco.  Half-and-half is a good substitute for part or all of the milk, if you have the last bits of a carton to use up.

This would probably be wonderful with chocolate croissants, too, although who would have four stale chocolate croissants, I can't imagine.

Croissant Pudding

2 large eggs
2/3 cup sugar
2 cups milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
about 4 stale croissants (3/4 pound), torn into large pieces
3 tablespoons sliced almonds

Preheat oven to 300° F.  Lightly butter a shallow 1 1/2- to 2-quart baking dish.

In a large, shallow bowl, whisk together the eggs, sugar, milk, salt, and vanilla, until combined.  Add the croissant pieces and toss to coat.  Let sit, stirring occasionally, until the liquid has been mostly absorbed, about 10 minutes.  Pour the mixture into the prepared dish, and smooth lightly.  Scatter the almonds across the top.

Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center of the pudding comes out clean, 40 to 50 minutes.  Cool at least 10 minutes before serving.

Refrigerate any leftovers.

Makes about 8 servings.  Preparation time, 15 minutes; total time, about 1 hour and 15 minutes.

Raspberry Sorbet

Raspberry_sorbet

I've done a few ice creams already this summer, but this month's Sugar High Friday -- hosted by Sarah of The Delicious Life -- is "Ice, Ice, Baby".  And you know you want more.

This recipe is based on one by Emeril Lagasse.

Raspberry Sorbet

2 cups water
1 3/4 cups sugar
4 1/2 cups fresh raspberries (about 18 ounces)
2 or 3 tablespoons freshly-squeezed lemon juice

Combine the water and sugar in a large saucepan and bring to a boil, then simmer for 6 to 8 minutes.  Remove from the heat and chill for about 3 hours.

In 2 or 3 batches, using a blender, purée the sugar syrup, raspberries, and lemon juice until smooth.  Strain the purée -- you will have to push much of it through the sieve with the back of a spoon -- and chill for 2 hours.

Freeze in an electric ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's directions.

Makes about 1 quart.  Preparation time, about 25 minutes, plus chilling and freezing times.

Brown Sugar Ice Cream

Brownsugar_icecream

Brown sugar is, I think, one of my favorite flavors in the world.  Molasses I'm in two minds about, but that hint of almost-molasses brownness in brown sugar -- mmm.  I first made this ice cream accidentally, when David and I were just married and trying out our La Glacière machine -- as one does -- and after breaking the eggs we found that there wasn't any white sugar on hand! and I thought that brown sugar would do just as well.  It did.  The brown sugar gives it a wonderful subtle caramelly sophistication -- quite remarkable.  We made it for the grandparents  this hot summer Sunday afternoon, and it was all gone long before dinner.

This is perfectly fine made with all milk -- even low-fat milk -- as I rarely have cream on hand.  It's not quite as rich, of course, but the brown sugar is such an interesting flavor that it more than makes up for the so-called "lack" of cream.

Brown Sugar Ice Cream

2 eggs
2/3 cup golden brown sugar
1 3/4 cups milk
2 cups cream
2 teaspoons vanilla

Beat the eggs and milk together in a large saucepan.  Add the brown sugar, and cook over low heat, whisking constantly, until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes -- the mixture should coat the back of a spoon.  Do not cook too long or it will curdle.  Remove from heat and let cool; add the cream and vanilla.  Refrigerate until very cold.

Follow manufacturer's instructions for freezing the ice cream.

Makes about 1 quart; preparation time, 15 minutes plus refrigeration and freezing time.

Lemon Buttermilk Ice Cream

Lemonbuttermilk_icecream

We had Father's Day at our house yesterday, with a barbecue in the warm summer afternoon -- we impulsively moved everything and ate outside, it was so lovely.  I made a white barbecue sauce, mayonnaise-based, from a recipe in "Cook's Country" magazine, and David grilled chicken and corn on the cob, and we had a favorite salad of fresh spinach, sliced cucumber, chopped cilantro, and tomatoes with a light vinaigrette. 

Afterwards, we made ice cream.  When I first tasted this lemon buttermilk ice cream a couple of years ago, a recipe from I think "Cooking Light", I thought I'd died and gone to heaven.  My father-in-law shuddered a bit when I said that there is buttermilk in it, but he conceded the point when he tried it.  It has a wonderful tangy sweetness, and I love the way that the lemon stays in your mouth long afterwards, like a memory of summer.  We all took turns cranking the freezer, the girls adding the ice and rock salt -- it seems that the ice cream is even better when you have to work for it a little.

Lemon Buttermilk Ice Cream

1 cup freshly-squeezed lemon juice (about 5 to 10 lemons)
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 cups whole or 2% low-fat milk
2 cups half-and-half
2 cups buttermilk

Combine the lemon juice and sugar in a large bowl, and stir until the sugar is dissolved.  Add the milk, half-and-half, and buttermilk.  (Refrigerate if necessary, until you are ready to make the ice cream.)

Prepare in a hand-cranked ice cream maker, or in an electric ice cream freezer according to the manufacturer's directions.  You may need to halve the recipe for some electric freezers.

Homemade ice cream is best on the day it is made; let leftovers soften a bit, at room temperature or on a very low microwave setting, and stir thoroughly to break up the ice crystals which develop.

Makes about 9 cups of ice cream.  Preparation time, about 5 minutes; active work time, about 40 minutes.

Ginger-Jam Bread and Butter Pudding

I've been craving the Ginger-Jam Bread and Butter Pudding from Nigella Bites for a few weeks now, and last night the stars aligned, as it were.  I'd never really given bread puddings a thought before starting to seriously read cookbooks a few years ago, but this one is especially mouth-watering.

Prep_1

The ginger gives it a lovely warmth, the brown bread a wheaty base-note, the custard is a milky complement to the ginger -- more like a sauce, as it were, than a separate component, as it sort of insinuates itself between the little "sandwiches" -- the rum raisins make a pleasant fruity surprise, and the Demerara sugar on the top makes a crispy, sweet accent to the soft, custardy goodness.

It seems like the nuttier, heavier the brown bread is, the better, so go ahead and be "healthy" with the bread selection! although the ordinary wheat bread also works very well.  I add a dash of vanilla to the custard, which doesn't go amiss, either.

Gingerjam_bread_pudding

Julia says, appreciatively, "Milk and pudding go good together --"