Showing posts with label Fiona Cairns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiona Cairns. Show all posts

Monday, June 14

cranberry filled lemon cakes


I've previously raved about Fiona Cairns' beautiful book 'Bake & decorate: tea time luxury'. It contains a wonderful list of cake and cupcake recipes, with beautiful yet simple decorating ideas to compliment them.

In celebration of what has been a very cold long weekend, I've created some of Fiona's adorable, wintery penguins to sit atop some snowy frosted cakes. They are really simple and fun to make, and any imperfection just adds character. Feel free to dust the final product with some icing sugar - I just didn't have the heart to snow on my penguins. I'm gosh darn smitten. I don't know how I will possibly bite into one...

Ingredients

For cakes:
90 gms butter, softened
1/2 cup caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup self raising flour
2 tbsps milk
2 eggs
finely grated rind of 1 lemon

For meringue icing:
3 egg whites
1 cup caster sugar
80 mls water

For cranberry filling:
170 gms craisins
125 mls water
1/4 cup caster sugar

For penguins:
250 gms black fondant/sugar paste/ready to roll icing
50 gms white fondant
1 egg white
250 gms icing sugar, sifted
yellow and black food colourings

For cranberry filling, add all ingredients to a small saucepan and bring to the boil. Stir until sugar has dissolved. Continue to simmer for 5 - 10 mins until mixture has thickened and craisins are plump. Set aside to cool.

For cakes, preheat oven to 180C/160C fan-forced. Place 12 paper cases into a 12 capacity cupcake tins.

Place all ingredients in the bowl of an electric mixture, and beat until just combined. Increase speed, and beat until mixture is creamy and paler in colour. Spoon mixture among cases. Bake for 20 minutes, until golden. Remove cakes from tin immediately, and allow to cool completely on wire rack.

For penguins, roll small quantities of black fondant into rounded cone shapes (various sizes work well. I made sizes ranging from about 1.5cm high to about 4cm high). With a pair of small scissors (or a small, sharp knife), snip out two wings on each penguin and ease them away from their bodies - using a toothpick makes this a little easier.

Make royal icing by mixing egg white and icing sugar together in a small bowl. Place some icing in a small zip lock back, and make a piping bag by snipping a very small tip off one of the bottom corners. Pipe two small eyes on each penguin.

Roll out a little ball of white fondant and squash to form the penguin's belly. Stick on using a little smear of royal icing. Tint remaining icing yellow. Pipe beaks onto each penguin using another home-made piping bag. Create eyeballs for your penguin by dipping a toothpick into some black food colouring, and dotting in the centre of each royal icing eye. Set penguins aside in a dry place.


Once both cakes and cranberry filling have cooled completely, take a small sharp knife and - holding your knife at a 45 degree angle - slice a circle into the top of a cake. The circle should be about 5mm from the edge of the cake to make it easy to cover when decorating. By holding your knife at this angle, you are creating a cone-shaped hold in your cake, and the lid you've created should come easily. Set lid aside for later. Repeat with remaining cakes.

Fill each cake with cranberries, pushing down to make them quite compact, and then replace lids. If necessary, trim the pointed end of the lids off to it sits flush when placed back onto the cake.

For snowy meringue icing, combine the sugar and the water in a small saucepan. Stir over a medium heat until sugar has completely dissolved. Increase heat and boil - without stirring - for approximately five minutes until syrup reaches 116C on a candy thermometer. Your syrup should have slightly thickened, but don't let it get any colour! Remove from heat and let bubbles subside.

Beat egg whites in an electric mixer until soft peaks form. While the motor is still running, pour sugar syrup into egg whites in a slow, steady stream. Continue to beat until mixture has cooled and is thick and glossy.

Spread cakes with snowy meringue and top with a penguin or two!


Recommended baking soundtrack: Beach House - Devotion

Thursday, May 20

sticky date cupcakes with salted caramel buttercream


My first post could be something self-defining and meaningful, but I think it's best to get straight to what's important: salted. caramel.

I've seen salted caramel on plenty of menus of fine restaurants and pâtisseries and always thought it smacked of pretension. Why taint perfection with ridiculous flakes of sea salt?! However, falling in love with Fiona Cairns' book 'Bake & decorate: tea time luxury' introduced me to a recipe I simply couldn't deny.

Initially, I thought I would follow the recipes for both cake and buttercream, but omit the recommended salt simply because I know best. Then I realised I often do not know best, and added a few flakes. Followed by the recommended 1/2 tsp. And then a little more! Salted caramel is my new black.

Ingredients (makes 12)

For cakes:
180 gms dates, pitted and chopped
1 tsp vanilla bean paste (or extract)
180 gms self-raising flour
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
80 gms unsalted butter, softened
150 gms light muscovado sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten

For buttercream:
160 gms salted butter, softened
200 gms icing sugar, sifted
4 tbps dluce de leche
1 tsp vanilla bean paste (or extract)
1/2 tsp sea salt (or more!)

Preheat oven to 180C/170C fan-forced. Place 12 paper cases into a 12 capacity cupcake tin.
In a heatproof bowl, pour 180 mls boiling water over the dates and leave to soak for 20 mins. Then, with a fork, gently break up the dates and stir through the vanilla.

Sift the flour and bicarbonate of soda into a bowl and set aside. Cream together the butter and sugar for a good five minutes until very light and fluffy. Add the eggs gradually, beating between each addition and slipping in 1 tbsp flour halfway through to prevent curdling. Lastly, fold in the remaining flour and then the date mixture.
Spoon into the cupcake cases and bake for 15 - 20 mins. The tops of each cake should spring back when lightly pressed. Remove and allow to cool.

To make the buttercream, place dulce de leche in a small bowl and add vanilla and salt.
Cream butter and icing sugar for at least five minutes. Fold through dulce de leche mixture. Do a taste test to check if more salt is needed.
Place the buttercream into a large piping back fitted with a star-shaped tip and pipe onto cakes.
Top with a sprinkle of finely chopped caramel candies.

Note: If you can't buy and don't fancy making the dulce de leche, see Fiona Cairns' book for a recipe to make the buttercream using her caramel method using cream and caramelised sugar.

Recommended baking soundtrack: Beach Fossils - Beach Fossil.