Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Do you remember our old food processor?

The one that I’ve been operating with a chopstick for the last four years?

Well, after nearly a quarter century of frequent use, it finally died.

And Pete bought me a brand new, super fantabulous Magimix 5200 XL…

It comes with a 30 year guarantee on the 1100W motor (three years on parts) and enough kit to require its own shelf in the cupboard.

I’m a very, very happy girl!

One of the first things we made was this easy chocolate cake – a homely, old-fashioned recipe from the lovely Gill…

  • 250g (8oz) unsalted butter, cut into pieces
  • 250g (8oz) white sugar (or 125g each of brown sugar and white sugar)
  • 4 free range eggs
  • 125g (4oz) self-raising flour
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract (I used homemade)
  • 60g (2oz) Dutch-process cocoa
  • 60g (2oz) hazelnut or almond meal

1. Have all the ingredients at room temperature before starting.  Preheat the oven to 160C (320F) with fan. Grease a loaf tin and/or line it with parchment paper (I used this Chicago Metallics tin and these loaf tin liners).  I’ve also baked this cake in a 20cm (8″) round springform tin.

2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, sifted cocoa and hazelnut or almond meal.

3. In the large bowl of the food processor (my new machine has THREE bowls!), pulse together the butter and sugar until well combined and light in colour.  Scrape down the bowl.

4. Add the vanilla and then the eggs one at a time and continue pulsing to combine. Add a spoonful of the flour mixture each time (if required) to stop the batter from curdling.  Then add the remaining flour mixture, pulsing until just combined.

5. Scrape the batter into the lined loaf tin and bake for 60 – 70 minutes, until a cake tester inserted into the thickest part of the cake comes out cleanly.  Allow to rest in the tin for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.

The second time I made this, I baked it in a 20cm round tin, and topped it with our ever reliable chocolate frosting.  It took about an hour to bake.  I wasn’t quick enough to take a photo of the whole cake, but here’s a slice…

I’ve been searching for months for a family style chocolate cake – uncomplicated yet flavourful, without being overly rich or heavy.  This one ticks all the boxes.  Being able to make it in minutes in the food processor is, if you’ll excuse the pun, icing on the cake!

. . . . .

For more food processor cakes, click here

In my kitchen…

…is an easy mid-week dessert – meringues with microwave custard and frozen raspberries…

In my kitchen…

…is treasureCape Grim beef ribs purchased at the markets for a song (they were surplus from an export order)…

A slow four-hour bake transformed them into sticky, tender perfection…

In my kitchen…

…is a large slab of salmon, smoked by our neighbour Ellen. The Neighbour Ware is not only coming back, it’s coming back with food on it…

And speaking of the Neighbour Ware, in my kitchen…

…is the latest addition to the set, from the Johnson Brothers Born to Shop range…

…the plate came with a matching teacup and saucer that says Dieting is Wishful Shrinking.  So true, so true…

In my kitchen…

…are dark and light Muscovado sugar. They add a treacly note to my baking…

In my kitchen…

…is Wednesday’s harvest – carrots, Tuscan kale, a perennial leek, white kohlrabi and three eggs…

…and Thursday’s harvest – self-sown endive, cucumbers, a patty pan squash and lots of small eggplants…

In my kitchen…

…are black mussels, cooked with soy, ginger and chilli. An easy and surprisingly economical meal!

. . . . .

Tell me, what’s happening in your kitchen this month?

If you’d like to do an In My Kitchen post on your own blog, please feel free  to use this format, and to leave a comment here linking back to your post.  We’d love to see what’s happening in your kitchen this month!

. . . . .

Here are this month’s posts…

Shelley @ All Litten Up

Christine @ Food Wine Travel

Sorcha @ xo.sorcha.ox

Rose @ Greening The Rose

Christine @ Invisible Spice

Pam @ Grow, Bake, Run

Sally @ Bewitching Kitchen

Brydie @ CityHippyFarmgirl

Misk @ Misk Cooks

Claire @ Claire K Creations

Karen @ Soul Kitchen Blog

Mandy @ The Complete Cookbook

Matina @ Delicio8

Sue @ Sous Chef

Tandy @ Lavender and Lime

Jane @ The Shady Baker

Lizzy @ Bizzy Lizzy’s Good Things

Glenda @ Passion Fruit Garden

Heidi @ Steps on the Journey

When my cousins Dilys and Brian came over for dinner a couple of months ago, they brought with them a bottle of Wollombi Roasted Garlic Olive Oil.

This delicious oil was consumed at a rapid clip – we dunked bread into it, garnished pasta and risotto with it, and drizzled it over our roast vegetables. When finished, there was a generous quantity of roasted garlic left in the bottle that I was loathe to throw away…

…so I incorporated it all into a batch of ciabatta dough, reducing the water content slightly to make it easier to shape…

  • 300g active sourdough starter (166%, fed at a ratio of 1 cup water to 1 cup flour)
  • 620g water
  • 500g bakers/bread flour
  • 500g remilled semolina flour (semola rimacinata di grano duro)
  • 18g fine sea salt
  • 50g roasted garlic

The loaves were quite garlicky, and a great accompaniment to the soup we had for dinner that night!

. . . . .

Small Man loves cheese and olive rolls, and takes one to school every day for lunch. I bake a dozen every other weekend – each roll weighs about 200g, and is filled with pitted Kalamata olives and King Island Surprise Bay Cheddar.  They keep very well in the freezer, and defrost perfectly by lunch time…

I’ve reworked the recipe over the past year and now use the following formula:

I wasn’t going to blog about these as I’ve mentioned them before, but Small Man, bless his heart, walked into the kitchen last Sunday and said:

“Mum, the olive rolls seemed to have turned out particularly well today.
You should take a photo of them for your blog..”

Given he eats them every day, I was flattered that he thought this batch was worth commenting on!

My lovely friend Joanna sent me these fabulous blocks of Willie’s Cacao…

I’ve grated up the Venezuelan Black, ready for use…

To keep the small people in the neighbourhood happy, I made chocolate lollipops from a 50:50 blend of Callebaut 823 Milk and 811 Dark.  The sticks reduce the likelihood of chocolate hand prints on the walls…

For the grown-ups, I blended Callebaut 811 (54%) with small quantities of Tanzanie, Sao Thome and Manjari origin chocolate.  The golden ticket moulds continue to be popular…

These fleur-de-lys are a new shape for me. I think they look quite elegant in both dark…

…and milk chocolate…

And finally, big dark (70%) chocolate pills, for emergencies…

Easter is just around the corner, so I thought it was worth doing a practice run – it’s been a while since I’ve tempered any chocolate.  More posts coming soon!

PS. As always, our moulds were purchased from Candyland Crafts in the US.  They’re just $2 each, but the shipping nearly doubles that if you’re ordering from Australia.  Be warned, their online catalogue can be addictive!

Autumn in Sydney has brought a little sunshine and yet more rain…

Our five remaining chooks are all doing well, although laying less than they have been in the past.  They’re now over two years old, and their egg production is slowing up a bit.

The Tuscan kale (above) is doing well in the cooler weather, and the patty pan squash seeds that we threw into an empty bed a couple of months ago are thriving. They seem to be much easier to grow in our garden than zucchinis…

In amongst Pete’s beloved chickweed, the cos lettuce is growing well…

Lebanese cucumbers are having a late run…

Kohlrabi is probably the second easiest vegetable to grow in our garden (radishes being the easiest,  but no-one will eat them). We broadcast seeds, and up they come…

There are always perennial leeks growing and they provide us with fresh greens when there is nothing else to harvest. We use them in place of onions, stir fry them, use them in tabbouleh salad, and add them to soups…

Basil seems to like our backyard, and we have a few healthy plants, despite the lack of sunshine this summer…

And a photo for my lovely friend Joanna…this broccoli plant is growing very determinedly in a crack in the bricks.  Can’t wait to see if it forms any flower heads…

Today’s pickings included a cos lettuce, two large squash, a couple of Lebanese cucumbers, parsley, eggplant and an assortment of chillies, including cayennes and bishop’s crowns.

What’s growing in your garden this month?