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  • :: Deep Dish Chocolate Chip Cookies!

    :: Deep Dish Chocolate Chip Cookies!

    All this snow is not good for the diet. The cold weather seems to always make me crave serious comfort food so I do have to apologise for posting another seriously delicious, seriously sweet recipe! Most of yesterday was spent very busily building a snowman in my friends back garden, so there wasn't much time for cooking. Dinner last night was a quick carbonara, thrown together using the bacon I was gifted by the lads at Truly Irish our stand neighbours at the RDS, who gave me a great selection of pork products to try out! A big pasta dish and a great movie made the perfect snowy evening in!

    Deep Dish Chocolate Chip Cookies
    I don't think there is any question that the Americans know how to create the most overindulgent desserts, and this one ticks all the boxes.
    These were created by an American chain of restaurants and have something of a cult following in the US. Put simply, it's cookie dough piled into individual serving dishes and baked at high heat, so you get a set top and edges but a ridiculously gooey interior.
    When they are pulled out of the hot oven, a big dollop of vanilla ice cream is plonked on top to melt and mingle with hot, soft cookie. Makes four individual portions.

    Serves 4
    200g butter, softened
    200g light brown sugar, packed
    1 large egg
    1 tsp vanilla extract
    200g plain flour
    1 tsp baking soda
    120g good-quality milk chocolate chips
    Vanilla ice cream, to serve

    Pre-heat the oven to 260°C/Gas Mark 9. In a mixing bowl, using a electric hand mixer, cream the butter and brown sugar until it is light and pale. Add in the egg and vanilla extract and beat through. Add in the flour and baking soda, little by little, until you have a stiff dough. Using a spatula, stir through the chocolate chips until evenly combined.
    Divide the cookie dough among four large six-inch ramekins and place in the oven on a baking sheet. Bake for seven to 10 minutes but keep an eye on them, you want them to puff up and become golden brown around the sides and just about set in the middle. Remove them from the oven and serve straight away with a dollop of vanilla ice cream on top.

  • :: Halloween Barmbrack

    :: Halloween Barmbrack

    The race is on to get the decorations up, the pumpkins carved, the costume sorted and the treats and goodies all laid out! Yes, Halloween is literally two days away. I've just moved into a new house so despite the fact that we've been carting furniture in and out I have found time to pick up some pumpkins, although carving them is still on the 'to do' list. I'm planning to make a velvet pumpkin soup served in the pumpkin itself, some roasted savoury pumpkin seeds and an all American pumpkin pie if I get a chance over the weekend, but this week I've been busy baking up barmbrack! I had planned to include the recipe in last week's Cork News Menu pages but unfortunately it was eaten up before I got a chance to take a picture!

    Barmbrack is a big part of Halloween tradition here in Ireland, with objects baked in the dough signifying different things. In most shop bought barmbracks you'll find a ring, which if you're lucky enough to receive it in a slice means you should be wed within one year! My mother recently told me the story of when she lived in Finland as a child and my grandmother generously baked a barmbrack for their Finnish neighbours, only to be berated by the lady next door after her child nearly choked on the ring! Needless to say they moved back to Ireland not long after! In keeping with tradition, I cheekily asked the baker at our local supermarket if he could give me a ring to put in my barmbrack, and he had no problem handing over a few, so don't be afraid to ask! This is a really easy recipe but it does take a bit of time, so if you want to enjoy it on Halloween night, make sure to get cooking today!

    Halloween Barmbrack
    This recipe makes a really beautiful moist loaf which is packed with flavour from the mixed spice and dried fruit, which sits overnight in cold tea and whiskey to soak up all the goodness. You can drop the whiskey if you wish but I think it adds another flavour kick...

    Makes one 900g loaf
    225g cream flour
    2 teaspoons of baking powder
    375g packet of fruit mix
    250ml cold tea
    50ml of whiskey
    125g light brown sugar
    1 large egg
    1/2 teaspoon of mixed spice
    A ring to place inside

    Place the fruit mix in a bowl and pour over the whiskey and cold tea. Allow to soak up the liquid overnight.
    Preheat the oven to 170oC/Gas Mark 3 and grease and line a 900g loaf tin
    Combine the flour, baking powder, sugar and mixed spice in a mixing bowl.
    Make a well and break in the egg, using a wooden spoon, mix the egg with the dry ingredients. Add a little bit of the liquid the fruit mix is sitting in and mix it through. You may not need all the liquid, you are looking for a wet dough.
    Then stir through the fruit mix until everything is thoroughly combined. Add in the ring and stir through.
    Spoon the wet dough into the lined loaf tin and place in the oven on the middle shelf and bake for 1 hour.
    Remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly before removing from the loaf tin and placing on wire rack.
    Cover in cling wrap and tin foil and allow to sit for 1-2 days before cutting into it.
    Serve in slices spread with a little butter and good cuppa!

  • :: Rustic Apple and Blackberry Galettes

    :: Rustic Apple and Blackberry Galettes

    After a fairly busy weekend the majority of my worldly belongings have been moved into our new house! The bad news we got today however is that it's going to take a whopping 25 days to get broadband installed in the house because there hasn't been a line there since 1994. So a life of robbing other peoples internet is what's on the cards for the next 25 days. Which isn't a bad thing really, I mean I would get far more things done if I wasn't drooling over my new favourite food blog What Katie Ate and talking crap on twitter. The truth is that I will probably far more focused now on cooking in the kitchen without my laptop keys getting covered in flour, corners nearly being singed and screen getting a lovely smattering of grease.

    We should really talk about the kitchen, it is a bit of a work in progress but there is lots and lots of light and space so in the next few days I'll be adding a few touches to make it perfect and then you most definitely will be due a photo or two. Very exciting stuff! The other advantage this new lovely house has is a big back garden, which at the moment looks like an overgrown jungle, but with a bit of work, by next spring will make the perfect little vegetable garden! Right enough new house talk how about a recipe?

    Rustic Apple and Blackberry Galettes
    These are one of my favorite little autumnal (yes I said autumnal, it rolls off the tongue doesn't it!) desserts, because they are really easy and make you look like a baking genius, when, realistically all you do is make some pastry and fill it with apples and blackberries. No messing around with blind baking, pie tins, or fancy latticing here, this is a no fuss dessert which you have to serve with cream or, even better, a soft scoop of vanilla ice cream!

    Serves 4
    Pastry:
    250g of plain flour
    3 tablespoons sugar
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    140g of chilled butter, cut into pieces
    1 large egg yolk
    3 tablespoons of cold water

    Filling:
    250g of blackberries
    250g of cooking apples, peeled and sliced thinly
    4 tablespoons of light brown sugar
    A good squeeze of lemon juice
    1 egg whisked together with a drop of milk to brush on the galettes

    Add the flour, sugar, salt and butter to a mixing bowl.
    Using your fingertips, combine the dry ingredients with the butter, until it resembles coarse bread crumbs. This can take time, but don't worry the mixture will come together.
    Add the egg yolk and water and form the dough using your hands.
    Press the dough into a sausage shape and cover it in clingfilm, place in the fridge to chill for at least 30-40 minutes.
    Preheat the oven to 190oC/Gas mark 5.
    Mix together the blackberries, apples, sugar, and lemon juice in a bowl and set aside.
    Split the dough in four and roll each quarter out into 6"/15cm circles on a floured work surface with a rolling pin. Transfer the rounds to a baking sheet with a non stick surface.
    Add a handful of the blackberry apple mix to the centre of each pastry circle and fold the sides of the pastry up and over the sides of the fruit mix. Brush with the pastry with egg wash and place in the oven to bake for 20-30 minutes. Allow to cool before serving with a dollop of thick, cool whipped cream and dust with a little icing sugar.

Random for food:

  1. raspberry and almond clafoutis
  2. lemon meringue ice cream sandwiches
  3. olive oil cupcakes with roasted strawberry buttercream
  4. lemon and coconut slice
  5. buckwheat gnocchi with tomato and butter sauce
  6. june in a photo a day
  7. apricot, almond and buckwheat cake
  8. inside out cookie dough truffles
  9. toasted buckwheat and rum ice cream
  10. share: the cookbook that celebrates our common humanity