We Love Cooking!:
self raising flour

  • :: Cranberry and White Chocolate Muffins

    :: Cranberry and White Chocolate Muffins

    Christmas has well and truly hit the Skehan household! We've only been in our brand new little cottage two months, but it's safe to say we've finally made our house a home. The Christmas decorations are up, the house is filled with Christmas spirit and the scent of warm baking is wafting from the kitchen. Just this week we carried our first Christmas tree up to the house from a little shop in the village; Christmas is here and I'm loving it! The festive season is a fantastic time for cooking, ingredients are celebrated and people are busy stocking up on all those essential Christmas storecupboard ingredients. I'm huge fan of Christmas baking and we're planning a big baking session with my little cousins who are coming over next week; a giant gingerbread house, homemade toffee, christmas tree biscuits and gingerbread muffins are all on the menu. If all this talk of Christmas baking has got you in the mood, then you have to try these absolutely delicious cranberry and white chocolate muffins. They make the best of leftover cranberries, but you could also use any other berry you wish. The sweetness of the white chocolate really balances out the sourness of the cranberries... utterly delicious!

    Cranberry and White Chocolate Muffins
    If you really want to get ahead of yourself you could make a big batch of these and freeze them to serve for a Christmas morning treat! If you're making them for kids, I'd suggest quickly whizzing the cranberries in a food processor to break up them up a little.

    Makes 8-12 Muffins
    100g of butter, melted
    200ml of buttermilk
    Zest of 1 orange
    2 large free range eggs
    150g of caster sugar
    250g of self raising flour
    250g of fresh cranberries
    200g of white chocolate, roughly chopped

    Preheat the oven to 175oC. Line a muffin tray with paper cases.
    In a bowl, whisk together the butter, buttermilk, orange zest and set aside.
    In a standalone mixer, beat the eggs with the sugar until light and fluffy.
    Add in the butter mixture and whisk until combined.
    Gently fold in the flour until just combined. Stir through the cranberries and white chocolate until combined. Be sure not to over mix the batter.
    Spoon the mixture into the papercases and place in the oven to cook for 15-20 minutes until brown on top.
    Remove from the oven and place on a wire wrack to cool.

  • :: Blackberry Crumb Slices

    :: Blackberry Crumb Slices

    It's quickly becoming an annual tradition that early on a Saturday morning at the start of autumn just before the leaves fall from the trees, we take my little cousin out blackberry picking. It doesn't take too much persuading really, because at the end of our trek around the local hedgerows and fields, she always knows we'll end up cooking a whole batch of sweets and treats. Last year we spent a bumper day of cooking, which included, Blackberry Coulis, Blackberry Mess and the most amazing blackberry cupcakes with a cream cheese frosting! AMAZING!

    This year it was just a big batch of blackberry jam and these really easy blackberry crumb slices.
    Blackberries are most certainly not the most pretty of fruits our Irish countryside has to offer, especially when compared to our most prized summer berry the seductive and far more grown up, glamourous, strawberry. No the blackberry is a bit more like your rough and ready cousin who doesn’t bother with the latest trends and insists on wearing wooly jumpers! But despite all this, blackberries are by far the most accessible and economical of all the fruits our countryside has to offer, with bramble bushes along most road sides literally teeming with the bulging black fruit.
    So if you have the time this weekend, grab a few extra hands, pull out an old basket or a bucket and get picking! I got some good advice to bring an umbrella with a hook on the end to pull down the branches- the big ones are always at the top!

    Blackberry Crumb Slices
    I think these blackberry crumb slices match the fruit perfectly! They are most definitely and bit more rustic looking than most cake slices, but are full of warm sponge and juicy flavours. Both the cake mix and the crumb topping are extremely easy to make and great for baking with kids!

    Makes 24 delicious slices
    115g butter, at room temperature
    175g caster sugar
    1 large free range egg
    280g self raising flour
    1 teaspoon of cinnamon
    125ml milk
    300g of fresh blackberries (you could use frozen if you’re stuck)

    For the sweet crumb topping
    115g caster sugar
    85g plain flour
    zest of 1 lemon
    75g of butter

    Preheat the oven to 190oC/Gas Mark 5.
    Grease a rectangular baking tin and line it with parchment paper. If you’re stuck for parchment paper you could probably get away with greasing the tin and flouring it instead.
    Using a hand mixer, in a bowl beat together the sugar and butter until pale. Add in the egg whisking to incorporate the mixture little by little.
    Using a wooden spoon fold in the flour, cinnamon and milk. Mix gently until you have a sticky dough like mixture.
    Spread evenly across the bottom of the prepared baking tin, this requires patience as the dough can be sticky, but bear with it you’ll get there! Then arrange the blackberries on top. Set aside while you prepare the sweet crumb topping.
    Add all the ingredients for the sweet crumb topping to a bowl and rub the dry ingredients into the butter with your fingertips as you would with pastry. Keep mixing until you have a mixture that resembles rough breadcrumbs.
    Sprinkle the crumb topping over the blackberries in the baking tray and place in the oven on the middle rack for 40-45 minutes until the top is golden brown.
    Remove from the oven and allow to cool before slicing into 24 pieces.

  • :: Auntie Ann's Banana Bread

    :: Auntie Ann's Banana Bread

    There seems to be quite a lot of debate about banana bread and whether or not the inclusion of nuts is significant. I'm not really sure which side of the fence I stand on over this, so for now I'm going to plonk myself right in the middle, on the fence! It's actually quite comfortable here and I can see both perspectives. On one hand, there are those who love the combination of the crunchy nuts through the soft cake, the flavours of the two mingling together in one mouthful of wonderfulness, completely oblivious as to why you would accept anything less. Then on the other side I see all you lovely people who really can't see why you would tarnish such a pure and delightfully moist, spongy, banana flavoured loaf with the somewhat crude addition of nuts. Well I say stop your cribbin' and either way this recipe is damn good and will accommodate for both your nut or non nut needs!

    Auntie Ann's Banana Bread
    This recipe comes from my auntie Ann who spent a lot of time in America over the years and has picked up some really great US inspired recipes. This banana bread is deliciously moist and is extremely easy to throw together. I add a little sliced banana on top before it goes into the oven, but if you want you sprinkle some nuts on top or even stir some chopped ones through.

    Makes 8 mini loaves or 2 larger loaves
    110g butter
    190g caster sugar
    2 large eggs
    240g self raising flour
    1 teaspoon baking soda
    1/2 teaspoon of vanilla extract
    3 large bananas

    Preheat the oven to 180oC/Gas Mark 4.
    Cream the sugar and the butter in a bowl with a hand held mixer until light and pale. Add in one egg and a little flour and mix through, repeat with the other egg and the rest of flour and baking soda, until everything is mixed through and smooth.
    Peel the bananas and mash them with the back of a fork. Add them to the bowl with the vanilla extract and mix through.
    Pour the mix into a well greased loaf tin and place in an oven for approximately 50 minutes. You can cover it with tinfoil after 25 minutes to stop it browning too much on top if you need too.
    Insert a metal skewer into the centre of the loaf and if it comes out clean the banana bread is ready. Remove from the loaf tin and place on a wire rack to cool.
    Enjoy with a big cuppa and filthy smile!

  • :: Gizzi Erskine's Sticky Banoffee Pudding

    :: Gizzi Erskine's Sticky Banoffee Pudding

    What I think I love most about Gizzi's book is her take on recipes, a perfect example being this Sticky Banoffee Pudding, what an inspired idea of combining banoffee pie and sticky toffee pudding, clearly the woman is a genius! If you are intrigued by the lovely Gizzi then you should definitely take a peak at the video below, where she talks about her style of cooking and her favourite recipes in the book.

    Which reminds me I really should make one of those for Good Mood Food! Now that you have a full grasp of what Gizzi is all about I think it's high time we getting cracking with one of her recipes. I chose this recipe basically because not only does it look delicious, but because it combines two of my favourite desserts, simple really! :) Also don't forget to give me your questions for Ms. Erskine in the comments below or on twitter and facebook.

    Gizzi Erskine's Sticky Banoffee Pudding
    This is my boyfriend Dean’s recipe. While he is a fantastic cook, he is so lazy he never cooks for me, except for this. And my God, does it make up for it! The banana is terrific with the toffeeish dates and keeps the pudding really moist.

    Serves 6
    Preparation time 15 minutes
    Cooking time 40 minutes

    250g dates, stoned and chopped
    250ml hot black tea, made with 1 teabag
    1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
    85g softened unsalted butter, plus extra butter
    for greasing
    175g caster sugar
    2 large free-range eggs, beaten
    175g self-raising fl our, sieved
    3 bananas, roughly mashed
    1 teaspoon ground mixed spice
    vanilla ice cream, or clotted cream, to serve

    For the sauce
    100g light muscovado sugar
    100g unsalted butter
    150ml double cream

    Preheat the oven to 180°C/gas 4 and butter a 22cm baking dish.
    Place the dates in a small pan and cover with the hot tea. Bring to the boil and cook for 3–4 minutes, until the dates have softened, then stir in the bicarbonate of soda.
    Cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy, then add the eggs, one at a time. Fold in the fl our, banana, mixed spice and the date mixture and pour into the baking dish. Bake for 30–35 minutes, until the top is springy and a skewer comes out clean when inserted into the centre.
    While the pudding is cooking, make the sauce. Put the muscovado sugar, butter and cream into a pan, place over a low heat and melt until the sugar has dissolved. Then whack the heat up and simmer for 3–4 minutes, or until the sauce is a light toffee colour.
    Serve the pudding with the warm sauce and a big scoop of vanilla ice cream or clotted cream.
    Or remove the bananas from the ingredients and you’ve got a classic sticky toffee pudding!

    (Taken from Gizzi’s Kitchen Magic by Gizzi Erskine published by Virgin Books, price £20)

  • :: Chocolate Fudge Cupcakes and The Highs and Lows Of The Music Biz!

    :: Chocolate Fudge Cupcakes and The Highs and Lows Of The Music Biz!

    After all the excitment over the weekend and the last few days on tour with JLS, I am just about back in the land of the living! It's these days, after the big highs, which are always the hardest, it becomes really important to pick yourself straight up and keep going, otherwise you don't know what to be doing with yourself! I can see the addictive side to performing in front of crowds that size, and with 10,000 people screaming for you it is extremely easy to see why, the problem then becomes that you expect that sort of addulation when you leave your house to go to the car, but unfotrunately nothing really comes close. While my band is not quite on the scale of JLS we have had an amazing journey so far which has provided us with more than a bit of a taster. But I am very glad I have another passion in my life, which of course is cooking, it keeps me distracted and after the big high, there is nothing better than getting back into the kitchen to refocus! In my case the answer is cupcakes!

    Mega Chocolate Fudge Cupcakes
    (Recipe adapted from BBC Good Food and food styling by Erica Ryan)
    This batter makes really delicious and moist cupcakes which will give you more reason to have just one more! The batter is a lot more runny than normal cupcakes batters, but will rise so just make sure not to overfill the cases, halfway up is just perfect.

    Makes about 16
    175g Self raising flour
    2 tablespoon of cocoa powder
    1 teaspoon of bicarbonate soda
    150g caster sugar
    2 eggs beaten
    150 ml (1/4 pint) sunflower oil
    150 ml (1/4 pint) semi skimmed milk
    2 tablespoon of golden syrup

    For the frosting
    75g unsalted butter
    175g icing Sugar
    3 tablespoon cocoa powder
    Drop of Milk

    Pre-heat oven to 180ºC/350F/Gas Mark 4. Line a muffin tray with cupcake cases.
    Sieve the flour, cocoa and Bicarbonate of Soda into a bowl. Add the sugar and mix well.
    Make a well in the centre and add the syrup, eggs, oil and milk. Beat well with electric whisk until smooth.
    Spoon the mixture into the cupcake cases about halfway up and bake for about 20 minutes or until they have risen and are firm to the touch. Remove from oven, leave to cool before turning out onto a cooling rack.
    To make your butter icing, place the butter in a bowl and beat until soft. Gradually sift and beat in the icing sugar and cocoa powder then add enough milk to make the icing fluffy and spreadable.
    Top the cooled cupcakes with delicious frosting and enjoy!