Showing posts with label jaffa cakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jaffa cakes. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 May 2016

Amazing Jaffa Cake Cupcakes

 
These cupcakes taste just like eating a giant jaffa cake – they are amazing! I took them into work for my birthday and they were extremely well received, even prompting a few comments about how I should open a bakery! I think I’ll stick with the day job and I can’t take very much credit at all as these are based on a recipe from the amazing Hummingbird Bakery (their Home Sweet Home book) but I did make one key change, which I really liked – I added a whole jaffa cake to the base of the cupcake before baking. I also used self-raising flour instead of plain flour and baking powder.
 
So my cupcakes had:
A jaffa cake at the bottom
Vanilla sponge cake
An orange marmalade filling
Chocolate frosting
A mini jaffa cake on top
 
They were so good I will have to make these again!
 
I got 18 cupcakes from this recipe as I used a mixture of large and small cake cases and with the jaffa cake at the bottom, I needed less cake mix for each cupcake.
 
You need:
70g butter, softened
210g self-raising flour
250g caster sugar
210ml whole milk
2 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
18 Jaffa Cakes
 
For the icing
450g icing sugar
150g butter, softened
60ml milk
60g cocoa powder
18 mini Jaffa Cakes (available from supermarkets – some people commented they had never seen these before!)
 
 
Preheat oven to 170C and line muffin tins with paper cases – I used gold ones.
 
Cream the butter with the sugar and flour at the same time – this was different to my usual approach but I followed the recipe.
 
In a jug, mix the eggs, milk and vanilla extract. Gradually pour half the liquid onto the cake mixture with the mixer running if you are using a freestanding food mixer. Beat in then add the remaining liquid, mixing until smooth.
 
 
 
Place a jaffa cake, chocolate side up, in the bottom of each cake case and spoon in the cake batter on top until the cake cases are almost full.
 
 
Bake in the preheated oven for 20-25 minutes then leave to cool. Remove to a wire rack to finish cooling.
 
When the cupcakes are cold, use a teaspoon to remove a little from the centre of each cupcake, leaving a small hole. Add a spoonful of marmalade into the hole and replace the cut out piece of sponge. Press down a little so the top is roughly level with the top of the cake.
 
 
 
 
In a bowl, carefully mix the butter with the icing sugar- I always do this by hand as I find using an electric mixer makes it go everywhere! Add the cocoa powder, and gradually add the milk, beating well.
 
Using a piping bag and a star nozzle, pipe swirls of icing onto the cupcakes, and top with a mini jaffa cake. Delicious!
  
 
I love how the Jaffa cake sits really neatly in the base - I think these are some of the best cupcakes I've ever made!
 
 
I'm sharing these with Treat Petite, hosted by Kat the Baking Explorer and Stuart aka Cakeyboi.
 
 
 
 

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Cookery Workshop with French Glace Cherries

French glace cherries were quite common in my childhood, always as the topping on a dessert - be it a knickerbocker glory or on top of a white iced fairy cake (we didn't call them cupcakes in those days!). I didn't like them and would always pick them off! So I was intrigued when I was invited to a cookery workshop aimed around one ingredient, and one ingredient alone: French glace cherries! The invitation promised to show us different recipes using cherries and I knew I had to go.
French Glacé Cherries

The class was hosted at the Central Street Cookery School in London, which I didn't even know existed - I can't believe I had missed such a gem! It's part of St Luke's Community Centre and the kitchen - which has a huge table and lots of ovens and sinks, so is perfect for teaching - can be hired for private events and cookery classes. The best thing is that the money they make from doing this goes back to St Luke's to help them provide food-related community projects.

The afternoon session that I attended was sponsored by French Glace Cherries and we were well looked after by the company's PR, Pauline at Sopexa. The company had teamed up with Cindy, a French chef who runs a baking business, Petit Gateau. Her blog also has information about her business and tons of great recipes.
Cindy and Pauline

 Cindy and Pauline welcomed us and told us a little about French glace cherries - originally they were candied not to satisfy a sweet tooth but as a way of preserving the cherries, and this process dates back to about 1600! I also discovered that glace cherries can be different colours - some batches darker than others - and this is a deliberate process, based on the juice that is used to stain them.


These ones come from Provence, where the growing conditions are just right for cherries, and I learned why it is important to use good quality cherries - not all cherries retain their flavour, shape and texture throughout the baking process (but these will), and cheaper glace cherries allow a lot of the sugar to seep out so you end up with a sticky residue at the bottom.

Cindy had already made a variety of treats for us to try,  which were quite simply amazing. In the pictures below you can see French glace cherries wrapped in bacon, which are then baked in the oven; mini oatcakes that contain chopped French glace cherries, topped with a French glace cherry chutney and blue cheese, and some mini French glace cherry smoothies, complete with a red and white striped straw. So cute!




 And in the pictures below, you can see some mini cheesecakes with a layer of French glace cherry compote, and chocolate fondants topped with a French glace cherry - I couldn't decide which of these two were my favourite! 


Cindy had devised some different recipes for us to cook on the day - Frencg glace cherry 'jaffa cakes' and French glace cherry financiers. We began by making the jaffa cakes as they needed to set in the fridge. First we made a genoise sponge for the base, which involved whisking eggs and sugar in a bain marie.Here you can see where I have finely chopped some French glace cherries for the filling.


Cindy had already made us a jam from French glace cherries, as we wouldn't have had time to do this in the class; we mixed this with gelatine and added the chopped cherries and put it in the fridge to set.


We cooked the genoise sponge in a silicon cupcake tray so we would have small flat discs for the base of the jaffa cake.


When the jelly came out of the fridge, we used a small round cutter to cut out circles.


It's much easier to make these if you keep the cakes in the silicon mould!


We placed a circle of jelly on each cake then melted some chocolate, and after waiting for it to cool a little (so it wouldn't melt the jelly), we poured it over the top.


Finally we decorated them with some candy and sugar paper hearts - it was nearly Valentine's day after all!


The finished French glace cherry 'jaffa cakes'. They tasted fantastic and the cherry was an interesting alternative to orange that I think worked really well.

Next we made financiers, a traditional French cake using ground almonds. Here's Cindy demonstrating; the full recipe is on her website here.


We heated butter so it was slightly burnt and golden brown; it takes on a nutty flavour so is called a 'beurre noisette'. Then you mix flour, ground almonds and sugar and add the butter. Then add egg whites - so this is a good recipe if you are using egg yolks for something else and have the whites left over!


We added chopped French glace cherries to the batter once it had gone into the pan. We used a cute heart-shaped silicon mould for this but you could use any shape pan or muffin tin even.


After just a short time in the oven, they were ready:


Very pretty! And again another recipe I wouldn't have thought to use French glace cherries in.


Thanks to French Glace Cherries, Pauline at Sopexa and Cindy at Petit Gateau for organising and hosting the event and for inviting me - and for my fabulous goody bag! It was great to meet some other bloggers and to learn some new recipes.


Friday, 2 November 2012

Homemade Jaffa Cakes


When the random letter generator came up with J for this month's Alphabakes challenge, I knew right away what I wanted to make. Jaffa cakes!
 
I love jaffa cakes and can never seem to stop once I've opened the packet... so I don't buy them very often! I had no idea how you could make your own but a quick search on the internet provided me with this recipe on the BBC Food website and it seemed fairly easy to follow, though as you can see from the picture, they didn't look perfect. They did taste great though!
 
 
You will need:
For the cakes:
2 eggs
50g caster sugar
50g plain flour
For the filling:
I packet orange jelly, made up according to instructions
200g dark chocolate, melted
 
The BBC recipe (if you follow the link above) has a slightly different method, whereby you mix the jelly with marmelade, but I don't eat marmelade so didn't do this. It worked fine with just the jelly - well, just about - but I think it probably would be worth trying with the marmelade.
 
Method:
Place the eggs and sugar in a heatproof bowl

Bring a little water to the boil in a saucepan and place the heatproof bowl over the top (as you would with a bain-marie) - don't let the bottom of the bowl touch the water. Beat the eggs and sugar for about five minutes until pale and fluffy.
 

Add the flour and beat well until you have a thick, smooth batter.



Pour the batter into a muffin tin - I used a silicon one as it meant I could grease it with a spray oil and not need to use cake cases. You only need to fill each indentation to about half way up as if you imagine the base of a jaffa cake, you'll recall it does need to be relatively thin like a flat disc.



Bake in the oven for 8-10 mins. These turned out perfectly -the right size, shape and colour, I was really pleased. Allow to cool.



Make up the jelly (see BBC Food link if you are adding marmelade). I used a wide plastic tub because you want the jelly to be relatively shallow so you can cut out the circles for each jaffa cake without them being too thick.


I used a round cookie cutter to cut out a small circle of jelly, though the circles aren't perfect as the jelly wasn't especially firm. Place the jelly onto the cakes.


Melt the chocolate in a microwave or bain-marie. I then poured the hot melted chocolate over the cakes... and unsurprisingly the jelly started to melt! Fail! I waited a while until the chocolate was a bit cooler then tried again, and that worked much better. On reflection, I wonder if I should have followed the BBC Food recipe and if mixing the jelly with marmelade would have made it less likely to melt when you pour the chocolate over. If you give this recipe a go, let me know!

Still, they look pretty good - like real jaffa cakes, only with a slightly messier top... the cake on the base turned out perfectly.
 
I took these to a party and they went down really well, several people commented they didn't know you could make jaffa cakes (well, I imagine you can make most things that are factory-produced at home...) and that they were really cool.
 
 
The letter for this month's Alphabakes challenge is J - I am hosting and please check out this blog post if you want to know how to participate.