16 Şubat 2013 Cumartesi

Black Forest gâteau


Ingredients
 175g salted butter , plus extra for greasing
 200g bar dark chocolate
 300g plain flour
 375g golden caster sugar
 25g cocoa
 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
 2 medium eggs
 200g buttermilk or natural yoghurt
TO ASSEMBLE
 425g can pitted  cherries  , 2 tbsp juice reserved, rest drained
 100g morello  cherry  jam
 4 tbsp  kirsch  (or more juice from a can if you want it to be non-alcoholic)
 500ml tub double cream
 3 tbsp icing sugar
 1 small punnet fresh  cherries  (optional)

METHOD

Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Grease and line the base of 3 x 20cm cake tins. Boil the kettle. Put the butter and 75g chocolate broken into chunks in a small pan and gently heat, stirring, until completely melted.
 Mix together the flour, sugar, cocoa and bicarbonate of soda with a pinch of salt in a mixing bowl. Whisk the eggs and buttermilk or yogurt together. Scrape the melted chocolate mixture and egg mixture into the dry ingredients, add 100ml boiling water and whizz briefly with an electric whisk until the cake batter is lump free.
 Divide the mixture between the tins and bake for 25 mins, swapping the tins round after 20 mins if they're on different shelves. To test they're done, push in a skewer and check that it comes out clean.
 Prick the cakes a few times with a skewer. Mix together the 2 tbsp reserved cherry juice and the kirsch (or more juice) and drizzle over the cakes. Cool the cakes.
 Mix together the remaining drained cherries and jam. Tip 200ml of the cream into a small pan and heat until just below simmering point. Chop the remaining chocolate and put in a heatproof bowl, pour over the hot cream and stir until melted. Set aside until spreadable.
 When the cakes are cool whisk the remaining cream and the icing sugar together until softly whipped. Spread over two of the cakes, then spoon over the jammy cherries. Stack the cakes together. Spread the chocolate cream over the third cake and sit on top of the other cakes. Pile the fresh cherries in and around the cake and serve

Lauchkuchen


Zutaten
Ergibt  Portionen 600 g helles Urdinkelmehl
 1 TL Salz (ca. 9 g)
 2 dl Milch
 3 dl Wasser
 30 g Hefe
 5 EL Olivenöl
 1.2 kg Lauch
 1 Zitrone
 1 dl Rahm
 120 g Crème fraîche
Kräutersalz
Mehl zum Auswallen




1.Mehl und Salz in eine Schüssel geben und in der Mitte eine Mulde bilden. Milch und Wasser handwarm erwärmen. Hefe darin verrühren. In die Mehlmulde giessen. Öl beigeben. Alles zu einem glatten, elastischen Teig verkneten. Mit einem feuchten Tuch bedeckt ca. 1 Stunde um das Doppelte aufgehen lassen.

2.Backofen auf 220 °C vorheizen. Lauch in feine Ringe schneiden. Zitronenschale fein abreiben. Beides mit Rahm und Crème fraîche mischen. Mit Kräutersalz würzen. Teig halbieren. Jede Teighälfte auf wenig Mehl ca. 5 mm dünn auswallen. Auf ein mit Backpapier belegtes Blech legen. Lauchmasse darauf verteilen. Kuchen in der unteren Ofenhälfte ca. 30 Minuten backen.

Apfelkuchen


Zutaten

Für 1 Kuchenblech à 23 cm Ø, ergibt 8 Stück. 2 Eier
 2 EL Zitronensaft
 2 EL Rohrzucker
 100 g Studentenfutter
 750 g Äpfel, z. B. Boskoop
Kuchenteig
 125 g helles Urdinkelmehl
 0.5 TL Salz
 60 g Butter, kalt oder Margarine
 0.5 dl Wasser, kalt
Mehl zum Auswallen






1.Für den Teig Mehl und Salz in eine Schüssel geben. Butter in Würfeln zugeben. Zwischen den Händen zu einer bröseligen Masse reiben. Wasser beifügen. Alles rasch zu einem Teig zusammenfügen. Zugedeckt 30 Minuten kühl stellen.

2.Backofen auf 180 °C vorheizen. Teig auf wenig Mehl auf ca. 28 cm Ø auswallen. Ins Kuchenblech legen, Rand andrücken. Boden mit Gabel einstechen. Eier mit Zitronensaft, Zucker und Studentenfutter mischen. Äpfel ohne zu schälen an der Röstiraffel dazureiben. Masse auf Teigboden verteilen. Kuchen in der unteren Ofenhälfte ca. 50 Minuten backen.

Rhabarber-Linzerkuchen


Zutaten

Für 1 Blech à 38 × 10 cm, ergibt ca. 12 Stück 600 g Rhabarber
 100 g Zucker
Linzerteig
 200 g gemahlene Haselnüsse
 200 g Mehl
 150 g Zucker
 1 Prise Salz
 150 g Butter, kalt, oder Margarine
 2 Eier






1.Für den Teig Haselnüsse mit Mehl, Zucker und Salz mischen. Butter in Würfeln dazugeben. Zwischen den Händen zu einer bröseligen Masse reiben. Eier beifügen. Alles rasch zu einem Teig zusammenfügen. Zugedeckt 30 Minuten kühl stellen.

2.Rhabarber schälen und würfeln. Mit Zucker ca. 2 Minuten knapp weich kochen. Abkühlen lassen.

3.Backofen auf 180 °C vorheizen. Blech mit Backpapier auslegen. ¾ des Teiges mit den Händen gleichmässig in der Form verteilen und am Rand etwas hochdrücken. Rhabarber durch ein Sieb abgiessen, gut abtropfen lassen. Früchte auf den Teig verteilen. Restlichen Teig zu feinen Rollen formen und als Gittermuster auf den Rhabarber legen. Teig am Rand mit einer Gabel andrücken. Kuchen in der Ofenmitte 30–35 Minuten backen. In der Form auskühlen lassen. Zum Servieren in 3 cm breite Schnitten schneiden.

Kürbis-Schoggi-Kuchen


Zutaten
Ergibt  Stück 1 Springform à 22 cm Ø
 4 Eier
 200 g Rohzucker
 1 Prise Salz
 0.5 Bio-Zitrone
 100 g dunkle Schokolade, z. B. Crémant
 1 TL Zimt
 125 g gemahlene Mandeln
 100 g Dinkelmehl
 1 TL Backpulver
 300 g Kürbis, z. B. Muskat, gerüstet gewogen
 4 EL Johannisbeergelee
 1 EL Puderzucker


1.Eier, Zucker und Salz ca. 5 Minuten zu einer hellen Masse schlagen. Zitronenschale fein dazureiben. Zitrone auspressen, Saft beigeben. Schokolade fein hacken. Mit Zimt, Mandeln, Mehl und Backpulver beigeben. Gut verrühren. Kürbis an der Bircherraffel reiben und sorgfältig unter die Masse mischen. Backofen auf 180 °C vorheizen.

2.Form mit Backpapier auslegen. Masse in die Form giessen. In der Ofenmitte ca. 50 Minuten backen. Kuchen auskühlen lassen. Waagrecht halbieren. Untere Hälfte dünn mit Gelee bestreichen. Obere Hälfte daraufsetzen. Mit Puderzucker bestäuben.

Croquembouche


Ingredients
 185g plain flour
 175g unsalted butter , cut into pieces
 6 large  eggs  , beaten
FOR THE LIMONCELLO CREAM
 9 large egg yolks
 150g golden caster sugar
 50g plain flour , plus 1 tbsp finely grated zest of 2 lemons, plus 4 tbsp juice
 500ml full cream milk
 7 tbsp limoncello (Italian lemon liqueur) or an orange flavoured liqueur
FOR THE DECORATION
 400g white chocolate
 200g refined caster sugar
 mixture of cream and pink sugared almonds , 175g/6oz each
 2 x 100g tubs crystallised whole roses
FOR THE CARDBOARD CONE
 1 A1 sheet of card
 60cm length of string
 tape and foil for shaping cone

METHOD

Three days ahead (or 1 month and freeze): preheat the oven to 200C/gas 6/fan oven 180C. Lightly butter 3 large baking sheets. Sift the flour onto a large square of greaseproof paper. Put the butter in a large, heavy-based saucepan with 450ml/3⁄4pint water and gently heat until the butter has melted. Bring to the boil then immediately tip in the flour, all in one go. Beat with a wooden spoon until the mixture forms a ball that comes away from the sides of the pan. Leave to cool for 5 minutes.
 Beat in the eggs, a little at a time, beating well between each addition, until the mixture is glossy and only just holding its shape. You may not need to add all the beaten egg. Spoon and pack half the mixture into a large polythene freezer bag. Twist the opening to secure and snip off a 1cm tip from the corner (or use a piping bag and 1cm plain nozzle).
 Pipe small rounds, about 2cm in diameter, on to the baking sheets, trimming the paste from the bag with a knife. Leave room between them to allow for spreading. You should end up with about 75 rounds. Bake for 25 minutes, in batches if necessary depending on how many baking sheets you have, until well risen and golden, rotating the baking sheets half way through cooking. As soon as the pastry is cooked, make a 1cm slit on the side of each bun to let the steam escape. (This stops them turning soggy as they cool). Return to the oven for a further 5 minutes to dry them out, then transfer to a wire rack to cool. Store in an airtight container (or freeze).
 Make the cone. Make a pencil mark halfway along a long edge of the A1 card. Mark the halfway position along both short edges and draw a line from each point to the mark on the long edge. Attach one end of the string to the pencil and holding the other end at the point on the long edge, draw a curve from the point on one short side to the point on the opposite side. Cut out the card shape and use as a template to cut out the same shape in foil. Tape the foil over the card and roll up (foil inside), overlapping the straight edges to make a cone shape with a 20cm diameter opening. Secure with tape and snip 10cm off the point of the cone.
 Two days ahead: make the limoncello cream. Beat the egg yolks, sugar, flour, lemon zest and juice in a bowl to make a smooth paste. Bring the milk to the boil in a large, heavy-based saucepan. As soon as it reaches the boil, pour it over the egg mixture, stirring well. Return to the saucepan and cook over a low heat, stirring constantly until the sauce is very thick and bubbling. Stir in the liqueur and transfer to a bowl. Cover the surface with a circle of greaseproof paper to prevent a skin forming and leave to cool completely. Refrigerate until ready to use.
 The day before: if the buns are a bit soft when you take them out of the container, lay them in a single layer on baking sheets and re-crisp in a moderate oven for 5 minutes. Fill them sparingly with the limoncello cream by piping as before. You can always pipe in a little extra if you have any mixture leftover.
 Break the chocolate into a heatproof bowl and melt over a bowl of gently simmering water. (Or melt in the microwave on Medium for 2-3 minutes.) Give the chocolate an occasional stir until it has just melted. Turn off the heat.
 Rest the cone inside a vase or jug for support. Put a small bun into the point of the cone with the bun's base face up. Spoon 1 tsp of melted chocolate onto the base and secure two small buns over the first, again with base up. Spoon over another teaspoon of chocolate. It's a little difficult working at the tip of the cone but it gets much easier as the cone gets wider.
 Work up the cone, packing in the buns quite firmly, drizzling the chocolate (see left) and working in horizontal layers until the cone is filled. Make sure that each bun is firmly secured in place with chocolate before proceeding to the next layer and make sure the last layer forms a flat base for the cake. Keep the filled cone in the coolest place overnight.
 On the day: carefully invert the cone on to a flat serving plate and lift away the cone. Gently peel away the foil if it hasn't come away already. Put the remaining 100g/4oz sugar in a small heavy-based saucepan with 5 tbsp water. Heat very gently, stirring slowly until it has dissolved to make a smooth syrup. Take care not to splash the syrup up the sides of the pan or it may crystallise and solidify.
 Bring the syrup to the boil and cook for 4-6 minutes, watching closely until it turns a rich golden colour. Take off the heat and dip the base of the pan in cold water to prevent further cooking. Stand back as the pan will splutter noisily. Carefully dip the ends of the sugared almonds and roses in caramel and secure around the cake, scattering a few on the plate.
 Using a teaspoon, drizzle more caramel around the buns so that it falls in fine threads. If the caramel hardens before you've finished decorating, gently reheat it, taking care not to burn it. Finish with a dusting of icing sugar. To serve the cake, it is easiest if you have one server to break pieces off for the guests, starting from the top and working down.

Passion fruits PARADISE


Ingredients
 150ml sunflower oil , plus a little extra for the tin
 300g self-raising flour
 1 tsp ground cinnamon
 1 tsp  baking powder
 300g caster sugar
 50g desiccated coconut
 2  eggs  , plus 2 egg whites, whole eggs beaten
 2 over-ripe  bananas  , mashed
 140g carrots , grated
 432g can crushed  pineapples  in juice, drained in a sieve, reserving the juice (or briefly whizz a can of pineapple chunks, then sieve)
 100ml milk


FOR THE DRIZZLE & ICING
 4 ripe passion fruits , halved
 25g caster sugar
 200g tub soft cheese
 100g softened butter
 85g icing sugar
 1 tsp  vanilla extract

METHOD

Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Oil and line the bases of 3 x 20cm sandwich tins with baking parchment. Mix the flour, cinnamon, baking powder, half the sugar and the coconut in a large mixing bowl. In another bowl mix the beaten whole eggs, mashed bananas, grated carrot, drained crushed pineapple, milk and oil. Beat the egg whites until stiff, then add the remaining sugar and beat until stiff and shiny again.
 Stir the wet mixture into the dry until smooth and lump-free, then using a large metal spoon or spatula, fold in the egg white mixture. Divide evenly between the tins and bake for 25 mins until risen and a skewer comes out clean. You might need to swap the position of the tins after 20 mins.
 For the drizzle, scoop out the passion fruit pulp into a small pan. Add the pineapple juice and caster sugar and heat until bubbling, then bubble until syrupy. For the icing, beat the cheese and butter until lump-free, then beat in icing sugar and vanilla. Chill until ready to assemble.
 Poke the cakes all over with a skewer, drizzle over most of the passion syrup, then cool. Once cool, spread the icing over two of the sponges. Sandwich together and top with the third, un-iced, sponge. Drizzle over the remaining syrup.

Chocolate & caramel layer cake


Ingredients
FOR VANILLA & CHOCOLATE SPONGES
 225g very soft butter , plus extra for greasing
 225g golden caster sugar
 175g self-raising flour
 85g ground almonds
 1 tsp  baking powder
 3  eggs
 150ml pot natural yogurt
 1 tsp  vanilla extract
 5 tbsp cocoa powder
FOR CARAMEL & CARAMEL-CHOC SPONGES
 225g very soft butter , plus extra for greasing
 175g light muscovado sugar
 50g dark muscovado sugar
 175g self-raising flour
 85g ground almonds
 1 tsp  baking powder
 3  eggs
 150ml pot natural yogurt
 1 tsp  vanilla extract
 1 tbsp cocoa
TO ASSEMBLE
 397g can caramel (stocked near the condensed milk in stores)
 140g dark chocolate
 140g milk chocolate
 300ml double cream

METHOD


Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Grease and line bases of 2 x 20cm sandwich tins with baking parchment. For the Vanilla & chocolate sponges, mix all the ingredients, apart from the cocoa, together with an electric whisk. Scrape half the mix into a second bowl and whizz in the cocoa. Scrape into the tins and bake for 20-25 mins until a skewer poked in comes out clean.
 Repeat step 1 for the Caramel & caramel-choc sponges, again leaving cocoa out of the first mixing, then splitting the mix in half and whizzing the cocoa into one batch. Cook as above.
 While sponges are cooling, melt the dark and milk chocolate together in a bowl over a pan of barely simmering water. Remove from the heat, stir in the cream and cool or chill until spreadable.
 When the sponges are cool, spread a third of the caramel over the Vanilla sponge and top with the Caramel sponge. Spread over another third of the caramel and top with the Caramel-choc sponge, then the final third of caramel and top with the Chocolate sponge (don't panic if you mix up the layers, the cake will still look great when you cut in). Spread the chocolate icing over the whole cake to serve. It will keep in a cool place in an airtight container for up to 3 days.

White chocolate & strawberry ice-cream cake


Ingredients
 2 x 500ml tubs strawberry ice cream
 3 x 500ml tubs white chocolate or vanilla ice cream
CAKE
 170g golden caster sugar
 4  eggs
 60g plain flour
 35g cornflour










METHOD


First make the cake. Base line 2 x 20cm, deep cake tins with baking paper. Heat the oven to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4. Beat the sugar and eggs with an electric whisk for 10 minutes, until pale and fluffy, and stiff enough to leave a trail when you lift the beaters. Sift over both flours and fold in. Divide between the tins. Bake for 20 minutes, until golden and a skewer pushed into the cake comes out clean. Cool for 5 minutes in the tin (they will sink a little but don't worry) then turn out onto a wire rack. Wash and dry one of the cake tins, and line it with a double layer of clingfilm or greaseproof paper.
 Cut the cakes horizontally into 2. Put the bottom layer in the lined tin. Take one tub of strawberry ice cream, and snip off the cardboard with kitchen scissors. Slice the block of ice cream into discs and arrange on the layer of cake in the tin, squidging small pieces into any gaps and spreading them slightly to make an even layer. Put the upper layer of cake on top and put the whole tin in the freezer for at least an hour to firm up.
 Use 1 tub of the the white chocolate ice cream to make the next layer, topping it with the bottom layer of the second cake. Freeze again for at least 1 hour. Finally, put on a layer of strawberry ice cream, and top with the last circle of cake. Freeze for an hour.
 Take the cake out of the tin and peel away the paper or clingfilm. Cut thin layers from rest of the white chocolate ice cream and cover the base and sides of the cake completely. This is easier than it sounds - the ice cream acts like wet icing. Use a palette knife to smooth the surface, then freeze for 2 hours to firm up. Wrap well in freezer bags and freeze for up to a week.
 Half an hour before serving, put the cake on a serving platter and into the fridge to soften a little. Slice with a large knife dipped in hot water.

Kartoffel-Gemüse-Kuchen mit Basilikum


Zutaten
Ergibt  Portionen 500 g Erbsen in der Schote oder ca. 200 g Erbsen, ausgelöst
 200 g Kohlrabi
Salz
 1 Zweig Minze
 150 g Ricotta
 3 Eier
 2 dl Halbrahm
Pfeffer aus der Mühle
 1 achteckig ausgewallter Kuchenteig à 270 g
 500 g Frühkartoffeln (Patatli)
 4 EL Olivenöl
 0.5 Bund glattblättrige Petersilie
 0.5 Bund Basilikum

1.Erbsen wenn nötig aus den Schoten lösen. Kohlrabi in 5 mm grosse Würfel schneiden. Gemüse in kochendem Salzwasser ca. 3 Minuten blanchieren. Abgiessen und gut abtropfen lassen. Minze fein hacken. Mit Ricotta, Eiern und Rahm verrühren. Mit Salz und Pfeffer würzen.


2.Teig samt Backpapier in ein Kuchenblech von 26 cm Ø legen. Überstehenden Teig über den Blechrand legen. Boden einstechen. Gemüse darauf verteilen. Eimasse darüber giessen.


3.Ofen auf 180 °C vorheizen. Kartoffeln gründlich waschen. Ungeschält in grobe Schnitze schneiden. Mit etwas Salz und etwas Öl mischen. Kartoffelschnitze auf den Kuchen legen. Überstehenden Teig darüber legen. Kuchen in der unteren Ofenhälfte 45–50 Minuten backen.


4.Etwas Petersilie für die Garnitur beiseite legen. Rest mit Basilikum hacken. Mit restlichem Öl mischen. Kuchen noch warm damit bestreichen und mit Petersilie garnieren.

Zwiebel-Käsekuchen



Zutaten

Für 4 Personen, für 1 Kuchenblech von 28–30 cm Ø 400 g Zwiebeln
 1 Knoblauchzehe
 1 EL Butter
 1 Bund Schnittlauch
 2 Eier
Salz
Pfeffer aus der Mühle
 120 g geriebener Emmentaler
 1 dl Milch
 1 dl Vollrahm
Butter für das Blech
Mehl für das Blech


Teig
 250 g Zopf- oder Dinkelmehl
 0.5 TL Salz
 0.25 TL Backpulver
 100 g Butter, kalt
 1 EL Essig
 5 EL Wasser, kalt
Mehl zum Auswallen
Butter für das Blech

1.Für den Teig Mehl, Salz und Backpulver in eine Schüssel geben. Butter in Würfelchen dazugeben. Zwischen den Händen zu einer bröseligen Masse reiben. Essig und Wasser beifügen. Alles rasch zu einem Teig zusammenfügen. Zugedeckt 30 Minuten kühl stellen.


2.Zwiebeln und Knoblauch hacken. In Butter knapp weich dünsten. Schnittlauch fein schneiden. Eier aufschlagen, mit Salz und Pfeffer würzen. Zwiebeln, Schnittlauch, Käse, Milch und Rahm unter die Eier mischen.

3.Backofen auf 220 °C vorheizen. Teig auf Mehl auswallen. Kuchenblech mit Butter ausstreichen und mit Mehl bestäuben. Boden mit einer Gabel dicht einstechen. Zwiebel-Käsemischung darauf verteilen. In der unteren Ofenhälfte 30–35 Minuten backen.