Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘childhood’

What do you want to be when you grow up?


Remember being asked that question when you were little? Me too.


My answers varied from dancer and fairy, to “someone who is with animals” and cricketer.


Infinitely more exciting than my brother, I’d say, who usually answered liftman and policeman.


Here are the two of us monsters.



My love for baking didn’t arrive until much, much later in my life. It’s funny how that happens.


Suddenly one day you do something and think- Oh my god! This is amazing! Why haven’t I been doing this all this time?


A few months ago, watching Junior Masterchef Australia and those crazy talented kids on the show made me wonder about how lucky it is to find what you’re good at early in life. These kids can give an adult chef a serious run for his/her money. Their passion really reinforces the fact that age has nothing to do with talent.


They were all super talented kids in the kitchen, but their poise, sportsmanship, and gentleness was what made them truly lovable to me.


I have been wanting to try Isabella’s (Junior Masterchef winner!) Lemon Meringue Cupcakes for a while. It wasn’t as easy as she made it look, but they were delicious nonetheless.



The cupcakes are slightly unusual because the recipe asks for cream instead of butter. So the cupcakes are more dense than fluffy, but that helps when you have to carve out a piece from the centre to fill with lemon curd.



Speaking of Lemon curd- even if you don’t want cupcakes, make this lemon curd. It is so divine, I can guarantee you will lick the spoon and pan and bowl and whatever else the lemon curd touches- clean. It would be lovely as lemon tart filling too. Will try that soon :)



The meringue gets beautifully golden after only a few seconds in the grill, but retains a creamy softness inside.



All together, a posh looking cupcake with a yummy lemon curd heart.



If nothing else, just make the lemon curd. You will be a happy child :)



Lemon Meringue Cupcakes
Adapted from: Isabella’s recipe


Prep time: 30 mins
Cook time: 20 mins
Makes: 12


Ingredients:


250 ml cream
225 g caster sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
225 g flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt


For the lemon curd


juice of 3 lemons
100 g butter
110 g caster sugar
1 egg
3 egg yolks


For the meringue


3 egg whites
110 g caster sugar


Method:


For the cupcakes


1. Preheat the oven to 180º C. Line a 12-hole cupcake tray with paper liners.
2. Put the cream, sugar, and eggs in a large bowl and whisk with an electric whisk until well combined. Mix the flour, baking powder, and salt and add this to the cream mixture, a little at a time continuing to whisk until it is smooth.
3. Evenly divide the batter between the cupcake liners and bake for 20 minutes. Leave to cool in the tray.


For the lemon curd


1. Put the lemon juice and the butter in a non-stick pan, and heat over a low flame until the butter melts. Add the sugar, egg, and yolks and whisk non-stop until the mixture becomes smooth and thick. It’s essential that you’re whisking continuously and briskly after the adding the eggs, or they might scramble. If you feel the pan is too hot, take it off the heat for a while to cool a bit and then put it back on the flame again.
2. Pour the lemon curd into a shallow tray or plate and leave to cool.


For the meringue


1. In a clean, dry bowl whisk the egg whites with an electric whisk until you have firm peaks. Add the sugar a little at a time and continue whisking. Transfer the meringue mixture into a piping bag with your choice of nozzle.


Assembly


1. Preheat the grill setting of your oven to 160º C. Cut a round hole in the centre of each cupcake and scoop out a small piece. Fill the hole with some lemon curd.
2. Pipe meringue over each cupcake carefully. Then place the cupcakes in the oven for about 1 minute (more if you want your meringue darker- but be careful it burns quickly). Remove from the oven and enjoy! :)



Here’s a peep inside!



Read Full Post »

Some friends met on Friday.

2

Now since these friends have known each other forever, a number of (silly) activities were (obviously) indulged in.

2

Activities included were:

2

Drinking white wine

Discussing relationships

Eating cupcakes

Laughing

Taking photographs that weren’t great (blame the wine)

Hugging

Power naps

Singing songs together

And smiling (lots and lots of smiling)

2

These are some of the things my crazies and me did recently.

2

We also ate Khow suey.

2

2

Khow suey is a traditional Burmese noodle dish. It involves noodles, and a rich coconuty gravy (usually with chicken, beef, or shrimp) that you eat with a number of condiments.

2

2

The noodles and gravy taste fantastic, but it’s the condiments that are the real fun part :)

2

Together they create a perfect balance of taste and texture in your mouth- sweet, spicy, creamy, tangy, crunchy- all in one mouthful.

2

Condiments for Khow suey differ from region to region, and you can choose almost anything you like.

2

These are the ones we had.

2

2

Hard boiled eggs

2

2

Fresh coriander

2

2

Deep fried noodle bits

2

2

Onions

2

2

Fried garlic (my favourite one :P )

2

2

Green chillies

2

2

Lemon juice

2

2

Chilli oil

2

2

How beautiful is that?

2

It is a bowl of comfort, nestled in happy memories.
Much like old friends.

2

Read Full Post »

“Things need not have happened to be true. Tales and adventures are the shadow truths that will endure when mere facts are dust and ashes and forgotten.”- Neil Gaiman

2

Do you remember the 8-year-old you?

2

Did you read Enid Blyton?

2

Did you long for a dog like Scamper?

2

Did you create a very secret detective group with your friends (password included)?

2

Did you try looking for the Faraway Tree?

2

Did you scrape your knees searching for pixies in gardens?

2

Did magic seem possible?

2

And most importantly do you remember the food?

2

Did you ask your mother to make you a shiny trifle or a wobbly jelly?

2

Did you wonder what scones with clotted cream tasted like?

2

Do you remember how cookies and cucumber sandwiches sounded like the most delicious things ever?

2

Today let’s go down the rabbit hole.

2

Let’s eat some cookies and recall that feeling.

2

The feeling that anything was possible.

2

It all begins with black and white. Doesn’t everything?

2

How glossy and perfect is the chocolate?

2

Then it becomes a gorgeous brown.

2

Pack it up. BTW Don’t you just love bags you can label?

2

Get your instruments ready.

2

Line ‘em up.

2

They look good, don’t they?

2

Say hello to them just out of the oven.

2

These are not safe to keep around the house. They vanish. I don’t know how :)

3

Chocolate Cookies

2

Recipe from: Smitten Kitchen’s Brownie roll-out cookies (adapted slightly)

Prep time: 10 mins

Cook time: 12 mins

Makes: depends on the size of the cutter you use. I made 32 from about half the dough.

Eat this with: A mug of hot chocolate or a light coffee

2

Ingredients:

2

400 g plain flour

½ tsp salt

½ tsp baking powder

220 g butter, melted but warm

300 g brown sugar (granulated)

3 eggs

1 tsp vanilla extract

90 g cocoa powder

2

Method:

  1. Put the flour, salt and baking powder in a bowl and dry whisk them together. Set aside.
  2.  In another bowl, mix the warm melted butter and sugar together. The butter will melt the sugar granules slightly. This is good! Now add the eggs, vanilla extract and cocoa powder and mix well.
  3. Add the flour mixture (a little at a time) to the cocoa mixture, stirring well to incorporate. Do the final mixing by hand. You should have a pretty solid chocolate dough at this stage.
  4. Wrap in cling-wrap or zip-lock bags and chill for about one hour. The dough freezes well at this stage. I like to make little bags, so I can take them out even weeks later and bake small batches whenever a sugar craving comes calling.
  5. When you are ready to bake, preheat the oven to 180º C. Take the dough out of the fridge and roll it out gently to about ¼ inch thickness. Dust with a little flour so it doesn’t stick. Use cutters to cut into whatever sizes or shapes you wish.
  6. Line a baking sheet with parchment and line up the cookies on it. They don’t spread at all, so you can fill up the tray with just a little space around each. Bake these for about 12 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.
2

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 91 other followers