Showing posts with label glace cherries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glace cherries. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 August 2014

Mary Berry's Florentines

chocolate covered florentines on a plate
I first made these luxurious biscuits a couple of weeks ago. I had a bit of spare time on a wet Sunday afternoon and fancied baking something new. I had never made florentines and had always imagined them to be fairly tricky: I was surprised to find that they are actually fairly quick and easy to make. What is also fantastic about them is that the ingredients are fairly standard stock cupboard items - so easy to whizz up without having to go to the shop!

My recipe comes from Mary Berry’s Ultimate Cake Book – except I add a few extra glace cherries, or add stem ginger instead of the glace cherries – which produces delicious florentines!

Randomly, florentines were then the Technical Challenge this week on Great British Bake Off. It was quite handy to hear Mary Berry describe exactly what she was looking for: the thin lattice edges and the crisp crack when you bite into the biscuit.

The trickiest bit of making these florentines is getting the chocolate layer right – cooling the melted chocolate to an appropriate thickness that it can be spread onto the biscuits without dripping through the lattice, and also so that it is thick enough to hold the forked pattern. To make them extra pretty, you can melt some white chocolate and pipe it over the other (non-chocolate-covered) side of the biscuits. Like this, they make lovely presents.

You can vary the nuts / fruit to suit your tastes – as suggested, stem ginger makes a delicious addition. For Christmas, I think that dried cranberries would be lovely.

FlorentinesFlorentines

Ingredients 
  1. 50g butter
  2. 50g Demerara sugar
  3. 50g golden syrup
  4. 50g plain flour
  5. 6 glace cherries  / 25g stem ginger – finely chopped
  6. 50g mixed candied peel, finely chopped
  7. 50g mixed nuts, finely chopped
  8. 200g plain chocolate, broken into pieces

Method 
  1. Pre-heat the oven to 180C.
  2. Line 3 baking trays with baking parchment.
  3. Place the butter, sugar and golden syrup into a small pan and heat gently until the butter has melted.
  4. Mix the flour, peel, nuts and stem ginger / cherries in a bowl.
  5. Stir this mix into the saucepan of melted butter/sugar/syrup.
  6. Spoon teaspoons of the mix onto the prepared baking trays and spread out with the back of the teaspoon. Leave plenty of room for the florentines to spread further.
  7. Bake in the pre-heated oven for 8-10 minutes until golden brown (turn the trays after 6 minutes if your oven bakes unevenly).
  8. Allow the florentines to cool and harden slightly before moving onto a cooling rack to fully cool.
  9. Melt about 150g chocolate in a glass bowl placed over a saucepan of simmering water.
  10. Remove the chocolate from the heat and add the remaining chocolate.
  11. Stir to incorporate the additional chocolate so that it cools and thickens a little.
  12. Use a teaspoon to spoon the chocolate onto the flat side of each florentine and spread out with the back of the teaspoon.
  13. Use a fork to mark a zig-zag pattern into the chocolate.
  14. Leave to cool. 


Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Condensed milk cookies

Stem ginger cookies with lemon icing
Stem ginger cookies with lemon icing

Having spent all morning lazing in bed and reading, I decided that I should do something a bit more productive with my Sunday afternoon. Unusually, I didn’t feel like faffing around with fancy decorative icing, so I decided to make some simple biscuits for EHH to take into his work. I had a flick through my recipe files and cook books, but wasn’t feeling particularly inspired so I decided to go with one of my tried-and-tested recipes.



I call these “condensed milk cookies” – they came from Sainsbury’s magazine ages ago, which called them “soft, American-style cookies”. They are amazing – a bit like “Millie’s Cookies” – with a crisp outside and soft, chewy centre. The magazine gave 6 variations – I made three types this weekend: lemon and ginger, oats and honey, and cherry and almond, with slight variations on the magazine’s recipes. I always feel the need to make more than one batch of these – once you’ve opened the tin of condensed milk, it seems a waste not to! However, I have got about half a tin left, so I may need to make some more later in the week!



Cherry and almond cookies


Makes 12
Ingredients

    Cherry and almond cookies
  1. 125g soft unsalted butter
  2. 125g caster sugar
  3. 2 tblsp condensed milk
  4. 175g self-raising flour
    Pinch of salt
  5. 75g glace cherries, chopped finely
  6. 2 tblsp flaked almonds
  7. 1 tsp almond essence
  8. 75g icing sugar

Method

  1. Preheat oven to 150C.
  2. Using an electric/stand mixer, cream the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy.
  3. Beat in the condensed milk and the almond essence.
  4. Add the flour and a pinch of salt and mix.
  5. Stir in the cherries.
  6. Roll into 12 walnut sized balls and space at least 5cm apart on 2 baking trays.
  7. Flatten them slightly with the back of a spoon.
  8. Scatter each cookie with flaked almonds.
  9. Bake for about 25 minutes or until firm at the edges but still soft in the middle.
  10. Leave to cool for a few minutes before transferring to a cooling rack.
  11. Once cool, drizzle with icing made up from the icing sugar and 1 tblsp water (optional).



Alternatives:
Ginger and Lemon

  • For Step 3: Omit almond essence.
  • For Step 5: Omit cherries. Instead, add 2 tsp ground ginger, zest of one lemon and 75g of finely chopped crystallised or stem ginger.
  • Omit Step 8.
  • For Step 11, drizzle with icing made from 75g icing sugar with 1 tblsp lemon juice. 
 


Oats and honey

    3 oat and honey chewy cookies
  • For Step 3: Use 1 tblsp of honey and 1 tblsp condensed milk. Omit almond essence.
  • For Step 5: Omit cherries. Instead, add 75g oats.
  • For Step 8: Drizzle each cookie with honey and scatter with oats.
  • Omit Step 11.