Showing posts with label orange zest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orange zest. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Mini orange, cinnamon and sultana loaf cakes

Cup of tea and a mini orange, cinnamon and sultana loaf cake

After a successful batch of mini lemon loaf cakes, I decided to try out a more adventurous recipe with my Lakeland mini loaf tin. After a search on Pinterest, I found this recipe by Laythetable – this recipe was for 6 mini loaves, using mini loaf paper cases. To use the 12 hole mini loaf tin, I doubled the ingredient quantities.

The original recipe suggested soaking the sultanas in Amaretto, which would be delicious! However, I didn’t have any Amaretto – after a rummage in our alcohol cupboard (which mostly contains gin!), the best  thing I could find to use as an alternative was Pimms! I also think Cointreau would be a great substitute if you have some! If you want to avoid alcohol entirely, you could simply use orange juice. As I did not plan my bake in advance, I only managed to soak my sultanas for about 45 minutes – this was ok and they did plump up a little, but the longer that you can soak them, the better!

The method for making the cake is fairly standard – it’s really important to beat the butter and the sugar thoroughly – at least 5 minutes in a stand mixer. When adding the beaten eggs, it should be done little by little to avoid the mixture splitting, however, if it does split, just add a little of the flour – this should bind the mixture back together.

Greasing the mini loaf tin well is really important. I really recommend a decent spray with Dr Oetker cake release spray and then rub the grease around with your fingers to ensure that every spot is covered.

The original recipe suggested finishing the cakes with a glaze followed by a drizzle, but I decided to go for a piped drizzle topped with a  sprinkling of orange zest. I have provided the methods for both so that you can choose!  

These cakes were really good – very moist and full of flavour! EHH took them into work and they were very well received – even by one colleague who claimed not to like orange cake!

Mini orange, cinnamon and sultana loaf cakes

Ingredients
Mini orange cinnamon and sultana loaf cake
  1. 75g sultanas
  2. Amaretto / Cointreau / Pimms / orange juice
  3. 2 oranges
  4. 1 tsp cinnamon
  5. 1 tsp baking powder
  6. 4 large eggs
  7. 170g self raising flour
  8. 60g ground almonds
  9. 230g unsalted butter
  10. 230g granulated sugar
  11. 100g icing sugar

Method
  1. Place the sultanas in a small bowl or cup and cover with the alcohol / orange juice. Leave to soak for as long as possible – ideally overnight or longer.
  2. Strain sultanas through a sieve and reserve the liquid.
  3. Preheat the oven to 180C.
  4. Lightly grease the mini loaf tin (ideally spray liberally with cake release spray) or place 12 mini loaf cases on a baking tray
  5. Zest one and a half of the oranges (save the remaining zest and the juice of the oranges for use in the icing).
  6. Sift the flour, ground almonds, cinnamon and baking powder together.
  7. Using a hand/stand mixer, cream the butter and sugar until pale, smooth and creamy.
  8. Break the eggs into a bowl and whisk with a fork to combine yolks and whites. 
  9. Bit by bit, add the eggs into the creamed butter and sugar, beating thoroughly between each addition.
  10. Add in the sultanas and orange peel.
  11. Add half of the flour mix and mix gently, then repeat with the remaining flour mix.
  12. Spoon the mixture into the tin / cases evenly.
  13. Use a teaspoon to smooth the tops.
  14. Place in the oven for around 18 - 25 minutes. Turn the tray after about 14 minutes if your oven bakes unevenly. Towards the end of the bake, you may wish to cover with brown paper to present the tops browning before the middle is cooked.
  15. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 10 minutes before removing the cakes from the tin.
  16. Place the cakes on a wire rack to finish cooling.

To glaze (while the cakes are still warm):
  1. Juice one orange and mix this with a tablespoon of the soaking liqueur.
  2. Place the icing sugar in a bowl and add the liquid a bit at a time until it resembles runny honey.
  3. Use a skewer to make a few piercings in each cake, then spoon the glaze over each (around 2 tablespoons per cake).
  4. Top each glazed cake with a sprinkle of orange zest.

To ice with a drizzle (once the cakes are cool):
  1. Place the icing sugar in a bowl and add a spoonful of the soaking liqueur, followed by enough orange juice to create a smooth piping icing – it should be just a little runnier than toothpaste.
  2. Spoon the icing into a piping bag with a small round nozzle and drizzle across the cakes.
  3. Top each iced cake with a sprinkle of orange zest.



Monday, 25 November 2013

Orange & Cinnamon Shortbread

Orange and cinnamon shortbread in teapot shapes



Last week was my turn on the rota for cake at work. We have a big team briefing every Friday known affectionately as the “Friday cake meeting” – there’s a rota with each week assigned to a member of the team! It’s taken very seriously! Unfortunately, I have set a rather strong precedent and so I had people telling me all week that they were excited about what I was going to produce on Friday – talk about pressure!



The trouble with the Friday cake meeting is that it is on a Friday! This means that you have to bake on a week night after work and as it had been a long week, I wasn’t up for making anything fancy! To complicate things further, we have one person who is gluten-intolerant and one person who is allergic to nuts and eggs! They always insist that they don’t want people to go to extra effort for them but I wanted to ensure that I catered for them both.



I decided to go with the gluten-free lemon polenta cake that I made earlier in the week (which was a bit of a disaster as I miscalculated and used too few eggs – having drowned the resulting cake in lots of lemon syrup, it was edible but nowhere near perfect – fail!) and two new recipes: toffee apple crumble cake and these orange and cinnamon shortbread biscuits.



I’d seen this Cookie’s cakes and Bakes recipe on Pinterest a little while ago and had pinned it onto my Christmas Baking board. It seemed a nice simple recipe that would work well as little baked Christmas presents, or as part as a Christmas hamper. It’s also conveniently egg-free and so this seemed like a great opportunity to try it out.



It’s a great simple and speedy recipe and would be great for making with kids. I used my favourite teapot cookie cutter and simply dusted the cooked biscuits with icing sugar, but you could drizzle with chocolate, or an orange blossom flavoured water icing. You could also vary the flavouring – adding lemon zest, or vanilla essence, or other spices. Or you could add chopped chocolate, or dried fruit, or anything else you fancy!  



The resulting biscuits are short and crispy. They will lose their crisp crunch after a day but they will last fine for at least a week. I actually prefer them once they are a day old and are a bit softer, but that’s probably a matter of taste!



Orange & Cinnamon Shortbread



Ingredients

  1. 200g soft butter
  2. 100g icing sugar
  3. 100g cornflour
  4. 250g Plain flour
  5. Zest of one orange
  6. 1 tsp cinnamon



Method

  1. Pre-heat the oven to 180C.
  2. Line 2 baking trays with baking parchment.
  3. Beat the butter until very light and creamy.
  4. Add the orange zest and beat.
  5. Slowly add the icing sugar, cornflour, plain flour and cinnamon, stirring gently until combined.
  6. Use your hands to bring the mixture together to make a dough. Try not to handle the dough too much – it will affect the texture of the shortbread.
  7. Roll the dough out between two sheets of baking parchment until 10mm thick.
  8. Use cookie cutters to cut out desired shapes.
  9. Re-roll any off-cuts and cut out more shapes.
  10. Place on baking trays and bake for 12-15 minutes or until pale golden around the edges.
  11. Remove from oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes on the baking tray.
  12. Tip onto a wire rack to cool completely.


Sunday, 24 November 2013

Chocolate orange cookies



Chewy chocolate orange cookies
Having had the girls over for a girly evening (complete with chocolate and raspberry brownies, lemon polenta cake, gossip and Coyote Ugly!), they left at about 11.00 on Sunday morning and I realised that I was out for a late lunch for a friend’s birthday, so I should whip up something quick and tasty as a small gift.

I didn’t have the time or energy to make anything too extravagant, so when I found orange-flavoured dark chocolate in the cupboard, I decided that I could make some quick and delicious chocolate orange cookies. These cookies are usually made with 450g of dark chocolate, so it was easy to replace with the orange-flavoured dark chocolate. I only had 300g of this, so I added 100g milk chocolate and 50g of chopped up orange matchmakers!  You could probably also make with all orange-flavoured milk chocolate (but they may be a little too sweet), or all dark chocolate, but I think the mix worked particularly well. I also replaced the vanilla extract in the original recipe with the zest of an orange.

I’ve added a rest stage for the cookie mixture into my method below. I didn’t do this when I made these cookies and, as you can see from the picture, they spread out too much and so were a bit thin (but still delicious!). I didn’t fit all of the mixture onto my baking trays, so had to do a second batch (of 3) once the first were cooked. This batch stayed much thicker and so I have added the rest stage in!  

Overall, I’m not generally a big chocolate fan, but these are absolutely delicious! Rich, chewy, chocolatey, with a nice fresh orangey zing! They’d make fantastic Christmas presents. EHH loved these and so I’ll definitely be making these again.

Chocolate orange cookies
(makes 12-14 large cookies)

Ingredients

  1. 50g butter
  2. 350g orange flavoured dark chocolate, roughly chopped
  3. 100g milk chocolate, roughly chopped
  4. 2 eggs
  5. 170g soft light brown sugar
  6.  Zest of one orange
  7. 85g plain flour
  8. ½ tsp baking powder

Recipe

  1. Line 2 baking trays with baking parchment.
  2. Put the butter, the milk chocolate and half of the orange-flavoured dark chocolate in a heat-proof bowl.
  3. Place the bowl over a saucepan of simmering water and stir gently until the chocolate and butter are melted and combined.
  4. Beat the eggs, sugar and orange zest in a bowl until frothy.
  5. Pour in the chocolate mixture, beating on a slow speed until combined.
  6. Sift the flour and baking powder into a separate bowl.
  7. In three additions, stir the chocolate mixture into the flour.
  8. Stir in the remaining chocolate.
  9. Leave for 20-30 minutes to allow the mixture to firm up a bit.
  10. Pre-heat the oven to 170C.
  11. Dollop the cookie mixture onto the two prepared baking trays, allowing plenty of room between each, as the cookies will spread.
  12. Bake for 10 – 15 minutes, until the top of the cookies start to crack, the sides of the cookies are firm but the centre still fairly squidgy.
  13. Remove from the oven and allow to cool on the tray for 10 minutes.
  14. Turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely.