Wednesday 11 February 2015

Valentine's Day - Red Velvet Cupcakes


Valentine's Day 2015, Cake #169 - Giant Red Velvet Cupcake and Small Red Velvet Cupcakes with Vanilla Buttercream and Dark Chocolate and Strawberry Hearts.

Red Velvet Cupcakes 
makes 12 cupcakes and 1 giant cupcake ( Ø 15cm)

350 g self-raising flour
250 g granulated sugar
300 g soft butter
4 eggs
2 tbsp drinking chocolate
2 tbsp dark cocoa powder
100 ml water
2 tbsp red food colouring

1. Pre-heat the oven to 175C.
2. Beat butter and sugar until creamy.
3. Beat in eggs.
4. Mix together all dry ingredients and add to the batter together with water and food colouring. 
5. Spoon half of the batter into a greased and floured Ø 15 cm cake pan and divide the other half equally into 12 paper cups placed in a muffin tin.
6. Bake the cupcakes for about 20 minutes and the giant cupcake about 30 minutes.

7. Let cool before icing and decorating the cakes.


Chocolate Hearts
Melt 100 g dark chocolate and pipe hearts on a silicone mat. Let set in the fridge for at least 15 minutes.

Strawberry Hearts
Cut strawberries in half and using a heart-shaped cookie cutter, cut out hearts. You need either huge strawberries or a tiny cookie cutter! I was lucky to have both.

Vanilla Icing
150 g butter
300 g icing sugar
1-2 tbsp cream 
1 tsp vanilla extract

1. Beat butter and icing sugar in a bowl until soft and creamy. 
2. Add vanilla extract and then cream drop by drop to make sure the mixture does not become too loose.



Tuesday 10 February 2015

Valentine's Day - Chocolate Cake with Rum and Raisin Fudge


Valentine's Day 2015, Cake #168 - Chocolate Cake with Rum and Raisin Fudge.

On the plate, instead of a cake, I was supposed to place cute little rum and raisin fudge hearts in cute little paper cups. I made the fudge in the morning but for some reason it just didn't set during eight hours at all. It did not even freeze - except the raisins. Luckily the mixture looked like it could work out as cake covering - and it did! On a chocolate cake which was supposed to be something else than chocolate cake covered with rum and raisin fudge... 

Oh, well. Win-win. The chocolate cake covered with rum and raisin fudge tasted heavenly. 

So, hopefully better luck next time with f-u-d-g-e in cute little papercups.

Rum and Raisin Fudge Cake Covering
100 g raisins, chopped
2 tsp rum essence
500 ml double cream
450 g demerara sugar
150 g butter
150 g white chocolate
2 tsp red food colouring

1. Sprinkle the rum essence on the chopped raisins and let set while you cook the fudge.
2. Mix together cream, sugar and butter and boil on medium heat until the mixture thickens, about 15 minutes.
3. Remove from heat, add chocolate and food colouring and mix well.
4. Fold in the raisins and put the fudge cake covering in the fridge to set while you bake the cake.

Chocolate Sponge
175g self-raising flour
2 tbsp cocoa powder
1 tsp soda
150g caster sugar
2 large eggs
150 ml sunflower oil
150 ml milk
2 tbsp syrup

1. Preheat the oven to 180 C/ 350 F and grease and flour a Ø 24 cm round cake pan.
2. Sieve flour, cocoa and soda into a bowl. Add sugar and mix well.
3. Make a well in the centre and add syrup, eggs, oil and milk. Beat well until smooth.
4. Spoon the mixture into the pan and bake for 35-40 minutes until risen and firm to the touch. Remove from oven and leave to cool completely before spreading the fudge.

Monday 9 February 2015

Valentine's Day - Yogurt and Raspberry Heart


Valentine's Day 2015, Cake #167 - Yogurt and Raspberry Heart (pulla - sweet bun cake).

Valentine's Day. In most languages I know, the day is called Valentine's Day or Saint Valentine's Day referring to a saint called Valentinus and being associated with romantic love. 

For some reason in Finland the day is called Ystävänpäivä - Friend's Day, and in Sweden Alla Hjärtans Dag - All Hearts' Day. Why, that is an interesting question. Is it easier for a Finn to say their partner that you are my best friend rather than saying I love you in a romantic way? And do the Swedes want to spread equality also this way - to, via and through all hearts?

One stereotype or another, let your Valentine or Friend or Foe or anybody with a heart - and especially anybody without one -  feel loved this Valentine's Day. If you cannot find words or dare say any, bake a cake!

***

Yogurt and Raspberry Heart
Dough
300 ml  lukewarm milk
25 g fresh yeast (or 1 bag / 7 g fast action dried yeast)
100 ml sugar
½ tsp ground cardamom
1 egg
100 g melted butter
about 1 litre plain flour

Filling
100 ml natural yogurt
50 ml raspberry jam
50 ml granulated sugar
½ tsp vanilla extract

1 egg for glazing

icing sugar, red food colouring and sprinkles for decorating the cake

1. Dissolve yeast in warm milk.
2. Add sugar, cardamom and egg and mix well.
3. Start adding flour gradually.
4. After you have kneaded in about half of the flour, add melted butter.
5. Knead in more flour until your dough is not sticky any more but still soft. It is better to leave the dough a little too soft than make it too dense as the cake will be too dry and hard after baking.
6. Leave the dough to rise in a warm place until double in size, for about half an hour.
7. Roll your dough into a rectangle, about 0,5 cm thick.


8. Cut hearts with a cookie cutter - or cookie cutters of different size.
9. Grease a heart-shaped cake pan and place one layer of hearts in the pan.
10. Mix together all ingredients for the filling and spoon half of the filling on the hearts. Then place another layer of hearts on top and spoon the rest of the filling on them and finally a third layer of hearts. 
11. Let rise for about 20 minutes and glaze with egg before baking.
12. Bake in the oven at 200 C for about half an hour.
13. Let the cake cool before removing from pan and decorating with icing and sprinkles.


Cake inspired by Ikea paper napkin...? 

Sunday 8 February 2015

Valentine's Day Coming Up!

 The Cat Hairy Baker's Valentine's Day Specials 8-14 February. Stay tuned!

Also on Facebook and Instagram.


Cakes #165 and #166 - Friday Cakes


#165 Friends First Friday Cake - Raspberry and Lemon Cake - to celebrate spring which according to the Celtic calendar started 1 February. And it really feels like spring!

#166 Nutella and Cinnamon Cake - Another World Nutella Day Cake.

Lemony Peach Cake by Donna Hay is one of my all-time favourites. Now I used raspberries instead of peaches and it worked out great! Yogurt gives the cake a gooey texture and yogurt is also great to go with the cake together with some fresh (or like in this case, frozen) berries.

The recipe for Nutella and Cinnamon Cake I bumped into at BBC Good Food Facebook page on the World Nutella Day right after baking my Nutella Brownie Cake. I wanted to try the recipe but had to leave it to the day after. Worth trying. Worth waiting!

Both turned out to be the perfect Friday Cakes when watching a movie with the family. After enjoying some pizza The Husband made for his Friday 'cake'. Some evenings are just made for munching, especially when it is all home-made. 

Cake #163 - Nutella Brownie Cake


World Nutella Day 5 February. Sure a reason to bake something with Nutella!

Nutella Brownie Cake
175 g dark chocolate
175 g butter
250 g golden caster sugar
pinch of salt
3 large eggs
120 g plain flour
2 tsp vanilla extract
4 tbsp Nutella

1. Pre-heat n to 180C and line a 20cm x 20cm square cake tin with baking paper.
2. Melt the chocolate and butter and stir until smooth.
3. Add sugar and salt and beat eggs and vanilla into the mixture.
4. Sift in the flour and then stir in Nutella.
5. Scrape the mixture into the tin and bake for 20-25 minutes.
6. Allow cool before removing from tin.
7. Serve with ice cream.

Happy World Nutella Day!

Cake #162 - Profiterole Cake


Wednesday Natural Ingredient / Healthy Cake - Profiterole Cake with Fresh Blueberries, Raspberries and Whipped Cream.

I am not sure if profiterole cake would be the correct name for this cake as it is not made of several profiteroles but rather of profiterole batter piped on a baking tray to shape two round cakes and then the filling is put in-between the two cakes.

***

I made this choux pastry double and then piped it into two equal sized round cakes on baking paper on a baking tray. The cakes I baked at 200C for about 25 minutes. After the cakes had cooled down I removed them from the trays, whipped 200 ml fresh cream to fill the cake together with fresh raspberries and blueberries and on top sprinkled some icing sugar.

Excellent dessert cake which was enjoyed by the family on one go. Oops. Well, seven people to be exact so the slices were actually tiny.

Cake #161 - Banana, Coconut and Sesame Seed Cake


Monday Mood Cake - Banana, Coconut and Sesame Seed Upside Down Cake.

It was a day to turn some jars upside down and feel if there is any serious baking power left after baking five batches of cinnamon buns the day before.

Baking is a lot about feelings. One day you feel like having pulla, the other day you feel like trying some recipe with sesame seeds in it. On the other hand, you may have overripe bananas in the house and you need to use them whether you feel like using them or not (unless you feel the bin is a choice). And then you feel the kids may have deserved some ice cream so you bake something to go with ice cream. You may feel satisfied after baking or you may not. You may feel like eating what you have made or you may leave it for later. Sometimes you feel the batter is better than the actual cake.

The main thing is that you can feel the joy!

The recipe for this cake is from here. - Instead of sprinkling the sesame seeds on top - the bottom after baking, that is, I would mix them in the batter the next time to feel them equally in the cake. As eating is feeling, too. And feeling is eating.

Cinnamon Buns and Shrove Buns

Pulla, anyone? Cinnamon buns or maybe Shrove buns with marzipan?

Sometimes you get into the mood for pulla and then there is only one medicine - you have to bake them!

The other day I set myself a mission to bake the perfect cinnamon bun and it was way harder than I expected. Until now, I have mainly baked my cinnamon buns in paper cups where they keep their shape and all excess butter stays inside the cup. This time I wanted to make the real, proper ones with no cheating. After baking 5 batches (about 60 buns, that was), I was able to find nine (yes, 9) buns with which I was just about happy with. A good start, eh?

But even the ugliest ones tasted perfect. The ones which looked like viking ships and the ones which looked like crippled snails. Oh, and the ones shaped like the horns of Dorset sheep. Yummy yummy pulla!

And then I also made a batch of Shrove buns. A bit early - the Shrove Tuesday is not until 17 February. I just happened to find a package of marzipan in the cupboard and baking the basic round buns felt like an easy and rewarding job after all the misshapen cinnamon buns.

Cinnamon buns (makes 12-14)
300 ml  lukewarm milk
25 g fresh yeast (or 1 bag / 7 g fast action dried yeast)
100 ml sugar
½ tsp ground cardamom
1 egg
100 g melted butter
about 1 litre plain flour

Filling
100 g butter
2 tbsp cinnamon
100 ml sugar

Glazing
1 egg
pearl sugar

1. Dissolve yeast in warm milk.
2. Add sugar, cardamom and egg and mix well.
3. Start adding flour gradually.
4. After you have kneaded in about half of the flour, add melted butter.
5. Knead in more flour until your dough is not sticky any more but still soft. It is better to leave the dough a little too soft than make it too dense as the buns will be too dry and hard after baking.
6. Leave the dough to rise in a warm place until double in size, for about half an hour.
7. Roll your dough into a rectangle, about 0,5 cm thick.
8. Spread the butter on top and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon.
9. Roll the dough into a cylinder and then cut it into triangles. Turn the triangles so that the sharp side faces up and then press it down with your finger.
10. Let the buns rise for about half an hour, then glaze with egg and sprinkle with pearl sugar.
11. Bake in the oven at 225C for 10-12 minutes.

Shrove Buns

Make the dough as above. When risen, knead it on a floured surface and cut into 12 pieces and roll them into balls. Let the buns rise, glaze them with egg and sprinkle with pearl sugar or almond flakes. Bake in the oven at 225C for 10-12 minutes.

After the buns have cooled, cut them in half and fill with marzipan or jam and whipped cream.

Cake #160 - Runeberg Torte and Cake #164 Runeberg Cake


Cake #160 Runeberg Tortes
Cake #164 Runeberg Cakes


J.L. Runebergthe national poet of Finland was born 5 February, 1804. His wife used to bake these little tortes which later were named after him. The tortes are popular in Finland around Runeberg's birthday and are made by every bakery in the country and sold nationwide. And each and every Finn certainly has an opinion which bakery makes the best tortes!

As an expat Finn I have to bake my own Runeberg Tortes and they are not that bad either. I prefer mine with almond essence unlike my family so always need to bake two batches, one with almond essence and another without.

You can use the same recipe for making one or two bigger cakes instead of small tortes if you do not have suitable tins. I was lucky to find these nearly perfect tins in TK Maxx a while ago:


Runeberg Tortes or Cakes (makes 12 tortes or 2 small cakes)
Batter
200 g butter
100 ml brown sugar
100 ml granulated sugar
2 eggs
100 g ground almonds
200 ml finely ground dry breadcrumbs
300 ml plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
200 ml milk
(2 tsp almond essence or rum essence)

raspberry jam
icing sugar, a few drops of water

1. Pre-heat the oven to 200C and grease and flour 12 muffin tins (or use paper cups) or 2 Ø 20 cm cake pans.
2. Cream together butter and sugar.
3. Add eggs and almond essence.
4. Mix together all dry ingredients and add them to the batter together with the milk.
5. Spoon the batter evenly in the muffin tins and bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes).
6. Let cool and decorate with raspberry jam and icing.
7. If the tortes feel dry you can moisten them with sugary water flavoured with almond or rum essence).

Cake #159 - Spinach Pancake


Savoury Saturday Cake - Spinach Pancake, served with crayfish tails, capers, rocket, creme fraiche and lemon.

I am a spinach fan! Fresh baby spinach in salads, cooked spinach in soups or, like here, in an oven pancake. In a stir-fry, in Fish Florentine... And nowadays in smoothies and home-made juices as well as my daughters are making those daily.

Spinach Pancake
150 g fresh spinach, cooked and blended
4 eggs
400 ml milk
300 ml plain flour
½ tsp salt

1. Pre-heat the oven to 200 C and grease a Ø 30 cm springform pan.
2. Mix all ingredients together and pour into pan.
3. Bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes.
4. Serve warm - plain or with prawns, ham, poached egg... Goes well for brunch or lunch as such or for appetizer like we enjoyed it.

Cakes #157 and #158 - Friday Cakes


Friday Cakes
#157 Cat Theme Cake - Hidden Cat.
#158 Friends First Friday Cake - Cheesecake with Fruit and Coconut Flakes with Nice Biscuit Base.

Missing summer! Friday cake with fruit to bring some summer here. It's so cold at the moment, and windy and humid, too. We are ready to move to any warmer place if there is one.

I do not know why but this winter has felt colder than ever. The wind is pushing through everything - and every body, including mine.

I am glad I have three cats and cats are warm. A warm and purring cat on your lap is the best you can have on a cold day. A cat and a cuppa - and a slice of cake!


I have baked quite a few hidden cat (and other hidden figures) cakes already. They are exciting as you cannot always be sure how they turn out - and if they turn out anything at all. Usually at least half of the cake I have managed to get fine.

Hidden figures change but my favourite recipe stays the same, you can find it here.


For this cheesecake I used my lime cheesecake recipe except I replaced digestive cookies with Nice biscuits. On the top I placed slices of nectarine, kiwi and pineapple and some grapes and a passion fruit cut in half. I brushed the fruit with jelly and poured the rest of the jelly on the cake to cover any uncovered spots between the fruit. The sides I decorated with coconut flakes.