Friday, 11 January 2013

Banana Bread vs Banana Cake

-->
Banana Bread vs Banana Cake

Whos knows the difference, I mean really?  Seriously there is nothing ‘bread’ about banana bread except that its cooked as a loaf and sliced and often toasted like bread, and delicious with butter.  But really, in my opinion its cake baked as a loaf….
Anyway, what happened to banana cake? Everyone stopped eating it, cafes stopped selling it, and along came the reign of the banana bread.  Well, Im here to say its over.  See ya later banana bread your time is done, and welcome back banana cake.  And what better way to welcome it back that with my very own 35 second cake batter recipe.  Guaranteed deliciousness!!!
And just incase you’re not done yet, ill include my banana bread recipe too :O)

Michelles 35 second Banana Cake!

2 bananas (approx. 200-250g total)
150g raw or white sugar
2 eggs
125g butter cubed

Speed 4, 20 seconds

100g buttermilk (or 100g milk and 1tsp white wine vinegar)
250g self raising flour
1 tsp baking powder

Speed 4, 15 seconds.

Bake 170-180 35-45 mins.  Time and temp will depend on your oven.  Check with a skewer, ready when skewer comes out clean.

Suggested Icing

40g icing sugar or 40g raw sugar milled on speed 9 for 40 seconds.
50g butter
80g philly
zest of ¼ lemon using a fine grater or zester.
Insert Butterfly
Speed 4, 20 seconds.

 

Michelle’s Banana Bread/ Banana cake LOAF!

200g Light Brown sugar
2 eggs
200g bananas peeled weight (approx. 2), broken roughly into quarters
280g Plain Flour
1 tsp baking powder
3 finger pinch of salt
1tsp bi carb soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ginger powder
140g unsalted butter

Preheat oven to 170, or 160 fan forced.
Place butter into TM bowl and melt on 37degrees, speed 1 until fully melted.
Remove to a separate bowl.
Now insert whisk and add to TM bowl the eggs and sugar.
Beat on speed 2 for 1 minute.
Add bananas through hole in the lid and beat for 30 seconds on speed 3.
Add all dry ingredients and mix speed 1 for 20 seconds.
Pour in melted butter and mix a further 20 seconds on speed 1.

Scrape into a baking paper lined load tin and bake for 1 hour or until a skewer comes out clean.
Allow to cool to room temp, remove from tin and continue to cool in the fridge.
When cool, slice and eat either cool or toasted, both ways are nice lathered in butter.

Suggestion,
To change up the flavours, remove ginger and replace with mixed spice.
Banana can also be replaced with blue berries for a blueberry loaf, in which case I would leave out the spices and add a tsp of vanilla essence or a scaped vanilla bean. I would also sprinkle some berries into the tin before adding the batter, so they end up on the top of the loaf once cooked.

Monday, 22 October 2012

ThermoMixup: Thermomix in a commercial kitchen

ThermoMixup: Thermomix in a commercial kitchen: Here's a great video from a Canadian distributor about the many uses of the Thermomix in a commercial kitchen - it's used and loved by chefs...

Thursday, 11 October 2012

Boab Nut Shortbread

                                                                                                   Photo by Ken Duncan
I dropped in on my Thermomix Group Leader Liz a few months ago, and she had just finished grinding boab nuts in the thermomix.  I found her in the backyard with the thermie plugged in and a fine pale powder everywhere!  I had been dying to try Boab since I saw a tv article on some farmers farming the actual tree as a 'vegetable'!. They plant the saplings and then once the tree is about the size of a large sweet potato, they are harvested and eaten in various ways.  Fresh with a crunchy, apparently water chestnut like flesh, or sliced up in salads, stir fry's or wherever you want a crisp fresh bite in a dish.  I am still yet to try the 'tree', and am dying to, but I was excited enough to get a container of the nut powder to experiment with!
Here's the thing though, it has taken me months to decide what to do with it! It was a small takeaway container, and the contents were so light it weighed 60g.  She had suggested custard which is what they love it for.  Tasting the powder dry, it was surprisingly tangy and citrusy, and I also wanted to make something that would really pay homage to the ingredients itself. ie keep it simple!  So I finally went with the simplest thing of all, shortbread.

60g boab nut powder, finely ground
280g plain flour
100g raw vanilla icing sugar, made by milling whole beans with raw sugar.
290g butter
pinch salt.

Follow as per normal shortbread recipe of your own, or as directed in the Everyday Cookbook.

I pressed out into a tart tin, baked until just starting to lightly brown, I took it a bit further because I had the nut powder a few months I wasnt sure if it goes stale.

Once out of the oven, score and cut if you want shapes, and allow to cool in the tin.

What did it taste like? Passionfruit shortbread.  The flavour of the boab nut is uncannily like passionfruit, when you just bit on one seed at the same time.  So theres that slight bitterness at the end, but barely.  Different, and delicious!

I took it to a Thermomix meeting at my GL's house and she loved it, and got so excited she gave me two more containers!  What to do with it next!?  As I had tasted the flavour of the first piece of shortbread, and thought back to her custard suggestion, I did actually have the thought, 'Pity I dont have any more or I would try making a Boab nut souffle'.  So I should probably honour my thoughts and follow through with that idea.

I will let you know how it goes!

Oh and btw, if you're wondering where to source Boab nuts from, as I was, I asked my GL where she got them from, and she said she picked them off the trees!  Up near Broome somewhere......




Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Thermie Yoghurt

Hi Guys,
Im so excited to announce my yoghurt recipe is finally mastered.  Thanks to some tips from my friends grandma!  I know it should be so simple but I didnt have any luck with the EDC recipe but this is my second batch in the photo and its perfect!!

So here goes
I used 99% fat free banister downs milk but the milk shouldnt matter, the more fat the creamier the yoghurt!

1 lt milk
2 tablespoons natural yoghurt containing cultures.  (I used brownes 99.7% fat free natural).

Heat the 1 lt of milk on varoma temp, speed 3 until it boils up to the MC.  This took about 8.5 minutes in mine.

Take the lid off and allow it to cool until the light reaches 37 degrees.

Pour it into the container you wish to store it in for eating, and add the 2 tablespoons of yoghurt, barely stirring, now put the a lid on it and wrap it in a towel and leave it on the bench 8 hours or overnight.
From here on store it in the fridge, eat it at will, and it will continue to set firmer, some watery liquid will separate from it, this is normal you can pour it off and use it as buttermilk or simply discard.  For greek style creamy yoghurt you want to hang it using a strainer and cheese cloth or clean chux for 12 hours in the fridge to allow as much of this watery liquid to drain out. To make labne cheese simply continue to hang it until its firm enough to roll into bocconcini size balls, delicious flavoured with garlic and herbs or marinated in a herb oil.  Or served sweetened too!

For your next batch remember to reserve 2 tablespoons from the previous batch.

If you like it sweet you can sweeten with sugar, agave syrup, honey, maple syrup, stevia, rapadura, fruit, or even make up a fruit syrup for example scrape the contents of 3 passion fruit or 60g fresh citrus juice into the tm bowl, add 100g raw sugar and 15g water and cook on speed 2 90degrees 3 minutes.  Strain out the seeds or leave them in.

Even when I buy the expensive bannister downs milk it still works out to be half the price of buying the yoghurt on special! If you score the 2lt milk for $2 it will cost you 1/4 the price!

Happy Cooking!
Michelle

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

More than one way to skin a cat

Ok slightly off on the title there, Im a cat lover really, but you know what I mean.  Tonight I'm making Fettuccine marinara and I thought I'd try and do it 100% in the Thermomix.  Usually my dinners are kind of half and half.  Usually involving Thermie + a pan to complete a meal.  Mostly I think because I'm a much bigger fan of pan fried protein than steamed, so nothing against good ol' Thermie.
There must be more than 1000 ways to make a good marinara, but I wanted it to be start to finish in Thermie, timed and delicious, and healthy too, so there was my task.

So here's what I did

1/2 a large onion
1 large clove garlic
1/2 chilli
Chop speed 7, 3 seconds
Add  1 Tbs olive oil
Cook varoma temp, speed 1, 4 minutes
Add 2 carrots (roughly quartered)
Chop speed 7, 5 seconds
Add 400g tin diced tomatoes or equivalent fresh (if using fresh, then puree again)
600g water
1 heaped Tbs tomato paste
2 Tbs TM stock
100ml white wine
1 tsp balsamic vinegar or pinch sugar
Good pinch dried herbs or 1 Tbs fresh
Cook 10 mins, 100C, speed 2



Add 450g fettuccine through the hole in the lid and set for 16 mins, varoma, speed soft, reverse.








Now prepare bottom varoma tray with assorted seafood and brocolli, and sprinkle with sea salt, fresh cracked pepper and a splash of good olive oil.

Occasionally push on the pasta so that the blades take it in, I play with the reverse button at this stage too so that the pasta doesn't get stuck together, but make sure its on reverse once it has all entered the bowl.

Once it gets below lid level check how much time is left on the dial vs how much time your packet instructions say.  Mine was 14 minutes which was perfect for cooking the seafood and brocolli.  If you were using quick cook or fresh pasta you would probably want to steam your seafood 5 minutes before adding the pasta so that its all ready at the same time.

Now sit your trays on top while the pasta is cooking, and stir seafood once, around half way.







The pasta will end up around the blades, as you tip in out use your spatula to turn the blades gently and the pasta will all just fall out.  Some of the sauce was a bit stuck to the bottom as I had cooked on varoma temp, but came off easily with a chux.

This will feed 4-6 easily and is too much for the 2lt thermoserver.

I have to say, I had my doubts, I always do.... Every time I cook something in the Thermomix that I have cooked hundreds of times before with more 'traditional' methods, I never expect the result to be as good.  But it was delicious.  Topped with a bit more diced chilli, bon apetite! (and meow).



Sunday, 22 April 2012

Kitchen Gods

You know how some days you just know the kitchen gods are shining on you? Tonight I made Lasagne for dinner using the Thermomix.  Ive made lasagne hundreds of times before (yes hundreds, I once had a job that was purely making lasagne!), but this was actually the first time I made the sauce in the Thermie because the last time I used pre-minced mince it was a disaster.  I had over mixed it and it was too fine and tasted horrible and grainy.  But I was re-inspired by two things, I watched a consultant do a talk the other night where she made delicious stuffed capsicums.  She was using pre-minced mince and I noted her technique which yielded the perfect sauce!  She had fed the mince in through the lid bit by bit, straight onto hot sauce as the blade were rotating on the slowest speed.  My other inspiration was today at a demo I was making the Pasta e fagiole from the Everyday Cookbook which reminded me how you can make a sauce from pure vegetables and how delicious and healthy it is. 

So this is how I made my Lasagne

2 smallish onions
2 cloves garlic
    chopped speed 6, 3 seconds

1 Tbs olive oil
    cooked Varoma temp, 2 mins, speed 1

2 carrots, roughly chopped
1/4 zucchini (that was floating around the fridge, you can pretty much chuck in anything!)
5 button mushrooms
a small handful of parsley
1 small red capsicum de seeded and quartered
good pinch fresh or dried herbs (rosemary, oregano, basil, thyme)
3 Tablespoons tomato paste
60g white wine
1 400g can tomatoes
then fill that can with water and add into TM
2 heaped Tablespoons Thermie stock
2 Tablespoons balsamic vinegar
    Puree speed 6, 20 seconds
    Heat 90C, 10 minutes, speed 2
(The reason Im saying 90 is because I did 100, then when I went to add the mince it was boiling and some splashed up and burnt my hands)
Ok now set the Thermomix again for 20 minutes, this time 100C and speed slow (spoon), reverse and add 1kg mince by breaking it up roughly and dropping through the lid, every now and then incorporate it with your spatula and then continue until all is in (this process shouldnt take longer than 3 minutes).
This recipe really pushes your Thermomix to the max quantity line, but it makes a massive serve of Lasagne.
 After 20 mins either pour into a bowl or casserole dish carefully, or if you have a second Thermomix bowl just swap them over and then place in the bowl
70g Plain Flour
70g butter
    mix speed 4 for 3 seconds then add
1 kg milk
good pinch salt or 3/4 tsp Thermie stock
    cook for 8 minutes, 90C, speed 4 then add
40g milled or grated parmesan cheese and check if it needs more salt

I then used a packet of dried Lasagne sheets 500g and layered pasta, sauce, pasta, sauce, béchamel, pasta, sauce, pasta, sauce, pasta, béchamel and topped with grated mozzarella, and baked at 180 for approx 35 mins, until golden, (if its browning too fast you can cover it). Allow to rest 20 mins before cutting.




It was the perfect amount to fill my largest baking dish, perfect amount of sauce, perfect amount of béchamel, perfect amount of pasta, not one piece left.  Ive never actually read the Thermomix recipe for Lasagne, I have no idea of the method they recommend but I think this turned out perfect.  I love those moments,  I was smiling happily thinking about how surely the kitchen gods were smiling down on me for today at least, and at that moment as I bent down to put the Lasagne in the oven my pants split, a giant 20cm gaping hole.  I guess the fashion gods will visit me some other time……

Monday, 6 February 2012

What is Sourdough?

Sourdough bread is bread leavened with lactobacillus culture instead of processed yeast, or a combination of the two. It is one of the earliest methods of leavening (rising) bread, and is created by making what is known as a sourdough culture or ‘starter’. The starter is made by mixing flour and water (and sometimes other things containing enzymes) over a process of around 11 days to activate the naturally occurring bacteria and yeasts. The sour flavour of the bread comes from the lactic acid produced by the good bacteria, and once you have your starter the process of making the bread takes from 1 to 3 days. Most larger bakeries producing sourdough use yeast, then add some of the starter so that you still get the sour flavour but don’t have to wait as long to bake. Some traditional bakeries use starters that are over a hundred years old, mine is 4 years young.