Baking · Breakfast · Do-ahead · Egg based · Holiday Food

Cheese croissant bread and butter pudding

This indulgent cheesy croissant bread and butter pudding makes the ideal lazy breakfast to share with friends. Prep the dish the night before and chill in the fridge, to buy yourself more time in bed in the morning.

Serves 4-6
Knob of soft butter for greasing the dish
6-8 croissants, depending on the size, ideally a day or two old
8oz (200g) gruyère cheese, grated
5oz (150g) ham hock, finely shredded
8.5 fl oz (250ml) whole milk
15 fl oz (450ml) double cream
3 medium free-range eggs and
2 egg yolks, lightly beaten
5 tbsp finely chopped chives
2 tsp English mustard powder

Heat the oven to 350F/160°C fan/gas 4.
Halve the croissants horizontally and lay them on a baking sheet. Put them in the oven for 5 minutes, then remove them to cool – you can turn off the oven now as you won’t need it for a bit. This helps the croissants dry out so they’ll greedily soak up the custard.
Arrange half the halved croissants, cut-side up, in the baking dish. Scatter over half the cheese and all the ham, then arrange the rest of the halved croissants, cut-side down, on top.
Stir the milk and cream in a pan and warm until just steaming. Remove from the heat, whisk in the eggs, yolks, chives and mustard, then season with salt and pepper. Slowly pour the mixture evenly over the croissants, then cover and chill for an hour or overnight. If you can, tilt the dish from time to time and baste the croissants with the custard to make sure it’s absorbed.
Reheat the oven to 350F/160°C fan/gas 4.
Remove the dish from the fridge, scatter over the rest of the cheese, put the dish on a baking sheet to catch any drips, then bake until the custard is just set and the cheese is bubbling (30-35 minutes). Let it sit for 5-10 minutes before serving with whatever your heart desires (within reason).
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* It only takes 15 minutes to prep but it needs time in the fridge, so if you’re not the type to get up early, make it the night before to the point where it’s soaked in the custard, then cover it, put it in the fridge and cook it the next morning.

Asian flavors · Baking · Breakfast · Do-ahead · Holiday Food

Triple ginger muffins

A baked good for the true ginger fanatic, these muffins pack some serious spice thanks to the addition of grated fresh ginger, ground ginger and minced crystallized ginger. Molasses, a key ingredient in traditional gingerbread, gives the muffins a beautiful golden hue and helps keep them moist for days — if they last that long. (Any variety of molasses will work here, but there may be some color variation depending on the brand used.) For larger, bakery-style muffins, use a jumbo muffin pan and bake the muffins for a few extra minutes.
Recipe by Lidey Heuck for the New York Times

1 cup/201 grams granulated sugar
½ cup/113 grams unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
2 large eggs, at room temperature
¾ cup whole milk
¼ cup molasses
1 tbsp finely grated fresh ginger (from a 2-inch piece)
2 cups/256 grams all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp kosher salt (Diamond Crystal)
¾ cup/108 grams, plus 3 tablespoons/27 grams minced crystallized ginger

Heat the oven to 375 degrees and line a standard muffin tin with paper liners.

In a large mixing bowl, combine the sugar, butter, eggs, milk, molasses and grated ginger, and whisk until smooth.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, ground ginger and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix until just combined. (Be careful not to over-mix! The batter will be slightly lumpy.) Stir in 3/4 cup crystallized ginger, reserving the remaining 3 tablespoons for the topping.

Using an ice cream scoop or a large spoon, divide the batter between the 12 muffin cups. Sprinkle the reserved crystallized ginger onto the tops of the muffins, and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean and the muffins spring back when lightly pressed.

Cool for 10 minutes in the pan, then carefully transfer muffins to a cooling rack and cool completely.

Baking · Chocolate · Do-ahead

Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies

These taste distinctly homemade: much smaller than giant, thick bakery-style disks and more delicate, with just enough buttery dough to bind the chocolate and oats.
Mixing by hand turns out cookies that are crisp at the edges and tender in the centers. These can be mixed and baked in under an hour, but the dough balls also can be packed in an airtight container and refrigerated for up to 3 days, or frozen for up to a month. You can bake them from ice-cold, though they’ll need a few more minutes to turn golden brown.

Recipe by Genevieve Ko for the New York Times
Makes between 2 and 3 dozen cookies

¾ cup/100 grams all-purpose flour
½ tsp baking soda
½ tsp fine sea salt
8 tbsp/114 grams unsalted butter, softened
½ cup/94 grams packed brown sugar
¼ cup/59 grams granulated sugar
1 large egg, at room temperature
2 tbsp heavy cream or milk
2 tsp pure vanilla extract
1 ¼ cups/134 grams old-fashioned rolled oats
1 cup/189 grams semi-sweet chocolate chips
½ cup/63 grams chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)

Heat oven to 350 F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.

Whisk the flour, baking soda and salt in a small bowl. Mix the butter and both sugars in a large bowl with a wooden spoon until creamy. Beat in the egg until incorporated, then stir in the cream and vanilla.
Add the flour mixture and gently stir until no traces of flour remain. Add the oats, chocolate chips and nuts (if using), and fold until evenly distributed. Loosely scoop a rounded ball of dough using a measuring tablespoon or small cookie scoop and drop onto a prepared sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough, spacing the balls 2 inches apart.
Bake, 1 sheet at a time, until golden brown, 12 to 14 minutes.
Cool on the sheet on a wire rack for 1 minute, then transfer the cookies to the rack to cool completely.
The cookies will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days or in the freezer for up to 2 months.

Baking

Sticky orange and ginger baklava

This comforting autumnal-style baklava combines a filling of fresh orange zest and spices with blended walnuts and is drenched in a gloriously sticky stem ginger syrup
Stem ginger is a fantastic ingredient to have on hand in autumn, and the syrup from the jar is just as useful as the ginger itself.
Recipe by Anna Glover for Olive Magazine

Serves 12.

11oz (300g) walnuts
2 oranges, zested and 1 juiced
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1 tsp ground ginger
3-4 balls stem ginger finely chopped, plus 2oz (50g) of syrup from the jar
2 oz (50g) runny honey
7-8oz (200g) butter, melted
2 x 9.5oz (270g) packs filo pastry, defrosted
9oz (250g) golden caster sugar

Put the walnuts in a food processor and pulse until finely chopped (don’t blend to a paste, you want to keep the texture). Tip into a bowl and stir in the orange zest, spices, stem ginger, honey and a pinch of salt.

Brush a little of the melted butter over the base of a 9″(20cm) x 12″(30cm) baking dish. Halve or trim the filo sheets so they’ll fit the dish, then layer half of the filo into the base, brushing each sheet with the melted butter as you stack the layers. You should have about 10-12 layers in total.

Sprinkle over the chopped nut mixture and gently smooth the surface with a spatula so it reaches the edges. Repeat step 2 with the remaining filo, layering it over the nut mixture. Brush the remaining butter over the top of the baklava. Heat the oven to 400F/180C/fan 160C/gas 4.

Score squares or a diamond pattern into the top of the baklava using a sharp knife, then chill for 10 minutes to firm up. Bake for 45-50 minutes or until deeply golden and crispy on top.

When the baklava is almost ready, make the syrup.
Put the caster sugar and stem ginger syrup in a pan with the orange juice and 6.5fl oz (200ml) of water. Bring to a simmer over a low-medium heat and cook gently for 6-8 minutes or until the sugar dissolves and the mixture is a smooth syrup. When the baklava is cooked, immediately pour over the warm syrup.
Cool to room temperature (this will allow the baklava to absorb the syrup), then cut along the scores you made earlier and serve.

Baking · Dessert · Do-ahead

Summer strawberry shortcake

Recipe from “Jane Grigson’s Fruit Book” for the New York Times
Adapted by Nancy Harmon Jenkins

There’s a kind of magic in a summer recipe that you can make wherever you are, provided that wherever you are has, say, flour, butter, an oven and whatever fruit is most glorious is at that very moment. This is one such recipe, so simple that you can decide that you’re having shortcake for dessert and make it so within the hour, and so satisfying that it may become your go-to for summer, the recipe you keep in your back pocket. Strawberries are the classic choice, but this would also be heavenly in high summer with very ripe peaches or any other juicy, macerated fruit. —Nancy Harmon Jenkins

Serves 4

2 pints ripe, well-rinsed strawberries
½ cup sugar, or more to taste
4 cups flour
3 tbsp sugar
¼ tsp salt
5 tsp baking powder
1 ¼ cups butter (softened)
3 cups whipping cream
¼ tsp vanilla extract

Pick over and hull strawberries. Cut in half or slice, depending on size. Gently crush about a quarter of the berries with a fork to release their juices. Mix with remaining berries and the 1/2 cup of sugar, adding more sugar if necessary. Set aside, covered, for about half an hour to develop flavor.

Preheat oven to 450 F.

Into a large mixing bowl, sift together the flour, 3 tablespoons sugar, salt and baking powder.
Add 3/4 cup of softened butter, and rub into dry ingredients as for pastry.
Add 1 1/4 cups cream, and mix to a soft dough. Knead the dough for one minute on a lightly floured pastry board, then roll it out to about 1/2-inch thickness. Using a 3-inch biscuit cutter, cut an even number of rounds – 2 rounds per serving.

Use a little of the butter to grease a baking sheet. Place half the rounds on it.
Melt remaining butter and brush a little on the rounds; place remaining rounds on top. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes, or until golden brown.

Remove from the oven, and pull shortcakes apart. Brush the insides with some of the remaining melted butter.
Beat remaining cream until it thickens. Add vanilla. Beat again just until thick.
Place a bottom half of a shortcake on each plate. Top with a generous spoonful of berries. Cover with a top half, add a few more berries, and top with whipped cream.
Serve immediately.

Baking · Do-ahead

Oh sooo easy date and orange Scones.

This café favorite is so easy to make at home. The trick to baking fluffy scones is not to overwork the mix once you add the flour. That’s why I always stir the mix with a knife – it keeps the action light.

Recipe by New Zealand cookbook writer, Annabel Langbein

Ready in 30 mins
Makes 12 large scones

Finely grated zest of 1 orange
3 cups self-raising flour or gluten-free self-raising flour
¼ cup sugar
1 tsp baking powder, sifted
3oz (75g) chilled butter, grated
2 cups pitted dates, chopped
1¾ cups buttermilk or natural yoghurt
icing sugar (powdered sugar), to dust (optional)

Preheat oven to 400F/200°C fan bake. Line an oven tray with baking paper and lightly dust with
flour.

Combine orange zest, flour, sugar and baking powder in a bowl. Add the butter and use a knife or your fingertips to work into the flour mixture to a coarse crumb. Mix in the chopped dates.

Add the buttermilk or yoghurt and stir with a knife until the mixture just comes together into a soft, wettish dough. (do not over-mix)

Turn out onto prepared tray and flatten into a circle about 10″/25cm in diameter. Cut into 12 wedges – like the spokes of a wheel- and rearrange with a little room in between so they can rise .

Bake until risen, fully set in the centre and lightly golden (about 20 minutes).
Dust with icing sugar before serving, if desired.

Baking · Dairy-free · Do-ahead · Gluten Free · Vegan

Rhubarb, cardamom and pistachio tart

This vegan recipe comes from the wonderful Meera Sodha who writes recipes for the Guardian.

“I don’t believe in rules when it comes to the pairing of ingredients, but I removed rhubarb from its lifelong partner in crime, custard, with caution.

Rhubarb by character is bright, fierce, acerbic and usually not for the faint-hearted unless tamed by something soothing. In custard’s place, I’ve used its more sophisticated cousin, frangipane, a sweet cream made using almonds, pistachios and oat milk flavored with zesty orange and cardamom. (Though, if this makes you feel uncomfortable, and because there are no rules, you could always serve this tart with custard instead.)”

Makes 1 x 9 inch (23cm) tart

For the pastry
8oz (250g) plain flour
7 tbsp (105ml) light olive oil
1.5oz (40g) caster sugar
1 pinch sea salt
3 tbsp cold water

For the filling
7 tbsp (105ml) light olive oil
4.5oz (125g) caster sugar, plus 1 tbsp extra to finish
2oz (50g) cornflour
7oz (200g) ground pistachios
1.5oz (40g) ground almonds
4 tbsp (60ml) oat milk
1½ tsp cardamom powder
Zest of 1 orange
8oz (250g) forced rhubarb or just the top tender parts

To make the pastry, put the flour, oil, sugar and salt in a bowl, and mix with a clean hand. Add the water, mix again, then knead for three minutes. Return to the bowl and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

Heat the oven to 350F/200C (180C fan)/gas 6.
After the pastry has rested, place it between two sheets of baking paper and flatten it gently. Roll to about 3mm thick and just larger than a loose-bottomed 9″ (23cm) tart tin.
Peel off the top sheet of baking paper, place a hand under the bottom sheet and flip the pastry on top of the tart tin – don’t worry if it cracks or breaks. Reserve the baking paper. Press the pastry into place, cut away the overhang and use the offcuts to fill any cracks.
Prick the base all over with a fork, crumple up one of the sheets of baking paper, unravel it and put it in the tart case. Fill with baking beans (or uncooked rice) and bake for about 25 minutes, until the pastry is crisp and lightly golden.
Remove, and leave to cool.

To make the filling, mix everything except the rhubarb in a bowl until well combined, then set aside.

When the tart case is cool, lift out the baking paper and beans, and scrape the frangipane mix into the tart shell. Even it out and smooth it down with the back of a spoon.
Now decorate as you wish: you could cut the rhubarb to size to lay stripes across the tart, or cut it into shorter lengths and tessellate. I like to do mine as in the photograph above by neatly arranging 1/4″ (6cm) pieces of rhubarb at the centre of the tart, then filling the gaps around it with smaller pieces, cut to size.

Sprinkle the extra tablespoon of sugar all over the top of the rhubarb, then bake for 40-45 minutes, until the filling is starting to bronze slightly and the rhubarb is tender. Leave to cool a little before cutting and serving.

Baking · Dairy-free · Dessert · Do-ahead · Gluten Free

Easy whole orange and almond cake

This is a wonderful recipe from the ladies who used to own the Post Office Café in Bundanoon, N.S.W, Australia.
A dusting of powdered sugar and served with blueberries and either créme fresh or mascarpone are the best accompaniments…

2-3 oranges , unpeeled. If they are really large, then just use 2. But the more “orangey-tasting” the more oranges!
250g (8oz) almond meal. (FYI, almond meal is made from raw, unpeeled almonds and is a coarser grind than almond flour, which is made from blanched peeled almonds)
6 large eggs
250g (8oz) sugar
1 tsp baking powder

Set the oven to 180C (350F)
Boil the oranges whole for about 30 mins or until soft. Remove from the water and let cool to room temp or enough so the eggs wont turn to scrambled eggs when they’re added to the orange.
Put the soft oranges into a blender and blend to a pulp, then add the eggs and sugar and blend until thick and pale
Add the almond meal and baking powder and mix well.

Put into a well greased cake tin and bake for 1 hour. Leave to cool a little and remove from the tin to a wire rack.

Baking · Dairy-free · Do-ahead · Grains

Jim Haley’s no-knead bread

This is the easiest and best no-knead bread recipe you will ever need and you can enjoy adding whatever flavorings you like to this recipe, like cheese, olives, herbs, cranberries etc
Recipe by Jim Lahey adapted by Mark Bittman for the New York Times.

3 ⅓ cups/430 grams all-purpose or bread flour, plus more for dusting
¼ tsp instant yeast
2 tsp kosher salt
Cornmeal or wheat bran, as needed

In a large bowl combine the flour, yeast and salt. Add 1 1/2 cups plus 2 tablespoons/390 milliliters water, and stir until blended; the dough will be shaggy and sticky.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. Let the dough rest at least 12 hours, preferably about 18, at warm room temperature, about 70 degrees.

The dough is ready when its surface is dotted with bubbles.
Lightly flour a work surface and place the dough on it; sprinkle it with a little more flour and fold it over on itself once or twice. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rest about 15 minutes.

Using just enough flour to keep the dough from sticking to the work surface or to your fingers, gently and quickly shape dough into a ball. Generously coat a cotton towel (not terry cloth) with flour, wheat bran or cornmeal; put the dough seam side down on the towel and dust with more flour, bran or cornmeal.

Cover with another cotton towel and let rise for about 2 hours. When it is ready, the dough will be more than double in size and will not readily spring back when poked with a finger.

At least a half-hour before the dough is ready, heat the oven to 450 degrees.

Put a 6 to 8-quart heavy covered pot (cast iron, enamel, Pyrex or ceramic) in the oven as it heats. When the dough is ready, carefully remove the pot from oven. Slide your hand under the towel and turn dough over into pot, seam side up; it may look like a mess, but that is O.K.
Shake the pan once or twice if the dough is unevenly distributed; it will straighten out as it bakes. Cover with the lid and bake 30 minutes, then remove lid and bake another 15 to 30 minutes, until the loaf is beautifully browned.
Cool on a rack.

Baking · Do-ahead · Gluten Free · Holiday Food · Vegetable sides

Creamed Brussels sprouts

It’s that time of year and I’m always looking for different ways to cook Brussels sprouts. This one is from food blog, “Delish” and is delish!
Not a fan of Fontina? Gruyere or white cheddar would also be delicious here!

Serves 6
1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 large yellow onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 lb Brussels sprouts, halved and thinly sliced
1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes, plus more for garnish
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 cup Greek yogurt
1/2 cup mayonnaise
2 eggs, lightly beaten
Zest of 1/2 lemon
1/2 cup freshly shredded Fontina
1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan, plus more for garnish
2 tbsp freshly chopped parsley

Heat oven to 375°.
In a large skillet over medium heat, heat oil.
Add onions and cook until soft, 6 minutes. Add garlic and cook until fragrant, 1 minute. Add Brussels sprouts and red pepper flakes and cook until tender, 7 minutes more.
Season with salt and pepper, then remove from heat and let cool.

In a large bowl, stir together Greek yogurt, mayonnaise, eggs, and lemon zest, and cheeses and season with salt and pepper. Fold in cooled vegetables and transfer to a medium baking dish.

Bake until top is golden and cheese is bubbly, 30 to 35 minutes.

Garnish with parsley, Parmesan, and red pepper flakes and serve immediately.