Author: Emma

Citrus upside down cake

Citrus upside down cake

Who doesn’t love an upside down cake? So many happy memories coming in from school to a pineapple cake my Mum made, such a treat. This is a playful twist on this classic. A citrus upside down cake bursting with oranges to celebrate beautiful winter 

Chocolate orange nutella pop tarts

Chocolate orange nutella pop tarts

Breakfast is my favourite meal of the day but it can often feel the most rushed and least satisfying when you’re preparing for a busy day. Chocolate orange nutella pop tarts add a much needed burst of excitement for my morning routine. They’re such a 

Ruby chocolate valentines truffles

Ruby chocolate valentines truffles

If you’re on the hunt for simple, no-bake goodies to treat yourself or the people you love to a gorgeous romantic treat have a go at these. Ruby chocolate valentines truffles are so delicious and really have the wow factor. Ruby chocolate is pretty special anyway but when it’s made into a silky ganache and rolled in sugar or freeze dried raspberries, these truffles are in a league of their own. A real indulgence and something you can make in advance and enjoy whenever you want them. 

Making truffles is a lovely recipe to learn and once you’ve mastered them you can do so many flavours and combinations. Even though making ganache is easy there is a trick to it to avoid the base from splitting; which has happened to me a few times. The best piece of advice is to be patient and keep everything on a nice gentle heat and you’ll be fine. 

Ingredients

250g ruby chocolate (I use Callebaut chocolate chips)

100ml double cream

1 tsp vanilla extract

Pinch of salt

30g icing sugar

20g freeze dried raspberries (optional)

Makes 20 truffles 

Method for ruby chocolate valentines truffles 

In a large bowl pour in the double cream, vanilla extract and salt. Then add in the ruby chocolate chips and stir briefly.

In a small saucepan, begin to boil a small amount of water to use to melt the chocolate. Once the water begins to simmer, put the large pyrex, heatproof bowl, on top of it and melt the ingredients together.  This is such a simple way to make a ganache, which is what truffles are essentially. 

Every so often stir the mixture. These are very easy to make but chocolate can be quite fiddly, particularly when making ganache. So my advice is to keep the heat as gentle as possible, turning down the heat for the water if it is bubbling too much to help get a beautiful ganache. The water should be hot enough to melt the chocolate and combine everything together but not too hot which can make the ganache split, so a little patience goes a long way here. If the mix does split, and you’ll know if it has because the chocolate will look grainy, just stir in a little more double cream and the mix should smooth out again. No problems. 

It should take about 5-10 minutes to make the ganache. 

When the chocolate is all melted and you have a smooth mix, take the bowl off the heat and directly cover the surface with cling film to avoid a skin forming. Chill the mixture in the fridge for a few hours so that it thickens enough to roll into truffles. 

Let’s make the truffles

Once the ganache has chilled, take it out of the fridge and start spooning out small amounts to roll into truffles. If you want to weigh them, I’d aim for 16g each but you don’t have to weigh them if you don’t feel like it. 

Once you’ve portioned out the ganache, quickly roll it in the palms of your hands to make a ball. When you’ve done this for all of them you can either coat them in icing sugar or freeze dried raspberries, which give the ruby chocolate a lovely fruity taste. 

Once made, these truffles will last a week or two in the fridge, ready for you to enjoy whenever you fancy.

Looking for other chocolate recipes? Try our Chocolate pancakes; Chocolate truffle no churn ice cream and Double Chocolate Baked Doughnuts – they’re all perfect treats to show you care

Simple greek salad flatbreads

Simple greek salad flatbreads

I love making bread but sometimes I can’t face the time it’ll take from start to eating. Particularly if you want something speedy for lunch or a cheeky brunch with friends. Luckily, my simple greek salad flatbreads are made with natural yoghurt and baking powder 

Cranberry pop tarts

Cranberry pop tarts

Cranberry pop tarts. These are such a fun and completely delicious treat, particularly in the winter when cranberries are in season. It’s a great recipe for when you’ve got leftover cranberry sauce that you don’t know what to do with. The tart and zingy cranberry 

White chocolate and cranberry cupcakes

White chocolate and cranberry cupcakes

White chocolate and cranberry cupcakes. This is such a beautiful festive bake. Great for anyone that wants an easy, stunning little showstopper. They’re even better for anyone that don’t like mincemeat. 

White chocolate and cranberries are such a gorgeous combo. The tart brightness of the cranberries is just the best with the indulgently sweet white chocolate buttercream icing. These cupcakes use this combo in a beautiful way. The sweet vanilla sponges are filled with zingy cranberry sauce and topped with a generous swirl of white chocolate icing, before being adorned with bright red sugar cranberry jewels. 

Cupcakes to me just feel less stressful to me than making one big cake. It’s easier to control the cooking time so you have beautiful soft cakes. They’re also quicker to cool and then decorate. This leaves you lots more time for everything else you might have on at this time of year. 

Lately, I’ve also developed a big appreciation for filled cupcakes. It’s a fab way to get more flavour in, adding a little extra surprise, plus all the cake offcuts are cooks perk, so there is that too. 

Give them a go and let me know what you think. The cranberry season is such a short one, I just get so excited to find as many ways to use them as possible. 

Ingredients

113g self rising flour 

113g caster sugar

113g softened unsalted butter 

2 eggs

¼ tsp salt

½ tsp baking powder

½ tsp vanilla extract

Approx 9 tsp cranberry sauce (I used my sloe gin cranberry sauce recipe but you can use store bought too if you’re short on time)

For the white chocolate buttercream icing:

350g sifted icing sugar

175g softened unsalted butter

1 ½  tsp vanilla extract

¼ tsp salt

100g white chocolate 

Sugared cranberries as decoration (optional)

Makes 9 cupcakes

Method for white chocolate and cranberry cupcakes 

Preheat the oven to 170°C, GM3. 

Line a muffin tin with 9 cases and leave aside while you make the mixture. 

Weigh out all of your ingredients.

In a separate bowl, sift the self rising flour, salt and baking powder.

Using a food mixer, or free standing whisk, combine the sugar and butter together until it forms a light, creamy consistency. This will only take a few minutes with a food mixer. Then gradually add one egg at a time, leaving plenty of time for the egg to incorporate into the mixture before adding the next and keep the mixer running at a fairly high speed while doing this; this will help the mixture from curdling. You can also add a tablespoon of flour after each egg at this stage to help prevent curdling too. 

Once the eggs have been added, add in the dry ingredients and on a slow speed mix until they have only just combined. Then add the vanilla extract, folding it into the cake mixture.

Using a medium ice cream scoop or two spoons, portion the mixture out amongst the cake cases. Take care not to overfill the cases as the mixture will rise more as it bakes. Just over half fill each case with batter. 

Let’s get baking

Bake in the middle shelf of the oven, turning the pan ¾ way through cooking time to help the cakes cook evenly. This should take about 15-18 minutes. 

To test if the cakes are cooked, use a cake skewer and insert into the middle of one of the cakes and if it comes away clean then they are cooked. The cakes should also spring back when touched and be very lightly golden.

Transfer the cakes to a wire rack to cool completely before icing. Cupcakes cool down really quickly so this will take less than 30 minutes. 

While you wait, you can prepare the icing. 

To make the icing, add the butter to a food mixer and cream it for a few minutes to make sure everything is very smooth before gradually starting to add the icing sugar. Once the mixture is combined and everything is light and fluffy (the longer you mix, the fluffier the mixture will get) then add the vanilla extract, salt and melted white chocolate and mix for a final time. Add a few tbsp of milk to the icing if you think it needs to have a looser, more spreadable consistency.

Let’s get assembling

To bring the cakes together, cut out holes in the middle of each cupcake and fill with approx 1 tsp of cranberry sauce. You don’t want to overfill, as it makes it difficult to pipe the buttercream on top later. 

Then using a piping bag, swirl the white chocolate buttercream onto each cupcake (or if you don’t have a piping bag you can use a palette knife and smooth it over the cupcakes). 

Top with sugared cranberries to finish the cakes. Alternatively you could add orange zest or festive sprinkles or simply some icing sugar for a snowy effect.

The cakes should keep well in an airtight container for up to 3 days.

Tips

For baking, make sure that all of your ingredients are at room temperature, including the eggs, it will help all of the ingredients combine together well. 

An ice cream scoop is a great tool to help ensure that your cupcakes are the same size when they are baked. 

Weigh out all of your ingredients in advance; yes this means more bowls and more washing up, but the positive is that you have everything ready before you start, so you only have to think about the process of making the cake, instead of rushing to find the next ingredient and weigh it out while the mixer is running. 

The easiest way to fill a piping bag is to open the bag into a tall glass and bend the top over the sides of the glass, then fill with the icing.

Love cranberries? Why not try our Cranberry and apple curd – this is brilliant as a breakfast over porridge. Lovely as part of a festive cream tea too.

Looking for some festive baking inspiration? Try our Reindeer Christmas chocolates, Mince pie Christmas cupcakes, Gingerbread hot chocolate or our Gingerbread Nutella sandwich cookies

Sloe gin cranberry sauce

Sloe gin cranberry sauce

Sloe gin cranberry sauce is exactly the sort of easy peasy recipe you can knock up in a flash. For me, the Christmas table would be naked without a little cranberry sauce to have on the side.  Not only is it delicious with the tart 

Gingerbread hot chocolate

Gingerbread hot chocolate

I just love a recipe that takes minutes to make but delivers big on flavour and indulgence. This gingerbread hot chocolate does exactly that. Such a treat. Full of warming spices and rich dark chocolate gorgeousness, you simply must make time for at least one 

Tomato, red pepper and lentil soup

Tomato, red pepper and lentil soup

For me, there is nothing more comforting on a cold, cold day, than to put my feet up and enjoy a nice bowl of soup with a chunk of bread or a toasted cheese sandwich and this soup is such a winner. Tomato, red pepper and lentil soup. Think, the best and most satisfying bolognese you’ve ever eaten and then you’re in the right ballpark for this delicious soup. So rich and full of flavour and bursting with tomatoes and basil. The lentils give the soup a really beautiful thick texture and the oregano, saffron and balsamic vinegar all add to that Italian feel. 

Yeast extract is a bit of a secret weapon here. Alongside the stock cubes it gives the soup a real depth, which is brilliant, particularly with vegetarian recipes that obviously lack that intense meaty savouriness. Bicarbonate of soda might sound like an odd addition, and I’d only discovered it recently, but the science of it basically means it cuts the acidity of the tomatoes, and there are a lot in this recipe, so much like sugar, it balances the flavours nicely. 

Now this soup, bursting with vegetables, serves a lot of people. I like that, because it means I can store it in the fridge and have snaffle batches away in the freezer too, but if you’d prefer to make a smaller quantity – this’ll easily feed 12 – you can reduce the amounts, not a problem. Leftovers make me feel organised and together and I’m always happy when I can pull something quick and delicious out of the freezer, so I definitely prefer making more, not less, but it’s entirely up to you. 

Recipe 

2 large onions (red or white)

4 sticks celery 

4 large carrots

1 480g jar of roasted red peppers

2 500g jars of tomato passata

3 400g tins of chopped tomatoes

250g red split lentils

2 tsp yeast extract (I always use Marmite, love the flavour)

1 tbsp tomato paste

2 cloves of garlic 

1 vegetable stock cube

2 tsp ground black pepper

Salt to taste 

1 bunch fresh basil

2 tbsp Marsala (optional)

30g butter (plus a little oil to cook the vegetables)

2 tsp fennel seeds

3 tsp dried oregano

3 tbsp balsamic vinegar

1 tsp caster sugar

⅛ tsp bicarbonate of soda

Makes enough for 12 people

Method for Tomato, red pepper and lentil soup

In a food processor (or by hand if you like) blitz the onions, celery, carrots alongside the basil stalks and pulse until very finely chopped. 

Heat a large saucepan with a little oil and butter and then add the fennel seeds and oregano.  When the oil is hot, add the onion and carrot mix and stir to combine. Add a little salt at this stage to help the vegetables cook gradually. The salt will release water from the vegetables, so it doesn’t burn but reduces down nicely. 

After 5 minutes or so, add the tomato puree and stir. Cook for a few more minutes. Then add the garlic, vegetable stock cube and yeast extract and saffron. 

When the vegetables are soft and cooked down add a splash of marsala. (This is entirely optional, so if you’d prefer not to add alcohol, then simply miss it out). 

Then add the jarred red peppers, passata and tinned tomatoes and stir to combine. Add the bicarbonate of soda and stir. (The purpose of this is to decrease the acid in all the tomatoes, to balance the flavours a little). 

Add the red split lentils and coat in the vegetable mixture. Then add about 2 litres of hot water from a recently boiled kettle and turn down the heat to let the soup cook. The lentils will absorb water while they cook, so keep adding water every so often to make sure it isn’t too thick. 

Now to wait for the soup to cook

As this is such a large amount of soup, the lentils take a while to cook, so bring to the boil and blip away on the stove top for 45 minutes or so until the lentils are soft. 

Once the lentils are cooked, add in a little more salt and pepper to taste. It’s best to add most of the seasoning at this stage, as too much salt can make lentils a little hard when cooking. Also add the balsamic vinegar and sugar too. Stir in the fresh basil leaves too. 

Blitz the soup with a handheld mixer how you like, I’ve made the soup pretty smooth here but it still remains nicely thick and has a bit of texture. 

Serve warm with a drizzle of oil, a few shavings of pecorino and some black pepper and a nice wodge of bread on the side. 

This soup freezes really well, so keep a few portions in the fridge and then bag up the rest and store in the freezer which will stay good for a few months. Then when you want them, defrost, heat and enjoy. 

Looking for other yummy winter warmers? Check out our Roasted carrot and lentil soup, Cheddar Red Leicester cheese scone recipe or our Mozzarella dough bites – so delicious. You can’t eat just one.

Gingerbread Nutella sandwich cookies

Gingerbread Nutella sandwich cookies

What’s better than a gingerbread cookie at Christmas? That would be two gingerbread cookies. What could be even better than that? Well, that would be smothering them with nutella and making a cookie sandwich. You’re welcome. These gingerbread nutella sandwich cookies are delicious and a