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Sunday 30 October 2016

This is Halloween!: Red Velvet Cheesecake Skyscraper





Halloween is my 2nd favourite holiday (Christmas is obviously my favourite!) and we always go all out every year!  Our annual Halloween party has costumes, decorations, quizzes... and, as always, cake!




This year, I decided to make a red velvet cheesecake skyscraper cake, inspired by Junior's cheesecake in NYC.  https://www.juniorscheesecake.com  My brother and I have been obsessed since our first visit - you must have at least one slice in your lifetime!

I am super chuffed with how it turned out (even though there were one or two pitfalls along the way!) and everyone agreed that it tasted phenomenal! 

IMPORTANT: You must make the cake and the cheesecake the day before so they can cool completely overnight before assembling!

I based the majority of the recipe on the Carrot Cake skyscraper book from Junior's recipe book - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Juniors-Cheesecake-Cookbook-die-York-style/dp/1561588806

The red velvet part I took from the BBC Good Food website - http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/freaky-finger-red-velvet-cake

Annoyingly, they do use different measuring systems due to Americanisms!

Ingredients

    For the red velvet cake

    • 175g soft butter , plus extra for greasing
    • 225g white caster sugar
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract
    • 3 large eggs , at room temperature
    • 1 tbsp red food colouring paste 
    • 200g plain flour
    • 50g cocoa powder 
    • 1½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

    • ½ tsp baking powder
    • ¼ tsp salt
    • 150g pot low-fat plain yoghurt , loosened with 2 tbsp milk

    For the cheesecake

    • 1 1/2lbs of full fat cream cheese
    • 1 1/3 cups caster sugar
    • 3 tbsps cornstarch
    • 1 tbsp pure vanilla extract
    • 2 extra large eggs (equivalent to 8tbsp of beaten egg)
    • 2/3 cup heavy or whipping cream

    For the cream cheese frosting

    • 1 1/2lbs of full fat cream cheese
    • 1 cup unsalted butter (I used salted)
    • 1 1/2lbs of icing sugar
    • 1 tbsp pure vanilla extract
    • 1/4 cup heavy or whipping cream

    Method

    Step One: Make the Red Velvet Cake
    This is one of my favourite kinds of cake!  Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan) and grease and sugar a 9-inch cake pan.  Cream the butter, sugar and vanilla, then add the eggs, one at a time, beating after each.  If your mixture curdles, add 1 spoonful of flour and it will sort it out!


    • Beat in the colouring until combined.  Sift all the dry ingredients together, then fold in HALF the dry ingredients (capitalised because I didn't read the instructions properly and chucked it all in!) and HALF the yoghurt and milk mix.  THEN fold in the other HALF of the dry ingredients and the other HALF of the yoghurt and milk mix.  



    Finally, tip it into the tin and level it off.  Bake for 25-30 mins until springy and a skewer comes out clean.  Cool in the tin for 10 mins, then turn out onto a wire rack to cool overnight.





    Step Two: Make the Cheesecake
    Preheat the oven to 180C (160C fan) and butter the bottom and sides of a 9 inch springform pan.  Wrap the outside of the pan in tin foil.  Mix 8oz of cream cheese, 1/3 cup of sugar and the cornstarch with an electric mixer on a low speed until creamy.  Add the rest of the cream cheese (a bit at a time) then scrape down the sides.  Increase the speed to medium and add the rest fo the sugar and the vanilla then the eggs (1 at a time).  Beat in the cream until completely blended.  Spoon the mixture into the pan and place it into a large shallow roasting pan full of hot water - it should come about halfway up the sides of your cheesecake pan.  Bake for about 1 1/4 hours until lightly brown.





    (Mine was too brown!)  Cool in the tin for at least 2 hours, then take off the foil and wrap the whole cheesecake and pan in cling film.  Refrigerate until completely cold, then place in the freezer overnight.

    Step Three: Make the Buttercream
    Beat the cream cheese and butter together on high speed until creamy.  I always use salted butter in all my buttercreams - it offsets the sweetness of the icing sugar.  (Also, mix icing in a large bowl because otherwise icing sugar goes everywhere.)  Add the icing sugar slowly, folding in slightly before beating (this stops it from flying everywhere).  Add the vanilla and the cream, then mix until smooth.  Clingfilm and refrigerate overnight so it's nice and firm.  




    Step Four: Cheesecake - Assemble!
    Take everything out of the fridge/freezer ten minutes before you want to assemble the cake. Cut the cake in half horizontally.  Put one half onto your serving plate and spread the top with some of the icing.  Remove the cheesecake from it's pan and place on top and spread with more buttercream.  Finally, lay the other half of the cake on top.  Cover the whole thing with the rest of the buttercream.

    To create the spider design, pipe concentric circles on top with red gel icing.  Using a skewer, drag the tip of the skewer from the centre to the outside to create the spider web.




    My score: 5/5 Relatively easy, but does need some forward planning.  A real showstopper!  Can be adapted to all kinds of different flavours - I've made a carrot cake one and a chocolate one before.  :)

    Julia's Top Tips

    • Be organised!  Make everything the day before your party, assemble it the afternoon of your party and store in the fridge.
    • Experiment with different flavour and designs.  You could try carrot cake, chocolate cake, funfetti cake, caramel cake...  the opportunities are endless!
    • Always use salted butter in your buttercream!

    Happy Halloween!!











    Saturday 29 October 2016

    Bake Off Final: My Thoughts and Opinion


    Wednesday was a very bittersweet night for me.  As you may have guessed, I am obsessed with Bake Off, it's my absolutely favourite show and I love every iota of it.  I love the witty banter of Mel and Sue, I love Paul's mysterious steel glare and, of course, I love the Queen of Baking, Mary Berry.  In a TV world of drama and sob stories, I love that Bake Off is simple, classic and quintessentially British.  

    I am gutted that Bake Off is leaving the BBC.  It is already ruined because 3/4 of the Fab Four will be missing, it will be made even worse by endless ads and product placement and recaps and cliffhangers.  I feel every member of the Fab Four made the right move for themselves - Mel and Sue and Mary did the right thing by staying with BBC; I also think Paul did the right thing staying with Bake Off.  

    I am also devastated on a personal level.  The whole purpose of this baking blog was to prepare me to enter the Great British Bake Off.  I had downloaded the entry form two years previously, but did not have any pastry, bread or patisserie experience.  Therefore, the aim of this blog was to expand and refine my baking skills, in preparation for applying for next year's Bake Off.  Unfortunately, my Bake Off dream will never be acheived.  I will not enter any Bake Off that does not include Mary Berry.  Bake Off without Mary Berry is like a cake without eggs - flat and joyless.  

    I'm still proud of myself - I've acheived a lot and really pushed myself and expanded into whole areas of baking I'd never experienced before.  I've got all my fingers and toes crossed that Mary, Mel, Sue and the BBC devise a new baking competition - I'll be the first in line if that eventually happens!

    Enough moaning - back to the final!

    I was in very mixed feelings about the result.  I'm a big Andrew fan - I love his precision, creativity and talent.  However, on the day, I do think Candice deserved to win.  I've never warmed to Candice, disliking her tendency to alway go over the top, always have to give everything a 'twist; and always presenting things in a ridiculous way (the piano and the bird cage spring to mind).  Personal opinion aside, she is an excellent baker and definitely does not deserve the internet backlash she recieved.  Whether you like or dislike someone, cyber bullying is cyber bullying and attacking someone personally is disgusting and childish.  I am impressed with anyone who can bake in a little black dress and wedge heels and not get a speck of flour on them!  Having said that, I adore Andrew and was very disappointed on his behalf.  

    All in all, a very emotionally mixed night for me.  I am very sad that something so wonderful has come to an end whilst still in its prime.  I think all that is left for us to do is what I always do - keep baking!






    Week Ten: Classic Victoria Sponge

    Will update asap!

    Week Nine: Fondant Fancies

    Never again!  Just buy them!

    Full recipe here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/fondant_fancies_88368


    Ingredients

    For the sponge

    For the buttercream

    For the marzipan topping

    For the icing and decoration


    Method

    Step One: Make the Sponge
    For some stupid reason, I decided that I was going to make 3 different cakes, 3 different toppings and 3 different icings...  I am an idiot.

    I made caramel, chocolate and confetti sponges.  Mary's a big advocate of the all in one method for sponge, but I always cream my butter and sugar first. Always sift the flour too.  After you've creamed the butter and sugar 'til it's pale and fluffy, add the eggs one at a time, along with a tablespoon of sifted flour, to stop the mixture from curdling.  Don't do what I did, which was to divide the mixture into thirds and add caramel flavouring to 1/3, a tablespoon of cocoa powder to another 1/3 and hundreds and thousands to the last 1/3.  

    Preheat the oven to 160C (140C fan).  Grease and line your tin.  I used my magic tin which means I didn't need to do any cutting - the one thing I did right in this whole disaster!  If you're using a magic tin like mine, grease well up the sides and pipe your mix in, otherwise you just end up with a mess.  Smooth the mix so it is level, then bake for 40 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.



    Step Two: Top the Cakes

    Let the cake cool in the tin for 10 mins, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool completely. If you want to speed the cooling process, pop the cake in the fridge for half an hour.  While the cake is chilling, make the buttercream.  DON'T do what I did, which was to make chocolate ganache and caramel to top your fancies with.  It sounds amazing but IT DOES NOT WORK.  Repeat after me - just buy them from a shop!

    If you are fool enough to make these yourself, beat the butter until it is really soft, then add the icing sugar and whatever flavourings you want.  Cut the cakes into equal squares and trim the tops off so you have a nice flat top.  I didn't and my fancies were grotesque!  I stupidly made 3 different butter creams - vanilla, caramel and chocolate.  Please don't waste your life doing this!  

    Once you've cut and trimmed your fancies to the right size, spread a thin layer of buttercream over the tops and the sides - known as the "crumb coat" as it stops crumbs from the cake spoiling your fondant finish.  I didn't bother with the marzipan on top - life's too short.  Then pipe a blob of buttercream (don't use ganache or caramel, they won't hold their shape) on top of the cakes.  Put the iced and topped cakes into the fridge to set.




    Step Three: Cover the cakes in fondant
    Just give up now.  Chuck it all in the bin, go to to the corner shop and buy a box of French Fancies for a quid.  If you really enjoy torturing yourself, cut the fondant icing into small cubes and place in your free-standing mixer.  Add a splash of water and start to mix.  Gradually add more water until the icing breaks down and becomes liquid.  Add the amount of liquid that Mary says - no more or it will run off and create a new Jackson Pollock masterpiece in your kitchen, like mine did!


    Jane's method on GBBO was the most efficient - stand your fancy on a masher, then use a spoon to drizzle fondant all over it.  Do not make my mistake and try to make different flavour or colour fondant, it's a waste of time and makes your fondant too runny.  Leave the fancies to set on a cooling rack, then drizzle with melted chocolate.

    This is how mine turned out!  Beautiful, eh?


    My score: 0/5 Never EVER make these!  Just buy them and pretend you did!

    Julia's Top Tips
    • Don't make them.
    • Don't waste your life.
    • Buy them from a shop.

    Keeeeeep Baking!

    Monday 17 October 2016

    Week Eight: Tudor Jumbles



    I wasn't looking forward to ANY of the challenges this week :( Decided to do jumbles as it was the least work (and I was actually really happy with them!)  There was no way I was going to have time to do pies or a marchpane centrepiece - especially as I was catching up two challenges in one day!  They turned out really well and were very similar to bagels.  They have an unusual flavour, more savoury than sweet, and would taste beautiful dipped in a sweet sauce e.g. chocolate, white chocolate, fruit sauce or caramel!  I think they would be lovely at Christmas time, maybe filled with mincemeat.  :)  I chose a slightly different recipe than the "official" one as (are we sensing a theme here??) I didn't have the right ingredients and could not be bothered to go traipsing around specialist shops searching for them - life is way too short!

    Full recipe here - http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/spice-vanilla-jumbles

    Ingredients

    • butter  for greasing
    • 400g self-raising flour
    • 150g golden caster sugar
    • 2 large eggs, beaten
    • ½ tsp mixed spice
    • ¼ tsp vanilla extract
    • icing sugar for dusting (optional)

    Method

    Step One: Make the Dough
    Sift the flour and your chosen spices together in a bowl (I used ginger and cinnamon).  Stir in the sugar, vanilla, egg and 50ml of water.  Bring the dough together and knead, adding a tiny bit more water if necessary.  




    Step Two: Shape and Boil the Jumbles
    Grease two baking trays and pre-heat the oven to 180C (160C fan).  Flour your worktop and tip the dough out.  I cut mine into 16 pieces and tried a variety of shapes - knots, twists and plaits.  My favourite was the plaits - they looked really professional.  Boil the jumbles in water until they float then use a slotted spoon to scoop them out.  




    Shake off the water and lay them on the prepared tray.





    Step Three: Bake the Jumbles
    Bake the jumbles for 20-25 minutes until golden brown.



    Leave to cool on the tray.  Dust with icing sugar or serve with a sweet sauce.

    My score: 4/5 They were MUCH better than I thought they would be!  Loved shaping them and it made me want to make bread.  I probably wouldn't make them again though, apart from maybe at Christmas time.  

    Julia's Top Tips

    • Very easy to make.  Make sure you don't use too much flour when kneading and shaping or the dough becomes very dry and tough.  
    • Try serving with jams or sweet sauces.
    • Experiment with different spices and flavours.
    • If you enjoy making these, try making bagels - very similar method!

    Keeeeeeeep baking!