Semla

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Semlor (plural) – mini Swedish cardamom buns, usually associated with Shrove Tuesday (or Fat Tuesday).

Now, this is may be quite late (ok, really reeeeally late), but I have it on good authority that these little darlings can be eaten in Sweden anytime from around New Year all the way to Easter!

And Easter hasn’t come around yet so….

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Look at them the little cuties! The whipped cream could easily be lace frills!

I chose to fill mine with ground almonds, cardamom and orange blossom. Not overly sweet, and just lush on your tastebuds!

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Seriously, if someone put this filling in some sort of skincare product I would unashamedly slather this all over my face!

Don’t judge till you try it! Eating it I mean. Or putting it on your face, whatever floats your boat! 😉

Onwards to the serious part…

Ingredients

For the dough:

325ml whole milk

50g butter

500g refined spelt flour (or sifted regular spelt flour, casting off ALL lumps)

75g caster sugar

1½tsp ground cardamom

2tsp salt

7g fast action yeast

For the almond filling:

400g  ground almonds

1 or 2tsp orange blossom water (to your taste, some people don’t like to feel like they’re eating perfume!)

splash of milk/cream

For the cream filling:

284ml  whipping cream

3tsp icing sugar

few drops of vanilla extract ( optional)

Method

In a pan, heat the milk and butter till it’s almost boiling. Remove from heat and leave to cool slightly.

In a large bowl, sift together the flour, sugar, cardamom and salt. Then add the yeast.

Make a well in the middle of the dry ingredients and add the prepared milk, making sure the it has cooled down – you don’t want to kill the yeast!

Mix till it begins to resemble a dough.

Pop this dough baby into an oiled bowl (using a flavourless oil, like sunflower or vegetable). Oil an adequate amount of cling film and use this to cover the bowl.

Leave the dough baby to prove in a fridge overnight.

Once the dough baby has grown and risen, divide into 2. Take one half leaving the other wrapped in cling film. Further divide this half into 12 pieces (for me, each weighed around the 40g mark). Roll each into mini buns.

Repeat with the other half of the dough.

Place the shaped mini buns onto a lightly oiled baking sheet, cover with a tea towel and leave to prove for a further 15-20 minutes (until they don’t spring back when gently poked with a finger!).

Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C fan/gas mark 6. Splash a bit of water in the bottom of the oven to create some steam. Bake on the upper middle shelf for 10-15 mins. If you think the buns brown to quickly turn the heat down to 180°C/160°C fan/gas mark 4.

Once baked, the buns should be golden brown and sound hollow when tapped. Allow to cool on a wire rack.

In the meantime make the almond filling by mixing the ground almonds, orange blossom water and milk/cream into a thick paste – add more milk/cream if needed to loosen the mixture enough so it can be piped. Set this aside.

In another bowl, whisk the whipping cream and slowly add the icing sugar (so you don’t disappear into a puff of sugar!) and vanilla extract. Whisk to softs peaks then place in to a pipping bag (or in my case, freezer bag) ready to be piped.

Once the buns have cooled, cut the tops off and scoop out the middle. You may crumble this into the almond mixture if you wish.

Fill the hollowed out buns with the almond mixture.

Pipe the whipped cream on top. I had serious troubles stopping the cream from ending up in my mouth! -ashamed face-

Pop on the cut of tops, dust with icing sugar and serve.

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Recipe for the buns was from Signe Johansen -‘Scandilicious Baking’, and the filling adapted from Linda Lomelino’s Semlor post which can be found here.

Strawberries & Cream Chiffon Cake

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Every year my siblings and I struggle to find a gift for our mum on Mother’s Day.

Perfume? She has millions of unused bottles lying around the house.

Flowers? She hates flowers (except orchids, but she has millions of those too!).

Jewellery? She doesn’t wear it.

Now, usually we shower her with boxes of chocolates… but this year she just HAD to give it up for Lent! Gah!

So naturally I baked a cake.

With strawberries and cream… because she inhales the stuff!

Happy Mother’s Day!!

Ingredients

170g plain flour

160 g caster sugar

2tsps baking powder

1tsp salt

70ml vegetable oil

4 eggs, separated

100ml cold water

1tsp vanilla extract

1tsp cream of tartar

284ml double cream

100g icing sugar

1 packet strawberries, halved

Method

Preheat oven to 160°C.

Line a 10 inch cake tin with baking parchment.

Add the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt into a large bowl.

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In a second bowl, mix together the oil, egg yolks, water, and vanilla extract.

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Gradually add the egg yolk mixture to the dry ingredients till you get a smooth batter.

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In yet another bowl, beat the egg whites and cream of tartar until you form stiff peaks.

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Add a dollop of the egg whites to the smooth batter and stir in to loosen the mixture. Then gradually fold in the rest of the egg whites, trying to keep as much air in the batter as possible.

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Pour the batter into your cake tin and bake for 55 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean from the centre.

Whilst the cake is cooling, whisk the double cream and icing sugar to stiff peaks.

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Slice the cake in half and lay the strawberries on the bottom half. Spread the cream on top, then lay the top half of the cake on top. Dust with icing sugar and serve.

Chocolate Guinness Cake – St. Patrick’s Day!

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I’d been dying to try out this Hummingbird Bakery recipe for absolutely ages now, so given it’s St. Patrick’s Day tomorrow I figured it was appropriate ;).

This rich, dense chocolate cake is so moist, and the addition of Guinness adds a delicious warmth that I just can’t explain in words! Nom.

A perfect dessert for celebrating St. Paddy’s Day! Hope you have a good one!

Continue reading “Chocolate Guinness Cake – St. Patrick’s Day!”