Showing posts with label cake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cake. Show all posts

Plum cake + an exciting new podcast

21 January 2018


I've been thinking about family rituals this week, since my sister moved to Canberra. Maybe we'll have a standing Friday night dinner somewhere local, like the family in The Squid and the Whale. We've already promised my niece a girls' day out, including "a meal at a restaurant" at her request (four year olds!).

I have the best memories of going to my grandparent's house for dinner as a kid. They used to own a Chinese restaurant in Sydney and had a servery built into their home - a little hatch that connected the kitchen to the dining room. With dinner covered, my parents, aunts and uncle took turns bringing dessert.


A summer plum cake is becoming a new family ritual. I made one last year, using fruit that a friend brought into the office to share. My extended family divvied it up on a balmy afternoon, after my grandfather's wake. When the plums appeared in the office again this week I realised we were nearing the anniversary of his death.

I baked this dimply plum cake (it's jewel-toned and jammy) to share with my family who are in town to help with my sister's move. We managed to demolish the whole thing on an equally hot day, this time in my sister's new lounge room. It's a simple tradition that makes me think of my grandfather, and our ever-growing family.

On a very different note, I am so excited about the Making Obama podcast, which comes out next month. Making Oprah was such a joyous and fascinating podcast series, and I am sure this next series will be just as good. I heard the reporter, Jenn White, speak at a podcast conference in Sydney last year and was blown away by her ideas and humanity (I even plucked up the courage to ask a question). You can listen to a preview of the new series here :)

Remedies

14 September 2017


Whenever things get a bit crazy, I have a sudden urge to bake a cake. It's almost always a sign to take a breather. Yesterday, I decided to take the afternoon off to do just that.

I walked into the city after lunch to stock up on supplies, caught the bus home, and started work on a dark chocolate olive oil cake. It didn't look like much when it came out of the oven (I also kept wondering... would it be too olive-oily?) but later that night with a scoop of yoghurt and some berries, it was perfect.


A few hours away from the office helped me realised that as things have gotten busier, I've given up on some of the no-brainer things that keep me sane - like riding my bike. This morning, encouraged by the re-opening of a bike path cafe near my work, I hopped on my bike. I left time for a coffee and a chapter of my book (I'm reading this at the moment), and patted the cafe's pet pug Pudding, who wandered hopefully between customers, in search of a treat.

Two quick things - here's the amazing cake I discovered last year, when I hit a similar busy patch. I also have my eye on Simple Fare, the cookbook that the chocolate cake comes from.

P.S This week I've come to see just how hard the same-sex marriage debate and vote has been on some of my friends. If you can lend an ear, share some cake, take your friend out for something totally distracting - please, please do. X

Three of a kind: Chocolate cake

29 June 2017



Every now and then, life calls for a good chocolate cake. I still remember the one I grew up baking, it came from a pink Family Circle cookbook and was the cake on the cover. It had two layers, lots of buttercream icing and a pile of chocolate curls stacked neatly on top.

I remember mixing it up in a big plastic bowl that was '70s brown. I also remember making it with my sister at our grandmother's house. We invited our younger brother to sample the 'yummy' cocoa and water mixture, which I still feel bad about it!

In the decades since, I've settled on three favourite recipes:

Smitten Kitchen's 'I want chocolate cake' cake is my go-to recipe because it's unfussy and totally satisfying.

Magnolia Bakery's super rich chocolate cupcakes are denser than any cupcake you can buy and excellent with Molly Yeh's green tea frosting.

Finally, if baking a chocolate cake the size of two roasting tins appeals to you, Ruth Reichl's giant chocolate cake will do the job. It feeds 20 and it's also a great base for novelty birthday cakes :)

P.S Don't feel like cake? Here are my five favourite choc chip cookie recipes.

Thursday's cake

16 March 2017



This week called for a chocolate loaf, hazelnut Lindt balls and a few nights in front of the TV. I blame it on the rainy days and the fact that I miss my sister!

While she was in town, I gave her a copy of Lunch Lady. The latest issue is especially great, it has a burger section and a thought provoking interview with oncologist and refugee advocate Ranjana Srivastava.

I especially liked her advice on being happy: "Work hard at finding a job that feels like a vocation. Cultivate a still, reflective mind. Regard live as a gift and death as inevitable. While it's impossible to do good every single day, live everyday mindfully so that you may learn from your mistakes."


This morning I set my alarm an hour earlier so I could look at the hot air balloons. Canberra has an annual festival :) It was cloudy and grey but there were so many people out, ready to take it all in. Hope you're having a good week!

Mini lemon birthday cake

13 December 2016



It's Tony's birthday today so I made a cake that combines two of his favourite desserts - cheesecake and lemon meringue pie. This time last year, we were staying in a bed and breakfast in Wagga Wagga for his PhD graduation so he ended up with a Streets Viennetta!

I used a recipe from Small Victories - one of my favourite cookbooks from 2016 - for the cake. It's a lemon olive oil cake that comes together really quickly, making it perfect for weeknight baking. Then I made a small batch of cream cheese icing to finish it off.


The pineapple candle makes it look extra festive :) My friend Kristy sent them all the way from Perth. We're about to head out to eightysix for dinner (I'm ordering for the fried chicken!) and then I have one more surprise up my sleeve - a nightcap at Molly, a speakeasy that specialises in whisky. I love birthdays!

Canberra bus shelter cake

18 November 2016



I made a cake in the shape of a Canberra bus shelter this week for a special city-wide bake off. The theme was Canberra icons, and I decided to make a concrete bus shelter because I'd worked on a story about them earlier in the year and fallen in love with their unusual round design. It also happened to be a super simple cake shape. Here's how it came together:


I wanted the cake to be sturdy so I baked and froze three white chocolate mud cakes on a quiet weekend while Gilmore Girls played in the background. I doubled the recipe and ended up with heaps of leftover batter, so there were cupcakes too.


The last time I made a novelty cake (a rubber ducky no less) it was rushed and messy, so this time I was a bit more organised. Earlier in the week Tony helped me sketch out the basic details of the cake, working from my bus shelter mug. He also mixed the colours for the fondant while I traced the shapes I needed and cut them out.

The next night I iced and assembled the cake with Rocky 3 was playing in the background (Tony's choice). It was surprisingly straightforward, mainly because I followed Joy the Baker's excellent how-to-frost-a-cake tutorial which meant the usual things that go wrong didn't. Eye of the Tiger helped too ;)


My office was hosting a mini bake-off that was part of the bigger event, so somehow I had to get my very tall and heavy cake to work. This was not a good way of transporting it. It almost slid into my lap at the very first turn even though Tony was driving very carefully. The rest of the drive was tense. Thankfully I had a giant sheet of baking paper to gingerly hold it in place. Next time I'm investing in a fancy box.


And here's what it looked like on the inside - like a wedding cake! Because it was such a giant cake, plenty of my work friends wrapped up slices to take home to their partners and kids. It reminded me of the slices of birthday cake I used to carry home from parties, wrapped up in napkins.


The Canberra-themed bake off was in support of PANDSI, a local post and antenatal depression support service. Supporting women's mental health is so important to me and you don't have to donate money to make a difference. Sometimes it can be as simple as texting a friend to say hi, organising an afternoon walk with your neighbour or dropping off a meal to a family member that can help difficult conversations begin.

Rainy Sunday fun

18 September 2016


This morning after a pancake breakfast and a visit to my favourite farmer's market, I joined a cake decorating workshop. Best rainy Sunday! Check it out:


It was a cake topper workshop hosted by The Floral Society, whose work I adore, and it was free! There were a bunch of flowers and greenery to work with and a mini buttercream cake too.

When it came to working with the flowers I was really hesitant at first but went with it and was super happy with how my cake looked in the end. Ta da!



Other good Sunday things - I finished my book, listened to this interview with Helen Garner that Kristy sent me and watched a doco that a friend's been working on. Oh, and there's a whole cake in the fridge to help ease us back into the week. Hope you had a lovely weekend.

A favourite chocolate birthday cake

11 August 2016


For the last few years my friend Sophie has been making my birthday cakes and she knew exactly what I liked - chocolate. When I turned 30 she made a giant black forest cake and last year, a fudge cake topped with homegrown flowers. 

It became a bit of a tradition because while I was living in Wagga Wagga, I made a few of her birthday cakes too - a hummingbird cake for her thirtieth and a fairy bread cake the year earlier. But now that we're separated by a few hundred kilometres contingency plans have to be made.


Which brings me back to the first ever cake Tony made from scratch for one of my first birthdays in Wagga Wagga - Nigella's chocolate guinness cake. It's an excellent chocolate cake - it's dense without being too rich, and chocolatey without being too sweet.

I made it for the first time for the office bake off for the boozy theme and it's pretty quick to make. It's a melt and mix cake, which is great for winter because butter doesn't really soften easily. One slightly unusual aspect of this cake is its cream cheese frosting but it really works. I've only just realised is meant to make the cake look like a glass of guinness!

So this year, there's a chance I'll be having this cake or something I've been wanting for years - a mini croquembouche :) I'll keep you posted.

P.S Here are two other favourite chocolate cakes - Smitten Kitchen's 'I-want-chocolate-cake' cake is unfussy and classic while Ruth Reichl's giant chocolate cake can feed a crowd with leftovers.

A very good baking book

10 May 2016


After the duck cake there was a cake of a simpler kind, a flourless chocolate fudge cake made for a special morning tea at work. It was baked late on Wednesday night and as I pulled it out of the oven, I knew I'd made something special.

I've had the The Cook and Baker cookbook since late last year, Annabel Crabb raved about it on the podcast she shares with Leigh Sales and off I went to find track it down. The best thing about it? Knowing that the time, effort and ingredients that go into any recipe will definitely pay off. And most of the recipes are straightforward, which is great because most of my baking happens after work.


The chocolate cake was for a special send off at work, for a long-serving and very lovely guy who was a day away from retirement. I'm really enjoying being part of a bigger office, I've gone from having six colleagues to 40 or more. It gives milestones like this one the ceremony they deserve. I also learn so much from the tiniest interactions and it's slowly changing my work for the better.

P.S Thank you for all of your lovely comments about the rubber ducky cake. Here it is in transit to the event, which was packed. People were lining up around the hotel just to get in. My friend Louise was there right at the end and says my cake went for $100. It was also on the news that night! I was thrilled - with the cake and the opportunity to support an excellent local charity.

Rubber ducky cake

02 May 2016


On Saturday Canberra is going to host a cake-off that features every single cake from the iconic Women's Weekly Children's Birthday Cake book. I've signed up to make the first cake that sprang the mind -  the rubber ducky.

Amazing cake

24 November 2015


On our last full day in Wagga Wagga we shared a spectacular cake in the park with friends. My friend Sophie even made a spreadsheet so we could vote for our favourite flavours and toppings. We ended up with a white chocolate cake with cookies and cream filling, buttercream icing, salted caramel drip, macarons, honeycomb and edible flowers. Phew!

Nadine did a big coffee order and we picnicked in my favourite park, feasting on amazing cake and playing with babies. It was the best possible send off. 


I have such mixed feelings about the move. I am so excited about settling into our new apartment and exploring the neighbourhood. I'm a little nervous about starting a new job and I am also so grateful for the time I've had in this town. We haven't left yet (the truck comes at 9am tomorrow!) but I'm beginning to wonder just how much I'll miss it. I suspect a lot.


Photos by me and Vanessa Keenan.

Sophie's fruit cake

25 June 2015



This might be my favourite cake of the season, a buttery loaf that's generously dotted with dried fruit. To me, it's more comforting than banana bread.

The recipe comes from my friend Sophie, and it's actually the very first cake she gave me. I'd never been given an entire cake before, with the exception of a birthday cake, so it felt pretty special. Tony and I found this same loaf and a small vase of homegrown flowers on our doorstep the other month, after we'd returned home from an overnight trip to Sydney to attend the funeral of a friend.

The original recipe comes from Sophie's grandmother and you can read its story here. Thank you for sharing the recipe Sophie, and for knowing the special comfort a homemade cake can bring :)


Sophie's fruit cake

You'll need:

250 grams self raising flour
150 grams brown sugar
1/2 tbsp mixed spice
75 grams dried figs, chopped
75 grams dried dates, chopped
75 grams dried apricots, chopped 
75 grams sultanas
125 grams butter
2 eggs
3/4 cup of milk

Here's how:

Set your oven to 180 degrees celsius and grease and line a loaf tin. Melt the butter on the stove and set aside to cool. Combine all of the dry ingredients in a large bowl, then add the wet ingredients. I used my KitchenAid and mixed it on high for a few minutes until totally combined but Sophie says you can also do it by hand and mix like you've never mixed before. Pour the mixture into a cake tin and bake for approximately 40 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.

And just a tip:

This recipe is easily doubled, I've actually halved the original recipe and regretted it less than a week later when all our cake was gone. You can also substitute the dried fruits and use things like dried cranberries. It's delicious on its own or you can serve it with a bit of butter and jam for afternoon tea, or ice cream for dessert. Sophie also decorates heres with raw almonds pre-bake.

Find more Sentimental Cake recipes here.

Interview + Recipe - Lee Inch, Ajanta

28 May 2015


Lee Inch runs Ajanta, a Coolamon cafe that specialises in my favourite things - cookies, scones and homemade cakes. When I'm in need of a serious sugar fix, I'll make the 80 kilometre return trip from Wagga Wagga to the nearby town for a good slice of cake.

I've always been curious about the shop, with it's ever changing cakes, beautiful tea-ware and Friday through Sunday opening hours. Last week, before the after school milkshake rush could interrupt us, I chatted with Lee about Ajanta’s humble beginnings, how she chooses what to bake next and the cookie she can never seem to sell. 


How did Ajanta get started?

I always wanted to have a little cafe of some sort, I've always baked and my real job is at the school - I've worked with the Department of Education for, jeepers, 18 years - I'm actually still on leave without pay. I was approached by a co-worker who was heavily involved in this building and who has Treats and Treasures across the road. He said - Lee, I have just got the space for you. 

Ajanta came about probably because I thought, if I don't do it, I'm never going to do it and it was only ever going to be two years. I thought I'll do it for two years and get it out of my system. It will be 11 years in October.

My two older children and I went to India for my 50th birthday and we went to these caves called Ajanta, so that's where the name comes from. They were only rediscovered in the late 1980s, British soldiers could see a tiny opening across the hill, and once they went across to investigate they found these caves. Out of everything I saw in India, it just blew me away. In one of the caves there is a life-sized elephant that's been carved out of the rock and you wonder how they did it without light? It was the most amazing thing, I don't think I've ever seen anything as beautiful again. 

Did the name have any relation to how this space is laid out? It does feel like a bit of a secret spot because you can't see into it from the street and the first time you walk in, you do feel like you've really discovered something.

What I saw was the caves were very ordinary outside and full of colour on the inside. To me, it's a lot to live up to because this would be nowhere near as beautiful as Ajanta but because this building is governed by heritage - I can't put proper lighting in, I don’t have any windows and it’s very ordinary around the outside. 


The first time I came here I noticed that you only sold cookies, cakes and scones and I thought it was pretty bold. Was it a difficult decision not to serve lunch? 

I've got a business plan and I get it out sometimes to have a laugh. In my initial business plan, within six months of opening I was going to have brunches, I was going to do lunch, I was going to have theme nights with entertainment and then I started and thought - what was I thinking? It's a big thing to do all of that by yourself. 

Wow, so it wasn't like you initially thought - cookies and cakes, that'll be it. 

No, no. That was the beginning - I'll just open and we'll just do this simple little morning tea and then I'll move up. But the thing is the busier Ajanta's become, and it has, the more I'm cooking and I don't have time to do anything else. And it works so well the way it is anyway. 



I want to ask you about the cakes, your daughter Jess mentioned that there's a bit of a formula as to what you bake for different days?

After all of this time I try not to repeat and I have two new cakes over there today. I call them virgin cakes and I like to try my virgin cakes out on a Friday because I have lovely local people who will tell me honestly - Lee don't do that again or it was fabulous. We tried the zesty lemon today which is totally sold out, it was divine.

The only things that I have all the time - I have the fruit cake, the biscuits and the scones are always there. The only cake I have religiously every week is the chocolate cake on Saturday. A boy who usually sits over there has been coming here since the day I opened with his mum on a Saturday morning, he religiously has chocolate cake and chocolate milk. He's 15 now. That's a favourite part of having Ajanta, watching kids grow up, watching kids be born. 

There are probably five things that I could put on every single day that I know would sell out. They would be Whitey's sponge, which is the recipe I’ve given you, an ordinary old hummingbird, although I do make a Belinda Jeffery version of it which is a beautiful robust cake that I tweak just depending on what's in - I'll put some fresh mango if they're in. So it would be the lumberjack, hummingbird, the sponge cake, chocolate cake and sticky date anything.


Did you say a lumberjack?

Yeah lumberjack, which is apple and date. It’s really old fashioned and it has a baked on topping of coconut mixed with egg and you put it on the cake so it's lovely and crispy. I have found that as much as I love doing new exciting recipes, the cakes based on the old fashioned recipes are by far more popular. The only thing I've never been able to sell, I've made them probably on three or four occasions, are Anzac biscuits.

Where do you find new recipes?

Everywhere. I love Donna Hay, Belinda Jeffery, Bill Granger and I'm always looking. It's more about how they present things, how they decorate things. I'm not a cake decorator, I've never been to classes but I like the cakes to look different. I love sauces, I'm near orgasmic when the fruit comes in. I really am.

I had my last plum cake last weekend, that will be it now for another nine months until they come back so now I'm looking forward to the quinces, pears and at the moment I’m doing a lot of apples. I love this time of year when I can start doing the lovely caramel and butterscotch sauces.



The presentation in your shop is so thoughtful, from the embroidered fabric napkins to the silver forks. How did you go about sourcing all of the smaller details, like all of the beautiful tea-ware?

I'm always buying napkins, I probably have well over a thousand napkins but they get rotated so they don't wear out. They might only get used once a month and I rotate them all. It's me that irons, washes and spray starches them and I still buy them.

I have a colour theme, which is Johnson Brothers, the really old fashioned lemon, pink, pale blue and pale green. So no matter what you put together, it still works because of the lovely soft colours. If the staff were to break that teapot today, I just wouldn’t talk for three hours because it's not even about the expense, it's about finding that teapot that fits in here.

In the beginning when we were putting the shop together, I would get up really early on the weekends and hit the garage sales. I'd be in there at 7 am and 11 years ago, there was no navigation. It would be a map and the paper and then I would have to decide, okay, which suburb would have sort of things I’m looking for?

I guess the biggest reaction, which is really nice, is from the older men. The blokes will say, oh the butter curls and the napkins. I'm thinking - that's so nice for you guys to notice that.



The presentation and the baking, was that something you grew up with? Is that what you’re trying to replicate?

No, not really. I always had a passion for baking as a very young girl but my mother would never let me cook at home because of the mess. And sometimes because I do all the baking at my house I think - no wonder. 

The person that had the biggest influence on the way I now look at things was a lady that was in my life for one hour max, when I was young and pregnant with my first child. 

We were temporarily living with my in-laws and as soon as my mother-in-law went to work, I would be baking and they were mostly failures. I can remember the first thing I baked, I used up some nuts that she had in the cupboard and she came home and searched for those nuts and I'd made this cake and I'd put it in the bin and I never fessed up that I'd used them. She looked for ages and I felt really bad about it. I never gave up and on the third occasion I had made a chocolate cake. I'd just got it out of the oven and it was this big and I'm in tears - pregnant, highly hormonal and crying.

You'd made a big cookie.

Then someone came to the door, her name was Eve Horn, I'll never forget her name. She just cuddled me because I was this young girl and she said, 'Why are you so upset?' She'd actually come to sell me a second-hand pram because she knew we were young and didn't have a lot of money.

She said, 'Come on, put it down and we'll fix it. We'll make it into a torte.’ I had no idea what a torte was. She got a serrated knife and she cut this tiny little cake into three layers, whipped up some cream, grated some chocolate and chopped up some nuts. It was magnificent. And she said to me, 'Remember, it doesn't really matter what it tastes like but it's always got to look sensational.' 

That woman had so much influence on how I looked at things. My neighbour always says she loves it when I do really rustic cooking. She's a young woman and she gets a lot of rustic cooking because I do have a line where it's - I cannot put that out - so I’ll throw it over the fence to her, saying here's some cake for supper.



What recipe have you decided to share and is there a story behind it? 

I call it Whitey's sponge, Mrs White was 92 when she gave me the recipe. She died, I think, when she was 101. She was still making this cake at 92 and the recipe I have is in her original writing. Every time I make it people will come across and tell me - I have not had a sponge cake like that since I was a kid. 

It's a really old fashioned sponge cake and it reminds me of her, and I love to make it because I know I've got it down pat now. Back then, in a lot of my original recipes, there's a pinch of that, a handful of that - it's not measured. Now the two tools I can't live without are electronic scales that convert pounds and ounces into metric and a sifter, a really good sifter. 


Thank you Lee.  You can find Ajanta on Faceook or pop in from 9.30am-5pm Friday to Sunday. 

A simple cake for all reasons

05 January 2015

Have you ever missed a recipe? I'm not sure I had until I was away from home for four months and had a sudden urge to make this frosted marmalade loaf from Nigel Slater's Kitchen Diaries.

This recipe reminds me of an orange syrup cake my mum used to make and the Madeira cake she would sometimes buy from the supermarket. It's dense, buttery and moorish, and a good one if you haven't had time to plan ahead. I've made it to cheer up my office and as a last minute gift.

When it's done, you can chop it up and take it to a picnic like this, it's a not-too-messy cake that you can easily eat with your hands.



Or if it's for something more special, decorate it. I made this for a New Year's Day afternoon tea, iced it as per the recipe and then took inspiration from Sarah's fruit and herb style of cake decoration. This cake is really cute too!


Unadorned is also just as nice. You'll find the icing is pretty runny, so you won't be icing a cake so much as you'll be pouring it over your finished loaf. Happy baking!