Wednesday, 30 July 2008

Daring Baker 6 - Filbert Gateau with Praline buttercream


I still haven't had the chance to make last month's Daring Baker challenge, but I've just about squeezed in this months with about half a day to spare.
So here it is - Filbert Gateau with Praline buttercream.






It doesn't look all that pretty, in fact not really like the photo of the original we were shown:



The chocolate ganache and buttercream on top were slightly runny - I'm putting it down to the heat we've been having lately! But this tasted real good. I took it to my good friend Miss.Sarah to try out cos she requested that I bring cake to her nice new apartment and I think she liked it too... for being diabetic she ate quite a bit!

There were a lot of different components to this cake - like previous challenges, but well worth it.
This cake included:
1 Filbert Genoise
1 recipe sugar syrup, flavored with dark rum
1 recipe Praline Buttercream
½ cup heavy cream, whipped to soft peaks
1 recipe Apricot Glaze
1 recipe Ganache Glaze, prepared just before using
3 tablespoons filberts, toasted and coarsely chopped

I've rearranged the order of the recipe we were given to show what order I did things in.




Filbert Gateau with Praline Buttercream
From Great Cakes by Carol Walter


Sugar Syrup
Makes 1 cup, good for one 10-inch cake – split into 3 layers

1 cup water
¼ cup sugar
2 Tbsp. dark rum or orange flavored liqueur I used 1 tbsp orange extract instead

In a small, yet heavy saucepan, bring the water and sugar to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from heat, add the liqueur. Cool slightly before using on the cake.


Swiss Buttercream
4 lg. egg whites
¾ cup sugar
1 ½ cups (3 sticks) unsalted butter, slightly firm
1 ½ -2 Tbsp. Grand Marnier or liqueur of your choice I left this out
1 tsp. vanilla

Place the egg whites in a large bowl of a electric mixer and beat with the whisk attachment until the whites are foamy and they begin to thicken (just before the soft peak stage). Set the bowl over a saucepan filled with about 2 inches of simmering water, making sure the bowl is not touching the water. Then, whisk in the sugar by adding 1-2 tablespoon of sugar at a time over a minutes time. Continue beating 2-3 minutes or until the whites are warm (about 120 degrees) and the sugar is dissolved. The mixture should look thick and like whipped marshmallows.
Remove from pan and with either the paddle or whisk attachment, beat the egg whites and sugar on med-high until its a thick, cool meringue – about 5-7 minutes. *Do not overbeat*. Set aside.

Place the butter in a separate clean mixing bowl and, using the paddle attachment, cream the butter at medium speed for 40-60 seconds, or until smooth and creamy. *Do not overbeat or the butter will become toooooo soft.*

On med-low speed, blend the meringue into the butter, about 1-2 Tbsp. at a time, over 1 minute. Add the liqueur and vanilla and mix for 30-45 seconds longer, until thick and creamy.

Refrigerate 10-15 minutes before using.

Wait! My buttercream won’t come together! Reheat the buttercream briefly over simmering water for about 5 seconds, stirring with a wooden spoon. Be careful and do not overbeat. The mixture will look broken with some liquid at the bottom of the bowl. Return the bowl to the mixer and whip on medium speed just until the cream comes back together.

Wait! My buttercream is too soft! Chill the buttercream in the refrigerator for about 10 minutes and rewhip. If that doesn’t work, cream an additional 2-4 Tbsp. of butter in a small bowl– making sure the butter is not as soft as the original amount, so make sure is cool and smooth. On low speed, quickly add the creamed butter to the buttercream, 1 Tbsp. at a time.

Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 5 days, or can be frozen for up to 6 months. If freezing, store in 2 16-oz. plastic containers and thaw in the refrigerator overnight or at room temperature for several hours.


Praline Paste
1 cup (4 ½ oz.) Hazelnuts, toasted/skinless
2/3 cup Sugar
Line a jelly roll pan with parchment and lightly butter.

Put the sugar in a heavy 10-inch skillet. Heat on low flame for about 10-20 min until the sugar melts around the edges. Do not stir the sugar. Swirl the pan if necessary to prevent the melted sugar from burning. Brush the sides of the pan with water to remove sugar crystals. If the sugar in the center does not melt, stir briefly. When the sugar is completely melted and caramel in color, remove from heat. Stir in the nuts with a wooden spoon and separate the clusters. Return to low heat and stir to coat the nuts on all sides. Cook until the mixture starts to bubble. **Remember – extremely hot mixture.** Then onto the parchment lined sheet and spread as evenly as possible. As it cools, it will harden into brittle. Break the candied nuts into pieces and place them in the food processor. Pulse into a medium-fine crunch or process until the brittle turns into a powder. To make paste, process for several minutes. Store in an airtight container and store in a cook dry place. Do not refrigerate.

Praline Buttercream
1 recipe Swiss Buttercream
1/3 cup praline paste
1 ½ - 2 Tbsp. Jamaican rum (optional) I left this out

Blend ½ cup buttercream into the paste, then add to the remaining buttercream. Whip briefly on med-low speed to combine. Blend in rum.

Filbert Genoise

Because of the amount of nuts in the recipe, this preparation is different from a classic genoise.

1 ½ cups hazelnuts, toasted/skinned
2/3 cup cake flour, unsifted
2 Tbsp. cornstarch
7 large egg yolks
1 cup sugar, divided ¼ & ¾ cups
1 tsp. vanilla extract
½ tsp. grated lemon rind
5 lg. egg whites
¼ cup warm, clarified butter (100 – 110 degrees)

Position rack in the lower 3rd of the oven and preheat to 350 degrees. Grease and flour a 10” X 2” inch round cake pan.

Using a food processor, process nuts, cake flour, and cornstarch for about 30 seconds. Then, pulse the mixture about 10 times to get a fine, powdery mixture. You’ll know the nuts are ready when they begin to gather together around the sides of the bowl. While you want to make sure there aren’t any large pieces, don’t over-process. Set aside.

Put the yolks in the bowl of an electric mixer, with the whisk attachment, and beat until thick and light in color, about 3-4 minutes on med-high speed. Slowly, add ¾ cup of sugar. It is best to do so by adding a tablespoon at a time, taking about 3 minutes for this step. When finished, the mixture should be ribbony. Blend in the vanilla and grated lemon rind. Remove and set aside.

Place egg whites in a large, clean bowl of the electric mixer with the whisk attachment and beat on medium speed, until soft peaks. Increase to med-high speed and slowly add the remaining ¼ cup of sugar, over 15-20 seconds or so. Continue to beat for another ½ minute.
Add the yolk mixture to the whites and whisk for 1 minute.

Put the nut meal in a mesh strainer (or use your hand – working quickly) and sprinkle it in about 2 tablespoons at a time – folding it carefully for about 40 folds. Be sure to exclude any large chunks/pieces of nuts. Again, work quickly and carefully as to not deflate the mixture. Pour the warm butter in a liquid measure cup (or a spouted container). * It must be a deep bottom bowl and work must be fast.* When all but about 2 Tbsp. of nut meal remain, quickly and steadily pour the warm butter over the batter. Then, with the remaining nut meal, fold the batter to incorporate, about 13 or so folds.

With a rubber spatula, transfer the batter into the prepared pan, smoothing the surface with the spatula or back of a spoon. **If collected butter remains at the bottom of the bowl, do not add it to the batter! It will impede the cake rising while baking.

Tap the pan on the counter to remove air bubbles and bake in the preheated oven for 30-35 minutes. You’ll know the cake is done when it is springy to the touch and it separates itself from the side of the pan. Remove from oven and allow to stand for 5 minutes. Invert onto a cake rack sprayed with nonstick coating, removing the pan. Cool the cake completely.

*If not using the cake right away, wrap thoroughly in plastic wrap, then in a plastic bag, then in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. If freezing, wrap in foil, then the bag and use within 2-3 months.

Apricot Glaze
Good for one 10-inch cake

2/3 cup thick apricot preserves
1 Tbsp. water

In a small, yet heavy saucepan, bring the water and preserves to a slow boil and simmer for 2-3 minutes. If the mixture begins to stick to the bottom of the saucepan, add water as needed.

Remove from heat and, using a strainer, press the mixture through the mesh and discard any remnants. With a pastry brush, apply the glaze onto the cake while the cake is still warm. If the glaze is too thick, thin to a preferred consistency with drops of water.

Ganache Glaze
Makes about 1 cup, enough to cover the top and sides of a 9 or 10 inch layer or tube cake

**Ganache can take on many forms. While warm – great fudge sauce. While cool or lukewarm – semisweet glaze. Slightly chilled – can be whipped into a filling/frosting. Cold & solid – the base of candied chocolate truffles.

6 oz. (good) semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, like Lindt
6 oz. (¾ cup heavy cream
1 tbsp. light corn syrup I substituted honey
1 Tbsp. Grand Marnier, Cointreay, or dark Jamaican rum (optional) I left this out
¾ tsp. vanilla
½ - 1 tsp. hot water, if needed

Blend vanilla and liqueur/rum together and set aside.

Break the chocolate into 1-inch pieces and place in the basket of a food processor and pulse until finely chopped. Transfer into a medium sized bowl and set aside.

Heat the cream and corn syrup in a saucepan, on low, until it reached a gentle boil. Once to the gently boil, immediately and carefully pour over the chocolate. Leave it alone for one minute, then slowly stir and mix the chocolate and cream together until the chocolate is melted and incorporated into the cream. Carefully blend in vanilla mixture. If the surface seems oily, add ½ - 1 tsp hot water. The glaze will thicken, but should still be pourable. If it doesn’t thicken, refrigerate for about 5 minutes, but make sure it doesn’t get too cold!

Assembling Cake

Measure out 1 cup of the praline buttercream and set to the side.
Make a card board disc slightly smaller than the cake.
Divide the cake into 3 layers.
Place one layer on top of the card disc.
Brush 3-4 tbsp of the sugar syrup on top.
Spread a quarter inch thickness of buttercream on.
Cover with half of the whipped cream. I left this out
Set another layer of cake on top.
Brush with 3-4 tbsp of the sugar syrup.
Spread a quarter inch thickness of buttercream on.
Cover with remaining whipped cream. I left this out
Moisten cut side of final cake layer with sugar syrup then place on top.
Press the sides gently to align the layers.
Chill in refrigerator for 30 minutes.
Lift cake and carve the edges with a sharp knife to get straight edges. I dind't bother
Brush the top and sides of the cake with warm apricot glaze.
Chill the cake in the fridge while you prepare the ganache.
Place a rack over a shallow pan and set cake on top.
Pour the ganache gently onto the cake spreading with a metal spatula.
Leave to stand for 15 minutes.
Decorate the cake using the cup of buttercream that was reserved in a piping bag.
Top with the filbert garnish or like me add some chocolate chips!

Leftover cake can be covered with foil and kept in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.



Check out the results of all the other Daring Bakers. Thank you to Mele Cotte for a great challenge!

Tuesday, 29 July 2008

Bookmarked Recipes 15

Sorry this is late again people, have had a mad busy time recently.
EDIT: And now it's super late because it didn't post right and it lost all the original work I'd done writing this post!

Here's this weeks round up of Bookmarked Recipes and this week we have some more great recipes from some more great bloggers who have bookmarked them from some really great places!!!



Chris Cool from Texas has recently started food blogging on Chris' Cooking Adventures and Mishaps and has sent in a great entry to start off this week's round up - Mushroom Stuffed Chicken with White Wine sauce using a recipe from Chow.com. There isn't a photo because Chris and her hubster got carried away enjoying this fab dish they forgot, I don't blame them thought, it sounds fantastic!



Deborah from Taste and Tell has made some beautiful looking Banana Crunch Muffins (recipe from Elizabeth from the Flowering Dogwood). I love the little banana chips on top of these - they'd be a great treat for any time of day.



Ning from Heart and Hearth, who lives in the Philippines is new to bookmarked recipes this week. She has made Milkfish in wild mangosteen sour soup from a recipe on Market Manila. I learned a whole lot just from reading just this one post about Philippine cuisine, so be sure to check out this blog!!!!



Grace from A Southern Grace is another newbie to the round up. She's bring's Baba Ghanoush to us using a recipe using Elise from Simply Recipes recipe. This looks real good and tasty, what a fab dip!!!



Pam from Sidewalk Shoes is becoming a regular at bookmarked recipes and she's back this week with a recipe from Epicurious: Wild Salmon with Pearl Couscous, Slow-Roasted Tomatoes, and Lemon Oregano Oil - quite the mouthful to say but it must have been a very tasty mouthful too!



Deeba from Passionate about Baking is becoming another regular and is back with Frankies served with a Sweet & Sour Mango Chutney using a recipe from What's for Lunch Honey?. What a great yummy lunch!!!!!



My entry for this week is Cookie Dough Dessert using a cookie dough recipe from The Goddess's Kitchen and an idea from Pizza Hut. Delicious.



Thanks everyone for your submissions!!! It's always exciting to see what people have been making and recreating as well as meeting some new bloggers.

Remember if you want to take part here's all you have to do....
1. Pick a recipe from a book/magazine/blog/website/tv show and make it. (Note you can only submit 1 recipe per week)
2. Blog about it
- include where you got the recipe in your blog post (including a link to their website if possible)
- include a link to this post or this blog in your blog post
- include the logo (see above) for Bookmarked Recipes in your blog post
- include a photo of your recreation on your blog post
3. Email bookmarkedrecipes[AT]gmail[DOT]com with the following information:
- Your name and where you're from
- The name of your blog
- The permalink for your entry
- A photo of your entry
- A note of where you got your recipe from

Sunday, 27 July 2008

Cookie Dough Dessert

Just over a week ago an old friend and I went to Pizza Hut then to the cinema for a night out (the kind of nights we used to do when we were at school) and we had a great dessert. A little round pan with cookie dough all baked slightly with a nice big blob of ice cream on top and chocolate sauce drizzled all over. It was so good and it made me want to try making it myself. So this is kind of a double bookmarked recipe because I used this idea but used a cookie dough recipe I've had bookmarked for a little while from The Goddess's Kitchen. I used Maria's recipe (which she originally found in The Good Cookie by Tish Boyle) for the dough (leaving out the walnuts), but baked the dough altogether in an ovenproof dish then served up some slices with ice cream. Really tasty treat! Crisp cookie dough on top and all soft and gooey in the middle. Loved it!



Cookie Dough Dessert

6-8

Ingredients

2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, melted
1 cup of firmly packed light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 large eggs
2 tsp vanilla extract
10 ounces bittersweet chocolate, cut into 1/4 inch pieces (I used chocolate drops - a mix of milk and plain chocolate)

Recipe
1. Preheat oven to 350˚F/160˚C.
2. Grease a 8"x 8" oven dish
3. Whisk together the flour, salt and baking soda in a bowl and set to the side.
4. In a separate larger bowl, whisk the melted butter and sugar then add in the eggs one by one, then the vanilla until well blended.
5. Stir in the flour mix with a wooden spoon then add in the chocolate chips.
6. Spread into the oven dish and bake for 8-10 minutes.
7. Divide into portions and serve with ice cream and chocolate sauce.

Tuesday, 22 July 2008

Taste and Create: Orange and Poppy Seed Cake

This month for Taste and Create I was paired up with Twenty Something and Cooking - a great blog name!!!! And also a great blog by a group of 20 somethings adventuring into the kitchen. I had fun looking through this blog trying to pick recipes to try and may well try a couple more at some point, but for this event I made the Orange and Poppy Seed Cake. I'm not sure how or why I ended up choosing this recipe but I'm really glad I did because it was so tasty and full of tasty orange. I took this to youth group and they loved it too.



Orange and poppy seed cake

Ingredients

1/3 cup poppy seeds
3/4 cup milk
200g butter, softened
1 tbsp finely grated orange rind
3/4 cup caster sugar
3 eggs
2 cups plain flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 cup freshly squeezed orange juice

syrup
1 cup sugar
1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
1/2 cup shredded orange rind



Recipe
1. Preheat oven to 160˚C.
2. Stir together the milk and poppy seeds in a bowl and set to the side.
3. Beat butter, orange rind, and sugar until light and fluffy.
4. Beat in the eggs one at a time.
5. Sift the flour and baking powder into the mixture.
6. Add orange juice, poppy seed & milk mixture into the batter and beat in.
7. Spoon into a greased 20cm round cake tin.
8. Bake for 55 - 60 minutes or until cook when tested with skewer.

9. While cake is baking, place sugar, orange juice and rind in a saucepan over low heat. Stir until sugar is dissolved.
10. Turn up the heat and boil for 5 - 6 minutes or until syrupy.
11. Pour half of the hot syrup over the hot cake. To serve, cut the warm / cold cake and pour over remaining syrup. (I poured all the syrup over the cake which worked well)



If you've not taken part in Taste and Create before you really should. You sign up each month by the 8th to say you want to partcipate, then you a few days later you get an email saying who you're paired with. You have a good rummage round that person's blog and pick a recipe to recreate and blog about, then email the results back for the big round up. Such a great concept. I love this event!

Monday, 21 July 2008

Bookmarked Recipes 14

Here's this weeks round up of Bookmarked Recipes and this week we have some more great recipes from some more great bloggers who have bookmarked them from some really great places!!!



Divya of Easycooking starts off this week's round up with some eggless peanut butter cookies using a recipe from Food, in the main.... I absolutely love cookies and these sound like a real treat.



Christina from Melecotte is back this time with Tomato Oambal which turns out to be a double bookmark because she had bookmarked it from The Budding Cook who had also bookmarked it from Arundathi's Food Blog. I love the networks and recipe sharing that food blogging creates! And what a great recipe to be sharing around!



Sharona May of Bird Food joins us for the first time with a truly delicious dish! Tilapia with balsamic butter sauce using a recipe from Epicurious. I love the sound of the sauce with this fish, like it would melt in your mouth as you ate it. Hmmmmmmmm.



Laura from The Spiced Life returns to the round up with another sweet treat: Strawberry Lime Bars. It seems to be a popular treat because she saw the recipe in 3 different places: 2 dogs and a Girl, Cooking Light Bulletin Board and Eggs on Sunday. Interesting... i just bought some strawberries and limes today!



Zhulaiha, from Singapore who blogs on Epicurean Escapism has made some mouthwatering Korean Cinnamon Sugar Pancakes using a recipe from My Korean Kitchen. I'm drooling at the sound of these!!!



That Girl from Paved with Good Intentions made Fleischmann's 1-Dish Hot Fudge Swirl from Fleischmann's but thinks it didn't turn out well. I think it looks fab! Serve me up a bit!



And now for my entry. A tad late this week but I have made Leeking Mushrooms using a recipe and inspiration from Dharm: Dad - Baker & Chef.



Thanks everyone for your submissions!!! It's always exciting to see what people have been making and recreating as well as meeting some new bloggers.

Remember if you want to take part here's all you have to do....
1. Pick a recipe from a book/magazine/blog/website/tv show and make it. (Note you can only submit 1 recipe per week)
2. Blog about it
- include where you got the recipe in your blog post (including a link to their website if possible)
- include a link to this post or this blog in your blog post
- include the logo (see above) for Bookmarked Recipes in your blog post
- include a photo of your recreation on your blog post
3. Email bookmarkedrecipes[AT]gmail[DOT]com with the following information:
- Your name and where you're from
- The name of your blog
- The permalink for your entry
- A photo of your entry
- A note of where you got your recipe from

Leeking Mushrooms

Over the past week I decided to make a little change to my diet. I do eat fruit and veg, and I love to eat fruit and veg but I don't eat enough of it. So I've been increasing the vegetable content in my meals, eating a little less meat and also trying to bring fruit and veg into my diet that I've never really had much of before.

When I saw this recipe on Dharm's blog it was around the same time as I made this decision and seemed like a great way to get more leeks into my diet and also a great recipe for my food blog event: Bookmarked Recipes.

Thanks Dharm for some tasty mushrooms!!! I loved the mix of the leeks and mushrooms and the herbs, really tasty. I'll definitely be making this again!

Saturday, 19 July 2008

Good Natured Fruit

It seems like I refer back to my visit to Enjoy the Taste of Scotland quite a bit but I can't help referring to it once more because a couple of weeks ago I spotted something I tasted there and had remembered enjoying them very much. Good Natured Fruit is now sold in Northern Ireland!!!! I've been buying the strawberries and raspberries and absolutely loving the taste of them - so much better than the other varieties of strawberries and raspberries in the shop. The strawberries are beautifully sweet, juicy and plump and the raspberries have been used in some incredibly delicious muffins for me to have for breakfast.



If you're able to get your hands on these please do!!! Good natured fruit aims to work in harmony with nature to grow berries that are pesticide free using natural predators (like ladybirds) to get rid of greenflies. You should check out thier website for more details while I get on with munching these strawberries!

Tuesday, 15 July 2008

Green chilli chicken

I decided it was high time I experimented again in the kitchen and spotted some green chilli that needed used up and had some chicken and several other things on hand so I threw together this tasty little dish. Rob really loved this too but mainly because I kept the veg to myself and gave him more of the chicken.

I've sent this recipe off to Sangeeth for the Eat Healthy - Protein Rich contest.





Green chilli and cashew chicken

Serves 2

Ingredients

2 skinless chicken breasts, cut into strips
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tsp rice vinegar
1 tsp sesame oil
1 green chilli, deseeded and sliced
2 garlic cloves, chopped finely
1 tsp ground ginger (I was going to use fresh but discovered I had run out and not restocked!)
Pinch of sugar
200ml chicken stock
1 tsp cornflour
Handul of cashew nuts
Handful of sliced mushrooms
Handful of broccoli
Handful of cooked sliced bamboo shoots
1 or 2 spring onions cut diagonally

Recipe
1. Mix the soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, green chilli, garlic, ginger and sugar in a bowl. Add the chicken and leave to marinade for at least 1 hour.
2. Place a wok on a medium heat and add the marinated chicken. Stir fry for 5 minutes until cooked through.
3. Add the stock, cornflour and cashew nuts and leave to simmer and reduce for 15 minutes.
4. Add the mushrooms, brocolli, bamboo shoots and spring onions and cook for 3/4 minutes.
5. Serve with rice and chopsticks..... enjoy!!!!

Monday, 14 July 2008

Bookmarked Recipes 13

Here's this weeks round up of Bookmarked Recipes and this week we have some more great recipes from some more great bloggers who have bookmarked them from some really great places!!!



Ann from Redacted Recipes has made some pretty looking Pink Lemonade Bars!!!! How fun do they look!?!?!?! She got the recipe from Nicole at Baking Bites. These would be perfect for an afternoon tea party!



TheSassyChef from Ontario, Canada: blogger on Pai Gu has submitted Banana napoleons with warm caramel walnut sauce made from a recipe from Emily Lucetti's book: Classic Stars Desserts. Don't these look incredible! I'm drooling at the thought of them.



Tracy from Ra Cha Chow has made a great recipe (Veggie fried rice) from a great blog (Steamy Kitchen). A fantastic dish on it's own or as a side!



Kittie from Kittens in the Kitchen in Brighton, UK has done the same as Tracy and made a great recipe (Psari Plaki) from a great blog (Kalofagas). I'm not a huge fish fan but how great does this look!!! A fantastic dish to bring to any table.



Christina from Mele Cotte in Atlanta, Georgia has recreated Laurie Constantino's recipe for Bouyiourdi - a baked tomato and feta cheese dish. A delicious and healthy looking dish!



Pam from Sidewalk Shoes has made some beautiful looking hot and sticky roast quail from a recipe found on the BBC website. I really love the sound of this mostly because I have never cooked with quail but also because the flavours sound fantastic together.



Kara from Hip chick's home is fairly new to blogging and has been very busy posting already! She has made a delicious Summer Squash Casserole from a recipe found in Jan Karon's Mitford cookbook and kitchen reader. I'm sure there are more fantastic recipes to be found from Kara!



And this week I have made a simple quick dinner: Buttered Chicken from a cheap cookbook I had bought in Tesco a while ago.



Thanks everyone for your submissions!!! It's always exciting to see what people have been making and recreating as well as meeting some new bloggers.

Remember if you want to take part here's all you have to do....
1. Pick a recipe from a book/magazine/blog/website/tv show and make it. (Note you can only submit 1 recipe per week)
2. Blog about it
- include where you got the recipe in your blog post (including a link to their website if possible)
- include a link to this post or this blog in your blog post
- include the logo (see above) for Bookmarked Recipes in your blog post
- include a photo of your recreation on your blog post
3. Email bookmarkedrecipes[AT]gmail[DOT]com with the following information:
- Your name and where you're from
- The name of your blog
- The permalink for your entry
- A photo of your entry
- A note of where you got your recipe from

Sunday, 13 July 2008

Buttered Chicken

This week's bookmarked recipe is from a cookbook called "Simple chicken recipes" that I bought in Tesco quite some time ago for 96p and after looking through it had bookmarked a few then left it to gather dust for a while. I needed a quick and tasty dinner this week, and fancied something different from my usual quick dinners and this was the result: buttered chicken.

Absolutely delicious! I will definitely be doing this again.



Buttered chicken

Serves 2

Ingredients

2 chicken breasts
Pinch of Salt
Pinch of Pepper
Flour (about 1/3 cup)
2-3 tbsp butter
1 tsp dried parsley

Recipe
1. Place the chicken in a sandwich bag and flatten by bashing with a rolling pin.
2. Mix the flour, salt and flour on a plate then dredge the chicken through it until it is well covered.
3. Melt the butter in a frying pan on a medium high heat then add the chicken, leave to cook for 5 minutes
4. Turn the chicken over and reduce the heat. Sprinkle the parsley over the top and leave to cook for 5-8 minutes until cooked through.

Monday, 7 July 2008

Bookmarked Recipes 12

Sorry everyone, this was set to post itself on Monday but never did, so here it is now!

Thank you Dell for hosting last weeks round up!

Here's this weeks round up of Bookmarked Recipes and this week we have some more great recipes from some more great bloggers who have bookmarked them from some really great places!!!



Mary from Ohio in Shazam in the Kitchen made Sicilian Penne and Sausage found originally as Sicilian Rigatoni and Sausage on Molly at Batter Splattered's blog. I love pasta especially with a great tasting sauce full of flavour like this one! Thanks for this entry Mary.



Ann from Redacted Recipes has made some seared scallops using a recipe from Inspired Bites. I've never had scallops (as far as I'm aware) and the more I see other bloggers using them the more I want to try them myself.



Deeba from Passionate about Baking has made a beautiful Quick Chocolate Cinnamon Mousse with Cherries based on a recipe from Susan from Food Blogga. I think I'm melting at the sound of this dish!!!



Michelle in Colorado Springs joins us again with a great egg salad recipe with dill using a recipe she found on Pages, Pucks and Pantry. Egg salad is one of those things that goes well in all sorts of sandwiches, pies and even with cooked meads and things too. I love it!



Sarah in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada from What Smells So Good? made Brownie Roll-Out Cookies originally made by Deb of Smitten Kitchen. These look like so much fun to make and eat.



Finally my own dish: Pound cake from Deeba at Passionate about Baking. A very tasty cake, I loved the taste of orange in this.



Thanks everyone for your submissions!!! It's always exciting to see what people have been making and recreating as well as meeting some new bloggers.

Remember if you want to take part here's all you have to do....
1. Pick a recipe from a book/magazine/blog/website/tv show and make it. (Note you can only submit 1 recipe per week)
2. Blog about it
- include where you got the recipe in your blog post (including a link to their website if possible)
- include a link to this post or this blog in your blog post
- include the logo (see above) for Bookmarked Recipes in your blog post
- include a photo of your recreation on your blog post
3. Email bookmarkedrecipes[AT]gmail[DOT]com with the following information:
- Your name and where you're from
- The name of your blog
- The permalink for your entry
- A photo of your entry
- A note of where you got your recipe from