Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Beyond baking borders


Greetings from my couch...where I am eating a piece of pineapple pie and drinking my new favorite hot drink, consisting of hot water, fresh lemon juice, sliced pieces of ginger and honey.  Since I am barefoot and baking in the kitchen, my posts are primarily consisting of baking adventures, however in this post I will broaden my field just a little..nothing outside the kitchen...but I want to share a super yummy meal that I made last night. I am an avid soup and bread fan and when I find a good soup recipe I feel my recipe book becomes more complete. Last night we had a few guests over and so I decided that I would win them over with my amazing soup skills. The soup was made with leek and potatoes and creme fraiche. Creamy in it's consistency, this soup is melt in your mouth goodness. Served on the side was home made rosemary and sunflower bread. Confession: made in our bread machine...every baker has their weakness. I recommend this combo as the flavors in the soup and bread complimented each other perfectly. For dessert, I served pineapple custard pie. Last week, we bought a fresh pineapple (definitely better in Thailand) and made sweet and sour vegetables for dinner. Since we had half of it left over which needed to be used I thought about combining it with a normal pie crust as the base and then covered with custard. It looked great and I think it tasted okay, but here is my suggestion. Since it was a fresh pineapple, the taste became a little more bitter and that taste unfortunately took over too much for me to say this was one of the best desserts ever. However, I think if you want to make this...which I am sure I have totally convinced you with my incredible advertisement...use canned pineapple. It's sweeter to begin with and I think (but no guarantees) that it will taste better. If it still taste bitter, then I suggest you throw away my recipe. Who wants crap dessert...not me!
All in all I think our dinner was a success, the guests were happy, which is a good thing. So I would recommend winning your guests over with this steaming bowl of  creamy soup, rosemary bread and pineapple pie.

Until my next post, branch out beyond your normal boundaries and share the goodness with others.
Barefoot and Baking ( and cooking) in the kitchen

Chopped Leeks and Potatoes
















 Melting butter
















Chopped garlic













Cooking leeks













Potatoes added













Bringing to a boil













Finished product













Bread baking in the machine. I just added rosemary
and sunflower seeds to the recipe. You can use your
favorite bread recipe.













Pie crust in the beginning stages
















Forming dough











































Nice and shaped in the pie dish













Chopped pineapple













Baked pie, please excuse the eaten sides,
this picture was taken after it was served





























Recipes for soup and pie

Leek and Potato soup
2 tbsp. butter/margarine
2 garlic cloves
3 large leeks(purjolök in Swedish)
5-7 potatoes (medium to large is fine)
1/2 tbsp. thyme
1/2 tbsp. basil
1 tbsp. oregeno
1/2 tsp. rosemary (optional)
2 bay leaves
3.5-5 C. vegetable stock (make sure the water is covering the potatoes, I add more if needed)
1 C. creme fraiche

Melt the butter in a large pan, add farlic and cook 1 minute. Add leek and cook for 2 minutes. Add potatoes, herbs and stock, bring to boil, then cook on lower hear for 25 minutes. Cool and then transfer 1/2 the soup to the blender or mash it in the pan. return to the rest of the soup. Stir in creme fraiche. Sprinkle shredded cheese for serving.

Pineapple pie
Crust:
1 C. flour
1/2 C cold butter
pinch of salt
2 tbsp. ice water

Mix the dry ingredients, cut in butter add ice water and continue working until dough forms. Roll out and put in pie 9" form

Chop pineapple into small pieces pour on the crust.

Custard
Either buy already made or powdered and follow instructions. I had a box of custard mix and I made 4 portions which was enough to cover the entire pie.

Served with hot tea or coffee!

Monday, March 14, 2011

Streusel your way into their hearts


Greetings! Today has begun the official transition into spring...or at least I hope so. The snow is nearly melted and there is, despite the chilliness, a wind that ushers in the glories of springtime. My tulips and daffodils are starting their ascent and are popping their little heads out of the ground. I really enjoy this time of year and as always I enjoy baking, no matter what season it is. I was not able to blog last week about my baked good, because I was battling a cold. But alive and thriving this week, I have two new recipes to share with you.
The first recipe which I did last week, was my own creation. Now before you think...AMAZING, she's the next Martha Stewart ( I kind of wish) let me assure you that this creation was super simple and anyone skilled or not skilled can do it. It was sort of like the raspberry trifle I made last year, but instead I used bananas and a few other goodies. I used pound cake (recipe found under Raspberry Trifle Post) as the base, crumbled it up and pushed it into the bottom of a glass bowl (enough for 12 people). Afterwards I mashed bananas with some cloves into a bowl and then spread it on top of the pound cake. Then I used whipped cream on top and sprinkled chopped chocolate and almond bits on top. Chilled it in the refrigerator for 30 minutes before serving.  It looked fabulous and I hate to say it, but in my cold-state, I forgot to take any pictures of this lovely chilled dessert. But here's where your part comes in, you can just imagine all the ingredients I stated and put them together and hopefully you will see a nice dessert you can serve to anyone. My next dessert, which is being served tomorrow morning,  is a streusel topped coffee cake. I got this recipe from a good friend of mine and it is currently filling my house with exceptional smells as it bakes. I have been wanting to make a good coffee cake for a while and I think this recipe hit the target for me. It consists of cardamom as it's main flavoring and cinnamon in the streusel. Yummy! This cake was super easy and quick to whip up. If you have 30 minutes or so to spare, you can have a hot, fresh coffee cake ready to serve to visiting friends. This I would totally recommend with a steaming cup of coffee.

Until my next post...enjoy the sights and smells around you.
Barefoot and Baking in the kitchen


Streusel topped coffee cake














Getting ready to bake













Recipe for Streusel Topped Coffee Cake
1 egg
3dl sugar--->1 Cup
100 grams butter/margarine (softened)--->1/4 Cup
3dl milk--->1Cup
7.5dl flour--->3 Cups
4tsp. cardamom
4tsp. baking powder
2tsp. vanilla

Streusel topping:
100 grams butter (softened--->1/4 Cup
3dl sugar--->1 Cup
3dl oats--->1 Cup
2tsp. cinnamon
1dl chopped almonds (optional)--->1/4 Cup
(Note: Measurements were converted online, so I am not sure if they are exact. This is the hard thing with living in a place where I bake with deciliter measurements, but also use my American measurements too. Hopefully your cakes will turn out.)

Mix the sugar and egg together until creamy. Add butter and milk and stir (will be lumpy). Then add dry ingredients stir and pour into baking pan. In a separate bowl mix streusel mixture and then sprinkle on top of cake batter. Bake 225C or 400F for 15-30 minutes. ( I am currently baking and this cake has been in for about 30 minutes and still not done. So it does take a while, but it might go faster for you)

Enjoy!!