Saturday 28 May 2016

Apricot, ginger and walnut buns

These were thrown together in a hurry, using my good friend the Muffin Method, which is why the ingredients are only in cups.  I'm really pleased with how well they turned out.  However I should mention that they're not as healthy as my usual cake recipes, because there's a small amount of real actual added sugar in them.  Shock horror.  I was using up a small amount of crystalised ginger, and even though I rinsed off the outer coating of sugar crystals, the crystalisation process itself has infused a lot of sugar into the ginger, and a quick rinse isn't going to get rid of that.  But by damn, crystalised ginger is sooo good! 
Not the best photo of food I've ever taken; the camera is more interested in my tea mug than the bun...

1 1/2 cups No 1 Baking Mix
1/4 cup broken walnut pieces
1/4 cup chopped soft dried apricots
1/4 cup chopped crystalised ginger (with the sugar rinsed off if you are trying to minimise the carb hit)
1 tsp xylitol
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon
2 tsp ground ginger
2 eggs
1 tblsp vegetable oil
1/4 cup water
Mixed seeds (e.g. pumpkin, sunflower and sesame) for a topping, if you like

Seive the baking powder and spices into the baking mix, add the xylitol and the nuts and dried fruit and stir all together.  Add the eggs and oil and enough water to make a soft but firm consistency.  Spoon into greased bun tins or muffin cups - it made seven medium-sized ones for me - and sprinkle with mixed seeds if you like a crunchy topping.  Bake at 150 degrees C (fan) for 25 - 30 minutes.

Thursday 12 May 2016

No-added-sugar rich fruit cake

I've been meaning to post this for ages, in fact since Christmas...



This is adapted from my mother’s family Christmas cake recipe, switching the fruits for less-sugary ones (so, for example, no candied peel) and removing all added sugar.  It made a lighter cake than usual but one with a really good fruity flavour and fantastic golden colour.  It kept well and still tasted good after a week.  Unlike a conventional Christmas cake, though, I don’t think it would respond well to being made a month in advance.

4oz/100g blanched whole almonds, chopped
4oz/100g raisins
8oz/200g dried apricots, chopped
2oz/50g dried mango, thinly sliced
2oz/50g dried cherries
Juice of 1 large lemon
1 tea bag, made into tea (can be herbal or normal tea, but NB no milk! I used a spicy rooibos blend)
4oz butter
4 tsp xylitol
3 large eggs
2 tsp vanilla essence
4 tsp ground mixed spice
4 heaped tsp baking powder, sieved
2 cups No 1 baking mix
Whole blanched almonds, whole walnuts or pecans and whole dried apricots to decorate

Soak raisins and apricots in tea, and dried mango in lemon juice, for at least a couple of hours.  Cream butter and xylitol together and beat in the eggs one by one along with the vanilla.  Drain the soaked fruit, reserving some of the remaining liquid, and stir the soaked fruit, the cherries and the chopped almonds into the mixture, then gradually stir in the baking mix, spice and baking powder, adding some of the fruit soaking liquid if necessary to get a soft, dropping consistency.  Line a medium-sized, fairly deep cake tin with greaseproof paper or baking parchment and spoon the mixture in, level it off and decorate the top with a pattern of nuts and dried fruit.  Bake at 150 degrees C (fan oven) for 45 minutes to 1 hour.  Test with a skewer or narrow knife blade; when the blade comes out clean it’s done.  Remove and cool for 20-30 minutes in the tin before turning out onto a cake rack.