zorkmead wrote:Fancy breakfast Sunday - Saffron Cinnamon Star:
Saffron in baked goods is new to me - I'm finding I really like it.
Sadly, there was one casualty in the valiant struggle to cook something awesome - queue the sad music:
- zorkmead
ronnie_suburban wrote:Right down the middle of the fairway . . .
Buttermilk Waffle
Directly from The Joy Of Cooking. With maple syrup, salted butter and powdered sugar. I'm not generally a fan of sweet breakfast but these were pretty good.
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seebee wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Right down the middle of the fairway . . .
Buttermilk Waffle
Directly from The Joy Of Cooking. With maple syrup, salted butter and powdered sugar. I'm not generally a fan of sweet breakfast but these were pretty good.
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If I had the full 4 squares, and about 1/2 a stick of butter, it would just be absolute bliss, imo.
Thanks for the link. A friend gave me a bunch of small blood oranges, so I made a version of the Blood Orange & Almond Cake from that site:zorkmead wrote:The recipe I made actually came from a site I ran across looking at recipes for Semlor: https://www.nordickitchenstories.co.uk/
tjr wrote:Thanks for the link. A friend gave me a bunch of small blood oranges, so I made a version of the Blood Orange & Almond Cake from that site:
tjr wrote:The cake rated "good but not great." I combined some aspects of the original recipe with the related gluten free one, precooking the orange slices in sugar syrup and making an orange syrup topping rather than a caramel. And I made a 2/3 batch.
We all really liked the texture of the almond meal + flour sponge cake along with upside down cake appearance. The color is definitely enhanced by pouring the very red syrup over the top. It's not a very sweet cake at all. The real downside was that the orange flavor is rather bitter. I think that comes from using the entire cooked chopped orange in the batter, rather than just the juice and zest as in other recipes.
. . .
zorkmead wrote:tjr wrote:The cake rated "good but not great." I combined some aspects of the original recipe with the related gluten free one, precooking the orange slices in sugar syrup and making an orange syrup topping rather than a caramel. And I made a 2/3 batch.
We all really liked the texture of the almond meal + flour sponge cake along with upside down cake appearance. The color is definitely enhanced by pouring the very red syrup over the top. It's not a very sweet cake at all. The real downside was that the orange flavor is rather bitter. I think that comes from using the entire cooked chopped orange in the batter, rather than just the juice and zest as in other recipes.
. . .
Thanks for the comments! I've tried a few 'whole fruit' citrus recipes in the past year or so and even though the recipe authors all promised otherwise, each one seemed unpleasantly bitter to me. I would have been tempted to try this recipe to see if boiling the orange would help. Again - I have to say I love the look of the vivid oranges in your picture.
- zorkmead
ronnie_suburban wrote:zorkmead wrote:tjr wrote:The cake rated "good but not great." I combined some aspects of the original recipe with the related gluten free one, precooking the orange slices in sugar syrup and making an orange syrup topping rather than a caramel. And I made a 2/3 batch.
We all really liked the texture of the almond meal + flour sponge cake along with upside down cake appearance. The color is definitely enhanced by pouring the very red syrup over the top. It's not a very sweet cake at all. The real downside was that the orange flavor is rather bitter. I think that comes from using the entire cooked chopped orange in the batter, rather than just the juice and zest as in other recipes.
. . .
Thanks for the comments! I've tried a few 'whole fruit' citrus recipes in the past year or so and even though the recipe authors all promised otherwise, each one seemed unpleasantly bitter to me. I would have been tempted to try this recipe to see if boiling the orange would help. Again - I have to say I love the look of the vivid oranges in your picture.
- zorkmead
Yeah, the pith is always bitter. In spite of what anyone claims, there's no getting around that.
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boudreaulicious wrote:I’ve used blood orange slices in several desserts, including the Burros Torte recipe, and never had any issues with bitterness. I don’t precook the fruit but I do slice it very thin and add a glaze and/or sugar to the top. Looking at the photo in the post, my first thought was that the slices were too thick to caramelize properly.
ronnie_suburban wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:I’ve used blood orange slices in several desserts, including the Burros Torte recipe, and never had any issues with bitterness. I don’t precook the fruit but I do slice it very thin and add a glaze and/or sugar to the top. Looking at the photo in the post, my first thought was that the slices were too thick to caramelize properly.
Blood orange is inherently bitter so the bitterness of the pith probably doesn't show up quite as strongly as it does with other citrus. And yes, your technique is obviously solid, too.![]()
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A definite possibility. I used the gluten-free recipe's technique of poaching them rather than the original recipe's method of caramelizing due to the author's comments in the gluten-free recipe about the original being too sweet. The caramelized slices are specified as "sliced very thinly" and the poached slices as "3-5 mm", about 1/8" to 3/16". Perhaps "very thinly" means paper-thin, like sliced prosciutto. No danger of being too sweet with the caramel., either.boudreaulicious wrote:Looking at the photo in the post, my first thought was that the slices were too thick to caramelize properly.
tjr wrote:A definite possibility. I used the gluten-free recipe's technique of poaching them rather than the original recipe's method of caramelizing due to the author's comments in the gluten-free recipe about the original being too sweet. The caramelized slices are specified as "sliced very thinly" and the poached slices as "3-5 mm", about 1/8" to 3/16". Perhaps "very thinly" means paper-thin, like sliced prosciutto. No danger of being too sweet with the caramel., either.boudreaulicious wrote:Looking at the photo in the post, my first thought was that the slices were too thick to caramelize properly.
The real source of the bitterness, though, I think is from boiling and chopping a whole orange. My plan next time would be to zest, peel and section the orange before cooking, discarding the pith.
One more note: I had a bit of the cake left over and it got moldy in a few days. Never had that happen before with cake! Next time, whatever's left goes in the fridge.
boudreaulicious wrote:tjr wrote:A definite possibility. I used the gluten-free recipe's technique of poaching them rather than the original recipe's method of caramelizing due to the author's comments in the gluten-free recipe about the original being too sweet. The caramelized slices are specified as "sliced very thinly" and the poached slices as "3-5 mm", about 1/8" to 3/16". Perhaps "very thinly" means paper-thin, like sliced prosciutto. No danger of being too sweet with the caramel., either.boudreaulicious wrote:Looking at the photo in the post, my first thought was that the slices were too thick to caramelize properly.
The real source of the bitterness, though, I think is from boiling and chopping a whole orange. My plan next time would be to zest, peel and section the orange before cooking, discarding the pith.
One more note: I had a bit of the cake left over and it got moldy in a few days. Never had that happen before with cake! Next time, whatever's left goes in the fridge.
If you slice thinly and use some sugar, you don’t need to worry about the pith and you get the beautiful presentation. If you section the orange it’s a completely different visual —and a whole peeled orange section will be a very different (more liquid) texture as well.
I was thinking to peel and section the portion that's boiled, chopped and added to the batter. I think the chopped pith in the original recipes added much of the bitterness. Agreed, the top pieces should be slices to look right.boudreaulicious wrote:If you section the orange it’s a completely different visual —and a whole peeled orange section will be a very different (more liquid) texture as well.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Open-face breakfast sandwich . . .
Kaiser roll, griddled mortadella, runny egg & 'merikan cheese.
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What makes it so very dark?zorkmead wrote:This is a very dark and intense gingerbread cake which I've made before, but I 1/2d it and baked in a loaf pan.
tjr wrote:What makes it so very dark?zorkmead wrote:This is a very dark and intense gingerbread cake which I've made before, but I 1/2d it and baked in a loaf pan.
zorkmead wrote:Starting off March right with Irish Porridge bread!
I really liked this, but when I was gushing (just a little, I promise) on Sunday morning about how good it was and how it was good for you too, I got a 'it tastes good for you' in response <<<>>> But I refuse to be swayed by someone whose favorite food is ketchup!
zorkmead wrote:I made a batch of savory crepes this week so I could have (leftover dinner party) beef bourguignon crepes for lunch. This wonky shaped crepe half made a great ham and egg breakfast: